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Huerta and UFC get past differences and ink a new deal

December 11, 2008 by  
Filed under Uncategorized

Roger Huerta, once the poster boy for the UFC being their first to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated for a story on the rising popularity of mixed martial arts became upset with the organization and it’s pay structure. Huerta went from the cover of Sports Illustrated to the cover of FIGHT! Magazine. This time everything wasn’t so hunky dory. Here’s an excerpt from the article.

Huerta is one of a growing number of Zuffa-contracted fighter who feel that there is a disconnection between the company’s success and the way fighters are compensated. Huerta’s disillusionment with the UFC began when he did press tours for his employer in Miami, Houston, Los Angeles, and London and received a $50 per diem for his troubles. It sounds like a a good deal until you factor in time away from training, friends, and family, days often stretch twelve hours or more, and an exchange rate of one UK pound for two American dollars. “Why do you think I don’t do PR for the UFC any more?” he asks.

He’s also unhappy with the terms of his current contract, but to Huerta, the press tours underscore a larger point: by and the large, Zuffa does not treat its contracted fighters with sufficient loyalty or respect. He argues that many UFC fighters barely make enough to cover their training expenses. He brings up teammate Keith Jardine repeatedly, incensed that a main event fighter is working for ten and ten- $10k to show and 10k to win – while his opponent regularly makes ten times as much.

Huerta’s expression hardens and becomes more animated as talk turns to endorsements. The common counter-argument for complaints about fighter pay is that fighters often make more from endorsements and sponsorships than they do for competing. But Huerta has soured on the system after receiving lowball offers from companies who expect fighters to jump at the chance to endorse products. He rails against a Fortune 500 company for offering a deal to build him as a spokesman that included unpaid work. “Are you serious?” Huerta ask. “I know Dale Earnhardt Jr isn’t doing appearances for free.”

“The truth is, I don’t really care if I fight in the UFC or somewhere else,” Huerta says. The fighter says he understands that Zuffa has to keep an eye on the bottom line, but he wants to work, “For a company that is as loyal to me as I am to them.”

It looks like Huerta and the UFC have put aside their differences. Huerta has inked a 5 fight deal with the organization and looks to be back in action in March. The rumored opponent is Spencer Fisher at UFC 96 in Columbus, Ohio. It’s become an annual event in Columbus every March during the weekend of the Arnold Classics and is always a great time.

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