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UFC superstar reacts (poorly) to Zuffa Boxing’s absurd $15 million Conor Benn one-fight deal – ‘I’ve never heard of him’

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LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – SEPTEMBER 14: Sean O’Malley of the United States looks on following his fight against Merab Dvalishvili of Georgia for the bantamweight title during UFC 306: Riyadh Season Noche at Sphere on September 14, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

“Suga” is shocked.

Zuffa Boxing made waves last week by signing British welterweight Conor Benn to a reported one-fight, $15 million deal — a staggering number that immediately caught the attention of the combat sports world. The former Matchroom standout’s jump reportedly left promoter Eddie Hearndevastated,” but it was the eight-figure payday that truly turned heads.

To put it in perspective, no UFC fighter has ever publicly disclosed earning a flat $15 million purse. While Conor McGregor banked massive money for his fight against Khabib Nurmagomedov, and Brock Lesnar scored big at UFC 200, the final numbers were heavily supplemented by pay-per-view points.

So when news of Benn’s deal surfaced, many wondered how UFC fighters would respond.

Enter UFC superstar Sean O’Malley — and he didn’t hold back.

“I don’t even know who Conor Benn is. He’s supposedly a pretty big name in boxing, but I’ve never f—king heard of him,” O’Malley said. “It’s crazy, bro. If they really paid this guy $15 million, I don’t know. It’s crazy how you put in so much work in the UFC. Build this name, create this character, be a star. I’m not making f—king $15 million to fight.”

“It’s also a business, and if they think it’s a good move and that guy is going to bring in money, I get it,” he added. “Business is business. He hates Oscar De La Hoya, hates Eddie Hearn, so it’s like let’s take their biggest star and pay them — I can see it being an ego thing. Again, I’ve never really heard of him.”

With Zuffa Boxing backed by Saudi powerbroker Turki Al-Sheikh, deep pockets clearly aren’t an issue.

Whether more UFC fighters publicly question the pay disparity remains to be seen — especially in the wake of the UFC’s massive $7.7 billion Paramount+ deal.

In the end, Saudi Arabia is backing boxing, not MMA, unfortunately.


Upfront Tony
Upfront Tony
Senior Editor, CEO, BJJ Black Belt, Muay Thai Kru, Entrepreneur

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