Tim Kennedy Walks Back Criticism of UFC, Apologizes For Calling Pay Poor


(“Apologize or Dana will do WHAT to my butt?” Photo via OTM.)

By Elias Cepeda

Looks like someone got a call from their boss. Former Strikeforce fighter Tim Kennedy is set to make his UFC debut July 6th against Roger Gracie but made news yesterday for an interview he recently gave in which he criticized UFC fighter pay.

“It’s a good thing I have another job because the UFC doesn’t pay very well,” he told GrappleTalk Podcast.

“Anybody who accepts [fighters being underpaid] as a reality of the sport is sad and pathetic,” Kennedy went on. “I hope this isn’t the reality of the sport. If it is I should probably go do something else, like empty trash cans. I’d make more money than I do now.”

It didn’t take the middleweight long to regret his words, however, and he issued an apology to UFC brass for the interview through his facebook fan page yesterday. “I recently made comments regarding fighter pay. The intent of these statements was to highlight that professional fighters incur significant expense associated with their preparations to fight and that fighter compensation is still not on par with other major sports,” Kennedy began.


(“Apologize or Dana will do WHAT to my butt?” Photo via OTM.)

By Elias Cepeda

Looks like someone got a call from their boss. Former Strikeforce fighter Tim Kennedy is set to make his UFC debut July 6th against Roger Gracie but made news yesterday for an interview he recently gave in which he criticized UFC fighter pay.

“It’s a good thing I have another job because the UFC doesn’t pay very well,” he told GrappleTalk Podcast.

“Anybody who accepts [fighters being underpaid] as a reality of the sport is sad and pathetic,” Kennedy went on. “I hope this isn’t the reality of the sport. If it is I should probably go do something else, like empty trash cans. I’d make more money than I do now.”

It didn’t take the middleweight long to regret his words, however, and he issued an apology to UFC brass for the interview through his facebook fan page yesterday. “I recently made comments regarding fighter pay. The intent of these statements was to highlight that professional fighters incur significant expense associated with their preparations to fight and that fighter compensation is still not on par with other major sports,” Kennedy began.

While I am fortunate to have various revenue streams associated with my business interests, most fighters do not have that luxury. When you spend training camps with great guys with amazing talents and you see them barely making ends meet, while simultaneously seeing athletes in other sports with far less character and a far smaller work ethic making exponentially more, you can get frustrated.

Unfortunately, I made statements that alluded to how the UFC in particular pays its athletes. This was particularly offensive as Zuffa has taken better care of me than any other organization, even giving me a bonus for being amusing on Twitter. My choice of words was poor, not properly informed, and did not match my intent. Additionally, my comments were taken out of context. I can tell you that I have been fighting longer than most people and I remember all too well the days when there was no regulation or standard for an MMA promotion. I fought many times in Mexico where the rules were negligible, there were no physicals, and being paid was a luxury we didn’t expect. Our sport was shunned and was considered ‘human cockfighting’. Today, we are on Fox. We have doctors and insurance. We make more money than the average American. And we get these things by playing a sport we love. The only reason this is possible is because of Zuffa. They have legitimized the sport and taken better care of the athletes than any other organization, and the trend is only improving, with athletes making three times what they made on average five years ago.

My comments were hurtful and inappropriate. I accept full responsibility for the statements and apologize to the UFC, Dana White, Lorenzo Fertita, & Joe Silva as well as anyone I might have offended with my comments. Fighting for the UFC is an honor and a privilege. I look forward to putting this situation behind me and focusing on my upcoming fight with Roger Gracie.

There are two sets of things to take issue with in Kennedy’s twenty four-hour public relations whirlwind. First, his notion that UFC fighters are not paid “on par” with other sports.

Assuming that we ignore the importance of the fact that MMA has only really existed in North America for less than twenty years, as opposed to over a hundred for all the major sports, Kennedy is still wrong.

Sure, athletes in unionized major sports leagues like the NBA, NFL and MLB get paid a lot more than UFC athletes, at the low-end, the middle range and at the top. But that’s not a great comparison. Those players bargain collectively, as associations and unions. More often than not, union work is higher-paid work in most fields. If UFC fighters want the benefits of unionization, they should unionize.

In comparison to boxers, however, it is a simple truth that UFC fighters get paid more than most of their counterparts in boxing. There are maybe three or four professional boxers in the entire world that get paid more than the top UFC champions. Other than that, fighters on a UFC card usually get paid more than boxers on top cable and pay per view boxing cards. Top level professional MMA has a much healthier middle class than top level professional boxing and the UFC has probably created more new fighter millionaires than boxing has in the past ten years.

Kennedy, no stranger to sounding out of touch, also said that he could make more money emptying trash cans. Listen, I’m not saying that fighters and athletes and everyone in the world shouldn’t get more money for honest work than they currently receive. Go for it. If you want to go that direction, see the above advice on banding together to get better wages and treatment. But Kennedy’s garbage man comparison and complaint is pretty silly for two reasons.

First off, let’s say that garbage collectors make more than a mid-card level UFC fighter. What’s wrong with that? We actually need functioning garbage collection in modern, healthy society. I like watching Tim Kennedy fight but I sure as heck don’t need him as much as I need the local garbage man or woman to come pick up my bags of filth every Friday.

Second, if Kennedy is complaining about low pay and has identified an alternate career path where he could earn more, then why in the world doesn’t he switch careers? Kennedy is a decorated, elite war veteran. Want to bet that he couldn’t walk into most cities in the U.S. and get a streets and sanitation job easier than most? Deservedly, government jobs often consider past military service quite favorably in evaluating potential hires.

If Kennedy were a garbage man, he could still train and fight MMA, like he loves. Then he’d have that high-paying job he’s always wanted and still be able to practice MMA. Chances are, however, that Kennedy likes fighting in the UFC for other reasons as well – notably the fame and opportunities to fight the best in the world.

All that is one set of issues with this Kennedy story. The bigger one, however, is how quickly he wilted under pressure, felt or anticipated.

Maybe Kennedy, in the midst of a training camp, thinking of lesser paid fighter friends of his, said some out of touch things in regards to UFC pay. But, there’s nothing wrong with him advocating for even better pay, overall. What’s really disappointing is that Kennedy is apparently willing to denounce important positions of his so easily. In his apology, Kennedy said, that his “choice of words was poor” and “not properly informed.”

Kennedy has been an MMA pro for years. Why wasn’t his opinion “properly informed?” And, what could have possibly happened in just a few hours to make Kennedy’s perspective more informed? Also, his apology wasn’t just a change in “choice of words,” it was a philosophical about-face.

Tim, does the UFC pay well or doesn’t it? You should have an answer, even if it’s a personal one. And, if the answer to the question is that, no, they do not, why back down from defending the low-paid fighters that you said you were concerned about in the first place?

For a more well thought out, balanced, and less likely to be so quickly denied view of UFC pay, check out Nate Quarry’s recent interview with BloodyElbow.

In it, Quarry provides a nuanced, first-hand perspective on the UFC being both cut throat and generous, the balance between what fighters give to the organization and what the UFC gives to them, the value of competition in the MMA promotions business, the value of sponsorship money and the possibility of unionization. Check it out.

Will UFC 161 Mark the Last Time We See Roy Nelson in the Octagon?


(And with a snap of his fingers, Homeless Santa vanished from our lives, leaving behind only the crumpled wrapper of the Carolina BBQ Tendercrisp we had left for him on the armoire.)

It wouldn’t exactly be earth-shattering news to tell you that Dana White is not a fan of Roy “Big Country” Nelson. In fact, the President of the UFC has stated exactly that to pretty much anyone who will listen, time after time after “he’s a f*cking idiot.”

