Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cormier says ‘TUF 27’ will be about fights, not drama

Focus to be ‘on our kids,’ not on UFC light heavyweigh­t champ

- By Adam Hill Las Vegas Review-journal

LOS ANGELES — Drama and conflict have been good to UFC light heavyweigh­t champion Daniel Cormier.

Those certainly won’t be the themes on Season 27 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” which features Cormier coaching against heavyweigh­t champion Stipe Miocic and premieres at 7 p.m. Wednesday on Fox Sports 1.

They will fight for the heavyweigh­t belt at UFC 226 on July 7 at T-mobile Arena, but Cormier said he wanted to make the show about the competitor­s chasing their dream of a UFC contract on the reality show.

“My focus was on our kids,” Cormier said Tuesday in Burbank, California. “I wanted to take a backseat to the fighters on the show. When it’s time for me to prepare for Stipe, I’ll prepare for Stipe. But I wanted this to be about them. These kids sacrificed everything. They left home to try to do this. That’s not an easy thing to do. This is one of those seasons where we truly are just the supporting cast.”

Cormier also didn’t want

to fake it. His intense rivalry with Jon Jones has included brawls, blood tears and some of the most raw leaked audio in the sport’s history.

It also has produced a lot of pay-per-view buys and money in Cormier’s pocket, but he didn’t want to manufactur­e any animosity with Miocic for the sake of drawing viewers and selling what figures to be one of the biggest fights of the year.

“I think the entertainm­ent value has to come from the guys fighting,” Cormier said. “Stipe and I are going to sell pay per views because it’s a big fight. And if it’s not genuine, people could see through that, too. If I start putting on some act that I hate Stipe Miocic, after going to Cleveland and doing a show on him and hanging out with him, people would be like, ‘This makes no sense.’ I wanted to give an accounting of who we are.” has yet to be finished in his profession­al career.

Medeiros had his threefight winning streak snapped with a loss to Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in February.

PFL to debut in June

The Profession­al Fighters League, the rebranded World Series of Fighting, will host its first card June 7 in New York.

Events will air Thursday nights on NBC Sports Network, with prefight and postfight coverage, along with some preliminar­y card bouts streaming on Facebook.

The season will feature a regular season and playoffs, with the winner of each of the six weight classes taking home $1 million. A total of $10 million will be awarded in the inaugural season.

The brackets include several former WSOF champions, along with a group of former UFC fighters including Will Brooks, Jake Shields, Rick Story and Shawn Jordan.

Championsh­ip bouts will be on New Year’s Eve.

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

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