Dana White has been the most important voice in MMA since taking over the UFC.
“What you guys [boxing fans] don’t understand is your sport is getting swallowed,” Rogan yelled at boxing promoter Lou DiBella on an early TV spot with ESPN. “It’s getting swallowed by a greater, more efficient, more spectacular sport. The famous people that you have right now are the only famous people who are going to […]
“What you guys [boxing fans] don’t understand is your sport is getting swallowed,” Rogan yelled at boxing promoter Lou DiBella on an early TV spot with ESPN. “It’s getting swallowed by a greater, more efficient, more spectacular sport. The famous people that you have right now are the only famous people who are going to exist in the future for boxing — the guys that were already famous before UFC came along. There will be no new ones. They will all go to MMA.”
“I’M VERY CLOSE TO ROGAN AND TRUMP,” WHITE SAYS. “WE’RE ALL CONNECTED BY UFC.”
O’Malley is a striker: Tall and graceful, he dances on his feet with darting punches and whipping kicks. But tonight, he looks slow. Dvalishvili is not a subtle fighter. He’s small and fast and very, very strong. Before O’Malley can establish a rhythm, Dvalishvili is on him. Overhand right, takedown, back control, side control, smashing O’Malley’s face into the mat and his body into the cage and sapping his energy and will. In each of the five rounds, when O’Malley starts to show even a spark of his usual creativity and threat, Dvalishvili stuffs him. The Suga-jerseyed fans in the crowd are silent or booing. The Georgians are ascendant. They get louder and louder until Dvalishvili is crowned the new champion by the judges’ unanimous decision.
On the train home, I strike up a conversation with two guys named Kay and Gage who are sober but still buzzing from the energy of the fight. They’re in the Navy, visiting from San Diego, and have been following this sport for years. “It’s the underdog fights that really get you going,” Kay says, rattling off a list of past UFC upsets. Neither of these guys are wearing red hats. They’re not yelling about the Nelk Boys or Elon Musk. They came here and paid ,100 a ticket to see two guys beat the shit out of each other in a cage, because the underdog stories get them going. When the president-elect showed up, Gage says, “it was like confirmation that this is what the American people want.”
Most fans don’t agree with the matchup at the Garden. Currently, the UFC’s heavyweight division has an interim champion, a polite but not gentle English giant named Tom Aspinall, who has been keeping the belt warm while Jones recovered from injuries. Ordinarily, an interim champ would get a shot at unifying the belts when the champion recovers — but instead, Jones has thus far ducked Aspinall in favor of fighting Stipe Miocic, a legendary-but-aging heavyweight who hasn’t stepped into the cage in nearly four years. Even though Jones is 30 pounds heavier than in his prime, he’s still terrifying: a generationally talented athlete who fights with a shocking brutality. He’ll unleash that on the 42-year-old Miocic, who works outside the ring as a firefighter. This is not the fight fans want, but it’s the one Jones wants — and because he’s White’s guy, he gets his way.
It makes sense, of course, that White and Trump would be friends. White runs the UFC the same way Trump runs America: top-down, tight control, with a warm hand toward those who are loyal and a vicious streak toward naysayers and challengers to his authority. White is notorious for torching fighters, journalists, and judges during press conferences, and the UFC’s history is full of high-profile rifts between the CEO and some of his stars.
At the parking lot “fan experience,” I meet a group of Latino twentysomethings from the Pacific Northwest in line to hit a punch-power machine. They’re UFC die-hards, but the parking lot is as close as they’ll get to the main event. “We bought flights [to Vegas] as soon as Noche was announced,” one tells me. Only later did they realize that tickets to the event — which started at more than ,000 — would be way out of their budget. They plan to watch the fight from one of the many bars on the Strip.
It’s hard for me to square this blunt, ruthless system with a sport that asks everything of its athletes. While the UFC has never had a death or serious injury in the ring, the damage a fighter takes over their career accumulates. A 2020 survey in The Athletic found that more than 55 percent of fighters expect their lives after retirement to be affected by injuries, and the specter of the progressive brain disorder CTE is seen almost as a given by everyone who makes a living with their fists.
At the time, MMA was seen as a bloody sideshow — “human cockfighting,” per then-Sen. John McCain — and was being heavily regulated out of existence in many states. But Trump saw something in the sport — or in White — and allowed the CEO to host his first two UFC events at the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City. White had an aggressive business plan, restarting home-video releases of the shows and doubling down on live events.
“I’m like the middleman in this relationship,” White tells me. “I’m very close to Rogan and loyal to Rogan, and Rogan is very close and loyal to me; and then I’m very close to Trump and very loyal to Trump, and Trump is loyal to me. And we’re all connected by this UFC thing.”
Dana White has been the most important voice in MMA since taking over the UFC.
A fighter like Blanchfield has something of a cushion: a slot in the top five, regular endorsements, high billing on fight cards, and enough star power that she can claim better prize money, or purses. But to get to that point, a fighter has to grind their way up in smaller promotions, hoping to get noticed by White or another of the UFC scouts.
The story of how a president of the United States wound up cage-side in Madison Square Garden that night is also the story of MMA, a sport that over the past 30 years has gone from being a late-night cable TV sideshow to a new American pastime. MMA is street fighting distilled into sport, practiced by professional athletes who have tuned every cell of their body for violence. As it happens, that’s something a whole lot of people want to watch. Depending on whom you ask, MMA is the third-largest sport in the world, behind only basketball and soccer, with anywhere from 300 million to 600 million fans worldwide. Some 60 percent of those fans, according to the statistics website Cagewalks.com, are people (mostly men) between the ages of 25 and 44, a demographic that is highly prized by advertisers and that also, perhaps not coincidentally, has gotten mashed in the face by the ass end of the American political system for the better part of 20 years.
In MMA, almost all of the human body’s weapons are allowed, and a scarce few — headbutts, biting, eye-gouging, and the aforementioned blows directly to the back of the skull — are banned. You can punch, knee, kick, and elbow. (Bend your arm and feel for the little knob of bone beneath the skin at the tip of your elbow. At the right angle and speed, it will cut like a scalpel.) On the ground, there’s a war of grappling, chokes, and limb breaks, and Oliveira is one of the best to ever fight it. Late in the fifth round, Oliveira latches onto Chandler’s back, squeezing him with all four limbs. Instead of going limp, Chandler stands up, taking Oliveira with him like a 155-pound backpack, and waddles to the center of the ring. “Fuck it!” he says, launching himself backward into the air and crashing down, crushing Oliveira to the mat, which booms like a giant drum. Chandler’s mouth guard is painted with an American flag. He does this slam, impossibly, twice. Oliveira does not let go. The fight ends. Oliveira wins, a unanimous decision, but Chandler is triumphant in defeat. “Madison Square Garden, are you not entertained?” he shouts. From across the cage, I see Trump smile.
Thomas says there are other fault lines aside from politics: rising ticket prices like the ones that forced out fans in Vegas, a glut of pay-per-view events bleeding fans’ wallets dry, the possibility of stagnant competition as the company prioritizes its brand over its pool of talent. But the waters are so high right now, it’s hard to tell if any of those amount to significant cracks.
