UFC Fight Night 123 Salaries: Marlon Moraes Cashes in

The UFC Fight Night 123 salaries have been released. Marlon Moraes knocked out Aljamain Sterling on the main card. He earned a $146,000 salary. Headliner Brian Ortega nabbed a submission win over Cub Swanson. Ortega walked away with $58,000, while Swan…

The UFC Fight Night 123 salaries have been released. Marlon Moraes knocked out Aljamain Sterling on the main card. He earned a $146,000 salary. Headliner Brian Ortega nabbed a submission win over Cub Swanson. Ortega walked away with $58,000, while Swanson made $76,000. You can see the full list of salaries for UFC Fight Night […]

TUF 26 Finale Salaries: Montano & Modafferi Easily Top List

Now that “The Ultimate Fighter” (TUF) 26 Finale has concluded, the salaries have been released. This past Friday night (Dec. 1), an inaugural Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) women’s flyweight champion was crowned. Nicco Montano d…

Now that “The Ultimate Fighter” (TUF) 26 Finale has concluded, the salaries have been released. This past Friday night (Dec. 1), an inaugural Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) women’s flyweight champion was crowned. Nicco Montano defeated Roxanne Modafferi via unanimous decision to capture the gold. Both competitors walked off with $100,000. Check out the rest of […]

Quote: Dana White Getting Rich While Fighters Don’t Get Paid

There’s been a lot of talk about UFC fighter pay in the recent years. Following the litigation brought to Zuffa by disgruntled former employees Cung Le, Nate Quarry and co., these issues were really put under the microscope. Moving forward to present day, the game is all about those big money fights. Who really benefits

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There’s been a lot of talk about UFC fighter pay in the recent years. Following the litigation brought to Zuffa by disgruntled former employees Cung Le, Nate Quarry and co., these issues were really put under the microscope. Moving forward to present day, the game is all about those big money fights. Who really benefits from these titan pay-per-views though? Guys like Conor McGregor are savvy enough to make bank, it’s the promotion who is taking the lion’s share. Should we expect any different from a business? Maybe its just everyone else apart from the UFC brass who sees mixed martial arts as a sport.

Certainly McGregor sees the business aspect, and is arguably following the blueprint laid down by his boxing counterpart, Floyd Mayweather. ‘Money’ reinvented boxing during the late 90’s and 2000’s through to present day. Raking in record-breaking purses and PPV points from his title fights, Mayweather is now acting as a mentor to upcoming champions. The link between McGregor and Mayweather and their fairy tale fight earlier this year was no co-incidence, albeit never even close to being a reality.

Conor McGregor Floyd Mayweather

Money

With Mayweather’s expertise in making money being passed around in private, he’s now taking aim at UFC president Dana White. In a recent interview with Fight Hype, Mayweather says it’s easy for White to make money in mass amounts while fighters struggle.

“It’s easy to get a ton of money off these UFC guys while they’re not really getting paid. He’s living better than the UFC guys. It’s easy for him to talk about that stuff when he’s never been in a contact sport. They say ‘Oh, Floyd is living better than all his fighters,’ well guess what, I was a fighter myself. So I put in the work on both sides.”

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Thoughts?

UFC president Dana White has been around the sport for years, longer than any current fighters on the roster (with Dan Henderson now retiring). He made a considerable chunk of cash when the promotion sold up for $4.2 billion recently, should certain fighters be getting paid low-end five figures to fight?

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Joe Duffy Unhappy With UFC Salary, Looks To Test Free Agency

The talk of UFC fighter salaries cropped up again recently in relation to Rory MacDonald. The popular UFC welterweight had fought for the promotion in 13 contests over six years, amassing a record of 9-4 under the UFC banner. After competing in a fight of the night/year against Robbie Lawler at UFC 189, ‘Red King’

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The talk of UFC fighter salaries cropped up again recently in relation to Rory MacDonald. The popular UFC welterweight had fought for the promotion in 13 contests over six years, amassing a record of 9-4 under the UFC banner. After competing in a fight of the night/year against Robbie Lawler at UFC 189, ‘Red King’ would go on to lose a decision against Stephen Thompson. After leaving so much blood on the octagon canvas, MacDonald stated he was not happy with the latest contract offer by the UFC.

On August 26, 2016 the Canadian mixed martial arts prospect would sign a contract with Bellator MMA. The UFC’s biggest rival had acquired another huge name in the sport. This just six months after taking in ex-UFC lightweight champion Benson Henderson made it a good year for BMMA. Apparently also bemused by his latest contract offer, ex-middleweight champ Luke Rockhold revealed he’s toying with the idea of modelling for a living.

Joseph Duffy 1

Joe Duffy

The latest UFC fighter to speak out about issues with his contract offer is Joe Duffy. The Irish lightweight competitor tells the42.ie that he is now ‘definitely looking’ at testing the free agency market. Currently at 16-2 and coming off a 25-second win over Mitch Clarke in July, ‘Irish Joe’ says his contract offer from the UFC makes him feel devalued.

