Dana White Reacts To Donald Cerrone’s Pay Criticism: ‘Win Them All’

Following what was arguably his finest performance in a dominant third-round TKO over former UFC title challenger Patrick Cote in the co-main event of last weekend’s (Sat., June 18, 2016) UFC Fight Night 89 from Ottawa, UFC mainstay and fan favorite Donald Cerrone wasn’t all smiles as one might expect a “Performance of the Night”

The post Dana White Reacts To Donald Cerrone’s Pay Criticism: ‘Win Them All’ appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Following what was arguably his finest performance in a dominant third-round TKO over former UFC title challenger Patrick Cote in the co-main event of last weekend’s (Sat., June 18, 2016) UFC Fight Night 89 from Ottawa, UFC mainstay and fan favorite Donald Cerrone wasn’t all smiles as one might expect a “Performance of the Night” bonus winner to be.

No, “Cowboy” spoke up at the post-fight presser to state that he ‘didn’t mean s***’ to the UFC based on his payscale:

“(The bonuses) all sound nice – according to my pay I don’t mean s*** to the UFC. But we’ll see. (I’m) going to talk to Dana after this and figure that out.”

Fighter pay is obviously a hot topic in MMA right now, but it was thought that Cerrone, a company man if there ever was one who possesses an alarming 17 wins and 12 post-fight bonuses in the UFC, was towards the upper end of UFC athletes with $79,000 to show, $79,000 to win, and an extra $50,000 ending with a $228,000 payday for his win over Cote.

Touching on all current aspects related to the UFC and MMA during the all-new “UFC Unfiltered” podcast with Matt Serra and Jim Norton today (June 21, 2016) UFC president Dana White put things in perspective concerning Cerrone’s pay complaint:

“Now Cerrone at the press conference comes out and says ‘I don’t know if the UFC loves me if you look at my paycheck. OK, now me and Cerrone are as tight as tight can be. There’s a lot of personal stuff with me and Cerrone, too, on the positive side. The kid made over $200,000 on free TV on the co-main event and the gate was $900,000. How much money does Cerrone expect to make on a co-main event?

“The kid looked great. Never held a world title and made over $200 grand, co-main event, $900,000 gate, free TV.”

Put that way, it would seem like Cerrone made out well with over $200,000 for the co-main event of an event that only brought in $900,000 live. But that wasn’t all it was based on, however, as White also pointed out Cerrone’s tendency to choke in big fights as a possible reason for his current pay:

“We’ve talked, me and Cerrone. He absolutely agreed. What he said to me is ‘I was half joking’. I love him. He looked phenomenal.

“I think the thing that’s frustrating, especially for a guy like ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone, is he has the personality,” White said. “Everybody loves the kid. His fighting style is (expletive) exactly what I like. It’s right up my alley. Everything I love about a fighter, ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone is. And he’s a couple fights away from having that big fight. You’ve got to win them all. Every fight is the most important, and you’ve got to work your way up and you’ve got to win those big fights.

“‘Cowboy’ – again, a guy that I love – hasn’t always taken everything so serious. You can’t be (expletive) rock climbing two days before your fight or wakeboarding the day of your fight. Some of the stuff that this guy does – you want to make that serious, big money, you have to get in the right mindset. The way he looked the other night against Patrick Cote is the way you have to fight when you fight dos Anjos or Diaz or any of the big guys. When you get to that big fight, you have to win.”

While it may sound a bit harsh, it’s also tough to argue with White in a sense, as Cerrone has beaten nearly every less-than-elite competitor he’s faced in the UFC only to fall short to champion Rafael dos Anjos (twice), Nate Diaz, and Anthony Pettis in pivotal and career-changing bouts.

At the end of the day, there’s no animosity between White and Cerrone, but while the exec said he “loves ‘Cowboy,” he’s just not at the Conor McGregor or Ronda Rousey level yet:

“Personally and professionally, I love “Cowboy” Cerrone. This day and age, every fighter on Earth, especially when you look at the money that Conor (McGregor), Ronda (Rousey) and some of these people are making out there, it gets crazy. Everybody wants to make a $1 million.

“Some people get there, some people don’t.”

The post Dana White Reacts To Donald Cerrone’s Pay Criticism: ‘Win Them All’ appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Dana White Reacts To Donald Cerrone’s Pay Criticism: ‘Win Them All’

Following what was arguably his finest performance in a dominant third-round TKO over former UFC title challenger Patrick Cote in the co-main event of last weekend’s (Sat., June 18, 2016) UFC Fight Night 89 from Ottawa, UFC mainstay and fan favorite Donald Cerrone wasn’t all smiles as one might expect a “Performance of the Night”

The post Dana White Reacts To Donald Cerrone’s Pay Criticism: ‘Win Them All’ appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Following what was arguably his finest performance in a dominant third-round TKO over former UFC title challenger Patrick Cote in the co-main event of last weekend’s (Sat., June 18, 2016) UFC Fight Night 89 from Ottawa, UFC mainstay and fan favorite Donald Cerrone wasn’t all smiles as one might expect a “Performance of the Night” bonus winner to be.

No, “Cowboy” spoke up at the post-fight presser to state that he ‘didn’t mean s***’ to the UFC based on his payscale:

“(The bonuses) all sound nice – according to my pay I don’t mean s*** to the UFC. But we’ll see. (I’m) going to talk to Dana after this and figure that out.”

Fighter pay is obviously a hot topic in MMA right now, but it was thought that Cerrone, a company man if there ever was one who possesses an alarming 17 wins and 12 post-fight bonuses in the UFC, was towards the upper end of UFC athletes with $79,000 to show, $79,000 to win, and an extra $50,000 ending with a $228,000 payday for his win over Cote.

Touching on all current aspects related to the UFC and MMA during the all-new “UFC Unfiltered” podcast with Matt Serra and Jim Norton today (June 21, 2016) UFC president Dana White put things in perspective concerning Cerrone’s pay complaint:

“Now Cerrone at the press conference comes out and says ‘I don’t know if the UFC loves me if you look at my paycheck. OK, now me and Cerrone are as tight as tight can be. There’s a lot of personal stuff with me and Cerrone, too, on the positive side. The kid made over $200,000 on free TV on the co-main event and the gate was $900,000. How much money does Cerrone expect to make on a co-main event?

“The kid looked great. Never held a world title and made over $200 grand, co-main event, $900,000 gate, free TV.”

Put that way, it would seem like Cerrone made out well with over $200,000 for the co-main event of an event that only brought in $900,000 live. But that wasn’t all it was based on, however, as White also pointed out Cerrone’s tendency to choke in big fights as a possible reason for his current pay:

“We’ve talked, me and Cerrone. He absolutely agreed. What he said to me is ‘I was half joking’. I love him. He looked phenomenal.

“I think the thing that’s frustrating, especially for a guy like ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone, is he has the personality,” White said. “Everybody loves the kid. His fighting style is (expletive) exactly what I like. It’s right up my alley. Everything I love about a fighter, ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone is. And he’s a couple fights away from having that big fight. You’ve got to win them all. Every fight is the most important, and you’ve got to work your way up and you’ve got to win those big fights.

“‘Cowboy’ – again, a guy that I love – hasn’t always taken everything so serious. You can’t be (expletive) rock climbing two days before your fight or wakeboarding the day of your fight. Some of the stuff that this guy does – you want to make that serious, big money, you have to get in the right mindset. The way he looked the other night against Patrick Cote is the way you have to fight when you fight dos Anjos or Diaz or any of the big guys. When you get to that big fight, you have to win.”

While it may sound a bit harsh, it’s also tough to argue with White in a sense, as Cerrone has beaten nearly every less-than-elite competitor he’s faced in the UFC only to fall short to champion Rafael dos Anjos (twice), Nate Diaz, and Anthony Pettis in pivotal and career-changing bouts.

At the end of the day, there’s no animosity between White and Cerrone, but while the exec said he “loves ‘Cowboy,” he’s just not at the Conor McGregor or Ronda Rousey level yet:

“Personally and professionally, I love “Cowboy” Cerrone. This day and age, every fighter on Earth, especially when you look at the money that Conor (McGregor), Ronda (Rousey) and some of these people are making out there, it gets crazy. Everybody wants to make a $1 million.

“Some people get there, some people don’t.”

