[EXCLUSIVE] Ryan Couture Discusses New UFC Contract, His Conversation With Dana White, And Randy’s Continued Involvement in His Career


(Ryan Couture poses for a photo with his father, billionaire fragrance-baron Randy Couture.)

By Elias Cepeda

To say Ryan Couture’s MMA career has moved fast is an understatement. The son of perhaps the most accomplished MMA fighter in history, Randy Couture, Ryan left a banking job just a few years ago to train full-time in Las Vegas with his father, and only two and a half years into his professional career, he has put together a four-fight win streak against great fighters in Strikeforce.

Though his last name has created a whirlwind around him since day one, the junior Couture has kept his head down and stayed humble while working hard to perfect his craft. With the week Ryan has had, it is a good thing that he had practice at keeping cool and collected amidst craziness.

The 30-year-old lightweight upset K.J. Noons in mid-January on Strikeforce’s final card. It was assumed that several Strikeforce champions and contenders would be offered UFC contracts after that event but nothing was certain for Couture.

Like all up-and-coming fighters, it was Couture’s dream to make it to the UFC. He took some time to rest after the Noons fights, got back to light training and waited for word about his future.

“I have a rule where I take one week after a fight and do nothing but eat cheeseburgers and drink beer,” Ryan says with a chuckle. “But after that, I got back to lifting and doing strength and conditioning with Jake [Bonacci], just trying to ease back up to working on the mat because my face was banged up.”

Then, a week ago Couture says he got a life-changing call from UFC President Dana White. Ryan was offered a UFC contract, but it came with one serious caveat.


(Ryan Couture poses for a photo with his father, billionaire fragrance-baron Randy Couture.)

By Elias Cepeda

To say Ryan Couture’s MMA career has moved fast is an understatement. The son of perhaps the most accomplished MMA fighter in history, Randy Couture, Ryan left a banking job just a few years ago to train full-time in Las Vegas with his father, and only two and a half years into his professional career, he has put together a four-fight win streak against great fighters in Strikeforce.

Though his last name has created a whirlwind around him since day one, the junior Couture has kept his head down and stayed humble while working hard to perfect his craft. With the week Ryan has had, it is a good thing that he had practice at keeping cool and collected amidst craziness.

The 30-year-old lightweight upset K.J. Noons in mid-January on Strikeforce’s final card. It was assumed that several Strikeforce champions and contenders would be offered UFC contracts after that event but nothing was certain for Couture.

Like all up-and-coming fighters, it was Couture’s dream to make it to the UFC. He took some time to rest after the Noons fights, got back to light training and waited for word about his future.

“I have a rule where I take one week after a fight and do nothing but eat cheeseburgers and drink beer,” Ryan says with a chuckle. “But after that, I got back to lifting and doing strength and conditioning with Jake [Bonacci], just trying to ease back up to working on the mat because my face was banged up.”

Then, a week ago Couture says he got a life-changing call from UFC President Dana White. Ryan was offered a UFC contract, but it came with one serious caveat.

The younger Couture works and trains in Las Vegas out of his father’s Xtreme Couture gym. His dad is also his coach and a corner man – three of the most important and trusted roles any fighter could have combined into one. As Ryan was getting closer to the UFC, however, Randy was getting further from it. The former heavyweight and light heavyweight champion had just signed a deal with former UFC partner but now rival, Spike TV, and rising MMA organization Bellator.

Dana White was furious at Randy for leaving a UFC/Fox television deal to work for a competitor and going about it in a way he claims was backhanded. On the phone with Ryan, White extended a bitter-sweet opportunity.

“The whole thing was a blur,” Ryan said of his short conversation with White. “The whole thing probably lasted a total of two minutes. I was at work at the gym front desk last Friday and my phone rang. It was a number I didn’t recognize and I was with a customer so I ignored it. It rang again and then I ignored it again. Then I got a text saying, ‘this is Dana, can you call me back?’

