Endeavor finalizes deal to buy the UFC outright

Back in 2016 the Fertitta brothers shook up the MMA world with the news that they had sold the Ultimate Fighting Championship for a whopping $4.3 billion. The buyers represented several investment oriented companies, with the majority stake going to the the William Morris Endeavor Entertainment (also known simply as Endeavor or WME-IMG) talent agency. Two other investment groups, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) and Silver Lake each took on a 22.9% share in the promotion.

As Endeavor attempts to hit the stock market with their second attempted IPO, however, it appears that a major part of their plan to make a successful launch this time around includes full ownership of the UFC. To that end, Sportico reports that Endeavor has reached an agreement to buy out their co-owners of the world’s largest MMA promotion.

Their first IPO attempt – back in 2019 – was a noted failure, with the talent agency struggling with a writers strike at the time as well as well as what the company cited as challenging “market conditions.” The agency has since come to an agreement with the Writers Guild of America, and now appears positioned to finally take their organization public.

At the time of their failed 2019 IPO, minority shareholders had the opportunity to spin off the UFC into it’s own IPO after Endeavor went public—something that will no longer be in play with this latest transfer of ownership.

Sportico notes that Endeavor recently held a ‘private placement’, selling shares in the company to a pre-selected investor group, raising $1.768 billion in the process. The bulk of that money, ($1.75 billion of it) will apparently go to buying up complete control of the UFC. That deal was reportedly finalized with the promotion back on February 16th, but has just come to light with the agencies latest SEC filing ahead of their planned IPO.

Alongside acquiring full control of the promotion, WME-IMG has also announced that Tesla mogul Elon Musk will be joining the company’s board of directors. An internal reorganization of the company will apparently leave Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel and Silver Lake CEO Patrick Whitesell with more than 50% of the company’s voting power. What, if any, impact this move has on the UFC’s operations going forward remains to be seen.

To say I’m ‘destroyed’ is an ‘understatement’ – Darren Till releases statement on injury

While Darren Till charged his way into the UFC title picture back in 2018, behind an unbeaten 17-0-1 record, the years since haven’t been nearly so prosperous nor consistent. Till lost his title fight to then-champion Tyron Woodley by submission, only to come back six months later and get knocked out be Jorge Masvidal.

A move up to middleweight eight months afterward resulted in a less than thrilling split decision win over Kelvin Gastelum, but was quickly followed by a loss to former champion Robert Whittaker in July of last year. A planned bout against Jack Hermansson, for December, was iced due to a Till’s slower than expected recovery from a knee injury.

Still, the fighter out of Team Kaobon in Liverpool found himself in the potential title conversation once again with a top contender’s bout against Marvin Vettori, set for April 10th at UFC Vegas 23. Unfortunately, that too has now fallen by the wayside, with the news that Till has been forced from the bout due to a broken collarbone. Till confirmed the reports in a post to his Instagram.

I’ve been sat here for a good few hours debating how to say this & put into words what I’m feeling & just going to say it straight… IVE BROKEN MY COLLARBONE!

I’m out my fight next week against Marvin.

Every person who is around me or who has been around me knows I train on a daily basis with fucked up knees, lower back, shoulders, hands and the list goes on.

Yesterday while drilling I fell and straight away I knew I’d broken something.

To say I’m fucking destroyed by it is an understatement.

I’ve literally put my heart, soul, mind, physical body, cash, nutrition, sleep, recovery & then some into making sure I went out there next week & took his head off. And I was 100% sure I was going to… and with ease!!!

I’m sure he was thinking the same but ahh well…

Till even added an apology to Vettori, with hopes that the ‘Italian Dream’ can find a new opponent to face in the main event spot of the ABC televised fight card. “Mark my words I will do anything and everything to become Middleweight world champion,” Till concluded.

No official word on a new opponent for Vettori, although reports are that Kevin Holland has accepted an offer to take the fight and is currently waiting on Vettori to sign a contract for the bout.

