July 11, 2026 · T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Green
35-17-1
UnrankedLong Beach, California | 39 years old
McKinney
18-8-0
UnrankedSpokane, Washington | 31 years old
Craft Against Explosion
McKinney owns the fastest knockout in lightweight history and 26 career fights that have never heard a scorecard. Green has 53 fights, two decades of mileage, and the chin McKinney has to find before the fight cools off.
O PONTO QUE DECIDE
Whoever Controls the First Five Minutes
Terrance McKinney is the earliest finisher in the lightweight division, and also the most unfinished fighter in it. He holds the fastest knockout in division history — seven seconds on debut — and all eight of his UFC wins came by first-round finish. Zoom out to his whole career and the number gets scarier: in 26 pro fights, McKinney has never heard the scorecards. Zero decisions. The fight either ends in his early explosion, or it drifts into territory he has never once set foot in. And that's where the hole lives: his striking defense sits at 43%, he drops his hands and comes forward with his head down, and his last two losses came exactly that way — a Ribovics head kick in 37 seconds and a Duncan choke when he charged in. He's a one-shot hunter who gets hurt the same way he hurts people. Across from him stands the exact stylistic nightmare for that kind of fighter. Bobby Green is refined pocket boxing — feints, reads, upper-body movement, and volume — with a 62% striking defense that's among the slipperiest in the division. At 39, with 53 pro fights, he's shared the cage with the lightweight elite for more than a decade. The question isn't whether Green is the more complete fighter — he is. The question is the chin: Ruffy landed a spinning kick that flatlined him in 2025, and a one-shot striker like McKinney hits just as hard, if not harder. But Green answered that doubt in the worst possible way for anyone betting against him — he ripped off three straight wins, two by finish, with no sign of a cracked chin. If he survives the storm of the first five minutes, the fight sinks onto his turf. If he doesn't, it's a wrap early.
Terrance McKinney is the earliest finisher in the lightweight division, and also the most unfinished fighter in it. He holds the fastest knockout in division history — seven seconds on debut — and all eight of his UFC wins came by first-round finish. Zoom out to his whole career and the number gets scarier: in 26 pro fights, McKinney has never heard the scorecards. Zero decisions. The fight either ends in his early explosion, or it drifts into territory he has never once set foot in. And that's where the hole lives: his striking defense sits at 43%, he drops his hands and comes forward with his head down, and his last two losses came exactly that way — a Ribovics head kick in 37 seconds and a Duncan choke when he charged in. He's a one-shot hunter who gets hurt the same way he hurts people. Across from him stands the exact stylistic nightmare for that kind of fighter. Bobby Green is refined pocket boxing — feints, reads, upper-body movement, and volume — with a 62% striking defense that's among the slipperiest in the division. At 39, with 53 pro fights, he's shared the cage with the lightweight elite for more than a decade. The question isn't whether Green is the more complete fighter — he is. The question is the chin: Ruffy landed a spinning kick that flatlined him in 2025, and a one-shot striker like McKinney hits just as hard, if not harder. But Green answered that doubt in the worst possible way for anyone betting against him — he ripped off three straight wins, two by finish, with no sign of a cracked chin. If he survives the storm of the first five minutes, the fight sinks onto his turf. If he doesn't, it's a wrap early.
Tale of the Tape
McKinney is 8 years younger and far fresher in career mileage
Same height, an even fight up close
McKinney carries a 2.5-inch reach edge, the length is his
Green has nearly double the fights and decades of mileage. Experience is the chasm of this matchup
Current Form
Bobby Green
UFC 328. Submitted rugged veteran Jeremy Stephens with a rear-naked choke in round 1. A reminder that Green's ground game punishes anyone who charges in, and that he can still finish at 39.
Sub R1UFC Mexico City. Stopped young Mexican prospect Daniel Zellhuber with punches late in round 2. Green banked damage, read the rhythm, and broke down the younger man. A smart veteran's win.
TKO R2UFC on ESPN. Took newcomer Lance Gibson Jr and outpointed him over three rounds, controlling range with his boxing. No finishing shine, just pure fight management.
Unanimous DecisionUFC 313. Caught cold by a perfect Mauricio Ruffy spinning kick and knocked out at 2:07 of round 1. The big chin red flag, and the only clean KO he's suffered in his recent run.
KO R1UFC 304. Caught in a triangle by rising star Paddy Pimblett in round 1. Proof that Green can be punished on the mat too when he accepts scrambles too early.
