The Question: Is Ronda Rousey’s UFC 207 Media Blackout a Big Deal?

A year after being knocked out and mostly vanishing from public view, Ronda Rousey is set to reappear Friday night at UFC 207. The rest of the week, though? Well, Rousey has apparently struck a deal with UFC management to mostly avoid the media, an unp…

A year after being knocked out and mostly vanishing from public view, Ronda Rousey is set to reappear Friday night at UFC 207. The rest of the week, though? Well, Rousey has apparently struck a deal with UFC management to mostly avoid the media, an unprecedented arrangement for a UFC headliner.

Remember, it was only earlier this year when the UFC claimed a no-tolerance policy for such a blackout, blowing up its own landmark UFC 200 event by pulling Conor McGregor from the card after he balked at arriving early in Las Vegas to do media.

“I respect Conor as a fighter and I like him as a person, but you can’t decide not to show up to these things,” UFC President Dana White said at the time (h/t MMA Fighting). “You have to do it.”

Of course, things have changed radically in the UFC since then after ownership changed hands. The reshaping of the organization has seem some subtle shifts and some seismic ones. This one, however, lies somewhere in between.

On one hand, Rousey has had an immense impact on the UFC’s women’s divisions and has attained a level of fame where she probably doesn’t require a huge media push behind her. On the other hand, it seems unfair for her to have such a perk when others like McGregor received harsh penalties for even requesting alterations to the media schedule.

      

Joining me to discuss the situation is Lead MMA writer Chad Dundas.

Mike Chiappetta: I would not say that this is an important development, but it is a bizarre one. For much of her career, Rousey has been excellent with the media. She is engaging, smart and interesting. But for some reason, she seems to believe her engagement with the media played a major part in her loss to Holly Holm. Either that, or that if she can cut out those obligations, she’ll be more focused come fight time. At last that’s the idea you get if you read Ramona Shelburne’s recent piece in ESPN The Magazine.

That makes some sense, I suppose. Or at least, I can understand how she might rationalize that to herself. Most fighters are not conditioned to believe someone else could have simply outperformed them on a given day. In their minds, they have to be the best, and if they happen to lose, there must be a concrete reason they can address, tweak or nullify. And once that adjustment is put into place, everything will come back into alignment. 

Rousey seems to be taking this to the extreme. I get it. If you suffer a world-shattering loss as she did, there has to be a desire to want to captain every single part of your return the way you want, so that whether you win or lose, you will know that you were in control and that the result is solely on you.

The problem here is more of a public perception than a private crisis. Rousey had no problem courting the media—and by extension, the fans—on the come up. She had a great story, she was happy to share it, and we were happy to tell it. When she won, she exulted in the glory.

But when she lost, there was zero accountability. 

There is a small (and unfortunately loud) segment of people who revel in antagonizing the vanquished. But by and large, most people understand failure. It’s something we can all identify with, and in a way, someone who recovers from a spectacular failure is more easily romanticized than a dominant winner. By standing up and discussing her last year—her lost year—Rousey would have mostly been looked at positively.

By being a bad loser, Rousey (who also was a poor winner) removed that from the equation. There will still be those who root her on, and that’s fine. But her attitude isn’t one most people can identify with. It’s not exactly a quitter’s mentality but something like it. 

What do you think, Chad? Is this solely a media issue? Does the rest of the wider world care?

      

Chad Dundas: The knee-jerk reaction of most MMA fans will be to fire off a snarky tweet saying they don’t care whether Rousey talks to the media. Under normal circumstances, leading up to a normal fight, I probably wouldn’t care that much, either. UFC press conferences may typically be a bit more interesting than your average mainstream sports press conference, but they’re still not that interesting.

The same can be said for the cookie-cutter 10-minute pre-fight interviews the UFC usually offers to media during fight week. In both settings, it’s hard to make anything real or illuminating happen. Fighters are on autopilot, regurgitating prepared answers to stock questions, and nobody has the time or inclination to break out of the mold. It’s all just part of how the sausage gets made at this point.

But with this particular woman leading up to this particular fight, we are in fact missing out.

One of the primary storylines headed into UFC 207 is Rousey’s mental state. Arguably the most important factor leading into her clash with Nunes will be how she’s been able to rebound from the loss to Holm both physically and psychologically. 

Now we won’t have any way to know before fight night. Perhaps that’s by design, but speaking as a fight fan, I do find it slightly disappointing.

We can read it one of two ways, of course. On one hand, it’s a good sign that Rousey is eschewing doing media in order to buckle down and prepare for her comeback fight. On the other hand, perhaps it’s a sign of impending disaster that she doesn’t even have what it takes to sit through a few softball Q&A sessions before stepping back in the Octagon.

Naturally, how we’ll view it in retrospect depends on whether she wins or loses. 

If she wins, it’ll be the former. If she loses, the latter.

