Halfway Across the World, Holly Holm Seeks to Fight off ‘One-Hit Wonder’ Label

When Holly Holm crashed her left shin against Ronda Rousey’s jaw and toppled a championship reign that had drawn worldwide attention, Holm quickly came to be seen as the heir to Rousey’s throne and the usurper of her fame. Here was the next…

When Holly Holm crashed her left shin against Ronda Rousey’s jaw and toppled a championship reign that had drawn worldwide attention, Holm quickly came to be seen as the heir to Rousey’s throne and the usurper of her fame. Here was the next golden girl, who like Rousey was accomplished in combat sports, articulate and telegenic, a ternary combination that seemed irresistible to fans and media alike. 

In the immediate aftermath, everything seemed to be setting her up for a long reign: her game, her personality and her conscientious outlook.

“I don’t want to be a one-hit wonder is probably the thing I’ve been saying about that,” Holm told FOX Sports shortly before her first title defense attempt. ”I don’t want it to be this one performance. I want to show people that I’m here for a reason and for me, I want to keep going, I want to keep getting better, I want to keep learning.”

Eighteen months later, all of her best-laid plans have evaporated, one disappointing loss at a time. 

And now, it’s led to this: On Saturday, Holm is headlining perhaps the weakest card of 2017. The UFC Fight Night main event features Holm, who is 0-3 dating back to that seemingly landmark win over Rousey, against Bethe Correia, who has won only one of her last four fights.

The event will be broadcast from Kallang, Singapore, and airs on UFC Fight Pass, ensuring the smallest audience for a Holm fight since she entered the UFC in early 2015.

 

That the UFC jettisoned Holm to the other side of the world to fight on its digital streaming site rather than television and on a card with little in the way of championship stakes is no coincidence. If the organization doesn’t see her as a declining asset, they most likely view her as a compromised one. The silver lining for Holm is that she has a realistic path to rebuilding her name value and star power.

In this matchup, the UFC has given Holm (10-3) an eminently winnable bout; most fight experts expect her to win Saturday night, and the odds see her as a heavy favorite, by as much as 6-1, per OddsShark.

In Correia (10-2-1), she is facing an opponent largely perceived as someone who has outperformed her potential, having advanced to a title shot back in 2015. Correia is not particularly fast or powerful, and she doesn’t have much offensive flourish to her game. She is mostly workmanlike, aggressively attempting to pile up strikes while prodding the fight to suit her rugged style. Her game is more heart than skill.

By contrast, Holm is polished and deliberate, preferring to let her opponent lead while waiting for openings to counter. 

Holm’s patience has been both her blessing and curse. When opponents rush her, as Rousey did in their Nov. 2015 matchup, Holm is at her best, using her skilled footwork to sidestep blitzes and her talented hands to land counters. She is murderous on static targets.

As opponents have figured this out and game plans have changed, Holm has looked decidedly average.

It may seem crass or unfair to characterize a former UFC champion in that way, but there is statistical evidence that Holm is the opposite of Correia and has underperformed her potential. Remember that Holm entered the UFC as a multi-time boxing champ, yet, according to FightMetric, she has landed only 34 percent of attempted significant strikes, a number below UFC average. She has been successful on only 18 percent of takedown tries, a downright poor number. Holm has also lost as a favorite three times and been out-struck in two of those fights.

In short, during her UFC run she performed brilliantly as an underdog against Rousey and has been inconsistent time and again as a favorite.

Fortunately for her, Correia seems tailor-made as an opponent. Correia will almost certainly come forward and offer Holm openings. It is up to Holm to capitalize upon them. If she can’t, Correia is likely to pile up enough strikes to take the lead on the scorecards—or at least to make the judges’ jobs more difficult based on sheer volume.

That’s exactly what’s happened to Holm in each of her last two fights, both unanimous decision losses. Against Valentina Shevchenko, Holm was out-struck 119-73, per FightMetric. Against Germaine de Randamie, she finished the fight at a 144-122 deficit.

