Sage Northcutt ready to reveal all over ONE fight withdrawal

UPDATE: Josh Barnett has a point to make:

Sage Northcutt’s MMA career has slowed to a crawl these past few years. After exiting the UFC back in 2018 ‘Super’ Sage had hoped to make a big splash on the international scene with his debut in Singapore-based ONE Championship.

Unfortunately for Northcutt, a middleweight bout against longtime kickboxer Cosmo Alexandre in May of 2019 left the longtime Team Alpha Male talent with eight facial fractures. A severe case of COVID followed and it was 2023 before the now-27-year-old was able to return to competition. Reports of more injury trouble followed Northcutt’s victory over Ahmed Mujtaba last year, leading to nearly another year of inactivity.

Sage Northcutt reveals reason behind ONE fight exit

Despite all the delays and all the health issues, Sage Northcutt seemed all ready to get his combat sports career underway again this past January, with a planned welterweight bout against longtime JMMA star Shinya Aoki at ONE 165 in Tokyo, Japan. At the last minute, however, news broke that Northcutt had pulled out of the fight, leaving Aoki to take on former ONE bantamweight champ John Lineker as a last minute replacement.

Soon after, reports surfaced that some problem with Northcutt’s corner had caused him to pull out of the fight. In a recent post to his Instagram account, the former youth Karate star gave a more thorough breakdown of events. Most notably, he claims ONE didn’t disclose to him that they had failed to secure proper visas for his team.

One Championship is implying that I pulled out of the Shinya fight for unforeseen circumstances. That is completely inaccurate. I sent One Championship the necessary paperwork they required to get my coaches visas 48 days ahead of the event. I was told by them over the phone and by text my main jujitsu coach Fabio Prado did not need a visa since I paid for his airfare flights and trip so he was not classified as a working employee that needed a visa and that my other coach could get in as a tourist so he didn’t need one either.

My coaches were there for almost a week, and I was not informed that two of them could not coach until hours before my match. I received a text from an unknown number that texted me for the first time that day that was a ticket salesman asking me about getting my two coaches complimentary tickets to watch my fight in the audience. I personally believe that One Championship was not going to inform me that my coaches were not allowed to corner me until I arrived at the arena to fight if I did not hear from a ticket salesman hours earlier.

We were also told hours before my match that if my coaches violated the visa requirements and were caught on camera, they could be arrested and there was a 99.8% conviction rate on all arrests. I made it clear to One Championship that I was not flying from America to Japan if I didn’t have my three coaches. I was told before I left to Japan by an executive that I would not have to fight without my coaches. They knew before I left that I would not be able to have two of my coaches. They never told me my coaches could be thrown in prison for any visa violation.

There has been a lot of stuff going on behind the scenes with One Championship with what caused me to withdraw from my last fight as well as other things that I will talk about at a later time on Facebook, Instagram, and with media outlets.

  • drug testing
  • weight cutting/ policies
  • active athletes/ roster
  • One’s stability… etc

If Northcutt really does plan to take further complaints with ONE and their business practices public in media interviews and social media posts, it could provide a fascinating test to the promotion’s draconian contract clauses. ONE infamously includes language in their deals that prevents fighters from disclosing company information, even to other members of their team. The also have anti-disparagement clauses that extend not just for the life of an athlete’s contract, but for the life of the athlete, full stop.

Urijah Faber suggests religious conviction lead to Northcutt’s withdrawal

One of the men there to corner Sage Northcutt in Japan was former UFC title contender and longtime Team Alpha Male owner Urijah Faber. Shortly after news that his fighter wouldn’t be competing broke, the ‘California Kid’ sat down with Middle Easy to explain his version of events. Faber backed up some of Sage’s story, noting that both Fabio Prado and Mark Northcutt (Sage’s father) were told they could not corner Northcutt just hours before the event.

He also added another interesting wrinkle to the conversation, however, with the suggestion that it wasn’t just the circumstances that caused Northcutt to withdraw from the bout, but also the fighter’s religious conviction.

“There’s a lot of misinterpretation there,” Faber explained (transcript via BJPenn.com). “I think if you watch Chatri [Sityodtong]’s interview he kind of said the way it was: there was a last-minute hiccup in the visas of Fabio Prado and Mr. Mark Northcutt, Sage’s dad.

“So, 10:30 at night in Japan, we learned that they were not going to be able to be in the corner,” Faber continued. “I got a message around 11:30 from Mark that Sage was not going to fight, and I talked to him face-to-face and kinda got the lowdown on what was going on. There was a lot of miscommunication and things like that. I was cleared to corner, I was cleared to be in the corner if Sage did want to fight.”

“I didn’t actually get to talk to Sage face-to-face until about one o’clock in the afternoon on fight day,” he continued. “And the general consensus was that he did not feel comfortable fighting with a couple of different things that had happened. He is a very big man of faith—he has a relationship with God and the holy spirit—and felt like things weren’t adding up for him and he didn’t feel like fighting.”

