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Dana White says UFC fighters deliberately hide pay from fans to avoid giving 'handouts'

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Dana White says UFC fighters deliberately hide pay from fans to avoid giving 'handouts'

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UFC fighters’ pay — or lack thereof — has been a recent hot-button topic.

It is widely estimated that fighters are given a smaller share of the organization’s revenue compared to athletes in other leagues and fighting promotions.

There is also much speculation that despite astronomical growth in recent years, fighters’ pay has not scaled along with it.

 

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UFC president Dana White in attendance during UFC 300 at T-Mobile Arena.  (Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports)

UFC president Dana White admitted that fighters “don’t want” fans to know “what they got paid,” but not because they don’t make enough.

Rather, White believes they don’t want to give “handouts” when people find out how much they actually make.

“There’s no gag order on any of these fighters. They could all sit down and do full interviews on how much they make and what they were paid …” White told Vegas PBS. “When people find out what you made, it makes life a lot tougher. There are a lot of people sitting around looking for handouts when they find out you made millions of dollars.”

Ultimate Fighting Championship CEO Dana White speaks on stage on the fourth day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 18, 2024, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

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White’s net worth is an estimated $500 million, and the UFC recently just scored a nearly-$8 billion deal with Paramount.

In 2014, former UFC fighters filed a suit in Las Vegas federal court, seeking class-action status, accusing the company of using “an anticompetitive scheme of long-term exclusive fighter contracts, coercion, and acquisitions of rival MMA promoters to establish and maintain dominance in the MMA industry and suppress fighter compensation,” according to a Forbes report on developments in the suit.

Dana White and his wife Anne arrive at the Rotunda in January 2025. (RICKY CARIOTI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

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That suit resulted in a $375 million settlement last year.

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High school softball: Southern Section Tuesday playoff scores and upcoming schedule

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High school softball: Southern Section Tuesday playoff scores and upcoming schedule

SOUTHERN SECTION BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
TUESDAY’S RESULTS
THIRD ROUND

DIVISION 1
Pool A
Norco 9, Ayala 2

Pool B
Corona 6, Corona Santiago 1

Pool C
Cypress 8, Sierra Canyon 0

Pool D
La Mirada 11, Huntington Beach 1

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SECOND ROUND

DIVISION 2
Elsinore 6, Santa Margarita 4
Ganesha 5, South Hills 2
Newport Harbor 4, Great Oak 1
Aquinas 5, Gahr 3
Santa Ana Foothill 3, Servite 0
Yucaipa 17, Royal 2
Loyola 7, Chaminade 6
Alemany 9, Westlake 6

DIVISION 3
Mira Costa 6, Redondo Union 3
Dos Pueblos 10, Edison 7
Warren 10, Palos Verdes 1
St. Francis 5, Cajon 2
Agoura 3, Garden Grove Pacifica 0
Fullerton 7, Corona del Mar 6
Millikan 3, Beckman 1
Summit 5, Arcadia 4

DIVISION 4
Saugus 11, San Marino 10
Rio Mesa 4, Claremont 2
Glendora at Katella, Wednesday
Anaheim Canyon 4, Upland 1
Marina 11, La Quinta 4
Grand Terrace 4, Palm Desert 0
Laguna Beach 7, Woodbridge 2
Moorpark 8, Monrovia 6

DIVISION 5
Irvine 3, Citrus Valley 2
Cathedral 2, Long Beach Poly 1
Kaiser 5, Quartz Hill 4
Santa Barbara 12, Paramount 5
Long Beach Wilson 2, Jurupa Hills 1
Temescal Canyon 7, Riverside Prep 6
Culver City 6, St. Bonaventure 2
St. Bernard 4, Bishop Montgomery 0

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DIVISION 6
Brentwood 9, Ontario 7
Foothill Tech 4, Canyon Springs 0
Trinity Classical Academy 5, Troy 3
El Rancho 8, Northwood 0
Western Christian 5, Savanna 3
Covina 15, Alhambra 5
Muir at Santa Ana Calvary Chapel, late
Lakewood 6, Crossroads 2

DIVISION 7
Carpinteria 7, New Roads 2
North Torrance 7, Grace 0
Santa Paula 11, Fontana 1
Patriot 3, Victor Valley 2
South El Monte 3, Hemet 2
Golden Valley 6, Jurupa Valley 3
Arroyo 4, Carter 3
Norwalk 4, Garden Grove 1