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UFC Rankings Update: ‘Wonderboy’ Tops Welterweight List

Following what was a crazy night at UFC Fight Night 89 in Ottawa this past Saturday (June 18, 2016), some big moves have been made to the 170-pound rankings following a pair of electrifying welterweight contests. Stephen ‘Wonderboy’ Thompson bested former title challenger Rory MacDonald in their main event contest, after five rounds of what turned

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Following what was a crazy night at UFC Fight Night 89 in Ottawa this past Saturday (June 18, 2016), some big moves have been made to the 170-pound rankings following a pair of electrifying welterweight contests.

Stephen ‘Wonderboy’ Thompson bested former title challenger Rory MacDonald in their main event contest, after five rounds of what turned out to be a beautiful technical war between the two mixed martial artists, by taking home a unanimous decision win over ‘The Red King’ in his home country of Canada. The one-sided victory boosted Thompson past MacDonald into the top spot on the 170-pound rankings. Heading into his murky contract negotiations, MacDonald sits at the No. 2 spot following two losses to the champion and top-ranked combatant.

Also at 170 pounds, Demian Maia moved up to the No. 3 spot without fighting, tying title contender Tyron Woodley.

In the co-main event of the evening, Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone made some noise of his own in the welterweight division even though he typically competes in the deeply talented pool that is the UFC 155-pound weight class, by appearing on the 170-pound rankings after knocking out Patrick Cote in the third round of their bout in Ottawa. The dominant win saw Cerrone debut at No. 14, pushing Thiago Alves down to No. 15.

The next biggest move of significance was Joanne Calderwood’s rise up the women’s strawweight rankings following her brutal third-round TKO of former title contender Valerie Letourneau. Calderwood skyrocketed five spots up the 115-pound ranks to No.7 for the win, after which she declared she was ‘broke as hell’ and would have to get a job in order to continue fighting.

You can check out the full updated rankings in their entirety courtesy of UFC.com right here:

POUND-FOR-POUND
1 Jon Jones
2 Demetrious Johnson
3 Dominick Cruz
4 Robbie Lawler
5 Rafael Dos Anjos
6 Conor McGregor
7 Daniel Cormier
8 Jose Aldo
9 Michael Bisping
10 Frankie Edgar
11 Stipe Miocic
12 Joanna Jedrzejczyk
13 Luke Rockhold
14 Chris Weidman
15 Fabricio Werdum

FLYWEIGHT
Champion: Demetrious Johnson
1 Joseph Benavidez
2 Henry Cejudo
3 Jussier Formiga
4 Kyoji Horiguchi
5 Ian McCall
6 John Moraga
7 Zach Makovsky
8 Wilson Reis
9 Ali Bagautinov +1
10 Dustin Ortiz -1
11 Justin Scoggins
12 Louis Smolka
13 Ray Borg
14 Sergio Pettis
15 Ben Nguyen

BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Dominick Cruz
1 TJ Dillashaw
2 Urijah Faber
3 Raphael Assuncao
4 Bryan Caraway
5 Michael McDonald
6 Aljamain Sterling
7 Cody Garbrandt
8 John Lineker
9 John Dodson -1
10 Thomas Almeida
11 Takeya Mizugaki
12 Frankie Saenz
13 Johnny Eduardo
14 Jimmie Rivera
15 Eddie Wineland

FEATHERWEIGHT
Champion: Conor McGregor
1 Jose Aldo
2 Frankie Edgar
3 Max Holloway
4 Chad Mendes
5 Ricardo Lamas
6 Cub Swanson
7 Charles Oliveira
8 Jeremy Stephens
9 Dennis Bermudez
10 Brian Ortega
11 Hacran Dias
12 Darren Elkins
13 Yair Rodriguez
14 Tatsuya Kawajiri
15 Mirsad Bektic

LIGHTWEIGHT
Champion: Rafael Dos Anjos
1 Khabib Nurmagomedov
2 Eddie Alvarez
3 Tony Ferguson
4 Donald Cerrone
5 Nate Diaz
6 Edson Barboza
7 Anthony Pettis
8 Michael Johnson
9 Dustin Poirier
10 Michael Chiesa
11 Beneil Dariush
12 Al Iaquinta
13 Evan Dunham +1
14 Rashid Magomedov -1
15 Francisco Trinaldo

