
Fares Ziam
18-4-0
Lightweight
About
French kickboxer-turned-MMA striker ranked #14 at lightweight who is on a six-fight win streak, finishing opponents with devastating knees and elbows.
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Fares Ziam is a 29-year-old French lightweight on the rise, currently ranked #14 in the UFC and riding a six-fight winning streak. Born into a combat-sports family in Lyon, Ziam began training at age 12 and built a formidable kickboxing resume before transitioning to MMA, where he compiled regional titles in Europe before entering the UFC in 2019. His early tenure was rocky - a debut loss to Don Madge in Abu Dhabi and a brutal first-round submission to Terrance McKinney in 2022 led to a brief contract lapse - but the promotion re-signed him in late 2022 and he has not looked back since.
What makes Ziam dangerous is his technical striking pedigree. A former K-1 European champion in kickboxing, he brings clean, efficient striking to the octagon, landing an average of 2.87 significant strikes per minute with a 65% striking defense rate. He finishes at a high rate (39% of his wins come via KO/TKO), and he has proven he can adapt: he survived Claudio Puelles' wrestling storm in a split-decision win in February 2024 despite being taken down seven times, then followed it with a Performance of the Night knockout of Matt Frevola via a spectacular knee in the third round in September 2024. Most recently, he dominated Nazim Sadykhov at UFC 323, stopping him with a second-round flurry to cap a dominant striking performance.
Ziam's appeal is his combination of technical excellence and finish rate. He does not coast to decisions; he hunts the knockout and the submission when opportunities arise. His comeback after the McKinney loss and brief roster exile resonates with fans who appreciate fighters who get knocked down and rebuild themselves. With a six-fight streak, top-15 ranking, and an upcoming bout scheduled for June 2026, Ziam is primed to fight his way into title contention at 155 pounds.
Why fans love Ziam
Ziam fights with technical striking precision and finishing instinct. He doesn't coast or stall; his wins come via decisive knockouts, submission, or clear-cut decisions. His six-fight run is real, and he's climbing the rankings the hard way. Fans respect his comeback arc after the McKinney loss and brief contract void.





