I head out into the crowd. “He comes out like a fighter, that’s the biggest thing,” a baby-faced 29-year-old named Jonathan in a bright red hat tells me. “It resonates with a lot of people that are hurting,” his friend Ethan says. “When they see a strong figure like that, it gives a sense of hope.” Jonathan and Ethan are Canadian but love Trump.
White got the Nelk Boys on Trump’s plane, put him on the radar of podcaster Theo Von, comedian Andrew Schulz, and eventually Rogan. Rogan, White says, was resistant to wade into the political scene, but as the 2024 campaign escalated, White made it a personal project to get him on board. “I’ve been working on Rogan for years,” White tells me. “I knew that if I could get him and Trump together that they would hit it off.” White says he made a breakthrough when he invited Rogan to a private dinner with Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, who helped persuade Rogan to bring Trump on his podcast, eventually leading to Rogan’s endorsement. (Reps for Rogan did not respond to a request for comment. A rep for Kushner and Ivanka Trump declined to comment.)
“There’s no rules [in MMA] to protect fighters, because there might be hundreds out there, but you’ll be dealing individually with this huge organization,” Ngannou says over Zoom from Paris. “You have no leverage … unlike other sports that have been around for so long and have a union that protects them. I was abused in that [UFC] contract. I was powerless, I was voiceless. On the other side, you have a guy who is the jury and the judge. He decides what goes.”
Here it is, in short: It’s the late Nineties, early 2000s. White, a boxing-fitness coach who claims he was run out of his native Boston by Whitey Bulger and the mob, is living in Las Vegas, palling around with a pair of casino-magnate brothers, Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta. Eventually, White and the Fertittas get “addicted” to grappling — Brazilian jujitsu, one of the bases of modern MMA — by training with former UFC fighter John Lewis and “trying to kill each other down in the gym at Fertitta Enterprises” three or four times a week, White says. Through Lewis, White starts managing some of the fledgling UFC’s fighters.
Donald Trump went to a UFC fight right after winning the 2024 election.
“When you’re at the level that Trump and all these other politicians are on, all you focus on is Fox, MSNBC, CNN, whatever. But that ain’t it,” White tells me. For the past several years, White has personally deepened the UFC’s relationships with the “manosphere,” seating podcasters like the Nelk Boys ringside and making Barstool Sports presenters favored mainstays in the UFC press room.
“Boxing would do Atlantic City, Vegas, and sometimes New York and L.A. They didn’t travel around to all these different states and small towns and big cities,” White says at the Peninsula, as he polishes off his steak. “We literally went everywhere with the UFC. We got the live event so dialed in, and so good — even in the early days, when it wasn’t at the level that it is now — nobody had ever seen anything like that. You never walked out of a live UFC event and said, ‘Yeah, I don’t ever want to come to one of these again.’ ”
“He called me on the phone and said, ‘If you don’t want to do this, I completely understand. But I would be honored if you would speak at the Republican Convention. I’m going to run for president,’ ” White says. “And everybody — everybody — told me not to do it. But you know, this guy’s been a good guy to me. I’m not going to say no.”
At any amateur or low-level professional MMA competition in America — of which there are dozens, if not hundreds — you can see people experiencing both sides of this equation in real time. A few weeks after returning to New York from Vegas, I take the train out to a nightclub in Queens called Amazura, which hosts a local promotion called Flex Fight Series. Local fight cards are often a mix of kickboxing and MMA matches with both professional and amateur fights on the ticket. There are generally two types of fighters in these brawls: the kind who get in — and push harder — when they’re hit in the face, and those who get out. The former, in most cases, make better fighters. (I have fought just enough to know that I am the latter.) Nobody likes getting hit in the face, but as the night at Amazura gets longer, more and more of the fighters in the ring seem like “get in” guys. Midway through the card, I head upstairs to the club’s steamy VIP room, which has been repurposed into the fighters’ warm-up area. The place is filled with wiry fighters reeking of Tiger Balm and sweat. There’s a guy jumping rope in the corner while another hits pads with his coach. The bar area has been taken over by the glove guy, who hands fighters the appropriate gear — boxing gloves for kickboxing, fingerless four-ounce gloves for MMA. I strike up a conversation with Elias Aminov, who is 23 years old, six feet one, 170 pounds, and 4-0 in amateur competition. All four of his previous fights ended in the first round, three by way of forcing a fast tap-out through chokes (also known as a “submission”) and one by technical knockout.
This is the grind. Fighters suffer through constant pain for years before they ever see a cent from it. There are no high school MMA teams, no college programs that provide coaching and medical care and state-of-the-art facilities. Fighters come to the sport because they step into a gym and never want to leave, because they washed out of those fancy college sports, because they were getting in too many fights on the streets and figured training was easier than jail. There is no pipeline to the pros: There is only the grind.
At the Madison Square Garden fight last year where Trump made his victory lap, red hats dotted the stadium.
Boxing, it should be said, still exists, but these days a casual fan is more likely to see a YouTuber fight a has-been than an actual title fight. Rogan called his shot well, and Trump, as White tells me, also saw the sport for what it could be. Trump has always known what will play well on TV.
Unlike the UFC’s ad-hoc matchmaking, the PFL’s regular roster of fighters compete in an annual tournament with a winner-take-all prize of 0,000. PFL’s chairman, the dot-com investor Donn Davis, claims that this structure puts more power in the hands of the fighters themselves. “I like that the athlete’s in control,” Davis tells me. “Nobody here is a puppeteer, nobody’s here playing favorites.”
What drew those three men together, above all else, was the belief that a little-known, barely regulated blood sport could tap into America’s latent appetite for violence and catharsis. Two decades later, they’ve been proved right, and their gamble has put all three at the direct center of one of the most extreme political realignments the country has seen in a century. If you want to understand Trump’s America, you have to understand the UFC.
White doesn’t control what happens in the cage, but before a referee yells “Fight,” he is essentially the only voice that matters. When I got to Vegas five days before the Sphere fight, I went to the UFC Apex, a satellite building near the main headquarters where a massive, balding kickboxer beat the snot out of a much smaller-looking Japanese striker. The fight was one of several White attends almost every Tuesday night as part of his televised “Contender Series,” a sort of UFC tryout circuit that functions like a bloody episode of The Apprentice.
Belgaroui’s face falls. He won, but it wasn’t enough.
Jones versus Miocic goes about how everyone expected. Miocic puts up a fight, but is clearly outmatched from the first round. In the third, Jones finishes it in spectacular fashion — a devastating spinning back kick that hits Miocic so hard in the floating ribs that he crumples, all the wind and fight gone out of him at the end of one angry man’s heel. Jones saunters to the middle of the cage, shimmying his hips and arms in an imitation of Trump’s signature shuffle-dance. White brings out the belt, a gleaming, skateboard-size strap of leather and gold, and Jones presents it to Trump, as Rogan hovers around after post-fight interviews. Miocic, quietly, announces his retirement.
“The kids at the jitsu gym — when they see me, I can see their eyes get wide. I remember being that kid looking up to others,” Blanchfield tells me. “The women before us didn’t have anyone to look up to.”