WELTERWEIGHT
Champion: Robbie Lawler
1 Stephen Thompson +1
2 Rory MacDonald -1
3 Tyron Woodley
3 Demian Maia +1
5 Carlos Condit
6 Johny Hendricks
7 Neil Magny
8 Matt Brown
9 Rick Story +1
9 Dong Hyun Kim
11 Gunnar Nelson
12 Kelvin Gastelum
13 Tarec Saffiedine
14 Donald Cerrone *NR
15 Thiago Alves -1

MIDDLEWEIGHT
Champion: Michael Bisping
1 Luke Rockhold
2 Chris Weidman
3 Jacare Souza
4 Vitor Belfort
5 Anderson Silva
6 Robert Whittaker
7 Lyoto Machida
8 Gegard Mousasi
9 Uriah Hall
10 Derek Brunson +1
11 Tim Kennedy -1
12 Thales Leites
13 Dan Henderson
14 Rafael Natal
15 Thiago Santos -1

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Daniel Cormier
1 Jon Jones (Interim Champion)
2 Anthony Johnson
3 Glover Teixeira
4 Alexander Gustafsson
5 Ryan Bader
6 Ovince Saint Preux
7 Mauricio Rua
8 Rashad Evans
9 Jimi Manuwa
10 Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
11 Nikita Krylov
12 Corey Anderson
13 Ilir Latifi
14 Patrick Cummins
15 Gian Villante

HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Stipe Miocic
1 Fabricio Werdum
2 Cain Velasquez
3 Alistair Overeem
4 Junior Dos Santos
5 Ben Rothwell
6 Andrei Arlovski
7 Travis Browne
8 Mark Hunt
9 Josh Barnett
10 Roy Nelson
11 Frank Mir +1
12 Derrick Lewis -1
13 Stefan Struve
14 Ruslan Magomedov
15 Alexey Oliynyk

WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT
Champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk
1 Claudia Gadelha
2 Carla Esparza
3 Rose Namajunas
4 Tecia Torres
5 Karolina Kowalkiewicz +1
6 Jessica Andrade +1
7 Joanne Calderwood +5
8 Maryna Moroz
9 Valerie Letourneau -4
10 Paige VanZant -1
11 Michelle Waterson
12 Jessica Penne -2
13 Randa Markos +1
14 Jessica Aguilar -1
15 Juliana Lima

WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Miesha Tate
1 Holly Holm
2 Ronda Rousey
3 Cat Zingano
4 Amanda Nunes
5 Julianna Pena
6 Sara McMann
7 Valentina Shevchenko
8 Liz Carmouche
9 Raquel Pennington
10 Jessica Eye
11 Bethe Correia
12 Germaine de Randamie
13 Lauren Murphy
14 Ashlee Evans-Smith
15 Marion Reneau

 

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Fight Night 89 Results/Highlights: Thompson Outguns MacDonald, Cerrone Batters Cote + More

(via UFC on FOX)

In Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson vs. Rory “I Refuse to Write His Nickname” MacDonald, we were expecting one of the more technical battles you’ll ever see in the octagon; one was a kickboxing and karate master with a wealth of experience behind him, the other an archetype of the modern MMA fighter whose only losses had come to the top 1% of his division. Suffice it to say, a sloppy haymaker-fest it would not end up being (not that there’s anything wrong with that).

Our predictions, as it turns out, were mostly spot-on. What we might not have expected, however, is that Thompson would almost completely shut down MacDonald’s attack over the the course of five rounds and reduce his face to the mashed-up pile of blood and gore that only Robbie Lawler before him was able to do.

It was quite possibly Thompson’s best performance to date, and one that cemented his name as the next title contender (after Tyron Woodley, for whatever reason). As for the “Red King” (dammit, I said it!), well, it looks like it’s back to the drawing board, by which I mean that he may very well have to hire a team of scientists and graphic artists to draw him up a new nose, because he won’t have much of a fighting future left with the one he’s got.

Head after the jump for a complete recap of Fight Night 89.

The post Fight Night 89 Results/Highlights: Thompson Outguns MacDonald, Cerrone Batters Cote + More appeared first on Cagepotato.


(via UFC on FOX)

In Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson vs. Rory “I Refuse to Write His Nickname” MacDonald, we were expecting one of the more technical battles you’ll ever see in the octagon; one was a kickboxing and karate master with a wealth of experience behind him, the other an archetype of the modern MMA fighter whose only losses had come to the top 1% of his division. Suffice it to say, a sloppy haymaker-fest it would not end up being (not that there’s anything wrong with that).

