I’m the boss of the UFC and I made a huge mistake in 2011 when I ruled out women ever fighting inside the octagon

3 months ago 30

DANA WHITE admits he made a huge mistake when he emphatically ruled out the prospect of women ever fighting in the UFC.

It may seem crazy given the elite and world-class female combatants in the UFC, but it wasn’t that long ago when women weren’t competing in mixed martial arts’ top promotion.

a referee holds a microphone in front of two women wearing ufc glovesUFC
Ronda Rousey and Liz Carmouche took part in the first women’s UFC fight in 2013[/caption]
a woman holding a ufc belt and a flagWomen’s MMA has gone from strength to strength over the last 11 yearsGETTY
a bald man in a suit looks at the cameraGETTY
UFC CEO Dana White once claimed women would ‘never’ fight in the promotion[/caption]

In fact, it’s only a little over 11 years since the MMA leader staged its first-ever fight between females at UFC 157 in February 2013.

That fight, of course, was the historic showdown between former long-reigning bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey and Liz Carmouche.

The turning point in the history of MMA came a mere two years after White said women would “NEVER” compete inside the octagon.

But 13 years removed from that statement and after a slew of iconic female fights, White admits women “needed to” enter the promotion.

Recalling Rousey’s historic fight with Carmouche in TNT SportsInside The UFC documentary, he said: “Once we were in that arena and she walked out.,

“Sold-out [arena] and the place just erupted when she walked out, I was like, ‘Yeah, this needed to be done.'”

Eleven years after Rousey vs Carmouche, the UFC now has three weight classes and a pound-for-pound rankings for women.

And some of the sport’s most beloved fighters – including the likes of Zhang Weili and Valentina Shevchenko – are women.

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The impact females entering the UFC has had on the growth of women’s MMA can’t be understated, as well as the global phenomenon Rousey was when she was at the peak of his powers.

White and the rest of the UFC brass deserve immense credit for investing the same amount of time, money and respect into women’s MMA as they have done with men’s.

But White, self-admittedly believes he was somewhat shortsighted not to recognise how they could elevate the sport and the organisation to new heights.

When reminded of his comments by ESPN: “What an idiot that guy was.”

a bald man wearing a blue hoodie with aviato on the sleeveReuters
Dana White has been blown away by the impact women in the UFC have had on the sport[/caption]
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