
Themba Gorimbo
14-6-0
Welterweight
About
Zimbabwean welterweight who rose from diamond smuggling to UFC fighter, briefly turned heads with charity work and a four-fight win streak, but has just retired after three straight losses.
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Themba Gorimbo's story is one of extreme adversity turned into a platform for change. Born in Bikita, Zimbabwe, he lost both parents by age 13 and worked illegally for diamonds as a teenager before fleeing to South Africa at 17. After discovering mixed martial arts, he funded his own journey to the United States to pursue fighting professionally, turning pro in 2013 and eventually earning the EFC welterweight title. His UFC debut came in February 2023 against AJ Fletcher, a loss via guillotine choke, but Gorimbo responded with four straight wins highlighted by two explosive first-round TKO finishes of Pete Rodriguez. It was after his first UFC victory that Gorimbo mentioned in a post-fight interview that he had only $7 in his bank account. That candid moment captured the attention of Dwayne Johnson, who surprised him at his Miami gym and bought him a house, turning Gorimbo into a mainstream story of triumph over hardship.
Inside the cage, Gorimbo was a submission specialist who won nearly half his fights (six of 14) by submission, including triangle chokes, guillotines, Brabo chokes, and armbars. His finishing instinct was real: five of his victories came in the first round. However, his striking defense, while respectable at 52%, masked deeper defensive deficiencies on the ground and in the clinch. His takedown accuracy was poor (5%), and he absorbed strikes at a rate of 1.75 per minute, suggesting he relied on durability and submissions rather than positional control.
Gorimbo's trajectory peaked in mid-2024 but took a sharp turn in December when ranked welterweight Vicente Luque submitted him in just 52 seconds at UFC 310, an upset loss that exposed how far he was from elite competition. He followed that with two more losses, including a split decision to Jonathan Micallef in May 2026. On May 21, 2026, at age 35, Gorimbo announced his retirement on Instagram, writing: "I dared to be someone and something and failed. Gave all I can in the sport, and I am walking away from the sport. My dream was to be a UFC champion, and if I cannot be that, I am going to walk away." Beyond fighting, Gorimbo's legacy includes his philanthropic work building water wells in Zimbabwe and his plan for a solar-powered library in his hometown, having turned his platform into real change for his community.
Why fans love Gorimbo
Gorimbo's resilience and authenticity resonated deeply. His story of survival, his charity work building water wells in Zimbabwe, and the viral moment with Dwayne Johnson's generosity made him a feel-good figure in the sport. Fans admired his hunger to reach the top despite starting from almost nothing, and his submission finishing style was technically impressive.