And if she can’t beat Correia, what exactly will that say about Holm? 

First, we must acknowledge that Holm’s decorated boxing past can’t be taken away from her. Her UFC championship win can’t be overlooked, either. Both of those accomplishments cement her combat sports bona fides. 

If we concede that point, we must also accept that the legacies of active fighters are always in the process of being rewritten.

Eighteen months after Holm’s shocking knockout of Rousey, this fight against Correia stands as a point of no return. If she can’t rise to the occasion as an overwhelming favorite and on the motivation of breaking a losing streak, then that result makes a statement that cannot be disregarded. 

There have been plenty of fighters who struggled to adapt as the fight world adapted to them. On Saturday, Holm gets a chance to reset herself or forever risk being labeled as the very thing she resisted: an MMA one-hit wonder.

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UFC: Something’s Gotta Give with All These Raging Fighters

If you’ve been watching MMA for any amount of time, you’ll barely recognize the UFC as it presently exists.
Interim titles are cascading out of the front office like water over a cliff.
The biggest star in the history of the sport is gone, for the time…

If you’ve been watching MMA for any amount of time, you’ll barely recognize the UFC as it presently exists.

Interim titles are cascading out of the front office like water over a cliff.

The biggest star in the history of the sport is gone, for the time being, to perform as a professional boxer.

Everyone from the best in the business to those barely hanging on to a UFC contract are speaking out against the promotion, its president, its fans, its matchmakers and almost anything else even remotely hovering in UFC’s orbit.

Wait. What?

Beyond the pointless paper belts and incomprehensible co-promotion that was long declared a nonstarter, everyone on the roster is voicing discontent for every reason you can name?

That is downright unthinkable. Unimaginable. Impossible, even.

Yet here we are.

UFC fighters have been speaking out constantly since the promotion was sold for a staggering $4 billion last summer, with everything from uniforms to unionization floating the outrage.

And it is very much describable as outrage. Fighters aren’t just speaking out; they’re doing it with a level of fury far exceeding what they produce in the cage.

That’s been much of the story to this point—the notion that these athletes, long under the thumb of Dana White and the Fertitta regime and bullied and oppressed into silence during that tenure, are so fed up that they’d brazenly bite the hand that feeds.

It’s fun to watch for those who enjoy a little chaos or fancy improved athlete rights, and it’s concerning for those who like stability and wonder what a new labor market in MMA might do to the sport. But regardless of one’s stance, it remains clear things can’t continue on like this.

It’s not viable for the UFC to remain the most hated entity in sports by those who perform for the promotion any more than the NBA or NHL is built to withstand a prolonged series of daily bad player PR stories. The sheer accumulation of athlete frustration means the league has to respond or risk losing advertising dollars and fan goodwill.

It’s not viable for fighters to continue to view the UFC as simultaneously the best place to ply their trade and the worst place to work for in the world. They’ll either migrate to Bellator, which is bolstering its roster and hasn’t worried about money since being purchased by Viacom in 2011, or retire from the sport entirely in the name of finding new, less physically traumatic ventures.

It’s probably not even viable for fans to continue to participate in the jungle of hostility the UFC has become, as the constant barrage of negativity could drive some to other sports and leagues they deem less drama-filled.

There is always going to be some friction between bosses and those under their watch, and athletes are no different. But those in the UFC have awoken to their situation enough to ramp that friction up to unprecedented levels.

It can’t keep going like this, though.

Friction, long enough in duration and consistent enough in force, will start a fire in the right conditions.

Fire in these present UFC conditions, with so many players depending on the promotion and the relationships surrounding it, will burn the whole thing to the ground and leave everyone sifting through ashes, wishing they could undo the wrongs done to one another.

Everyone loses in that situation, and it’s time people started finding solutions instead of finding more problems. 

No question, something’s gotta give.

