Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney on Spike TV Deal: “It’s Opened Up a Lot of Doors”

Bellator Fighting Championships has been waiting since late 2011 to make their debut on Spike TV. Next Thursday, it’s finally happening. CEO Bjorn Rebney is excited, if not a little anxious. “It was probably a longer time than some of us want…

Bellator Fighting Championships has been waiting since late 2011 to make their debut on Spike TV. Next Thursday, it’s finally happening. 

CEO Bjorn Rebney is excited, if not a little anxious. 

“It was probably a longer time than some of us wanted,” Rebney said at a media conference call, at which Bleacher Report was present. 

However, Rebney saw the silver lining in the contractually obligated MTV2 clouds that kept his promotion away from Spike TV in 2012. “Just a lot of time to prep, a lot of time to get ready, a lot of time to do it right. What you’re gonna see next Thursday night on Spike at 10:00 is the best of what we have,” he said. 

Rebney is referring to several things when he says “best of what we have.” There are, of course, the fights and fighters. There are two title fights on the card. Michael Chandler will defend his lightweight title against Rick Hawn, while Pat Curran will attempt to keep his featherweight title from the hands of Patricio “Pitbull” Freire.

However, there’s also the rarely-thought-of back end of an MMA television production. It’s there that Spike TV is making a huge difference, according to Rebney

“It is a different looking show,” said Rebney.

Bellator‘s Spike TV debut will display “a really great television production in terms of everything from graphics, to sound, to production enhancements we’ve been going through over the last couple of months,” he said. 

“It’ll be in HD everywhere across the country that you want to watch it, in 100 million homes…The difference between SD and HD is night and day,” he said.

But clearer, brighter production values aren’t all the Spike TV debut promises to deliver. Rebney was sure to note this, saying that Bellator on Spike TV would have “a new graphics package, new opens, and new feature pieces that we’re shooting with home follows where we’ve been going into the gym with Rick [Hawn] and going into the Gym with Pat [Curran] and Mike [Chandler] and Patricio [Freire] etc.”

Gone are the days of Bellator‘s dark, dreary production values that made you feel like you were watching a fight going on in some dingy, bush-league venue.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Spike TV has had an impact for Bellator in that area as well. 

“When you have a partner like Spike, it opens up a lot of doors,” Rebney said. “But with the Spike alliance, from a sponsorship perspective, from a casino perspective, from a venue perspective, international and on and on, It’s opened up door after door after door…it’s opened up a lot of opportunities for us at bigger venues in more prolific areas.” 

Rebney elaborated: 

It’s really about fights and it’s about the push and it’s about the branding that opens up those doors. Also it’s the 10:00 start. Look at the events we’re talking about, Albuquerque, Dallas, the greater southern California market. Those were not available opportunities to us when we had an 8:00 start, because for the west coast you’re talking about a 5:00 live to TV. And on a weeknight on a Thursday night, that wouldn’t fly. Now with a 10:00 start coming off of [TNA Impact Wrestling], you’ve got a 7:00 live to TV on the west coast. So it works perfectly for us. It’s opened up doors to us in hotbeds of mixed martial arts. It’s opened up a lot of doors to us that weren’t open in the past based on timing and based on the Spike partnership that we got.

The MMA world has less than a week to see if his talk has any substance to it. Rebney himself, however, is practically giddy thinking about the event. 

“We have done 84 events over the last four years and I can tell you with all truth and sincerity I’ve never been more excited about sitting cageside than I am for next Thursday’s premier event on Spike,” he said.

Bellator 85—their inaugural event on Spike TV—will take place on January 17th. It is headlined by a lightweight title fight between champion Mike Chandler and challenger Rick Hawn. The Bellator featherweight title will also be contested when champion Pat Curran meets Patricio “Pitbull” Freire.

 

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Rousimar Palhares and Joey Beltran Fail UFC on FX 6 Drug Tests

According to MMAweekly.com, both Rousimar Palhares and Joey Beltran have failed their UFC on FX 6 drug tests.Beltran tested positive for the banned anabolic steroid nandrolone. His UFC on FX 6 win over Igor Pokrajac has been changed to a no-c…

According to MMAweekly.com, both Rousimar Palhares and Joey Beltran have failed their UFC on FX 6 drug tests.

Beltran tested positive for the banned anabolic steroid nandrolone. His UFC on FX 6 win over Igor Pokrajac has been changed to a no-contest. He has also been hit with a nine-month suspension. 

Had he not failed his drug test, the “win” over Pokrajac would’ve been Beltran’s first light heavyweight victory in the UFC. 

While Palhares didn’t test positive for any anabolic steroids, his test did display elevated levels of testosterone—testosterone that didn’t help him avoid a KO loss to Hector Lombard. Palhares, too, has been suspended for nine months.

UFC officials had this to say on the matter:

The UFC organization has a strict, consistent policy against the use of any illegal and/or performance-enhancing drugs, stimulants or masking agents.

Both athletes have agreed to serve a nine-month suspension retroactive to December 14. They must pass a drug test upon completion of the suspension before receiving clearance to compete again.

