Extensive Dana White Interview
Jan 22, 2007 20:27:17 GMT -5
Post by LWPD on Jan 22, 2007 20:27:17 GMT -5
Very extensive interview with the UFC President and Part Owner...answers placed in bold for easier reading...highly recommened!
Online exclusive
One-on-one with UFC President Dana White
Q&A with the MMA executive
By Pramit Mohapatra
Special to Baltimoresun.com
Originally published January 22, 2007, 4:46 PM EST
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) President Dana White is nothing if not aggressive. Under his stewardship since 2001, the promotion has grown from an underground fight league with very limited mainstream acceptance to an outfit that is now synonymous with mixed martial arts in the United States.
UFC closed 2006 with a high-profile pay-per-view bout, UFC 66. In March, the company extended a strategic partnership with Spike TV and expanded its lineup of television programming. And the sport continued to gain fans, particularly in the 18-34 male demographic coveted by advertisers.
According to White, also a co-owner of UFC's parent company, Zuffa LLC, the success in 2006 was just the tip of the iceberg. He used "aggressive" several times to describe his organization's growth strategy during a Jan. 18 phone interview. What follows are his answers to a range of questions on the future of the UFC, its competitors, upcoming plans, his favorite fighters and more.
UFC's competitors
Although UFC popularized MMA in the United States, over the last couple of years, the MMA landscape has become a lot more crowded. At the start of 2007, it seems like there are basically three competitors to UFC: PRIDE FC (PRIDE), the International Fight League (IFL), and EliteXC, which will air fights on Showtime. Of these three leagues, who do you consider to be your biggest competitor?
I don't consider the other two [IFL, EliteXC] competition at all. IFL or the other one you said. I don't even know what it's called -- XFC, EFB, EFD -- whatever it is. PRIDE is who I consider the competitor.
In your opinion, does the presence of these other leagues help or hurt the UFC?
You know what ... since 2001, when we bought the company, every weekend there have been leagues popping up left and right and they stick around for awhile and then they disappear. And it's no different now than it was back in 2001. It's exactly the same.
There have been rumors floating around -- online especially -- that Zuffa, the parent company of the UFC, is looking to purchase Dream Stage Entertainment, which owns PRIDE. Can you comment on these rumors?
Well, I think over the last month you've seen that we're out there acquiring a few different things and obviously, we're very aggressive and have been since we bought the company and I don't plan on slowing down now. I'm looking to acquire all the best fighters in the world and make the biggest, best matches I can make for the next few years.
So, I guess that's not a denial or a confirmation?
If PRIDE is for sale, I'm interested.
Suppose EliteXC matures to a certain level and maybe the acquisition of PRIDE doesn't go through or PRIDE somehow stays on its feet, would you be an advocate for a cooperative event in the future between UFC and, maybe not these leagues, but other leagues in general? For example, an event like PRIDE's 2003 Middleweight Grand Prix, where Chuck Liddell represented the UFC. Would you be an advocate for something like that?
If somebody was big enough, yeah. If somebody was big enough. I've never been opposed to that. I've actually been the one who's taken the steps to move forward and go ahead and do things like that. Nobody else ever has. I'm the only one that's ever done it. I'm talking about [league's] as big as UFC and PRIDE � I'm not talking about one of these little, rinky-dink upstarts. These two companies [IFL and EliteXC] you keep talking about are rinky-dink upstarts. They don't even really exist.
Growing the UFC brand
The UFC is very popular among males 18-34, the demographic you specifically target. In order to compete against other leagues, you are going to have to continue to grow your fan base. Do you have specific plans to attract women and fans from other demographics?
Yeah, obviously, I'm going after other demographics. Women isn't one of them. One of the things we've always said is we know what this is for -- it's for males 18-34. And if women watch, that's just gravy for us -- that's beautiful. And our female fan base has grown incredibly. But to go out and market toward women would be very expensive and not make much sense. But, I'm going after Hispanic and urban [fans].