“I thought, ‘oh shoot, I don’t want to ignore that call,’ so I let my boss the gym manager know that I needed to make a phone call and called him back. He said…’obviously me and your dad have beef. Things aren’t OK between us but I want to reassure you that you are a UFC fighter. You have a home here.’ He said that was assuming that I wanted to fight for them. He gave me the option. He said he was not going to make my life miserable if I wanted to leave and pursue something else.”

While speaking with assembled media after last Saturday’s UFC 156, White lambasted Randy Couture and mentioned that he had spoken with Ryan and explained to him that his father would no longer be welcome at UFC events. Through his anger, White’s comments were vague but ominous-sounding.

It is easy to understand that White would not roll out the red carpet at UFC events for a now-competitor in Randy, but could the UFC and White actually affect who is and is not allowed to corner one of their fighters? Fighters and seconds/cornermen are licensed by state athletic commissions, not by the UFC.

We asked Randy earlier this week what his understanding was regarding his ability to corner his son during fights going forward. “I don’t have the answer to that question right now. I think it’s an athletic commission,” he told us.

So, we contacted Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Director Keith Kizer and asked if White or the UFC had contacted him about preventing Randy from being a licensed second for his son. “Absolutely not,” Kizer told us. “No promoter has ever contacted us and told us who and who not to license.”

Furthermore, Kizer told us, even if a promoter had attempted to dictate or pressure them on licensing matters, neither he nor the commission would not take that into consideration. “Licensing is done by the athletic commission,” he said.

There is no particular reason to believe that White or the UFC acted improperly and attempted to pressure the Nevada Commission to no longer license their Hall of Fame fighter, but had White pressured Ryan to agree to no longer bring his dad with him to events? We asked Ryan if, during his brief conversation with Dana White, he got the impression that if he listed his dad as a corner man — or if he even bought a ticket and watched from the audience — that it would be a problem for his new bosses.

“That’s the way it seems to me,” Ryan said.

“Dana told me, ‘your dad is not welcome at our events.’ The full implication of that didn’t sink in until after we hung up. It is what it is. If Dana doesn’t want dad there, he doesn’t want him there. I did say that I wanted dad to be involved in my training, and Dana said I could do whatever I needed to with my training. Really, for me, it’s a bummer because he doesn’t even want him there as a spectator. My dad can’t cheer for me from the audience. My dad has been a big part of how I got to where I am. He’s a great corner man, a fantastic coach. He’s able to communicate things clearly and that is really important.”

Saddened, Ryan still decided to take White and the UFC’s offer. “As it stands, the beef is between Dana and dad and it needs to stay that way. It’s not my issue. That has nothing to do with my career,” he said.

“I told him that the UFC is where I want to be. It is hard to get there and it is the best place to accomplish my goal, which is to be the best fighter I can be and hopefully the best in the world one day.”

This past summer, I spent time interviewing both the elder and younger Couture and they both went on and on about how Ryan living in Vegas and being a professional fighter out of Randy’s gym had brought them close. Randy and Ryan’s mother divorced while he was still young and both seem to relish getting back time together that had once been lost.

It may be premature to speculate, but one has to wonder if this new development — Ryan’s new boss telling him he has to make changes in who corners him or even watches him live and in person during fights — will put some distance back between father and son. They work for competing companies now, and it appears as if Ryan would be in trouble with the UFC if his dad continues to corner him.

The young fighter is confident that he and his dad’s relationship will remain strong, however. “Our relationship will absolutely not be affected negatively by this,” Ryan said.

“The day of the fight, in some ways is a small part of the process. Whenever he’s around he’s going to be heavily involved in training camp. He will continue to actually be there for the hands-on stuff. We will always have that no matter what. That’s never going to change. We both have talked it through and he wants what’s best for both of our careers. I don’t see it coming between us at all. It will be a bummer to not have him there for my next fight. This next one is going to be a special one. It will be bittersweet, though, because he won’t be in the corner. But we each want what’s best for each of our careers.”

Things have been moving fast for Ryan Couture, but he’s glad to be where he is. He also feels ready.

“If you had asked me a year ago if I thought I’d be ready to fight in the UFC I would have definitely said that I needed more time, not to be fast tracked,” he admitted.

