Tag: Dana White

  • Dana White Fires Back At Eddie Hearn Over Tom Aspinall Release Request

    Dana White Fires Back At Eddie Hearn Over Tom Aspinall Release Request

    Dana White dismissed Eddie Hearn’s push to have Tom Aspinall released from his UFC contract, mocking the request and comparing it to asking the UFC to release bantamweight champion Bam Rodriguez.

    White was asked about Hearn’s comments for the first time Saturday at the Zuffa Boxing 07 post-fight press conference.

    “He said he wanted Aspinall released right? You release Bam Rodriguez, then. Sounds pretty stupid, doesn’t it? Congratulations, Eddie. You sound stupid again. Eddie, who apparently Conor Benn was his best friend, he’s been crying — literally crying for weeks, ‘Oh, he was my best friend.’ He didn’t even want to pay him, but he wants to pay my guy. He could’ve paid his best friend and they could’ve remained best friends. Eddie’s full of a lot of sh*t. You know it. I know it. We all know it.”

    White said the UFC will not force Aspinall to fight but equally has no intention of releasing or renegotiating his deal, suggesting the situation will be addressed after the UFC Freedom 250 interim heavyweight title fight between Alex Pereira and Ciryl Gane on June 14.

    “Let’s see who wins. Let’s see how the fight plays out at the White House. If Eddie’s not going to let his fighter fight, what are you going to do? You can’t make anybody fight. You can’t force anybody to fight. You have to want to fight, so we’ll see how it plays out.”

    Hearn had claimed this week that Aspinall is extremely unhappy with his situation and would not unify belts with the Pereira-Gane winner under the terms of his current contract, while promising to find paydays tripling his UFC payout if released.

  • Dana White Fires Back at Roy Jones Jr.’s Criticism of Zuffa Boxing

    Dana White Fires Back at Roy Jones Jr.’s Criticism of Zuffa Boxing

    Dana White has pushed back against criticism from Roy Jones Jr. regarding Zuffa Boxing’s growing influence in the sport, defending the promotion’s approach to fighter treatment at the post-fight press conference following Zuffa Boxing 06 in Las Vegas.

    Jones had questioned in a recent interview whether Zuffa’s long-term presence could alter how boxing historically operates. White addressed the comments directly and dismissed the idea that fighters are being mistreated or politically managed under the Zuffa structure.

    “I don’t know whose ass you got to kiss around here to get fights. Probably got to be Ish or Harrison or somebody. I think that if you asked any of the fighters, they would tell you that we treat them very well, treat them like professional athletes. Any of the interactions that I’ve had through Ish and Harrison has been nothing but respectful.”

    White acknowledged that disruption inevitably generates resistance from established figures within any industry, framing Jones’ criticism as a predictable consequence of what Zuffa is doing.

    “Everybody’s entitled to their opinions. I’m sure when you come into a business and you start to cause disruption, you’re going to ruffle some feathers. It’s going to happen.”

    Zuffa Boxing has built its early identity around matching undefeated fighters against each other earlier than is traditionally common in boxing, and White has been consistent in saying the promotion will not protect fighter records at the expense of meaningful matchmaking. He has also stated that fighters will not face pay cuts or contract changes as a result of losing, a policy designed to differentiate Zuffa from traditional boxing structures.

  • Dana White Explains What Zuffa Boxing is Best At, Promises Bigger Progress Heading Into 2027

    Dana White Explains What Zuffa Boxing is Best At, Promises Bigger Progress Heading Into 2027

    Dana White used the post-fight press conference following Zuffa Boxing 06 in Las Vegas to outline the promotional philosophy driving the company forward, pointing to undefeated fighters facing each other as the clearest expression of what Zuffa Boxing is trying to do differently.

    “When the best fight the best, that’s what everybody wants to see. A great card top to bottom with lots of up-and-coming prospects, lots of undefeated guys fighting undefeated guys.”

    White also addressed a key structural difference between Zuffa and traditional boxing promotions, specifically around what happens to a fighter’s financial standing after a loss.

    “Nobody has to worry about being cut or their money being changed with a loss. That’s how it works.”