The UFC uncovering cheats shows they are capable of keeping their own house in order. After all, UFC on FX 6 took place in Australia, which means that drug testing was the work of UFC officials rather than of any athletic commission. 

If the UFC plans to do even more work overseas, their testing will need to be stern and consistent. Catching two guilty fighters shows they have the abilities to do just that.

 

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Dana White: MMA Is ‘the Safest Sport in the World, Fact’

UFC president Dana White has proclaimed that his organization is safer than the NFL. Furthermore, he said that MMA as a whole is the world’s safest sport. It seems ironic to think that a sport with choke holds, elbows, knees, kicks, joint locks an…

UFC president Dana White has proclaimed that his organization is safer than the NFL. Furthermore, he said that MMA as a whole is the world’s safest sport. 

It seems ironic to think that a sport with choke holds, elbows, knees, kicks, joint locks and strikes is the least hazardous, but White doesn’t seem to think so. 

White told MMAMania the following: 

Concussion is a huge dilemma right now for the NFL. Here’s the difference between the UFC and the NFL as far as concussions are concerned. First of all, if you get a concussion, if you get knocked out or you get hurt whatsoever in the UFC, three months suspension. You are on suspension for three months and you cannot come back until you are cleared by a doctor. You can’t have any contact whatsoever. In the NFL, you’re not going to lose Tom Brady for three months, man. You lose Tom Brady for three months and your whole season is wiped out. So, the UFC, listen, we don’t hide from it, it’s a contact sport and that’s what these guys do, (is) much safer. In the 20-year history of the UFC, it will be 20 years in November, there has never been a death or a serious injury. Never been a death or serious injury in 20 years because we go above and beyond when it comes to the safety of these guys. When you know you have two healthy athletes getting ready to compete, they get the proper medical attention before and after, it’s the safest sport in the world, fact.

White is certainly correct about the perils of getting a concussion in the NFL. There are no medical suspensions issued by athletic commissions to protect football players. They simply get concussed, and then come back some weeks later for a new round of brain trauma. 

However, his disquisition on concussions and safety reeks of Dana White the promoter. That is, the diatribe is partly triumphalist hot air. 

Yes, it’s true that there hasn’t been a death in the UFC’s Octagon, but there have been deaths in MMA. And the UFC can tow the “we’re safe, we don’t have athletes who wind up with long-term brain injuries” line because the company is so young. 

It was founded in 1993, but the early days didn’t feature competitors that fought for decades. Some did, but others did not. For example, initial UFC mainstay Royce Gracie only fought 12 times in the 1990s.

The UFC wasn’t the sprawling juggernaut it is now. There weren’t as many “professional” MMA fighters then. 

Also, the early days of the UFC didn’t have gloves. 

This seems like it’d make the sport safer but, in reality, it’s the opposite. How many fighters were knocked out cold from strikes in the old days? The most prominent KO was when Tank Abbott fought John Matua at UFC 6. And what was Abbott wearing? Gloves. 

It was made evident early on that punching someone in the head with bare hands wasn’t the most efficient way to win.

Keith Hackney did that at UFC 3 against Emmanuel Yarborough and walked away with a broken hand for his efforts. He got the “W” but couldn’t continue in the tournament. Meanwhile, grapplers like Gracie took people down, choked them out, and usually walked away just fine. 

Adding gloves to “regulate” the sport made punching people in the face safer for a fighter’s hands, and let knockouts come in droves.

It wasn’t until Dana White and his financial backers, the Fertitta Brothers, purchased the company 2001 that it started to aggressively expand.

White and Co. have only been at the helm for 12-odd years. The initial cadre of full-time fighters has evolved into an entire generation of them.

Still, we haven’t had enough time to see swaths of battered athletes retire and grow old. MMA is safe, yes, and the UFC does take precautions to protect its fighters, true. But calling the sport “the safest sport in the world” is errant hyperbole. 

 

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Report: Ronda Rousey Has a Six-Fight UFC Contract

The Ronda Rousey contract conundrum is showing no signs of slowing. Now, Sports Illustrated is reporting that the media misreported the amount of fights on Rousey’s contract; it’s a six-fight deal, not an eight-fight one.This isn’t the first time …

The Ronda Rousey contract conundrum is showing no signs of slowing. Now, Sports Illustrated is reporting that the media misreported the amount of fights on Rousey‘s contract; it’s a six-fight deal, not an eight-fight one.

This isn’t the first time there was conflict over Rousey‘s UFC deal.

First, her pay was reported to be $75,000 to show and $75,000 to win. If true, this would dwarf the paychecks for many a fighter. The news caused quite a stir among fans, especially since Rousey would be making more than six times as much her opponent Liz Carmouche, who is supposedly only making $12,000 to show and $12,000 to win.

UFC president Dana White was his usual livid self when he heard the rumors.

“[M]ma interviews whoever the hell they are is full of s***,” he said on the famed MMA message board, The Underground. 