“But I feel like I’ve proven a lot to myself and everyone else [during my] last three wins. I’m putting on good shows and improving how I react under pressure, particularly with being hurt in the second round of my last fight and still finishing strong. My confidence couldn’t be higher.

“The last six months I’ve begun to feel that I’m at the level where I can hang with anybody. The timing couldn’t be better.”

Master of Foresight Greg Jackson Shows Shocking Lack of Foresight in Joining Bellator/Randy Couture Reality Show


(“OK, Jon, let’s call it a day. I’ve got to go get some fans.”)

Greg Jackson, world-renowned mixed martial arts trainer and Dana White-described “fucking sport killer” is known by MMA fans near and far for his ability to predict the mindsets of opposing fighters and react accordingly. He has created intricate, masterly crafted gameplans that have in turn helped propel the likes of Georges St. Pierre, Rashad Evans, and Jon Jones to the ultimate level of MMA glory. But as they say, “Those who can’t do, teach.” “They” were clearly referring to none other than Greg Jackson, who stated in an interview today that he didn’t “foresee any future problems” with the UFC despite the fact that he’s hopped on board Bellator’s upcoming TUF-ripoff reality show:

No, I don’t think so because like Randy (Couture) I’ve worked with Bellator before, and I don’t think it should be a problem. My fighters are my fighters, and I’m me and like Frank (Shamrock) said as well, I think it’s good for the sport.

Even Dana (White) would admit that it’s good for the sport to have other organizations around.  So I don’t foresee any problems.

Oh Greg, you ignorant slut. After all this time in the game, you think you would have a better understanding of The Baldfather’s view on friendly competition.


(“OK, Jon, let’s call it a day. I’ve got to go get some fans.”)

Greg Jackson, world-renowned mixed martial arts trainer and Dana White-described “fucking sport killer” is known by MMA fans near and far for his ability to predict the mindsets of opposing fighters and react accordingly. He has created intricate, masterly crafted gameplans that have in turn helped propel the likes of Georges St. Pierre, Rashad Evans, and Jon Jones to the ultimate level of MMA glory. But as they say, “Those who can’t do, teach.” “They” were clearly referring to none other than Greg Jackson, who stated in an interview today that he didn’t “foresee any future problems” with the UFC despite the fact that he’s hopped on board Bellator’s upcoming TUF-ripoff reality show:

No, I don’t think so because like Randy (Couture) I’ve worked with Bellator before, and I don’t think it should be a problem. My fighters are my fighters, and I’m me and like Frank (Shamrock) said as well, I think it’s good for the sport.

Even Dana (White) would admit that it’s good for the sport to have other organizations around.  So I don’t foresee any problems.

Oh Greg, you ignorant slut. After all this time in the game, you think you would have a better understanding of The Baldfather’s view on friendly competition.

One would also think a guy as smart as Jackson would have been hesitant to join the ranks of Frank Shamrock, who White will carry a grudge against to the grave (perhaps rightfully so), and Randy Couture, who has enraged White so much with this deal that he has in turn been banned from attending any future UFC events, including those that feature his own son. All we’re saying is, Greg, don’t be too surprised if you show up at the next UFC event and find the guy on the far right blocking the door.

Jackson has been on thin ice ever since he advised Jon Jones to pull out of UFC 151, a move that led to the inevitable cancellation of the event. And although Dana has since ceased spilling haterade in Jackson’s direction, you gotta imagine this move puts the famed trainer back on Dana’s shitlist. And brother, that is not somewhere you want to be.

J. Jones

MMA: Will Randy Couture Get the Shamrock Treatment After Bellator Deal?

When news broke that longtime UFC legend and dual-division multiple-time champion Randy Couture had signed a deal with rival network Spike TV to work with rival promotion Bellator, anyone who has followed the sport just knew there was going to be some …

When news broke that longtime UFC legend and dual-division multiple-time champion Randy Couture had signed a deal with rival network Spike TV to work with rival promotion Bellator, anyone who has followed the sport just knew there was going to be some form of fallout.

UFC President, Dana White, has never been shy about making his opinions known, no matter the subject, and all fully expected him to begin a kind of scorched earth policy against Couture.