      

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC: Something’s Gotta Give with All These Raging Fighters

If you’ve been watching MMA for any amount of time, you’ll barely recognize the UFC as it presently exists.
Interim titles are cascading out of the front office like water over a cliff.
The biggest star in the history of the sport is gone, for the time…

If you’ve been watching MMA for any amount of time, you’ll barely recognize the UFC as it presently exists.

Interim titles are cascading out of the front office like water over a cliff.

The biggest star in the history of the sport is gone, for the time being, to perform as a professional boxer.

Everyone from the best in the business to those barely hanging on to a UFC contract are speaking out against the promotion, its president, its fans, its matchmakers and almost anything else even remotely hovering in UFC’s orbit.

Wait. What?

Beyond the pointless paper belts and incomprehensible co-promotion that was long declared a nonstarter, everyone on the roster is voicing discontent for every reason you can name?

That is downright unthinkable. Unimaginable. Impossible, even.

Yet here we are.

UFC fighters have been speaking out constantly since the promotion was sold for a staggering $4 billion last summer, with everything from uniforms to unionization floating the outrage.

And it is very much describable as outrage. Fighters aren’t just speaking out; they’re doing it with a level of fury far exceeding what they produce in the cage.

That’s been much of the story to this point—the notion that these athletes, long under the thumb of Dana White and the Fertitta regime and bullied and oppressed into silence during that tenure, are so fed up that they’d brazenly bite the hand that feeds.

It’s fun to watch for those who enjoy a little chaos or fancy improved athlete rights, and it’s concerning for those who like stability and wonder what a new labor market in MMA might do to the sport. But regardless of one’s stance, it remains clear things can’t continue on like this.

It’s not viable for the UFC to remain the most hated entity in sports by those who perform for the promotion any more than the NBA or NHL is built to withstand a prolonged series of daily bad player PR stories. The sheer accumulation of athlete frustration means the league has to respond or risk losing advertising dollars and fan goodwill.

It’s not viable for fighters to continue to view the UFC as simultaneously the best place to ply their trade and the worst place to work for in the world. They’ll either migrate to Bellator, which is bolstering its roster and hasn’t worried about money since being purchased by Viacom in 2011, or retire from the sport entirely in the name of finding new, less physically traumatic ventures.

It’s probably not even viable for fans to continue to participate in the jungle of hostility the UFC has become, as the constant barrage of negativity could drive some to other sports and leagues they deem less drama-filled.

There is always going to be some friction between bosses and those under their watch, and athletes are no different. But those in the UFC have awoken to their situation enough to ramp that friction up to unprecedented levels.

It can’t keep going like this, though.

Friction, long enough in duration and consistent enough in force, will start a fire in the right conditions.

Fire in these present UFC conditions, with so many players depending on the promotion and the relationships surrounding it, will burn the whole thing to the ground and leave everyone sifting through ashes, wishing they could undo the wrongs done to one another.

Everyone loses in that situation, and it’s time people started finding solutions instead of finding more problems. 

No question, something’s gotta give.

      

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Time Is Now for a Jose Aldo Reinvention

The smoke has cleared and Jose Aldo is no longer the UFC featherweight champion.
He’s no longer champion thanks to being on the wrong end of one of the crispest 1-2 combinations ever landed in a UFC bout, thrown by new champion Max Holloway in the clos…

The smoke has cleared and Jose Aldo is no longer the UFC featherweight champion.

He’s no longer champion thanks to being on the wrong end of one of the crispest 1-2 combinations ever landed in a UFC bout, thrown by new champion Max Holloway in the closing moments of their UFC 212 scrap.

The sport is left to wonder whether Aldo is GOAT or goat considering his 1-2 run since late 2015, and the memorable means by which he’s taken to losing fights, but that may not be the story in all of this.

The story may be that this is the best thing to ever happen to him.