Our predictions, as it turns out, were mostly spot-on. What we might not have expected, however, is that Thompson would almost completely shut down MacDonald’s attack over the the course of five rounds and reduce his face to the mashed-up pile of blood and gore that only Robbie Lawler before him was able to do.

It was quite possibly Thompson’s best performance to date, and one that cemented his name as the next title contender (after Tyron Woodley, for whatever reason). As for the “Red King” (dammit, I said it!), well, it looks like it’s back to the drawing board, by which I mean that he may very well have to hire a team of scientists and graphic artists to draw him up a new nose, because he won’t have much of a fighting future left with the one he’s got.

Head after the jump for a complete recap of Fight Night 89.

In the evening’s co-main event, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone improved to 2-0 as a welterweight with a surprisingly dominant performance over Patrick “Look Into My Eyes and See The Wellspring of All Creation” Cote. Known the world across for his notoriously tough chin — which has stood up to the likes of Anderson Silva, Stephen Thompson, and Tito Ortiz — the Canadian “Predator” was dropped on numerous occasions by Cerrone, finally succumbing to a flourish of strikes in the third round. The sky appears to be the limit for Cerrone at 170 for now, which begs the question: With USADA’s recently-implemented weight-cutting rules now in place, are we about to enter the era of fighters going *up* a weight-class to save their careers? Details at 11.

You know that thing I said early about haymaker-fests? Well that’s more or less what the light heavyweight battle between Steve “The Boss” Bosse and Sean “The New Tom Lawler of Weigh-Ins” O’Connell was (are these nickname jokes working for you at all?), and it was fantastic. After nearly getting slept in the first round — well, actually getting slept, then somehow recovering — Bosse managed to rally in the second and third to deliver some brutal punishment of his own. How either guy had the stamina or strength left to engage in that final exchange is beyond impressive, and the UFC should probably do the sensible thing and book them in a rematch on every other card for the rest of eternity.

But it wouldn’t be a night of MMA without some horrific judging and/or refereeing, amiright Nation? On Saturday, that came in the form of referee Jerin Valel, who you might remember as the guy who nearly got Ruan Potts, Josh Koscheck *and* Mark Munoz killed back at UFC 184, who all but forced Valerie Letourneau to go out on her shield against Joanna Calderwood after she had clearly given up. You’d think that a fighter turning her back on his/her opponent and fleeing would be enough of a sign that they were unable to fight back, but not for Jerin Valel. Because Jerin Valel does not operate under the assumptions that you or I do. No, when he sees a man being choked within an inch of his life, he makes sure that he sees his soul dip its toes into the Netherrealm before bringing him back to life. He’s basically the Red Priestess of MMA in that regard.

The full results for Fight night 89 are below.

Main card
Stephen Thompson def. Rory MacDonald via unanimous decision (50-45 x2, 48-47)
Donald Cerrone def. Patrick Cote via third-round TKO (2:35)
Steve Bosse def. Sean O’Connell via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-27)
Olivier Aubin-Mercier def. Thibault Gouti via submission (rear-naked choke) (R3, 2:28)
Joanne Calderwood def. Valerie Letourneau via third-round TKO (2:51)

Undercard
Jason Saggo def. Leandro Silva via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)
Misha Cirkunov def. Ion Cutelaba via submission (arm triangle) (R3, 1:22)
Krzysztof Jotko def. Tamdan McCrory via first-round TKO (0:59)
Joe Soto def. Chris Beal via submission (rear-naked choke) (R3, 3:39)
Elias Theodorou def. Sam Alvey via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27 x2)
Randa Markos def. Jocelyn Jones-Lybarger via UD (30-27, 29-28 x2)
Colby Covington def. Jonathan Meunier via submission (rear-naked choke) (R3, :54)
Ali Bagautinov def. Geane Herrera via unanimous decision (30-27 x3)

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UFC Ottawa Reebok Payouts: Donald Cerrone Tops Everyone, Patrick Cote Follows

UFC Fight Night 89 is in the books, and now it’s time for Reebok to pay the fighters their sponsorship money. Stephen Thompson earned $5,000 for beating Rory MacDonald, who earned $10,000 in the main event while Donald Cerrone earned $20,000 for destroying Patrick Cote, who earned $15,000 in the co-main event. Everyone else earned

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UFC Fight Night 89 is in the books, and now it’s time for Reebok to pay the fighters their sponsorship money.

