Dana White’s “Lookin’ For A Fight” Heads To Texas

In the fifth installment of Dana White’s “Lookin’ for a Fight” series, the crew hits up Texas to find the next big thing.

Along the way, they get themselves situated into bull riding and meet former boxing champion George Foreman.

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In the fifth installment of Dana White’s “Lookin’ for a Fight” series, the crew hits up Texas to find the next big thing.

Along the way, they get themselves situated into bull riding and meet former boxing champion George Foreman.

Dana White: “It’s 100% Fact That The Fertitta’s Will Own An NFL Team”

According to UFC President Dana White, it’s only a matter of time before UFC owners Lorenzo Fertitta and Frank Fertitta buy an NFL franchise.

White addressed the rumors about the Fertitta brothers buying the Oakland Raiders and moving the team to La…

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According to UFC President Dana White, it’s only a matter of time before UFC owners Lorenzo Fertitta and Frank Fertitta buy an NFL franchise.

White addressed the rumors about the Fertitta brothers buying the Oakland Raiders and moving the team to Las Vegas, Nevada, during his appearance on “The Jim Rome Show.”

“Here’s the thing — as you know you can’t own an NFL team if you’re involved with casinos. So if they were really making a serious move at the Raiders, they’d be selling Station Casinos not the UFC,” White said on Friday.

White continued, “But it is 100-percent a fact, they are hardcore football fans and I promise you one day the Fertitta brothers will own an NFL team. No doubt about it.”

H/T to FOXSports.com for transcribing the above Dana White quote.

Dana White Calls Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Conor McGregor Fight ‘Impossible’

UFC President Dana White thinks a Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Conor McGregor fight is impractical. 
White said on ESPN Radio’s Russillo & Kanell that the reason he doesn’t see the 49-0 Mayweather taking on the current UFC Featherweight champion …

UFC President Dana White thinks a Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Conor McGregor fight is impractical. 

White said on ESPN Radio’s Russillo & Kanell that the reason he doesn’t see the 49-0 Mayweather taking on the current UFC Featherweight champion in a sanctioned bout is because of how long it took the unbeaten boxer to fight Manny Pacquiao.

“Let me put it to you this way,” White said, per Brett Okamoto of ESPN.com. “Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather are in the same sport. It took how long for those two to fight? Now imagine how hard it would be to get (Mayweather and McGregor) to fight. They’re not in the same sport.”

Mayweather said on May 7 that any rumors about a potential fight with the Irishman have come from he and his camp. McGregor upped the ante later that day by tweeting an altered image of he and Mayweather facing off.

The Sun reported Mayweather and McGregor were discussing a potential megafight in Las Vegas later this summer, but White said the rumors were not true because UFC is McGregor’s fighter, and Mayweather’s camp would have to go through him.

“Is this thing going to be MMA or boxing rules?” White said, per Okamoto. “Who’s getting the lion’s share of the money? This and that. It’s impossible. But like I’ve said, ‘Floyd, you want to fight Conor, call me.'”

White holds all the leverage as far as a Mayweather-McGregor fight goes, seeing how Irishman is still under contract with UFC, and the MMA company would probably get the better share of the money because it could be liable for anything that happens to McGregor.

However, White sounds open to negotiations should such a fight ever happen. As of now, though, it’s still a pipe dream.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dana White’s “Lookin’ For A Fight” Heads To Texas

In the fifth installment of “Lookin’ for a Fight” with UFC president Dana White, Matt Serra and Nick the Tooth, the crew hits up Texas.

They try to become real cowboys and even meet former boxing champion George Foreman.

Check out a couple of pre…

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In the fifth installment of “Lookin’ for a Fight” with UFC president Dana White, Matt Serra and Nick the Tooth, the crew hits up Texas.

They try to become real cowboys and even meet former boxing champion George Foreman.

Check out a couple of previews in the videos below for the series, which airs May 17 on YouTube:

UFC Sale Rumors: Would the UFC Improve Without Dana White and the Fertittas?

On Tuesday night, ESPN  that the UFC is in advanced talks to sell the promotion, hiring investment bank Goldman Sachs to represent it in discussions with at least four groups that have bid on an acquisition of the MMA global market leader.
Rumors …

On Tuesday night, ESPN  that the UFC is in advanced talks to sell the promotion, hiring investment bank Goldman Sachs to represent it in discussions with at least four groups that have bid on an acquisition of the MMA global market leader.