The fact that Nelson was one-half of the coaching duo at least partly responsible for the worst season of TUF in recent memory (at least ratings wise), surely doesn’t increase his stock in the eyes of The Baldfather, but with “Big Country” knocking out contenders left and right, it’d be insane to let him slip through your fingers, right? Well, according to DW, Nelson’s bout with Stipe Miocic at UFC 161 this weekend may be his last in the UFC:

UFC President Dana White used the contract circumstances as a way to explain the pairing of Nelson and Miocic, which looked odd when announced five weeks ago.

The fighters were headed in different directions. Nelson had just defeated Cheick Kongo and ascended to No. 5 in the heavyweight rankings two months ago while Miocic was coming off the first loss of his career and hadn’t fought in nine months.

Slated to fight newcomer Soa Palelei on the preliminary card, Miocic found himself promoted into the Nelson bout on late notice. It was a necessary move, according to White, because of the terms of Nelson’s contract.

“He’s on the last fight of his deal and we owe him a fight,” White said. “He’s not giving us any extensions.”

White reported that the UFC offered Nelson an extension that he turned down, prompting the boss to blast the fighter by referring to him as “the smartest guy on Earth” and “a (expletive) genius.” 


(And with a snap of his fingers, Homeless Santa vanished from our lives, leaving behind only the crumpled wrapper of the Carolina BBQ Tendercrisp we had left for him on the armoire.)

It wouldn’t exactly be earth-shattering news to tell you that Dana White is not a fan of Roy “Big Country” Nelson. In fact, the President of the UFC has stated exactly that to pretty much anyone who will listen, time after time after “he’s a f*cking idiot.”

The fact that Nelson was one-half of the coaching duo at least partly responsible for the worst season of TUF in recent memory (at least ratings wise), surely doesn’t increase his stock in the eyes of The Baldfather, but with “Big Country” knocking out contenders left and right, it’d be insane to let him slip through your fingers, right? Well, according to DW, Nelson’s bout with Stipe Miocic at UFC 161 this weekend may be his last in the UFC:

UFC President Dana White used the contract circumstances as a way to explain the pairing of Nelson and Miocic, which looked odd when announced five weeks ago.

The fighters were headed in different directions. Nelson had just defeated Cheick Kongo and ascended to No. 5 in the heavyweight rankings two months ago while Miocic was coming off the first loss of his career and hadn’t fought in nine months.

Slated to fight newcomer Soa Palelei on the preliminary card, Miocic found himself promoted into the Nelson bout on late notice. It was a necessary move, according to White, because of the terms of Nelson’s contract.

“He’s on the last fight of his deal and we owe him a fight,” White said. “He’s not giving us any extensions.”

White reported that the UFC offered Nelson an extension that he turned down, prompting the boss to blast the fighter by referring to him as “the smartest guy on Earth” and “a (expletive) genius.” 

Although White has had public beefs with fighters before, none of them have seemed as deep-seated and plain bitter as his current lover’s quarrel with Nelson. It doesn’t help that Nelson approaches his contract negotiations — and apparently life in general — with the attitude of a cynical, defiant adolescent, but “Big Country” does go on to make some solid points about White’s contradictory nature and fighter pay in general later in the interview.

A quick example of the former: If you were to click the “he’s a f*cking idiot” link above, you would be taken to an interview with White dated May 29th in which he claims that Nelson hasn’t earned a title shot because “You’re not going to get a title shot for beating No. 6 and No. 8. You have to beat the top guys.” Which is sound logic, except that just a few weeks prior, White promised that exact thing to Gray Maynard (ranked #3) were he to get past T.J Grant (ranked #7).

Clearly, White has an axe to grind when it comes to Roy Nelson. The problem is that rather than attempt to reconcile with his boss like a grown ass man, Roy has chosen to embrace to heel role and essentially commit career suicide. While Nelson may be able to walk away from UFC 161 with a moral victory, it won’t make his exit any easier to accept from a fan’s perspective. The man is a legitimate, unique draw who just so happens to be one of the top 10 heavyweights in the world, yet he appears all too willing to flush his future down the toilet for the sake of coming out on top in a pissing contest.

Is Nelson underpaid considering his talent level? You could surely make the case (FYI, Roy made 24k/24k at UFC 159), but then again, if Roy and fighters like him are fed up with fighter pay, perhaps they should try proactively solving their problems rather than continuously venting them to any two-bit journalist who will listen. You know who complained a lot without ever accomplishing anything? Hippies, and if Nelson wants to be lumped in with those unkempt slobs, well…*looks at header image and withdraws argument* 

Personally, I loathe the idea of Nelson being ousted from the UFC, if only because it means that we will be treated to interview snippets wherein he claims that “I could have totally beaten so-and-so IF the UFC weren’t such cheapskates” for the rest of his career.

J. Jones

Cain Velasquez Reported to Earn $400,000 at UFC 160, Win or Lose


(Photo via MMA Junkie)

MMA Junkie is reporting that heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez will earn a $400,000 purse for competing in the main event of tonight’s UFC 160 card, win or lose. “Velasquez is scheduled to make a flat $400,000 paycheck at UFC 160 with no win bonus on the line,” Junkie writes.

Of course, this number wouldn’t represent any discretionary bonuses that the UFC may or may not choose to give Velasquez. If the report is true, it might signal a major change in the champion’s purse pay structure.

It was reported that Velasquez earned $100,000 in “show money” for each of his prior two bouts (a win at UFC 146 win over Antonio Silva and a win over Junior Dos Santos at UFC 155), as well as an additional $100,000 in “win money.”

Traditionally, flat pay purses have been had by some of the biggest stars in MMA. If Junkie’s report is correct, it appears as if Velasquez got an improved contract along with that shiny UFC heavyweight title belt this time around.

Elias Cepeda


(Photo via MMA Junkie)

MMA Junkie is reporting that heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez will earn a $400,000 purse for competing in the main event of tonight’s UFC 160 card, win or lose. “Velasquez is scheduled to make a flat $400,000 paycheck at UFC 160 with no win bonus on the line,” Junkie writes.

Of course, this number wouldn’t represent any discretionary bonuses that the UFC may or may not choose to give Velasquez. If the report is true, it might signal a major change in the champion’s purse pay structure.

It was reported that Velasquez earned $100,000 in “show money” for each of his prior two bouts (a win at UFC 146 win over Antonio Silva and a win over Junior Dos Santos at UFC 155), as well as an additional $100,000 in “win money.”

Traditionally, flat pay purses have been had by some of the biggest stars in MMA. If Junkie’s report is correct, it appears as if Velasquez got an improved contract along with that shiny UFC heavyweight title belt this time around.

Elias Cepeda

And Now He’s Retired: UFC Lightweight John Cholish Hangs Up the Gloves Over Low Pay


Cholish estimates that after training costs, his paycheck from last night’s fight wasn’t enough to break even. Photo courtesy of his Twitter page.

No matter how gloriously cheesy the TapouT commercials try to make it look, life as a fighter is far from easy. Training full-time is extremely taxing on your body, promoters and fellow fighters alike can be shady, unpleasant individuals, sponsors try to stiff you, and because the pay involved is so low for most fighters, it’s all essentially just for the glory of saying you’re better at a sport than the guy across from you.

That’s why – in many ways – it should come as little surprise that UFC Lightweight also-ran John Cholish is walking away from the sport after his loss to Gleison Tibau during last night’s UFC on FX 8.

If you find yourself wondering who John Cholish is, you’re far from alone. After compiling a 7-1 record in the minor leagues – including a victory on the undercard of Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Silva – the Renzo Gracie product made his UFC debut at UFC 140, where he defeated Mitch Clarke by second round TKO. This would be the final victory of his career, as Cholish would then drop a decision to Danny Castillo during the UFC on FOX 3 undercard, lose to Gleison Tibau last night and retire from the sport. Another small fish in a big pond, whose career barely made a splash.

Perhaps fittingly, Cholish’s retirement may very well end up being the most significant part of his career. Cholish – who announced his intent to retire on Twitter shortly before the his fight – made it clear while speaking with MMAJunkie.com that the low paychecks that fighters in his position earn were his primary motivation for hanging up the gloves. Via MMAJunkie:


Cholish estimates that after training costs, his paycheck from last night’s fight wasn’t enough to break even. Photo courtesy of his Twitter page.

No matter how gloriously cheesy the TapouT commercials try to make it look, life as a fighter is far from easy. Training full-time is extremely taxing on your body, promoters and fellow fighters alike can be shady, unpleasant individuals, sponsors try to stiff you, and because the pay involved is so low for most fighters, it’s all essentially just for the glory of saying you’re better at a sport than the guy across from you.

That’s why – in many ways – it should come as little surprise that UFC Lightweight also-ran John Cholish is walking away from the sport after his loss to Gleison Tibau during last night’s UFC on FX 8.

If you find yourself wondering who John Cholish is, you’re far from alone. After compiling a 7-1 record in the minor leagues – including a victory on the undercard of Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Silva – the Renzo Gracie product made his UFC debut at UFC 140, where he defeated Mitch Clarke by second round TKO.  This would be the final victory of his career, as Cholish would then drop a decision to Danny Castillo during the UFC on FOX 3 undercard, lose to Gleison Tibau last night and retire from the sport. Another small fish in a big pond, whose career barely made a splash.

Perhaps fittingly, Cholish’s retirement may very well end up being the most significant part of his career. Cholish – who announced his intent to retire on Twitter shortly before the his fight – made it clear while speaking with MMAJunkie.com that the low paychecks that fighters in his position earn were his primary motivation for hanging up the gloves. Via MMAJunkie:

“I’m fortunate enough that I have a job that provides for me really well,” Cholish said. “I give a lot of these guys credit that fight at this level. I think they could be compensated much better based on the income that the UFC takes in. Fortunately, I can just walk away and I’m OK with it. By no means do I mean it disrespectfully toward any other fighters because I think they do a great job. But hopefully Zuffa and the UFC will start paying them a little better.”

By the way, this job he’s referring to? Yeah, he’s a full-time energy trader on Wall Street. I know, I feel worthless now, too.

Don’t assume that the “low paychecks” he’s complaining about are simply “low for a guy who works on Wall Street.” While the amount of money that Cholish made for his losing efforts to Castillo and Tibau haven’t been disclosed, we do know that he only made $8,000 for his lone UFC victory. It’s doubtful that he earned more than that last night: Cholish estimates that after travel expenses and training costs, he lost money by competing in Brazil.

“At the end of the day, it’s hard,” he said. “I have great coaches that take time off and travel. They deserve money, as well. To be completely honest, on a fight like this, I’m losing money to come down here. Flights, hotel rooms, food – and that doesn’t even cover the cost of the time I have to pay for my coaches for training. It’s funny because people talk about the fighters, but at the same time there’s camps and coaches behind the fighters that you don’t even see. So if a fighter is having a tough time making ends meet, how do you think his coaches are doing?”

So what does Cholish offer up as a solution? The obvious answer, of course, is the formation of a fighters union. However, Cholish isn’t stupid. Because he still intends on training regularly and hasn’t ruled out the possibility of coming out of retirement (who actually does?), he says “form a union” in the most careful, “I’m not saying I’m just saying” manner possible.

“I don’t know if there is one significant answer,” he said. “And again, this is just my opinion, so there’s no right or wrong. It’s hard because you have top-level guys like Georges St-Pierre, Jon Jones, Anderson Silva that have started off where we started and worked really hard to get there. So is it right for them to have to give up what they did to try and sacrifice for the greater good? It’s an individual sport, at the end of the day. It’s not like you have a whole team that can kind of step away, like in baseball, when the first union started. Only time will tell. (Zuffa is) a private company. Maybe when it goes public at one point?

I know the Zuffa higher-ups probably aren’t happy with what I’m saying, but I’d like to think I can speak for the lower portion of fighters. A lot of guys I’m sure would love to say the same thing but aren’t in a position where they have another source of income.”

Enjoy your retirement, John. You made the most out of your time in the sport, despite never making much money from it.

@SethFalvo

MMA Manifesto Releases Total Career Earnings for 772 UFC Fighters

James Toney UFC MMA walkout shirt
(Ladies and gentleman, #69. There is no God.) 

I am going to apologize right from the get-go, Potato Nation, because as I’m writing this, I’m also trying to wrap my brain around the fight I just saw on Super Fight League’s latest installment of Friday Fight Nights and it’s all but completely crippling my ability to focus on my actual task.

While I appreciate the new format that SFL has taken — forgoing freak show fights in mega stadiums in favor of local talent in scaled down arenas — to describe the skill level of some of SFL’s fighters as amateur would be a disservice to amateur MMA fighters around the world. I’m talking specifically, about the heavyweight clash between Virender Singh and Naveen Rao I just witnessed, in which Rao seemingly refused to even attempt to get back to his feet after being taken down, like Butterbean trapped in the YAMMA pit all over again. Singh, on the other hand, was content to dance around and throw one or two GnP shots at a time instead of finishing the fight outright, as if he was unaware of what to do when an opponent literally offers zero defense. Anyway, Rao tapped to strike (yes, it appeared to be just one) and then the camera cut to the crowd engaging in synchronized dance for approximately 3 minutes. BOLLYWOOD IS CRAZY.

What does any of this have to do with the topic at hand? Nothing really, except that even for their completely subpar skill levels, most of the fighters participating on SFL 11 will likely walk away with more money than Tiki Ghosn did from his entire UFC career, at least according to the figures recently released by MMA Manifesto, which tabulated the approximate career earnings of every fighter to fight for the UFC over the past seven years. Of course, the figures only date back to UFC 46, and are void of any sponsorship or locker room bonus money, so perhaps the $2,000 Ghosn was paid should be taken with a grain of salt. Still though, makes you wonder even more how he pulled off this for years.

In either case, join us after the jump to find out how much each of your favorite fighters have made over the course of their UFC careers. And while you might not be shocked at the top few entries on the list, there are definitely more than a few totals that will leave you scratching your head.

James Toney UFC MMA walkout shirt
(Ladies and gentleman, #69. There is no God.) 

I am going to apologize right from the get-go, Potato Nation, because as I’m writing this, I’m also trying to wrap my brain around the fight I just saw on Super Fight League’s latest installment of Friday Fight Nights and it’s all but completely crippling my ability to focus on my actual task.

While I appreciate the new format that SFL has taken — forgoing freak show fights in mega stadiums in favor of local talent in scaled down arenas — to describe the skill level of some of SFL’s fighters as amateur would be a disservice to amateur MMA fighters around the world. I’m talking specifically, about the heavyweight clash between Virender Singh and Naveen Rao I just witnessed, in which Rao seemingly refused to even attempt to get back to his feet after being taken down, like Butterbean trapped in the YAMMA pit all over again. Singh, on the other hand, was content to dance around and throw one or two GnP shots at a time instead of finishing the fight outright, as if he was unaware of what to do when an opponent literally offers zero defense. Anyway, Rao tapped to strike (yes, it appeared to be just one) and then the camera cut to the crowd engaging in synchronized dance for approximately 3 minutes. BOLLYWOOD IS CRAZY.

