UFC president Dana White called Jon Jones "the Michael Jordan of MMA" in public remarks this week, two days after a documented clash between the pair at a White House event. The comment marks White's first on-record praise of Jones since the heavyweight champion reversed his public endorsement of White's business decisions in December.
The reconciliation came as White testified in federal antitrust proceedings that he has not been involved in fighter contract negotiations or matchmaking for the past decade. The testimony contradicts years of public positioning in which White personally announced signings, threatened roster cuts on social media, and conducted post-fight backstage negotiations on camera. Court filings reviewed by attorneys indicate White's operational distance began formalizing around 2015, when TKO parent company structures shifted oversight to dedicated departments.
The timing matters for UFC's $21.4 billion enterprise value and ongoing litigation exposure. Antitrust plaintiffs are seeking damages related to alleged fighter pay suppression between 2010 and 2017. White's testimony creates a procedural gap: if he was not setting terms, discovery now shifts to Hunter Campbell (chief business officer) and the compensation committee White previously described as "basically me and Lorenzo [Fertitta]." Depositions are scheduled through June.
Jones reversed his public support of White in December after the UFC declined to negotiate an interim purse structure for a postponed Tom Aspinall fight. Jones' manager, Malki Kawa, told ESPN the heavyweight wanted percentage points tied to pay-per-view buys above 700,000 units, a threshold Jones has cleared twice since moving to heavyweight. White called the ask "not how we do business" in a December scrum. Two weeks later, Jones posted then deleted an Instagram story calling White's public negotiation tactics "disrespectful to a champion."
The White House clash occurred at a January event honoring championship teams. Jones arrived without UFC credentials and sat in a section designated for political guests, according to three attendees who spoke on background. White was seated with the athletic delegation. A brief exchange near the venue exit was described by one witness as "louder than a handshake, quieter than a scene." Neither party has commented on specifics.
White's "Michael Jordan" comparison carries structural weight beyond reconciliation theater. Jones is 37, holds heavyweight and light-heavyweight legacy wins, and represents the promotion's last major star developed entirely under Zuffa ownership before the 2016 WME-IMG acquisition. His next fight—likely Aspinall in Q3—projects to 1.2 million buys at current betting-market interest levels. That would rank second all-time for UFC, behind only McGregor-Khabib.
The contract testimony also affects Conor McGregor's return timeline. McGregor has two fights remaining on his current UFC deal, signed in 2018 with tiered purse escalators based on buy rate. If White is not negotiating extensions, McGregor's team now routes requests through Campbell, who has historically moved slower on marquee renewals. McGregor last fought in July 2021. His USADA testing-pool re-entry window closed in December without resolution.
For team presidents and sponsors evaluating UFC partnership risk, White's testimony creates surface-level operational clarity but deepens structural questions. If the president is not setting fight terms or pay, his public persona as closer and kingmaker becomes brand theater rather than business function. That distinction matters for sponsors buying White's personal appearances or quote rights in activation packages.
Watch for Jones-Aspinall fight announcement timing relative to White's next scheduled deposition in March, and whether McGregor's team files a formal contract dispute if extension talks stall beyond April. The antitrust plaintiff attorneys are also expected to depose Campbell before summer.
White has called Jones the pound-for-pound greatest twice before—once in 2015 after the Daniel Cormier win, and again in 2023 after Jones took the heavyweight belt. Both times preceded contract renewals within 90 days.
The takeaway
White praises Jones publicly while testifying he hasn't negotiated fighter contracts in a decade, shifting antitrust exposure and creating extension uncertainty for the promotion's biggest active draw.
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