Heavyweight veteran Mark Hunt has not been happy with the UFC, as of late. His displeasure is all rooted to management’s decision to pull him out of his supposed headliner against Marcin Tybura in Sydney, Australia this November.
At the height of emotion upon his removal, he lashed out at Dana White whom he branded as a “bald-headed prick” for pulling him after claiming that he was given medical clearance for the Sydney card.
White offered a short response to Hunt when TMZ caught up with a couple of weeks ago, saying he was only trying to “protect the fighters from themselves.” But most recently, he wrote an open letter of his own where he disputed all of Hunt’s claims.
“Mark Hunt was never ‘cleared’ to fight Marcin Tybura in Sydney, Australia this November. Period,” White wrote in his letter obtained by The Daily Telegraph. “And the statements he’s been making, saying that he is, are just not true.”
White also reiterated that the UFC is also about protecting its fighters, especially those who are already experiencing troubling health concerns.
“I get it, they’re fighters and they want to fight. But this only works if safety comes first, and that’s always been my goal — to provide a level playing field and a safe, regulated environment for our fighters to compete in.”
Below is the full version of White’s letter
Mark Hunt was never “cleared” to fight Marcin Tybura in Sydney, Australia this November. Period. And the statements he’s been making, saying that he is, are just not true.
Let me tell you what I know.
Mark Hunt recently wrote an op-ed piece for an Australian website that described some serious symptoms.
He wrote that he’s starting to stutter and slur his words.
He wrote that he’s not sleeping well.
He wrote that he can’t remember something he did yesterday.
These are his words, from him, but now he’s saying it was taken out of context. How can you take your own words out of context? So you know what I did? My team contacted his management within the first week of learning about these symptoms and offered to fly him to Las Vegas first class to visit the Lou Ruvo Brain Center — which is the best in the world for brain research — to get more tests done. And you know what? He absolutely refused.
How can I put a guy with these symptoms he said he’s experiencing immediately back in the Octagon without additional tests? I definitely wasn’t going to do that. So I did the only thing I could do — which is to pull him off an event that would have him fighting just nine weeks after writing his piece so he can have the proper time to see a specialist. Let me remind you that this is an event I already had signed contracts for and spent a lot of money marketing and advertising, so this was a big loss. But it was the right thing to do.
So here we are now. After all of this, Mark is saying that I have it out for him and I am holding a grudge because he filed a lawsuit. Let me ask you this:
Would I have placed him in two additional fights, including one in which he headlined the event?
Or paid him 1.645 million dollars, which includes a $50k Fight of the Night bonus and a $25k discretionary bonus?
All of this was AFTER the lawsuit, so how can anyone say I have any issues with this guy?
Bottom line, my job is to put on the best fights in the world and part of that is to protect these guys from themselves. I get it, they’re fighters and they want to fight. But this only works if safety comes first, and that’s always been my goal — to provide a level playing field and a safe, regulated environment for our fighters to compete in. I’ve been doing that for almost 20 years and I’m not going to stop now.
UFC Sydney will now be headlined by Tybura and former heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum. The event takes place on November 18th (November 19th in Australia) at the Qudos Bank Arena.