You know who really should care that Rousey is ditching on her press obligations, though? Nunes. Especially if she stands to get a cut of the pay-per-view money, the event’s biggest drawing card excusing herself from actually trying to sell the thing would be troubling.

What do you think, Mike. Does Nunes stand to get the short end of the stick if UFC 207 is allowed to fly beneath the radar?

      

Mike: Nunes has a right to feel slighted by the whole set of circumstances. Even though the UFC gave her “equal” treatment in the sense that she is also excused from doing the typical fight-week media, Nunes can use the press to grow her own brand and to draw further interest in herself.

If she wins Saturday, she will gain some new fans and grow awareness of her talents, but not as much as if she was involved with a push heading into the bout.

Furthermore, since most of the questions about Rousey are based on her psychological state, Nunes is being robbed of opportunities at starting the psychological warfare during in-person meetings.

While she’s not exactly a trash-talker, Nunes won’t even have the option of doing it this time around, and that’s unfair. It comes off as the UFC standing in Rousey’s corner, protecting her.

Which brings us to another, related matter: Rousey’s representation.

The former UFC bantamweight women’s champion is represented by WME-IMG. It has a vested interest in protecting her career in both MMA and beyond. It is not difficult to assume that Rousey talked to her agent, who ran it up the flagpole to the WME-IMG bosses, who signed off on what she wanted. Of course, that’s probably what happened. Agents are not in the business of saying “no” to their clients if they can help it—especially ones who generate significant income for the group.  

It’s a serious conflict of interest, and it’s unfair to the rest of the roster. It’s unfair to the fans who may want to hear more about Rousey’s mindset. But most of all, it’s unfair to Nunes. Even with Rousey’s absence, all of the collateral marketing has been based on Rousey. All of the supporting television programming this week is, too. 

She’s absent yet everywhere, but these fight replays and commercials don’t have the same impact as live words. 

The consequences of any fan reaction will be interesting to watch as they unfold. Will this kind of thing ultimately harm the Rousey brand? Will it harm the UFC? 

    

Chad: Honestly, I doubt it. Excusing Rousey from media obligations only plays inside the MMA bubble. Casual fans may not even notice, and if they do, Rousey showing up to do one two-minute satellite interview on SportsCenter or Good Morning America probably makes it all go away.

However, I do wonder how all this might decrease the overall profile of UFC 207. Already scheduled for an unorthodox Friday night broadcast in order to make room for Saturday’s New Year’s Eve, this event could use all the public awareness it can get. Now I wonder how the mainstream media will cover it, with no press conference quips or potential staredown antics to use as highlights on their newscasts.

Again, if I were Nunes, I’d be worried about that. She’s had an unbelievable 2016, first claiming the title with a win over Miesha Tate in the main event of UFC 200 and then landing Rousey’s comeback fight. This ought to be the crowning achievement of her career, and yet it feels like it might fly beneath the radar. If she’s getting a cut of the PPV money, then Rousey’s decision to blow off her press engagements could theoretically cost Nunes a heap of cash.

In the bigger picture, the point you raise about WME-IMG is a potentially troubling one. Especially considering the kerfuffle that broke out between McGregor and the UFC over the UFC 200 press conference, this does smack of new owners giving preferential treatment to their client.

Were I a UFC fighter represented by a competing firm, I’d feel uneasy about the whole thing. Remember, promoters also managing their fighters is against the law in boxing, but MMA enjoys no such federal protections.

How WME-IMG straddles that line figures to be a major storyline moving forwardone that could persist long after Rousey’s strange career has come and gone.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Question: Is Ronda Rousey’s UFC 207 Media Blackout a Big Deal?

A year after being knocked out and mostly vanishing from public view, Ronda Rousey is set to reappear Friday night at UFC 207. The rest of the week, though? Well, Rousey has apparently struck a deal with UFC management to mostly avoid the media, an unp…

A year after being knocked out and mostly vanishing from public view, Ronda Rousey is set to reappear Friday night at UFC 207. The rest of the week, though? Well, Rousey has apparently struck a deal with UFC management to mostly avoid the media, an unprecedented arrangement for a UFC headliner.

Remember, it was only earlier this year when the UFC claimed a no-tolerance policy for such a blackout, blowing up its own landmark UFC 200 event by pulling Conor McGregor from the card after he balked at arriving early in Las Vegas to do media.

“I respect Conor as a fighter and I like him as a person, but you can’t decide not to show up to these things,” UFC President Dana White said at the time (h/t MMA Fighting). “You have to do it.”

Of course, things have changed radically in the UFC since then after ownership changed hands. The reshaping of the organization has seem some subtle shifts and some seismic ones. This one, however, lies somewhere in between.

On one hand, Rousey has had an immense impact on the UFC’s women’s divisions and has attained a level of fame where she probably doesn’t require a huge media push behind her. On the other hand, it seems unfair for her to have such a perk when others like McGregor received harsh penalties for even requesting alterations to the media schedule.

