8. Myles Jury (15-0)
Few fighters have achieved as much in the UFC with as little fanfare as Jury, a product of the same Alliance MMA gym that houses friend and mentor Dominick Cruz. Part of that likely has to do with the roundabout path that brought Jury to the UFC; it took him two underwhelming stints on “The Ultimate Fighter” -- the first ending when Jury blew out his knee and the second with an ignominious decision loss to eventual finalist Al Iaquinta -- for the Michigan native to make his debut in the UFC proper.
The real question with Jury is not his game, which is proven and should adapt well to high-profile clashes against the division’s elite, but his personality and ability to generate interest in his fights. True stardom in MMA requires charisma, and the jury is still out on whether “Fury” can show a national audience he is worth its emotional and financial investment.
Number 7 » He is a fascinating example of the late bloomer in MMA. The former Brazilian muay Thai champion always had talent -- there was no question about that -- but the first five years of his professional career included nearly as many head-scratching losses as impressive showings.