DIVISION 8
Rancho Alamitos 13, Edgewood 10
Chadwick 26, Pasadena Marshall 23
Wildomar Cornerstone Christian 7, Rio Hondo Prep 3
Oxford Academy 4, Rosemead 3
Duarte 4, Santa Clarita Christian 2
Nuview Bridge 3, Nordhoff 2
Artesia 10, Magnolia 5
Anaheim vs. Schurr at Rio Hondo College

DIVISION 9
Lennox Academy 6, Dunn 4
Crossroads Christian 9, St. Monica Academy 8
Ojai Valley 2, San Bernardino 0
Webb 5, Yucca Valley 3
Rolling Hills Prep 11, Ambassador Christian 3
Riverside Bethel Christian 6, Westminster 4
Temecula Prep 22, Cobalt 1
Garden Grove Santiago 7, St. Pius X-St. Matthias Academy 6

FRIDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Games at 3:15 p.m. unless noted)
QUARTERFINALS

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DIVISION 1
Corona at Sherman Oaks Notre Dame
Norco at Orange Lutheran
St. John Bosco at La Mirada
Cypress at Harvard-Westlake

DIVISION 2
Ganesha at Elsinore
Aquinas at Newport Harbor
Foothill at Yucaipa
Loyola at Alemany

DIVISION 3
Mira Costa at Dos Pueblos
St. Francis at Warren
Fullerton at Agoura
Summit at Millikan

DIVISION 4
Saugus at Rio Mesa
Glendora / Katella vs. Anaheim Canyon
Marina at Grand Terrace
Laguna Beach at Moorpark

DIVISION 5
Irvine at Cathedral
Santa Barbara at Kaiser
Temescal Canyon at Long Beach Wilson
Culver City at St. Bernard

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DIVISION 6
Foothill Tech at Brentwood
El Rancho at Trinity Classical Academy
Covina at Western Christian
Lakewood vs. Muir /Santa Ana Calvary Chapel

DIVISION 7
Carpinteria at North Torrance
Santa Paula at Patriot
South El Monte at Golden Valley
Norwalk at Arroyo

DIVISION 8
Chadwick at Rancho Alamitos
Oxford Academy at Wildomar Cornerstone Christian
Duarte at Nuview Bridge
Schurr at Artesia

DIVISION 9
Crossroads Christian at Lennox Academy
HajI Valley at Webb
Riverside Bethel Christian at Rolling Hills Prep
Temecula Prep at Garden Grove Santiago

Note: Semifinals in all divisions May 26; Finals in all divisions May 29-30.

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NFL owners unanimously vote to bring Super Bowl LXIV to Nashville’s new $2 billion stadium in 2030

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NFL owners unanimously vote to bring Super Bowl LXIV to Nashville’s new  billion stadium in 2030

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The soundtrack of Super Bowl LXIV will have a Nashville, Tenn., twang because the NFL on Tuesday awarded the place known as Music City its biggest event — the championship game set to be played in February 2030.

The announcement was made at the NFL Spring League Meeting in Orlando following a review of the proposal by the NFL’s Fan Engagement & Major Events Committee and a vote by full ownership.

Owners voted 32-0 to approve the Music City Super Bowl.

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“The 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville was one of the great fan events in our history,” NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. “Super Bowl LXIV at the new stadium is the next step in this remarkable football journey. The vision of Amy Adams Strunk and the Tennessee Titans helped make this moment possible, along with our great partners at the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp. We can’t wait to put on an unforgettable show in 2030.”

This could be the biggest thing for Nashville sports since the Music City Miracle in January 2000. And that happened because the Houston Oilers moved to Nashville in 1997.

The place has come a long way since then.

Nashville and the renamed Tennessee Titans are in the process of building a new $2.1 billion stadium, which is scheduled to open in time for the 2027 season. The new Nissan Stadium will be in operation for its third season when it is slated to host Super Bowl LXIV to culminate the 2029 season (played in February 2030).

 During what was billed as the Steel Topping Out ceremony at new Nissan Stadium in November, Goodell was very complimentary of the franchise’s facility, and even dropped hints that a Super Bowl could be headed to Nashville someday.

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Now we know it’s happening.

“Hosting the Super Bowl is a defining moment for Nashville and Tennessee and reflects years of work to build Music City into a globally recognized destination for music, entertainment, and live events,” Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp. President & CEO Deana Ivey said in a statement.

“This event is an incredible opportunity to showcase the dynamic and creative character of Nashville to a global audience and to deliver a Super Bowl experience that is distinctly Music City, where music, sports, culture, and hospitality come together in a way few cities can match.”