      

Joining me to discuss the situation is Lead MMA writer Chad Dundas.

Mike Chiappetta: I would not say that this is an important development, but it is a bizarre one. For much of her career, Rousey has been excellent with the media. She is engaging, smart and interesting. But for some reason, she seems to believe her engagement with the media played a major part in her loss to Holly Holm. Either that, or that if she can cut out those obligations, she’ll be more focused come fight time. At last that’s the idea you get if you read Ramona Shelburne’s recent piece in ESPN The Magazine.

That makes some sense, I suppose. Or at least, I can understand how she might rationalize that to herself. Most fighters are not conditioned to believe someone else could have simply outperformed them on a given day. In their minds, they have to be the best, and if they happen to lose, there must be a concrete reason they can address, tweak or nullify. And once that adjustment is put into place, everything will come back into alignment. 

Rousey seems to be taking this to the extreme. I get it. If you suffer a world-shattering loss as she did, there has to be a desire to want to captain every single part of your return the way you want, so that whether you win or lose, you will know that you were in control and that the result is solely on you.

The problem here is more of a public perception than a private crisis. Rousey had no problem courting the media—and by extension, the fans—on the come up. She had a great story, she was happy to share it, and we were happy to tell it. When she won, she exulted in the glory.

But when she lost, there was zero accountability. 

There is a small (and unfortunately loud) segment of people who revel in antagonizing the vanquished. But by and large, most people understand failure. It’s something we can all identify with, and in a way, someone who recovers from a spectacular failure is more easily romanticized than a dominant winner. By standing up and discussing her last year—her lost year—Rousey would have mostly been looked at positively.

By being a bad loser, Rousey (who also was a poor winner) removed that from the equation. There will still be those who root her on, and that’s fine. But her attitude isn’t one most people can identify with. It’s not exactly a quitter’s mentality but something like it. 

What do you think, Chad? Is this solely a media issue? Does the rest of the wider world care?

      

Chad Dundas: The knee-jerk reaction of most MMA fans will be to fire off a snarky tweet saying they don’t care whether Rousey talks to the media. Under normal circumstances, leading up to a normal fight, I probably wouldn’t care that much, either. UFC press conferences may typically be a bit more interesting than your average mainstream sports press conference, but they’re still not that interesting.

The same can be said for the cookie-cutter 10-minute pre-fight interviews the UFC usually offers to media during fight week. In both settings, it’s hard to make anything real or illuminating happen. Fighters are on autopilot, regurgitating prepared answers to stock questions, and nobody has the time or inclination to break out of the mold. It’s all just part of how the sausage gets made at this point.

But with this particular woman leading up to this particular fight, we are in fact missing out.

One of the primary storylines headed into UFC 207 is Rousey’s mental state. Arguably the most important factor leading into her clash with Nunes will be how she’s been able to rebound from the loss to Holm both physically and psychologically. 

Now we won’t have any way to know before fight night. Perhaps that’s by design, but speaking as a fight fan, I do find it slightly disappointing.

We can read it one of two ways, of course. On one hand, it’s a good sign that Rousey is eschewing doing media in order to buckle down and prepare for her comeback fight. On the other hand, perhaps it’s a sign of impending disaster that she doesn’t even have what it takes to sit through a few softball Q&A sessions before stepping back in the Octagon.

Naturally, how we’ll view it in retrospect depends on whether she wins or loses. 

If she wins, it’ll be the former. If she loses, the latter.

You know who really should care that Rousey is ditching on her press obligations, though? Nunes. Especially if she stands to get a cut of the pay-per-view money, the event’s biggest drawing card excusing herself from actually trying to sell the thing would be troubling.

What do you think, Mike. Does Nunes stand to get the short end of the stick if UFC 207 is allowed to fly beneath the radar?

      

Mike: Nunes has a right to feel slighted by the whole set of circumstances. Even though the UFC gave her “equal” treatment in the sense that she is also excused from doing the typical fight-week media, Nunes can use the press to grow her own brand and to draw further interest in herself.

If she wins Saturday, she will gain some new fans and grow awareness of her talents, but not as much as if she was involved with a push heading into the bout.

Furthermore, since most of the questions about Rousey are based on her psychological state, Nunes is being robbed of opportunities at starting the psychological warfare during in-person meetings.

While she’s not exactly a trash-talker, Nunes won’t even have the option of doing it this time around, and that’s unfair. It comes off as the UFC standing in Rousey’s corner, protecting her.

Which brings us to another, related matter: Rousey’s representation.

The former UFC bantamweight women’s champion is represented by WME-IMG. It has a vested interest in protecting her career in both MMA and beyond. It is not difficult to assume that Rousey talked to her agent, who ran it up the flagpole to the WME-IMG bosses, who signed off on what she wanted. Of course, that’s probably what happened. Agents are not in the business of saying “no” to their clients if they can help it—especially ones who generate significant income for the group.  

