Monday, July 11, 2016

UFC Sold for 4 Billion

The $4-billion sale of the UFC to Hollywood talent agency WME-IMG was made official Monday.


“We’ve been fortunate over the years to represent UFC and a number of its remarkable athletes,” WME-IMG co-CEOs Ari Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell said in a prepared statement.

“It’s been exciting to watch the organization’s incredible growth over the last decade under the leadership of the Fertitta brothers, Dana White and their dedicated team. We’re now committed to pursuing new opportunities for UFC and its talented athletes to ensure the sport’s continued growth and success on a global scale.”

UFC Chairman Lorenzo Fertitta and his brother, Frank, purchased the company in 2000 for $2 million and grew it from a no-holds-barred niche sport into an empire. Mixed martial arts is now regulated in all 50 states, with a New York debut coming in November, while UFC stages worldwide events and counts Ronda Rousey and Conor McGregor as mainstream sports stars.

The $4-billion sale of the UFC to Hollywood talent agency WME-IMG was made official Monday.

“We’ve been fortunate over the years to represent UFC and a number of its remarkable athletes,” WME-IMG co-CEOs Ari Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell said in a prepared statement.

“It’s been exciting to watch the organization’s incredible growth over the last decade under the leadership of the Fertitta brothers, Dana White and their dedicated team. We’re now committed to pursuing new opportunities for UFC and its talented athletes to ensure the sport’s continued growth and success on a global scale.”

UFC Chairman Lorenzo Fertitta and his brother, Frank, purchased the company in 2000 for $2 million and grew it from a no-holds-barred niche sport into an empire. Mixed martial arts is now regulated in all 50 states, with a New York debut coming in November, while UFC stages worldwide events and counts Ronda Rousey and Conor McGregor as mainstream sports stars.

The $4-billion sale of the UFC to Hollywood talent agency WME-IMG was made official Monday.

“We’ve been fortunate over the years to represent UFC and a number of its remarkable athletes,” WME-IMG co-CEOs Ari Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell said in a prepared statement.

“It’s been exciting to watch the organization’s incredible growth over the last decade under the leadership of the Fertitta brothers, Dana White and their dedicated team. We’re now committed to pursuing new opportunities for UFC and its talented athletes to ensure the sport’s continued growth and success on a global scale.”

UFC Chairman Lorenzo Fertitta and his brother, Frank, purchased the company in 2000 for $2 million and grew it from a no-holds-barred niche sport into an empire. Mixed martial arts is now regulated in all 50 states, with a New York debut coming in November, while UFC stages worldwide events and counts Ronda Rousey and Conor McGregor as mainstream sports stars.

UFC marked UFC 200 at Las Vegas’ T-Mobile Arena on Saturday, generating a company-record live gate of $10.7 million. It produces more than 40 live events annually and is the largest pay-per-view event provider in the world, with broadcasts in more than 156 countries and territories to nearly 1.1 billion television households worldwide, in 29 different languages, according to the statement.

“We’re confident that the new ownership team of WME-IMG, with whom we’ve built a strong relationship over the last several years, is committed to accelerating UFC’s global growth,” Lorenzo Fertitta said in the statement. “Most importantly, our new owners share the same vision and passion for this organization and its athletes.”

The deal separates the passionate White from his calm-headed close friend and chairman, something White said tugged at him all weekend, when the deal was finalized.

“Lorenzo was worth $1.5 billion and there were many times he’d put in longer hours than his staff in our offices,” White said. “I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t emotional, a little bummed out.”

What Fertitta, whose family operates the Station Casino business in Las Vegas, will do by cashing out is yet to be seen. Possibilities include his interest in participating in ownership should an NFL team move to Las Vegas, or expanding his casino/Las Vegas building empire.

“Lorenzo, for now, is going to chill, spend time with his family,” White said.

Fertitta relinquishes control to a company that “produces more than 52,000 hours of sports programming and arranges to distribute an additional 32,000 hours on behalf of more than 200 clients, including major sports leagues and associations like Wimbledon, the NFL, Premier League, Major League Soccer and Euroleague,” the statement said.

WME-IMG purchased Professional Bull Riders last year. The statement noted that the “PBR … has broken 10 event attendance records and increased television viewership over 20% in 2016.”

Article courtesy of LA Times

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