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Super Bowl LXI is set for SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, on Feb. 14, 2027. Super Bowl LXII will be played at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Feb. 13, 2028.

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And then Las Vegas will host Super Bowl LXIII in February 2029 with a date to be set later.

NFL owners on Tuesday also voted to approve holding the 2028 NFL Draft in Minneapolis.

The view of construction at the 200 level looking south at the new Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tenn., on March 3, 2025. (Mark Zaleski/The Tennessean/USA TODAY NETWORK)

The Minnesota bid was focused on the major event at U.S. Bank Stadium. The Twin Cities will hold other portions of the draft’s festivities at the Mall of America and other sites.

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After leaving New York City’s Radio City Music Hall and Marriott Marquis before that, the draft was in Chicago twice, and then in Philadelphia, Dallas, Nashville, Cleveland, Las Vegas, Kansas City, Detroit, Green Bay and Pittsburgh. Next year’s draft will be in Washington, D.C.

Pittsburgh set a record for NFL Draft attendance in April when 775,000 people attended the three-day event. The draft next year in the nation’s capital is expected to set a new record.

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Tennis great Billie Jean King graduates from Cal State L.A. 65 years after enrolling

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Tennis great Billie Jean King graduates from Cal State L.A. 65 years after enrolling

Long before Billie Jean King won dozens of Grand Slam tennis titles, founded the Women’s Tennis Association, became part owner of the Dodgers and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, she enrolled in what was then called Los Angeles State College.

Three years later in 1964, King left without a degree to devote full attention to her burgeoning tennis career.

Failing to earn the degree bothered her, and King would correct anyone who said she had graduated.

“I said, ‘Don’t ever say ‘graduated.’ I haven’t earned it — yet,’” she said.

“Yet” became a reality Monday when King, 82, received her bachelor’s degree in history from the same school she attended more than 60 years ago — now called Cal State Los Angeles — walking across the Shrine Auditorium stage with the rest of the Class of 2026.

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King also served as a commencement speaker, telling the roughly 6,000 fellow graduates, “It is a privilege for me to be here.

“Yeah, baby, only 61 years!”

King mentioned that “like many of you,” no one in her immediate family had graduated from college.

She noted that her lifelong fight against discrimination began when she realized at age 12 that nearly everyone at tennis clubs was white.

“I asked myself, ‘Where is everybody else?’” King said. “From that day forward, I committed my life to equality and inclusion for all. Tennis is a global sport and it became my platform, but equality was my dream — to make the world a better place.”

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“We can never understand inclusion unless we’ve been excluded.”

Known then as Billie Jean Moffitt, she chose Los Angeles State because tennis coach Scotty Deeds trained men and women together. She soon became an international star, winning a Wimbledon doubles championship at 18 with Karen Hantze, who was only 17.

She married her college sweetheart Larry King in 1965 and they divorced in 1987. Afterward, King and Ilana Kloss, an accomplished tennis player in her own right, were a couple for decades before marrying in 2018 in a secret ceremony in the apartment of former New York City Mayor David Dinkins.

“You’re finding your truth, and it doesn’t have to stay the same,” King told People magazine at the time. “I only liked guys when I was young. I didn’t think about girls. And then all of a sudden I’m like, ‘Oh my God, what’s happening?’ My truth was changing over time. It took me forever.”

King became a trailblazer for LGBTQ+ and women’s civil rights and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009 in part for her advocacy for equality. King and Kloss co-founded the Billie Jean King Leadership Initiative to promote inclusive workplaces and gender equality.

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Shortly after they married, King and Kloss became part owners of the Dodgers and the Sparks, acquiring undisclosed minority stakes in the franchises through an invitation from controlling owner Mark Walter.

“We believe all professions, and professional sports, need to be more inclusive and equitable,’’ Walter said at the time. “It’s going to be wonderful to have a role model like her in both clubhouses from time to time.’’

King returned to Cal State L.A. in the 2025 spring semester. She also earned course credit for her interaction with fellow students enrolled through the university’s Prison Graduation Initiative.

“They have made a commitment to improving their lives through education,” she said, and “getting their degree will be life-changing for them.”

King now knows the feeling firsthand. At the graduation ceremony on Monday, she wore a gold stole embroidered with a multicolored tennis racket and the letters G.O.A.T — greatest of all time.

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“It means a lot more to me than I thought,” she told reporters. “I am so glad I did it. My hope is that one other person will go back to school.

“It’s never too late, whatever age you are, whatever your abilities are, go for it if you want it.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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