It’s a serious conflict of interest, and it’s unfair to the rest of the roster. It’s unfair to the fans who may want to hear more about Rousey’s mindset. But most of all, it’s unfair to Nunes. Even with Rousey’s absence, all of the collateral marketing has been based on Rousey. All of the supporting television programming this week is, too. 

She’s absent yet everywhere, but these fight replays and commercials don’t have the same impact as live words. 

The consequences of any fan reaction will be interesting to watch as they unfold. Will this kind of thing ultimately harm the Rousey brand? Will it harm the UFC? 

    

Chad: Honestly, I doubt it. Excusing Rousey from media obligations only plays inside the MMA bubble. Casual fans may not even notice, and if they do, Rousey showing up to do one two-minute satellite interview on SportsCenter or Good Morning America probably makes it all go away.

However, I do wonder how all this might decrease the overall profile of UFC 207. Already scheduled for an unorthodox Friday night broadcast in order to make room for Saturday’s New Year’s Eve, this event could use all the public awareness it can get. Now I wonder how the mainstream media will cover it, with no press conference quips or potential staredown antics to use as highlights on their newscasts.

Again, if I were Nunes, I’d be worried about that. She’s had an unbelievable 2016, first claiming the title with a win over Miesha Tate in the main event of UFC 200 and then landing Rousey’s comeback fight. This ought to be the crowning achievement of her career, and yet it feels like it might fly beneath the radar. If she’s getting a cut of the PPV money, then Rousey’s decision to blow off her press engagements could theoretically cost Nunes a heap of cash.

In the bigger picture, the point you raise about WME-IMG is a potentially troubling one. Especially considering the kerfuffle that broke out between McGregor and the UFC over the UFC 200 press conference, this does smack of new owners giving preferential treatment to their client.

Were I a UFC fighter represented by a competing firm, I’d feel uneasy about the whole thing. Remember, promoters also managing their fighters is against the law in boxing, but MMA enjoys no such federal protections.

How WME-IMG straddles that line figures to be a major storyline moving forwardone that could persist long after Rousey’s strange career has come and gone.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Gambles, Loses Bet on Paige-Sage Combo, but Silver Linings Emerge

With a mandate to grow revenue streams while paying down the massive loan required to purchase the UFC, the organization’s new ownership group has quickly and clearly seized upon a strategy of identifying and pushing potential stars with urgency.
It is…

With a mandate to grow revenue streams while paying down the massive loan required to purchase the UFC, the organization’s new ownership group has quickly and clearly seized upon a strategy of identifying and pushing potential stars with urgency.

It is how we ended up with a network television card promoting 22-year-old Paige VanZant in a main event, 20-year-old Sage Northcutt in the co-main event, and 25-year-old Mike Perry, in just his third UFC bout.

Saturday’s UFC Fight Night on Fox was designed to set up the future, but best-laid plans seldom follow the script, and for the UFC, this one turned into disaster. If it was written on paper, it’s headed straight for the shredder.

Perry showed his inexperience by failing to make any adjustments in a clear decision loss to Alan Jouban. Northcutt flashed his usual bursts of explosion but ultimately succumbed to a Mickey Gall rear-naked choke. And VanZant barely got her engine started, getting choked out by Michelle Waterson in less than a round.

The 0-of-3 night should serve as another reminder that star-making isn’t just an inexact science; it’s alchemy.

Welcome to the fight business, WME-IMG.

Welcome to the big-time, Paige, Sage and Mike.

Too much, too soon? Maybe, although who will ever admit it?

“No, I was meant for the spotlight and I’m going to continue to be in the spotlight,” VanZant said in the event’s post-fight press conference. “I will be back and I’m gonna have the belt one day. I’m 22 years old. I have a long time. I have the best team in the world. And it’s come together as the perfect gym for me, so I’ll be back.”

Sure, she’ll be back in presence, but any momentum she’s had is clearly gone after losing—and getting dominated—in two out of her last three.

Age may be a factor in these struggles, but focus might be, too. VanZant may have enough energy to go do reality shows and potentially chase movie roles, but every day she spends out of the gym is another day the rest of the division is training to catch up to her or surpass her.

Anyone who watches with a halfway-educated eye can see the holes in her game that must be addressed. This is a time when the most improvements can be made. The mind is young and adaptable. The body is fresh and pliable. At this point of her career, she’s more tough than skillful, which is a perfectly fine starting point for a career, but a no (wo)man’s land for a UFC athlete.

And still, VanZant said that she will consider other options outside of MMA as opportunities present themselves. That’s her right, and she should certainly contemplate offers that may enrich her both financially and spiritually in ways that fighting can’t. But for her to believe she can alternate between two demanding worlds and ascend toward the championship is youthful naivete.

