Dayton Daily News

UFC kicks off the era of sports without fans

First major sport to return offered a stacked card with lots of blood, grunts and new safety protocols.

- By Mark Long

Kicks, punches and grunts echoed through an empty arena as the MMA league held the first major sports event since the shutdown.

Kicks, punches and grunts echoed through the empty arena. Coaches, commentato­rs and camera clicks resonated like never before. Blood, sweat, swollen eyelids and face masks signaled the return of UFC, the first major sporting event to resume since the coronaviru­s shuttered much of the country for nearly two months.

UFC 249 ushered in a new look for sports, too. One without fans and amid several safety precaution­s.

It was definitely different — two fighters adjusted their approaches because of what they heard announcers say — and a welcome reprieve for a sports-craved country that went nearly eight weeks with few live events.

“We did this for you, to bring sports back,” fighter Tony Ferguson told fans following his loss in the main event.

Five hours after President Trump congratula­ted UFC for restarting the sports world, Justin Gaethje stunned heavily favored Ferguson (26-4) in the finale. Gaethje earned a TKO in the fifth and final round of the headliner that was deemed an interim lightweigh­t title bout. It essentiall­y gives Gaethje (22-2) the right to fight titleholde­r Khabib Nurmagomed­ov next. Nurmagomed­ov was unable to fight this weekend because of travel restrictio­ns.

Gaethje flipped over the top of the cage and back in following the biggest victory of his career. He then screamed repeatedly.

“I want the real one,” he said as he threw down the interim belt. “There’s no other fight I want right now.”

The stacked card saw 33-yearold Henry Cejudo, with blood gushing from his forehead and running down his chest, defend his bantamweig­ht title against

Dominick Cruz and then announce his retirement in the middle of the octagon.

“I really do want to walk away, but money talks,” said Cejudo, an Olympic gold medalist in 2008. “It gets stagnant. I want to leave on top.”

The event also included heavyweigh­t contender Francis Ngannou pummeling another opponent, former NFL defensive end Greg Hardy, to win for the sixth time in eight fights and former welterweig­ht champion and fan favorite Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone losing his fourth straight.

Trump grabbed the spotlight early. His taped message was played during ESPN’s broadcast of the undercard.

“I want to congratula­te (UFC President) Dana White and the UFC,” Trump said. “They’re going to have a big match. We love it. We think it’s important. Get the sports leagues back. Let’s play. Do the social distancing and whatever else you have to do. We need sports. We want our sports back.”

UFC 249 originally was scheduled for April 18 in New York, but was postponed in hopes of helping slow the spread of COVID-19.

The mixed martial arts behemoth will hold three shows in eight days in Jacksonvil­le, where state officials deemed profession­al sports with a national audience exempt from a stay-at-home order as long as the location is closed to the public.

The UFC came up with a 25-page document to address health and safety protocols, procedures that led to Jacaré Souza testing positive for COVID-19 on Friday. His middleweig­ht bout against Uriah Hall was canceled. Souza’s two cornermen also tested positive, the UFC said.

All three men left the host hotel to self-isolate elsewhere, where UFC’s medical team will monitor their conditions remotely and provide assistance with necessary treatments.

The positive results surely increased the focus on the event. Every other sport is watching closely to see how it plays out.

“The whole world is weird right now. Everything’s weird. This event’s weird,” White said. “It’s different. We live in a different world than we did two months ago. The bottom line is the system worked. What you don’t want to do is two days after the fight say, ‘Aw, Jacaré tested positive.’ So it worked. The system worked that we put in place.

“Without sounding like a jackass, we’re really good at what we do. We’re very, very good at what we do. We’ll just get better. The longer this goes, the better the testing technology’s going to get and the faster it’s going to get. We’re going to prove by next Saturday that profession­al sports can come back safely.”

White didn’t want to postpone any fights. He tried to host the event on tribal land in California and still hopes to create a “Fight Island” for future cards.

He settled for Jacksonvil­le for at least a week — without fans and with social-distancing rules in place.

Judges and broadcaste­rs worked from separate tables. Fighters, trainers, referees, judges, UFC staff and even outside media had to undergo COVID-19 testing to get inside Veterans Memorial Arena.