As of right now, while it looks like Couture couldn’t even pay for a ticket to attend a UFC event, there has been little in the way of retribution from White.

He’s spoken about his feelings on the subject (h/t MMAWeekly.com), told anyone who would listen that Randy’s son, Ryan Couture, will not suffer in any way, directly or by proxy, due to the separation, and aside from that, there has really been nothing else.

Fans of the sport were expecting something, but most of us were not expecting the level of restraint White is showing on the subject.

After all, this is the man who has freely and openly denied Frank Shamrock, one of the best fighters in UFC history, a spot in the UFC Hall of Fame, for no other reason than he simply doesn’t like him.

Any time Frank Shamrock’s name gets brought up, White rips into him as if the man had never been a fighter of note in his life.

So why wouldn’t we think that Couture might get the Shamrock treatment, given that what Couture has done was expected to be viewed by White as nothing short of traitorous?

Well, if there is one thing White has shown us in the past, it’s that he’s unpredictable. No one expected him to throw Jon Jones under the bus the way he did over the UFC 151 fiasco.

On the other hand, White has shown that he can mend fences with anyone; all you need note is his reconciliation with Tito Ortiz.

So, for now, it looks like no more news is the news when it comes to the topic of Randy Couture vs. Dana White, and that is probably for the best.

But that could all change when Couture becomes a prominent face on Bellator broadcasts; if Bellator begins enjoying success, thanks to Couture, White may aim his displeasure at Couture more freely.

And if the Bellator reality series becomes a hit?

There is no telling just how aggressive White will become. He may even go to the lengths to alter the UFC’s image so that it seems Randy Couture never existed.

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Spike TV Reveals Details of Two New MMA Reality Shows Featuring Randy Couture


(Photo via MMAFighting.com)

Earlier today, Spike TV and Bellator executives and former two-division UFC world champion Randy Couture hosted a media conference call to give more details about the two television projects “The Natural” will be involved with as part of his multi-year agreement with the cable network and rising fight organization.

The first, titled Fight Master: Bellator MMA will be a reality television fight competition show, reminiscent of the one Spike famously created with the UFC back in 2005, which also featured Couture as a coach on its first season. This time around, Couture will serve as a coach along with Frank Shamrock, Greg Jackson and Bellator fighter Joe Warren. Thirty-two welterweight contestants will vie for a spot in the Fight Master house, and sixteen will make it in to compete for $100,000 and a slot in a future Bellator tournament.

Spike and Bellator say that Fight Master: Bellator MMA will tape in the fall of 2013 and that the show will feature more fighter choice and autonomy than in past shows of this type. The Emmy award-winning Bertram van Munster and Elise Doganieri, who created The Amazing Race will serve as the show’s executive producers.

Spike and Bellator also announced a second reality show that Couture will be a part of. MMA Rescue will feature Couture using “his years of expertise in the business of mixed martial arts to help turn struggling gyms into thriving enterprises.” That’s actually new ground for MMA programming and sounds pretty cool, as far as we’re concerned. Fight fans who have, for years, been subjected to watching restaurants, bars, tattoo shops, and hair salons get turned around will now get their very own version of the business rescue reality-show format.


(Photo via MMAFighting.com)

Earlier today, Spike TV and Bellator executives and former two-division UFC world champion Randy Couture hosted a media conference call to give more details about the two television projects “The Natural” will be involved with as part of his multi-year agreement with the cable network and rising fight organization.

The first, titled Fight Master: Bellator MMA will be a reality television fight competition show, reminiscent of the one Spike famously created with the UFC back in 2005, which also featured Couture as a coach on its first season. This time around, Couture will serve as a coach along with Frank Shamrock, Greg Jackson and Bellator fighter Joe Warren. Thirty-two welterweight contestants will vie for a spot in the Fight Master house, and sixteen will make it in to compete for $100,000 and a slot in a future Bellator tournament.

Spike and Bellator say that Fight Master: Bellator MMA will tape in the fall of 2013 and that the show will feature more fighter choice and autonomy than in past shows of this type. The Emmy award-winning Bertram van Munster and Elise Doganieri, who created The Amazing Race will serve as the show’s executive producers.

