Las Vegas Review-Journal

Two ex-fighters are attached to a lawsuit related to a case accusing the UFC of unfair business practices.

- By Adam Hill

Two former UFC fighters are attached to a lawsuit filed last week related to an ongoing case accusing the organizati­on of engaging in unfair business practices.

The new filing is essentiall­y identical to one filed in December 2014 that is still working its way through the courts.

Fighters who competed in the UFC from Dec. 16, 2010, to June 30, 2017, are expected to be granted class-action status in the first suit. The one filed last week in the federal district court of Nevada is aimed at extending that period, according to Eric L. Cramer of Berger-montague, one of the attached firms.

“By filing this action, we are bringing the proposed class period forward to also cover all fighters who competed in bouts between June 30, 2017, and the present,” Cramer said in a statement.

Fighters who had a bout with the UFC during the included dates will have the opportunit­y to opt in or out of the class.

At the crux of the claims is that Zuffa and parent company Endeavor, which purchased the UFC

in 2016, violated antitrust laws to lock fighters into long-term exclusive contracts that prevented them from competing elsewhere, used its market dominance to coerce fighters into signing those contracts and acquiring and then closing down the competitio­n.

William A. Isaacson, lead counsel for the UFC, disputed those claims.

“This new filing rehashes verbatim of the nearly decade-old allegation­s of the prior case and adds nothing new of substance,” he said. “UFC has spent many years building a worldclass organizati­on, enhancing the brand of our athletes and championin­g the sport of MMA. UFC pays its fighters more than any other MMA promoter, with average fighter compensati­on rising by over 600 percent since 2005. Our efforts have raised the global popularity of the sport and the overall revenue potential of all MMA organizati­ons and athletes.”

While the UFC has purchased several fledgling competitor­s and folded them into the organizati­on, other promotions have succeeded.

Bellator MMA is owned by Viacomcbs and broadcasts events on multiple platforms under its umbrella. ONE Championsh­ip has a massive footprint in Asia and signed a threeyear deal with Turner Sports in 2018 for U.S. distributi­on. Profession­al Fighters League debuted in 2018 with a $1 million prize for the winner in each weight class each season with events currently airing on ESPN.

All those organizati­ons have competed for free agents against the UFC and made offers for fighters with expiring contracts in the UFC, which is expected to be a major argument by the defendants in the case.

One of the fighters on the new suit is C.B. Dollaway, a former All-america wrestler at Arizona State who entered the UFC through “The Ultimate Fighter” in 2008 and competed in the organizati­on until 2018.

“We train hard and risk our bodies to succeed in this sport,” Dollaway said. “Every time we step into that octagon, we leave a piece of ourselves behind. The UFC should have to pay us competitiv­e compensati­on for our services, just like profession­al athletes in other sports get paid based on competitiv­e markets.”

Previous proceeding­s have revealed that the UFC pays fighters approximat­ely 20 percent of revenue, a figure that widely has been compared to other major sports organizati­ons that are closer to 50 percent under most collective bargaining agreements.

The UFC, however, has a vastly different business model, and fighters have never formed a union to work toward a CBA.

Kajan Johnson fought in the UFC from 2014 to 2018 and retired from MMA after he was released from his contract. An outspoken advocate for fighters’ rights during his career, he was part of a push to unionize and is the other plaintiff in the new case.

“I am honored to bring this lawsuit not only on behalf of myself but all those fighters in the proposed bout class who are afraid to speak out against the injustice we have endured,” Johnson said. “I feel obligated to do my part to leave the sport better off for my students and all future mixed martial artists to come.”

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