One can only wonder what Dana White will have to think of Sports Illustrated’s recent report, especially since it implies that Rousey will seek even more money from the UFC as time goes on.  

“Rousey’s team wanted the shorter deal,” the anonymous source told Sports Illustrated. “Her camp believes her celebrity—and thus, earning power—will skyrocket with each win. The greater her popularity, the more leverage Rousey will have to command more money. The shorter contract will allow her to renegotiate and cash in more quickly.”

MMA conspiracy theorists might attribute Rousey‘s desire for a shorter contract to wanting to go the Hollywood route. Why risk getting brutalized when you can quit after fighting six people and then be a movie star for the rest of your days?

All we know for sure is that the Ronda Rousey saga has six more fights to unfold. And if there’s been this much drama before she’s even stepped into the Octagon, it’s going to be quite a ride.

 

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Prominent MMA Coach Greg Jackson Addresses His Critics

Famed MMA coach Greg Jackson doesn’t care what you think about him or his stratagems. He’s in the business of winning and coaching, not pleasing your or anyone else, including UFC president Dana White. “I think it’s been popular (to bash Jackson-W…

Famed MMA coach Greg Jackson doesn’t care what you think about him or his stratagems. He’s in the business of winning and coaching, not pleasing your or anyone else, including UFC president Dana White. 

“I think it’s been popular (to bash Jackson-Winkeljohn) for the past five years,” he told MMAjunkie.com. “I think that comes with success. I think if you have a lot of success, there are going to be people that don’t like what you do.”

Jackson is correct. He hasn’t been the most popular figure in the sport, especially since UFC welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre sought Jackson’s tutelage and became a “boring” fighter who couldn’t finish fights.

However, there are many other fighters under the Jackson-Winkeljohn banner who fans claim that Jackson “ruined.’ For example, Jackson detractors use Clay Guida’s nigh-unwatchable performance against Gray Maynard as evidence of what’s sometimes called “The Greg Jackson Effect.”

This supposed phenomenon is when an entertaining fighter starts training at Jackson’s camp and then becomes a point-fighter who never attempts to finish and just seeks to game plan his way to a decision victory. 

Greg Jackson’s image was further tarnished by the UFC 151 fiasco, where Jackson told UFC light heavyweight champ Jon Jones not to take a fight against Chael Sonnen on short notice, prompting the cancellation of the event.

Jackson tried to justify his advice to Jones by saying:

It was actually three days notice; it’s not eight days notice because you don’t train the last week of a fight camp. That’s when you do media and weight cutting; there’s no real training going on there. When I was asked if fighting Sonnen for a world title on three days notice was a smart idea, I said no.

UFC president Dana White, however, wasn’t buying it. He referred to Greg Jackson as “a [expletive] sport killer”, among other nasty things.

But Jackson doesn’t put too much stock in the opinions of others. “People don’t have to agree with my decisions either, but they are not in my position. They don’t have to deal with things I deal with. They can disagree with what I say, but I believe in our team,” he said. 

Disagree with his tactics all you want. What difference does it make to him or his stable of athletes? He’ll keep coaching and his fighters will keep winning. 

 

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UFC Helps Fuel TV to Grow Viewers by More Than 100 Percent

Fuel TV’s partnership with the UFC has resulted in a banner year for the TV network; their prime time viewership increased 164 percent and their total daytime viewership increased 122 percent.Fuel TV also finished first in year-to-year percentage growt…

Fuel TV’s partnership with the UFC has resulted in a banner year for the TV network; their prime time viewership increased 164 percent and their total daytime viewership increased 122 percent.

Fuel TV also finished first in year-to-year percentage growth in the following categories: households, total viewers and men ages 18-49. All other ad-supported cable networks were left in the dust.

“2012 has been an incredible year for FUEL TV,” said Executive Vice President and General Manager of Fuel TV, George Greenberg in a recently issued press release. “We are excited to see the extraordinary viewership growth month after month.”

Greenberg attributed Fuel’s rapacious growth in 2012 to the UFC and its fans. 

“Driven by the power of the Ultimate Fighting Championship and its passionate and loyal fan base, we have seen unbelievable increases in all demos throughout the year,” he said. “We know the trend will continue in 2013. The UFC product is without a doubt the major league of MMA and you cannot find this quality of fights anywhere else.”

In the face of such success, it seems odd to think that fans and pundits initially had reservations about “burying” so much of the UFC product on a network that so few people knew about. Can you honestly say that you had heard of Fuel TV before the UFC signed its seven-year deal with Fox in August 2011?

The prevailing school of thought was that Fox was using the UFC’s size and brand recognition to boost the fledgling Fuel TV network, while giving the UFC occasional exposure on FX and Fox (as well as an average of 100 million dollars a year) to make it worth their while. 

The numbers show that Fox’s gambit worked. The UFC has brought unprecedented growth and success to the channel. 

Of course, cynics can (and likely will) argue that Fuel TV was so tiny and insignificant that the only place it could go was up. 

We’ll have to wait until the end of 2013 to see which side—the cynics or the triumphalists—have the right of it.

 

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