Polar opposites Tony Ferguson and Michael Chandler bring fierce styles to UFC 274
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- Tony FergusonAmerican mixed martial artist
- Michael ChandlerAmerican mixed martial artist
The similarities between Michael Chandler and Tony Ferguson are obvious. Theyโre still elite, championship-level fighters, though theyโre now up there in age and on the back nine of their careers.
The loser of their lightweight bout on the main card of UFC 274 on Saturday at the Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona, can likely kiss a future title shot goodbye, while the winner will at least remain in the running.
Their approaches, though, are so dramatically different that itโs almost as if theyโre in different universes.
Chandler, who spent the majority of his career fighting for Bellator, can barely contain his giddiness about being in the UFC. One doesnโt even have to prod him to get him to unleash a string of superlatives about the promotion and its personnel.
He raves about the way heโs been treated, from UFC president Dana White down to Hunter Campbell, the companyโs chief business officer, to the general staff.
โI love this sport, I really do,โ Chandler said when asked if it will be tough watching Charles Oliveira and Justin Gaethje, the men who defeated him last year, fight for the belt in Saturdayโs main event. โI love the opportunities that the UFC has given me since signing with the organization. I came in and told Hunter Campbell, โI want to be a good thing for your organization. Iโm going to say, 'Yes.' And Iโm going to go out there and put on great performances.โ And I believe I've tried to do that every single time."
At the UFC 262 pre-fight news conference last year, when Chandler fought Oliveira for the vacant title and Ferguson met Beneil Dariush on the undercard, Ferguson was chiding Chandler and uttered one of the great lines ever.
He was complaining about not getting his shot and was unhappy that Chandler, then in his second UFC bout, was fighting for the title.
โYou got this s*** handed to you,โ Ferguson said to Chandler, who was seated at the opposite end of the dais. โYouโve got Dana White privilege.โ
But at Wednesdayโs media day when a reporter joked about that, Ferguson was in no laughing mood. He hasnโt fought since UFC 262, when he was beaten by Dariush to suffer his third consecutive loss.
He laid into the UFC and White in particular, complaining about pay and said that White runs the company like a drug kingpin.
โI donโt think that s*** is very funny,โ Ferguson said when the White privilege line was brought up. โYou do maybe. I donโt think itโs very funny. Everybody is looking at it, theyโre smiling and laughing at it but nobodyโs saying s***.
โIโm the one up here with Dana Brown privilege or whatever the f*** you want to call it. I donโt think itโs very funny anymore. I donโt think you should think thatโs very funny. So Iโm taking this weekend very f***ing seriously. So Iโll kick this Dana White boyโs ass.โ
Ferguson then went off on the UFC pay structure. Itโs been a repeated topic over time and Showtime Sports president Stephen Espinoza made an issue of it again recently when he was chiding UFC welterweight champion Kamaru Usman for seeking a boxing match with Canelo Alvarez.
Espinoza got into the middle of a Twitter beef between Alvarez, Usman and Usman's manager, Ali Abdelaziz, by making an issue of the pay disparity. Top-end boxers make far more than the majority of the top-end UFC fighters, though the UFC has a thriving middle class of fighters that does not exist in boxing.
โUFC fighters want that boxing paycheck but donโt understand that boxers have the autonomy to choose opponents,โ Espinoza tweeted. โItโs not about not wanting โsmoke.โ Itโs about professional self-determination, a foreign concept to those who let the kickboxing instructor choose their fights.โ
There is no doubt that the UFC regularly puts on better, deeper and more evenly matched cards than any boxing promoter does. Thatโs indisputable. But itโs equally as indisputable that fighters like Alvarez make the kind of money, in the tens of millions, that even makes McGregor jealous.
Ferguson, who has long been one of the divisionโs leading talents, let loose on the UFC and on White in a long rant on Wednesday.
โI think weโre underpaid, personally,โ Ferguson said. โIโm going to be real. Iโm not going to say too much. Dana said something the other day ... talking about how boxers are overpaid. I asked Dana to box. He said, โF*** no.โ Iโm like, โWhy? I want to go play baseball, I want to go do other pro sports.โ Iโm an athlete. I grew up doing different pro sports at a very high level. I won a state championship in football. We were 27-1. I come from Grand Valley State University as a wrestler. I want to go do wrestling. Iโve got Uncle Brock [Lesnar] whoโs right there watching me.
โI want to go do all these couple things but then I have this guy right here acting like a f***ing drug dealer, telling me I canโt go do this s***. I want to go make more money for my family.โ
Ferguson is expected to make in the neighborhood of $500,000 on Saturday to face Chandler, a not-so-bad payday for a guy third from the top on the card on a three-fight losing streak.
The answer to the dilemma, of course, is simple. A fighterโs union would be the best bet if it had the majority of fighters involved and supporting it. But because fighters are independent contractors who have vastly different interests, itโs hard to get the top stars to support unionization efforts. And without the top stars, the union has no teeth, which is why attempts to unionize the fighters have repeatedly failed in the UFC.
Ferguson and Chandler will be long gone by the time a union ever comes to the UFC, if it ever does.
But though theyโll be gone, theyโll be remembered fondly for as long as MMA fighting is still a thing.
Because despite their differences in approach, there have been few fighters more exciting than Tony Ferguson and Michael Chandler. A match between them is one that should blow it out of the water and be talked about for ages.
Along, of course, with the fierce and ongoing dispute about fighter compensation.