Sub R1An unlikely renaissance at 39. After Ruffy flatlined him in early 2025, plenty of people called it a career, and Green answered with three straight wins: he outpointed newcomer Gibson Jr on the cards, stopped prospect Zellhuber in round 2, and submitted veteran Jeremy Stephens with a rear-naked choke in the first. Two finishes in a stretch where he was supposed to be fading. The soft spot is still the mileage and the chin — 17 career losses and a recent KO on the ledger — but he walks into Las Vegas sharper than he's looked in years, and he's the most experienced fighter McKinney will ever face.
Terrance McKinney
UFC Fight Night. Flattened Kyle Nelson with a head kick and hammer fists at 24 seconds of round 1. Quintessential McKinney: speed, timing, and done before the opponent warms up.
TKO R1UFC 323. Charged forward against tough Chris Duncan and got caught in an anaconda choke at 2:30 of round 1. The fight that exposed the pattern: when the knockout doesn't come, he over-commits and pays for it.
Sub R1UFC 317. Locked up a mounted guillotine and finished Viacheslav Borshchev at 0:55 of round 1. Under a minute again — McKinney's submission game is as lethal as his fists.
Sub R1UFC Fight Night. Took Damir Hadzovic down, climbed to back mount, and finished with punches at 2:01 of round 1. Blitz wrestling plus ground-and-pound, once again never past five minutes.
TKO R1UFC Fight Night. Knocked out by a head kick from Argentina's Esteban Ribovics in 37 seconds. The flip side of a fighter who lives and dies in the opening moments.
KO R1Pure, volatile explosion. McKinney is coming off a head kick and hammer fists that flattened Kyle Nelson in 24 seconds — another portrait of what he is: lethal in the opening moments. He's won three of his last four, all by first-round finish. The caveat screams in the details: the one loss in that stretch, to Chris Duncan, came when he charged forward and got caught in a choke, and the fight just before this run, against Ribovics, was a head kick that put him out in 37 seconds. McKinney is a double-edged sword: survive the blitz and you get a man who has never once operated in deep water.
Level of Competition
There are no common opponents, and the resume gap leans hard toward Green. Over more than a decade in the UFC, Green faced the whole division — ranked contenders, former champs, and the new wave — and became the gatekeeper who measures who's for real. He lost to the very top of the elite, but almost always on the cards, rarely blown out. McKinney built his record flattening unranked names inside a round — Frevola, Hadzovic, Borshchev, Nelson — and has never shared the cage with a top-5 fighter. This is, by a distance, the toughest and most experienced test of his career. And it's precisely against experience and craft that McKinney's style stumbles most.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
McKinney pours out more volume, but compressed into two-minute fights. Green sustains his rhythm across 15
Striking Accuracy (%)
Both land clean. McKinney is slightly sharper in the blitz, Green is more economical
Strikes Absorbed/Min
Green absorbs less and is slipperier. McKinney offsets his low defense by ending fights early
Striking Defense (%)
The most telling gap: Green is elusive, McKinney is hittable. It's Green's chin against McKinney's defense
Takedowns per 15 Min
McKinney has a wrestling base and uses the blitz takedown, but the number is inflated by ultra-short fights
Takedown Accuracy (%)
Takedown Defense (%)
Neither man wants this on the mat on purpose, and both defend takedowns at the same level. It's a striking fight
Submissions per 15 Min
McKinney has the far more active and dangerous submission game, but Green rarely gives up the mat
Green leads in 2 categories · McKinney leads in 5
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Both men finish, but from opposite worlds. McKinney is the pure hunter: 9 KOs and 9 submissions in 18 wins, not a single decision in his entire career, and virtually everything in round one. He needs early impact. Green is far more balanced — 12 KOs, 10 submissions, and 13 decisions in 35 wins, a clear sign he knows how to win on the cards, on the mat, and on the feet. It matters enormously for the method: McKinney wants it over early, Green can build the fight round by round.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
The loss profiles tell the fight. Green has lost 17 times, but the overwhelming majority on the cards (10 decisions) — the mark of a gatekeeper who almost always reaches the finish on his feet, with only a handful of KOs (5, including Ruffy) and rare submissions. McKinney has a smaller sample, 8 losses, but every one is telling and every one is a finish: 5 knockouts and 3 submissions, ZERO by decision. He's never lost on the cards because he's never reached the cards. The practical read: Green can be knocked out if he stands still in front of McKinney early, and McKinney can be punished — on the kick or on the mat — whenever he over-commits and the fight doesn't end in the opening minute. It's a duel over who forces the other's mistake before the fight cools off.
