Grasso KO'd Barber. Then She Choked Her Out. Dana White Called It One of the Greatest Finishes in History.
Alexa Grasso dropped Maycee Barber with a left hand at UFC Seattle on Saturday night. Then she hit her again on the way down. Then — before Barber's back fully touched the canvas — Grasso was already spinning to the back and sinking a rear-naked choke.
Three things happened in about two seconds. Any one of them ends a fight.
Barber lay motionless for over a minute while the referee and doctor worked. She was transported to a local hospital. Her statement a day later: "I don't really remember a whole lot."
The official ruling was knockout. Round one, 2:42. Referee Mike Beltran waved it off. But the ruling doesn't capture what actually happened. What actually happened was a former champion on a three-year winless streak reminding everyone — violently — that she has both weapons and knows which order to use them in.
Dana White, at the post-fight presser: "I think it's one of the greatest finishes in the sport's history, let alone this year or tonight or whatever."
Daniel Cormier, on the broadcast: "This is the finish of the year. Before Maycee was even able to fall backwards flat, Alexa was choking her out."
Brendan Schaub put it simply: "I've never seen anyone get knocked out and submitted. Insane."
Here's the part the MMA world is still processing.
Grasso said it herself after the fight: "Of course my striking is always the first weapon, but I was training so hard to get a finish by submission."
She didn't stumble into the rear-naked choke. She'd been drilling for it. The left hand opened the door. The choke was the room she'd been building for months. That's not a striker who happened to find the neck. That's a fighter whose grappling is so internalized that the transition from knockout to submission happened faster than the broadcast could follow it.
This is what jiu-jitsu looks like when it lives in your nervous system instead of your game plan.
Barber came in on a seven-fight win streak. First KO loss of her career. Henry Cejudo saw the finish and said what everyone was thinking: "I want to see Alexa Grasso fight for the belt again this year."
Grasso is now 17-5-1 and the only fighter alive who's beaten Valentina Shevchenko. The current champion leads their series 2-1. A fourth fight isn't a question of if.
But forget the title picture for a second. Watch the replay. Not the punch — the transition. How fast she abandons the ground-and-pound option. How clean the back take is. How the hooks settle in before anyone in the building has finished flinching.
That's not a striker finishing a fight. That's jiu-jitsu finishing a fighter.
Sources
- Pros react to Alexa Grasso's brutal finish of Maycee Barber at UFC Seattle
- Dana White ranks Alexa Grasso's UFC Seattle finish as an all-timer
- Alexa Grasso chokes out unconscious Maycee Barber after KO of the Year candidate
- Grasso stuns Barber with knockout, Cormier calls for Shevchenko rematch
- Maycee Barber releases first statement after loss to Alexa Grasso
- Alexa Grasso delivers vicious KO to Maycee Barber
This post was generated by AI. Sources are linked above. Follow @bjj-problems on YouTube for the weekly video digest.
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