UFC HAS BOUGHT PRIDE - ITS OFFICIAL

UFC acquires Pride Multimillion-dollar deal includes all assets. The
owners of the Ultimate Fighting Championship scooped up their primary
rival Monday, reaching a multimillion-dollar deal to purchase the
Japanese-based Pride Fighting Championship.
UFC president Dana White said he and partners Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta
formed a new company, Pride Worldwide, that purchased the assets of the
Pride FC.White, who said the deal was completed about 1:30 p.m. PDT
Monday, would not reveal the purchase price, but intimated it was an
eight-figure deal.
"I don't like to talk about money, but it was a lot of money, I can tell
you that," White said by telephone from Japan. "It was a hell of a lot
more than Barry Bonds is making." Bonds, the second-leading home run
hitter in baseball history, signed a $15.8 million, one-year deal with
the San Francisco Giants in February.
The UFC deal transfers all Pride assets, including fighter contracts,
fight video library and trademarks, to the new company. White said he
would retain Pride's Japanese employees and that the company's planned
April 7 show would go on as planned in Tokyo.
Pride has many of the sport's best fighters, including heavyweight
champion Fedor Emialenenko, Wanderlei Silva, Dan Henderson, Shogun Rua,
Takanori Gomi and Hayato Sakurai, signed to promotional contracts.
White said Pride would adopt the same rules that are used in the United
States and expressed a desire to use the so-called unified rules around
the world. Soccer kicks and knees to the head were legal in Pride fights
in Japan, but they were outlawed in two shows that were held at the
Thomas & Mack Center. However, White said any fight held with the Pride
banner would continue to be in a ring. UFC fights are in a cage.
"This is a sport and we're going to follow the unified rules that were
established in New Jersey and then in Nevada," White said. "It's a sport
-- mixed martial arts -- and the sport should have the same rules
everywhere. As far as I'm concerned, if an organization doesn't follow
these rules, it's not MMA. It's something else, but that's not MMA."
White said he will create a "Super Bowl" of MMA that will match the best
fighters in Pride against the best in the UFC. White said he hadn't had
time to think through the logistics, but said the concept could become
the biggest annual event in the sport. He said he has the option to use
Pride fighters in UFC shows if he chooses, but plans to run distinct
brands.
"Pride is a powerful brand," White said. "The winners in this are the
fans, because they're going to see the question answered. How many times
have I heard someone say, 'Pride is better,' or 'UFC is better?' Well,
wherever you come down on that, we'll answer the question because we'll
make certain we put them in with each other and get an answer."
One of Pride's downfalls in the last year in Japan was the loss of its
contract with Fuji TV. White said it was one of the new ownership
group's leading priorities to negotiate a new television deal in Japan.
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