logo
We laughed, but we would've watched: Ferguson, Danis and GFL should've owned this weekend

We laughed, but we would've watched: Ferguson, Danis and GFL should've owned this weekend

Yahoo23-05-2025

Living in Ireland and covering combat sports for a living, you'd think I'd rejoice in a malnourished MMA weekend that allows for a full night's sleep, but you'd be wrong.
Over a decade of diminished dozing has taught me that it isn't a choice. It's a sickness. And nothing has highlighted that sickness quite like realizing Saturday was supposed to mark GFL's debut. On a weekend light on MMA, the freak-show loving hardcore crowd I proudly belong to would've been glued to our screens.
Advertisement
The pièce de résistance of this meme-fueled double-header was Tony Ferguson vs. Dillon Danis — a bout that doesn't quite reach the giddy morbid highs of Eddie Hall vs. Mariusz Pudzianowski or Eddie Hall vs. Two Tiny Guys, but it came pretty damn close.
Of course, there was something frightening about a legend like Ferguson taking his eight-fight skid into a contest against the oft-ridiculed résumé of a formerly celebrated jiu-jitsu player Danis. But the mockery the bout drew on announcement had a communal feel — and an unspoken guarantee that we'd all show up anyway. Not in support, but in solidarity of disbelief.
The GFL dream
It's never a great sign when one of the biggest talking points around a new promotion is, 'Will it even happen?' — but that was the dominant narrative surrounding GFL when founder Darren Owen announced his intentions on "The Ariel Helwani Show" back in December.
Advertisement
From the jump, the team-based format drew ridicule, with MMA's grizzled memory bank immediately pointing to the ill-fated IFL (hat-tip to Uncrowned's own Ben Fowlkes). While the promised 50/50 revenue split with fighters was a commendable idea, the absence of a broadcast partner raised the obvious question — what revenue?
To be fair to GFL, they must have pitched well — the roster was nothing to scoff at, boasting a vast array of former UFC champions (albeit many well past their sell-by dates). But cracks appeared early when multiple announced fighters publicly claimed they were still under contract with rival promotions.
We got our first real glimpse of the GFL's surreal appeal during January's 'live' draft. What should've been a hype-building event instead became a masterclass in collective cringe, as the 80% AI-generated production had fans stampeding to social media to join the pile-on. The most talked-about moment? Not a fighter, coach, or team — but a rap song (yet another IFL nod), its chorus echoing through the chaos.
'Protect your neck… wooooooaahhh!'
UFC dominance
While my overview of the promotion may seem trite, I genuinely believe a lot of fans would have tuned in if Saturday's debut event went ahead. In an age where the gap between the UFC and every other promotion appears to be growing every weekend, the ability to put on an event that inspires genuine curiosity is no mean feat.
Advertisement
The Patchy Mix to UFC story and the postponement of PFL's biggest event of the year — starring Dakota Ditcheva and Johnny Eblen — are the latest marks against the MMA co-leader in what seems to be a conveyor belt of critical developments throughout 2024-25.
The promotion's best work has been done on the European scene. I marveled at the event I witnessed in Paris, where 20,000 people showed up at the Accor Arena to heap adoration on Cedric Doumbé. Similarly, in Belfast last weekend, Paul Hughes' homecoming felt like a real moment for the brand. However, those in the U.S. simply have to take my word for it as there was no legal avenue to watch either event in "The Land of the Free."
Donn Davis's 'co-leader' moniker is drawing more and more ridicule as the hits keep coming for PFL, but there is a lot happening in Europe with Oktagon regularly booking gargantuan venues and the kings of the freak-show, KSW, drawing the intrigue of the world with their recent Pudzianowski vs. Hall offering.
PFL hosting the early knockout rounds of this year's global tournament at the Universal Studios soundstage point to a lack of interest U.S. fans had in attending the events. It also underlines the dominance the UFC boasts in its homeland, where TKO continues breaking gate records at every venue it visits, often to the confusing delight of those in attendance who whooped and hollered when the dollar-pinching tally was announced.
Oh hey — TKO just broke another gate record while you were reading this. (Georgiana Dallas/WWE via Getty Images)
(WWE via Getty Images)
Attention
In the end, GFL didn't happen.
Advertisement
Ferguson didn't fight Danis and we didn't get an opportunity to collectively chortle to our hearts' content — and perhaps we should be sad about that. Even though the promotion was doomed to fail, it did something the overwhelming majority of promotions outside the UFC cannot do.
It got people talking.
As the UFC effortlessly widens the gap, the No. 2 spot in MMA remains a strange, shifting thing. It's not about talent. It's not about titles. It's about attention — and occasionally, about tapping into the bizarre, junk-food part of our fandom that just wants to see what happens when chaos is left unsupervised.
Ferguson vs. Danis could have very well been a car crash, but deep down we know we would have all been there, bracing for impact together. In that shared, guilty curiosity, there was a chance — however fleeting — that the GFL just might have worked, if only for one weekend.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer
UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer

The UFC continues to make its annual trip to France. A UFC Fight Night event is set to take place Sept. 6 at Accor Arena in Paris, promotion officials announced Tuesday morning. No fights were included in the announcement. The promotion's most recent trip to Paris took place last Sept. 28, 2024, where France's Benoit Saint Denis headlined UFC Fight Night 243 against Renato Moicano. Saint Denis lost a doctor's stoppage TKO in Round 2 after doctors declared him unable to see. In the co-main event, Nassourdine Imavov extended his winning streak by defeating Brendan Allen by unanimous decision, and rising lightweight Fares Ziam scored one of the best knockouts of the year over Matt Frevola. This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: UFC announces end-of-summer return to Paris

Cora Jade opens up on WWE release, body-shaming within the company: 'It was just constant'
Cora Jade opens up on WWE release, body-shaming within the company: 'It was just constant'

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Cora Jade opens up on WWE release, body-shaming within the company: 'It was just constant'

Elayna Black, best known by her WWE ring name Cora Jade, was one of the latest casualties of WWE's ongoing roster cuts. An NXT prospect on the rise, the 24-year-old Black came as a surprise to see on the list of names receiving their walking papers from WWE in May. Having completed her 30-day non-compete clause, Black was able to speak on her experiences with the company for the first time Monday. Advertisement "In November, I kind of had a feeling that, like, I was going to be gone," Black said of her release on Uncrowned's "The Ariel Helwani Show." "It's always up and down. Maybe two weeks before the cuts, it was in Vegas, I was like, 'I'm going to make it good because I'm not coming back here.' I just had that gut feeling. Obviously, you don't want that to be right, so don't manifest it. "That day, I was going to hang out with Bea Priestly (formerly Blair Davenport), and she called me and said, 'Josh [Terry, aka WWE's Riley Osborne] just got fired.' Her husband. So I was like, 'OK, I'll keep my ringer on.' And sure as hell, two minutes later I got the call." Black's WWE run began in 2021 and saw her immediately align with Gigi Dolin, who was also let go from the company in May's same batch of releases. Unfortunately for Black, the latter years of her time in WWE were marred by injury after she tore several ligaments in her knee, resulting in a significant amount of time lost to recovery in 2024. Advertisement There were some things Black wishes would've played out differently, but ultimately her regrets are minimal. "I had a conversation with somebody who I won't name, but someone I feel I would have had a better experience there if it wasn't for [them] — and not Shawn [Michaels] or Hunter [Paul Levesque] or anybody," Black said. "I can't praise them enough, and my time there, and everything like that, but there was a conversation with somebody where I was kind of like, 'OK, this is probably going to be weird in a few months.' And it was. "At times [it was unsettling]. I could look at it and think about things I could have changed or what I could have done different, then I guess when you think about it there really is nothing, because I feel like — I was there every day. I was cleaning up the locker rooms with Roxanne [Perez] after the shows because we're from indie wrestling, that's what you do. Until the day I was gone, that's just what you do. "You can always look at it and think what could have been different, but at the end of the day, I feel comfortable in the fact that I got to do so much stuff," Black continued. "I got to meet my best friend, so many of my best friends, and I feel confident that I stood on my morals. Things that I spoke up about that maybe other people wouldn't have." Advertisement Regarding some of the more problematic experiences Black had, one in particular was frustrating enough that she took to social media within the past month, teasing smoke to a fire. She opened up more on the matter on Monday, indicating that she had been body-shamed into improving her physical appearance. "I don't want this to be 'bash WWE' because it was my dream," Black said. "It still is my dream. I have no doubt maybe one day in the near future I'll be there again. But it just is what it is. Cora Jade makes her entrance during NXT TV at the WWE Performance Center on March 4, 2025, in Orlando, Florida. (Eric Johnson/WWE via Getty Images) (WWE via Getty Images) 'I definitely think things could've went differently if it weren't for certain things like the body-shaming thing. I came in at 19 years old, I was like 110 pounds, I was so small. It was just constant comments, whether it was from guys who think they're being funny, or, I'm not going to name names again, but I remember specifically being told that I wasn't and wouldn't be champion in that company because I looked like I couldn't crack an egg. Multiple conversations about my body, which I don't think anyone, especially another man, should be saying that to a female. I was so young and it created a lot of issues for me body-wise. But, obviously, I gained so much muscle