What does any of this have to do with the topic at hand? Nothing really, except that even for their completely subpar skill levels, most of the fighters participating on SFL 11 will likely walk away with more money than Tiki Ghosn did from his entire UFC career, at least according to the figures recently released by MMA Manifesto, which tabulated the approximate career earnings of every fighter to fight for the UFC over the past seven years. Of course, the figures only date back to UFC 46, and are void of any sponsorship or locker room bonus money, so perhaps the $2,000 Ghosn was paid should be taken with a grain of salt. Still though, makes you wonder even more how he pulled off this for years.

In either case, join us after the jump to find out how much each of your favorite fighters have made over the course of their UFC careers. And while you might not be shocked at the top few entries on the list, there are definitely more than a few totals that will leave you scratching your head.

(updated after UFC on Fuel: Franklin vs Le)

1 Chuck Liddell*  $4,320,000
2 Tito Ortiz*  $4,075,000
3 Quinton Jackson*  $3,240,000
4 Michael Bisping*  $3,135,000
5 Georges St-Pierre *  $3,102,000
6 Randy Couture*  $3,045,000
7 Anderson Silva *  $2,871,000
8 Brock Lesnar  $2,825,000
9 Rashad Evans*  $2,697,000
10 B.J. Penn *  $2,650,000
11 Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira *  $2,640,000
12 Lyoto Machida*  $2,075,000
13 Matt Hughes*  $2,045,000
14 Mauricio Rua*  $2,040,000
15 Wanderlei Silva*  $2,020,000
16 Forrest Griffin*  $1,907,000
17 Mirko Cro Cop*  $1,885,000
18 Jon Jones*  $1,852,000
19 Vitor Belfort*  $1,844,000
20 Frank Mir *  $1,433,000
21 Dan Henderson*  $1,400,000
22 Rich Franklin*  $1,326,000
23 Josh Koscheck *  $1,302,000
24 Junior dos Santos*  $1,190,000
25 Diego Sanchez*  $1,187,000
26 Cheick Kongo*  $1,183,000
27 Nate Diaz*  $1,113,000
28 Jon Fitch *  $1,068,000
29 Brandon Vera*  $1,051,000
30 Demian Maia *  $   996,000
31 Chris Lytle *  $   960,000
32 Cain Velasquez *  $   918,000
33 Tim Sylvia  $   915,000
34 Fabricio Werdum*  $   910,000
35 Gabriel Gonzaga*  $   907,000
36 Frankie Edgar *  $   891,000
37 Kenny Florian *  $   836,000
38 Nate Marquardt*  $   834,000
39 Chris Leben*  $   828,000
40 Clay Guida*  $   801,000
41 Martin Kampmann*  $   788,000
42 Andrei Arlovski*  $   768,000
43 Joe Stevenson *  $   761,000
44 Cung Le*  $   760,000
45 Donald Cerrone  $   737,600
46 Joe Lauzon*  $   694,000
47 Melvin Guillard*  $   650,800
48 Thiago Alves*  $   643,000
49 Antonio Rogerio Nogueira*  $   625,000
50 Jake Shields*  $   600,000
51 Stefan Struve*  $   596,000
52 Jim Miller*  $   584,000
53 Chael Sonnen*  $   582,000
54 Carlos Condit*  $   574,000
55 Nick Diaz*  $   568,500
56 Dong Hyun Kim*  $   559,000
57 Alan Belcher *  $   558,000
58 Stephan Bonnar*  $   557,000
59 Jason MacDonald *  $   556,200
60 Thiago Silva*  $   555,000
61 Sam Stout*  $   552,000
62 Tyson Griffin*  $   532,500
63 Matt Wiman*  $   528,000
64 Matt Hamill*  $   524,000
65 Gleison Tibau *  $   523,000
66 Matt Serra*  $   515,000
67 Johny Hendricks*  $   504,000
68 Spencer Fisher*  $   504,000
69 James Toney  $   500,000
70 Takanori Gomi*  $   500,000
71 Ken Shamrock*  $   490,000
72 Dennis Siver *  $   485,000
73 Marcus Davis*  $   478,000
74 Yoshihiro Akiyama*  $   475,000
75 Jake Ellenberger*  $   465,000
76 Mark Munoz*  $   463,000
77 Heath Herring*  $   460,000
78 Ed Herman*  $   454,000
79 Jeremy Stephens *  $   445,000
80 Mac Danzig*  $   445,000
81 Sean Sherk*  $   436,000
82 Mike Swick*  $   423,000
83 Terry Etim*  $   417,000
84 Kendall Grove *  $   410,000
85 Ricardo Almeida*  $   410,000
86 Keith Jardine *  $   405,000
87 Brian Stann*  $   404,000
88 Ryan Bader*  $   401,000
89 Royce Gracie  $   400,000
90 Wilson Gouveia*  $   396,800
91 Evan Dunham*  $   393,000
92 Gray Maynard*  $   392,000
93 Edson Barboza*  $   390,000
94 Yushin Okami*  $   386,000
95 Alistair Overeem  $   385,714
96 Anthony Johnson*  $   385,000
97 Cole Miller*  $   381,000
98 Kurt Pellegrino *  $   369,000
99 Ben Rothwell*  $   369,000
100 Mike Pyle*  $   367,000
101 Roy Nelson*  $   366,000
102 Dan Hardy*  $   365,000
103 Thiago Tavares*  $   353,000
104 Rick Story*  $   342,000
105 Charles Oliveira*  $   341,000
106 Urijah Faber*  $   337,000
107 Aaron Simpson*  $   336,000
108 Paulo Thiago*  $   332,000
109 Benson Henderson*  $   318,000
110 DaMarques Johnson *  $   318,000
111 Krzysztof Soszynski *  $   312,000
112 Vladimir Matyushenko*  $   307,000
113 Nik Lentz*  $   307,000
114 Ross Pearson*  $   306,000
115 George Sotiropoulos *  $   304,000
116 Hector Lombard*  $   300,000
117 Alessio Sakara*  $   299,000
118 C.B. Dollaway *  $   293,000
119 Phil Davis*  $   290,000
120 Mark Bocek*  $   289,000
121 Dan Miller*  $   283,000
122 Amir Sadollah*  $   282,000
123 Shane Carwin*  $   281,000
124 Rafael dos Anjos*  $   281,000
125 Nate Quarry*  $   280,000
126 Tom Lawlor*  $   278,000
127 Karo Parisyan*  $   277,000
128 Paul Taylor*  $   275,000
129 Jose Aldo*  $   273,000
130 Jorge Rivera *  $   273,000
131 Chan-Sung Jung  $   264,000
132 Marcus Aurelio*  $   263,000
133 Patrick Cote*  $   263,000
134 Chris Weidman*  $   262,000
135 Rousimar Palhares*  $   255,000
136 Josh Neer*  $   251,000
137 Mark Coleman*  $   250,000
138 Matt Riddle*  $   248,000
139 TJ Grant*  $   245,000
140 Mark Hominick*  $   241,000
141 Dustin Hazelett*  $   240,800
142 Matt Brown*  $   240,000
143 Hermes Franca*  $   238,000
144 Tim Boetsch*  $   238,000
145 Mike Pierce*  $   237,000
146 Evan Tanner*  $   232,000
147 Travis Browne*  $   229,000
148 Pat Barry*  $   224,000
149 Eddie Sanchez*  $   222,000
150 Lavar Johnson*  $   220,000
151 Cub Swanson*  $   220,000
152 Joey Beltran *  $   218,000
153 Shane Roller*  $   218,000
154 Rich Clementi*  $   217,000
155 Leonard Garcia*  $   217,000
156 Brock Larson*  $   207,000
157 Paul Kelly*  $   204,000
158 Joseph Benavidez*  $   200,500
159 Danny Castillo*  $   199,600
160 Luiz Cane*  $   199,000
161 Demetrious Johnson*  $   198,000
162 Brian Ebersole*  $   195,000
163 Kyle Kingsbury*  $   194,000
164 Pablo Garza*  $   191,000
165 Jeremy Horn*  $   185,000
166 Antoni Hardonk*  $   184,000
167 Paul Sass*  $   184,000
168 Brendan Schaub*  $   182,000
169 Dustin Poirier  $   181,000
170 Nam Phan*  $   181,000
171 Mike Russow  $   179,000
172 Miguel Torres  $   178,800
173 Rory MacDonald*  $   178,000
174 Michael McDonald  $   177,000