There isn’t a single example of any high-level fighter who’s successfully done that, let alone one who has done it on the way up the ladder.

Northcutt and Perry looking similarly green in their losses, yet after all that, the UFC really shouldn’t be faulted for its approach.

At some point, you have to put the machine behind potential stars.

MMA is a star-run business, and you can’t get the masses behind anyone without pushing them out into the world to see how they’re received.

VanZant and Northcutt had already begun receiving a push under the previous regime, so last night was simply a continuation. Perry was added to the mix due in equal parts to his early UFC performances (two knockouts) and the kind of brash, subversive traits that often click in a counterculture sport.

While the night is definitively a setback for UFC, there are silver linings.

Because they matched their favored sons (and daughters) with reasonably marketable opponents, the victors got the rub.

Waterson came off looking great, first by dominating VanZant and then by being gracious and charming in victory, noting that her daughter told her she’d be her favorite fighter upon winning, so she couldn’t lose.

Gall has been particularly adept at drawing attention to himself, talking his way into a UFC contract, parlaying that into a shot against CM Punk, then engineering a matchup with Northcutt. But on a tough night for UFC, even he had his first whiff, saying he was going to move down to lightweight and calling out Dan Hardy, a career welterweight who has not fought in four years. Later, he compounded the mistake by breaking the fourth wall and talking about his “character” as a “bad guy.”

Still, at least he’s been proactive, which is exactly the point.

Young fighters should be taking note of the UFC’s approach and of the fighters they are getting behind. Anyone who makes the right kind of noise gets noticed. Most who raise their hands for fights get called upon. There is a path to writing your own ticket now, or at least having a more active hand in charting your path.

On Saturday night, the UFC lost its Paige and Sage gamble, but it showed it will aggressively push the talent it identifies as potential stars. For the fighters, that’s meaningful information. For the ones who play their hands right, the line to the top has just gotten shorter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Gambles, Loses Bet on Paige-Sage Combo, but Silver Linings Emerge

With a mandate to grow revenue streams while paying down the massive loan required to purchase the UFC, the organization’s new ownership group has quickly and clearly seized upon a strategy of identifying and pushing potential stars with urgency.
It is…

With a mandate to grow revenue streams while paying down the massive loan required to purchase the UFC, the organization’s new ownership group has quickly and clearly seized upon a strategy of identifying and pushing potential stars with urgency.

It is how we ended up with a network television card promoting 22-year-old Paige VanZant in a main event, 20-year-old Sage Northcutt in the co-main event, and 25-year-old Mike Perry, in just his third UFC bout.

Saturday’s UFC Fight Night on Fox was designed to set up the future, but best-laid plans seldom follow the script, and for the UFC, this one turned into disaster. If it was written on paper, it’s headed straight for the shredder.

Perry showed his inexperience by failing to make any adjustments in a clear decision loss to Alan Jouban. Northcutt flashed his usual bursts of explosion but ultimately succumbed to a Mickey Gall rear-naked choke. And VanZant barely got her engine started, getting choked out by Michelle Waterson in less than a round.

The 0-of-3 night should serve as another reminder that star-making isn’t just an inexact science; it’s alchemy.

Welcome to the fight business, WME-IMG.

Welcome to the big-time, Paige, Sage and Mike.

Too much, too soon? Maybe, although who will ever admit it?

“No, I was meant for the spotlight and I’m going to continue to be in the spotlight,” VanZant said in the event’s post-fight press conference. “I will be back and I’m gonna have the belt one day. I’m 22 years old. I have a long time. I have the best team in the world. And it’s come together as the perfect gym for me, so I’ll be back.”

Sure, she’ll be back in presence, but any momentum she’s had is clearly gone after losing—and getting dominated—in two out of her last three.

Age may be a factor in these struggles, but focus might be, too. VanZant may have enough energy to go do reality shows and potentially chase movie roles, but every day she spends out of the gym is another day the rest of the division is training to catch up to her or surpass her.

Anyone who watches with a halfway-educated eye can see the holes in her game that must be addressed. This is a time when the most improvements can be made. The mind is young and adaptable. The body is fresh and pliable. At this point of her career, she’s more tough than skillful, which is a perfectly fine starting point for a career, but a no (wo)man’s land for a UFC athlete.

And still, VanZant said that she will consider other options outside of MMA as opportunities present themselves. That’s her right, and she should certainly contemplate offers that may enrich her both financially and spiritually in ways that fighting can’t. But for her to believe she can alternate between two demanding worlds and ascend toward the championship is youthful naivete.

There isn’t a single example of any high-level fighter who’s successfully done that, let alone one who has done it on the way up the ladder.

Northcutt and Perry looking similarly green in their losses, yet after all that, the UFC really shouldn’t be faulted for its approach.