Spike and Bellator also announced a second reality show that Couture will be a part of. MMA Rescue will feature Couture using “his years of expertise in the business of mixed martial arts to help turn struggling gyms into thriving enterprises.” That’s actually new ground for MMA programming and sounds pretty cool, as far as we’re concerned. Fight fans who have, for years, been subjected to watching restaurants, bars, tattoo shops, and hair salons get turned around will now get their very own version of the business rescue reality-show format.

The Hollywood Reporter has also reported that MMA Rescue “will be produced by Couture [and] his manager Samuel Spira” and that “Production on MMA Rescue likely will begin after Fight Master wraps.”

Couture said that he felt he was “coming home to Spike” with this new agreement. The former fighter and Dana White BFF also expressed excitement at reprising his coaching role.

“Coaching is where I started before I started MMA and its something I’ve always had an affinity for,” Couture told CagePotato. “I’m a much better technical athlete than I was in 2005 and I’m looking forward to sharing that with the fighters.”

Elias Cepeda

The UFC 156 Post-Fight Media Scrum Video In Which Dana White Basically Bans Randy Couture From the UFC

Wow. We all knew that the fallout from Randy Couture’s deal with Bellator would be swift and harsh, but if Dana White’s words during the UFC 156 post-fight media scrum were any indication, the UFC HOFer might find himself SOL (Author’s note: I get paid by the acrostic) when his son makes his promotional debut as well.

But before we get into that, lets talk about what went down during the UFC 156 post-fight press conference first (video above). Following his parlay-destroying victory over Alistair Overeem earlier in the evening, Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva was not afraid to add insult to injury when questioned on his strategy heading into the third round, stating almost matter-of-factly that Overeem lacked heart:

I work a lot in the gym and I had a good strategy, because we know Overeem [doesn’t] have good cardio and no heart. When he punches, he’s a lion, but when [you] punch him, he’s a cat, you know? 

That’s right, Antonio freaking Silva just used the power of metaphor in English to call Ubereem a pussy. Might I direct you to this Scanners gif?

For obvious reasons, Dana White remained noncommittal to the idea of a Silva/Velasquez rematch, but simply stated that he “wouldn’t be opposed to that.” While it’s a decent idea in theory considering Silva’s most recent win, putting a guy who got taken down by Overeem on multiple occasions against the best wrestler in the division — one who practically killed Silva when they first fought, by the way — does not exactly scream “necessary matchup.” Then again, crazier things have happened in heavyweight rematches.

Now, let’s move on to Dana White pretty much banishing Randy Couture from all future UFC events…

Wow. We all knew that the fallout from Randy Couture’s deal with Bellator would be swift and harsh, but if Dana White’s words during the UFC 156 post-fight media scrum were any indication, the UFC HOFer might find himself SOL (Author’s note: I get paid by the acrostic) when his son makes his promotional debut as well.

But before we get into that, lets talk about what went down during the UFC 156 post-fight press conference first (video above). Following his parlay-destroying victory over Alistair Overeem earlier in the evening, Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva was not afraid to add insult to injury when questioned on his strategy heading into the third round, stating almost matter-of-factly that Overeem lacked heart:

I work a lot in the gym and I had a good strategy, because we know Overeem [doesn’t] have good cardio and no heart. When he punches, he’s a lion, but when [you] punch him, he’s a cat, you know? 

That’s right, Antonio freaking Silva just used the power of metaphor in English to call Ubereem a pussy. Might I direct you to this Scanners gif?

For obvious reasons, Dana White remained noncommittal to the idea of a Silva/Velasquez rematch, but simply stated that he “wouldn’t be opposed to that.” While it’s a decent idea in theory considering Silva’s most recent win, putting a guy who got taken down by Overeem on multiple occasions against the best wrestler in the division — one who practically killed Silva when they first fought, by the way — does not exactly scream “necessary matchup.” Then again, crazier things have happened in heavyweight rematches.

