UFC boss Dana White gifted Nelk’s Kyle Forgeard $250,000 in cash.
Dana White is a wealthy man, and he just gave his rich YouTuber friend some cold hard cash as a birthday gift.
In a video posted by Kyle Forgeard, who is one of the founders of Nelk, the UFC boss was seen excitedly watching as the YouTuber opened his birthday gift of $250,000 in cash.
“What the f—k??” Forgeard reacted to the big bag of cash inside. “No. Holy f—k! That’s f—ked bro.”
Uncle @danawhite just gave me $250,000 for my birthday.. pic.twitter.com/noH34JF8zY
— KYLE (@KyleForgeard) July 12, 2022
Whether it’s his mega-mansion built after demolishing four other Las Vegas mansions or being a self-described “degenerate” gambler with million dollar bets, White is obviously free to spend his own money however he pleases.
With low fighter pay being a controversial issue with the UFC though, flexing that wealth on social media naturally won’t get the best reaction from most people. Here are just a few of the responses to the tweet, which included a former UFC contender:
When we starting the union bois https://t.co/gqZkYAPOCe
— Louis Smolka (@LouisSmolkaMMA) July 12, 2022
Pays his fighters 20k then gives a way 250k to someone who doesn’t need it
— joey (@JoeyPeralez) July 12, 2022
??? ??? ???
— Louis Smolka (@LouisSmolkaMMA) July 12, 2022
Fighters watching this https://t.co/l5cuII5JJi pic.twitter.com/6GtWPLZUCW
— Pissed Off Twood (@pissedofftwood) July 12, 2022
he jus paid you more than he pays 90% of his entire roster LMAO
— milan (@Cloudz605) July 12, 2022
I’m trying to figure out if this is suppose to like? Make Dana look good? And not like some cartoonish mob boss??? https://t.co/kxlglRyH6Y
— wholesomeMMA (@wholesome_mma) July 12, 2022
Fighters should be proud that they get to finance that gift. https://t.co/Pno1Pvu8jc
— John S. Nash (@heynottheface) July 12, 2022
I would’ve liked it a lot better if he gifted it to a fighter who is struggling to make ends meet and might have CTE
— Freezepop (@DrFreezepop) July 12, 2022
The UFC has been breaking their financial records year after year, with the MMA world leader now making over a billion dollars a year with more growth expected.
The owners get to keep majority of that money though, with Endeavor revealing figures that suggest UFC met its goals of keeping athletes’ revenue share at around 17.5%. This pales into comparison to other sports leagues that pay athletes close to 50%, or to a more similar sport in boxing where fighters can take home 70% or more of the revenue.