ONE Championship’s Victor Cui: ‘We’ve gotten a lot of interest’ since UFC-Reebok deal

While reaction has been mixed since news of the tiered Reebok payouts for UFC athletes leaked onto the internet earlier this month, an ample number of the promotion’s fighters have voiced concern about shrinking paychecks under the new …

While reaction has been mixed since news of the tiered Reebok payouts for UFC athletes leaked onto the internet earlier this month, an ample number of the promotion’s fighters have voiced concern about shrinking paychecks under the new deal, creating an unusually restless climate within the broader MMA world.

Or in other words, “the phone’s been ringing,” as Bellator President Scott Coker recently told MMAFighting.com. And according to ONE Championship CEO Victory Cui, effects of the sponsorship program between the UFC and Reebok haven’t just been limited to the western hemisphere.

“We’ve gotten a lot of interest,” Cui said to MMAFighting.com. “Because now sponsors are looking for other opportunities. This was just another reason for them to look at Asia. Unfortunately we’re turning down sponsors now. Watch our canvas [at ONE Championship 27] and it just blows my mind where we are with sponsors right now.”

The UFC’s exclusive partnership with Reebok, which goes into effect July 7, will see fighters paid anywhere from $2,500 to $40,000 in sponsorship income depending on tenure. The deal, worth $70 million over six years, effectively wipes out additional fight week and in-cage sponsorship, which until now was a significant source of secondary revenue for UFC fighters.

While ONE Championship remains largely in its infancy, the promotion has made major inroads into the eastern mainstream in a few short years, establishing itself as the largest promotion in Asia since its launch in 2011 by securing global broadcast deals, successfully entering the Chinese market, and occasionally serving as a player for high-value free agents like former Bellator champion Ben Askren.

“You can see that everyone who comes is really loyal to the organization and excited to be a part of what we’re building,” Cui said. “That being said, on the business side, our sponsors that we have are completely different than any sponsor that the UFC has in the U.S. In fact, I don’t think we have any identical sponsor that has traditionally been with MMA in North America. Our sponsors here are all blue-chip sponsors who the first time they’ve been with the sport has been with us.

“Disney is our sponsor, launching all across Asia, Star Wars and Avengers. We have LG televisions; on every smart LG TV that they’re launching, you get ONE Championship content and the live broadcast on your TV preloaded. We have Canon, Casio, Kawasaki, Panasonic. These are all blue-chip companies that are with us that are typically not with the sport, so our base and what we’re able to deliver from a business side is, I think, considerably different.”

Cui acknowledged that an apparel deal for the Singapore-based organization is a possibility for ONE Championship’s own future, though admittedly in the distant one. In the meantime, as managers and fighters navigate the uncertain waters resulting from the UFC-Reebok deal, Cui, like Coker, could become an inadvertent beneficiary of MMA’s newly changing world.

“Matt Hume and Rich Franklin handle all the fighter stuff, but man, I don’t even open up my Facebook e-mails because it’s probably, I don’t know, 500 or 600 e-mails a day on Facebook from fighters, managers, agents, other promotions that want to work with us and send their fighters,” Cui said.

“I don’t think there’s a shortage of talented fighters around the world. It’s a matter of if it’s a right career choice for them, and if it’s a right option for us as a company and for our fans.”

Andre Pederneiras plans to retire as head coach, cornerman this year

Andre Pederneiras, one of the best coaches in MMA today, will no longer be seen in fighters’ corners in 2016.

Co-founder of jiu-jitsu and MMA team Nova Uniao and president of Shooto Brazil, Pederneiras has a busy schedule with dozens of fighters competing around the world, including UFC and Bellator stars Jose Aldo, Renan Barao, Junior dos Santos and Eduardo Dantas, and decided to step away from being the head coach at Nova Uniao.

“I will continue to teach them in the gym, to follow them in the gym, but I want to stop being the head coach,” Pederneiras told PVT. “Other kids in the gym will do this. Each one will take care of a group.

“I’m not saying I will ever go (to a fight) again, but this will reduce my travels to almost zero. There are so many fighters and I can’t just go to one’s fights and deny to others, which is happening today and makes me upset.”

Nova Uniao currently has 12 athletes signed with the UFC and two title fights booked for the next months, Jose Aldo vs. Conor McGregor and T.J. Dillashaw vs. Renan Barao.

Fighters like Marlon Sandro and Leonardo Santos often play the role of cornerman for teammates when Pederneiras isn’t available to travel for fights, but “Dede” will continue to manage fighters.

“I will complete 1000 fights as a coach this year, so I thought that this is a good number to go and say ‘it’s good, I’ve done my job as a cornerman and I want to stay at backstage now’,” he said. “I will become a consultant for Nova Uniao, that’s my goal today, and continue to manage the fighters.”

