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Khabib Nurmagomedov voted UFC GOAT

Split image of Conor McGregor celebrating, Georges St-Pierre with his UFC title and Amanda Nunes with her two UFC titlesImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Conor McGregor, Georges St-Pierre and Amanda Nunes are all two-weight UFC champions

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It is a question which is brought up often in mixed martial arts circles: who is the greatest UFC fighter of all time?

With the promotion having just hosted its landmark UFC 300 event in Las Vegas, BBC Sport asked their readers to vote for their UFC 'GOAT' of the past 30 years.

Fighters were chosen based on skill, their records, popularity and impact their careers have had on the growth of the UFC.

Russia's Khabib Nurmagomedov, who retired with an undefeated record, was selected by BBC Sport readers, getting 32% of the votes compared to American Jon Jones who received 25%.

Jon Jones

Jones' legacy as the most dominant light-heavyweight champion in UFC history was cemented before he secured the heavyweight title last year.

The American is a controversial figure outside the octagon but has a glittering resume, boasting 27 wins with his sole defeat coming via a disqualification against Matt Hamill in 2009.

Conor McGregor

The first simultaneous two-division champion in UFC history, few can rival McGregor's impact in helping expose MMA to a wider audience with the Irishman being the biggest draw in the promotion's history.

Amanda Nunes

The UFC's only two-time double champion, Brazil's Nunes dominated the featherweight and bantamweight divisions for the best part of five years.

Khabib Nurmagomedov

Russia's Nurmagomedov retired in 2020 having gone the entirety of his 29-fight career undefeated - a feat which has never been replicated in the UFC.

Ronda Rousey

Media caption,

Women have to work twice as hard to get half the respect - Rousey

The first woman to be signed by the UFC, Rousey paved the way for her peers to compete at the highest level alongside the men.

A former bantamweight champion who defended her title six times, the American's dominance inside the octagon and bravado outside it helped expose the UFC to a wider audience.

Georges St-Pierre

Canada's St-Pierre is widely regarded as the greatest UFC welterweight of all time, defending his belt a record nine times in the division, before winning the middleweight belt in the final fight of his career in 2017.

Anderson Silva

Brazil's Silva holds the longest win streak in UFC history with 16 victories as he dominated the middleweight division for seven years from 2006 during his run as champion.

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