175 John Hathaway*  $   177,000
176 Roger Huerta*  $   176,000
177 Jared Hamman*  $   171,000
178 Jorge Gurgel*  $   170,000
179 Yves Edwards*  $   170,000
180 Dave Herman*  $   169,000
181 Matt Mitrione*  $   168,000
182 Jacob Volkmann *  $   168,000
183 Bart Palaszweski*  $   167,500
184 Akihiro Gono*  $   167,000
185 Gerald Harris *  $   167,000
186 Drew McFedries*  $   165,000
187 Daniel Roberts  $   164,000
188 Erick Silva*  $   162,000
189 Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou  $   160,000
190 Thales Leites*  $   157,000
191 Rob Emerson*  $   156,000
192 Michael Johnson*  $   156,000
193 Dominick Cruz*  $   155,000
194 Kyle Noke*  $   155,000
195 Brian Foster *  $   153,000
196 Alexander Gustafsson*  $   152,000
197 Renato Sobral*  $   151,000
198 Manny Gamburyan*  $   150,000
199 Din Thomas*  $   148,000
200 Stipe Miocic*  $   148,000
201 Josh Burkman*  $   146,000
202 Mike Brown*  $   146,000
203 Luke Cummo*  $   144,000
204 Diego Nunes*  $   144,000
205 Riki Fukuda*  $   144,000
206 James Irvin*  $   143,000
207 Scott Jorgensen  $   143,000
208 Duane Ludwig*  $   142,000
209 Jason Brilz*  $   141,000
210 Diego Brandao*  $   141,000
211 Antonio Silva  $   140,000
212 Dennis Bermudez*  $   140,000
213 Jonathan Goulet*  $   138,500
214 Paul Daley*  $   138,200
215 Charlie Brenneman*  $   136,000
216 Carlos Eduardo Rocha*  $   152,000
217 Chris Wilson*  $   133,000
218 Anthony Njokuani*  $   132,400
219 Tony Ferguson*  $   131,000
220 Court McGee*  $   131,000
221 Frank Trigg*  $   128,000
222 Dennis Hallman*  $   128,000
223 Ryan Jensen  $   127,000
224 Brian Bowles*  $   127,000
225 James Te-Huna*  $   126,000
226 Aaron Riley*  $   125,000
227 Ricardo Lamas*  $   125,000
228 Igor Pokrajac*  $   125,000
229 Brad Pickett*  $   124,000
230 Paul Buentello*  $   122,000
231 Cody McKenzie*  $   122,000
232 Kevin Burns*  $   120,000
233 Alex Caceres*  $   120,000
234 Mark Hunt*  $   117,000
235 John Dodson  $   116,000
236 Anthony Pettis*  $   115,000
237 Jake Rosholt  $   114,000
238 John Howard*  $   114,000
239 Karlos Vemola*  $   114,000
240 Kuniyoshi Hironaka*  $   113,000
241 Joe Riggs*  $   111,000
242 Ivan Menjivar*  $   111,000
243 Takeya Mizugaki*  $   108,000
244 Rony Mariano Bezerra*  $   106,000
245 Efrain Escudero*  $   104,000
246 Justin Lawrence*  $   104,000
247 TJ Waldburger*  $   103,000
248 Ben Saunders *  $   102,000
249 Luigi Fioravanti*  $   102,000
250 Che Mills*  $   102,000
251 Rob Kimmons*  $   100,000
252 John-Olav Einemo*  $   100,000
253 Steve Cantwell*  $   100,000
254 Tim Credeur*  $     98,000
255 Bryan Carraway  $     97,000
256 Goran Reljic *  $     96,000
257 Mike Massenzio*  $     96,000
258 Chris Camozzi*  $     96,000
259 Dean Lister*  $     95,000
260 Erik Koch*  $     94,000
261 Jason Miller  $     92,000
262 Chad Mendes*  $     92,000
263 Justin Edwards*  $     92,000
264 Jamie Varner  $     91,000
265 Tomasz Drwal*  $     90,600
266 Louis Gaudinot  $     90,200
267 Gilbert Yvel  $     90,000
268 Houston Alexander*  $     90,000
269 Eric Schafer*  $     90,000
270 Edwin Figueroa*  $     89,000
271 Travis Lutter*  $     88,000
272 Raphael Assuncao*  $     88,000
273 Jake O’Brien  $     87,000
274 Stephen Thompson  $     85,000
275 Rodrigo Damm*  $     85,000
276 Marcos Vinicius*  $     85,000
277 Ryo Chonan*  $     84,000
278 Jorge Santiago*  $     84,000
279 Fabio Maldonado*  $     84,000
280 Rodney Wallace*  $     83,000
281 Eliot Marshall*  $     83,000
282 Constantinos Philippou*  $     83,000
283 Mitch Gagnon*  $     83,000
284 Jason Lambert*  $     82,000
285 Pascal Krauss*  $     82,000
286 Matt Grice*  $     82,000
287 Brad Tavares*  $     82,000
288 John Lineker*  $     81,800
289 Eddie Yagin*  $     81,000
290 Vaughan Lee*  $     81,000
291 Caol Uno *  $     80,000
292 Phil Baroni  $     80,000
293 Darren Elkins*  $     80,000
294 Eddie Wineland*  $     80,000
295 Seth Baczynski*  $     80,000
296 Kalib Starnes*  $     79,000
297 Lance Benoist*  $     79,000
298 Andre Winner *  $     78,000
299 Ian McCall*  $     77,000
300 Ryan Jimmo*  $     77,000
301 John Maguire*  $     76,000
302 Christian Morecraft*  $     75,000
303 Hatsu Hioki*  $     75,000
304 Jon Madsen *  $     74,000
305 Damacio Page*  $     74,000
306 Pete Sell*  $     72,000
307 Tamdan McCrory*  $     72,000
308 Matt Lindland  $     70,000
309 Rafaello Oliveira*  $     70,000
310 James Wilks*  $     69,000
311 Jonathan Brookins*  $     69,000
312 Brad Blackburn *  $     68,000
313 Mark Scanlon*  $     68,000
314 Sean Pierson*  $     68,000
315 Michihiro Omigawa*  $     67,000
316 George Roop*  $     66,000
317 Rich Attonito*  $     64,000
318 Nick Denis*  $     63,000
319 Nick Osipczak*  $     62,000
320 Siyar Bahadurzada*  $     62,000
321 Jens Pulver*  $     60,000
322 Seth Petruzelli*  $     60,000
323 Daniel Pineda*  $     60,000
324 Glover Teixeira*  $     60,000
325 Drew Fickett*  $     58,000
326 Reuben Duran*  $     58,000
327 Yves Jabouin*  $     58,000
328 Ivan Salaverry  $     57,500
329 Dennis Kang*  $     56,000
330 Michael Chiesa  $     56,000
331 Nick Ring*  $     56,000
332 David Loiseau*  $     55,000
333 Jason Dent  $     55,000
334 Kimo Leopoldo  $     55,000
335 Marvin Eastman*  $     55,000
336 Chris Tuchscherer*  $     54,000
337 Jason Black  $     54,000
338 Waylon Lowe*  $     54,000
339 Yoshiyuki Yoshida*  $     54,000
340 Anthony Perosh*  $     54,000
341 Renan Barao  $     54,000
342 Matthew Riddle*  $     52,000
343 Pete Spratt*  $     52,000
344 Francis Carmont*  $     52,000
345 Jeff Monson  $     51,000
346 Scott Smith*  $     51,000
347 Rani Yahya*  $     51,000
348 Elvis Sinosic*  $     50,000
349 Kimbo Slice *  $     50,000
350 Ramsey Nijem*  $     49,200
351 Diego Saraiva  $     49,000
352 Junie Browing*  $     49,000
353 Nick Catone*  $     49,000
354 Mike Easton*  $     48,800
355 Phillipe Nover  $     48,000
356 Shane Nelson*  $     48,000
357 Terry Martin  $     48,000
358 Cyrille Diabate*  $     48,000
359 John Cofer  $     48,000
360 Steven Siler*  $     48,000
361 T.J. Dillashaw*  $     48,000
362 Marcus Brimage*  $     48,000
363 Christian Wellisch  $     45,000
364 Norifumi Yamamoto*  $     45,000
365 Josh Grispi  $     45,000
366 Rafael Natal*  $     44,000
367 Fabricio Camoes *  $     44,000
368 Claude Patrick*  $     42,000
369 Dave Kaplan  $     41,000
370 Matt Veach*  $     41,000
371 Mike Van Arsdale  $     41,000
372 Dave Branch*  $     40,000