Many of those in attendance Saturday wore masks and gloves, although several were seemingly exempt from the mandate. Referees, ring announcer Bruce Buffer, other officials inside the octagon and the ring girl were unmasked. Playby-play commentato­r Joe Rogan, who initially was supposed to interview winners remotely, ended up doing them inside the octagon.

The cage floor was disinfecte­d between bouts, and the padded parts of the octagon were wiped down between rounds.

Without fans, though, sounds that usually would be muted or completely drowned out filled the desolate arena. Fighters said it affected their bouts. Hardy and Carla Esparza said they altered their approach after hearing commentato­rs during early rounds.

“It’s hard to assess without the crowd,” Anthony Pettis said after beating Cerrone in a wild welterweig­ht fight. “When I land stuff, I hear the crowd and know it was a good one. This time, there was no crowd. I saw his head pop, but there was nothing behind it, so it’s hard to tell.”

Also on the card:

■ Cejudo (16-2) caught Cruz (22-3) with a right knee to the face that sent him reeling to the canvas. Cejudo then delivered nearly a dozen unanswered blows before the referee stopped the bout. Cruz argued it never should have been called because he was working to get back on his feet. Cejudo surprising­ly ended his career a few minutes later, saying he wants to spend more time with his family.

■ Ngannou knocked out fellow heavyweigh­t Jairzinho Rozenstrui­k in 20 seconds. Ngannou rushed Rozenstrui­k and delivered a flurry of blows that left Rozenstrui­k so woozy he had trouble getting into his slides long after the fight ended. It was Ngannou’s fourth consecutiv­e victory totaling less than 3 minutes in the octagon.

■ Calvin Kattar (21-4) stopped Jeremy Stephens (2818) in the second round after consecutiv­e elbow blows, one standing and another on the ground.

■ Hardy (6-2) celebrated a unanimous decision over Yorgan De Castro (6-1) in a heavyweigh­t bout.

■ “Showtime” Pettis (2310) beat Cerrone (36-15) in a unanimous decision. Pettis and Cerrone last fought in 2013. Pettis won that one as well. Cerrone has dropped four in a row, including losses to Conor McGregor, Gaethje and Ferguson.

■ Aleksei “The Boa Constricto­r” Oleinik (59-13-1) beat Fabricio Werdum (23-9-1) in a heavyweigh­t bout featuring a pair of 42-year-olds. It was a split decision that included more toe-to-toe blows than ground grappling.

■ Carla Esparza (16-6) edged Michelle “Karate Hottie” Waterson (17-8) in a split decision. It was Esparza’s third straight victory in the straw-weight division.

■ Vicente Luque (18-7-1) won for the seventh time in eight fights when he beat Niko Price (14-4) in a bloodbath. The fight was ruled a TKO in the third round after Price developed a nasty cut above his right eye.

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 ?? JOHN RAOUX / AP ?? Justin Gaethje punches Tony Ferguson on his way to an upset victory by TKO over his heavily favored opponent in the main event at UFC 249 Saturday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
JOHN RAOUX / AP Justin Gaethje punches Tony Ferguson on his way to an upset victory by TKO over his heavily favored opponent in the main event at UFC 249 Saturday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JOHN RAOUX / AP ?? Carla Esparza lands a blow against Michelle Waterson during a UFC 249 mixed martial arts bout, Saturday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla. A split decision gave Esparza her third straight victory in the straw-weight division.
PHOTOS BY JOHN RAOUX / AP Carla Esparza lands a blow against Michelle Waterson during a UFC 249 mixed martial arts bout, Saturday in Jacksonvil­le, Fla. A split decision gave Esparza her third straight victory in the straw-weight division.
 ??  ?? A worker sprays sanitizer in the octagon between bouts Saturday at UFC 249. Anyone who wanted to enter the arena had to be tested fr COVID-19, and many of those in attendance — no fans — wore masks and gloves.
A worker sprays sanitizer in the octagon between bouts Saturday at UFC 249. Anyone who wanted to enter the arena had to be tested fr COVID-19, and many of those in attendance — no fans — wore masks and gloves.

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