Darren Till out of UFC headliner against Marvin Vettori

The UFC’s upcoming fight card on ABC has just taken a serious blow. Top-ranked middleweight Darren Till appears to be off the card, with reports swirling of a collarbone injury. The UFC is seeking a replacement to headline their upcoming April 10th UFC Vegas 23 Fight Night event.

Just before the news broke, Marvin Vettori – who was set to take on Till in what may have been a title shot clinching contest for both men – made a declaration that he considers himself the top contender for Israel Adesanya’s belt, and will prove as much against whoever the UFC puts across from him.

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ESPN’s Ariel Helwani broke the news shortly afterward, with MMA Junkie’s Nolan King providing details of the injury and reports that the UFC would be searching for a replacement.

Vettori has climbed all the way to no. 6 in the middleweight division, per the UFC’s latest rankings. That success comes on the heels of a 4-fight winning streak, stretching back to a split decision loss to the ‘Last Stylebender’ back in 2018. Most recently Vettori picked up the highest profile victory of his career, defeating Jack Hermansson by unanimous decision in the main event of UFC Vegas 16.

While no replacement for the bout has been made official, Kevin Holland has reportedly made the offer to step in on short notice. Holland is fresh off a unanimous decision defeat to Derek Brunson just over a week ago, in the main event of UFC Vegas 22. Heading into that bout, ‘Trailblazer’ was on a five-fight winning streak, with all bouts taking place within the last 12 months.

Stay tuned to Bloody Elbow for more news and notes as information becomes available.

‘Just cut me already’ – Jon Jones sounds fed up with UFC negotiations

It feels like the path to Francis Ngannou’s first UFC title defense couldn’t be any more clearly laid out. Back in August of last year, longtime light heavyweight champion Jon Jones made it clear that he was taking a step he’d long teased: a move up to the heavyweight division.

‘Bones’ vacated his belt, hit the weight room, and started packing on the kind of muscle he’d likely need to make himself a true contender for heavyweight gold. And a few months later, Dana White seemingly cemented the whole idea when he publicly announced that Jon Jones would be facing off against the winner of Miocic vs. Ngannou. After his title-winning victory, Ngannou even made the call-out himself.

“I think Jon Jones makes more sense for me,” Ngannou said when asked about potentially re-matching Stipe Miocic at the UFC 260 post-fight presser—adding that he would, however, be entirely willing to take on what ever fight the UFC puts in front of him.

If all parties want the same thing, then coming to a deal should be as easy as one-two-three right?

Apparently not.

As is so often the case, it appears that money is the major sticking point in getting the bout done. Jon Jones is looking for a significant pay bump for taking what, to his mind, is a major risk with his career. And the UFC appear not to be having it. To the point that Dana White is even now claiming that Derrick Lewis vs. Francis Ngannou 2 is the fight to make, despite the first one being one of the worst things the UFC has ever put on television.

It’s unclear just how far apart Jones and the UFC are on money, but whatever the differences may be, they appear to have driven the longtime Jackson-Wink talent to despair. Jones posted a (quickly deleted) Twitter rant on Monday, March 29th, asking the UFC to terminate his contract rather than keep stringing him along.

Shortly after deleting those Tweets, Jones was back on Twitter with another barrage, once again looking for his UFC release.

Of course, this isn’t the first time that Jones’ interest in a heavyweight move has pushed him to seek out an exit from the promotion. Back in May of 2020, Jones compared his fight purses to those of heavyweight boxer Deontay Wilder, saying that he doesn’t even make half as much per fight. “Just go ahead and release me from my UFC contract altogether. I’m sure some promoter somewhere will be more than happy to pick me up,” Jones wrote at the time.

For now, the UFC seems content to sit on Jones’ contract and wait for him to take a fight on their terms. Hopefully the two sides can find enough common ground to make Jones vs. Ngannou happen. If not, Derrick Lewis had better start preparing for his second chance for UFC gold.

