Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UFC could be blueprint for other leagues

- Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. – UFC President Dana White wanted a major fight card weeks ago. He was confident his team could pull it off whether it took place on a tribal land, on a private island or in any of the 10 states offering to host it.

Coronaviru­s testing. Fan-free arena. Social distancing. Self-isolation. White looked at all those unpreceden­ted details that seemed too complex and too risky to some outsiders as merely extra challenges.

“I knew we could do this,” he said following UFC 249 on Saturday night. “I knew we could figure it out. Even with all the hurdles that we had early on, this has been fun. It’s been challengin­g and it’s been fun.

“I know that sounds a little demented to say I’ve had fun going through this. It’s been challengin­g and I’ve enjoyed the whole game of it, if you will.”

White and the UFC look like the big winners following their rousing show at Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonvil­le, an event that could serve as a blueprint for other sports leagues around the country and the world as they start to resume during a global pandemic.

The NFL, NBA, NHL, Major League Baseball and NASCAR, all of them had to have an eye on how the UFC approached and handled the first major human-centric sporting event in the U.S. since the new coronaviru­s shuttered much of the country nearly two months ago. The UFC created a 25-page document to address health and safety protocols, which included disinfecti­ng the octagon between bouts and mandating tests and masks for nearly everyone in attendance.

The spotlight only intensified when one fighter, Jacaré Souza, and two of his cornermen tested positive for COVID-19 a day before the stacked card.

Souza was pulled from the fight and removed from the hotel where hundreds of UFC employees are staying this week. The UFC’s medical team continues to provide assistance and is helping with necessary treatment, White said.

The UFC has two more fight nights scheduled this week in Jacksonvil­le, beginning Wednesday, and plans to administer more than 1,000 more coronaviru­s tests for everyone scheduled to take part.

“However it was handled this week, this was our first week,” White said. “It will only get better. And we can share what we learned here doing three events with other sports leagues who are reaching out to us and asking.

“A lot can be learned by what we’re doing here. Not just for profession­al sports but for sending people back to work and lot of other things in life.”

White said he never considered postponing UFC 249 following Souza’s positive test and got support from the Florida Athletic Commission, the governor and local authoritie­s.

The show went on and, by most accounts, got rave reviews.

Justin Gaethje stunned Tony Ferguson in the main event, earning a TKO in a lightweigh­t bout that set the winner up to fight titleholde­r Khabib Nurmagomed­ov next. Henry Cejudo, with blood gushing from his head and dripping down his chest, defended his bantamweig­ht title against Dominick Cruz and then announced his retirement.

Heavyweigh­t contender Francis Ngannou pummeled his fourth straight opponent, this one in 20 seconds. Former NFL defensive end Greg Hardy won for the sixth time in eight fights.

And Milwaukee native Anthony Pettis handed former welterweig­ht champion and fan favorite Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone his fourth consecutiv­e defeat in the undercard.

About the only negative was the empty arena, where punches, kicks, grunts, steps, trash talk, corner coaching and TV commentary echoed off metal beams and vacant seats.

“It was weird,” White conceded. “There’s so many things that you love about live sports, whether you’re home, in a bar or there live. One of the big, key components to live sports are the group of people that you’re with and the energy that you get when cool things happen.

“Tonight was an amazing event, but that was definitely missing tonight, these moments. … It’s all part of what makes this so great.”

Finding a way to recreate those missing moments could be the next challenge, one White surely would welcome as long as the show goes on.

“We’re still figuring this whole thing out,” he said. “This was the first one. It was a success. Wednesday will be better. Saturday will be better than that.”

Without fans, though, sounds that usually would be muted or completely drowned out filled the desolate arena. Fighters said it affected 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,” Pettis said after beating Cerrone in a wild welterweig­ht fight. “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.”

Pettis (23-10) beat Cerrone (36-15) in an unanimous decision. Pettis and Cerrone last fought in 2013. Pettis won that one as well.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anthony Pettis (left) fights Donald Cerrone in a UFC bout on Saturday night in Jacksonvil­le, Florida.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Anthony Pettis (left) fights Donald Cerrone in a UFC bout on Saturday night in Jacksonvil­le, Florida.

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