Though you wouldn’t know it from watching him weep as he passed by press row last Saturday, there is an unquestionable case that Aldo has been stagnating atop the featherweight division for some time. A lengthy run of tepid performances where he would mostly counterstrike and win on points supported that case, and supported fan frustration as well.

It didn’t help that he got a reputation for pulling out of bouts after seemingly only defending his belt on every triennial winter solstice, and the dubious circumstances of how he became champion again almost immediately after losing his belt to Conor McGregor only empowered detractors to speak more loudly.

But now, thanks to getting a little too comfortable on the center line in front of Holloway and waking up with a flashlight in his face for that comfort, he’s got a chance to turn a big mistake into a big opportunity.

Say hello to Jose Aldo: lightweight contender.

For years there has been talk Aldo is too big for featherweight, that his lazy performances and late round disappearing acts had more to do with a brutal weight cut than any skill discrepancy. That’s always been a pretty probable explanation, given the number of horrendous weight cuts MMA sees and the fact that no one ever questioned whether Aldo was good at fighting.

So here, in his darkest moment, with no obvious right to an immediate rematch against Holloway and no clear options at 145 pounds, why not embrace that narrative and go up in weight?

He could spin it as a new beginning, a chance to claim a title in a second weight class that he probably should have been fighting in since 2011. He could perhaps set his sights on McGregor, his ultimate nemesis and present lightweight champion who so boldly ended his first reign and has been so belligerent towards him for so long.

He could come back bigger and meaner, hunting for finishes the way he did when he was a hungry young contender on the rise in his WEC days.

And people would love it.

The problem with Aldo hasn’t ever been that people don’t want to get behind him. It’s been that he’s made it so hard.

Outside of his native Brazil, people generally seem to take him as a whiny malcontent disinterested in North American media promotion beyond occasionally slagging the UFC.

They feel cheated that someone with so much skill seems so content to coast to successful scorecards when he’s been so obviously ahead of his contemporaries for so long.

They want more from him, if for no other reason than that his “more” might be beyond anything ever seen in the sport.

He can give it at lightweight, find big fights for big money and collect more big accolades there.

He can re-establish himself as a GOAT, all-caps and feared by all instead of a goat, lowercase and with horns. 

For a man who’s lost everything and has no means of gaining it back any time soon, you’d have to think that sounds pretty good.

     

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Will Derrick Lewis vs. Mark Hunt Be the Slugfest of Our Heavyweight Dreams?

If you’re in the market for some hammer-fisted heavyweight action this weekend, the UFC has just the main event for you. Derrick Lewis and Mark Hunt will headline UFC Fight Night 110 on Saturday evening U.S. time in New Zealand.
Lewis vs. Hunt……

If you’re in the market for some hammer-fisted heavyweight action this weekend, the UFC has just the main event for you. Derrick Lewis and Mark Hunt will headline UFC Fight Night 110 on Saturday evening U.S. time in New Zealand.

Lewis vs. Hunt…oh, boy, that sounds like a main course, doesn’t it? In the UFC heavyweight rankings, that’s No. 7 vs. No. 6, but these are two fighters who are in very different stretches of their respective careers.

Lewis is on the come-up, a 32-year-old who had a late start in MMA but has found success with his crushing power, racking up six straight wins. Hunt, meanwhile, is 43 years old, embroiled in a lawsuit with the UFC and its president Dana White, and has only won two of his last six matches.

It’s rare to see a heavyweight prospect break through to title contention. Most of the names around the heavyweight top 10—Cain Velasquez, Junior Dos Santos, Alistair Overeem, Fabricio Werdum, etc.—have been there for years, but Lewis is moving closer to pushing to the front of the pack. So it’s a fun fight and an interesting one, and joining me to discuss it is my colleague, Chad Dundas.

Mike Chiappetta: Chad, I have a feeling that at about the moment the ref squares them up for last-minute instructions, I’ll be giddy about this fight. How could I not be? There is a reason that heavyweights steal the air out of a room. It’s not just their size, but their power and the aura of unpredictability that comes with it.