Andre Pederneiras, one of the best coaches in MMA today, will no longer be seen in fighters’ corners in 2016.

Co-founder of jiu-jitsu and MMA team Nova Uniao and president of Shooto Brazil, Pederneiras has a busy schedule with dozens of fighters competing around the world, including UFC and Bellator stars Jose Aldo, Renan Barao, Junior dos Santos and Eduardo Dantas, and decided to step away from being the head coach at Nova Uniao.

“I will continue to teach them in the gym, to follow them in the gym, but I want to stop being the head coach,” Pederneiras told PVT. “Other kids in the gym will do this. Each one will take care of a group.

“I’m not saying I will ever go (to a fight) again, but this will reduce my travels to almost zero. There are so many fighters and I can’t just go to one’s fights and deny to others, which is happening today and makes me upset.”

Nova Uniao currently has 12 athletes signed with the UFC and two title fights booked for the next months, Jose Aldo vs. Conor McGregor and T.J. Dillashaw vs. Renan Barao.

Fighters like Marlon Sandro and Leonardo Santos often play the role of cornerman for teammates when Pederneiras isn’t available to travel for fights, but “Dede” will continue to manage fighters.

“I will complete 1000 fights as a coach this year, so I thought that this is a good number to go and say ‘it’s good, I’ve done my job as a cornerman and I want to stay at backstage now’,” he said. “I will become a consultant for Nova Uniao, that’s my goal today, and continue to manage the fighters.”

John Dodson Is Agitating for Demetrious Johnson’s Flyweight Crown

Would you rather be bored or annoyed?
It’s kind of a reductive way of thinking about it, but you have to admit: It does fit in 140 characters.
These days, sometimes that’s all you need. And that’s probably why John Dodson doesn’t mind couching it in th…

Would you rather be bored or annoyed?

It’s kind of a reductive way of thinking about it, but you have to admit: It does fit in 140 characters.

These days, sometimes that’s all you need. And that’s probably why John Dodson doesn’t mind couching it in those terms, even though one of those rather unflattering descriptors is self-directed.

See, Dodson has had some time to think lately. Dodson has looked on as MMA‘s biggest talkers market themselves into main events, regardless of their size. Coming back from a major injury, Dodson has watched from the sidelines over the past year as Demetrious Johnson—the UFC flyweight champion, one of the two or three best fighters in the world and the only UFC flyweight to ever defeat Dodson—drove their division into the public-opinion ground.

Fear not. Or fear—that’s your call. But Dodson’s ready to take the wheel.

Prior to his fight with Zach Makovsky on Saturday at UFC 187, the not-personality-deficient Dodson is applying the full-court press to not only get a rematch for the belt but to become the new—and in his mind, improved—face of the 125-pound weight class.

“I’m the savior of the division because Demetrious Johnson is so boring,” Dodson said recently in an exclusive interview with Bleacher Report. “People want someone they love and they can cheer for. DJ is not that person. They say they like him. They say, ‘Oh, good job.’

“Then they interview him, and it’s boring…Some people hate me, they call me a cartoon character. But people want something amazing. I’m happy. I’m energetic. That’s me.”

Dodson is certainly comfortable in his own skin. Some people get agitated by what they see as his silly, over-the-top theatrics at weigh-ins and other venues, dating back to his 2011 stint as a contestant on The Ultimate Fighter. But Dodson (16-6) takes all that in stride because, well, the best MMA fighters in the world have that luxury.

A lightning-fast workout warrior with legitimate knockout power in his hands, Dodson is probably one of the most finely tuned competitors in the UFC right now. What’s more, if he can handle Makovsky on Saturday, he’ll be 5-1 as a UFC flyweight, with his only defeat coming to Johnson in an excellent bout back in 2013. That will all make it hard for UFC brass to turn down him down—again—for a title shot. 

“I thought I was supposed to get a title shot right now,” Dodson said. “But they said I had to fight one more person.”

The reasoning there is fairly sound, when you think about it. This is Dodson’s first fight in nearly a year, thanks to a torn ACL suffered in his last fight, which Dodson still pulled out via a doctor stoppage TKO against John Moraga. The Jackson-Winkeljohn student spent nine months recovering and doing his best not to rush back.

“It hurt so bad. I knew immediately when it happened. I felt my knee pop,” Dodson recalled. “The only hard part [during rehab] was I didn’t want to leave the gym. Everybody would be like, ‘Why are you still in the gym?’ I live in the gym. I push myself harder than anyone else I know. My teammates just wanted me to sit down and relax and not get too crazy.”

It was apparently also pretty hard to watch the champion do his thing. The flyweight division, with Johnson at its vanguard, has drawn dismal television ratings and pay-per-view numbers. Most recently, the injury-riddled UFC 186 card, headlined by Johnson’s fifth-round submission defeat of Kyoji Horiguchistruggled to break 100,000 pay-per-view buys.