373 Kazuhiro Nakamura  $     40,000
374 Khabib Nurmagomedov*  $     40,000
375 Roland Delorme*  $     40,000
376 Dustin Pague*  $     40,000
377 Carlo Prater*  $     40,000
378 Robert Peralta*  $     40,000
379 John Makdessi*  $     39,600
380 Roan Carneiro*  $     39,000
381 Sam Hoger*  $     39,000
382 Junior Assuncao*  $     39,000
383 Forrest Petz*  $     38,000
384 Joe Doerksen*  $     38,000
385 Tim Hague*  $     38,000
386 Josh Haynes*  $     36,000
387 Justin Bucholz*  $     36,000
388 Justin McCully  $     36,000
389 Mario Miranda  $     36,000
390 Ricardo Romero  $     36,000
391 Jimy Hettes*  $     36,000
392 Mike Guymon  $     34,000
393 Dan Lauzon  $     33,000
394 Shannon Gugerty*  $     33,000
395 Corey Hill*  $     32,000
396 David Bielkheden*  $     32,000
397 James McSweeney*  $     32,000
398 Matt Arroyo*  $     32,000
399 Roli Delgado*  $     32,000
400 Dongyi Yang*  $     32,000
401 Clay Harvison*  $     32,000
402 Chris Cariaso*  $     32,000
403 Ronny Markes*  $     32,000
404 John Albert*  $     32,000
405 Tim Means*  $     32,000
406 Vinny Malgahaes*  $     32,000
407 Wagner Prado*  $     32,000
408 Rob MacDonald*  $     31,000
409 Shamar Bailey*  $     30,400
410 Ken Stone*  $     30,000
411 Carolos Newton  $     30,000
412 David Heath  $     30,000
413 John Salter *  $     30,000
414 Reese Andy  $     30,000
415 Rory Singer*  $     30,000
416 Felipe Arantes*  $     30,000
417 James Head*  $     30,000
418 Yuri Alcantara*  $     30,000
419 Max Hollaway*  $     30,000
420 Jason Young*  $     30,000
421 John Gunderson*  $     29,000
422 Kamal Shalorus  $     29,000
423 Jesse Lennox*  $     28,000
424 Sean McCorkle*  $     28,000
425 Steve Bruno*  $     28,000
426 Tony DeSouza*  $     28,000
427 Mackens Semerzier*  $     28,000
428 Francisco Rivera*  $     28,000
429 Darren Uyenoyama*  $     28,000
430 Chad Griggs  $     27,000
431 Assueiro Silva  $     26,000
432 David Terrell  $     26,000
433 Greg Soto  $     26,000
434 Kris McCray*  $     26,000
435 Marcio Cruz*  $     26,000
436 Javier Vazquez*  $     26,000
437 John Alessio*  $     26,000
438 Sergio Moraes*  $     26,000
439 Jeff Hougland*  $     26,000
440 Renato Verissimo*  $     25,000
441 Dan Cramer*  $     24,000
442 Jon Koppenhaver  $     24,000
443 Kyle Bradley  $     24,000
444 Kyle Watson*  $     24,000
445 Roman Mitichyan*  $     24,000
446 Troy Mandaloniz*  $     24,000
447 Rob Broughton*  $     24,000
448 Vagner Rocha*  $     24,000
449 Aaron Rosa*  $     24,000
450 Chris Cope  $     24,000
451 Jake Hecht*  $     24,000
452 Justin Salas*  $     24,000
453 Erik Perez*  $     24,000
454 Walel Watson*  $     24,000
455 Sam Sicilia*  $     24,000
456 Cristiano Marcello*  $     24,000
457 Zhang Tiequan*  $     24,000
458 Alvin Robinson  $     23,000
459 Trevor Prangley  $     23,000
460 Mike Ciesnolevicz*  $     22,400
461 Nate Mohr*  $     22,000
462 Ricardo Funch*  $     22,000
463 Hugo Viana*  $     22,000
464 Carmelo Marrero*  $     21,000
465 Jess Liaudin*  $     21,000
466 Justin Eilers*  $     21,000
467 Mustafa Al Turk*  $     21,000
468 Ian Loveland  $     21,000
469 Chase Gormley  $     20,000
470 Jason Day*  $     20,000
471 Jason Von Flue  $     20,000
472 Clifford Starks  $     20,000
473 Shane del Rosario  $     20,000
474 Cezar Ferreira*  $     20,000
475 Francisco Drinaldo*  $     20,000
476 Thiago Perpetuo*  $     20,000
477 Reza Madadi*  $     20,000
478 Jeff Curran  $     18,500
479 Brad Imes*  $     18,000
480 Todd Duffee  $     18,000
481 Curt Warburton*  $     18,000
482 Cole Escovedo*  $     18,000
483 Johnny Eduardo*  $     18,000
484 Henry Martinez  $     18,000
485 Shawn Jordan*  $     18,000
486 Chris Clements*  $     18,000
487 Antonio Carvalho*  $     18,000
488 Anton Kuivanen*  $     18,000
489 John Moraga  $     18,000
490 Buddy Roberts*  $     18,000
491 Michael Kuiper*  $     18,000
492 Simeon Thoresen*  $     18,000
493 Marcus LeVesseur*  $     18,000
494 Jay Hieron*  $     18,000
495 Stanislav Nedkov*  $     18,000
496 Alex Karalexis*  $     17,000
497 Oli Thompson*  $     16,000
498 Dokonjonosuke Mishima  $     16,000
499 Genki Sudo  $     16,000
500 Mike Kyle  $     16,000
501 Robbie Lawler*  $     16,000
502 Tommy Speer*  $     16,000
503 Paul Bradley*  $     16,000
504 Johnny Bedford  $     16,000
505 Daron Cruickshank  $     16,000
506 Myles Jury  $     16,000
507 Joe Proctor  $     16,000
508 Keith Wisniewski  $     16,000
509 Antonio McKee  $     15,000
510 Jesse Forbes*  $     15,000
511 Mike Nickels*  $     15,000
512 Rolles Gracie  $     15,000
513 Josh Thomson  $     14,000
514 Philip De Fries*  $     14,000
515 John Cholish*  $     14,000
516 Keita Nakamura  $     13,000
517 Shonie Carter*  $     13,000
518 Jason Reinhart*  $     13,000
519 Maximo Blanco  $     13,000
520 Nick Pace*  $     12,600
521 Amilcar Alves*  $     12,000
522 Anthony Waldburger*  $     12,000
523 Branden Lee Hinkle*  $     12,000
524 Charles McCarthy*  $     12,000
525 Dale Hartt*  $     12,000
526 Jay Silva  $     12,000
527 Julio Paulino*  $     12,000
528 Lucio Linhares*  $     12,000
529 Maiquel Falcao*  $     12,000
530 Mark Holst*  $     12,000
531 Nate Loughran*  $     12,000
532 Pat Audinwood*  $     12,000
533 Per Eklund*  $     12,000
534 Rory Markham*  $     12,000
535 Steve Steinbeiss  $     12,000
536 Todd Brown  $     12,000
537 Wes Correira  $     12,000
538 Xavier Foupa-Pokam*  $     12,000
539 Jesse Bongfelt*  $     12,000
540 David Mitchell*  $     12,000
541 Donny Walker*  $     12,000
542 Yuri Alcantara*  $     12,000
543 Dustin Jacoby  $     12,000
545 Eric Wisely*  $     12,000
546 Issei Tamura*  $     12,000
547 Andrew Craig*  $     12,000
548 Alex Soto  $     12,000
549 Jared Papazian*  $     12,000
550 Pat Schilling*  $     12,000
551 Bernardo Malgalhaes*  $     12,000
552 Yoislandy Izquierdo*  $     12,000
553 Luis Ramos*  $     12,000
554 Hacran Dias*  $     12,000
555 Tommy Hayden*  $     12,000
556 Eiji Mitsuoka*  $     12,000
557 Chico Camos*  $     12,000
558 Joey Gambino*  $     12,000
559 Jimi Manuwa*  $     12,000
560 Akira Corassani*  $     12,000
561 Gunnar Nelson*  $     12,000
562 Yashuhiro Urishitani*  $     12,000
563 Tom DeBlass*  $     12,000
564 Jon Tuck*  $     12,000
565 Dan Christison  $     11,000
566 Gabe Ruediger  $     11,000
567 Nick Thompson  $     11,000
568 Peter Sobotta*  $     11,000
569 Charlie Valencia*  $     10,000
570 Danny Abaddi*  $     10,000
571 Dave Menne*  $     10,000
