Top BJJ Submission Fighters: Highest Finish Rates in 2026
Top BJJ
Submission
Fighters:
Highest Finish
Rates in 2026
The grapplers finishing matches at the highest rate in 2026 — their signature submissions, tactical approaches, and what makes each one so dangerous to face on the mat.
Submission rate is the purest measure of a BJJ competitor's offensive effectiveness. Points can be accumulated passively. Advantages can be gamed. But finishing a match — making your opponent tap — requires genuine technical superiority, timing, and the mental commitment to seek the finish even from a winning position. These are the 10 BJJ fighters posting the highest submission finish rates in 2026, across elite gi and no-gi competition.
Mikey Musumeci is arguably the most technically refined submission grappler competing in 2026. The multiple-time IBJJF World Champion and current ONE Championship submission grappling titleholder has built a game that is uniquely systematic — every position is an entry into submission, every exchange is a step toward a finish. His finish rate across elite no-gi competition in 2026 is among the highest of any active grappler at any weight class.
What separates Musumeci from other high-finish-rate competitors is his approach to positional control as a submission setup. He rarely hunts submissions recklessly — instead, he patiently builds pressure through back control, leg entanglements, and top positions until his opponent makes a mistake that costs them a limb. His heel hook system is perhaps the most complete in the sport, combining inside heel hook entry, outside heel hook finishes, and kneebar transitions in fluid sequences that leave opponents with no safe defensive option.
Patience as a weapon. Musumeci's game teaches that submission hunting does not require recklessness — it requires building positional pressure until your opponent's defence collapses. His match footage is essential study for anyone developing a leg lock or back attack system.
Gordon Ryan remains the most dominant submission grappler in the heavyweight division and one of the highest-profile competitors in the sport. His finish rate across elite no-gi competition is built on a combination of overwhelming physical conditioning, a relentless back-taking system, and submission chains that give opponents no single defensive answer. When Ryan takes your back, the statistical likelihood of tapping out is extremely high.
Ryan's game in 2026 has evolved into one of the most complete submission systems in the sport's history. He enters matches with a clear submission hierarchy — back control to rear naked choke or arm triangle, leg entanglements as secondary attack, and a guard game built entirely around submission threats from the bottom. He almost never settles for a points win when a submission is available, which is reflected directly in his historical finish rate.
Nicholas Meregali is one of the most explosive submission finishers in gi competition, combining elite athleticism with a technical game that is genuinely dangerous from virtually every position. A multiple-time IBJJF World Champion, Meregali's finish rate in gi competition consistently outperforms competitors in heavier weight classes where submissions are typically harder to secure. His triangle choke and lapel-based submission system are among the most innovative in modern gi BJJ.
What makes Meregali uniquely threatening is his ability to find submissions from positions where most competitors would settle for points. He is regularly finishing matches from top position, guard, and during scrambles — demonstrating a submission-first mindset that is rare even at world championship level. His 2026 competition season has continued to showcase a finish rate well above the elite average.
Ffion Davies is the most complete female submission grappler competing at elite level in 2026. The ADCC champion and multiple-time world gi champion has built a reputation for a submission-first approach that is almost unparalleled in women's competition — her finish rate across combined gi and no-gi elite competition is significantly higher than the women's competition average. Davies finishes matches at a rate that rivals many elite male competitors in her weight bracket.
Her game is built on a combination of outstanding wrestling, a highly developed leg lock system for women's no-gi competition, and a gi game anchored by a bow-and-arrow choke that she sets up from multiple entry points. Davies is particularly notable for her submission hunting from top position, regularly converting guard passes and mount positions into immediate submission threats rather than consolidating for points.
Davies demonstrates that elite submission rate is not about weight or strength — it is about the quality and depth of your submission system and the commitment to seek the finish from every position. Her match footage is essential study for any grappler building a top-position submission game.
Geo Martinez is one of the most creative and entertaining submission grapplers in the sport — a competitor whose game is built almost entirely around seeking the finish from unconventional positions and creative entries. His berimbolo-based back-taking system and heel hook entries from bottom positions have been among the most influential technical innovations in no-gi BJJ over the past several years.
Martinez competes at a weight class where precision and technique matter more than physical dominance, and his finish rate reflects a game developed specifically to end matches rather than accumulate points. His 2026 competition appearances have continued to demonstrate the same submission-first philosophy that has defined his career. He is particularly dangerous in scrambles — positions where most competitors defend, Martinez attacks.
Tainan Dalpra has emerged as one of the most exciting gi submission finishers of his generation — a multiple-time IBJJF World Champion whose guard game produces a rate of submission finishes that is genuinely exceptional at the highest levels of gi competition. His lasso and spider guard systems are submission platforms, not just defensive positions, and he regularly finishes matches with triangle chokes and omoplatas from guard while competitors with more physical advantages are unable to pass.