UFC 260: Miocic vs. Ngannou 2 – Fights to Make

UFC 260 may have been a bit of a slow burn early on, but it wrapped up on a definite high note. Francis Ngannou usurped Stipe Miocic to claim the heavyweight crown. Vicente Luque brought his name back into the potential title challenger conversation, and Sean O’Malley reasserted the fact that he’s an electric fighter to watch when things are going his way.

So, is the UFC really going to try and bargain away a title fight between Francis Ngannou and Jon Jones? Is there any clear path to a contender’s bout for Vicente Luque? And is there any reason to slow play Sean O’Malley’s re-entry into the bantamweight rankings?

To answer those questions – but not much else – I’ll be using the classic Silva/Shelby fight booking methodology from the UFC of years past. That means pitting winners against winners, losers against losers, and similarly tenured talent up against one another. Hopefully, by following that model, a few of these bout ideas will actually make it off the page and into the Octagon. Now, let’s get to the fights from UFC 260.

FRANCIS NGANNOU

If this was the fighter Francis Ngannou has been working on becoming for all these years, I’m not sure I ever saw the signs before tonight. For perhaps the first time in his entire career Ngannou didn’t just look violent, but he looked composed in that violence. He used his jab to find range, he targeted multiple points on Miocic’s body, he threw low kicks, and he just let his strikes go in ways that clearly kept the champion uncomfortable for every minute this fight lasted. The result? A new king at heavyweight, off unquestionably the finest performance of Ngannou’s career. While Dana White is already trying to pivot to a Derrick Lewis rematch as Ngannou’s first title defense, there’s zero question as to what’s the right fight to make. Jon Jones has been preparing for his heavyweight debut, he says he wants to fight Ngannou, the UFC is coming off one of their most profitable years in the promotion’s history, just make the damn fight. Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou is the fight to make, anything else is just down to UFC stinginess.

STIPE MIOCIC

Clearly not the fight Miocic was looking for on any level. But, unlike the first time – where he got stung a bit early but still met Ngannou head on with a busy striking performance and some well timed takedowns – this time around the champ looked truly shaken by the early power shots that the ‘Predator’ plugged him with. Nonetheless, having only faced two fighters in 3.5 years, there’s a whole passel of top ranked heavyweights that Miocic has yet to step into the cage with. Men like Curtis Blaydes, Derrick Lewis, Cyril Gane, Jairzinho Rozenstruik, or Alexander Volkov. If the UFC really is going to put Jon Jones in title contention (something that’s looking a little more doubtful now, unfortunately) then all these men are going to need high profile bookings in the near future. At the moment, Curtis Blaydes vs. Stipe Miocic feels like the most obvious choice, with Blaydes coming so close to a title shot before getting sat down hard. But, I’ll be happy to see Miocic take on just about anyone in the top 5 right now.

VICENTE LUQUE

All credit to Woodley, he clearly went out and tried to take the fight to Luque from the get go. He clinched and looked to wrestle, threw bombs and hurt Luque standing. Everything he needed to do to potentially get the win. But Luque wouldn’t be controlled inside and ate all the shots standing. Eventually the Brazilian found his counters and when he started clipping Woodley up, he had the former champ hurt bad in a hurry. All told, a huge win for Luque that should cement him as a top 5 fighter for the immediate future.

After the victory, he called out Nate Diaz, but that seems more like a pipe dream than a likely booking. Demian Maia, Neil Magny, and Michael Chiesa appear to be much more likely options. And among those, Chiesa is absolutely the won I want to see. Vicente Luque vs. Michael Chiesa. See which fringe contender can put themselves in line for a potential title shot.

SEAN O’MALLEY

An absolutely one-sided shellacking from O’Malley, who had Almeida badly hurt in the first before piecing him up on the way to a 3rd round KO. O’Malley made the claim after the bout that he was looking to prove the haters wrong, that kicking his legs wasn’t a clear path to victory, and he ate more than a few firm low kicks on his way to this win. That should set him up for another top 15 opponent.