Rumors of a potential sale have occasionally surfaced over the last several years, but this is clearly the strongest report yet that the Zuffa ownership is considering cashing out, with ESPN citing a potential price tag of up to $4 billion.

But why now? The UFC is riding high, with UFC 200 around the corner, a couple of transcendent stars in Conor McGregor and Ronda Rousey, and its first New York state event since the ban was dropped on tap toward the end of the year. 

To mine the potential causes and reasons behind the possible deal, as well as what it might mean for the future, I’m joined by Bleacher Report MMA Lead Writer Chad Dundas.

Mike Chiappetta: Chad, I wasn’t surprised to hear this report, and I’m sure you weren’t surprised either. Like most good businesses, its leadership team is always looking for opportunities. Until now, they’ve always been the one snapping up properties, but there have always been signs it wouldn’t last forever. 

For one thing, the Fertitta brothers have the family business to run, recently taking their renamed gaming company, Red Rock Resorts, Inc., public. For another, those of us who have been around the UFC a long time have heard that Lorenzo Fertitta has always been interested in bringing an NFL team to Las Vegas. 

As Bleacher Report NFL writer Mike Freeman has written, “large swaths of ownership no longer see putting a team in Vegas as a problem.” Fertitta may think it’s time to pounce on this opportunity or simply sell when the market is high.

Chad Dundas: We’re dealing with a very fluid situation here, Mike. Even as I type this, our former Bleacher Report colleague Jeremy Botter is reporting that Zuffa is merely looking to sell a 10-15 percent stake in the UFC.

A move like that obviously wouldn’t be unprecedented. In January 2010, the parent company sold a 10 percent stake in the UFC to Flash Entertainment, a live-events promoter owned by the government of the United Arab Emirates. The Octagon has made a couple trips to the UAE since then, but mostly Flash has been a pretty silent partner.

As far back as the summer of 2015, rumors swirled that another deal could be in offing. A couple months ago, Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Snowden tweeted that Zuffa might have another suitor on the hook.

And look, even if this is just the Fertittas portioning off another small-ish side of flesh, the fact is that our friends in Las Vegas are going to sell the company store at some point. Despite the fact they’ve always seemed like lifers when the cameras are on, I’ve always gotten the impression that behind the scenes they were treating the UFC like a spec house.

And you’re right. If you’re looking to unload this thing, now would be a great time. Not only because of the positive developments you mentioned above, but because there’s at least some evidence to suggest the ride is about to get a lot rockier for ownership. There is that looming class action lawsuit, rumbles of an Ali Act for MMA coming in the near future and a labor force that isn’t going to get any less interested in getting a fair slice of the pie as time goes on.

If I were Dana White or one of the Fertittas, I might look up at the clock and wonder if midnight wasn’t just about to strike.     

Mike: The sale of a percentage rather than the whole thing does seem much more likely. After all, the UFC is still a very profitable business, one that allows the management team an almost-absurd level of control over its product and finances. Compare that to say, owning an NFL team, and there are so many rules and regulations to follow. Would the Fertitta brothers really rather do that than continue carving their own path? 

That seems unlikely. I can understand the interest in owning an NFL team and being the savior that brings the league to your hometown. Who wouldn’t want to do that? But doesn’t owning a league sound better than owning a team? It does to me. 

Another roadblock? By my understanding, the NFL prohibits ownership in any gambling interest, so the brothers would have to rid themselves of their stake in Red Rock Resorts, Inc., to go the NFL route. That seems awfully unlikely, too.

So a percentage of a portion seems the most logical outcome. White indirectly showed his hand that was the case when asked by NBC Sports’ Dan Patrick, saying, “Um, obviously if I’m in the middle of a deal right now, there’s a lot of confidentiality involved in it, but we’re working on expanding.”

But, if they did sell, what would the UFC look like? For all the grief Dana White receives, it’s hard to imagine the UFC without him. He’s been the chief hype man for over a decade, and he’s been very good at it, even if he’s taken a diminished role in the last year or two. I doubt a new controlling interest group would come in and immediately install their own people in every top role. There is too much of a learning curve involved to do that, but one thing we know in life is that everyone is replaceable. 

I wouldn’t expect the finished product to look vastly different. New ownership might come with new ideas for presentation, but fighting is still two men—or women—and a cage. If anything, maybe we could finally say goodbye to “Face the Pain.”