That’s pitiful.

And that’s what Dodson wants to change. He acknowledged some people are just going to enjoy larger people fighting compared to smaller people. But he doesn’t let Johnson off the hook for what he views, in a sense, as a failure of responsibility when it comes to promoting fights.

“Some people just want the big guys, but flyweights aren’t lower class,” Dodson said. “We can be great. Everybody has seasons of champions. Smaller boxers used to be considered as midgets. Now, everyone watches Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao.”

His road to Johnson technically begins Saturday with an opponent Dodson knows fairly well. Dodson said he has trained with Makovsky frequently in the past.

“He’s going to have very strong wrestling,” Dodson said. “He’ll try to push forward. He’ll shoot, and I’ll try to bang it out, or I’ll try to take him down.” 

That’s the fight, though. His push for the rematch began weeks ago and will never see the inside of a cage.

“I enjoy my job,” Dodson said. “I’m wild and crazy. They say I’m like a little kid…It’s just who I am.”

Scott Harris writes about MMA for Bleacher Report. For more stuff like this, find Scott on Twitter. All quotes obtained firsthand.

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UFC 187: Fight Night Bonus Predictions for Johnson vs. Cormier Fight Card

The UFC 187 fight card is stacked to the brim with potential headline-makers, led by Anthony “Rumble” Johnson’s battle against Daniel Cormier for the vacant light heavyweight title. Although Jon Jones was stripped of the belt and suspended for his part in a hit-and-run incident, reported by Fox Sports Live (h/t Mike Bohn and Matt […]

The UFC 187 fight card is stacked to the brim with potential headline-makers, led by Anthony “Rumble” Johnson’s battle against Daniel Cormier for the vacant light heavyweight title. Although Jon Jones was stripped of the belt and suspended for his part in a hit-and-run incident, reported by Fox Sports Live (h/t Mike Bohn and Matt […]

Jon Jones: The King Without a Throne

The UFC 182: The Moment preview video’s juxtaposition between a vibrant, young champion and an older, scarred lion can be more appreciated in hindsight. This moment for Jon Jones isn’t forced or rehearsed.
It’s a beautiful one that encapsulates what it…

The UFC 182: The Moment preview video‘s juxtaposition between a vibrant, young champion and an older, scarred lion can be more appreciated in hindsight. This moment for Jon Jones isn’t forced or rehearsed.

It’s a beautiful one that encapsulates what it truly means to reach up and grab the proverbial brass ring.

As the camera zooms in on the rugged features of older Jones’ face, he slowly looks away, cracking an efficacious smile. He then opens up about the moment that changed everything, when he defeated Mauricio “Shogun” Rua at UFC 128 to become the UFC light heavyweight champion in 2011.

The words trek from his heart, up through his chest and throat, before rolling off his tongue and sliding through his lips:

It was a feeling like everything I’d been through in life—the good and the bad—but mainly the bad, it was like it all led to that. I got to just channel all of the good and the bad and channel it into something that was beautiful. It was an awesome moment. I felt free. I felt better than what I was.

These were the naive thoughts of a 23-year-old from New York. But time changes us physically, and experience shapes us mentally. Jones quickly learned freedom, while being the best in the world, is a thought bound in irony.

When you’re on top, expectations and responsibilities are multiplied exponentially. People come out of the woodwork, feigning as your friend with luxurious gifts and worldly offers. The spotlight beams so brightly that it becomes hard to see the wolves standing two feet in front of you. Everything you say and do is dissected under a microscope and interpreted a million different ways.

One day, you wake up and realize you’re no longer a human being to most people. You’re just a piece of meat, a product to be consumed.

Jones has likely woken up by now at age 27, after being stripped of the title and indefinitely suspended from the UFC. A felony charge for an alleged hit-and-run put his fighting career on ice. As the light heavyweight king, he is now forced to sit on the sidelines and watch Anthony “Rumble” Johnson and Daniel Cormier fight Saturday for the same throne he called home for the last four years.

The spotlight swallowed Jones the moment he stepped from the shadows, forever trapping him in the belly of the beast.

Georges St-Pierre, one of the most beloved fighters in UFC history, vacated his UFC title and walked away from fighting indefinitely at age 32. Admittedly, he became overwhelmed with the pressure and stress of being a world champion, among other things.

But Jones was nothing like St-Pierre in the public eye. He wasn’t the French-speaking, complimentary guy in front of the media. His confidence brimmed to a point where it came off as arrogance to some. It probably didn’t help that he began his title run by dominating beloved legends Shogun Rua and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson.