No word yet on when Northcutt might expect to return to action. But if he really does feel the need to spill the tea on ONE’s business, it may just be that fans will have to wait quite a while before they see him back in competition again.

Sage Northcutt talks ONE fight with Shinya Aoki

At one point Sage Northcutt looked as though he were the future of the UFC. Signed with a shiny 5-0 record at just 19 years old, the former poster boy of non-contact sport karate seemed headed for big things with his clean cut, wholesome personality and dynamic traditional martial arts style.

Unfortunately, the UFC is a terribly hard place to learn the ropes. A couple surprising upset losses and a few fights that were more difficult that expected and the Northcutt hype train felt all but derailed by the time he and the world’s largest MMA promotion parted ways in 2018.

Northcutt landed in ONE FC a year later, with the expectation of becoming a star for Asia’s largest MMA promotion instead, but a brutal loss to Cosmo Alexandre in his debut and bouts with injury and illness saw him sidelined for the next four years.

Sage Northcutt returns again

Finally, in May of last year, Northcutt made his return to competition—submitting relatively unknown AKA talent Ahmed Mujatab just 39 seconds into round 1 with a heel hook. Sadly, for fans hoping this would jump start his return to action, his injury troubles weren’t totally behind him.

“I would have liked to fight sooner than the six to eight months since my last fight, I wanted to fight very soon but I had a little nagging injury that I had going into my fight with Mujtaba and I got it checked up again after my fight,” Northcutt said in a recent interview.

No word on exactly what that injury might have been. Northcutt suffered multiple facial fractures in his bout against Cosmo Alexandre, but hasn’t publicly disclosed any other more recent injury problems. It may be worth noting, however that Northcutt did pull out of a 2017 bout against John Makdessi citing injury, but the exact nature of that issue was never disclosed.

Sage Northcutt talks prep for Aoki

Known primarily for his striking prowess, Sage Northcutt shocked a lot of fans when he won his last bout with a heel hook submission, the first joint-lock submission win of his career, and only submission since beating Cody Pfister in 2015. However, in a recent interview with MMA Junkie, Northcutt admitted that he’s been putting a whole lot of time into his grappling game. It’s something he says he won’t necessarily look to avoid, even against a submission artist with Aoki’s reputation.

“I’ve been working my grappling for the past several years a lot,” Northcutt revealed. “Great grapplers, great teammates, great coaches. So, I’ve been really, really preparing and training my grappling a whole lot to improve.”

“A lot of people know that Shinya is known for his grappling, but it’s not just a grappling match out there,” Northcutt said. “It is mixed martial arts. You have a whole different set of tools and same thing, it’s not just a striking match. So, I think really going out there and being ready for anything is very important.”

Of course, it doesn’t hurt Northcutt’s chances that Aoki is a full 13-years his senior, and has competed as low as 145 lbs in the past. While Northcutt pinged between lightweight and welterweight during his UFC run, he made his ONE debut up at 185 lbs. It seems very likely that the Team Alpha Male talent will hold a pretty decent strength advantage when he meets ‘Tobikan Judan’ on January 28th in Tokyo.

Mighty Mouse reflects on UFC trade years later

The UFC was looking to kill flyweight in 2018 and cutting every fighter that lost. Nonetheless, it was still a massive shock when the UFC traded long-time division champ Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson for then-undefeated welterweight Ben Askren.

Demetrious Johnson calls UFC trade his ‘best decision’

Demetrious Johnson’s pro MMA career is winding down, so he took some time to reflect on that major moment in his career.

“When I was going into that final fight with Henry Cejudo, the time where the UFC was at with the flyweight division, I’d already defeated everybody,” Johnson told former UFC champion Rampage Jackson on his JAXXON podcast (transcript via MMA Fighting). “I just did my 11 consecutive title defenses and I was going to fight Henry Cejudo. So it’s another rematch. I had a rematch with John Dodson, a rematch with Joseph Benavidez, now it’s coming to the rematch with Henry Cejudo.

“So I’ve already gone through the whole division and now I’m about to fight Henry Cejudo the second time. … They would never let a flyweight at my time make $500,000. That was like the standard pay for a mixed martial artist, for the champion. If you became champion, it was like, you got that five bills plus pay-per-view points.”

“For me, they would never give that to me. And when I lost to Henry Cejudo [my then-management and I] were talking and we were like, ‘What are you going to do, bro?’ I was like, ‘You know, I want to see if they’re going to let me go.’ Because at the time they were talking about getting rid of that division, ‘I’m going to scrap it, it don’t make no money.’ So I was like, ‘Alright, let me see if I can get out of my contract.’ They were able to make it happen and they traded me for Ben Askren and I think it was the best decision that I ever did in my mixed martial arts career.”

Dana White had no regrets

On the Octagon side of things, Ben Askren had 3 UFC fights before retiring on a win and two losses.