    He also signaled that the first several months of Zuffa Boxing should be understood as a foundation-building period rather than the finished product, pointing toward 2027 as the window when the promotion’s work will be most visible.

    “Judge us by our body of work as we head into ’27. They’re only going to get better.”

    Zuffa Boxing launched in January and has signed a growing roster including Conor Benn, Jai Opetaia, Edgar Berlanga, Richardson Hitchins, and Chris Billiam-Smith. Reports linking Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney to the promotion are adding further momentum to a company that has staged six events across its first four months of operation.

  • Dana White Teases Two New Zuffa Boxing Signings

    Dana White Teases Two New Zuffa Boxing Signings

    Dana White stopped short of confirming Shakur Stevenson’s signing with Zuffa Boxing after their sixth card in Las Vegas, but the smirk that accompanied his answer said plenty.

    Sports Illustrated senior writer Chris Mannix reported late last week that Stevenson, the 140-pound champion and third-ranked pound-for-pound fighter on Ring Magazine’s rankings, is finalizing a deal with Zuffa Boxing. White was asked about the report at the Zuffa 06 post-fight press conference and kept his answer deliberately vague.

    “Did we announce Shakur Stevenson? No? Possibly. Listen, at the end of the day, I think that everybody is going to be here at Zuffa Boxing.”

    Stevenson is arguably the best active American boxer following Terence Crawford’s retirement and would represent easily the most significant signing in Zuffa Boxing’s four-month existence. He and Conor Benn, who is already signed with the promotion, have been going back and forth publicly about a potential fight.

    White was also asked about welterweight champion Devin Haney following a cryptic post from his father and manager Bill Haney on X that teased a deal worth over $100 million before Devin turns 30. When pressed on whether that contract is with Zuffa Boxing, White maintained his pattern of non-denial.

    “I think that everybody is going to be at Zuffa Boxing eventually. At the end of 2026, judge us by our body of work as we head into 2027. I don’t know why I would say things that aren’t true. Look at what we’ve done in just four months.”

    Zuffa Boxing has already signed Edgar Berlanga, Richardson Hitchins, and British cruiserweight Chris Billiam-Smith in recent months alongside Benn and Jai Opetaia, building a roster at an aggressive pace since launching in January.

  • Dana White Calls Eddie Hearn ‘Fruit Loop’ in Epic Rant

    Dana White Calls Eddie Hearn ‘Fruit Loop’ in Epic Rant

    Dana White delivered one of his more colorful responses to Eddie Hearn on Saturday night following UFC 328 in Newark, firing back at the Matchroom Boxing promoter after Hearn branded him a clout chaser and told him to find his courage over the Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua situation.

    The dispute centers on White’s claim that he would be involved in promoting the Fury and Joshua fight later this year, which both Hearn and Fury’s promoter Frank Warren flatly denied. When asked by IFL TV’s Colm McGuigan to clarify his involvement after UFC 328, White gave a deliberately vague answer.

    “I don’t know, let’s see what happens.”

    When McGuigan pressed him on Hearn and Warren’s denials, White kept it equally brief.

    “Then it must not be true.”

    It was only when Bloody Elbow asked White to respond to Hearn’s specific language, including the clout chaser comment and the invitation to find his courage, that White opened up fully.

    “This fruit loop came out and said he’s the fing biggest fight in boxing while he has Bam Rodriguez and Anthony Joshua and all the other guys that are out there. He’s the biggest fight in boxing? Those are his words, you know what a fing fruit loop you’ve got to be to say that? Nobody knew who this guy was four months ago and now he’s the biggest fight in boxing? I hope I answered your question.”

    The two promoters have been trading public insults for several months, with an actual boxing match between them having been floated by multiple parties as a way of settling the dispute. Hearn’s comments about White’s courage appear to be a reference to those fight talks stalling. Fury and Joshua are expected to meet later in 2026 in Britain on Netflix, with Frank Warren placing November as the most likely window.

  • Eddie Hearn Calls Dana White Promoting Fury vs. Joshua ‘Contractually Impossible’ and a Clout Chase

    Eddie Hearn Calls Dana White Promoting Fury vs. Joshua ‘Contractually Impossible’ and a Clout Chase

    Eddie Hearn has dismissed Dana White’s suggestion that he will be involved in promoting Tyson Fury versus Anthony Joshua, calling it contractually impossible and taking a pointed personal shot at the UFC president in the same breath.