Skills Profile
Green
vs
McKinney
Boxing at Range
+2 Green
Green is the more refined pocket boxer, with feints, reads, and volume. McKinney has the length, but not the technique at long range.
Power and Early Explosion
+3 McKinney
McKinney owns the fastest knockout in lightweight history and one-shot power. It's the weapon that decides the fight if it lands early.
Defense and Head Movement
+2 Green
Green defends 62% and slips with his upper body. McKinney drops his hands and defends just 43%, exposing himself to land.
Grappling and Submissions
+1 McKinney
McKinney has an active submission game (chokes, guillotines) and a wrestling base, but Green defends takedowns at 73% and won't give up the mat for free.
Cardio and Deep Water
+4 Green
A glaring gap. Green has gone 25 minutes and wins on the cards. McKinney has never heard a scorecard in his entire career — deep water is the total unknown.
Experience and Fight IQ
+3 Green
53 fights to 26, a decade facing the elite against a record of unranked names. The fight IQ and the mileage belong to Green.
McKinney wins the first five minutes on power, explosion, and the finish threat. Green wins everything that comes after: boxing at range, defense, cardio, and a fight IQ forged over 50-plus fights. The question isn't who's more dangerous early — it's McKinney. The question is whether he lands before the fight cools off and sinks onto the veteran's turf.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis is: Bobby Green wins because he's the more complete, more technical, higher-IQ fighter, tested for over a decade against the lightweight elite while McKinney has never shared the cage with a top-5 opponent; because McKinney carries a documented defensive hole (43% defense, hands down, charging in head-first) and has already been knocked out and submitted doing exactly that when the fight didn't end in the first minute; and because this is the biggest cardio unknown in the sport — McKinney has never heard the scorecards in 26 fights and has never been past round 1 in the UFC, which pushes the matchup toward Green's experience and deep-water edge, a man who goes 25 minutes and wins on the cards.
The thesis is: Bobby Green wins because he's the more complete, more technical, higher-IQ fighter, tested for over a decade against the lightweight elite while McKinney has never shared the cage with a top-5 opponent; because McKinney carries a documented defensive hole (43% defense, hands down, charging in head-first) and has already been knocked out and submitted doing exactly that when the fight didn't end in the first minute; and because this is the biggest cardio unknown in the sport — McKinney has never heard the scorecards in 26 fights and has never been past round 1 in the UFC, which pushes the matchup toward Green's experience and deep-water edge, a man who goes 25 minutes and wins on the cards.
The path is Green surviving the storm of the first five minutes, making the blitz-wrestler miss and burn his gas tank, and from round 2 dictating the pace with his pocket boxing until he banks a lead or punishes a spent McKinney. It breaks down if Green's chin — 39 years old, with the Ruffy KO on the ledger — can't hold the heaviest hands he's faced since then, or if he stands still in front of McKinney and gets caught early.
Conviction
Conviction 6, a step above a coin-flip, because the thesis leans on four distinct, concrete dimensions: style (the durable, slippery boxer is the worst matchup for the one-shot hunter), level of competition (Green faced the elite for a decade, McKinney has never seen a top 5), physical and cardio (26 fights without a single decision against a 25-minute man), and the qualitative read on McKinney's 43% defensive hole, which has already been punished exactly this way by Ribovics and Duncan. What keeps the conviction at 6 and no higher is that the underdog path is the market's favored scenario: McKinney hits harder, is 8 years younger, has the reach and the fastest knockout in history, and Green's chin at 39 has already failed once against a striker of this profile. This isn't a market read — it's the opposite: the books have McKinney favored, and I'm on the dog. The edge comes from Green's craft, cardio, and experience, plus the fact that he answered the chin doubt with three straight wins, not from the line.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
If McKinney lands the hand or the head kick on Green's chin as early as round 1, the way Ruffy did in 2025, the fight ends early and the late-fade thesis never happens.
- 02
If Green accepts the firefight up close instead of using range, feints, and head movement, he plays McKinney's game and erases his own technical edge.
- 03
If age and the mileage show up at 39 and rob Green of the mobility that powers his slips and counters, the veteran becomes a stationary target.
