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27th March 2019
05:55pm GMT

"I’m here for seven more years…when I go, they can make a 180, 165, 122, whatever they want to do when I’m gone they can do. It ain’t happening while I’m here."
Fresh from the UFC's recent landmark broadcast deal with ESPN, White signed a new long-term contract extension with the promotion and he cannot see the sense in the argument that more weight divisions will result in more champion vs. champion bouts.
"What’s the appeal in it? A lot of guys who know they can’t win at either 170 or 155 would all jump ship," White continued.
"If you look at our 170 and 155 division, they’re stacked. You’ve got Usman, Woodley, Covington, Wonderboy, RDA, Masvidal, Askren, Till, Ponzinibbio, Lawler, Edwards. That’s 170. Lightweights at 155 you got Khabib, Conor, Tony, Poirier, Iaquinta, Kevin Lee who’s moving over to welterweight to make it even better, Edson Barboza, Gaethje, Pettis now is over in the welterweight division which makes it even better, Cerrone, Felder, Gillespie, Diaz.
"You build a 165lbs division, you completely drain both of those divisions. It ain’t happening while I’m here. These divisions are stacked, we’ve got tons of great fights in both divisions. We don’t need a 165lbs division."
One fighter who doesn't look like he will be fighting in any division again is Conor McGregor, who was a big proponent of the rumoured 165lbs division before his unexpected retirement announcement on Tuesday.
https://twitter.com/TheNotoriousMMA/status/1110410797925175296
Prior to his clash with Khabib Nurmagomedov at UFC 229, McGregor revealed that the "if there are two things that would keep me away from this game, it's the intense media obligations and the weight cuts."
'The Notorious' continued: "There should be many more weights to choose from. 155lbs to 170lbs, it’s a 15lbs gap.
"Even 10lbs is [a lot]. Boxing is every bloody 3lbs or something, there's a new fucking division. There's definitely space for more divisions and something needs to be done so we can keep an eye on the way people are cutting weight and manage it and make the sport more enjoyable for the athletes who are actually competing.
"You'll get better fights for it. You’ll get fighters that are able to do extraordinary things when they’re going in full of energy and correctly prepared rather than killing themselves."Explore more on these topics: