The MMA Thread: DON'T ASK 4 STREAMS & NO GIFS- UFC 300 ON NOW

Slow news day in the world of mma, but came across this and thought others would like to read it. Nate Quarry went on another forum and talked about the behind the scenes, shady stuff that happens in UFC. Its a semi long read.
When I signed with the UFC this is what I was told"

We can't pay you much but you can have any sponsors you want.

Then: We need to approve your sponsors.

Then: You can't have any conflicting sponsors.

Then: You can't thank your sponsors after fights.

Then: We are not approving any sponsors that we don't like their product.

Then: Your sponsors have to pay us a fee of $50,000 for the pleasure to sponsor you.

Then: Your sponsors have to pay us a fee of $100,000 for the pleasure to sponsor you.

If a sponsor has a budget of 10k to sponsor a fighter, they are then out. If there are 5 shorts companies in the UFC you can only go to them for a sponsorship. If they have spent their budget or don't want to support an up and coming fighter they give you shorts instead of money. If you're fighting for $6,000 to show and fighting 3 times a year, even $500 makes a big difference. When there is no competition they don't have to pay you. I lost And1 as a sponsor when the UFC enacted the tax.

At the UFC summit a fighter asked if he could wear his own shirt. Dana laughed and said, "Uh... we can talk about it." I turned around and asked the UFC lawyer if I could wear my OWN shirt and he said, "Sure, give me $50,000 and we can talk about it."

People have no clue from the outside what it's like to fight for the UFC. After spending 10-15 years chasing your dream only to see that the company it's been your dream to fight for cares nothing about the fighters and only cares about the bottom line. 

When I was fighting for the UFC we got X-Mas presents like an iPod. A very bottom of the line iPod but it was still cool. Now the guys get a gift certificate to the UFC store and can use it ONE day. Any money they don't spend on that day is forfeited. 

A fighter gets to use the gym at the hotel he's fighting at for free. The cornermen and everyone with him have to pay. So I'm helping Leben make weight the day of weigh ins and have to pay to go sit in the sauna with him. The UFC couldn't say, "The fighter gets 3 people to go into the gym with him the week of the fight." 

That's just nickel and dime stuff. 

With every little bit they try to squeeze out of the fighters, the more the other organizations will look more attractive. 

I'm incredibly grateful for the opportunity to fight for the UFC and everything I have besides my daughter has come from fighting. But let's not fool ourselves. It's not a charity. It's a business. And they are doing everything they can to make money. The fighters are just a product to use and discard. Every up and coming fighter is the best ever. Every ex-fighter who then expresses an opinion is a coward, loser, etc, etc. 

I fought for the world title for $10,000. Not a penny more. No bonus. No cut of the PPV. The gate alone was 3.5 million dollars. The third highest gate in UFC history at the time. And they must have loved the fight cuz they show the final punch at the start of EVERY UFC PPV. :smile:

And that's fine. Because it's a business. But sooner or later the allure of fighting in the UFC will not be as attractive as fighting for an organization that takes care of you, appreciates you, will let you have sponsors to help make up the income gap, doesn't trash you when you think for yourself, and on and on. Just like every business you work for. It's funny to me to hear people cheer for Dana when he says things that if he was your boss and he said them about you, you would be looking for another job. But when you're signed to a contract, you can't go anywhere. No matter how much you want to. 

When I retired I received a form letter, EMAILED to me that said, "Should you choose to fight again you are still under contract with the UFC." I didn't even get a hard copy with a real signature that I could frame. 

As I said, I love what the UFC has done for me and my family. And specifically what Dana has done for me. 

But I also know it's a business. And that's the best piece of advice I can give to wanna be fighters. Fight for the love of the game. But you better treat it like a business. Because the promoter handing you a contract sure will.
Cliff Notes:

He talks about how sponsors have to pay a sponsor fee. How it increased from $50k to $100k.

How corner men and trainers basically have to pay their own way.

At XMas fighters used to get gifts like bottom of the line iPods, but now they get gift certificates to the UFC store that they have to use in one day.

And how former fighters can''t really express how they feel because they'd be labeled a loser, coward, etc.
 
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Based off cliff notes, nothing really surprises me. Where the UFC has been, where it's at, and where it's going is a very delicate process. I wouldn't be surprised to see the UFC flame out to be honest. I pray it doesn't, but the world of MMA is just so volatile. So many faucets involved, so many people involved. So many competing interests. I do think Dana oversteps his bounds at times but overall I do believe he has the best interest of the sport in mind.

On an unrelated note, I also fear that I'll get bored with MMA at some point. These guys are just so skilled that once they reach a certain level, they match and they basically neutralize their skills and strengths. Then you add in the fact that many of the champs now fight not to lose.