While I could throw names out there like Pedro Munhoz or Rafael Assuncao, or even Kyler Phillips, there’s one fight that I gotta go with. Dominick Cruz just came off a win over Casey Kenney. If he’s willing to take that kind of prospect fight again, I’d love to see him try a bout with O’Malley. Just the build up would be wild, but it’d also be a great chance for Cruz to prove that he can still put all the young guns at 135 in their place. And if he can’t, it’s the kind of win that would make O’Malley a bonafied top 10 talent instantly. Sean O’Malley vs. Dominick Cruz seems like the fight to book. If not, then he can always rematch Marlon Vera.

MIRANDA MAVERICK

As long as Maverick can keep making 125 lbs, she’s got the potential to be a real physical problem for a lot of fighters at the top of the division. She’s still a raw striker, she still lets her aggression take her into questionable positions, but she’s shown exactly the kind of consistency, toughness, and cardio needed to fight her way out of any bad spots she finds herself in. That could line her up with Mayra Bueno Silva, JJ Aldrich, or the winner of a bout like Antonina Shevchenko vs. Andrea Lee or Roxanne Modaferri vs. Taila Santos. I’d rather not see the UFC push Maverick to far too fast though, after all she’s just 23-years old.

And while that means I would have liked to see Maverick take on Bueno Silva next, ‘Sheetara’ is already booked to take on Poliana Botelho in May. I guess that leaves JJ Aldrich to once again run up against a top prospect on the rise and see if she can use her technical skill to overcome the physical gap. Miranda Maverick vs. JJ Aldrich seems like a great way for Maverick to try and build her resume at 125 lbs.

JAMIE MULLARKEY

Exactly the kind of victory Mullarkey needed after a rough first couple outings in the UFC. Worthy came out throwing low kicks to answer Mullarkey’s pressure, Mullarkey drew out the hands with a right feint and blasted Worthy with the left hook over the top for the KO. A big win that should get him another action bout at the bottom of the lightweight division. Someone like Uros Medic, Jordan Leavitt, Don Madge, or Mike Davis. Of all those, I think Madge would be the most interesting matchup, just for his own blend of striking and wrestling. Another fighter who made his bones on one of the less developed regional circuits, but who has had a bit more success plying his trade in the UFC so far. Madge vs. Mullarkey to see if the Aussie can put a bit of a run together.

ALONZO MENIFIELD

A badly needed return to form for Menifield, who appeared to be a promising light heavyweight prospect before running into Devin Clark and Ovince St. Preux. Beating Cherant on just a couple days notice may not make him a future contender again, but it should get him back into a fight with someone else looking to claw their way up the ranks at 205. That could be someone like Marcin Prachnio or Michal Oleksiejczuk. But, I’d like to see Menifield against Kennedy Nzechukwu. Nzechukwu has had his own struggles trying to separate himself from the pack, but his rangy frame and strong chin should make him a live dog against Menifield, especially if he can force the pace through action in the clinch. Right now, Menifield just needs to keep putting victories together, a fight with Nzechukwu seems like a good opportunity to do it.

MICHAL OLEKSIEJCZUK

It wasn’t exactly the most dominating performance from Oleksiejczuk, but he did enough to convince at least two judges that he’d beaten Modestas Bukauskas. And at the end of the day that’s really all that matters. That should set him up for another decent opponent coming off a win. And while there are two or three options to consider, there’s really only one I’m interested in, and that’s Dustin Jacoby. Put Oleksiejczuk’s boxing heavy style to the test against a comfortable, rangy kickboxer. Can he control the pocket, or will Jacoby pick him off from range. I’m excited to find out. Oleksiejczuk vs. Jacoby should be a fire fight.