With just one fight remaining on his contract, Duffy was hoping to fight in his native Belfast, Northern Ireland. He says the offer of both the opponent and his contract renewal are simply not on par with his needs. In the midst of all the talks of fighters unions and such, ‘Irish Joe’ is the latest of many who are starting to find their voice.

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Irish Joe Says No

“Of course I’d be very disappointed to miss the Belfast card but I just feel that the fight I was offered didn’t make sense. There was no real upside to the fight for me. With it being the last fight on my contract, I feel there’s no benefit for me in taking it.”

“No, I’m not close at all [to signing a new deal]. I have been offered a new contract to sign but I don’t feel like I’m valued. The negotiation seems to be a case of take it or leave it. I’m not asking for a massive increase, just what I believe I’m worth as a professional mixed martial artist. It’s definitely looking like I will be testing free agency, but not by choice.” 

“No matter who you’re fighting in the UFC, you’re up against the best in the world. Three of my opponents didn’t get out of the first round. I’ve had one decision loss against a ranked opponent and three first-round finishes, so I’m happy with how I’ve performed in the UFC.” 

joseph duffy

The Reality

The harsh reality of the modern fight game is not lost on Joe Duffy. He made $20,000 for his fight against Dustin Poirier, currently it was his only loss in the UFC. Duffy’s most notable victory came over current featherweight champion Conor McGregor in a 2010 Cage Warriors contest. The Tristar trained lightweight continued:

“In this game it’s all about the right fights at the right time. I’m still on my first contract so we’re not exactly making enough money to set ourselves up for life, and in this game one injury could end your career in an instant,” explained Duffy, who earned a disclosed $20,000 for his clash with Poirier, while his opponent picked up $84,000.

“I believe there are a lot of guys in the top 10 who I match up well against and obviously my competitive side wants all top 10 guys. But the reality is that I’m not getting paid top 10 salaries and that’s where we’re at right now.”

Another promising prospect could well be on their way to Bellator in the form of Joe Duffy. Who’s next?

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Breaking Point: Why Donald Cerrone Was Right About Fighter Pay

Fan favorite MMA fighter Donald Cerrone recently co-headlined June’s UFC Fight Night 89 and put on perhaps the best performance of his 10-year MMA career when he stopped notoriously durable Patrick Cote with strikes in the third round of their welterweight affair. After a bout of wildly inconsistent results against the absolute elite of the […]

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Fan favorite MMA fighter Donald Cerrone recently co-headlined June’s UFC Fight Night 89 and put on perhaps the best performance of his 10-year MMA career when he stopped notoriously durable Patrick Cote with strikes in the third round of their welterweight affair.

After a bout of wildly inconsistent results against the absolute elite of the 155-pound division, he looked every bit a potential world champion, and affirmed his possible status as a serious threat to both the 155 or 170-pound titles.

In the post-fight press conference, Cerrone was asked what he meant to the company.

His response, like his octagon performance, pulled no punches:

According to my pay check, I don’t mean shit”.

Cerrone isn’t the only athlete to express discontent with the UFC brass for their remuneration. Fighters both past and present have spoken candidly about the ubiquitous lack of financial security that overshadows a career in MMA’s premier promotion.

And to be frank, in 2016 with UFC profits at an all-time high and the company recently having been sold for a record-setting $4 billion, it’s indefensible.

The line that the UFC is sticking to is that all fighters want to make “millions,” but to get there, they have to win consistently, fight in a fan-friendly style, and promote themselves to a wider audience in the media.

However, this defense critically ignores the fact that the majority of complaints from fighters aren’t that they’re not millionaires – it’s that they’re unable to make a living wage.

This is a reality made painfully clear by former top-10 lightweight Myles Jury, who broke down his training expenses such as gym fees, management, taxes, medicals, coaching, and miscellaneous expenses last October to show that, even with a victory, he was barely making $6,000 a fight.

More recently, No. 7-ranked strawweight Joanne Calderwood stated that she was “broke as hell” after her breakout performance against former title contender Valerie Letourneau, and would have to go back to her job so that she could save enough money just to continue training.

Amongst the relatively unknown contenders crying out for better pay are higher-profile fighters like current UFC heavyweight champ Stipe Miocic, who still works as a full-time firefighter; former heavyweight champ Shane Carwin, who worked full-time as an engineer when he was atop the heavyweight throne, and lightweight contender Nate Diaz, who – until beating the UFC’s poster boy Conor McGregor – was earning a maximum of $40,000 a fight ( only $20,000 if he lost).

When you account for the detrimental effects of the Reebok deal, which robbed fighters of their ability to accrue sponsorship income and promote their own personal brand to external stakeholders (they get a ludicrously small Reebok stipend as compensation), the fact that fighters are contractually restricted from fighting and earning money in other promotions; and that, fighters are still classified as “independent contractors” instead of employees, thereby depriving them of benefits they would otherwise entitle to (like pensions), it’s simply absurd to act like the onus for meager fight purses is on the combatants themselves.

It also begs the question of whether a business model premised on minimizing fighter remuneration works to the detriment of the sport’s long-term growth.