Stephen Thompson earned $5,000 for beating Rory MacDonald, who earned $10,000 in the main event while Donald Cerrone earned $20,000 for destroying Patrick Cote, who earned $15,000 in the co-main event. Everyone else earned either $2,500 or $5,000.

UFC Fight Night 89 took place on  June 18 at the TD Place in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The prelims aired on Fight Pass and FOX Sports 1 while the the main card aired on FOX Sports 1.

The full payouts include:

Stephen Thompson: $5,000 def. Rory MacDonald: $10,000

Donald Cerrone: $20,000 def. Patrick Cote: $15,000

Steve Bosse: $2,500 def. Sean O’Connell: $5,000

Olivier Aubin-Mercier: $5,000 def. Thibault Gouti: $2,500

Joanne Calderwood: $2,500 def. Valerie Letourneau: $2,500

Jason Saggo: $2,500 def. Leandro Silva: $2,500

Misha Cirkunov: $2,500 def. Ion Cutelaba: $2,500

Krzysztof Jotko: $5,000 def. Tamdan McCrory: $5,000

Joe Soto: $2,500 def. Chris Beal: $2,500

Elias Theodorou: $2,500 def. Sam Alvey: $5,000

Randa Markos: $2,500 def. Jocelyn Jones-Lybarger: $2,500

Colby Covington: $2,500 def. Jonathan Meunier: $5,000

Ali Bagautinov: $5,000 def. Geane Herrera: $2,500

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Donald Cerrone: According To My Pay, I Don’t Mean S*** To The UFC

Perennial UFC lightweight contender and current rising welterweight Donald Cerrone returned with a record-breaking win at UFC Fight Night 89 in Ottawa. Taking on Patrick Cote in the co-main event of the exciting card from Canada last night (Saturday June 18, 2016) ‘Cowboy’ scored yet another fight night bonus, racking his total to promotional high

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Perennial UFC lightweight contender and current rising welterweight Donald Cerrone returned with a record-breaking win at UFC Fight Night 89 in Ottawa. Taking on Patrick Cote in the co-main event of the exciting card from Canada last night (Saturday June 18, 2016) ‘Cowboy’ scored yet another fight night bonus, racking his total to promotional high of 17 from both WEC and the UFC. It’s Cerrone’s second straight $50K bonus after shining in his 170-pound debut against Alex Olveira in February.

With his career record now standing at 30-7, there are many options for Cerrone to consider next, but he sounds a little unhappy if his comments during the post fight presser last night were anything to go by.

donald-cerrone-patrick-cote-ufc-fight-night-89[1]

After 21 fights for the UC and 10 years as a professional mixed martial artist, Cerrone clearly feels he should be of greater monetary value the promotion. After taking out ‘The Predator’ (see the finish at the end of article) in front of the Canadian’s home crowd, ‘Cowboy’ spoke during the PFPC to voice his displeasure in his wages. As quoted by MMAJunkie:

“(The bonuses) all sound nice – according to my pay I don’t mean s*** to the UFC. But we’ll see. (I’m) going to talk to Dana after this and figure that out.”

Assuming Cerrone does get satisfaction from the meeting with UFC president Dana White, we could see a number of intriguing duels in either he lightweihgt, welterweight or potentially middleweight divisions. Although ‘Cowboy’ had previously teased a jump to 185 pounds, he indicated that a 155 or 170-pound bout is what’s on the horizon for now:

5148438942973952[1]

“I don’t know. 155 or 170, either way,” Cerrone said. “Whatever the fastest trip to the next fight is, whether it’s 155 or 170, that’s the route I’m going. I felt good. I probably was literally 176, 177 walking into this fight tonight. Either Diaz or Khabib at 155 or 170.”

You can rest assured that the always active Cerrone will want action sooner rather than later, but will the promotion, potentially on the eve of changing ownership, be willing to increase his basic. This writer would hope so, and there are plenty of other fighters who are also more than deserving, but will the UFC cough up the cash to keep Cerrone on the books?

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