OMAR MORALES

Morales did well against Young to make his power count early, and to keep Young from getting any momentum going across all three rounds. A very controlling, counter-heavy performance that didn’t exactly deliver thrills, but showed off Morales’ solid sense of pace and timing. As long as he keeps winning, there are plenty of action bouts to test him against at 145. Let’s see if he can keep the fight controlled against a striker who almost certainly won’t take his foot off the gas in the face of a more powerful opponent. Charles Jourdain has proved himself intensely reckless through his short UFC tenure, including on his way to a big upset win over KO artist Dooho Choi. Morales vs. Jourdain seems like a great way to see if Morales can turn up the heat or if he’ll wilt under the pressure.

OTHER BOUTS: Tyron Woodley vs. Robbie Lawler 2, Thomas Almeida vs. Andre Ewell, Gillian Robertson vs. Kish/Cortez loser, Khama Worthy vs. Alex da Silva, Fabio Cherant vs. Carlos Ulberg, Abubakar Nurmagomedov vs. Matthew Semelsberger, Jared Gooden vs. Jason Witt, Modestas Bukauskas vs. Aleksa Camur, Shane Young vs. Kevin Aguilar, Marc-Andre Barriault vs. Deron Winn, Abu Azaitar vs. Antonio Arroyo

‘I’m making my comeback’ – Oscar De La Hoya announces return to boxing on July 3rd

It looks like Miesha Tate and Ben Askren aren’t the only former fighters finding themselves lured out of what seemed, at the time, to be fairly finalized retirements. Former multi-divisional boxing superstar Oscar De La Hoya has announced his return the ring as well.

The 48-year-old ‘Golden Boy’ hung up his gloves way back in 2008, after an 8th round TKO loss at the hands of Manny Pacquiao. At the time, De La Hoya told reporters that, while “my heart still wants to fight,” his body could no longer keep up with elite level competition. De La Hoya had already started his own brand, Golden Boy Promotions, back in 2002. After walking away from competition, he turned much more of his attention to being a full time promoter, working with talents like Canelo Alvarez, Manny Pacquiao, Deontay Wilder, and Amir Khan among many many others.

Still despite his success on the business side of combat sports, it appears the competitive fire has yet to die out, and with fellow yesteryear stars like Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, and Roy Jones Jr. all finding success into their later years with high profile exhibition bouts, it’s perhaps not so surprising that De La Hoya would look to carve out a piece of the action.

To that end, during the Ben Asrken vs. Jake Paul press conference for their upcoming Triller PPV – and after being brought the stage by Snoop Dogg – De La Hoya took his opportunity to announce his return to the ring.

“July 3, I’m making my comeback,” De La Hoya told viewers before dropping the mic and walking off stage.

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No word yet on who he’ll face for his return to the ring. Stay tuned to Bloody Elbow for more news and notes as details become available.

The MMA Vivisection – UFC 260: Miocic vs. Ngannou 2 picks, odds, & analysis

It started out as a pretty decent PPV. But by the time fight night comes around UFC 260 feels a lot more like a seriously diminished product. The main event, between Francis Ngannou and Stipe Miocic still feels like a big fight. But Tyron Woodley vs. Vicente Luque and Sean O’Malley vs. Thomas Almeida aren’t quite carrying the hype the way they might have a couple years ago.

For fans looking for the skinny on all the fights deeper down on the undercard, check out our Prelims Vivi below.