At some point, you have to put the machine behind potential stars.

MMA is a star-run business, and you can’t get the masses behind anyone without pushing them out into the world to see how they’re received.

VanZant and Northcutt had already begun receiving a push under the previous regime, so last night was simply a continuation. Perry was added to the mix due in equal parts to his early UFC performances (two knockouts) and the kind of brash, subversive traits that often click in a counterculture sport.

While the night is definitively a setback for UFC, there are silver linings.

Because they matched their favored sons (and daughters) with reasonably marketable opponents, the victors got the rub.

Waterson came off looking great, first by dominating VanZant and then by being gracious and charming in victory, noting that her daughter told her she’d be her favorite fighter upon winning, so she couldn’t lose.

Gall has been particularly adept at drawing attention to himself, talking his way into a UFC contract, parlaying that into a shot against CM Punk, then engineering a matchup with Northcutt. But on a tough night for UFC, even he had his first whiff, saying he was going to move down to lightweight and calling out Dan Hardy, a career welterweight who has not fought in four years. Later, he compounded the mistake by breaking the fourth wall and talking about his “character” as a “bad guy.”

Still, at least he’s been proactive, which is exactly the point.

Young fighters should be taking note of the UFC’s approach and of the fighters they are getting behind. Anyone who makes the right kind of noise gets noticed. Most who raise their hands for fights get called upon. There is a path to writing your own ticket now, or at least having a more active hand in charting your path.

On Saturday night, the UFC lost its Paige and Sage gamble, but it showed it will aggressively push the talent it identifies as potential stars. For the fighters, that’s meaningful information. For the ones who play their hands right, the line to the top has just gotten shorter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC’s Hasty Title Addition Yet Another Slight Against Cris ‘Cyborg’ Justino

Cris “Cyborg” Justino is the best featherweight women’s fighter in the world. Of that there is no dispute. It’s been the same story several years running, and it’s not going to change even after the UFC puts a new belt around the wais…

Cris “Cyborg” Justino is the best featherweight women’s fighter in the world. Of that there is no dispute. It’s been the same story several years running, and it’s not going to change even after the UFC puts a new belt around the waist of either Holly Holm or Germaine de Randamie at UFC 208 in February.

This is a crowning of convenience over merit—the trickle-down effect of compounding mistakes with little accountability.

It’s a shame for Cyborg, and it’s a shame for the fight’s eventual winner, who can take pride in their win yet walk away with the full understanding of their place in the division.

How the UFC got here—and how they somehow managed to exclude Cyborg from the proceedings—is a textbook case of how the promotion’s fly-by-the-seat-of-their-pants bookings and scattershot focus lead to unfortunate consequences, as well as how they spin the narrative to reflect blame away from themselves and on to the athletes.

Remember, this is the promotion that repeatedly told us that there wasn’t enough talent to begin a featherweight division as a rationale for repeatedly pressuring Cyborg to cut down to 135 pounds, and then when they realized she couldn’t do it, pushing her into meaningless 140-pound catch weights. 

She did so as recently as late September, taking fans through the process of her horrific weight cut in a way that no other fighter ever has. At the time, UFC president Dana White reaffirmed that the organization had no plans of adding additional women’s weight classes.

“As far as a heavier division, no I don’t see that happening,” he told Globo (h/t MMA Fighting). “I don’t see that happening any time soon.”

“Any time soon” lasted about two months, culminating in a rushed pairing of two fighters who have spent almost the entirety of their careers as bantamweights, and one of which (Holm) is on a two-fight losing streak.

So how did we get here?

To give you a reminder of how one completely unrelated thing can affect another in the UFC, remember that it was just over two weeks ago when UFC light-heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier withdrew from UFC 206, beginning a domino effect that ended with Conor McGregor being stripped of his featherweight belt. 

That chain went like this: With Cormier out of the pay-per-view, a replacement headliner was needed. All the other champions were either scheduled or unavailable, and with the UFC’s back against the wall, they realized they could strip McGregor of one of his two belts, create an interim belt for the featherweight division—even though an interim belt already existed—and with a “title fight” atop the card, Voila, instant credibility is restored.

It was a ridiculous game of cause-and-effect in the name of business, and the same thing is now playing out again.

Within the last few weeks, the UFC has canceled events in The Philippines and California, the latter of which was a scheduled January 2017 pay-per-view. With the heavily leveraged deal that was struck by the new ownership team, the promotion can’t cancel events and expect to make its aggressive revenue targets, so they broke open the emergency glass and pulled another belt out of thin air.

Cyborg told ESPN’s Brett Okamoto (h/t ABC News) on Tuesday that after her difficult weight cut, she wanted to wait until March, but the UFC wasn’t having any part of a four-week delay. They had an event to fill. 