How about older demographics or older fans that may be more interested in boxing?
We have done that. I think we have tried to go after those people that are boxing fans. I haven't spent a ton of money trying to go after that market but we have definitely advertised toward them, too.
As you said, MMA is becoming more popular, even among women -- whether you market to them or not -- and because of that, women are also becoming participants in the sport. Do you have any plans to add female fighters to your promotion?
I don't. I'm not a huge fan of women fighting. Period. Not to say that I don't acknowledge that there are amazing female athletes out there in every sport. I just think right now we had a hard enough time getting over the stigma of the men.
Is that something you might incorporate in the longterm future once you feel like you are stable enough and you have enough of a presence?
Anything could happen. Who knows? But it's nothing I'm focusing on right now.
What are some of the obstacles you face as you try to gain sanctioning in states where MMA is not currently sanctioned?
I think the big problem is a lot of these other states are states that big shows wouldn't go to anyway. But my goal is [comprehensive sanctioning] -- these smaller shows are happening in these states and it needs to be sanctioned. One of the biggest reasons is fighter safety. � When they fight these rinky-dink, little shows all over the place, they don't have to go through the same medical testing, drug testing, everything else that we do in all the major states. But it needs to happen. That's the commission's job.
What are you doing to overcome these obstacles and to gain the sanctioning you need? Are you working with local and state governments? What's the process that you go through for that?
That's the reason we brought Marc Ratner on board from the Nevada State Athletic Commission. We hired him -- that's what he does all day, talks to all these different states and continually works to get proper sanctioning.
Recently you announced that UFC will be more accessible to Spanish-speaking people through television programming on Fox Sports en Espanol. You have also opened a London office. What countries are UFC actively trying to gain a foothold in?
The three we are focusing on right now are Mexico, Canada and the UK. We are going to do four or five fights this year in the UK. And then we are going to start creeping out into Europe doing fights all throughout Europe.
Any fights scheduled for Mexico or Canada in the near future?
Yeah, we're working on those deals as we speak.
So, in 2007 we could see both?
Yup.
Are you experiencing any cultural challenges in introducing the UFC to some of these other countries?
Not cultural challenges but obviously I'd say business challenges. When you try to do business in another country there's a big learning curve there.
Would you change fight rules to accommodate local values, customs, or laws?
No, that I won't do. I will not do that. I want the unified rules throughout the world. The same game of soccer that they play in Japan, England, and Brazil is the same game we play here. To be a real sport that's the way it has to be.
The last time you held a pay-per-view event on the East Coast was UFC 53 on June 4, 2005, which was held in Atlantic City, N.J. When will you be coming back to the East Coast?
Soon. We're going to Columbus, Ohio. We're doing Columbus in March. Then we're doing Texas. We're really starting to travel around now, not only to the East Coast but places we've never been before.
And why haven't you been back to Atlantic City for over a year and a half? Has that just been a scheduling thing or what's been the issue there?
There's been no issue or specific reason other than [that] we've just been doing a lot of shows out here [on the West Coast].
Between UFC Fight Nights and UFC pay-per-view events, you have over 20 events planned for this year. Are you worried at all about diluting your product with so many events?
I don't know. Are there too many football games on? Are there too many baseball games going on every day? I think as long as you put on good fights people are going to want to tune in and see them.
As you seek to expand your brand, do you see mistakes in other leagues -- for example, the NBA, NFL, Major League Baseball, or even other MMA leagues -- that you would like to avoid?
I think that the NFL is a monster -- it's amazing what they've done with it. The NBA, Major League Baseball -- I think they all do very well. The one thing I think, if we can emulate any of those three I'd be thrilled. Those are three of the biggest sports in the United States.
One of the things that we want to avoid that I think happens is that the players got too big. The players don't talk to the fans. The players don't go out of their way to sign autographs and to do the things that I think would make [these sports] even bigger than [they are] today.
And that's one of the things that we're going to make sure doesn't happen here in the UFC -- where the guys just become untouchable. You show up at a [Los Angeles] Lakers game, you'll never meet Kobe Bryant. But when you show up to a UFC event, odds are pretty damn good that you're not only going to meet Liddell, but he's going to sign what you need signed and take a picture with you.
How are you going to keep the fighter humble or how are you going to keep them beholden to the fans?
I'm very tight with all the guys that fight here. And we have a lot of meetings -- we get together with the fighters before they go on pay-per-view. The great thing about this sport is that we really don't have to keep too tight of a leash on these guys on being humble and being good people and being good to the fans because this sport is martial arts-based. All these guys come from martial arts which, as anybody knows, you learn a lot of respect and discipline.
So, we're very lucky in the fact that we deal with a lot of good guys as it is. Believe me, there's some idiots in this sport too just like any other sport, but overall [we have] very good guys.
Do you see or could you name one or two good practices that stand out to you in other sports leagues that you would like to emulate or that you already do emulate?
Yeah, I think one of the things that makes us more of a sport sport than a fighting league is -- like I said earlier -- the sportsmanship. When two teams play each other, yeah you might have some teams that are rivals and they really don't like each other that much. That happens in fighting, too. But most of the time, these guys that go out to fight each other are like two teams playing. I mean, that's really what it's like. They go out before the fight, they can hang out at the press conference and the weigh-in and shake hands and say hello to each other. Then they go in and fight as hard as they can fight and they fight to win. As soon as that fight's over, they're shaking hands and showing each other respect again. I think that's one of the great things about the UFC and about the sport.
Are there any plans for taking Zuffa -- the parent company of UFC -- public?
Never. Never, ever, ever. At least not while I'm here. Because I don't want to deal with [the hassles]. I have enough [hassles] to deal with every day, running this company. I don't need a bunch of idiots out in Wall Street -- who have no idea what they're talking about and don't know anything about this business -- telling me how to run it.
Television coverage
You currently have a very strong relationship with Spike TV. Shows such as The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) and events like the UFC Fight Nights have brought MMA to the mainstream audience over the last few years. What are your plans for expanding coverage of UFC on TV?
Well, right now, I think we have nine different television shows on Spike TV that all do great ratings. We're obviously talking to a lot of different networks right now and again, I don't have any deals done yet, so I don't like to talk about deals before they're done. But we're in deep, deep talks with HBO right now.
That was actually my next question. So the rumors of those negotiations are actually true?
Yes.
Can you give us your opinion -- is this a deal that's going to get done very shortly?
Absolutely. We're very aggressive. We really don't take no for an answer. And I think you're going to see UFC programming popping up on all the majors [major networks].
So that's premium cable. How about partnerships with basic sports cable networks such as ESPN or with broadcast TV?
We're talking to everybody, man. We're talking to everybody.
Would you be able to tell me what the number of pay-per-view buys was for UFC 66?
We don't give out our pay-per-view numbers, but we were very pleased with the numbers, very pleased.
People were talking "Mike Tyson-type" numbers. Would you say you got somewhere in the neighborhood of those numbers?
Yeah.
Last year you held two seasons of The Ultimate Fighter reality show -- season three and season four. And season four didn't do quite as well as the show had done in the past, according to reported ratings. Why do you think that is?
We know exactly why it was. We expected it because we went up against football. It was football and that's when all the big shows launched on TV. There's a lot of competition out there. If you have satellite or even basic cable, there's a lot to watch, a lot of things to choose from, and we know we do better running and airing after January. We expected it. Considering the competition we had out there for television -- for eyeballs -- we're very thrilled with the numbers we did last season.
Will this mean that you'll only be running one season per year from now on?
No. I start filming Sunday. We'll knock out season five. Then I think there's a few weeks off and we start doing season six.
