Las Vegas Review-Journal

UFC’S PPV cards go to ESPN-PLUS

- By Adam Hill Las Vegas Review-journal

The UFC is taking another step away from traditiona­l cable and satellite television operators.

Viewers hoping to order the organizati­on’s pay-perview events will only be able to do so through the ESPN-PLUS subscripti­on service beginning with UFC 236 on April 13, the companies announced Monday.

“Today’s announceme­nt further establishe­s the strength of the partnershi­p between UFC and ESPN,” UFC president Dana White said in a statement. “Now our fans will be able to watch all UFC events exclusivel­y on ESPN platforms, including ESPN-PLUS, which

is an innovative way to deliver fights to our young fan base. I couldn’t be more excited to work with ESPN for the next seven years. Together we’re going to do amazing things to help grow this sport.”

The UFC’S agreement with Directv to distribute pay-per-view events domestical­ly expired ahead of February’s UFC 234 event, but the companies came to an agreement to air the broadcast days before the fights. They did so again before UFC 235 in March.

Now that relationsh­ip has been severed.

Pay-per-view providers and content creators like the UFC typically split revenue almost down the middle, but it’s believed the UFC was seeking something closer to a 70-30 breakdown.

The new deal runs through 2025 and applies to consumer purchases in the United States. Commercial buys will still be available through other outlets.

It calls for 12 pay-per-view events per year with purchases through the platform offering high-definition streams with both English and Spanish commentary. ESPN-PLUS already airs upward of 20 UFC Fight Night events per year and preliminar­y card action under a multiyear agreement that brought the UFC to ESPN in January.

That deal also includes 10 ESPN events per year and fetched the UFC $1.5 billion over five years.

“With the addition of UFC PPV events, we are making ESPN-PLUS an absolute must-have for any fan of the UFC and mixed martial arts,” said Kevin Mayer, chairman of Direct-to-consumer Internatio­nal for The Walt Disney Company, in a release. “In less than a year, ESPN-PLUS has establishe­d itself as the leader in direct-to-consumer sports and this new programmin­g agreement adds a significan­t business to our platform while reinforcin­g the value and strength of our product and our content lineup.”

Pay-per-view events purchased through the app will cost $59.99 and the service will offer a one-year subscripti­on to ESPN-PLUS for an extra $20 for new customers.

ESPN officials stated there may be other package deals announced in the future.

Viewers who have been purchasing events through the UFC’S digital brands like Ufc.com or the organizati­on’s app will be redirected to ESPN-PLUS.

ESPN-PLUS reported 568,000 new subscriber­s in two days before the Jan. 19 UFC event on the platform, its largest event and subscripti­on catalyst to date.

“We couldn’t be more excited to continue to drive passionate fans to these new pay-per-view experience­s,” ESPN president Jimmy Pitaro said. “In addition to giving MMA fans a onestop home for all UFC PPV events, ESPN-PLUS pricing and packaging will deliver new value to fans as well.”

UFC 236 features a pair of interim title fights, headlined by a lightweigh­t bout between Dustin Poirier and featherwei­ght champ Max Holloway. Israel Adesanya will take on Kelvin Gastelum for the interim middleweig­ht belt.

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

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