after that. I worked my ass off." Advertisement Although the knee injury was one of Black's most notable setbacks in recent years, it wasn't her only health scare. The Chicagoan recalled being scheduled to wrestle Lyra Valkyria at the end of January 2023 — until things unexpectedly took a turn for the worse. "I ended up in emergency surgery in the hospital the night before," Black reflected. "Literally almost dying and bleeding out because I had an ectopic pregnancy that had failed, and it exploded and made me internally bleed. I was rushed into emergency surgery because I was this close to bleeding out. Thank God I went, because I was literally thinking, 'I just have to get through the match tomorrow.' I knew something wasn't right, but I just thought I had to get through the match, but I'm bleeding. "What happened was, I had an IUD birth control. It's inserted into you. It's a 99.9% success rate, it's a five-year thing, you protect your eggs for five years. They warn you of ectopic pregnancy beforehand. It's where the egg is implanted outside of the uterus in the fallopian tube, and that causes the fallopian tube to explode, you internally bleed, and it's extremely life-threatening to the baby and woman. I was always scared of that in general, because I have health anxiety anyway, so I was always worried about that." Black knew something was off as soon as she started feeling discomfort ahead of her match. The emergency surgery was successful, but the cost was her left fallopian tube, which was removed. Advertisement Despite the horrific process, Black was still upset she didn't get to perform at NXT: Stand & Deliver 2023 as planned. The toll of everything left the wrestler in a dark place for the ensuing several months. "Nothing has ever happened to me like that before. I never realized the effects of it," Black said. "After I came back those few months, I was the most mentally depressed I have ever been in my entire life. "I remember calling one of the WWE doctors and being like, 'I need to go somewhere. I'm not OK. This is not OK.' I don't know what it was because nothing was really wrong, but I learned later — you deal with postpartum depression, and it's so intense. I was 23 years old, and [it was] the craziest thing I had ever experienced. I went back to work and I was not there mentally. Nothing to do with work. I literally didn't realize the toll that takes on you as a person. Advertisement "I needed to go away and take time off or I don't know what was going to happen to me. Mentally, I needed to take that time off. ... I took that time to get myself mentally right, I felt good, I was ready to go, I was so excited. I felt good mentally, physically and emotionally. It was probably the best I ever felt. Then I came back, I had just went through a really bad breakup, it was my birthday — and I tore my knee. It was back-to-back-to-back. I was so excited and — boom, boom, boom." Black is already gearing up to stay as busy as possible in her post-WWE life. She has several indie bookings lined up, starting with a match against Rachel Armstrong at a Black Label Pro show on June 14. Considering her age, there are still plenty of possibilities left for the one-time NXT Tag Team Champion in the wrestling world. Because of how recently her non-compete clause has ended, she hasn't had any discussions with a major promotion like AEW or TNA, but she's certainly open to returns in either. "I would definitely be open to going to AEW. I loved my time there. I have a lot of friends there. I watch all the shows," she said. "I love the fact that they have as much creative freedom as they do. I'm so much for storylines and character, so I feel like they are very creatively free in that way. So it's definitely something I'd be open to. "I'm not closed off to [TNA] by any means. I just feel that my only hang-up is I feel like I was just there. Now they're kind of doing WWE and TNA, so it almost feels like I need to step away from that world for a second. I love TNA, I would definitely work there again in the future. Just right now, in my time, I feel they're too close-knit together. It'll be better for me to branch off and just kind of figure it out."

UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer
UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer

USA Today

time41 minutes ago

  • USA Today

UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer

UFC announces return to Paris for end of summer The UFC continues to make its annual trip to France. A UFC Fight Night event is set to take place Sept. 6 at Accor Arena in Paris, promotion officials announced Tuesday morning. No fights were included in the announcement. The promotion's most recent trip to Paris took place last Sept. 28, 2024, where France's Benoit Saint Denis headlined UFC Fight Night 243 against Renato Moicano. Saint Denis lost a doctor's stoppage TKO in Round 2 after doctors declared him unable to see. In the co-main event, Nassourdine Imavov extended his winning streak by defeating Brendan Allen by unanimous decision, and rising lightweight Fares Ziam scored one of the best knockouts of the year over Matt Frevola.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store