    White had publicly claimed involvement in the long-awaited British heavyweight showdown, prompting Hearn to respond on his Instagram story with language that made his position unmistakably clear.

    “Such a clout chaser. Not a chance and contractually impossible. Let me know when you find your b—.”

    The final line was a reference to Hearn’s earlier accusation that White backed out of a boxing match between the two promoters that had been publicly discussed.

    Hearn also posted a screenshot referencing TKO president Mark Shapiro’s claim that Zuffa Boxing had been involved in promoting Fury’s recent comeback win over Arslanbek Makhmudov, adding a second dig in a separate story.

    “Oh yeah, they said they were promoting this one too. What happened?”

    The Fury and Joshua fight has been signed for later in 2026 on Netflix, with Frank Warren confirming November is now the more likely window after October was initially floated. Joshua faces Kristian Prenga in Riyadh on July 25 before the mega fight. No date or venue has been officially confirmed for the Fury and Joshua bout, though it is expected to take place in Britain.

  • Zuffa Boxing to Leave Meta APEX for The Cosmopolitan

    Zuffa Boxing to Leave Meta APEX for The Cosmopolitan

    Zuffa Boxing is leaving its home base for the first time, with two upcoming cards booked at Las Vegas venues outside the Meta APEX where the promotion has staged every event since its January launch.

    According to filings approved by the Nevada State Athletic Commission, TKO Group Holdings will promote a boxing card on Sunday, June 28, at The Chelsea inside The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, followed by a second Sunday show on July 12 at a Las Vegas venue still to be confirmed.

    Every Zuffa Boxing event to date has taken place at the 600-seat Meta APEX on the UFC campus. The Chelsea holds roughly 4,000 people and has hosted multiple UFC Fight Nights.

    The move aligns with the operating plan TKO outlined to Nevada regulators in January, when UFC VP of Regulatory Affairs Marc Ratner told the commission the promotion intended to run between 12 and 15 boxing events in 2026, with the majority based in Las Vegas.

    The July 12 date carries additional significance as it falls inside UFC International Fight Week 2026, which runs July 9 through July 12. UFC.com already lists Zuffa Boxing as part of the IFW programming alongside UFC 329, the Hall of Fame induction ceremony, and Power Slap, putting the boxing arm directly inside TKO’s flagship week in combat sports.

    Both cards preserve the Sunday broadcast window Zuffa Boxing has used since its second event, keeping the cards on Paramount+ without conflicting with UFC’s Saturday programming. Paramount holds United States, Canadian, and Latin American streaming rights under a deal worth approximately $100 million annually.

    No fights have been announced for either card. Zuffa Boxing typically confirms main events four to six weeks ahead of fight night.

  • Ali Act Reform Hits Senate as Nick Khan, De La Hoya Face Off

    Ali Act Reform Hits Senate as Nick Khan, De La Hoya Face Off

    The U.S. Senate heard sharply divided testimony on Tuesday as lawmakers weighed whether to overhaul federal boxing law for the first time in over two decades. The hearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, chaired by Senator Ted Cruz, put TKO president Nick Khan and Golden Boy Promotions CEO Oscar De La Hoya on opposite sides of a debate that could reshape the sport’s power structure.

    At issue is the Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act (H.R. 4624), which passed the House by voice vote in March and now faces its first Senate scrutiny. The bill would create a new legal category called a Unified Boxing Organization, allowing a single entity to handle promotion, rankings, titles, and sanctioning under one roof. It is the first piece of boxing legislation to clear the House in 26 years.

    Khan Makes TKO’s Case for Centralized Boxing

    Khan, testifying on behalf of TKO Group Holdings and its Zuffa Boxing venture, argued that boxing’s current structure is failing fighters and fans alike. He pointed to the WBC recognizing 163 champions across 18 weight classes as evidence of a fragmented, bloated system with inconsistent standards and insufficient support for both professional fighters and the amateur pipeline.