Any punch can change everything. Any moment could be the last one. 

Lewis and Hunt are in some ways birds of a feather. They are ferocious punchers who will gladly step in the line of fire to launch their own offensive. But the way they do it is very different.

Lewis isn’t a technical marvel. He’s big and powerful, and he fights like he knows those are two of his most meaningful weapons. He’ll walk you down and sling leather and, when he smells fear, unleash a torrent of fists and elbows until you wither or run for cover. He doesn’t have much interest in fighting on the ground or outpointing opponents. He’s all about the finish, baby.

Hunt has a little more subtlety to his game. He’s always had to, because at his height (he’s just 5’10”), he’s always had to navigate the distance to get inside against the heavyweight division’s monsters. So he’s had to develop a deep bag of tricks to get there. He’s great at baiting opponents into his traps and has the one-punch power to turn a single mistake into a TKO. He’ll chop down opponents with kicks, too. And he’s more than happy to fight in close quarters.

So they have some similarities and some differences, and that will be thrilling to watch, for however long it lasts. 

Chad, what do you like about this fight, and is there anything not to like about it?

Chad Dundas: Almost nothing that will likely happen from bell to bell, that’s for sure.

We all know how Hunt fights. It’s not as though he’s going to transform himself into a play-it-safe grappler in the next few days. He’s going to swing for the fences and hope for the best. And while it’s not a style of fighting you want to dwell on for too long, it should be fun to watch.

Meanwhile, the last time Lewis won by submission was November 2010, when he stopped somebody named Rakim Cleveland via second-round armbar at something called Worldwide Gladiator. Oh, to have footage of that one. Since that night, 14 of Lewis’ next 19 fights have ended in TKO victories for the 6’3″ Louisiana native.

So, yeah, this one ought to be a slobberknocker.

Now, granted, Lewis seemingly has more to lose than Hunt. Is there an outside chance he comes into this thing with an actual game plan? Is there a chance he tries to pull a fast one with takedowns and top control? Sure.

But honestly? I just don’t see it. Both these guys know what they’re here for and know full well the attributes that make them popular, marketable fighters. Besides, in the heavyweight division, it’s fairly simple to battle back from a loss, so there’s next to no reason—unless you want to consider the long-term effects—to play it particularly safe.

One thing that kind of does bother me, though, Mike, is Hunt’s ongoing legal struggle with the UFC. Since that ill-fated loss to Brock Lesnar at UFC 200, he’s given every impression he wants only to get through his existing contract as quickly as possible and then get gone.

Now he’s saying he’s found reasons to think his UFC 209 loss to Alistair Overeem was suspect, too.

Do those extenuating circumstances put any kind of damper on this for you? Namely, that Hunt doesn‘t seem to be in a great headspace?

Mike: Well, if you want to be all Debbie Downer about it, I must acknowledge you have a valid point. Even though Hunt is a born fighter, you can’t help but feel that this legal case has to be more than just a passing distraction and may actually affect his preparation and performance.

It’s easy to get caught up in the idea that the best person always wins, or that these guys are simple machines of destruction instead of complex humans that deal with the same hopes, fears, emotions and problems as anyone else, and that all those things can follow them to work.

When we make our predictions or set our expectations for fights, these are X-factors that we often can’t account for. 

Hunt isn’t only facing those kinds of problems, but he’s also at an significant age disadvantage here. He’s 11 years older than Lewis, and his chin, while still amazing, ain’t quite what it used to be. I wouldn’t say I’m to the point that it makes me uneasy to watch Hunt, but I am saying that I worry about how many more of these battles he has in him. 

Chad, you said something interesting, in that you believe Lewis has more to lose than Hunt. I’m not sure that’s the case. At Hunt’s age, how many more big paydays does he have ahead of him? According to the Nevada Athletic Commission, Hunt made a $750,000 purse in his last match. Say he loses and the UFC cuts him. Sure, there will be bidders for his services, but would any of them approach that kind of coin? Given what we know about MMA contracts, I have a hard time believing they would.