Now, let’s move on to Dana White pretty much banishing Randy Couture from all future UFC events…

To be fair, Dana White was forced to wade through a shitty selection of topics in the post-fight scrum — everything from Vitor Belfort’s positive test rumor to Stephan Bonnar’s totally positive UFC 153 test was covered — but to see the look that comes across DW’s face when he’s asked about Randy Couture at the 8:43 mark is downright hilarious. You can literally see the gears of war turning in The Baldfather’s head, as if he’s trying to express all his pent up rage and frustration by forming a completely new curse word (Cuntangular-pumpionfucker!), before calming down and declaring that Couture “is only a man when he steps into the octagon.” And if Dana White isn’t completely bullshitting the details of Couture’s signing with Bellator (and that’s an Emmanuel Yarborough-sized “if”), then it seems our beloved Captain America is a little more like Two-Face than we’d like to imagine. I’m not great with superhero puns.

However, it wasn’t until the subject of Randy’s son, Strikeforce veteran Ryan Couture, came up that things really got interesting (emphasis mine):

Interviewer: So how might this affect Ryan’s future?

Dana: So (sighs)…the day after I talked to you guys, I called Ryan Couture and I said ‘Ryan, let me put it to you this way, this is probably the weirdest conversation you’re ever going to have. [Author’s note: Oh God, I know how this ends.] You signed a deal with us in the UFC. I want you to be here. But I need you to understand this: me and your dad are not good, me and your dad are never going to be good, ever, ever again, as long as I walk this fucking planet.

[Randy’s] not cornering him. Randy Couture can’t buy a ticket to this motherfucking event. So I said, ‘He’s not going to be around and I just want to be upfront with you’…and he said to me, ‘Every kid who’s ever strapped on a pair of gloves is dreaming about fighting in the UFC, and if they say they’re not than they’re either lying or stupid.’ He said, ‘This is my dream. I want to fight with you guys.’ 

We’re not exactly sure which “motherfucking event” White was talking about, but there you have it: the most literal case of “out with the old, in with the new” that MMA has ever witnessed. No pressure, Ryan.

J. Jones

Dana White: ‘I Don’t Respect Randy Couture at All, Not Even a Little’

Big news dropped earlier this week that UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture had inked a deal with Spike TV and UFC rival Bellator.  Sports Illustrated’s Loretta Hunt broke the story and detailed that Couture’s first venture with Spike and …

Big news dropped earlier this week that UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture had inked a deal with Spike TV and UFC rival Bellator

Sports Illustrated’s Loretta Hunt broke the story and detailed that Couture’s first venture with Spike and Bellator would be a stint as a coach on the upcoming Bellator reality series, which will begin shooting this month.

It came as no surprise that this fact did not pass without a comment from UFC president Dana White. “I’m happy that he’s gone, that he’s gone forever,” White said of the former UFC champion.

If you think that was where White would let things end you would be wrong. “I don’t respect him (Couture) at all, not even a little. The only time that Randy Couture is ever a man is when he sets foot in that cage. As soon as his big toe steps out of that cage, he’s the furthest thing from it.”

As far as why White feels this way about the Couture, White said that around Christmas time Couture sent him a text informing him that he had not signed a deal with Bellator or Spike, but that he was talking to two other networks and that White should relax and the two would talk after Christmas. White then said, “To this day, we still have not talked.”

For those that think there will be fallout that will affect Randy’s son Ryan, a fighter who has transferred to the UFC with the shuttering of Strikeforce, White said that isn’t going to happen.

In fact White called Ryan and told him, “I want you here if you want to be here, but I need you to understand this, me and your dad are not good. Me and your dad are never going to be good, never, ever again. If you want me to release you from your contract so that you can go do a deal with Bellator I would do that for you.”

According to White, Ryan’s reply was that “This is my dream. I want to fight with you guys. This is where I want to be, I worked my whole life to be here.”

White then reassured Ryan that he was a part of the UFC family and was happy to have him as a part of the UFC.

White then closed with, “That’s it, that’s the whole story and I don’t ever want to talk about it again.”

**all quotes obtained first-hand by BR MMA.

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