Jon Jones, Daniel Cormier Fined by NAC for UFC 178 Media Day Brawl

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and 205-pound top contender Daniel Cormier appeared before the Nevada Athletic Commission to discuss their August brawl at a press event. Both fighters received modest punishments that ensures their fight will s…

UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and 205-pound top contender Daniel Cormier appeared before the Nevada Athletic Commission to discuss their August brawl at a press event. Both fighters received modest punishments that ensures their fight will still go down in Las Vegas, Nevada at UFC 182 on Jan. 3rd. The entire hearing was broadcasted live on UFC Fight Pass.

Jones appeared first, and was quiet and repentant in talking with the Commission, accepting blame for the brawl and basically asked for leniency. In light of Jones’ honesty and claims that he lost his much-hyped sponsorship with Nike due to the brawl (and also had another major sponsor leave the bargaining table), he was given a $50,000 fine and 40 hours of community service.

Jones was quick to take to Twitter afterwards, shrugging off the fine, but expressing concerns regarding how the community service may affect his camp:

Cormier, meanwhile, was slightly less repentant as he largely placed blame on Jones for the altercation for both the initial aggression in touching foreheads and then throwing the punch that set the situation off. Accordingly, he received a lesser penalty with a $9,000 fine (10-percent of his guaranteed purse) and 20 hours of community service:

For those that don’t remember, Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier had one of the biggest press conference brawls in MMA history back in August.

 

The scuffle saw Jon Jones shove UFC Senior Director of Public Relations off the back of the stage and throw a punch at Cormier. From there, the two light heavyweights fell off the back themselves and threw punches before being pulled apart, before Cormier threw his shoe at Jones. Jones then got back onto the stage and yelled. From there, the two had a heated exchange off-camera (they believed) following an interview on ESPN.

Unsurprisingly, the Nevada State Athletic Commission offered a slap on the wrist for Jones and Cormier that left the date and place for the fight untouched. Former light heavyweight and middleweight title contender Chael Sonnen was recently suspended for two years, effectively ending his career, following a failed drug test. Belfort, meanwhile, was offered a faux suspension that still afforded him the opportunity for a December title fight opposite Chris Weidman in Las Vegas.

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