Realistically, how many young men and women with a skillset conducive to professional combat are likely to take that risk when the median payout for the top MMA promotion in the world is a laughable $24,500 a fight? How many young athletes with the potential to be world-beaters have opted to pursue other professional sports – like basketball or football – simply because the conditions are so much more favorable and the risks much more manageable?

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Further, the fact that the UFC promises that those who “win them all” can set themselves apart from the average earner is hardly a justification for the UFC pay structure.

The inherent volatility of MMA as a sport – five champions were dethroned by significant underdogs in the last ten weeks alone– dictates that few fighters can sustain a winning streak after breaking into the world ranking. Moreover, it is precisely the highly competitive “anything can happen” nature of the sport that makes it so attractive to its fans.

And then there’s the politics that goes behind making big-money match ups, like title fights, where athletic merit very frequently comes second to courting mainstream attention (I discussed about that here).

Case in point is the UFC’s announcement this week that Dan Henderson, the No. 13-ranked middleweight who has gone a paltry 3-6 in his last nine fights, will fight newly minted champion Michael Bisping for the belt later this year. Passing over better and more deserving contenders – like Ronald “Jacare” Souza (No. 3) and Robert Whittaker (No. 6) – is one thing, but when your only defense for underpaying your fighters is that they need to win more fights, and win “big” fights, you don’t have a leg to stand on.

In 2016, the conversation about fighter pay is more important than ever. The UFC just sold for $4 billion dollars and has a very diversified revenue stream consisting of subscription-based streaming service “Fight Pass,” an immensely popular video game series with EA Sports, their television deal with FOX Sports, and pay-per-view events that set fans back fans $60 apiece to watch the most high-profile fights.

These wouldn’t be possible without legions of men and women willing to put their bodies on the line, and it’s about time that we, as fans and commentators on the sport, recognized that all of them – not just the McGregors and the Rouseys – deserve a bigger slice of pie.

With legislation that would extend the Ali Act – which would require MMA promotions to disclose their revenue in contract negotiations and regulate title fights based on an objective ranking system – soon to be introduced into Congress, and Mark Hunt recently making an impassioned plea for a fighters union, it’s also a time where our opinion, and that of the mainstream media, matters most.

Because right now, it’s just not good enough.

Right now, it’s hard to argue with Cerrone’s assessment.

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UFC 182 Salaries: Jon Jones Earns Waaaaaay More Than Everyone Else


(Yep, that’s gonna suck. Photo via Esther Lin/MMAFighting)

The UFC paid out $1.5 million in disclosed salaries and bonuses to the 22 fighters who competed at UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier, with light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones taking home over a third of the pie. Of course, these numbers never really tell the full story, as they don’t include pay-per-view incentives and undisclosed “locker room bonuses” that can make UFC fights much more lucrative for the headliners. Anyway, the official payout list is below via MMAJunkie. Let us know if you have any questions.

Jon Jones: $550,000 (no win bonus; includes $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus)
def. Daniel Cormier: $140,000 (includes $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus)

Donald Cerrone: $140,000 (includes $70,000 win bonus)
def. Myles Jury: $16,000

Brad Tavares: $50,000 (includes $25,000 win bonus)
def. Nate Marquardt: $49,000

Kyoji Horiguchi: $40,000 (includes $20,000 win bonus)
def. Louis Gaudinot: $10,000


(Yep, that’s gonna suck. Photo via Esther Lin/MMAFighting)

The UFC paid out $1.5 million in disclosed salaries and bonuses to the 22 fighters who competed at UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier, with light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones taking home over a third of the pie. Of course, these numbers never really tell the full story, as they don’t include pay-per-view incentives and undisclosed “locker room bonuses” that can make UFC fights much more lucrative for the headliners. Anyway, the official payout list is below via MMAJunkie. Let us know if you have any questions.

Jon Jones: $550,000 (no win bonus; includes $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus)
def. Daniel Cormier: $140,000 (includes $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus)

Donald Cerrone: $140,000 (includes $70,000 win bonus)
def. Myles Jury: $16,000

Brad Tavares: $50,000 (includes $25,000 win bonus)
def. Nate Marquardt: $49,000

Kyoji Horiguchi: $40,000 (includes $20,000 win bonus)
def. Louis Gaudinot: $10,000

Hector Lombard: $106,000 (includes $53,000 win bonus)
def. Josh Burkman: $45,000

Paul Felder: $70,000 (includes $10,000 win bonus, $50,000 Performance of the Night bonus)
def. Danny Castillo: $36,000

Cody Garbrandt: $16,000 (includes $8,000 win bonus)
def. Marcus Brimage: $12,000

Shawn Jordan: $94,000 (includes $22,000 win bonus, $50,000 Performance of the Night bonus)
def. Jared Cannonier: $8,000

Evan Dunham: $54,000 (includes $27,000 win bonus)
def. Rodrigo Damm: $12,000

Omari Akhmedov: $20,000 (includes $10,000 win bonus)
def. Mats Nilsson: $8,000

Marion Reneau: $17,600 (includes $8,000 win bonus, and $1,600 from Dufresne’s purse)
def. Alexis Dufresne: $6,400 (Dufresne was penalized 20% of her purse for missing weight)