
William Knight
11-5-0
About
Power-punching light heavyweight from Connecticut who rode a knockout streak into the UFC but struggled against elite competition before his release.
See moreSee less
William Knight is an American light heavyweight whose personal story rivals his fighting ability in compelling power. After spending his twenties overweight and directionless, a chance moment in 2015 sparked a dramatic transformation: he joined Thornton Mixed Martial Arts and reinvented himself as a professional fighter. Knight compiled an 8-1 amateur record before turning pro in 2018, quickly building a reputation as a devastating knockout artist in the regional circuit. His explosive power and high finishing rate - 9 of his 11 wins came by KO or TKO, with 6 first-round stoppages - earned him a UFC contract via Dana White's Contender Series in 2020.
Inside the Octagon, Knight showed promise in flashes. His first-round knockout of Fabio Cherant in August 2021 was so impressive it earned him a Performance of the Night bonus and briefly positioned him as a rising threat in a thin light heavyweight division. He also posted a solid decision victory over ranked opponent Alonzo Menifield in December 2021. However, inconsistency and losses to increasingly elite strikers - Da Un Jung, Maxim Grishin, and Devin Clark - exposed gaps in his technique and durability. A catastrophic 12-pound weight miss before his UFC 271 bout against Grishin, the largest in UFC history, proved to be a warning sign of discipline issues.
Knight's UFC tenure unraveled with his final notable appearance: a February 2023 decision loss to Marcin Prachnio that became infamous for all the wrong reasons. Knight landed just 8 strikes across 3 rounds, appeared mentally frozen for long stretches, and delivered what many considered one of the poorest performances in recent UFC history. The public backlash - including death threats from angry fans - hit hard, especially given that Knight was processing the death of seven family members at the time. His contract was not renewed following this bout. Knight's career is a complex story of resilience, redemption, and the gulf between regional success and elite-level consistency.
Why fans love Knight
Knight's personal transformation is remarkable: overweight and directionless until age 27, then rising from the regional circuit all the way to the UFC, compiling one of the highest knockout rates in the promotion. His willingness to take short-notice replacements and face ranked opponents showed grit. After the Prachnio fiasco, he owned his poor performance publicly rather than making excuses.
Why some fans hate Knight
Knight's catastrophic 12-pound weight miss at UFC 271 - the largest in UFC history - angered fans and was seen as disrespectful to his opponent Maxim Grishin. The Marcin Prachnio fight was widely panned as one of the worst performances in recent UFC memory: Knight landed 8 strikes in 3 rounds, appeared mentally frozen, and turned in a non-performance that drew criticism and even death threats from viewers. Some view him as a gatekeeping fringe prospect who took up roster spots from more deserving fighters without delivering at the top level.