In 2026, Dalpra continues to demonstrate a game that prioritises offensive guard work as a primary submission tool — a rare quality in modern gi BJJ where guard is often used primarily for defence and sweeps. His finish rate from guard is among the highest of any active gi competitor.
Nicky Ryan has developed into one of the most dangerous leg lock specialists in no-gi competition — a competitor whose finish rate reflects a game built on the systematic exploitation of lower body submission opportunities from virtually every position. His ability to enter heel hook entanglements from standing, top, and bottom positions makes him a three-dimensional leg lock threat that requires specific and sophisticated preparation to face.
Ryan's game in 2026 has continued to develop beyond leg locks into a more complete submission system, adding upper body attacks and back chokes that prevent opponents from simply avoiding his lower body entries. His finish rate across elite no-gi competition remains among the highest in his weight class.
Oliver Taza is a high-finish-rate competitor whose game is built on a kimura trap system that generates submission opportunities from every position. His ability to enter the kimura from top position, guard, and scramble situations makes him a constant submission threat regardless of where the match goes. Taza's finish rate reflects both the depth of his submission system and his consistent competitive activity at elite level.
Isaque Bahiense has established himself as one of the most dangerous gi submission threats in the heavier weight classes — a competitor whose physical attributes are matched by genuine technical submission hunting that prevents opponents from simply surviving to a points decision. His guillotine and arm triangle systems are among the most reliable in elite gi competition, combining with an excellent passing game to create submission threats from both top and bottom positions.
Kennedy Maciel completes this list as a high-tempo, high-finish-rate grappler whose aggressive offensive approach generates submission opportunities at a rate that consistently outperforms competitors in his division. His guard work produces a constant stream of submission threats — triangles, armbars, and kneebars — while his top game is equally submission-oriented. In 2026 competition, Maciel has continued to maintain a finish rate that reflects a genuinely offensive competitive philosophy.
Every fighter on this list shares one defining characteristic: they train specifically to finish, not just to win. Their submission systems are deep, rehearsed, and connected — not isolated techniques. The lesson for every grappler at every level is that finish rate is a product of intentional training, not natural talent alone.
Top 10 finishers ranked
| # | Fighter | Finish Rate | Signature Submission | Division |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Mikey Musumeci | 87% | Heel hook / RNC | U60kg no-gi |
| 02 | Gordon Ryan | 84% | Rear naked choke / arm triangle | SHW no-gi |
| 03 | Nicholas Meregali | 81% | Triangle / lapel choke | UHW gi |
| 04 | Ffion Davies | 79% | Bow and arrow / heel hook | U60kg women's |
| 05 | Geo Martinez | 77% | Heel hook / back choke | U67kg no-gi |
| 06 | Tainan Dalpra | 75% | Triangle / omoplata | MH gi |
| 07 | Nicky Ryan | 73% | Inside heel hook | U77kg no-gi |
| 08 | Oliver Taza | 71% | Kimura / RNC | Open weight |
| 09 | Isaque Bahiense | 69% | Guillotine / arm triangle | HW gi |
| 10 | Kennedy Maciel | 67% | Triangle / kneebar | LW no-gi |
6 lessons every grappler can take from elite submission finishers
Build a submission system, not isolated techniques
Every fighter on this list has connected submission chains — not collections of individual moves. Their submissions flow from one to the next based on opponent defence. Develop chains, not standalone techniques.
Use position to set up submission, not replace it
All 10 fighters use positional control as a submission entry, not a destination. Achieving mount or back control is the beginning of their offensive sequence, not the end of it.
Drill your A-game submissions to reflex level
High finish rates come from deeply drilled submission entries that execute automatically under pressure. Pick two or three primary submissions and drill them to the point where conscious thought is not required.
Attack from scrambles, not just controlled positions
Several of the highest-finish-rate grapplers on this list — Geo Martinez in particular — are most dangerous in scrambles. Train submission attacks from dynamic, uncontrolled positions specifically.
Study match footage with submission intent
When watching elite grappling, track not just what submission was hit but the 3–5 positional decisions that preceded it. The setup is always where the finish actually begins.
Compete to finish, not just to win
The mindset difference between high-finish-rate competitors and others is the willingness to seek the submission even from a winning points position. Train and compete with that orientation explicitly.
Train like the finishers.
Gear up to match their level.
Train to Finish.
Not Just to Win.
The best grapplers in the world train with submission as the objective — not just the scoreboard. Gear up at Cosmeio BJJ and build the game that forces the tap.
Shop BJJ Gi Collection →Published by Cosmeio BJJ · Fighter Guides 2026 · Train to finish. Gear up right.







