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Thread: You too could own a UFC Gym

  1. #1

    You too could own a UFC Gym

    Another sign of the apocalypse.

    Franchises are available! http://www.ufcgym.com/franchising/

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Was contacted by someone out of Vegas about 'getting in on this exciting f*cking opportunity.'

    I've got business clients in Vegas, kinda thought they were messing with me.

    I declined. Maybe I was too hasty...
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    "Who dies first," he mumbled through smashed and bloody lips.

  3. #3
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    Feb 2008
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    I see, it's a full service gym with "MMA" and BJJ classes, who are teaching these classes? Somebody that has trained and competed OR someone who has taken a crash course and teaches highly structure classes from a manual?

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Almost A Ghost View Post
    I see, it's a full service gym with "MMA" and BJJ classes, who are teaching these classes? Somebody that has trained and competed OR someone who has taken a crash course and teaches highly structure classes from a manual?
    Looks like they hire people to teach: http://www.ufcgym.com/about-us/jobs/

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by MightyB View Post
    Looks like they hire people to teach: http://www.ufcgym.com/about-us/jobs/
    OK, but the requirements to be an MMA teacher seem pretty ambiguous "MMA Private Trainers must also have Martial Arts, Wrestling or Boxing experience."

    Then again, their target demographic probable won't care and then defend it to the death after the start forking over the money.
    Last edited by Almost A Ghost; 06-05-2014 at 12:58 PM.

  6. #6
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    The conversation with the sales rep I had seemed to indicate they bring in people with some coaching experience in the area they'd be working.

    Around here, that would've meant poaching from several MMA gyms, a few which are part of a chain.

    I ended up not doing it just because I'm not worth anywhere near what they require for their smallest locale, and I can't stand the idea of wearing anyone's name on my chest but mine.

    It'd be like Batman wearing a Fantastic Four shirt.
    BreakProof BackŪ Back Health & Athletic Performance
    https://sellfy.com/p/BoZg/

    "Who dies first," he mumbled through smashed and bloody lips.

  7. #7
    I'm one of the owners and coaches of Redline Fight Sports, www.redlinefightsports.com ... For a while we feared a UFC gym franchise opening up in the area to compete for our clientele and coaches. We had a big TapOut gym open nearby and they were gunning to take over the local MMA scene. This was about five years ago when TUF had just really taken off in the mainstream, and who could blame them? This definitely made waves in the marketplace that we, and a couple other well established local MMA gyms definitely felt the repercussions of. So we just spoke with all our staff in an all-hands-on-deck meeting and recommitted to being the BEST gym in the Boston area. Instead of fracturing we upped our game and went to war.

    I heard from some of my coaches that they'd been offered nice deals to teach over there, but they declined. You can't really buy real loyalty. You have to build it together from the grass-roots up. Our sense of team and community was too strong a bond. They came at the market place with high dollar ad campaigns, but nearly all our clientele liked our genuine environment more than the new swain mats and part-time instructors that they had to offer. I did my homework and took the full gym tours, heard their sales pitches and methods and learned as much as I could about them. Those gyms were really nicely finished to high end mats and equipment. But they were made up of mostly mercenaries from other various MMA gym who were looking to jump on a gravy train. Their overhead was very high, and their atmosphere was pretty dead compared to our gym. Not just small class sizes, but lacking the cohesion that can only be built over time from genuine hard work and comradere. Compared to us, they were never truly a TEAM. After a while I could see the TapOut gym getting desperate with their deals, and I'd go by at their peak hours and count students, and knew that they couldn't possibly be breaking even. It was like an MMA match on a macro scale, were we had the dominant position and ground-n-pounded them, then sunk in the rear naked choke and watched their last second thrashing in desperation until we choked them unconscious and out of business. It was a very satisfying victory. We worked our a$$es off to be the best and beat teh deep pocket backed franchises at their own game. Once things started coming unglued for them, there was reportedly lots of infighting. There's also been a Title Boxing gym opened up in the region, but they're really not a direct competitor being mostly a cardio-factory, and they're far enough away as not to be a factor.

    So while we don't want to let our guard down and write them off as harmless, we no longer fear the prospect of a big UFC gym opening around here and we'd actually welcome the challenge to put another ambitious gym and owners out of business. And I think that any businessmen thinking of opening a UFC Training Center in the Boston area would be well advised to think long and hard before taking the plunge into this marketplace, where they'll end up being submitted into bankruptcy. The established MMA gyms here (us, SYT, WK, SSSF etc) are too strong for a franchise to come in and take over. That might work in Vegas but not in Boston. Now we'd actually welcome the challenge.

  8. #8
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    UFC Performance Institute Shanghai



    UFC Wants to Turn Shanghai Into a Mixed Martial Arts Mecca
    The company says it’s going to build the world’s largest MMA training facility in the eastern Chinese megacity.
    Kenrick Davis
    Nov 29, 2018 5-min read

    SHANGHAI — It’s been a big month for mixed martial arts in China. On Nov. 20, the sport’s largest promotion company, Ultimate Fighting Championship, or UFC, announced plans for a $13 million training center in China. The 93,000-square-foot UFC Performance Institute Shanghai will be the largest MMA training facility in the world and will feature a gym, sparring areas, recovery pools, and the sport’s iconic octagonal rings — one complete with stadium-style lighting and spectator seating.