The MMA Vivisection is brought to you by Combat Wombat, makers of combat sports themed artwork featuring MMA’s legendary fighters and legendary fights. Visit chrisrini.com for the latest pieces and commissions. Get your Combat Wombat themed Vivi t-shirts today! cottonbureau.com/products/dr-wombat

Here’s a look at how the UFC 260 fight card stacks up right now:

PPV CARD | 10pm/7pm ET&PT
Stipe Miocic vs. Francis Ngannou – At 1:05, Odds 21:30, Picks, Both: Miocic
Tyron Woodley vs. Vicente Luque – At 27:07, Odds 33:15, Picks, Both: Luque
Thomas Almeida vs. Sean O’Malley – At 34:43, Odds 46:29, Picks, Both: O’Malley
Gillian Robertson vs. Miranda Maverick – At 48:19, Odds 55:09, Picks, Both: Maverick
Jamie Mullarkey vs. Khama Worthy – At 56:07, Odds 1:04:27, Picks, Both: Worthy

ESPN PRELIMS | 8pm/5pm ET&PT
Alonzo Menifield vs. William Knight Fabio Cherant – At 1:58, Odds 6:48, Picks, Both: Menifield over Knight
Jared Gooden vs. Abubakar Nurmagomedov – At 7:21, Odds 17:07, Picks, Both: Nurmagomedov
Modestas Bukauskas vs. Michal Oleksiejczuk – At 18:16, Odds 28:32, Picks, Both: Oleksiejczuk
Shane Young vs. Omar Morales – At 28:49, Odds 34:36, Picks, Both: Morales

ESPN+ PRELIMS | 7:30pm/4:30pm ET&PT
Abu Azaitar vs. Marc-Andre Barriault – At 35:08, Odds 44:00, Picks, Both: Azaitar

For those of you following the picks made on the show, we started tracking them with the July 13th, 2020 Vivisections for ‘Kattar vs. Ige’… Standings for our last event, UFC Vegas 22: Zane went 8 out of the 10 bouts we were left with & Connor went 7 out of those 10.
So far, here are the overall standings:
Zane is now 235/364 and Connor is now 223/364

Be sure to follow Zane on twitter @TheZaneSimon, follow Connor, @BoxingBusch, and follow @BloodyElbow for all the latest in MMA happenings. If you enjoy our shows, give us a shout out in the comments here on Bloody Elbow, or give us a “like”, share & subscribe over on whichever BE Presents Podcast Channel happens to be your listening platform of choice: SoundCloud, YouTube, iTunes & Apple TV, iHeartRadio, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, TuneIn, OverCast, or Player FM, & NOW AMAZON MUSIC! – While you’re there, don’t forget to subscribe to Bloody Elbow Presents; that way you’ll always be the first to get all of BE’s daily MMA offerings. For previous episodes of the show, check out our playlists on all of our BE Presents channels.

‘Surprise surprise’ – Khamzat Chimaev announces his return to competition

Khamzat Chimaev hit the UFC like a hurricane in 2020. The Allstars Training Center talent had only six pro bouts before stepping into the Octagon against John Phillips at UFC Fight Night: Kattar vs. Ige, but demolished three opponents in just over two months to vault himself into the welterweight rankings and a booking against potential title contender Leon Edwards.

That Edwards bout never came to fruition, unfortunately—pushed back, and eventually cancelled after both men contracted COVID-19. For Edwards, his battle against the novel coronavirus resulted in a difficult few weeks, but a return to action earlier this month against Belal Muhammad. For Chimaev, the road has been longer and seemingly much more difficult.

“I think I’m done,” Chimaev said in a cryptic post on social media in early March. “Yes, I know that I didn’t take the belt, but this is not the most important victory in this life. It may upset you, but my heart and body tell me everything.”

Photos of a bloody sink and reports from Chimaev’s manager that the fighter had been struggling hard to regain his former fitness while still dealing with long-term symptoms of the disease – including fever, headaches, and muscle pain – were all signs that COVID was taking a heavy toll on the 26-year-old.

Still, shortly after Chimaev’s retirement announcement, Dana White denied that the streaking prospect was walking away from MMA. “He wants to fight like every f-cking weekend, and now he can’t even train. So he just got emotional and posted that. But he ain’t quitting,” White told reporters of ‘Borz’’s condition.