The next day, I fly to Las Vegas, where White prepares for one of his biggest live events yet. The confusingly named “Riyadh Season Noche UFC” is a partly Saudi-sponsored blowout celebrating Mexican independence and culture in Vegas’ absurdly futuristic Sphere amphitheater. (White picked the venue after Tom Brady took him to see U2 play there.) It’s the first MMA fight at the Sphere, and, all together, it’s costing the UFC upward of million. I meet White at the UFC’s corporate headquarters in a sparse industrial district southwest of the Strip. White strolls into the lobby, which has a bank of TVs playing Judge Judy and ESPN above a wall full of broadcast awards. White is bald, a few inches short of six feet, and built like a small fridge: thick neck, broad shoulders, biceps straining at the short sleeves of his polo shirt, and the rolling gait of guys who are intimately familiar with the concept of “leg day.”
Aminov and I don’t talk much about politics — I’m not much interested in his, and he’s not much interested in mine. MMA gyms are some of the most accepting places I have ever been: If you show up to work and respect your training partners, most other facets of your identity will be pretty much ignored. But there’s no denying that in recent years, the sport’s culture as a whole has taken a drastic and alarming swing to the far right.
I meet White for the first time in early September. We eat lunch in a private dining room attached to the restaurant in the Peninsula hotel in Manhattan, where White stays when he’s in New York. He runs late to the interview because he’s been downstairs buying a watch at the Rolex store for a longtime associate, a gift for his service and loyalty over decades. He orders a strip steak medium well, asparagus, and a Cobb salad chopped and tossed with both ranch and blue cheese dressing. He brings his own drink, some blue electrolyte mix that he pours out of a glass Voss water bottle into a plastic cup emblazoned with Power Slap branding. (Power Slap is White’s latest venture, a “slap fighting” promotion in which “fighters” slap each other in the face, usually until one is knocked out.) Fortunately, I’m not there to talk about Power Slap, and White happily launches into the story of the UFC.
I don’t know what will happen next to Belgaroui. He’s a seasoned fighter — 8-3 as a pro in MMA, with a 27-7 record against high-level kickboxing competition before he made the jump to the cage. But without the UFC, your options are limited. That fact is even more brutal when you realize what it takes to even get that shot on the Contender Series. All around the country, fighters sweat, puke, and bleed their way through an endless grind of high-impact training for the slim chance of getting a shot at real money. The UFC, ONE, the PFL, and Bellator can offer contracts that, with sponsorships and social media endorsements, can amount to something like a living wage: say, three fights a year at mid five-figures per, plus money on the side through the social marketing. The biggest fighters make hundreds of thousands if not millions per fight, but they’re outliers. Everyone else, for the most part, is just like you and me: working a day job, making ends meet. But when their day job is over, MMA’s up-and-comers go right back to work in the gym.
“You don’t see me running around trying to defend the pay and all that stuff all the time, because I don’t give a shit,” White tells me. “I know what we’re doing. I know how many people’s lives we’ve changed, and I know for a fact that we’ve built the right pay structure to build a business, and grow the business, and reinvest in the business.”
Elias Aminov (left) is declared winner of an MMA fight in Queens, New York.
The question, then, is how far White can ride this wave. How far does this new America go? How long do the fights last? “For the short and medium term, this is absolutely the sport of the moment,” Thomas, the longtime MMA commentator, tells me. “But they’ve tied their fortunes so nakedly to one guy’s political identity and movement. I’ve got a feeling it’s not going to last forever.”
The UFC aims to build on the success of last year’s Noche UFC, tapping into its passionate Latin American fan base with a fight card (the term for the list of matchups at a single event) made up mostly of Mexican and Central American fighters. Still, it’s a risk — the experimental venue and budget throw a wrench in the company’s polished live-event process.
T
here are two men bleeding in a chain-link cage in front of the next president of the United States. A week and a half ago, Donald Trump was elected for his second term, and now he is back home at the center of the world, underneath the lights at Madison Square Garden, watching the greatest gladiators of our time fight in a canvas-and-steel octagon. For the past four rounds, Charles Oliveira, a tall Brazilian with blinding white teeth and icy bleached hair to match, has been beating the absolute shit out of Michael Chandler, a short American wrestler who fights with a kind of manic joy that often works against him. Case in point: Early in the fifth and final round, Chandler finally connects with a right hook right on the side of Oliveira’s jaw that sounds like slapping the flat of a shovel into wet earth. Oliveira staggers, and Chandler blitzes forward, arms and eyes wide, looking for the kill, but then slips and falls over. They end up on the ground instead, Chandler on top, pounding at the back of Oliveira’s head: brutal, dangerous strikes that are illegal in the universal rules of mixed martial arts but not called by the referee.
Inside the UFC, White has his fighters who he has gone to bat for time and time again. One of those fighters is Jones, the current UFC heavyweight champion, who is headlining the event at Madison Square Garden in mid-November. Jones, now 37, has had multiple arrests and failed drug tests, a previous title belt stripped, compounding injuries, and years without fights. He and White have had public differences, but Jones tells me that behind the scenes, White has stuck with him. To sell this fight, White has made that loyalty public, declaring Jones the “pound-for-pound greatest of all time” so incessantly that the phrase becomes a fan meme.
The union of UFC and what would become MAGA started back in 2015. Since the early fights at the Taj Mahal, White and Trump stayed in touch, with the latter making it clear that he was keeping a careful eye on the UFC. “There was a write-up in The New York Times about the UFC, and Trump took the article and wrote, ‘Congratulations Dana, I always knew you were gonna do it,’ ” White tells me. “Stuff like that would roll into the office.” Their relationship was friendly but not close, until White got the chance to stick his neck out for Trump the way Trump had for him way back at the Taj Mahal.
The boss was not pleased. Usually, if a fighter wins a Contender Series fight, they’ll get their first real UFC contract, but it’s not always cut-and-dry: White hams up the drama, proclaiming that he is “interested” or “not interested” in each fighter at a press conference following the fights. When Belgaroui’s name comes up, he gets the latter.
This culture, this movement, Kay says — “It refuses to be denied.”
“Coach, you think this needs stitches?” Aminov asks. Jimenez grimaces. “I dunno man … I think it needs something to keep it closed.” Aminov swears. We look up the nearest walk-in place to the gym, but it’s almost 10 p.m., and everything is closed. “You don’t have someone to do that stuff for you … a nurse girlfriend or something?” Jimenez asks. Aminov laughs and shakes his head. At least he has insurance, which is more than many fighters have.
A few months later, Ngannou signed a new contract with an upstart, rival promotion: the Professional Fighters League. Ngannou tells me the PFL approached him with a contract that he agreed to on the spot, including a minimum purse for his opponent. His own take was reportedly north of million for his first fight with the PFL.
“The production we have now has taken 25 years to dial in and get right where we want it. I believe it’s perfect,” White says. But this week is different. “We don’t know what’s going to happen. Is this a good idea? We’ll know Saturday night. But I wanted to attempt it, and I wanted to be first, and here we are.”
