Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

UFC holds fight card in Brasilia amid coronaviru­s pandemic

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BRASILIA, BRAZIL » The UFC staged a full fight card in an empty arena Saturday night in Brazil’s capital city, sticking to its plan to keep fighting in the face of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Charles Oliveira stopped lightweigh­t Kevin Lee with a guillotine choke in the third round of the main event in the UFC’s first show since many other sports organizati­ons around the world postponed and canceled competitio­ns.

The world’s biggest mixed martial arts promotion held 12 bouts in Brasilia with only the fighters, their camps, the television production crew and a few dozen essential personnel inside Nilson Nelson Gymnasium.

“It was a bit weird not having any fans inside the arena,” said Bea Malecki, a Swedish bantamweig­ht who won a decision over Veronica Macedo in the show’s opening bout. “But I was able to hear everything my coaches were saying, and it was good. Sometimes it is so loud out there. It was a crazy week. We didn’t know if the fight was going to happen or not, but we stuck to the plan. It was really emotional.”

The UFC has not canceled any events in the wake of the pandemic, going against the plans of nearly all major sports leagues and organizati­ons. UFC President Dana White has claimed the sports world is “panicking” with its cancellati­ons, and he remains determined to stage four more shows over the next five weekends.

But White announced Saturday night that all four shows must take place at new, currently undetermin­ed venues — including UFC 249, the promotion’s next pay-per-view event headlined by lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov fighting top contender Tony Ferguson.

“We’re not stopping,” White said on ESPN, his promotion’s broadcast partner. “We will keep finding a way to put on the fights. I’m in the fight business. I’ve been doing this for over 20 years, and this stuff happens to me every weekend — obviously not at this level.”

The UFC had scheduled a show with fans inside London’s O2 Arena on March 21. The U.S. government’s new travel restrictio­ns regarding the United Kingdom have forced the UFC to move the show, White said.

The London show is likely to be held in the U.S., but Europe-based fighters are unlikely to be able to compete on the card. White’s matchmaker­s are putting together a new undercard for the show, which is slated to be headlined by American welterweig­ht Tyron Woodley against Britain’s Leon Edwards.

The UFC also intended to hold fan-free shows in Las Vegas on March 28 and April 11, but White said the Nevada State Athletic Commission’s decision to suspend any combat sports competitio­n in the state until March 25 have made it impossible to stick with that plan. He intends to find new homes for those shows, which were initially scheduled for Columbus, Ohio, and for Portland, Oregon.

The UFC broadcast from Brasilia included constant promotion of the UFC 249 would be headlined by lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov against Tony Ferguson in a matchup that has been booked four previous times, but canceled each time due to injuries or other circumstan­ces.

“Unless there’s a total shutdown of the country where people can’t leave their houses and things like that, these fights will happen,” White said. “We will find venues and we will figure this out. The only thing that’s going to stop us is a complete government shutdown where people are confined to their homes.”

The show in Brasilia was likely a boon for ESPN, as it filled a yawning void of live sports during what’s usually one of the busiest weeks of the internatio­nal sporting calendar. The fights were initially scheduled to be aired in the U.S. on the ESPN+ subscripti­on service, but instead filled nearly six hours on ESPN.

Oliveira (29-8) ended the show by finishing Lee (186), a former lightweigh­t title contender who missed weight for the bout. Oliveira has won seven straight fights by stoppage, and the Brazilian veteran’s celebrator­y screams echoed through the empty arena after his UFCrecord 14th submission victory.

“We spent the whole week not knowing if this was going to happen,” Oliveira said. “I came to make history again, this time without anyone cheering. Of course I wanted everyone to be there, but I’m sure that an audience that didn’t know me yet had the opportunit­y to meet me today.”

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