White told ESPN:

We offered three fights, and she turned them all down. This is a business. I had two girls who wanted to fight for the 145-pound title. This is the pros. If you play for the Patriots, you don’t sit around and say, “I don’t feel like playing this weekend.”

We brought her in because she said she could make 135 pounds. When she couldn’t, the weight cut was too hard, we created the 145-pound division—and she still doesn’t want to fight.

To White, taking care of your health is apparently equal to not wanting to fight, never mind the sacrifices she made for the organization in 2016.

Anyone who doesn’t think there’s more to the story here is blissfully naive. Remember how the UFC has huge revenue targets to meet in 2017? It will also start shopping for a new TV deal, seeking a reported four-fold increase to $450 million per year, according to John Ourand, Liz Mullen and staff writers of Sports Business Journal, so it’s crucial to have a monster year. 

Holm vs. de Randamie is not going to do huge business, but it can certainly set the stage for something that will. 

Remember, Ronda Rousey returns later this month. If Rousey beats Nunes, suddenly the UFC has the possibility of sticking out the two-division champion possibility in front of her. Rousey recently said on The Ellen DeGeneres Show that she was contemplating retirement. She’s still the second-biggest star in the promotion, so it would completely make sense to try to line up Rousey for the opportunity, whether it was against Holm (best-case scenario), Cyborg or de Randamie, and watch the cash-machine start ringing.

Let’s go back in time and remember that when the UFC established its first women’s division, it simply handed Rousey a title belt and moved on from there. Sure, Rousey went on to be an excellent champion, but at the time, she had all of one Strikeforce title defense on her resume.

By comparison, Cyborg held the Strikeforce and Invicta belts for a combined five-plus years, has been universally considered the best featherweight for longer than that and hasn’t tasted defeat in over a decade.

Yes, she tested positive for a steroid several years ago, and yes, she has occasionally made things hard on herself with her public grievances, but consider the entirety of her record against the hoops that she’s been made to jump through and the UFC’s treatment of her—White once publicly mocked her, saying she “looked like Wanderlei Silva in a dress and heels,”—and you’ll have at least part of the context behind this decision. The rest comes from the UFC’s blind ambition and an insatiable appetite for cash that must be fed.

To be clear, the machine stops for no one. Lesson by lesson, Cyborg has learned that, and even if she’s had her hopes dashed yet again, at least she can go to sleep today, tomorrow and on the night of UFC 208 with the full understanding that new title belt be damned, she’s still the best in the world.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Question: Is Sage Northcutt vs. Mickey Gall Wasting a Prospect?

With a different set of life circumstances, Sage Northcutt and Mickey Gall could top the marquee of a made-for-TV movie—probably about fraternity brothers at war with football players over some German foreign-exchange sisters.
Instead of being on…

With a different set of life circumstances, Sage Northcutt and Mickey Gall could top the marquee of a made-for-TV movieprobably about fraternity brothers at war with football players over some German foreign-exchange sisters.

Instead of being on the same side, they’ll square off this Saturday at UFC Fight Night VanZant vs. Waterson in a matchup that is more about star-building than contender-building.

To be blunt, the pairing doesn‘t make much sense. Northcutt has gone unbeaten as a lightweight in the UFC but lost his one start at welterweight. Why, then, would he move up again in order to face the naturally larger Gall? No good reason, other than they’re a pair of guys who have managed to build a bit of name recognition despite little UFC experience.

In today’s WME-IMG-owned UFC world, matching popularity levels is enough.

And to be candid, as compelling pairings go, there’s something theremostly because it’s weird. After all, no one has any idea how good either of these guys can be.

Northcutt lost the first time he got dragged into deep water in the UFC, but he’s still just 20 years old. And Gall’s Octagon wins over Mike Jackson and CM Punk feature arguably the two most unqualified UFC fighters in the modern era.

So this thing has the possibility of being campy and fun, and for a bout with two guys well outside of the rankings, that sounds enjoyable. But is it fair to the fighters? And what does the winner ultimately get out of it? Bleacher Report MMA Lead Writer Chad Dundas joins me to discuss the fight and its ramifications.

       

Mike Chiappetta: According to the folks at OddsShark, Gall is a slight favorite to win. To be honest, no one has any idea how this thing will play out. Gall’s UFC opponents have been so inept at MMA that they’re simply useless as barometers.

Still, you can see certain characteristics when he fights.

He’s aggressive, comfortable on the ground and seems to have a finishing instinct. Those are good traits, but we may soon discover they are matched or exceeded. It’s just impossible to know right now.

Anyway, my interest is not just regarding the result but also how we got here. I question whether it’s worth guaranteeing a loss on the record of one of these guys you’ve put marketing dollars behind at this early stage of his career.

Moreover, I question whether this matchup made sense for Northcutt in any way. 