The UFC — and White — have built this business around a bloody version of the American dream: that any given fight could be your highlight-reel knockout, your big break. And that anyone, even a Venezuelan immigrant who can’t afford groceries, can make it to a title shot someday, if they just work hard enough, sweat hard enough, bleed enough. The UFC’s roster is riddled with testaments to this: fighters who’ve come from nothing and achieved everything. The UFC’s parent company was projected to make around .75 billion in 2024. What portion of the UFC’s revenue goes to fighters is unclear, but prior reporting based on court documents shows it hovers at around 20 percent. In the NFL, NBA, and MLB, that revenue share is closer to 50 percent.
Aminov takes a hit above his eye at practice.
“Nobody wanted to give him arenas because they said it’s a rough sport — a little rough,” Trump said at his election-night victory party last year, telling the story of their meeting before ushering White onstage to speak. “I said, ‘This is the roughest sport I’ve ever seen,’ and I began to like it.”
White, and many fighters, see this as a success story — a dedicated athlete making the most of a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. But it’s clear that in this system, White’s favor can be the most valuable currency.
Aminov is getting back into regular training after his fight. We spar for a few rounds. Aminov takes it easy on me: He loves the sneaky left high kick and has a lanky fighter’s long jab that pops right through my guard more than once. When you move around with a fighter in the gym, their eyes are dead until they hit you. It’s disconcerting to try to punch someone who looks bored, but it’s even scarier when their eyes light up after they tag you with a shot. And even with everyone playing nice, there’s always a chance of blood: At one practice, Aminov eats an accidental headbutt that splits the skin over his right eye.
The line about favorites seems to be a reference to White. When I bring it up, White responds: “Who the fuck is Donn Davis?”
The nature of Trump and White’s relationship is unique, especially in a second term riddled with presidential friends and familiar faces, as White appears to be one of the few people in his inner circle who is not jockeying for a cabinet seat or personal advancement. “I don’t want anything from him,” White says. “I don’t want anything from this election. I don’t want anything from him in that way, other than his friendship.”
Dvalishvili walks out to a thumping Georgian folk song and then enters the cage to “Por Mi México,” by Lefty SM. The Sphere projects a four-story hologram of him over the domed screen. O’Malley follows, walking out to “Superstar,” by Lupe Fiasco. The crowd goes nuts, chanting “Su-ga! Su-ga! Su-ga!” The cage closes, the fight begins.
Hunter Campbell, the UFC’s chief business officer, claims Ngannou left after refusing terms for a fight with undefeated heavyweight Jon Jones. “Francis Ngannou publicly raised issues such as health insurance as a talking point for himself to attempt to change the narrative,” Campbell says. “I dealt with Francis extensively, and it’s my opinion he was always most concerned with himself.”
In 2001, Trump was a famous but bankruptcy-plagued developer and casino owner, riding high on a powerful personal brand. At the time, the UFC’s most recognizable figure was its lead commentator, a stand-up comedian and reality-TV host named Joe Rogan.
The vast majority of fighters on this path are men. White, for years, resisted including women in the UFC, but relented in 2013 thanks to the star power of Ronda Rousey, a blond, photogenic fighter who took bronze in judo at the 2008 Olympics. After that, the women’s game grew rapidly. In 2014, I met a fighter named Erin Blanchfield, a 15-year-old grappling prodigy who was already training with adult fighters. Now, she’s the UFC’s number-three flyweight, inches away from a shot at the belt, and a testament to how far the sport has come in those 10 years.
“THIS IS THE ROUGHEST SPORT I’VE EVER SEEN,” TRUMP SAYS, “AND I LIKE IT.”
The fights start up again. The crowd bursts into chants of “USA! USA!” every few minutes. The energy carries all the way through to the main event, through Oliveira and Chandler’s wild scrap.
“The sport has probably always been decidedly right wing,” Luke Thomas, a longtime MMA commentator and podcaster, tells me. Fighting is a brutal and individualist sport, and orienting your life around violence can lend itself to seeing the world in harsh absolutes. But in the early aughts, Thomas says, those attitudes were kept more under wraps as the UFC was “groping for mainstream appeal.”
A few weeks later, I drop by Aminov’s gym in midtown Manhattan, a two-story studio with sweat-fogged windows and a full octagon for sparring and drills. He trains under a grappling coach and former pro, Andy Jimenez. Jimenez is a quiet, friendly man who immediately tells me to grab some gear and hop into drills with Aminov. “I like to let fighters be themselves,” he says. It shows — his room is a mix of former wrestlers and guys with a few years of boxing who are switching to MMA (Aminov, who had no background in combat sports before taking up MMA, is somewhat of a minority in the fight world).
Tonight, Aminov is fighting for his first belt — the Flex Fight Series amateur welterweight title. His opponent, Randy Mendez, is shorter and stronger, and comes out fast, catching Aminov with a jab. Mendez gets a takedown but loses position. In the second round, Mendez connects with a hard right and drops Aminov to the mat, but Aminov recovers quickly, nearly ripping through Mendez’s elbow joint with an “armbar.” In the third, Aminov almost gets a leg lock, but Mendez’s shin is so slippery with sweat and blood, he can’t finish it. Amateur fights are quick: three three-minute rounds. Aminov wins in a controversial split decision.
The Ultimate Fighting Championship, a 31-year-old company that dominates the sport globally, is one of the most profitable properties of the Endeavor Group, an American conglomerate of talent management and media companies that earned around billion in revenue last year. The UFC is the gold standard of the sport, valued at some billion on its own. There are other companies, which the fight world refers to as “promotions” — the Professional Fighters League, Bellator MMA, Cage Warriors, and the Asia-dominant One Championship — but if you want to be a star in MMA, it has to happen in the UFC. And it won’t happen without Dana White.
Aminov hopes to turn pro after his next fight, either sticking with Flex or making the hop to a bigger promotion like the Texas-based Legacy Fighting Alliance or the Northeast’s Cage Fury Fighting Championship. There, pros can expect a couple of thousand bucks per fight, maybe doubled if they win. In the UFC, it doesn’t get that much better — a new fighter’s standard contract is often somewhere around “10 and 10,” or ,000 per fight, with ,000 for a win. That’s a step up from the regionals, but when you consider that fighters will fight at most four times in a year, it doesn’t add up to much, even if they win. The week before I went to Vegas, a Venezuelan fighter on the Contender Series didn’t have money to buy herself groceries during fight week, and the UFC stepped in to help her out. She won the fight — a spectacular knockout that impressed the hell out of White and earned an immediate contract with the UFC and bonus from White himself. “Let me tell you what, she ain’t broke now,” White said following the fight.
The buildup to Noche UFC is as big as it gets. The main draw is the hyped-up bantamweight championship between Georgian wrestler Merab Dvalishvili and the current belt holder, “Suga” Sean O’Malley, a rainbow-haired, lanky knockout artist. For months before this fight, they’ve taunted each other online to drum up hype (Dvalishvili has a shockingly good O’Malley lookalike on hand to be the butt of his Instagram skits, for instance). The official press conference takes place on a stage erected in the Sphere’s baking-hot parking lot, adjacent to a “fan experience” area where hordes of young men in “Suga” basketball jerseys and free, bright-pink Happy Dad seltzer trucker hats mill around. When O’Malley takes the stage, his basketball-jersey boys go absolutely feral: screaming at Dvalishvili, jeering at the Georgian fans in the crowd. In person, O’Malley is quiet and thoughtful: “He [Dvalishvili] is good. He’s great. He’s as good as he says he is,” O’Malley tells me before the press conference. “I just believe I’m better.”
