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The Problem
Dana White has stated the bonuses help out fighter pay, and encourage fighters to finish fights.
But this is blatant bullshit to anyone that spends a few minutes looking into it.
"Get a load of this goof and his math and logic and stuff. Ya goof!"
If Fighter A is making $25k to show, and $25 to win, he knows how important it is to win. He doubles his pay with a victory. He might be able to double his pay and get a huge KO bonus of $50k, which would again double his pay all the way up to $100k. But that's the rub. It's almost like betting on poker. If you have a guy beat (you know you are pulling away on points and can almost certainly win the decision), but then you wonder if you can hit a "double or nothing" (you're ahead but you begin to focus on getting a KO or setting up a sub, even though you know how dangerous your opponent is).
Two things - It's not truly double or nothing. If Fighter A goes for the KO and gets put to sleep, Fighter A still gets his base of 25k. Second, Fighter A goes for the KO and gets it? That bonus is up for grabs if a single other person got a KO that night. Just because he went for a finish, does not mean he will get that bonus. At all.
So you can see, it's a huge gamble to abandon your plan when you're ahead. It's essentially putting at risk the ability to double your pay of 25k, for the chance to quadruple it all the way up to 100k, knowing that even if you get the finish, you might not even get that sweet $50,000 KO Bonus. So what would a fighter do that desperately needs a solid chunk of money, but doesn't need a ton? He will fight for the victory, not the finish. He will go for the win, not the bonus. The idea of gambling away so much money to maybe get or not get even more might not be an option to some of these fighters.
Let's take a look at UFC 197. Bonuses of $50k were awarded to four fighters -
Fight Of The Night: Dominique Steele & Danny Roberts
Performance Bonuses: Yair Rodriguez, Demetrious Johnson
That's $200k, and three of the four getting equal chunks of it benefit greatly as they are lower paid guys. Mighty Mouse already is making bank, so him getting an extra $50k will not "change his life" as Dana has said the bonuses can do.
Let's look at two guys that did finish, and did not get a bonus.
Walt Harris: $20,000 (includes $10,000 win bonus)
Taken before finding out there would be no KO bonus
Marcos Rogerio de Lima: $24,000 (includes $12,000 win bonus)
Taken after finding out there would be no KO bonus... "No bonus.... no bonus?"
Walt was at 10k+10k, and Lima was at 12k+12k. Holy shit. I didn't know they were still as low at 10+10...
So that's nice. The UFC likes to tout how the money can change a prelim guy's life and they decide to give extra cash to a guy getting $195k + $40k (Reebok) over either of these guys. Mighty Mouse walks with nearly a quarter mil, and these young guys will take home a several grand after camp, medicals, and taxes.
Life changing!
Dana White has stated the bonuses help out fighter pay, and encourage fighters to finish fights.
But this is blatant bullshit to anyone that spends a few minutes looking into it.
"Get a load of this goof and his math and logic and stuff. Ya goof!"
If Fighter A is making $25k to show, and $25 to win, he knows how important it is to win. He doubles his pay with a victory. He might be able to double his pay and get a huge KO bonus of $50k, which would again double his pay all the way up to $100k. But that's the rub. It's almost like betting on poker. If you have a guy beat (you know you are pulling away on points and can almost certainly win the decision), but then you wonder if you can hit a "double or nothing" (you're ahead but you begin to focus on getting a KO or setting up a sub, even though you know how dangerous your opponent is).
Two things - It's not truly double or nothing. If Fighter A goes for the KO and gets put to sleep, Fighter A still gets his base of 25k. Second, Fighter A goes for the KO and gets it? That bonus is up for grabs if a single other person got a KO that night. Just because he went for a finish, does not mean he will get that bonus. At all.
So you can see, it's a huge gamble to abandon your plan when you're ahead. It's essentially putting at risk the ability to double your pay of 25k, for the chance to quadruple it all the way up to 100k, knowing that even if you get the finish, you might not even get that sweet $50,000 KO Bonus. So what would a fighter do that desperately needs a solid chunk of money, but doesn't need a ton? He will fight for the victory, not the finish. He will go for the win, not the bonus. The idea of gambling away so much money to maybe get or not get even more might not be an option to some of these fighters.
Let's take a look at UFC 197. Bonuses of $50k were awarded to four fighters -
Fight Of The Night: Dominique Steele & Danny Roberts
Performance Bonuses: Yair Rodriguez, Demetrious Johnson
That's $200k, and three of the four getting equal chunks of it benefit greatly as they are lower paid guys. Mighty Mouse already is making bank, so him getting an extra $50k will not "change his life" as Dana has said the bonuses can do.
Let's look at two guys that did finish, and did not get a bonus.
Walt Harris: $20,000 (includes $10,000 win bonus)
Taken before finding out there would be no KO bonus
Marcos Rogerio de Lima: $24,000 (includes $12,000 win bonus)
Taken after finding out there would be no KO bonus... "No bonus.... no bonus?"
Walt was at 10k+10k, and Lima was at 12k+12k. Holy shit. I didn't know they were still as low at 10+10...
So that's nice. The UFC likes to tout how the money can change a prelim guy's life and they decide to give extra cash to a guy getting $195k + $40k (Reebok) over either of these guys. Mighty Mouse walks with nearly a quarter mil, and these young guys will take home a several grand after camp, medicals, and taxes.
Life changing!