Some people wanted a reason to dislike Jones to rid themselves of the typical hater label. They eventually got their wish when Rashad Evans, Jones’ former teammate, entered the picture, and the word “fake” was permanently attached to Jones like a bad high school nickname.

Looking back on the entire situation, when speaking with MMAFighting.com in an article by Marc Raimondi, Evans touched on the harsh realities of youth and fame:

Even though Jon does amazing things inside the cage, Jon is still young. You give somebody so young so much power, so much freedom, they don’t always make the right decisions. He’s human and sometimes people think things never catch up with them. Sometimes they catch up with you at the wrong time.

… Looking back and seeing my whole role in the situation, I didn’t handle everything right. [Jon is] one of my favorite fighters to watch. Even when he fights, I kind of root for the guy.

The wrong time for Jones appears to be when he allegedly ran a red light and smashed his rental vehicle into a pregnant woman’s car, per Raimondi. Witnesses claimed he ran from the scene after grabbing a handful of cash from his vehicle. Marijuana was found inside the car.

Serious missteps in Jones’ personal life, including this one, a failed drug test for cocaine and a DUI charge have replaced the image of the young fighter fans once rallied behind. It’s easy to forget the fighter who came to the rescue of an “old Spanish couple” by chasing down and apprehending their mugger, mere hours before his first UFC title fight.

Listen to the room eat up every word as Jones rehashes the story that nearly gave UFC President Dana White a heart attack.

Whatever happened to this version of Jones? When did everything go sideways?

A new champion will be crowned at UFC 187 on Saturday, but there is no questioning Jones is still the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world.

You can take away his title, strip him of his accomplishments and remove him from the UFC rankings. Through it all, Jones will still be the best fighter in the world. He will still be king. But the throne belongs to the UFC, and as a business, the powers that be have a right to choose who they want as the face of the company.

Jones is the king without a throne. Until he returns or a more polarizing figure comes along, nothing in the world will ever change that.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

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UFC 187: Why Things Will Be Different This Time for Daniel Cormier

Daniel Cormier will get another title shot just five months after his last. A thank you note to Jon Jones should be in the mail.
On Saturday, Cormier headlines UFC 187 opposite No. 1-ranked Anthony Johnson for the vacant UFC light heavyweight title. An…

Daniel Cormier will get another title shot just five months after his last. A thank you note to Jon Jones should be in the mail.

On Saturday, Cormier headlines UFC 187 opposite No. 1-ranked Anthony Johnson for the vacant UFC light heavyweight title. And this time, you can expect Cormier to wear gold at the end of the night.

Why will this contest be different?

When Johnson said the matchup with Cormier would be more difficult than Jones, I agreed.

Styles make fights, and Cormier‘s style is a terrible matchup for what Johnson brings to the cage. Johnson has massive power and excellent athleticism, but Cormier‘s grinding style should be able to nullify him in the early rounds.

At heavyweight, Cormier was dealing with bigger men and heavier punchers. Johnson won’t surprise Cormier with anything in the cage. Cormier has outclassed most with his wrestling with the lone exception of Jones. Johnson does not pose the same issues that Jones did in the cage.

There is little concern that Johnson will be able to stop a Cormier takedown.

Johnson is a threat to knock out anyone. The issue with this matchup is that Cormier has splendid defensive boxing and a good chin. Johnson will have a hard time locating the chin of Cormier for another impressive KO. Is it possible? Absolutely. But Cormier will not give him the space.

Cormier is aggressive. Johnson needs space to throw big power shots, and Cormier will close the distance quickly. Even if he fails to take Johnson down, Cormier will put his back against the fence and grind out the early rounds. Johnson’s history of fading as the fight wears on will pop back up as he struggles with Cormier‘s clinch game.

Cardio will play an important factor.

Once tired, Johnson is toast. Cormier will be able to finish a sluggish Johnson in the later rounds.

UFC 187 is the perfect title matchup to make Cormier look like the elite fighter he is. On a basic level, this matchup reminds me a lot of Randy Couture vs. Vitor Belfort—the dynamic striker who is more athletic against the grinding wrestler who will outwork most everyone. Johnson has the proverbial “puncher’s chance,” but that is all.

The key to this fight is the first round. If Cormier puts Johnson on his back, either against the fence or on the canvas, Johnson will struggle the rest of the way.

Cormier struggled with Jones’ physical stature, but Johnson cannot replicate that. This matchup plays out perfectly for the Oklahoma State Sooner.

Things will be different for Cormier. He’s not fighting the king of the division.

UFC 187 is the time for Cormier to claim gold. It is a preferable stylistic matchup against a man who has a history of fading. The highlight reel takedowns that Cormier has had in his MMA career are likely to continue against “Rumble.” Eventually, the pressure will wilt Johnson.

In Jones’ absence, Cormier is the best this division has to offer. That will be evident Saturday evening.

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