One of them, Francis Ngannou, is perhaps the only former fighter who has gone toe to toe with the boss and won. Ngannou, a Cameroonian immigrant who took up MMA after living on the streets of Paris, tore his way through the UFC’s heavyweight division in the late 2010s, claiming the undisputed championship in 2021. But after a single title defense, Ngannou’s contract negotiations fell apart. Ngannou says he pushed the UFC to give their fighters health insurance, more opportunities for personal sponsorships, and an advocate at meetings with the company.
To know what this is like, you need to understand what it feels like to get hit in the face. The pain is easy to imagine: a sharp jolt as your brain rattles inside your skull. Your eyes well up with tears, and you both smell and taste copper at the back of your nose and throat. It hurts, yes, but there’s also an immediate sense of disgrace. It makes you angry and afraid and ashamed — another person has hit you and you couldn’t stop them. A punch steals your pride and your confidence, and if you get hit with enough of them, they’ll even take your sanity. Getting hit hard feels awful. To do it to someone else, however, is one of the greatest feelings in the world.
In the years since Trump’s first election in 2016, and particularly since the Covid-19 pandemic, the wraps have come off. “It is expressly right wing now,” Thomas says. “The fan base and the sport more generally have been ideologically homogenized.”
White has effectively run the UFC since 2001. Under his tenure, the UFC has become synonymous with MMA and served as the driving force behind the sport’s transformation into a global sensation. White’s more than 25-year devotion to the sport and making money from it has made him its principal god, his authority largely unchecked by investors and fighters alike. The UFC’s rise and current dominance have paralleled that of a new political movement centered, similarly, on one man: Trump. It should come as little surprise, then, that White and Trump are close friends, their lives intertwined for decades by politics and business, their outlooks on the world united by a fixation on loyalty and a ruthless intolerance of opposition.
Finally, it’s fight night. The octagon sits in the center of the Sphere’s stage, with amphitheater seating stretching high up into the dome on one side and a gargantuan, LED-display screen enveloping the other. When the main card starts, the Sphere itself steals the show. After each fight, a film tells a history: steamy Aztec jungles, pueblas and markets, scenes of battle and revolution, all building toward a futuristic cityscape meant to show what Mexico could become. I begin to understand where the million went. All this, for a sport that started in 1993 with a fight between a 200-pound Dutch kickboxer and a 400-pound Hawaiian sumo wrestler in an outdated hockey arena in Denver (the sumo wrestler lost).
In the years since, White and Trump’s mutual loyalty has deepened. They dine together when they can and speak on the phone frequently (“He hates FaceTime,” White says), and White is also close to several other members of the Trump family, including Ivanka and Jared Kushner. Last year, White took an even more active role in Trump’s orbit, advocating for the presidential candidate to engage with the new-media empire of podcasts, comedians, and YouTubers who sent the president’s numbers skyrocketing with young men.
Charles Oliveira (bottom) won his match at the UFC fight at MSG where Trump sat front-row.
“He was an 11-to-1 favorite against a guy who took a fight on short notice. He’s a six-foot-five middleweight,” White says into a microphone. “Instead of closing his hands and using them to keep him off him or to finish him, he poked him in the eyes. He did not impress me tonight. I’m not interested.”
It’s not, perhaps, the most cinematic ending for the UFC: O’Malley is one of its biggest stars, and his horde of merch- and ticket-buying fans just watched him get his face shoved into the canvas for 25 minutes straight. In the post-fight press conference, well after midnight, White tells it straight. “You can put on million of production, but you can’t control the fights,” he says. “I cannot let that drive me crazy.”
The arena clears out quickly. Outside, I try talking to a gaggle of red hats, but most of them are too drunk to give me anything worth writing down. “MMA is amazing” is all I get when I ask one guy why he likes the sport.
“It feels good to have a sense of control over the way my story ends,” Jones tells me backstage at MSG. “Oftentimes, you see athletes that stay too long, and a lot of times fans remember them for the old version of themselves instead of them in their prime. I don’t want to be remembered for my degression.”
The Fertittas bought the company two months later for a price of million. By January 2001, White was installed as president and CEO, with a stake in the company as a finder’s fee. At the time, the UFC had nothing, and White was faced with rebuilding the organization essentially from scratch. Fortunately, he had two dedicated allies: Rogan and Trump. White and Rogan, who had been calling fights for the UFC as a side gig since ’97, went on a nationwide media blitz.
White tells me: “Trump got it. Think about where the Trump brand was and where the UFC brand was. Not only did he get it — he also showed up for both events. He was there for the first prelim of the night, and he stayed through the main event.”
In the cage at the Apex, a Tunisian Dutch kickboxer named Yousri Belgaroui used his range and length to great effect: long, snapping punches that his opponent, Taiga Iwasaki, couldn’t seem to get through to close the distance. Belgaroui was also eye-poking the shit out of Iwasaki, prompting the referee to deduct a point. Cage-side, White frowned. Belgaroui is six feet five but competes at middleweight, the UFC’s 185-pound division, which means he towers over most opponents. He should be making short work of this guy or else picking on someone his own size. In the third round, he opted for the former, throwing a leaping knee that connected hard with Iwasaki’s jaw and sent him backpedaling frantically. Belgaroui chased him before stabbing a straight right punch into his gut. Iwasaki crumpled as Belgaroui fired a few more sloppy strikes that glanced off the top of his head.
Peña is a brilliant and intensely dedicated fighter — first claiming the title in a massive upset win against Amanda Nunes, one of the greatest female fighters of all time. But for every bonus White pays out, for every new champion crowned, there are dozens of other fighters who take their bare-minimum check and try to make it last until their next chance to impress the boss.
“He’s the type of guy where you have to talk to him like you own the joint. If somebody goes out there and fights their ass off, he’ll reward you for it,” Julianna Peña, the current women’s bantamweight champion, tells me. (Peña’s last fight reportedly netted her somewhere around half a million dollars.) “There’s never been a time when he hasn’t given me everything that I could need.”
When an athlete leaves the cage for the last time, they’re completely on their own. White points to former fighters having opportunities to become UFC analysts and do paid meet-and-greets with fans at live events. “Believe me,” White says, “we do more than everybody does. I say it all the time: It’s not a job, it’s an opportunity.” The fighters I talk to admit the system’s flaws but balk at considering any kind of widespread change. The grind is the grind. If you make it to the top, there’s no way anyone can say you didn’t earn it. “It’s like what some people say,” Aminov tells me after practice, his eyebrow still wet with fresh blood. “You eat what you kill.”