    UFC said at a press conference in Shanghai last week that the center will help train China’s next generation of MMA fighters and spread the sport throughout the country. There are currently 11 Chinese fighters — eight men and three women — on UFC’s roster of 461 athletes from around the world, and the company hopes to triple this figure in 2019. In just the past year, the number of users on social app WeChat who follow UFC’s official account has increased by 60 percent.

    On Saturday, UFC held its 141st Fight Night event at Beijing’s Cadillac Arena to a crowd of over 10,000 — the second time an installment in the series had ever been staged in China. Although a faceoff between elite heavyweights Curtis Blaydes and Francis Ngannou was nominally the night’s main draw, two local fighters attracted the most attention from domestic media present at the event — and they did not disappoint their home crowd.

    UFC’s most experienced Chinese fighter, Li Jingliang — known as The Leech for his mastery of headlock submission holds — defeated his German opponent, David Zawada, by delivering a deft kick to the midsection. Meanwhile, 20-year-old rising star Song Yadong — dubbed The Kung Fu Monkey after the simian hero in the Chinese epic “Journey to the West” — won his fight against American Vince Morales in three rounds. The three female Chinese participants — all of whom won their matches — also turned heads, especially Zhang Weili, who “mauled” veteran Jessica Aguilar of the U.S. to claim her 18th straight victory.


    Chinese mixed martial artist Zhang Weili celebrates after her victory at UFC’s first-ever event in Beijing, Nov. 24, 2018. Courtesy of UFC

    The MMA training facility coming to Shanghai represents a major investment in developing the sport in China, where it was little-known just a decade ago, Kevin Chang, the Asia-Pacific vice president of UFC, told Sixth Tone during last week’s press conference. When the company entered the Chinese market in 2011, there were myriad misconceptions about MMA — like whether it was real fighting or merely a testosterone-fueled performance akin to a World Wrestling Entertainment event.

    Over the past few years, the sport has gradually found a foothold in China thanks to UFC, local promoters, and the Singapore-based ONE Championship, with specialized MMA gyms popping up across the country. For its part, UFC has cultivated a Chinese fan base by inking broadcasting deals, expanding its social media presence, and grooming local stars like Li, who has over half a million followers on microblogging platform Weibo.

    But the sport has also courted its fair share of controversy. In April 2017, MMA fighter and promoter Xu Xiaodong attempted to demonstrate the superiority of his craft by pummelling an older, portlier tai chi master in a heavily criticized fight. More recently, a brawl that ensued on the sidelines of a high-profile Las Vegas showdown between MMA stars Conor McGregor and Khabib Nurmagomedov — known among Chinese fans by their respective nicknames, Mouth Cannon and Little Eagle — was widely reported and commented on in China.

    Reputation management remains an ongoing challenge for such an inherently violent pastime, said Chang. “We’re not a bloodless sport,” he said candidly, adding that lax standards at local, non-UFC events — many of which don’t have the resources to test athletes for doping — have led to incidents that tarnish the sport’s reputation. “When something quote-unquote ‘bad’ happens in MMA, it affects all of us, and it affects that perception which we’re trying so hard to correct,” Chang said, noting that conditions at domestically organized fights seem to be improving at least.


    American mixed martial artist Vince Morales protects himself from a punch thrown by his Chinese opponent, Song Yadong, at a UFC Fight Night event in Beijing, Nov. 24, 2018. Courtesy of UFC

    American Ramsey Dewey, a former MMA fighter who now runs a gym in Shanghai, describes some of the hassles he experienced in the sport’s early days in China on his popular YouTube channel: a fighter covering himself in oil to slip out of holds, promoters vanishing without making payments, trainers supplying banned materials to bind fighters’ hands, and competitors kicking the heads of their fallen opponents. According to Dewey, his MMA career ended after a bout with a Chinese fighter who had wrapped his fingers with a dangerous kind of tape provided by event organizers. “One single punch shattered my skull,” Dewey says in one of his videos, explaining how certain wrapping materials can pack a harder punch.

    Although most injuries are superficial and not life-threatening, local authorities can be nervous about events taking place under their watch, UFC fighter Wang Guan told Sixth Tone at last week’s press conference. Wang — or The Dongbei Tiger, as he’s sometimes known — competed in China’s first Fight Night event a year ago. He’s also the man Dewey says forced him into early retirement, though Wang maintains that his hand bindings were legitimate. According to the Chinese fighter, officials are afraid of competitors suffering severe injuries and have been known to shut events down early. Nevertheless, Wang said MMA in China has come a long way in recent years — particularly with respect to the quality of referees, whose split-second decisions can prevent curtailed careers — and he’s bullish about its continued growth.

    “Judging by how things are developing in China, I think MMA will be the dominant fighting sport here in the future,” he said.

    For now, though, Chinese fans are holding out for a champion and remain only slightly bitter that local fighters seem to have such a hard time getting matched up against the world’s leading competitors. Li, for example, has had 11 UFC fights, but none were against top-40 opponents. But according to Chang, UFC’s Asia-Pacific vice president, it’s only a matter of time before Chinese fighters will have the chance to prove themselves against elite competition.

    “Even before the establishment of the Shanghai Performance Institute, some of our [Chinese fighters] could already hang with the best of the best — it takes years to get a title shot,” Chang said. “I don’t think it’s unrealistic to expect that we’ll have some contenders in the next couple years.”

    Editor: David Paulk.

    (Header image: Li Jingliang of China lands a kick against David Zawada of Germany during the UFC Fight Night in Beijing, Nov. 24, 2018. Greg Baker/VCG)
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    You too could own a UFC Gym
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