How the Ali Act Could Reshape MMA in 2018

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Wild

Zi Nazi
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
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The United States Congress’ Subcommittee on Digital Commerce and Consumer Protection held a hearing on mixed martial arts just two short months ago. Therein, former two-division Ultimate Fighting Championship titleholder and UFC hall of famer Randy Couture joined Oklahoma Rep. Markwayne Mullin to make the case for extending the economic protections that cover boxers to their counterparts in MMA.

If introduced, H.R. 44, better known as the Ali Expansion Act, would decouple promotions like the UFC and Bellator MMA from their titles and rankings system, placing those responsibilities within the domain of independent sanctioning bodies licensed by state athletic commissions. Champions would be required to fight the No. 1 contender of their division at least once annually, and firewalls would be erected to prevent promoters from also acting as managers.

Other features of the bill would require MMA promotions to disclose dealings with fighters and other stakeholders, as well as the revenue generated, in connection with the events on which they compete. In the words of Pennsylvania Athletic Commission Executive Director Greg Sirb, who also testified at the hearing, these provisions would inform fighters of the “size of the [financial] pie” so they know “how big a piece” of it they should ask for at the negotiating table.

On the other end of the witness table was Marc Ratner, the UFC’s senior vice president of regulatory affairs. In between being roasted by Mullins, Ratner defended the current state of MMA regulation, asserting the UFC treats its athletes “fairly by any objective measure” and that the conflicts and corruption of boxing that necessitated legislative intervention there aren’t found in MMA.

Read more at Debets: How the Ali Act Could Reshape MMA in 2018
 

nuraknu

savage
Jul 20, 2016
6,247
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The United States Congress’ Subcommittee on Digital Commerce and Consumer Protection held a hearing on mixed martial arts just two short months ago. Therein, former two-division Ultimate Fighting Championship titleholder and UFC hall of famer Randy Couture joined Oklahoma Rep. Markwayne Mullin to make the case for extending the economic protections that cover boxers to their counterparts in MMA.

If introduced, H.R. 44, better known as the Ali Expansion Act, would decouple promotions like the UFC and Bellator MMA from their titles and rankings system, placing those responsibilities within the domain of independent sanctioning bodies licensed by state athletic commissions. Champions would be required to fight the No. 1 contender of their division at least once annually, and firewalls would be erected to prevent promoters from also acting as managers.

Other features of the bill would require MMA promotions to disclose dealings with fighters and other stakeholders, as well as the revenue generated, in connection with the events on which they compete. In the words of Pennsylvania Athletic Commission Executive Director Greg Sirb, who also testified at the hearing, these provisions would inform fighters of the “size of the [financial] pie” so they know “how big a piece” of it they should ask for at the negotiating table.

On the other end of the witness table was Marc Ratner, the UFC’s senior vice president of regulatory affairs. In between being roasted by Mullins, Ratner defended the current state of MMA regulation, asserting the UFC treats its athletes “fairly by any objective measure” and that the conflicts and corruption of boxing that necessitated legislative intervention there aren’t found in MMA.

Read more at Debets: How the Ali Act Could Reshape MMA in 2018
I saw part of the vid of that hearing. Mullins called Ratner out for removing Nate Diaz from the rankings as a contract negotiation tactic. He also was saying that basically it's fraud to the consumer to mess with the rankings to sell a sporting event. It was a fun angle.
 

Wild

Zi Nazi
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
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Ratner said "UFC fighters are ranked by sports reporters, and those rankings guide our merit based competitive match making decisions. We put on the fights that the fans want to see. And it's merit based on competitive match making decisions. Fighters, fans, and sports reporters keep MMA promoters accountable."


The same sports reporters that are either in bed with the UFC (MMA Junkie, for example), or scared to death they'll lose their credentials if they go against the machine. Yeah, seems legit.

Bob Carson MMA @Bob Carson MMA - this is a must watch for you. This a podcast material served up on a platter.
 

Haulport

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Jan 17, 2015
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Yes. What we need is more control by the corrupt horrible piece of shit commissions over a sport that they have already crippled. And we definitely need to be more like boxing because boxing is the paradigm of a clean sport where titles and rankings are handled in the most aboveboard fashion.

In case you didn't notice my sarcasm here is how I really feel: Congress should pass an act banning all State athletic Commission because they fucking suck and are filled with criminals. Or maybe the government should just stay out of sports completely.