Lewis, though, still has a lot of time left. As you mentioned, a loss won’t end any kind of title hopes for him; the UFC will certainly offer him opportunities to get himself back into the chase.

So I guess that brings me to this: how will the fight go, and who will win?

For one thing, I actually believe this fight goes past a round or two. Both Lewis and Hunt are historically durable, and I think both will be a little more cautious of the other’s power than they normally would be against other opponents. But that will only last so long. I expect a lot of power punches being thrown with ill intent and some kind of highlight-reel ending. I’m sure most of us would be surprised if it didn’t end that way. 

Chad, this is about as fun a pairing as the UFC can make with its top-15 heavyweights, isn’t it? What do you hope we get out of it, and is this one of those matchups where the result is less important than the action that is delivered?

Chad: Well, first and foremost, I hope we get a fight-of-the-year candidate brawl to rival the one Hunt had against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva back in 2013—and this time without somebody testing positive for PEDs afterward. 

I hope, as always, we get in and out of this fight without any serious injuries.

Because I’m a strict institutionalist, I also hope something happens to further the overall heavyweight title picture. I guess that means my heart is with Lewis. As you mentioned, the 265-pound class has been hard-up for new title contenders in recent years. Suddenly, with Stipe Miocic as champion, and with Lewis and Francis Ngannou shaping up as fresh contenders, it feels as though there is some momentum starting to build.

A win over Hunt could conceivably make Lewis the next logical choice to face Miocic later this year. That would be a fun fight not only because of the matchup of styles but because both Miocic and Lewis bring a lot of personality to promoting their bouts. For my money, that’s exactly the kind of matchup the heavyweight division needs to start feeling great again.

Line up Ngannou for the winner—barring anything crazy like the arrival of Jon Jones or Daniel Cormier to the weight class later this year—and you might be onto something.

But because this is the heavyweight division, I also can’t be too confident any of that will happen, Mike. Despite the fact Hunt comes in 2-3 (1 no contest) in his last six fights and Lewis has won his last six in a row, the outcome here is far from a foregone conclusion.

Even when he’s on, Lewis gets hit, and his brawling style can sometimes turn sloppy. We all know only bad things happen when you allow one of Hunt’s canned ham fists to connect with your face. So, if this night ends in a big win for the Super Samoan on his home turf, I won’t be surprised about that, either.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Question: As Mighty Mouse Rips Him, Is Dana White Still an Asset to New UFC?

Longtime flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson became the latest athlete to go public with his grievances about his UFC bosses Monday, posting a detailed recounting of his ongoing frustrations to Imgur.
In it, Johnson discusses the behind-the-scenes wh…

Longtime flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson became the latest athlete to go public with his grievances about his UFC bosses Monday, posting a detailed recounting of his ongoing frustrations to Imgur.

In it, Johnson discusses the behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing surrounding his next title defense, for which flyweight contender Ray Borg, bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt and former 135-pound champ TJ Dillashaw have all been floated as opponents.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the main targets of Johnson’s vitriol are UFC President Dana White and head matchmaker Sean Shelby, who the fighter accuses of using “bullying” tactics throughout their conversations. Johnson also rails against the UFC’s apparent apathy about promoting his fights and what he sees as the disrespect he’s been showed throughout the negotiating process.

At least some of Johnson’s anger is believed to be in response to White’s recent appearance on the UFC’s company-controlled Unfiltered podcast, where he called Johnson’s refusal to fight Dillashaw “insanity,” via MMAjunkie.

“For years, I have been a company man and kept quiet, accepting fights, doing as they asked and always remaining humble and grateful for the opportunities provided to me through mixed martial arts,” Johnson wrote in his statement. “Unfortunately, UFC’s mistreatment and bullying has finally forced me to speak out.”

Johnson later doubled-down in a fiery appearance on Monday’s The MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani (warning: NSFW language in video):

Johnson certainly isn’t the first fighter to take issue with the UFC’s hard-nosed management style and in recent years, more and more recognizable names have singled out White as the prime target of their complaints. Considering last year’s sale of the UFC to Hollywood megatalent agency WME-IMG for more than $4 billion, the rising tide of fighter discontent raises questions about White’s bombastic, sometimes obnoxious persona both backstage and in front of the cameras.

Joining me to discuss exactly what all this means is fellow Bleacher Report lead writer Scott Harris.


 

Chad Dundas: Scott, for longtime observers of the UFC, very little of what “Mighty Mouse” alleges in his recent statement is surprising. Because of that—even though all we have so far is his side of some of this story—much of it has the ring of truth.

We’ve known for years that the world’s largest MMA promoter takes an iron-fisted approach to every negotiation. White himself has made a cottage industry out of being a swaggering loudmouth.

For a long time, you could argue that was exactly the sort of public leadership the UFC needed, as it fought for acceptance and airtime in the mainstream sports landscape. But now? It seems to me perhaps that approach is no longer useful.

Because while not much of what Johnson says is shocking, it is surprising that it’s Johnson saying it.

This is a guy who has been a rock for the UFC since winning the 125-pound title in 2012. He’s fought at least twice a year every year since, while amassing 10 consecutive title defenses and blowing away the rest of the best flyweights in the world.

Along the way—by his own admission—he’s made few waves. Until now.

And really, if Demetrious Johnson is publicly ripping you for the way you’ve treated him throughout his career? Brother, you’ve got problems.

Scott, we can talk about Johnson himself in a minute, because his position inside the company is an interesting one.

Firstly, though, what are we to make of White and the UFC getting called on the carpet by one of their most successful champions? And in the era of the “new” WME-IMG-owned UFC, does this macho negotiating style actually do more harm than good?

Scott Harris: You’re absolutely right about the nature of the statement. The content wasn’t surprising. What was surprising is that someone went on the record, and very, uh, thoroughly at that. White’s treatment of fighters is usually described in whispers, thanks entirely to the treatment itself.

As for said treatment, yes, it has run its course. Put aside how grating and off-putting it is. Put aside the bully tactics. After all, White’s personality is not exactly unique in the world of MMA or beyond—cough—Trump— cough.

Let’s instead make a business case for White—or, to be more precise, against him. Generally speaking, White’s stated basis for denying Johnson’s demands (according to Johnson’s statement) was that flyweights don’t “sell” or “draw.” That is accurate, but only to a point. Cards headlined by Johnson and other lighter-weight fighters do not perform well in TV ratings or pay-per-view buys. But that doesn’t mean flyweights and men’s bantamweights are devoid of value to the company. These divisions are not loss leaders or personal vanity projects. Clearly, White and other UFC leaders did not establish these divisions out of love for these fighters. Perhaps Johnson can’t sell one million pay-per-views, but he is still a champion and he still draws eyeballs and darn sure delivers the goods, as evidenced by the fact that he just tied the UFC record for consecutive title defenses and has never lost as a flyweight. At the very least, he makes a strong card stronger.

Cards headlined by Johnson and other lighter-weight fighters do not perform well in TV ratings or pay-per-view buys. But that doesn’t mean flyweights and men’s bantamweights are devoid of value to the company. These divisions are not loss leaders or personal vanity projects. Clearly, White and other UFC leaders did not establish these divisions out of love for these fighters. Perhaps Johnson can’t sell one million pay-per-views, but he is still a champion and he still draws eyeballs and darn sure delivers the goods, as evidenced by the fact that he just tied the UFC record for consecutive title defenses and has never lost as a flyweight. At the very least, he makes a strong card stronger.

And there’s where White’s tactics appear to fail a basic cost-benefit analysis. Why would you ever alienate your own champion? And not only a champion, but the top fighter on the UFC’s own pound-for-pound ranking? Aren’t WME-IMG and the UFC in the business of making and promoting stars? How does this advance that cause? Where else do you see a top official make a disgruntled athlete where there wasn’t one before, for absolutely no discernible reason beyond ego? Maybe White isn’t unique, but his tendency to let his little head make decisions for his big head certainly doesn’t benefit the UFC’s bottom line. In the scrappy early days, when the UFC needed a tough and loyal ally, this made sense. It doesn’t anymore.

Chad: The idea that a guy like Johnson “doesn’t sell” drives me crazy. Here’s a man with a legitimate blue-collar success story—Johnson worked in a factory while his UFC career was just getting started—who has painstakingly built himself into perhaps the best mixed martial arts fighter in history while putting up a 26-2-1 record since 2007.

He comes preloaded with a fanbase outside the UFC’s usual fight audience, as Johnson is something of a well-known figure in the video game-centric Twitch community (whatever that is). He’s a smart, thoughtful family man who enjoys a sorcerer’s apprentice-type relationship with his coach, MMA pioneer Matt Hume.

On top of all that, the dude spits hot fire pretty much every time anybody puts a microphone in front of his face. After defeating Wilson Reis in April, Johnson got on the mic and literally declared that he is a better fighter than beloved legends Georges St-Pierre and Anderson Silva ever were.

You can’t sell this guy, UFC? Really?

 

And that brings us back to White.

Through his 16 years as UFC president, it has seemed like the company only understands one way to promote its fighters. Either they come pre-made in the badass Chuck Liddell/Brock Lesnar/Ronda Rousey mold or the UFC can’t seem to figure out what to do with them.

Now that we’re nearly a year into the WME-IMG era, shouldn’t we see evidence that things are changing? If there was one thing the bona fide entertainment giant seemed like it could improve on in this sport, it was promoting fighters and building stars.

So far? I don’t know that we’ve seen any evidence of that.

Scott, what’s the end game here? During his appearance on The MMA Hour, Johnson said he’d be willing to continue working for the UFC if they could all put this ugliness behind them.

Does Mighty Mouse carry on being the Octagon’s most dominant champion? Or is this a deal breaker of a situation?

Scott: When it comes to the UFC’s history of making stars, an old quote from The Simpsons comes to mind: “We’ve tried nothing, and we’re all out of ideas!” That definitely applies to Johnson, and in the case of White’s purported behavior, they’ve tried less than nothing. He failed to adequately promote Johnson, then blamed him for the shortcoming.

However, I do want to be fair here. Johnson spent a good chunk of his career taking a very guarded stance opposite any microphone. He tended to lapse into cliches and general blandness, though he did turn that around after Conor McGregor’s emergence cemented once and for all the indispensable role personality plays in MMA success. (And while I personally find his fighting style electrifying—and 15 stoppages in 26 wins demonstrates that—some people fairly or not do find him boring to watch.)

Anyway, to your question about the end game, the UFC owners have a few choices. They can find some way to part ways with Johnson, they can mediate some kind of resolution between Team White and Team Mouse, or they can part ways with White.

To date, outside of some staff layoffs, the WME-IMG brain trust has been basically invisible, at least to the public. They seem content to let White be the face of the company. What kind of ROI [rate of investment] do they believe they are getting on him right now, I wonder. Can they really believe there is no one, literally no one else, who can do what White does? White has institutional knowledge, no question; he is the institution. But at this point, is that a good thing? So much has been made of WME-IMG’s buttoned-down approach to governance. Does White fit that approach?

I imagine White will stay, that cooler heads—whomever those heads might actually be—will prevail. But until WME-IMG leaders step forward and fully imprint their own stamp on their $4 billion investment, this kind of dissonance will continue. That wouldn’t be surprising. The surprising part may come, as it did today, when more and more athletes come forward to challenge it.

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