    Khan framed the UBO model as an opt-in alternative, not a replacement for the existing system. The bill, he stressed, does not alter or weaken the original Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act’s protections. It simply adds a second path for fighters and promoters who want a more centralized, league-style structure, similar to how other major professional sports operate.

    The TKO president pointed to Zuffa Boxing’s partnership with Paramount+, which reaches roughly 80 million subscribers worldwide with a CBS network tie-in, as proof of what a centralized model can deliver. When asked what he would say to a young boxer about how a UBO could benefit the next generation, Khan laid out the pitch directly.

    “If you want a chance to be something bigger over a shorter period of time on a platform, we were able to secure a deal with Paramount, as I said on a platform that has almost 80 million subscribers worldwide and has a network partner in CBS. If you want that exposure, if you want trading card deals, if you want merchandise deals, if you want video game deals, of which the fighters would all participate financially. If you want all of that, plus some more, come this way. If you don’t, that’s your choice,” Khan said.

    Video of Khan’s testimony was shared by Jedi Goodman on X.

    Khan also addressed what he sees as a broken grassroots pipeline, arguing that the professional side of the sport does not invest enough in developing the next generation of fighters.

    “The amateur system is something that the professionals do not support sufficiently. That’s the pipeline. We have to make it easy fighters, just like we have a performance institute for UFC. We have a performance center for WWE. If you want to try to do one of those things, come our way and check it out. You don’t have to sign anything with us. Same thing in boxing, grassroots system,” Khan said.

    The clip was again shared by Jedi Goodman on X.

    De La Hoya Fires Back, Cites UFC Lawsuits and Saudi Ties

    Oscar De La Hoya pushed back forcefully in his own testimony, warning senators that the UBO model risks concentrating too much power in a single promoter. The Golden Boy CEO has been vocal in his opposition for months, arguing that TKO needs the Ali Act changed specifically so it can operate in boxing the same way it does in the UFC, where a single organization controls matchmaking, rankings, contracts, and championships simultaneously.

    De La Hoya went further during the hearing, pointing to existing UFC lawsuits as evidence of what happens when a single entity consolidates that level of control over a combat sport. He also raised the involvement of Saudi Arabia’s funding in the Zuffa Boxing venture as a concern, questioning whether handing a foreign-backed entity the legal framework to serve as promoter, sanctioning body, and ranking authority all at once is in the best interest of American fighters.

    Video of De La Hoya’s testimony was shared by @boxingnbbq on X.

    Ali Walsh Tells Senate to Strip His Grandfather’s Name From the Bill

    Nico Ali Walsh, Muhammad Ali’s grandson and a professional boxer, delivered some of the hearing’s most pointed testimony. Ali Walsh told senators directly that if they pass the “Revival” Act, they should remove Muhammad Ali’s name from it, because the bill destroys the very protections his grandfather fought for.

    Walsh, who co-founded the Ali Act Preservation Alliance alongside De La Hoya, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman, and retired MMA fighter Carlos Newton, argued that the original Ali Act is an anti-monopoly law and that the Revival Act would gut that purpose entirely. He framed the bill as serving corporate interests over fighters.

    “This new law is designed for billionaires, not boxers,” Walsh said.

    The alliance has called on the Senate to reject the Revival Act outright, characterizing it as anti-labor legislation that serves promoter interests at the expense of fighter protections. Timothy Shipman, president of the Association of Boxing Commissions and Combative Sports, also testified at the hearing.

    What the Bill Actually Changes

    Beyond the UBO framework, H.R. 4624 includes provisions that apply to all of professional boxing regardless of organizational structure. Those include a $200 per round minimum payment for all professional boxers, $50,000 in medical coverage per bout, $15,000 in accidental death coverage, certified ringside physicians, and anti-doping requirements. Supporters argue these universal protections strengthen the original Ali Act rather than weaken it.

    The original Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, signed into law in 2000, was designed to protect fighters from exploitative practices by separating the business interests of promoters from the sanctioning bodies that control rankings and title shots. Critics of the Revival Act say the UBO model is a direct contradiction of that principle.

