
Elves Brenner
About
Brazilian submission specialist and rising UFC lightweight who has won seven of his last 11 fights with a lethal ground game anchored by armbars and chokes.
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Elves Brenner is a 27-year-old Brazilian lightweight who embodies the old-school submission fighter archetype. Growing up in Maués in the Amazon region, he worked at local markets as a child before discovering jiu-jitsu at 13 and building a formidable grappling resume across regional competitions. He turned pro in 2016 and earned his UFC debut in February 2023 on the back of regional championship belts, arriving in the octagon as a technical submission specialist trained at the legendary Chute Boxe camp.
In the UFC, Brenner has gone 7-4 overall, compiling an 16-6 professional record that speaks to his finishing ability: 11 wins by submission (six armbars, three rear-naked chokes, plus triangle and guillotine finishes) and three knockouts. His record includes an impressive nine first-round finishes, signaling a fighter who hunts the early exit with relentless forward pressure. He lands over 90% of his significant strikes standing, a volume-heavy approach designed to close distance and drag opponents into his world on the ground.
Brenner's recent run has been mixed, with losses to Myktybek Orolbai (unanimous decision, May 2024) and Joel Alvarez (KO, August 2024) suggesting that while his submission prowess is elite, his wrestling and striking defense against high-level opponents still need refinement. These setbacks have tempered initial momentum but have not derailed him from the lightweight conversation. His appeal lies in that rare combination of technical grappling depth and explosive finishing instinct: fans of submissions and early-round action gravitate toward him, and his humble origin story and reverence for mentors like Charles Oliveira add narrative weight to a fighter still in his upward arc.
Why fans love Brenner
Aggressive, exciting fighting style with a high finish rate (69% of wins by submission); comes from humble beginnings and trains at storied Chute Boxe camp; expresses gratitude and humility in post-fight interviews and cites Charles Oliveira as a mentor and training partner, embodying the Brazilian MMA tradition.