Chad: It’s fitting that you bring up “Face the Pain,” given that everything we know about the MMA industry in America today was created exactly in the image White and the Fertittas wanted. Bloodsport-style marketing? That’s them. Unfortunate relationship with bro culture? Them. Weird insistence that the whims of management and fans should come before the well-being of the actual fighters? Guess who.

I often wonder what would have happened if a crew of billionaires with slightly different sensibilities had bought the UFC all those years ago. Alas, now we’ll never know.

One day we will find out what life in the UFC is like without White and the Fertittas, though. That’s a certainty. Many of us kvetch long and loud about themand they deserve itbut sometimes I wonder if we should be careful what we wish for.

If the company that bought the UFC was a faceless hedge fund or stuffy venture capital firm, would we end up pining for the fast-and-loose days where White shot from the hip and Fertitta showed up looking like he could out-bench-press most of the roster? Maybe. Maybe.

I doubt anyone who bought the UFC would suddenly come in with a more labor-friendly attitude, unfortunately. They would be buying the thing based on Zuffa’s revenue history and projections, after all. But someone who might bring a new vision for the sport? I’d be all in on that.

A guy can dream, can’t he? 

Mike: Yeah, I guess those are the things we wonder most about. What would a sale mean for the fans? What would it mean for the athletes? 

For the latter, the questions are numerous. Would it mean an increased schedule? A further watering-down of the product? More opportunities? Anything and everything is possible with a new perspective. It could be the best thing to happen to them, or the very worst. 

But one thing I do know is that the treatment of athletes isn’t likely to change without any concerted effort by them. A sale generally assumes any pre-existing deals. Reebok will stay, so will the Fox deal and those iron-clad contracts. Billion-dollar businesses aren’t known for magnanimity. 

So in the end, whether the UFC honchos sell the whole organization, or a part of it, or keep the ownership structure as is, it will be mostly “business as usual,” a term familiar to longtime fans of UFC acquisitions. Except this time, it will actually be that. Everyone is always open to tinkering with formula, even an ultra-successful one, but no one will toss it away and start from scratch.

Generally, fans don’t care about ownership teams. There are a few outliers. George Steinbrenner. Mark Cuban. Jerry Jones. Al Davis. Dana White and Co. fall into this category. They are characters who are weaved into the fabric of the sport. Even a sale wouldn’t change that.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dana White: Mayweather Can Call Me If He Wants To Fight McGregor

Despite receiving a whirlwind of media attention, a potential boxing fight between retired pound-for-pound king Floyd “Money” Mayweather and reigning UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor is likely a distant hypothetical dream for fight fans. With that being said, the two stars have done quite a good job at making the fight appear as a reality.

The post Dana White: Mayweather Can Call Me If He Wants To Fight McGregor appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Despite receiving a whirlwind of media attention, a potential boxing fight between retired pound-for-pound king Floyd “Money” Mayweather and reigning UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor is likely a distant hypothetical dream for fight fans.

With that being said, the two stars have done quite a good job at making the fight appear as a reality.

McGregor recently posted a picture to his official twitter account promoting the potential showdown, and Mayweather himself even said that he started the rumors, and that you just never know what could happen in combat sports.

Despite both men adding to the madness, the situation just doesn’t appear as if it will actually come to fruition. That is unless it goes through the UFC.

Recently speaking on the topic, UFC President Dana White said that if “Money” actually wanted to fight the “Notorious” one, he would have to give him a call:

“Conor McGregor is under contract with the UFC,” White said Wednesday on “The Dan Patrick Show.” “Listen, if Floyd wants to fight Conor, call me Floyd.”

Mayweather has been retired ever since he took home a one-sided decision over Andre Berto last September, improving his undefeated record to 49-0. Despite originally making it sound as if he was done for good, a possible return for “Money” has seemed very likely as of late.

McGregor, on the other hand, hasn’t competed since last March when he suffered his first UFC loss to Nate Diaz at UFC 196. He was then set to rematch Diaz at July 9’s UFC 200, but he was essentially pulled from the card after he didn’t appear in Las Vegas for his scheduled media requirements.

What do you make of the rumors surrounding Mayweather and McGregor?

The post Dana White: Mayweather Can Call Me If He Wants To Fight McGregor appeared first on LowKick MMA.