572 Denis Stojnic*  $     10,000
573 Edgar Garcia*  $     10,000
574 Jordan Radev  $     10,000
575 Justin Levens*  $     10,000
576 Mike Patt  $     10,000
577 Rob Yundt*  $     10,000
578 Ross Pointon*  $     10,000
579 Tom Murphy  $     10,000
580 Wes Sims  $     10,000
581 Mike Lullo*  $     10,000
582 Joseph Sandoval*  $     10,000
583 Papy Abedi*  $     10,000
584 Mitch Clarke*  $     10,000
585 Anistavio Medeiros*  $     10,000
586 Godofredo Pepy*  $     10,000
587 Delson Heleno*  $     10,000
588 Leonardo Mafra*  $     10,000
589 Wagner Campos*  $     10,000
590 Antonio Banuelos  $      9,000
591 Steve Lopez*  $      9,000
592 Tra Telligman  $      9,000
593 T.J. O’Brien*  $      9,000
594 Jussier da Silva  $      9,000
595 Aaron Wilkinson  $      8,000
596 Alberto Crane  $      8,000
597 Alexandre Ferreira*  $      8,000
598 Antonio Mendes*  $      8,000
599 Billy Miles  $      8,000
600 Brad Morris*  $      8,000
601 Brandon Wolff*  $      8,000
602 Cale Yarborough  $      8,000
603 Cameron Dollar  $      8,000
604 Chuck O’Neil  $      8,000
605 Dan Barrera  $      8,000
606 Dan Evenson*  $      8,000
607 Darril Schoonover  $      8,000
608 Dorian Price  $      8,000
609 Ediberto Crocata  $      8,000
610 James Hammortree  $      8,000
611 Jamie Yager  $      8,000
612 Jared Rollins  $      8,000
613 Jesse Taylor  $      8,000
614 Joe Brammer  $      8,000
615 John Kolosci  $      8,000
616 John Polakowski  $      8,000
617 Johnny Rees*  $      8,000
618 Josh Bryant  $      8,000
619 Josh Hendricks  $      8,000
620 Jules Bruchez  $      8,000
621 Justin Wren  $      8,000
622 Marcus Jones  $      8,000
623 Paul Georgieff  $      8,000
624 Richie Hightower  $      8,000
625 Ronys Torres*  $      8,000
626 Ryan McGillivray  $      8,000
627 Sam Morgan*  $      8,000
628 Savo Chivitchian  $      8,000
629 Shane Primm  $      8,000
630 TJ O’Brien  $      8,000
631 Danny Downes  $      8,000
632 Edward Faaloloto*  $      8,000
633 Stephen Bass  $      8,000
634 Josh Ferguson  $      8,000
635 Dustin Neace  $      8,000
636 Al Iaquinta  $      8,000
637 Chris Tickle  $      8,000
638 Chris Saunders  $      8,000
639 Jeremy Larsen  $      8,000
640 Caio Malgalhaes  $      8,000
641 John Texeira*  $      8,000
642 Ulysses Gomez  $      8,000
643 Francisco Trinaldo*  $      8,000
644 Phil Harris  $      8,000
645 Will Campuzano*  $      7,300
646 Gideon Ray*  $      7,000
647 Jeff Cox*  $      7,000
648 Brodie Faber*  $      6,000
649 Chad Reiner  $      6,000
650 Chris Price*  $      6,000
651 Colin Robinson*  $      6,000
652 Doug Evans*  $      6,000
653 Edwin DeWess*  $      6,000
654 Fabiano Scherner*  $      6,000
655 Hector Ramirez*  $      6,000
656 Jason Gilliam  $      6,000
657 Jason High*  $      6,000
658 Jason Tan*  $      6,000
659 Joe Vedepo*  $      6,000
660 Joe Veres  $      6,000
661 John Halverson  $      6,000
662 Kenny Robertson  $      6,000
663 Kevin Jordan*  $      6,000
664 Lee Murray  $      6,000
665 Luke Caudillo*  $      6,000
666 Matt Horwich*  $      6,000
667 Naoyuki Kotani*  $      6,000
668 Razak Al-Hassan*  $      6,000
669 Ryan Thomas*  $      6,000
670 Samy Schiavo*  $      6,000
671 Sean Salmon  $      6,000
672 Victor Valimaki  $      6,000
673 Vinicius Queiroz*  $      6,000
674 Willamy Freire*  $      6,000
675 Matt Lucas  $      6,000
676 Josh Clopton  $      6,000
677 Ednaldo Oliveira*  $      6,000
678 Dan Stittgen  $      6,000
679 Nick Penner*  $      6,000
680 Magnus Cedenblad*  $      6,000
681 Besam Yousef*  $      6,000
682 Tim Elliot*  $      6,000
683 Brock Jardine*  $      6,000
684 Milton Vieira*  $      6,000
685 Roger Hollett*  $      6,000
686 Tom Watson*  $      6,000
687 Andy Ogle*  $      6,000
688 Renee Forte*  $      6,000
689 Motonobu Tezuka*  $      6,000
690 Andre Gusmao  $      5,000
691 Anthony Torres*  $      5,000
692 Mike Whitehead  $      5,000
693 Soa Palelei  $      5,000
694 C.J. Keith*  $      4,800
695 Ansar Chalangov  $      4,000
696 David Lee  $      4,000
697 Fredson Paixao  $      4,000
698 Gilber Aldana  $      4,000
699 Joe Jordan  $      4,000
700 Jonathan Wiezorek  $      4,000
701 Logan Clark  $      4,000
702 Maciej Jewtuszko*  $      4,000
703 Mike Wessel*  $      4,000
704 Scott Junk  $      4,000
705 Sherman Pendergarst  $      4,000
706 Tom Blackledge*  $      4,000
707 Tony Fryklund*  $      4,000
708 Travis Wiuff  $      4,000
709 Vernon White  $      4,000
710 Wes Combs*  $      4,000
711 Mike Stumpf*  $      4,000
712 Jorge Lopez*  $      4,000
713 Byron Bloodworth*  $      3,200
714 Alex Schoenaur*  $      3,000
715 Alexandre Barros*  $      3,000
716 Allen Berube*  $      3,000
717 Andy Wang*  $      3,000
718 Bill Mahood*  $      3,000
719 Bobby Southworth*  $      3,000
720 Brandon Melendez*  $      3,000
721 Brian Geraghty*  $      3,000
722 Brian Cobb*  $      3,000
723 Chris Sanford*  $      3,000
724 Crafton Wallace*  $      3,000
725 Curtis Stout  $      3,000
726 Danillo Villefort*  $      3,000
727 Dante Rivera*  $      3,000
728 David Baron*  $      3,000
729 Derek Downey  $      3,000
730 Derrick Noble  $      3,000
731 Floyd Sword*  $      3,000
732 Icho Larenas  $      3,000
733 Ivan Serati*  $      3,000
734 James Giboo  $      3,000
735 James Lee*  $      3,000
736 Jason Thacker*  $      3,000
737 Jeff Joslin  $      3,000
738 Jeremy Jackson*  $      3,000
739 Jesse Sanders*  $      3,000
740 Josh Rafferty*  $      3,000
741 Josh Shockman  $      3,000
742 Justin James  $      3,000
743 Keigo Kunihara*  $      3,000
744 Kerry Schall*  $      3,000
745 Kit Cope*  $      3,000
746 Koji Oishi*  $      3,000
747 Kristian Rothaermel*  $      3,000
748 Lodune Sincaid*  $      3,000
749 Mario Neto  $      3,000
750 Neil Grove*  $      3,000
751 Neil Wann*  $      3,000
752 Nissen Osterneck*  $      3,000
753 Rex Holman  $      3,000
754 Ron Faircloth*  $      3,000
755 Ronald Jhun  $      3,000
756 Ryan Madigan  $      3,000
757 Ryan Roberts*  $      3,000
758 Sean Gannon*  $      3,000
759 Solomon Hutcherson*  $      3,000
760 Steve Byrnes  $      3,000
761 Stevie Lynch*  $      3,000
762 Thomas Egan*  $      3,000
763 Tim McKenzie*  $      3,000
764 Tyler Toner  $      3,000
765 Joe Marsh  $      2,500
766 Brian Gassaway  $      2,000
767 Cory Walmsley  $      2,000
768 Jeff Newton  $      2,000
769 Rick Davis  $      2,000
770 Steve Vigneault  $      2,000
771 Tiki Ghosn  $      2,000
772 Wade Shipp  $      2,000