So season six will be in 2007 as well?
Yup.
Fighter Welfare
Are the state athletic commissions in charge of drug testing the fighters?
They are.
Online exclusive
One-on-one with UFC President Dana White
Q&A with the MMA executive
By Pramit Mohapatra
Special to Baltimoresun.com
Originally published January 22, 2007, 4:46 PM EST
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) President Dana White is nothing if not aggressive. Under his stewardship since 2001, the promotion has grown from an underground fight league with very limited mainstream acceptance to an outfit that is now synonymous with mixed martial arts in the United States.
UFC closed 2006 with a high-profile pay-per-view bout, UFC 66. In March, the company extended a strategic partnership with Spike TV and expanded its lineup of television programming. And the sport continued to gain fans, particularly in the 18-34 male demographic coveted by advertisers.
According to White, also a co-owner of UFC's parent company, Zuffa LLC, the success in 2006 was just the tip of the iceberg. He used "aggressive" several times to describe his organization's growth strategy during a Jan. 18 phone interview. What follows are his answers to a range of questions on the future of the UFC, its competitors, upcoming plans, his favorite fighters and more.
UFC's competitors
Although UFC popularized MMA in the United States, over the last couple of years, the MMA landscape has become a lot more crowded. At the start of 2007, it seems like there are basically three competitors to UFC: PRIDE FC (PRIDE), the International Fight League (IFL), and EliteXC, which will air fights on Showtime. Of these three leagues, who do you consider to be your biggest competitor?
I don't consider the other two [IFL, EliteXC] competition at all. IFL or the other one you said. I don't even know what it's called -- XFC, EFB, EFD -- whatever it is. PRIDE is who I consider the competitor.
In your opinion, does the presence of these other leagues help or hurt the UFC?
You know what ... since 2001, when we bought the company, every weekend there have been leagues popping up left and right and they stick around for awhile and then they disappear. And it's no different now than it was back in 2001. It's exactly the same.
There have been rumors floating around -- online especially -- that Zuffa, the parent company of the UFC, is looking to purchase Dream Stage Entertainment, which owns PRIDE. Can you comment on these rumors?
Well, I think over the last month you've seen that we're out there acquiring a few different things and obviously, we're very aggressive and have been since we bought the company and I don't plan on slowing down now. I'm looking to acquire all the best fighters in the world and make the biggest, best matches I can make for the next few years.
So, I guess that's not a denial or a confirmation?
If PRIDE is for sale, I'm interested.
Suppose EliteXC matures to a certain level and maybe the acquisition of PRIDE doesn't go through or PRIDE somehow stays on its feet, would you be an advocate for a cooperative event in the future between UFC and, maybe not these leagues, but other leagues in general? For example, an event like PRIDE's 2003 Middleweight Grand Prix, where Chuck Liddell represented the UFC. Would you be an advocate for something like that?
If somebody was big enough, yeah. If somebody was big enough. I've never been opposed to that. I've actually been the one who's taken the steps to move forward and go ahead and do things like that. Nobody else ever has. I'm the only one that's ever done it. I'm talking about [league's] as big as UFC and PRIDE � I'm not talking about one of these little, rinky-dink upstarts. These two companies [IFL and EliteXC] you keep talking about are rinky-dink upstarts. They don't even really exist.
Growing the UFC brand
The UFC is very popular among males 18-34, the demographic you specifically target. In order to compete against other leagues, you are going to have to continue to grow your fan base. Do you have specific plans to attract women and fans from other demographics?
Yeah, obviously, I'm going after other demographics. Women isn't one of them. One of the things we've always said is we know what this is for -- it's for males 18-34. And if women watch, that's just gravy for us -- that's beautiful. And our female fan base has grown incredibly. But to go out and market toward women would be very expensive and not make much sense. But, I'm going after Hispanic and urban [fans].
How about older demographics or older fans that may be more interested in boxing?