I miss the hunger in fighters, the raw drive to go out there and just lay it on the line resulting in spectacular theater. Once they reach the big show, you see less risk-taking. Intelligent of course, but the product suffers. I sure do miss the WEC days. That was must-see television. The sport is evolving though and more money is on the line so I understand that we will probably never see the PRIDE and WEC type shows. Where fighters went out there with a different mentality.
 
If they want the top fighters to go all out and take risk I think they have to start guaranteeing contracts. Just look at Overeem's last fight. He was on a losing streak and in danger of getting cut if he lost, so he played it safe. 
 
Yup, it's the nature of the beast. With the sport growing and evolving, I don't expect the fighters to fight the same way they did when they were first making their way into the sport and up the food chain.

With guys like Jon Jones, Pettis and Cain etc., I still have faith that we can still get great shows at the highest level. I do believe the point system needs to be looked at and somehow tweaked so that we get more action and less stalling/grinding. I believe that would do a lot to ensure decent shows on every card. I don't have any ideas but I'd hope someone out there does. Something I've always wanted though, was a smaller cage. Obviously not that much smaller since there's HW's but just a tad bit smaller.
 
I've lost a lot of interest in mma around a year ago. Too many ufc events with fights I don't care about. I think this is close to as popular as the sport will get.

I miss the Pride Grand Prixs so much. They were epic and exciting. I miss all of it. The awesome female ring announcer, huge arenas, big entrances, the ring, the confetti for the winner. The ufc presentation isn't as nice.

The only division I care about right now is lightweight because it's so stacked and the matchups are good.
 
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Yeah I have lost a lot of interest in MMA. Japanese MMA is on life support, there is no 2nd big show (Bellator doesn't have enough big fights), women fights are whack, and every card is watered down now.

The UFC has probably peaked. Unless they get a huge mainstream superstar I don't see them getting another bump.

But most important, Quarry comments prove once again, then UFC fighters need to form a union and negotiate a CBA
 
I think the UFC is slipping somewhat. They've watered down the product by having so many events. Ton of unavoidable injuries are reaping havoc on the cards too. You can't afford to have guys like Pettis constantly sidelined, or have main/co-events chopping and changing all the while.

Plus you got all this behind the scenes **** coming out in the press and a loose canon for a president. Things are just looking sloppy at the moment.

They've come a long way but i think they need to make changes. One of the main ones being the pay. They're trying to crack into soccer, NFL, NBA levels of popularity/viewership but there's only a tiny percentage of fighters who are seeing that kind of money.
 
Amen to all your statements.

^^The question is who will form and lead this union. It has to be someone well-known, respected, and active in the ufc. Whoever that person is, he will surely suffer from uncle dana's wrath. I don't really like jon jones but he and gsp(although not active at present) are the only fighters I see who can do that.

Meanwhile, other mma organizations should capitalize (not sure if this is the right term) from all the recent negative news from the ufc. Better management to their fighters, better pay, overall better treatment than the ufc. Considering the popularity of other organizations, I doubt they can do better than the ufc in paying its fighters. They need a 'fertita brothers' type backup for that.

Someone mentioned about champions playing safe nowadays. Now that you mentioned it, I realized that the last fights I actually enjoyed were non-title fights. And some fighters I look forward to watching are not currently holding a title. One fight I'm really excited to watch would be cerrone vs barboza.

As for the number of events they are doing, I think that is the effect of the ufc expanding, and in the process signing more fighters. If they are to compress these lesser known fighters to fight in 1-2 events per month, imagine how long we will wait before we can watch the main event.
 
Not a current fighter but I think Randy Couture would be good to lead a union. But Jon Jones would be a good candidate too. Jon does what's best for him, not whats best for UFC. For instance, he refused to fight Sonnen on short notice. The UFC has been pushing their headphones by Monster that you see a bunch of fighters wearing to the octagon and after the fights while being interviewed by Rogan, so he posts a picture of him wearing Beats.

And Bellator would be the perfect company to capitalize on all of the recent negative news but because of some of his own wrong doing and because of what Dana feeds the media and fans, Bjorn is looked at as shady. And they have Viacom a multi-billion dollar company backing them. 
 
Agree with most of what was said:

Watered down product is a massive issue.

Lack of theatre compared to PRIDE makes me not want to tune in to anything that doesn't feature a fighter I like/follow.


I'm not really concerned with Dana's recent antics. Dude has always been a hot-head. He is just under a bigger microscope now with social media, MMA 'media', and the message board hardcores. He needs take it down a notch, but DW saying whatever he wants, whenever he wants is a reason the company is where it is at today.

