
Phil Davis
17-4-0
About
Penn State wrestling champion and former Bellator Light Heavyweight champ who was a top-5 UFC contender before leaving to pursue cross-promotion fights.
See moreSee less
Phil Davis is a highly credentialed wrestler and technical mixed martial artist who rose to prominence in the UFC as a top-5 light heavyweight contender before pivoting to Bellator, where he became champion. Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Davis won an NCAA Division I wrestling title at Penn State in 2008, establishing himself as a legitimate grappling talent. He signed with the UFC in late 2009 and quickly impressed with submission artistry, earning Submission of the Night honors in 2010 for a modified kimura against Tim Boetsch that became his signature finish. Over five years in the UFC, Davis compiled a 9-3 record and defeated respected opponents including Lyoto Machida (a controversial 2013 decision) and Glover Teixeira (dominant 2014 unanimous nod), establishing himself among the division elite.
Davis fights as a pressure wrestler who controls opponents through superior takedown accuracy and ground-and-pound, methodically accumulating points rather than hunting knockout finishes. His submission toolbox is refined, built on a foundation of anaconda chokes and arm-lock variants honed during his wrestling days. While effective, his reliance on wrestling to score rounds sometimes drew criticism from judges and media when decisions were close, most notably his controversial win over Machida, which UFC president Dana White openly disputed.
After a 2015 split-decision loss to Ryan Bader in his final UFC bout, Davis departed the organization and signed with Bellator, where he immediately won a one-night tournament and captured the Bellator Light Heavyweight Championship in 2016 by decisioning Liam McGeary. Now competing in the PFL, Davis has become as well known for his activism off the mat as his achievements in it. In 2025, he led a class-action antitrust lawsuit against the UFC, not seeking monetary damages but rather forcing the promotion to eliminate restrictive contract clauses that prevent fighters from competing across promotions. His stated goal is simple: to fight the best in the world regardless of promotional affiliation, a right he argues should apply to all elite competitors. This principled stance has reframed Davis as a fighter willing to sacrifice personal opportunity for industry change.
Why fans love Davis
Elite wrestling credentials and submission artistry from his NCAA pedigree. Composed and intelligent fighter who dominates matches through precision and ring control. Post-UFC activism on fighter rights has earned him respect as a principled advocate who speaks clearly about industry injustice.
Why some fans hate Davis
Pre-fight trash talk that sometimes backfired; he baited Jon Jones before UFC 172 and dismissed Anthony Johnson as an unworthy opponent, then lost badly to Johnson. Controversial Machida decision drew criticism for being overscored. Loss to Bader in his final UFC fight was contentious, and some viewed his Bellator success as inferior competition relative to UFC light heavyweight depths.









































