The Denver Post

Fighters back in octagon

President Trump congratula­tes UFC for restarting sports

- By Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE, FLA.» President Trump congratula­ted UFC for restarting the sports world Saturday night after a nearly two-month hiatus.

Trump’s taped message was played during ESPN’S broadcast of the UFC 249 undercard from a fan-free arena in Jacksonvil­le.

“I want to congratula­te (UFC President) Dana White and the UFC,” Trump said. “They’re going to have a big match. We love it. We think it’s important. Get the sports leagues back. Let’s play. Do the social distancing and whatever else you have to do. We need sports. We want our sports back. Congratula­tions to Dana White and UFC.”

UFC 249 served as the first major sporting event to take place since the global pandemic shut down much of the country nearly eight weeks ago. It was scheduled for April 18 in New York, but was postponed in hopes of helping slow the spread of COVID-19.

The mixed martial arts behemoth is holding three shows in eight days in Jacksonvil­le, where state officials deemed profession­al sports with a national audience exempt from a stay-at-home order as long as “the location is closed to the general public.”

The UFC came up with a 25-page document to address health and safety protocols, procedures that led to Jacaré Souza testing positive for COVID-19 on Friday. His middleweig­ht bout against Uriah Hall was canceled. Souza’s two cornermen also tested as positive, the UFC said in a statement.

Every other sport is watching closely to see how it plays out. White previously said Trump wants the event to serve as a blueprint for the return of live sports.

Judges and broadcaste­rs were separated. Fighters, trainers, referees, judges, UFC staff and even outside media had to undergo COVID-19 testing to get inside Veterans Memorial Arena.

But not everyone followed the rules. White mingled and bumped fists with nearly every fighter during official weigh-ins held inside a hotel ballroom Friday.

Many of those in attendance Saturday wore masks and gloves, although several were seemingly exempt from the mandate. Referees, ring announcer Bruce Buffer, other officials inside the octagon and the ring girl were unmasked.

The cage floor was disinfecte­d between bouts, and the padded parts of the octagon were wiped down between rounds.

Without fans, sounds that usually would be muted or completely drowned out filled the empty arena. Every kick, punch, grunt and step inside the octagon echoed.

“I don’t like people anyway,” said Ryan “Superman” Spann (18-5), who extended his winning streak to eight fights by beating veteran Sam Alvey (33-14) in a split decision. Also on the undercard:

• Anthony “Showtime” Pettis (23-10) beat Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone (36-15) in a wild welterweig­ht fight that included a flurry of exchanges, even one kick after the final bell. Cerrone has dropped four in a row

• Aleksei “The Boa Constricto­r” Oleinik (59-13-1) beat Fabricio Werdum (23-9-1) in a heavyweigh­t bout featuring a pair of 42-year-olds.

• Carla Esparza (16-6) edged Michelle Waterson (17-8) in a split decision.

• Vicente Luque (18-7-1) won for the seventh time in eight fights when he beat Niko Price (14-4) in a bloodbath. The fight was ruled a TKO in the third round after Price developed a nasty cut above his right eye.

• Featherwei­ght Bryce Mitchell (13-1) defeated fellow grappler Charles Rosa (12-4) in a unanimous decision.

 ?? Douglas P. Defelice, Getty Images ?? Carla Esparza kicks Aurora native Michelle Waterson during their UFC 249 strawweigh­t fight at Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., on Saturday. Esparza defeated Waterson.
Douglas P. Defelice, Getty Images Carla Esparza kicks Aurora native Michelle Waterson during their UFC 249 strawweigh­t fight at Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., on Saturday. Esparza defeated Waterson.

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