- 04
If, even in a three-round fight (shorter than five), McKinney's cardio isn't a factor and he keeps his power into rounds 2 and 3, the bet on the blitz-wrestler fading loses steam.
Underdog Path
McKinney doesn't need an elaborate plan, he needs one shot — and it's literally what the market expects of him. He comes out exploding, forces the exchange up close or shoots the blitz takedown, and lands the heavy hand or the head kick on the chin Ruffy already cracked. It's the script of every fight he's had: immediate pressure, one-shot power, lightning finish, and a 39-year-old opponent with real mileage and a recent KO on the ledger. If Green hesitates or accepts the firefight in the first round, the night ends early, and that's why he's the betting favorite.
Required Conditions
- Land clean on Green's chin, or the head kick, in the first round, before the fight cools off
- Force the exchange up close or the blitz takedown, where his power and explosion carry the most weight
- Don't charge in so recklessly that he drops his hands and eats the counter or the kick, the mistake that cost him against Ribovics and Duncan
- Close the show early: if it goes past round 1, the never-tested cardio becomes a real risk against a 25-minute veteran
— Precedent: Ruffy vs Green (UFC 313, March 2025): an explosive one-shot striker landed a spinning kick and flatlined Green in round 1. McKinney carries equal or greater power, in the fists and the kick, and the same early-hunter profile. The warning is real, even if Green has won three times since.
Verdict
Winner
Bobby Green
Method
KO/TKO
Most Likely
- 01
Winner (underdog)
Bobby Green
Green because he's the more complete fighter, with a far higher level of competition, and he has the craft and cardio to beat a man who's never been past round 1 in the UFC. It's a pick against the market (McKinney is favored), so it's a live dog and a moderate stake. Breaks if his chin at 39 can't hold McKinney's hands early.
- 02
Duration (past R1 / over 1.5)
Fight goes past round 1
If McKinney doesn't end it in the first minute, everything tilts to Green: boxing, cardio, experience. It's the cleanest read of the fight, because McKinney's only path is the early finish. Breaks if his opening blitz connects, exactly what the market expects.
- 03
Method (market/favorite)
McKinney by R1 KO/TKO
It's the cleanest path to a McKinney win and it has to be acknowledged: fastest knockout in lightweight history, one-shot power, and Green's chin cracked by Ruffy. The market pays less because it's the expected scenario, but it's still a high-risk bet, not the main read. Breaks if Green uses range and refuses the firefight early.
Most Likely Outcome
Fight goes past round 1, moderate stake
In a fight where the read is against the market, the soundest bet isn't the winner, it's the path. McKinney's only winning plan is to end it early. If the fight survives round 1, Green's cardio, boxing, and experience take over the rest. Moderate stake because McKinney's power and speed keep the early-finish risk alive the whole way.
Stats That Matter
ZERO
the times McKinney has gone to a decision in 26 pro fights. He's never heard the scorecards
Deep water is 100% uncharted territory for him
8
McKinney UFC wins, all by first-round finish. He's never been past round 1 in the Octagon
If the early blitz misses, he steps into the unknown
53
pro fights in Green's career, against McKinney's 26. Two decades of mileage
At 39, he's the most experienced man McKinney has ever faced
The Trap
McKinney by R1 knockout
The market is on McKinney, favorite, all anchored on the fastest knockout in history and the lightning finishes. The trap is treating it as a guaranteed repeat. McKinney hits hard and early, sure, but he's a one-shot hunter who defends just 43% of strikes, drops his hands, and charges forward — and he was knocked out and submitted doing exactly that (Ribovics, Duncan) when the target didn't fall in the first minute. Betting McKinney by R1 KO has logic and it pays, but it ignores that if the knockout doesn't come early, the whole equation flips against him, against the most experienced and most durable man he's ever faced.
The market is on McKinney, favorite, all anchored on the fastest knockout in history and the lightning finishes. The trap is treating it as a guaranteed repeat. McKinney hits hard and early, sure, but he's a one-shot hunter who defends just 43% of strikes, drops his hands, and charges forward — and he was knocked out and submitted doing exactly that (Ribovics, Duncan) when the target didn't fall in the first minute. Betting McKinney by R1 KO has logic and it pays, but it ignores that if the knockout doesn't come early, the whole equation flips against him, against the most experienced and most durable man he's ever faced.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Bobby "King" Green vs Terrance "T-Wrecks" McKinney | UFC 329: McGregor vs Holloway 2 | July 11, 2026 | T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
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