10 Most Unique Submissions In UFC History
2. Suloev Stretch
Who: Aljamain Sterling vs. Cody Stamann and Zabit Magomedsharipov vs. Brandon Davis
When: UFC 228
Also known as the Banana Split, the painful looking Suloev Stretch has finished a fight three times in the UFC, the first of those being Kenny Robertson on Brock Jardine in 2013.
However, we'll be focusing on the bizarre evening of UFC 228 that saw the rare submission finish used TWICE on the same card.
It's essentially a rear-mount Knee Bar, of which Sterling and Magomedsharipov displayed perfectly.
Sterling's win came first on the Prelims, sticking to his opponent's back like a monkey.
When Stamann tried to quad pod - trying to use all four limbs to move up off the mat - Sterling simply reached down to grab one leg and just pulled it out, bringing them both falling down.
Once they'd collapsed backwards to the canvas, it's just a case of wrenching the hamstring as aggressively as you can, which can result in bones around the knee breaking if put under enough pressure for too long.
Magomedsharipov's effort was near-identical barely an hour later, tearing the leg savagely towards Davis' own hairline for a quick tap out.
Logic will tell most people that having your foot up next to your face against your own will is never going to end well.
From occurring only once in 21 years, to twice in one night, the Suloev Stretch is as brutal as it is fascinating to witness.