Houston Chronicle

UFC card possible guide for boxing

Saturday’s fights also could provide path for other major sporting events

- By John Whisler CORRESPOND­ENT

Tony Ferguson hasn’t lost in eight years. Justin Gaethje has 18 knockouts in 21 career victories. The two are set to collide for the interim lightweigh­t title in UFC 249, a pay-per-view card Saturday night in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

The sport of boxing will be keeping score.

Not blow-by-blow or round-by-round for any of the 12 bouts scheduled that night, but day-by-day.

Boxing is keenly interested in how the UFC and its president, Dana White, plan to conduct the event amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

That includes Texas, which is beginning to put together guidelines for a possible return to action after COVID-19 KO’d the sport in mid-March.

“We’ll be watching,” said Greg Alvarez, manager of the combative sports division for the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.

Since March, the TDLR has had to cancel more than 25 profession­al box

ing and MMA events statewide because of the health crisis.

The Jacksonvil­le show is important because it could open the door for not only MMA and boxing, but all major sports.

UFC is promising strict safety measures for the event, including mandatory medical screenings and COVID-19 tests throughout fight week for fighters and corner people.

UFC reportedly has 1,200 tests on hand for the event, with results available in 24 hours, and people already have been filmed getting tested for the coronaviru­s.

The event will be held without fans at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonvil­le.

The UFC began administer­ing both the diagnostic

swab coronaviru­s test and the antibody test when the fighters arrived Tuesday.

After passing through a medical checkpoint, they were to receive credential­s to be worn at all times at the host hotel. Fighters and corners were asked to avoid mingling in large groups and to try and self-isolate until their test results came back.

Daily temperatur­e readings and symptom checks were scheduled, and the teams were provided private workout rooms for training and reducing weight.

“In today’s world, it’s as safe as possible,” said Dr. Donald Muzzi, chief ringside physician for the Florida State Boxing Commission. “We’re living in a new normal.”

Other precaution­s include limiting the number of arena staff and media members in attendance. Organizers

have discussed having the referees wear masks and eye protection.

“When this event is over, we’re going to step back and see what we’ve learned,” Muzzi said.

Texas and other state commission­s — not to mention the nation’s major sports leagues — will be taking note.

TDLR’s medical advisory board is scheduled to meet soon to discuss steps for a return for combative sports.

Boxing received a boost Tuesday when Gov. Greg Abbott said gyms could reopen with restrictio­ns May 18. Local boxers have had to

resort to training in makeshift facilities set up in garages and backyards.

The ability to stage boxing events is the next logical step.

Because boxing has no central governing body, officials are hoping for a series of universal guidelines from the Associatio­n of Ringside Physicians (ARP) for state commission­s to follow.

Boxing’s major ratings organizati­ons are expected to author their own protocols.

The WBC released its plan this week, calling for promoters and state commission­s to put boxers and their teams into 14 days of isolation before staging events behind closed doors.

The WBC also set out guidelines for remote judging, whereby judges will score bouts by watching the fight live via TV from home, logging into a WBC portal and then scoring the fight after every round.

Saturday’s UFC 249 card is one of three events the organizati­on is planning in Jacksonvil­le over an eightday period.

Alvarez and other Texas officials will be watching. So will Cameron Davies, a San Antonio businessma­n and boxing promoter with Davies Entertainm­ent. His boxing show, originally scheduled for March 28, has been reschedule­d for June 13.

TDLR has not made a determinat­ion as to when or if boxing events will return to action.

Davies said he’s pushed back the June 13 show to July or August, despite selling 2,200 tickets.

“I just don’t want to get anybody (sick),” he said. “Boxing is dangerous enough as it is. The last thing you want to do is come back too early.”

 ?? Zhe Ji / Getty Images ?? UFC president Dana White and his group have many precaution­s in place for UFC 249, which is Saturday.
Zhe Ji / Getty Images UFC president Dana White and his group have many precaution­s in place for UFC 249, which is Saturday.

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