We have done that. I think we have tried to go after those people that are boxing fans. I haven't spent a ton of money trying to go after that market but we have definitely advertised toward them, too.
As you said, MMA is becoming more popular, even among women -- whether you market to them or not -- and because of that, women are also becoming participants in the sport. Do you have any plans to add female fighters to your promotion?
I don't. I'm not a huge fan of women fighting. Period. Not to say that I don't acknowledge that there are amazing female athletes out there in every sport. I just think right now we had a hard enough time getting over the stigma of the men.
Is that something you might incorporate in the longterm future once you feel like you are stable enough and you have enough of a presence?
Anything could happen. Who knows? But it's nothing I'm focusing on right now.
What are some of the obstacles you face as you try to gain sanctioning in states where MMA is not currently sanctioned?
I think the big problem is a lot of these other states are states that big shows wouldn't go to anyway. But my goal is [comprehensive sanctioning] -- these smaller shows are happening in these states and it needs to be sanctioned. One of the biggest reasons is fighter safety. � When they fight these rinky-dink, little shows all over the place, they don't have to go through the same medical testing, drug testing, everything else that we do in all the major states. But it needs to happen. That's the commission's job.
What are you doing to overcome these obstacles and to gain the sanctioning you need? Are you working with local and state governments? What's the process that you go through for that?
That's the reason we brought Marc Ratner on board from the Nevada State Athletic Commission. We hired him -- that's what he does all day, talks to all these different states and continually works to get proper sanctioning.
Recently you announced that UFC will be more accessible to Spanish-speaking people through television programming on Fox Sports en Espanol. You have also opened a London office. What countries are UFC actively trying to gain a foothold in?
The three we are focusing on right now are Mexico, Canada and the UK. We are going to do four or five fights this year in the UK. And then we are going to start creeping out into Europe doing fights all throughout Europe.
Any fights scheduled for Mexico or Canada in the near future?
Yeah, we're working on those deals as we speak.
So, in 2007 we could see both?
Yup.
Are you experiencing any cultural challenges in introducing the UFC to some of these other countries?
Not cultural challenges but obviously I'd say business challenges. When you try to do business in another country there's a big learning curve there.
Would you change fight rules to accommodate local values, customs, or laws?
No, that I won't do. I will not do that. I want the unified rules throughout the world. The same game of soccer that they play in Japan, England, and Brazil is the same game we play here. To be a real sport that's the way it has to be.
The last time you held a pay-per-view event on the East Coast was UFC 53 on June 4, 2005, which was held in Atlantic City, N.J. When will you be coming back to the East Coast?
Soon. We're going to Columbus, Ohio. We're doing Columbus in March. Then we're doing Texas. We're really starting to travel around now, not only to the East Coast but places we've never been before.
And why haven't you been back to Atlantic City for over a year and a half? Has that just been a scheduling thing or what's been the issue there?
There's been no issue or specific reason other than [that] we've just been doing a lot of shows out here [on the West Coast].
Between UFC Fight Nights and UFC pay-per-view events, you have over 20 events planned for this year. Are you worried at all about diluting your product with so many events?
I don't know. Are there too many football games on? Are there too many baseball games going on every day? I think as long as you put on good fights people are going to want to tune in and see them.
As you seek to expand your brand, do you see mistakes in other leagues -- for example, the NBA, NFL, Major League Baseball, or even other MMA leagues -- that you would like to avoid?
I think that the NFL is a monster -- it's amazing what they've done with it. The NBA, Major League Baseball -- I think they all do very well. The one thing I think, if we can emulate any of those three I'd be thrilled. Those are three of the biggest sports in the United States.
One of the things that we want to avoid that I think happens is that the players got too big. The players don't talk to the fans. The players don't go out of their way to sign autographs and to do the things that I think would make [these sports] even bigger than [they are] today.