If pressure from the UFC boss wasn’t enough, Chimaev also got some stern words from none other than Chechyn dictator Ramzan Kadyrov. “I told him that ALL Chechens were upset by this news. I reminded Chimaev that the youth, whom he inspires, are pinning their hopes and expectations on his success…” Kadyrov wrote in a message on social media.

So perhaps it’s a little less than surprising then that the UFC welterweight took to social media on Tuesday, March 23rd, to make it clear that his days as a professional fighter were, indeed, not over.

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No word yet on just when he’ll make his Octagon return, or against whom. Earlier reports from Chimaev’s camp pegged him to potentially be recovered by June. Whether or not he’s still on that time frame remains to be seen.

‘It sucks’ – Jim Miller says he got ‘a fraction’ of his fight purse for cancelled UFC 258 bout

For most fighters, the actual hard work of their job comes well before fight week. Hours upon hours of training, dieting, game-planning, and conditioning all done with the eventual promise that there will be a few minutes of work at the end that actually pays the bills. When that payoff doesn’t come about, however? That’s when things start getting tricky.

In the case of longtime lightweight action fighter Jim Miller, ‘A-10’ made it all the way through fight camp, through fight week, and even through weigh-ins before finding out that his bout with Bobby Green wouldn’t be going ahead as planned. Shortly after hitting the lightweight limit on the scales, Green collapsed due to apparent kidney failure and air pockets in his lungs.

And while the medical emergency obviously leaves Green in a much more difficult place, it also left Miller facing his own problems. Namely, was he going to get paid for a bout he cut weight for? And how much? In a recent interview with Just Scrap Radio (transcript via BJPenn.com), Miller revealed that he did get something for his efforts, but it was only a fraction of what he would have made had both men made it to fight night.

“They gave me a percentage,” Miller responded when asked if the UFC paid him his fight purse for the cancelled bout. “A fraction. You waste a week out in Las Vegas basically stuck in your hotel room and it’s like I made a couple thousand dollars for it. It sucks.”

Miller noted that the cut was actually a comparatively easy one, all things considered. But for a fighter whose last reported payday was $208,000 ($104,000 to win/show), is it any wonder that walking out of fight week with just a few grand would feel like a serious downgrade.

The New Jersey native is currently on tap to face Gym-O talent Joe Solecki at UFC on ABC 2 this coming April 10th. The event takes place at the Apex facility in Las Vegas, NV and is expected to be headlined by a middleweight top contender’s bout between Darren Till and Marvin Vettori.

BJJ star Gordon Ryan signs with ONE Championship

For the past couple years now, Gordon Ryan has been teasing a move to MMA. The world class grappling talent has won the ADCCs and the IBJJF Worlds as a no-gi competitor, but speaking to Luke Thomas on the MMA Hour back in 2019, he made it clear that the next step has always been to go into MMA and prove his talents in the cage as an elite competitor.

“Gi is just not as exciting for me,” Ryan said when asked about what the next horizon would be after achieving so much success as a no-gi grappler. “I don’t want to invest time into something that’s not as fun as MMA, which is my ultimate goal. My ultimate goal was always to be the best in MMA, not the best in grappling.”

And while the COVID-19 pandemic no doubt slowed the potential jump to a new sport, it appears Gordon is now finally ready to take the plunge. The Gordon Ryan and John Danaher trained 25-year old has been announced as the latest sigining for Singapore-based MMA promotion ONE Championship. President Chatri Sityodtong announced the news via his Twitter account on Monday, March 22nd.

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ONE has provided a jumping off point for other notable grapplers in the past and currently sports other notable BJJ talents including Tom DeBlass, Marcus Buchecha, Yuri Simoes, and – of course – Gary Tonon. Tonon made his own jump over to MMA with ONE back in 2018, and is currently 6-0 competing with the promotion. No doubt as one of the world’s largest mixed martial arts platforms, ONE will be hoping to see similar success out of Ryan.

No word yet on when Ryan’s debut will be, or against whom.