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Daniel Cormier scoffs at PFL becoming ‘co-leader’ with UFC: ‘It’s not close and it’s not going to be close’

UFC 290: Volkanovski v Rodriguez
Daniel Cormier | Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Daniel Cormier isn’t too worried about the PFL acquiring Bellator.

This past week, PFL announced it had officially acquired Bellator, ending months of speculation about a possible merger between the two biggest non-UFC MMA promotions in the world.

In the aftermath of acquisition, PFL Founder Donn Davis promised that this move would set the PFL up to become a “co-leader” with the UFC in the next few years. But Cormier isn’t buying that.

“I don’t know how you’re going to be the co-leader,” Cormier said, reacting to the merger on The MMA Hour. “You’re not going to be the co-leader. I’m sorry. The UFC is the standard. The UFC is the standard. They’ve got too big a head start. The level of fighters is just too high and it’s well-oiled machine.

“People will say, ‘Oh, this guy is a company man!’ Yes. They write me checks, a lot. [Laughs] But here’s the deal, the UFC has developed a product that is so far ahead of everything else, it’s crazy. From the production side, to the personnel and staff side, to the fighters, there’s nothing that compares. It’s not close, and it’s not going to be close.”

Cormier is a UFC Hall of Famer with deep ties to the promotion, currently working as a color commentator for the promotion on most of its big events. But prior to joining the UFC in 2013, he fought for Strikeforce, which was similarly positioned as the second-biggest non-UFC promotion in the world. He remembers just how wide the gulf between No. 1 and No. 2 truly was.

“It’s just not the truth,” Cormier said about Davis’ statements. “When I was in Strikeforce in the beginning, I remember we would be on CBS, and I would just rush to find the ratings to see how it did. I had to know how it did, because you wanted to feel like it was catching up, or you were on that level, because you knew, back then, UFC numbers were crazy. Pay-Per-View numbers they were doing back then were crazy. You were like, ‘Man, if Strikeforce can do 5 million views on cable, that’s a big number.

“And it was not ever really that. But you always looked for some sort of metric that put you on the same level as the UFC, and there’s really just not any. From crowd attendance to gates to PPVs, there’s just not a metric that’s going to show that you’re on that level.”

That’s not to say that Cormier doesn’t believe in the fighters currently competing in PFL and Bellator. He acknowledged that the current crop of Bellator champions is possibly the best in the history of the promotion, but it’s simply not the same.

“I think they’re good,” he said. “I think these guys can fight. I think these guys can really fight. I think anybody fighting at the highest level can fight. But come on, man.”

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