He lost at 170 pounds to Bryan Barberena and then headed right back down to 155 to fight (and eventually beat) Enrique Marin. Shouldn’t he have to pick a division? The UFC hasn’t historically let young fighters jump between classes, and for Northcutt, taking a match against a bigger man seems an unnecessary risk. If he loses, he’s suddenly 1-2 in his last three fights. 

I do realize that we often tend to put the UFC in no-win positions, and maybe we should applaud its risky matchmaking here, but I just don’t see the reason to push a 20-year-old to fight up a weight class unless it’s something he demanded.

How about you, Chad? Do you think this is a wise decision for Northcutt and the UFC?

         

Chad Dundas: I guess it’ll turn out to be a wise decision if he wins.

How’s that for expert analysis?

In a weird way, this is a fight that simultaneously makes no sense and yet provides each guy with a kind of interesting opportunity. 

Despite the fact that Northcutt will be making his fifth appearance inside the Octagon, Gall actually shapes up as his highest-profile opponent. I realize we’re painting in almost indistinguishable shades of gray here, but for Northcutt to move up to 170 pounds and defeat the man who made a small but impressive splash undressing CM Punk, that might be considered a halfway-meaningful signpost.

For Gall, it gives him the chance to derail a second of the UFC’s pet projects in consecutive fights. He may have gotten a nice rub off the Punk win, but as you mentioned, we have no idea what that victory really means.

If he can go out there and stomp a mudhole in Northcutt, too? Well, it would give him an easy talking point—“Hey Dana, keep sending me your guys!”—and could conceivably go a little ways toward proving he’ll be a quality UFC fighter.

And to be honest with you? I kind of like Gall here. He ought to be bigger than Northcutt and is strongest where Super Sage is weak: on the ground.

Heck, Northcutt damn near got submitted by Marin during the early portion of their fight, and we have at least some reason to believe Gall is just as capable as Marin on the mat. So put me down for Gall via submission—probably another rear-naked choke—in the first round.

In the bigger picture, Mike, am I wrong to think that using Paige VanZant vs. Michelle Waterson and Northcutt vs. Gall as the main and co-main events of a UFC Fight Night event means the UFC has figured out exactly what kind of product these “big” Fox events are?

And that maybe they’re not quite the high-profile boons we once thought they might be? 

       

Mike: That’s an interesting question. To me, it suggests that Fox is focusing on the entertainment part of the sport, which is something it doesn’t always have the luxury of doing when it comes to the scheduling of other sports.

Some of that works out well. For example, counting January’s UFC Fight Night show starring Valentina Shevchenko and Julianna Pena, Fox will have featured women’s fights as headliners in three of its last four events. That’s the kind of opportunity MMA should be proud of.

On the other hand, we get some confounding matchups, like Northcutt-Gall. I see its allure from a matchmaker-needing-to-fill-out-a-card perspective, but what’s the endgame?

If Northcutt wins, is he now officially a welterweight? Because that division is murderous, and that move is probably not best for his development. And if he goes back down to lightweight, what was the point in the first place?

I guess we just have to shrug and give props to Gall. When 2016 rang in, this guy was a complete nobody in the MMA world, and by the end of the year, he will have had a pay-per-view bout with CM Punk and a fight on national television against Northcutt.

In all honesty, I think the best outcome here for the UFC is Gall winning, as he seems mouthy enough to call out his next challenge and keep building his name in the process.

Other fighters should take note of his path and think about emulating it.

Chad, if you’re the UFC brass, and you’re secretly rooting for one of these young gents to seize the moment, which one has the greatest potential to turn into a cash cow?

           

Chad: The UFC has seemed very high on Northcutt, perhaps hoping he can offer the same sort of plucky, blond appeal as VanZant. He seems like the sort of young, positive and energetically religious guy combat sports fans will either cheer for or really, really want to see get beat up.

Either way, he’ll probably go on being one of the UFC’s chosen oneswin, lose or draw this weekend.

For that reason, perhaps this shapes up as a more important fight for Gall.

He’s less established than Northcutt and has thus far been sort of a self-made man. He talked his way off Dana White‘s Lookin‘ for a Fight internet reality show and into the fight with Punk. Then he talked himself into this bout with Northcutt.

The UFC historically likes a self-promoter, and Gall has been nothing if not that, but the company also has a whole lot less invested in his success than it does in Northcutt‘s. For that reason, it’s easier for me to imagine Gall slipping back into obscurity with a loss here.

The stakes, I think, are naturally higher for him.

Any way you slice it, however, this is a strange fight. It’s yet another in a line of UFC attractions that reminds me we’re a long way from the halcyon days of competition-based matchmaking and pure sport promotion. 

There was a time during the evolution of this sport when neither Gall nor Northcutt would’ve gotten a sniff at the UFC at this stage in their careers.

Putting a couple of good-looking but green guys on national television to let the chips fall where they may? That’s the new world order in the UFC. To be honest, I’m still getting used to it.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com