I just don't see a union happening for the fighters. Someone like GSP needs to lead it and if he doesn't get the ball rolling soon, he may lose the power to change the landscape. (Couture is a solid choice, just don't know if he could get the backing needed while he is being exiled by ZUFFA.)

I just think there are WAY TOO many fighters in the UFC. With this new TV deal, a fan tuning into the FS! fights would be hard pressed to encounter the same fighter twice in a calendar year. It's hard to build and market stars when UFC fighters are a dime a dozen.
 
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Here's the problem though with wanting other orgs to "capitalize on this", you get stars getting spread out again. I don't like that. I want everyone under the same umbrella and that's where I'm sure a lot of us differ. I'm sure there are a number of folks who see the UFC as a monopoly or something similar to that. I don't care whether it's the UFC, Bellator or whatever, I want all the best fighters under one roof.

I personally don't jive with the Gilbert situation.
"I can't be too specific," said Rebney. "But it includes on-air opportunities, entertainment opportunities behind-the-scenes, some marketing opportunities, really, the whole genesis is Gil-specific. The key to the deal is building the Gilbert Melendez brand, not the Bellator brand or the Bjorn Rebney brand. The fighter's brand is what's important. The focus was on talking to Gil and his team. How do we leverage all the different resources to build the `El Nino' brand, and that's what got us all on the same side of the table to put this structure together."
I'm all for fighters wanting to be compensated fairly, don't get me wrong. If Dana wasn't offering market value, then by all means, Gil go get your $$$

However if you're just trying to stronghold an org, then I can't really support that. To me, that's what the Gilbert situation is, not that Dana was just being an idiot at the negotiating table. I'm still waiting on details though.
 
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With everything going on with UFC, does anyone see MMA fighters going the way of boxers or the way of Mayweather? As in fighters just start marketing themselves, promoting their own fights, and hold their own ppvs without being under the UFC umbrella. That way they can have whatever sponsors they want, fight when they want, and make more money. 
 
That would be terrible in my opinion. The sport would most likely get corrupt and fights that we would want to see would be even more difficult to make. The whole Fedor/M-1 thing was pretty crazy, I wouldn't want MMA to turn into that. Plus, the UFC would never let that happen and co-promote. The whole reason we never saw Fedor in the UFC
 
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Realistically, I don't think it could ever happen under the UFC brand. Dana and company have way too much pride and too much invested to see a model like that become reality. How MMA has evolved to this point, it would be difficult to picture that scenario play out, although when it comes to the fight business anything can happen.
 
Here's the problem though with wanting other orgs to "capitalize on this", you get stars getting spread out again. I don't like that. I want everyone under the same umbrella and that's where I'm sure a lot of us differ. I'm sure there are a number of folks who see the UFC as a monopoly or something similar to that. I don't care whether it's the UFC, Bellator or whatever, I want all the best fighters under one roof.

Well, if the fighters will stay in one roof, then we are stuck with seeing ufc events every week with fighters many don't know about. On the other hand, if fighters spread to other organizations then we might see what boxing politics is doing now. Fighter A thinks he is p4p the best and fighter B thinks he is p4p the best but can't prove it because they belong to rival promotions. That would be bad for mma which I think is still growing. And I would rather see fights every week than not see fights at all.

Bottom line is, dana stop being a douche, fighters are not your puppets, treat them and pay them better.
 
There's needs to be a union to protect the fighters financially and post career. Are these guys getting residuals with the ufc app? That THQ video game deal, I heard was garbage. Unlike the wrestlers, I don't any of them made any real $$. I wonder what happens in 10 years when these guys show signs of brain damage, trauma, and depression. That's going to be the downfall of the ufc and mma, When stories of these guys post fighting career start to develop like Chris leben . I saw him at the mall in the summer post July ufc and he looked broken and depressed. I just felt bad for him and sadly he might be one that might not make it.
 
Regarding a union, could the fighters even form one? Since technically they are independent contractors and are viewed as self employed.

The THQ deal was garbage for the fighters. Hopefully they got a better deal with EA but thats doubtful. I'm sure they had to sign another lifetime agreement allowing EA to use their image and likeliness in UFC games. 
 
Did you guys see cormier at the weigh-in? He looked like he didn't move to a lighter weight class.

Sara mcmann though. 2nd time I felt a little scared when I looked at a woman hahaha.
 
I thought Cormier looked pretty different. His face for one. It'll be interesting to see how much he inflates by tomorrow night.

McMann is just huge. Still shorter but she's stout. It'll be fun to finally see a woman as big as Rousey (for the most part) and I doubt Rousey will be able to ragdoll McMann.
 
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