And that's one of the things that we're going to make sure doesn't happen here in the UFC -- where the guys just become untouchable. You show up at a [Los Angeles] Lakers game, you'll never meet Kobe Bryant. But when you show up to a UFC event, odds are pretty damn good that you're not only going to meet Liddell, but he's going to sign what you need signed and take a picture with you.
How are you going to keep the fighter humble or how are you going to keep them beholden to the fans?
I'm very tight with all the guys that fight here. And we have a lot of meetings -- we get together with the fighters before they go on pay-per-view. The great thing about this sport is that we really don't have to keep too tight of a leash on these guys on being humble and being good people and being good to the fans because this sport is martial arts-based. All these guys come from martial arts which, as anybody knows, you learn a lot of respect and discipline.
So, we're very lucky in the fact that we deal with a lot of good guys as it is. Believe me, there's some idiots in this sport too just like any other sport, but overall [we have] very good guys.
Do you see or could you name one or two good practices that stand out to you in other sports leagues that you would like to emulate or that you already do emulate?
Yeah, I think one of the things that makes us more of a sport sport than a fighting league is -- like I said earlier -- the sportsmanship. When two teams play each other, yeah you might have some teams that are rivals and they really don't like each other that much. That happens in fighting, too. But most of the time, these guys that go out to fight each other are like two teams playing. I mean, that's really what it's like. They go out before the fight, they can hang out at the press conference and the weigh-in and shake hands and say hello to each other. Then they go in and fight as hard as they can fight and they fight to win. As soon as that fight's over, they're shaking hands and showing each other respect again. I think that's one of the great things about the UFC and about the sport.
Are there any plans for taking Zuffa -- the parent company of UFC -- public?
Never. Never, ever, ever. At least not while I'm here. Because I don't want to deal with [the hassles]. I have enough [hassles] to deal with every day, running this company. I don't need a bunch of idiots out in Wall Street -- who have no idea what they're talking about and don't know anything about this business -- telling me how to run it.
Television coverage
You currently have a very strong relationship with Spike TV. Shows such as The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) and events like the UFC Fight Nights have brought MMA to the mainstream audience over the last few years. What are your plans for expanding coverage of UFC on TV?
Well, right now, I think we have nine different television shows on Spike TV that all do great ratings. We're obviously talking to a lot of different networks right now and again, I don't have any deals done yet, so I don't like to talk about deals before they're done. But we're in deep, deep talks with HBO right now.
That was actually my next question. So the rumors of those negotiations are actually true?
Yes.
Can you give us your opinion -- is this a deal that's going to get done very shortly?
Absolutely. We're very aggressive. We really don't take no for an answer. And I think you're going to see UFC programming popping up on all the majors [major networks].
So that's premium cable. How about partnerships with basic sports cable networks such as ESPN or with broadcast TV?
We're talking to everybody, man. We're talking to everybody.
Would you be able to tell me what the number of pay-per-view buys was for UFC 66?
We don't give out our pay-per-view numbers, but we were very pleased with the numbers, very pleased.
People were talking "Mike Tyson-type" numbers. Would you say you got somewhere in the neighborhood of those numbers?
Yeah.
Last year you held two seasons of The Ultimate Fighter reality show -- season three and season four. And season four didn't do quite as well as the show had done in the past, according to reported ratings. Why do you think that is?
We know exactly why it was. We expected it because we went up against football. It was football and that's when all the big shows launched on TV. There's a lot of competition out there. If you have satellite or even basic cable, there's a lot to watch, a lot of things to choose from, and we know we do better running and airing after January. We expected it. Considering the competition we had out there for television -- for eyeballs -- we're very thrilled with the numbers we did last season.
Will this mean that you'll only be running one season per year from now on?
No. I start filming Sunday. We'll knock out season five. Then I think there's a few weeks off and we start doing season six.
So season six will be in 2007 as well?
Yup.
Fighter Welfare
Are the state athletic commissions in charge of drug testing the fighters?
They are.