Despite his ultimately lackluster record inside the Octagon, and lots of past animosity, UFC president Dana White had no regrets about trading what many consider to be an all time MMA legend for a man that never even managed to contend for a UFC title.

“No regrets, whatsoever,” White told reporters at an October 2019 press event shortly after Askren’s loss to Demian Maia (transcript via MMA Junkie). “That fight was incredible over the weekend. Loved that fight. Fun fight to watch. Ben brought a lot of hype to the UFC. People were excited about him coming in and fighting and seeing what he could do.

“The fight with Ben and Masvidal was what built Masvidal into what he is right now and going into this weekend. Without Askren, that doesn’t happen.”

Johnson last competed at ONE Fight Night 10 back in May of last year, where he defeated Adriano Moraes in a trilogy bout to retain his bantamweight championship belt. No word yet on when Johnson might return to action, in August of last year the 37-year-old suggested he was still undecided as to whether or not he would fight again.

Report: ONE Championship loses senior execs

We’ve already noted that 2024 could very well be a make or break year for one of the world’s largest combat sports promotions. One Championship is reportedly set to run out of investor cash by Q3 2024, and is apparently struggling to gain more funds from its biggest backers, the Qatari government.

Unfortunately for the Singapore-based company, there are also reports that the principal feeling about past investment in ONE among has been more embarrassment than anything else—as the combat sports organization has seemingly repeatedly failed to hit profitability targets year after year.

3 senior staff reported to have left ONE Championship

To add more uncertainty into the mix, a recent Deal Street Asia article highlighted a talent drain apparently ongoing in Qatar’s sports entertainment industry, noting that with the conclusion of the 2022 World Cup, top executives were making the jump over to Riyadh, where Saudi Arabia has shown greater interest for investment in major sports-washing events.

Since the World Cup ended, Qatar’s attention to hosting mega sports events has fallen off a cliff, shared one Doha-based sports industry executive. Many of his colleagues have already left and relocated to Riyadh. 

But it looks like it’s not just the Qatar side of the equation that’s losing its C-suite executives. A new article from DSA reveals that in just the past three months, ONE Championship has lost three members of its senior team and may not have any intentions of replacing them.

Back in October, it appears that Apprentice: ONE Championship Netflix show advisor—and head of company corporate strategy and technology—Niharika Singh severed her relationship with the fight promotion (having posted the end of her 4.5 year tenure with the company on her Linkedin profile). DSA notes conflicting reports as to the nature of Singh’s departure with one source reportedly telling the outlet that she had chosen not to renew her contract with ONE, and another source claiming that she had been let go from her position.

Alongside Singh, ONE VP in charge of analytics and insights Jane Guo is also reported as having exited the promotion after a 5.5-year run. No details about her departure were noted.

Chief commercial officer Hari Vijayarajan explains departure

Heading out the door with Singh and Guo, ONE Championship chief commercial officer Hari Vijayarajan has also left the company. In a letter posted on Linkedin, Vijayarajan explained his decision, calling it bittersweet. Vijayarajan is apparently leaving ONE to take on the role of CEO sustainability startup Reebelo. Despite reports of ONE’s potentially dire financial straits, however, he was very bullish on the promotion’s future.

After 5 amazing years at ONE as CCO, I have made a bittersweet decision to move on. This was truly the ride of a lifetime and I am extremely grateful for having had the opportunity to be part of the ONE rocketship. I want to thank Chatri Sityodtong & Hua Fung Teh (郑华峰) and all my colleagues for their tremendous support and guidance over the years. I am proud of the excellent commercial foundation that we have built, the awesome team I had the privilege to hire and groom, and the exciting years that lie ahead as ONE continues to expand rapidly and globally.

ONE has had a record 2023 in terms of viewership, engagement and revenues, and our revenue pipeline is the largest it’s ever been. So leaving was an extremely hard (and almost unnatural) decision, especially with ONE’s future looking so bullish. However, the rare opportunity to take on a major Regional CEO role based in Singapore, in an area I am passionate about (sustainability), was a once in a life-time opportunity. I have always aspired to be a CEO, with end-to-end cross-functional and P&L responsibility. I would not have left ONE otherwise.

Of course, at this point, we all know about ONE Championship’s non-disparagement clauses and the inability for fighters to speak with any negativity about the company’s business practices. Hard not to assume that senior staff are also being held to the same kind of legal wrangling.

We’ll likely know more in the coming weeks and months, as to just how prepared ONE is to survive the year. In the meantime, the promotion will put on its first fight card of 2024 on Friday, January 12th featuring a mix of MMA and kickboxing, headlined by a flyweight (135 lbs) title defense for former multiple time Muay Thai champion and ONE Flyweight Grand Prix winner Superlek Kiatmuu9, taking on Elias Mahmoudi at the Lumpinee Boxing Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand.