The Bottom Line: Fluid Perspectives
It doesn't get bigger than this - UFC President @DanaWhite confirms that @JonnyBones will take on @Ciryl_Gane for the đđđđđđđđđđ heavyweight championship at #UFC285 đ
â UFC (@ufc) January 15, 2023
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Itâs Christmas morning. Youâve been hoping for months your parents would get you the new Grand Theft Auto. It seems unlikely given how your mom feels about all the violence sheâs heard is in the game, but thereâs nothing more you want to be doing than running over virtual pedestrians in a tank. You find a gift that looks conspicuously like a PlayStation 2 game and rip it open with uncontainable excitement to discover⊠Jak and Daxter. Now, thereâs nothing wrong with Jak and Daxter. Itâs a well-made platformer with an adorable weasel-looking creature that looks like it will be fun in its own right, but itâs hard to hide your disappointment that youâll have to go over to a friendâs house if you want to play some GTA.
Thatâs about how many MMA fans feel today with the announcement that after years of buzz surrounding a Jon Jones-Francis Ngannou superfight, Jones will be returning to action in March to face Ciryl Gane. Itâs exciting to finally have Jones back and Gane is certainly a worthy opponent, but it has been a long time since MMA fans have had a real dream fight to look forward to; and weâre going to have to wait a while longer. Jones-Gane has nothing resembling the cache of Jones-Ngannouâthe highly skilled longtime light heavyweight king against the ultra-powerful undisputed ruler of the heavyweight division.
That the
Ultimate Fighting Championship made a public spectacle of
announcing Ngannou is no longer under contract and even went so far
as to laughably claim he doesnât want to take on top competition
speaks to the hard feelings that exist following an extended period
of negotiations. Neither side is likely that keen to deal with the
other right now. Thatâs perfectly fine and it makes sense for both
sides, for one fight that is.
Ngannou has pursued free agency for one specific reason, because he knows how much money there is to be made in a one-off fight with Tyson Fury, the first ever matchup between the No. 1 MMA heavyweight and the No. 1 boxing heavyweight. Even if that fight doesnât do as well on pay-per-view as Ngannou-Jones would doâit might, but itâs not a givenâboxing pays its top stars so much more than MMA that it would still be much more lucrative for Ngannou than any UFC fight.
Itâs also a better bet for Ngannou than previous MMA fighter forays into boxing, because the MMA fighterâs best chance is landing a one-off power shot, and the odds of that happening go up the more powerful you are. Fury has proven himself a better boxer than Deontay Wilder, but Wilder almost beat him the first time because of that element. Ngannouâs odds are low, but theyâre better than Conor McGregorâs were against Floyd Mayweather. All in all, itâs a very attractive option for âThe Predator.â Fury has other options between Oleksandr Usyk and Joe Joyce, but he has expressed interest in an Ngannou bout and the fight would do big box-office business. Meanwhile, the UFC has an attractive fight of its own with Jonesâ return against Gane.
The key question is what happens after Ngannou fights Fury. Assuming Ngannou loses, there wouldnât be the same curiosity for him in another boxing bout. Other MMA promotions have expressed interest in Ngannou, probably in significant part for the publicity, but financially, his fighting for Bellator MMA or the Professional Fighters League makes no sense. Without the UFC name or an obvious opponent, he couldnât draw at the level needed to justify a bigger paycheck than what UFC offers to fighters like Ngannou who move numbers on pay-per-view.
From the UFC perspective, Ngannou will likely still have a lot of value after a boxing foray. His name will become bigger from the publicity, and a loss to Fury under different rules wouldnât be likely to affect his marketability much. It certainly didnât hurt McGregor. If Jones beats Gane, Jones-Ngannou will be even bigger than it was before and much bigger than Jones against any other opponent. If Gane beats Jones, Jones-Ngannou would still be big. More importantly, Ngannouâs return would help to reestablish credibility in the UFC heavyweight title, which is badly hurt by a strong champion leaving without dropping the belt.
All of this is to say both sides will still have a lot for each other after Ngannou satisfies his boxing itch. They will also have more incentive to negotiate then than they do now because each will have fewer viable options. Both sides would be wise to recognize that. They may be feeling happy to move on from the other partner right now, but their perspectives are likely to be quite different in the not-so-distant future. They would be better off with a separation than a divorce.
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