“I got into this huge contract dispute with Bob Meyrowitz — the old owner — and one day he fucking flipped out on me and just started saying, ‘There is no more money. I don’t even know if I can put on my next event,’ ” White says. “And after we hung up the phone, I was like, ‘Holy shit.’ I called Lorenzo and I said, ‘I just got off the phone with the owner of the UFC, and I think they’re going bankrupt. I think they’re done. I think we could buy the company.’ ”
At the Garden, there’s plenty for fans to remember. Jones, Miocic, Chandler, and Oliveira are all huge draws in their own right, but tonight, they share the stage with the biggest headliner the UFC could possibly pull: the newly victorious President-elect Trump. Trump arrives just at the start of the main card, entering the arena like a fighter. White leads him out. His walkout song, Kid Rock’s “American Badass,” thunders through the arena. “I wish the people at home could hear the sound in this room,” Rogan squeals on the pay-per-view broadcast. The cheers rise and fall like waves as Trump glad-hands his way through the UFC announcers’ table and VIP section. Kid Rock himself is there, as is Elon Musk, prospective Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., prospective Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Department of Government Efficiency co-chair Vivek Ramaswamy, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, some of the Trump kids — it’s their victory lap. The jumbotrons above the octagon play a sizzle reel of Trump and Vice President-elect J.D. Vance on the campaign trail. “God spared my life for a reason,” drones a recording of Trump, “to restore America to greatness.” As a giant red 45 turns to a 47 onscreen, the voice-over blares, “Together we can truly make America great again.” The crowd is deafening. “It’s always loud when he comes in, but now that he’s won? Now that he’s the president again?” an elated Rogan says on his broadcast.
Lindsay Theater to show Pittsburgh-based U.S. Open documentary ‘Steel Links’ We notice you’re using an ad blocker. Since the purpose of this site is to display digital ads, please disable your ad blocker to prevent content from breaking. Documentary ‘Steel Links’ will show at the Lindsay Theater and Cultural Center in Sewickley on June 8. […]
Documentary ‘Steel Links’ will show at the Lindsay Theater and Cultural Center in Sewickley on June 8.
As Oakmont Country Club prepares for the 2025 U.S. Open, all eyes in the golf world are on Southwestern Pennsylvania. WQED has produced new documentary, “Steel Links,” to bring together Pittsburgh’s industrial history, its legacy of golf and some of the city’s most iconic faces.
Brad Turkel, the creator and executive producer of “Steel Links,” has a history with combining sports with local storytelling.
“I’ve been creating and producing documentaries for several years, and I’ve always had a special interest in sports docs,” he said.
Last year, he produced a documentary about Pinehurst Resort, the North Carolina golf course where the U.S. Open was held.
“That was my first documentary that used a major sporting event as kind of a jumping-off point to discuss and to get into other subjects,” he said. “I really enjoyed that because it wasn’t just a ‘sports doc.’”
The success of this first project, which aired last year on PBS, was a template for future projects of its kind. “Steel Links” will premiere on WQED on June 10 — and will show at the Lindsay Theater on Sunday, June 8 and Monday, June 9.
“Steel Links” examines the connections between Oakmont, Pittsburgh, the steel industry and sports. The film includes former Steelers coach Bill Cowher, former Steeler Charlie Batch, rapper Wiz Khalifa, native Pittsburgher and former Pittsburgh Pirate Neil Walker and more. Walker will be at the screening at The Lindsay on June 8 for a post-show Q&A.
“If you’re interested in golf, there’s enough golf in there where it will be compelling to you,” Turkel said. “But I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised at the other direction it goes in. I think that for the broader audience, they’ll learn a little about golf that they might not have known, but they’re really going to be excited to discover the other stories that we unveil.”
Many of those stories revolve around Pittsburgh’s most famous industry.
“Kind of my North Star when I was developing the idea was I would look at the steel,” he said.
While Turkel is from Connecticut, his wife was born and raised in the region, a connection that remains strong wherever they go.
“I have been to Pittsburgh several times over the years. I feel very connected to Pittsburgh, and frankly, this is the first time that people in her family are finally interested in what I’m doing,” he laughed.
They filmed the documentary at Oakmont Country Club, where the U.S. Open will begin on June 12.
“The folks at Oakmont were very supportive of it,” he said. “And everyone that we dealt with — and I think it really speaks to how people feel about Pittsburgh — when they heard what we were doing, wanted to jump on board. And that’s unusual. I think that speaks to the city itself and the people from Pittsburgh, even if they moved away, you can’t take the Pittsburgh out of it.”
When you’re talking golf and Western Pennsylvania, you have to talk about golf legend Arnold Palmer. Turkel did say that Palmer’s story shows up in the doc, especially in segments with fellow golfer and Western Pennsylvanian Rocco Mediate.
“Steel Links” also includes conversation with Carol Semple Thompson, a Sewickley native and well-known golfer in her own right.
“We are thrilled to host the public premiere of WQED’s Steel Links. The film pays homage to this region’s industrial legacy, while also highlighting Pittsburgh’s rapidly growing profile as a tech-forward city with passions for culture and sports. Its particular focus on golf’s deep roots in Pittsburgh make it an ideal tailgating opportunity prior to the U.S. Open in Oakmont,” said Carolina Pais-Barreto Thor, CEO of The Lindsay Theater and Cultural Center.
After WQED posted a trailer for the new documentary, Turkel said that engagement online was overwhelming. “I think it really hit a nerve,” Turkel said.
“Steel Links” will show at The Lindsay Theater and Cultural Center in Sewickley on June 8 at 5 p.m. and June 9 at 7 p.m. For tickets and information, visit thelindsaytheater.org.
AUBURN | Auburn will return a player from last season’s Final Four team. Tahaad Pettiford has withdrawn from the 2025 NBA Draft and will return for his sophomore season, he announced on Instagram. Pettiford was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team last season averaging 11.6 points, 2.2 rebounds, 3.0 assists, and 0.9 steals in 22.9 […]
AUBURN | Auburn will return a player from last season’s Final Four team.
Tahaad Pettiford has withdrawn from the 2025 NBA Draft and will return for his sophomore season, he announced on Instagram.
Pettiford was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team last season averaging 11.6 points, 2.2 rebounds, 3.0 assists, and 0.9 steals in 22.9 minutes per game off the bench.
Auburn’s backup point guard and part-time shooting guard shot .421 from the floor, .366 from three-point range and .804 from the free throw line.
In five NCAA Tournament games, Pettiford averaged 15.2 points and 3.6 assists. His 23 points against Creighton set an Auburn record for a freshman in the NCAA Tournament.
Pettiford was one of 75 players selected to attend the NBA Draft Combine where he posted the second-best vertical at 42 inches. He scored 23 points and had eight assists and two steals in the opening scrimmage.
In their post-Combine mock draft, ESPN projected Pettiford to go to the Detroit Pistons in the second round with the 37th overall pick.
Auburn coach Bruce Pearl spoke about Pettiford’s decision at his charity golf tournament last week.
“He’s still in the same position he’s been in the whole time. And that is if he can get in the first round, he’s gonna go. And if he can get in the first round, he should go,” said Pearl. “If he doesn’t feel and his folks don’t feel like he is gonna be in there in the 20s somewhere, then he’ll come back.
“If he does come back, he’s going to have to play an expanded role, which I know is something that is exciting to him and probably exciting to our fan base, too, because we’ll get to see more of him. He’ll be a starter. There will be more on him.”
Auburn has added 10 newcomers to the roster for the 2025-26 season including four transfers, an international signee, two junior college signees and three true freshmen signees.
The MLB Breakdown offers data-driven analysis using the FantasyLabs Tools and predictive metrics to highlight notable players within our MLB Player Models. MLB DFS Pitching Picks MLB DFS Stud Pick Matthew Boyd ($8,300) Chicago Cubs (-360) vs. Colorado Rockies Matthew Boyd is a bit cheaper than our typical options at the top, but he has […]
The MLB Breakdown offers data-driven analysis using the FantasyLabs Tools and predictive metrics to highlight notable players within our MLB Player Models.
Matthew Boyd is a bit cheaper than our typical options at the top, but he has a commanding lead in median, ceiling, and Pts/Sal projection for Wednesday’s evening slate.
As has been the case this week, that’s mostly due to the matchup. The Cubs series against the Rockies has been a boon for their pitching staff, with Colorado scoring just three regular innings runs across the first two games. They’re the worst offense in baseball by a comfortable margin — and somehow about 15% worse against lefties.
Plus, Boyd is putting up solid numbers of his own. He has a 3.42 ERA and a 23.7% strikeout rate through 10 starts this season. The Rockies should help him improve on that latter number as well. Their 27.7% strikeout rate against southpaws is the second highest in the majors.
Considering his low salary and elite Vegas data, it’s hard to see a reason not to play Boyd tonight.
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The only arm with a Pts/Sal projection approaching that of Boyd’s is the Yankees’ Clarke Schmidt. While he doesn’t have the elite Vegas data of Boyd, he also has an extremely strong matchup — at least in terms of upside.
The Angels are the only team that strikes out at a higher rate than the Rockies, with a 26.9% mark against righties. They’re a roughly average overall offense so they’re capable of putting up runs, but that can easily be outweighed in DFS by strikeouts.
Schmidt has a solid 24.2% strikeout rate, and his 12.5% swinging strike rate suggests he’s been a bit unlucky. As does his 3.35 xERA — which is more than a full run lower than his 4.58 ERA. This is a weak enough matchup that he should be able to push his actual numbers closer to his predicted marks tonight.
More importantly, he’s priced under $8,000. We don’t need a massive score to justify that salary, so even if he gives up some runs, we’ll probably be fine. He’s a solid play for all contest types.
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Greene was briefly a top two or three NL Cy Young candidate before a brief stint on the IL and some early exits hurt his case. He’s now set to make his second start since returning, with his first outing lasting just four innings against the Cubs.
The second start back feels like an ideal buy-low time, especially considering his first matchup was against the Cubs. He held them to just two runs over four innings, despite the game being in Cincinnati. Tonight he gets a much better matchup with the Royals and a slight park upgrade going to Kansas City. Plus, the weather in KC should cut scoring a bit, according to Weather Edge.
Greene has massive upside, thanks to a 32.6% strikeout rate that would be fourth among qualified starters had he not missed time. He’s also got his ERA down to an excellent 2.54, despite home starts at one of the best parks for hitters.
However, there’s some risk that he’s still operating on a limited pitch count as he works his way back to full strength. Considering his price premium over the other options, that could make it hard for him to find the winning lineup. With that said, that should also suppress his ownership, making him a solid GPP pivot.
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With the Lineup Builder, it’s easy to incorporate stacks into DFS rosters.
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The top DraftKings stack in the FantasyLabs MLB Player Model when generated by rating using an aggregate projection set belongs to the Chicago Cubs:
There are three teams with implied totals right around five runs tonight, though the Cubs are the only team technically over that mark. They’ve been a top-five lineup in baseball against right-handed pitching this season and have a winnable matchup with Tanner Gordon ($6,500) of the Rockies.
Gordon has just under 50 innings of big league experience, with a 7.52 ERA across those outings. While some of that is due to home games at Coors Field, his 5.41 FIP (fielding independent pitching) isn’t exactly strong either.
The value at pitcher also makes it possible to find the salary for the Cubs stack, while pairing them with Boyd bakes in some nice correlation.
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One of the great features of being a FantasyLabs Pro member is the option to purchase additional items in the FantasyLabs Marketplace.
In addition to our in-house MLB projections, THE BAT X from Derek Carty of RotoGrinders is available in our marketplace. With this purchase, you can use his projections alone or create aggregate projections within our Player Models.
For this example, we created a 50/50 blend with THE BAT X and the FantasyLabs projections to pinpoint some hitters that stand out.
The Yankees have another matchup against a lefty pitcher. They hit lefties better than any team in baseball, with much of that driven by two specific players.
One of them is pretty obvious, as we see in PlateIQ:
While we could make a case for Judge every day, the combination of matchup and value pitchers makes him especially appealing tonight. This game is also the only one on the slate with a positive weather impact for overall scoring, so I definitely want some exposure.
Crawford is too cheap at $3,500 for his leadoff spot in the Mariners lineup, at least on a night where their team total is just under five runs. Crawford has been just okay as a fantasy asset, hitting .261 with four homers and three steals. The strong Mariners lineup behind him helps him to score runs, though, as well as see good pitches to hit.
Plus, Trevor Williams ($6,200) has allowed lefties to hit .379 against him this season. While his career numbers aren’t quite as bad, he’s consistently had a harder time against left-handed bats. For that reason, I’m interested in stacking the Mariners while attempting to get as many of their left-handed or switch-hitting bats as possible.
The Rangers are likely to go a bit overlooked tonight, as their 4.6-run implied total is a bit behind the best teams on the slate. However, they could be worth it, with a solid matchup against Eric Lauer ($6,000).
While Lauer has a 3.31 ERA, he’s split time between starting and the bullpen. As a starter, his ERA is just under 5.00. Plus, he’s a lefty, and Langford’s career OPS is about 150 points higher against lefties than righties.
He has the most obvious platoon split advantage tonight, but I’m interested in getting some Rangers exposure in general with the solid matchup.
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Pictured: Matthew Boyd
Photo Credit: Imagn
Kentucky Wildcats shooting guard Otega Oweh has made his NBA Draft decision. On Wednesday, Oweh decided he would withdraw from the draft and return to Kentucky. ESPN’s Jonathan Giovny broke the news first. Oweh has since announced the news on his Instagram page. “This year exceeded all my expectations,” said Oweh. “Through all the highs […]
Kentucky Wildcats shooting guard Otega Oweh has made his NBA Draft decision.
On Wednesday, Oweh decided he would withdraw from the draft and return to Kentucky.
ESPN’s Jonathan Giovny broke the news first.
Oweh has since announced the news on his Instagram page.
“This year exceeded all my expectations,” said Oweh. “Through all the highs and the lows, I found a family in Kentucky forever. So let’s run it back: I’m staying home.”
In his first season with the Wildcats, the Oklahoma transfer averaged 16.2 points (49.2% shooting), 4.7 rebounds, 1.7 assists, and 1.6 steals per game while shooting 35.5% from 3-point range. Following the regular season, he was named a Second-Team All-SEC selection.
