#9 Brock Lesnar's Kimura Lock
![This move has its origins in real shootfighting, making it far more terrifying](https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=190 190w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=720 720w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=640 640w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=1045 1045w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=1200 1200w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=1460 1460w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg?w=1600 1600w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2018/03/908d2-1522469475-800.jpg 1920w)
Brock Lesnar’s approach to wrestling over the past six years has been to be as simplistic as possible. People complain that Cena only has ‘five moves of doom’, but Lesnar exemplifies this issue much more than Cena.
Lesnar uses only a handful of different moves: various strikes, the German Suplex, the Belly-to-Belly Suplex (on rare occasions), the F-5 (to end most of his matches), and the Kimura Lock as his super-finisher.
The Kimura is a more believable and realistic finisher for Lesnar because it has its origins in MMA. But Lesnar doesn’t use the F-5 all the time; he only saves it either for moments when he needs to hurt someone or send a special message, or for situations when his regular F-5 finisher can’t keep someone down.
Since the F-5 it itself one of the most protected finishers in WWE, it takes an exceptionally strong and tough person to kick out of Lesnar’s F-5. And when they do, they have the misfortune of finding themselves locked in Brock’s Kimura Lock, with little hope of escaping.