    What Comes Next

    The bill’s path forward now rests with Cruz’s committee. TKO’s broader ambitions are well documented. Zuffa Boxing, which is 40% owned by TKO with the remaining 60% held by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund through Sela, has been actively building out its roster and infrastructure while the legislative process plays out. Industry voices remain split on whether the centralized model represents boxing’s future or its undoing.

    Tuesday’s hearing made clear that the Senate fight will be at least as contentious as the House debate that preceded it.

    The full hearing, titled “Return to Your Corners: Have Federal Boxing Laws Gone the Distance or Slipped the Jab?”, is available via the Senate Commerce Committee. Additional coverage via Luke Thomas on Substack.

  • Dana White Fires Back At ‘Bum’ Eddie Hearn After Latest Comments

    Dana White Fires Back At ‘Bum’ Eddie Hearn After Latest Comments

    The Dana White and Eddie Hearn promotional rivalry has taken another sharp turn, with Hearn delivering a lengthy attack on White at his Liverpool show while White responded with his now-familiar dismissal on the other side of the Atlantic.

    White originally floated the idea of a boxing match between the two promoters in what began as a lighthearted exchange, but Hearn has since pursued the concept with enthusiasm and growing frustration at what he sees as White backing away from a fight he called for.

    Speaking after his show at the M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool, Hearn went directly at White and challenged him to follow through.

    “The only thing that can stop the fight happening is Dana White,” Hearn said. “So really, the truth of the matter is, he’s backing out of the fight that he called on. So who’s the p—e now? Where’s your balls gone? You can’t keep calling me a p—e when you call me out for a fight, and I accept the fight, and then you go, ‘Oh, no, no, we’re bums, it would go on earlier in the night.’ What the f— is that? We would main event and sell out a massive stadium. Do you not think we’d sell out The O2? Do you not think we’d do over a million buys globally?”

    Hearn added that he has been daydreaming about the fight in considerable detail. “In bed every night I’ve picked my ring walk, I’ve actually designed my robe. But, like I said, it’ll probably just be fantasy because unfortunately, Dana White backed out of the fight.”

    Hours later at the UFC Winnipeg press conference, White was asked about the situation and repeated his standard framing of the two men as unworthy of a real fight card.

    “Eddie said that me and him are the biggest fight in boxing. Therein lies the problem with boxing. You’re a f—ing bum, I’m old, and we don’t even deserve to be on a card with a bunch of real fighters,” White said.

    The two promoters are currently running competing boxing and MMA operations, with White’s Zuffa Boxing signing high-profile names while Hearn continues to operate Matchroom Boxing as one of the sport’s most established promotional outfits.

  • Conor Benn Makes Priority Clear After Zuffa Signing

    Conor Benn Makes Priority Clear After Zuffa Signing

    Conor Benn did not need much time to answer when Stephen A. Smith pressed him on which fight he wants next.

    “Garcia.”

    Sitting alongside Dana White on ESPN’s First Take on Friday, Benn cut through the diplomatic preamble and made his priority clear. The newly signed Zuffa Boxing fighter had walked through the procedural path toward a WBC welterweight title shot before Smith cornered him on a name, and the answer was immediate.

    “We’re going to try to get the WBC world title. I’m mandatory for that shot. I’ve worked hard to get there,” Benn said. “But I’m open to options. There’s plenty of fighters calling me out. Whatever fight the public wants, they can get.”

    He also explained the broader motivation behind signing with Zuffa and pursuing the biggest available matchups. “I’m here because I want to make the biggest fights possible. I want to make the most memorable nights in boxing, the ones where people go, ‘What a fight. What a night.’ Something to remember. History made, legacy made. That’s why I’m here.”

    Benn sits as the WBC mandatory challenger at welterweight, putting him in direct line for a shot at Ryan Garcia, who holds the WBC welterweight title after his victory over Mario Barrios earlier this year. With Benn now signed to Zuffa and Oscar De La Hoya pushing Garcia toward a world champion opponent next, both fighters are under promotions aligned on making the bout happen. Early reporting has pointed toward an August date on Netflix, though nothing has been officially announced.

    Benn’s Zuffa deal runs five fights over 2.5 years, meaning Garcia would be the first of multiple marquee outings. With Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney also circling at welterweight, Benn made clear on Friday which name sits at the top of his list.