Cape Breton Post

What’s next for UFC?

Only other card listed on official website is UFC 250

- DANIEL AUSTIN

And now, we wait.

The UFC’s quick two-week trip to Florida came to an end Saturday night with a fun card in Jacksonvil­le, but little is known about where the sports goes next.

The promotion held three cards in eight nights, with Ronaldo (Jacare) Souza’s positive COVID-19 test being the only real black eye from the experiment. That’s not nothing, but if we’re being honest, Souza’s test didn’t seem to derail what the UFC set out to accomplish.

For the most part, you’d have to imagine company president Dana White is feeling pretty good about the way things went.

Justin Gaethje emerged as a legitimate star. Drew Dober got some shine. Francis Ngan-nou’s next fight is going to be a blockbuste­r. Some of the biggest names in sports media — guys like Bill Simmons and Stephen A. Smith — were using their platforms to discuss MMA in a way they never have before.

At least from a business perspectiv­e, you have to credit the UFC with taking advantage of the opportunit­y to be the only show in town.

But what’s next? That’s the real question here.

The UFC cancelled a number of cards that were set for March and April due to the COVID-19 pandemic. That allowed the company to reschedule fighters who had their fights called off and build some really nice cards for its three-show Jacksonvil­le run.

We know the company wants to hold a card on May 30 at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas — their purpose-built production centre — but fights aren’t currently allowed in Nevada. White said Saturday that Arizona is the Plan B.

“There’s where I’ll go. That’s 100 per cent where I’ll go,” White said in his post-fight news conference. “If we can’t get May 30 at the Apex, it’s gonna be super disappoint­ing, but we will go somewhere else.”

Where the fights will happen is only part of the question. The UFC still hasn’t announced any actual matchups for that night. It’s heavily rumoured that former welterweig­ht champi-on Tyron Woodley will return to the octagon for a fight against Gilbert Burns.

There’s the rest of the card to fill, too, and May 30 is less than two weeks away.

The only other card listed on the UFC’s official website is UFC 250, which seems to be scheduled for June 6. The headliner for that one is currently “TBD vs. TBD,” although the co-main event between Amanda Nunes and Felicia Spencer should be legitimate­ly great.

What does any of this actually mean? Well, the UFC proved it could set up shop in one lo-cation and host fights in a way that keeps the athletes and coaches isolated, for the most part.

Every other North American sports league will have been watching and taking careful notes. The Souza test was a bad look, but you’d hope everyone would learn from it and do better next time.

Of course, the UFC doesn’t want to be camping out fulltime in Jacksonvil­le. If they have to hold fights with no fans in the stands, there’s no question they’d prefer to do it at their home in Las Vegas.

The UFC Performanc­e Institute is a world-class training facility and the UFC Apex is basi-cally a fully functionin­g TV studio with an octagon in the middle. As long as the company can secure hotel space to keep fighters isolated — and this is Las Vegas we’re talking about, they absolutely can do that — it seems like there’s a pretty obvious path forward.

Maybe they can travel around for a couple more fight cards, but eventually, Las Vegas is the key.

NOT SO FAST

One of the biggest stories to come out of the UFC’s three recent fight cards was the appar-ent retirement of bantamweig­ht champion Henry Cejudo, who announced he was moving on from fighting after beating Dominick Cruz at UFC 249.

The whole thing came out of nowhere. Many people wondered whether it was some sort of attempt at negotiatin­g for more money from the UFC.

This past weekend, Cejudo’s manager spoke with TMZ Sports and while he didn’t go into any details, he didn’t sound like a man who believed Cejudo is done for good.

“I don’t talk about money publicly,” Ali Abdelaziz said. “I think Dana’s right, I think Hen-ry’s been talking about retirement. Do I think Henry’s gonna retire? Absolutely not. I don’t think Henry’s gonna retire.”

AROUND THE OCTAGON

John Oliver took aim at the UFC’s plays for a fight island during a segment on his HBO show, Last Week Tonight, on Sunday night, and it’s absolutely worth watching … Khabib Nurmagomed­ov posted a video to Instagram updating fans about the condition of his fa-ther, Abdulmanap Nurmagomed­ov. The video was translated by two sources for MMA-Junkie. com, who reported that the lightweigh­t champion said his father had heart surgery as the result of complicati­ons due to COVID-19 and urged his fellow Dagestanis to stay at home.

 ?? 123RF ?? MMA fighters participat­e in battles without rules in the hexagon.
123RF MMA fighters participat­e in battles without rules in the hexagon.

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