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UFC
president Dana White says he has secured an island to hold international MMA fights
- 7th April 2020



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PHOTO:
UFC president Dana White says he is planning a series of international MMA fights
on a private island. (Reuters/USA TODAY Sports: Adam Hagy)
With
world sport searching for ways to get around the coronavirus pandemic, the Ultimate
Fighting Championship (UFC) is talking up the possibility of holding fights on
a private island. Key
points: *UFC
has not held an event since mid-March amid restrictions on mass gatherings due
to coronavirus *President
Dana White says infrastructure is being built on a private island to allow international
fighters to compete *In
Australia, the NRL has said moving the competition to an island off the Queensland
coast is one option for the league to revive its season UFC
president Dana White said a fight between lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov
and Tony Ferguson had been scrapped, with Nurmagomedov apparently unable to leave
Russia amid the pandemic. American
Justin Gaethje is the new man to replace Nurmagomedov at UFC 249 at a yet-to-be-determined
location. "I'm
this close to getting a deal done so this place where this fight is going to be
on April 18th, I have locked up for two months. So I'm going to continue to pump
fights out," White told ESPN. "I've
also secured an island. I've got an island. The infrastructure is being built
right now. "We're
going to do all of our international fights on this island." White
gave no indication where the island was located. The
last UFC event was on March 15 in the Brazilian capital Brasilia. It
became the first event in UFC's history held behind closed doors after the Governor
of the Federal District that includes Brasilia declared a ban on all large gatherings
in response to coronavirus. Since
then, a UFC fight night in London was also cancelled, as were two other cards
due to be held at UFC's headquarters in Las Vegas. Although
White still has not even announced a venue for UFC 249, he remains determined
to hold the pay-per-view show. White
wrote on Twitter: "The fight is signed and is 100% ON LIVE on ESPN somewhere
on EARTH!!!!" Most
US states have restrictions in place that would make it impossible to stage a
show, even without an audience. UFC
249 initially was slated for Brooklyn, but a venue change became necessary several
weeks ago. ESPN,
the UFC's broadcast partner, has said White was attempting to secure an unnamed
venue on the west coast for the show. "I'm
terrified and I
love it," Gaethje tweeted after the announcement of
his fight. Nurmagomedov
announced last week that he wasn't planning to leave his native Dagestan, suggesting
Russia's travel restrictions in response to coronavirus made it impossible. He
later claimed he would be willing to leave for the fight but couldn't plan because
he didn't know where or when it would occur. 'Why
not give it a crack' Australian
UFC champion Alex Volkanovski said he was confident White could make the project
work. "It
is crazy but if anyone is going to do it, it's Dana White," he said. Volkanovski,
a former concreter from New South Wales' south coast, has resumed training after
recovering from a broken hand he sustained during his title-winning fight in Las
Vegas last December. The
31-year-old was hoping to begin the defence of his featherweight title in Australia
but said he was open to the possibility of joining the UFC island project. "I
wanted to defend that belt on home soil, but it just not looks like that's happening.
I think that's definitely going to have to be postponed," Volkanovski said. "Now
that the coronavirus has come up, I'm thinking why we don't just go and fight
on an island for a while?" With
the coronavirus pandemic set to disrupt almost all major international sporting
competitions for the foreseeable future, Volkanovski said White's idea might be
a silver lining for sports fans around the world. "We
could be stuck in this for a long time and if this is the only way of bringing
money for me and my family, I might have to do it," he said. "If
it does happen, the world will be watching especially in the times we're
in right now. "If
we can make it work, why not give it a crack?" Sports
eyeing island solution The
island idea is not new, with the NRL admitting it is considering a range of options
including moving its entire competition to Tangalooma on Moreton Island
off the Queensland coast to keep the players quarantined. The
AFL has suggested the possibility that teams could be sent to a number of "hubs"
in different states in a bid to get the season off the ground. The
idea would involve some teams based in Tasmania and Western Australia, where there
are lower COVID-19 infection rates and a possible earlier end to self isolation
and restrictions than elsewhere in Australia. However
AFL Players Association president Patrick Dangerfield has described the idea as
"speculative" and said he wasn't sure how comfortable he was with it. (ABC/Wires) |