Yes it’s a mess and yes it’s long as hell, but it’s a pretty damn comprehensive list on MMAManifesto’s part and it needed to be shared, so DEAL WITH IT.

Like we said, there are definitely some odd placements that need to be discussed amongst you Taters (Bisping over GSP?! Stefan Struve over Stephan Bonnar?!) as well as some whimsically hilarious ones (Terry Etim over Edson Barboza, Carlos Condit at #54, Nick Diaz at #55), but which figure strikes you as the most shocking? Personally, I gotta go with Brandon Vera. His last performance aside, the dude has underwhelmed and underperformed his way to six figures. But I guess that’s why they call it the American dream.

J. Jones 

Alistair Overeem is Officially a Blackzilian, Y’all


(Which one of you sent me the box of horse-flavored chocolates for Valentine’s Day? Delicious!) 

Amidst a long and public dispute with Golden Glory that has yet to be resolved, it appears that UFC Heavyweight #1 contender Alistair Overeem has signed with Authentic Sports Management, and will begin training in Florida alongside Anthony Johnson, Rashad Evans, Melvin Guillard, and fellow K1 kickboxer Tyrone Spong, also known as “The Blackzilians,” for his upcoming title fight with Junior Dos Santos.

Though the team has gotten off to a rough start, Alistair believes ASM, and specifically team leader Glenn Robinson, will push his already decorated career to a new level with their top notch team of industry experts. Overeem sent out the following press release earlier today in regards to the managerial change:

With [ASM], I saw right away that Glenn Robinson has a system in place that allows the fighter to focus on training only, which is so important as I prepare for my UFC heavyweight title fight against Junior Dos Santos,” said Overeem. “ASM has a team of experts to help you grow as an athlete, from Glenn working hands-on as management to Jen Wenk handling my PR and Karen Gough running marketing, a full-time nutritionist, a finance and legal department – you name it they have it. After meeting with ASM, I was convinced that they can make me the new UFC world champion.


(Which one of you sent me the box of horse-flavored chocolates for Valentine’s Day? Delicious!) 

Amidst a long and public dispute with Golden Glory that has yet to be resolved, it appears that UFC Heavyweight #1 contender Alistair Overeem has signed with Authentic Sports Management, and will begin training in Florida alongside Anthony Johnson, Rashad Evans, Melvin Guillard, and fellow K1 kickboxer Tyrone Spong, also known as “The Blackzilians,” for his upcoming title fight with Junior Dos Santos.

Though the team has gotten off to a rough start, Alistair believes ASM, and specifically team leader Glenn Robinson, will push his already decorated career to a new level with their top notch team of industry experts. Overeem sent out the following press release earlier today in regards to the managerial change:

With [ASM], I saw right away that Glenn Robinson has a system in place that allows the fighter to focus on training only, which is so important as I prepare for my UFC heavyweight title fight against Junior Dos Santos,” said Overeem. “ASM has a team of experts to help you grow as an athlete, from Glenn working hands-on as management to Jen Wenk handling my PR and Karen Gough running marketing, a full-time nutritionist, a finance and legal department – you name it they have it. After meeting with ASM, I was convinced that they can make me the new UFC world champion.

As you may or may not know, Golden Glory has filed yet another court order to garnish Overeem’s payment for his UFC 141 win over Brock Lesnar. The former DREAM, Strikeforce, and K1 Champion has stated a desire to keep the issue private and between the parties involved, and like a true professional, refuses to name names in terms of who specifically influenced his decision to seek out a new camp. In fact, in a recent interview with MMAWeekly, Overeem stated that instead of letting the past weigh him down, he is rather looking to the future, and explained why he chose to do so with ASM:

Since I signed my UFC contract, I knew I needed to be in the States more and, therefore, I visited several gyms, training camps, managers and other interesting people in the industry. When I came to South Florida, with ASM, I saw right away they are not only a management company, but an organization that makes sure that everything besides fighting is being taken care of. 

Best of luck, Alistair. Just make sure you stay away from those cheeseburgers the Blackzilians seem to love so much.

-J. Jones