In Kentucky’s Round of 64 win over Troy in the NCAA Tournament, Oweh racked up 20 points (8/13 shooting), eight rebounds, six assists, and two steals. He became the first Kentucky player since Walter McCarty in 1996 to register 20+ points, 8+ rebounds, and 5+ assists in an NCAA Tournament game.
The 6-foot-4, 215-pound native of New Jersey had 13 games of 20+ points, including a career-high 28 points and the game-winner at Oklahoma. He also scored 27 points and beat the Sooners at the buzzer in the SEC Tournament.
In the recent NBA Draft Combine, Oweh had a good showing in Chicago, including the following numbers in shooting drills:
In his first combine scrimmage, Oweh went for 10 points (4/8 shooting), three assists, three rebounds, two steals, one block, and one turnover in 21 minutes. In Game 2, he racked up 14 points (4/8 shooting), five rebounds, one assist, two steals, and one turnover in 26 minutes.
However, Oweh hit just one 3 in the two scrimmages on his lone attempt. That was an area where he really needed to shine in order to get a first-round guarantee from an NBA team, which is what he was reportedly looking for to stay in the draft.
The 3-point shot has been the biggest topic of discussion with Oweh, and rightfully so with anyone looking to play shooting guard at the NBA level. While Oweh is certainly capable of knocking them down — he shot a career-best 37.7% in his sophomore year with the Sooners — he hit just 35.5% last season (33.3% in SEC play) and just 1/4 attempts over his final four games.
Despite the current limitations with his outside shot, Oweh proved he can be an elite scorer thanks to his ability to drive to the rim and hit contested shots in the paint while drawing contact. He hit a career-best 77.6% from the charity stripe last season. That included a 13/13 performance vs. Ohio State and a 9/10 outing in the win at Oklahoma.
Now, the quest for No. 9 has officially begun.
NEWS: Kentucky’s Otega Oweh has withdrawn his name from the NBA draft and will return to the Wildcats for his senior season, agent Wilmer Jackson of Spencer Sports told ESPN.
Massive news for Mark Pope to return his team’s leading scorer from last season. pic.twitter.com/Qgt6tRyqiC
— Jonathan Givony (@DraftExpress) May 28, 2025
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Lee Murray could have been a UFC champion, but he made a $92 million mistake that cost him his livelihood. ‘Lightning’ impressed everyone when he beat Jorge Rivera, a future opponent of MMA legend Michael Bisping, in his first and last UFC fight in 2004. Lee Murray used his post-fight interview to call out UFC […]
Lee Murray could have been a UFC champion, but he made a $92 million mistake that cost him his livelihood.
‘Lightning’ impressed everyone when he beat Jorge Rivera, a future opponent of MMA legend Michael Bisping, in his first and last UFC fight in 2004.
Lee Murray used his post-fight interview to call out UFC light-heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz after previously knocking him out during an infamous street fight.
Two years later, the middleweight contender led a group of masked men who ransacked a Securitas depot in Kent, England, and walked away with $92.2 million in a shocking robbery, which made worldwide news
Lee Murray is currently serving 25 years in a Moroccan prison for his leading role in the heist.
The 47-year-old is due to be released in 2035, but it’s hoped he could return home sooner after a petition calling for him to be pardoned garnered thousands of signatures.
Last week, Murray’s old coach, Terry Coulter, touched on the bid to free his most infamous pupil, during a wide-ranging interview about the UFC star turned bank robber.
At one point, Coulter recalled Murray’s sparring with two-weight world boxing champion David Haye, who had initially come to their gym to trade blows with Julius Francis, one of Mike Tyson‘s KO victims.
“As a trainer, you think, out of a million people who walk through the door, one could go all the way,” Coulter said on Anything Goes With James English. “And [Murray] was that one. I just looked at him and thought, ‘Jesus, he’s something special’.”
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“When I was training him, we started moving around with Julius Francis, who was the British heavyweight champion then. Julius helped him a lot. Brought him on a lot in sparring because you learn a lot.
“I remember David Haye coming down the gym and sparring with Julius. I said, ‘Can Lee do a couple of rounds with you?’ David Haye said to him afterward, ‘Wow! You need to turn pro. You’re something special. You’ve got a godforsaken talent.’
“To see the way he went, and where he is now, is such a shame.”
When he’s released from prison in 2035, Murray will be way past his fighting prime at 57 years old.
Still, he’s planning to return to MMA in some form and ultimately realize his UFC championship dream.
“Fighting’s my life. Fighting’s in my blood,” Murray explained during Showtime’s ‘Catching Lightning’ documentary about his life.
“If I’m not in there fighting myself, I’m going to be taking people in there.
“One way or another I need to win that UFC title.
“My story isn’t finished. This isn’t the end.”
The Los Angeles Dodgers signed outfielder Michael Conforto to a one-year, $17 million deal this past offseason. Conforto’s short tenure with the Dodgers has been disappointing, to say the least. More news: Dodgers’ $72 Million Addition Doesn’t Want to Make Excuses for Struggles The former All-Star is hitting .162 with two home runs and six […]
The Los Angeles Dodgers signed outfielder Michael Conforto to a one-year, $17 million deal this past offseason. Conforto’s short tenure with the Dodgers has been disappointing, to say the least.
More news: Dodgers’ $72 Million Addition Doesn’t Want to Make Excuses for Struggles
The former All-Star is hitting .162 with two home runs and six runs batted in this season. He has an OPS of .563 across 154 at-bats. Conforto has gone 1-for-17 in the Dodgers’ last six games.
While it appeared Conforto was just experiencing an early season slump, the outfielder has remained cold at the plate and is quite frankly becoming a liability in the lineup.
The Dodgers have made it clear that winning is their top priority. Two of the team’s longest-tenured players in Austin Barnes and Chris Taylor were cut amid a tight division race in the NL West.
If players are not producing, the Dodgers are evidently not afraid to take them off the roster. It’s unclear if Conforto will be cut anytime soon, but Bleacher Report’s Kerry Miller named the outfielder as one of the biggest busts of the season.
“Michael Conforto has very much become the “one of these things is not like the other” player in this otherwise ridiculously loaded Dodgers lineup,” Miller writes. “For a little while there—with both Tommy Edman and Teoscar Hernández on the IL while Hyeseong Kim was just beginning to cut his teeth at the MLB level—they had little choice but to keep Conforto as their regular left fielder.
“Now, however, they have 10 solid assets at their disposal—11 if you’re already counting recently promoted top prospect Dalton Rushing, who can play left field, for the record—and every plate appearance given to Conforto and his .448 OPS (with just one RBI!) dating back to April 6 feels like a missed opportunity to do so much more.”
Miller argues the Dodgers can’t even use Conforto as a trade piece with the deadline approaching given his poor performance through the first two months of the season.
“At this point, they probably wouldn’t even be able to trade him away,” Miller adds. “If he doesn’t start showing legitimate signs of life, might just have to bite the bullet and drop him like the Astros did with José Abreu last June.”
More news: Mets Pitcher Takes Major Shot at Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani
For more Dodgers news, head over to Dodgers on SI.
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