Scott Coker on postponing Bellator 241: ‘Bigger things to worry about’ during coronavirus pandemic

In a Q&A with MMA Junkie, the Bellator president discusses what went into the decision, where the promotion goes from here, and more.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. – Bellator president Scott Coker had to make a down-to-the-wire decision, but he thinks he made the call.

Bellator 241 was scheduled to take place Friday night at Mohegan Sun Arena. As fight week progressed, restrictions on the event increased due to the global cornavirus pandemic. First, it was decided, fans wouldn’t be allowed to attend. Then media wasn’t allowed in. Finally, just hours before the event, the promotion pulled the plug and postponed the card entirely. Despite the postponement, all fighters were compensated, according to Coker.

In his first interview since the promotion announced the postponement, Coker sat down with MMA Junkie to discuss the decision-making process and what’s next.

Hear what he had to say in the video above or read below:

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Can you talk us through the decision to postpone tonight’s event?

“It’s an unfortunate time not just for this country, but worldwide. There are much bigger things to worry about than fights. With the current climate, we just felt like it was the right decision to make.”

Who made the ultimate call? Was it Bellator? The state government? The Mohegan commission?

“We had conversations with everybody. At the end of the day, it was this company’s decision to make that move.”

How much did the optics of this virus lead to your decision? Were you concerned about how it would have reflected on Bellator?

“It wasn’t even a consensus of the outside looking in. It was the inside looking out – how our fellow staffers, production people, some of the fighters and corners felt. It was the right thing to do. We said, ‘Just call it.’ That was really how the decision was made. Nobody called me from the outside and said, ‘You guys should go do this.’ If you had asked me yesterday at this time, I’d say full steam ahead. We had an amazing press conference in New York. That was only Monday. That was like four days. We had all this great media and press. You know what? That seems like it was a month ago now with all the momentum this virus has been gaining on this country – and worldwide.

Looking forward, what’s the plan for this card? You said it’s going to be postponed, but are there any additional details?

“We’re going to monitor how this thing starts gaining momentum or losing momentum, but there’s no plans. You can’t make plans when there is uncertainty like this. It’s tough to make plans because we don’t know, but we will be monitoring. It’s a fluid scenario. What if they find a vaccine? What if they find they can contain it? What if other sports start engaging again? These are all things we’ll be monitoring. This is a certain cycle because it’s a tournament fight. Just so you know, fighters were paid. Officials were paid. Cutmen were paid. All of the producers, the lighting guys, everybody got paid. Nobody was shortchanged. We want to make sure everybody had what they thought they were going to get. Everybody gets to go home and be with their families now.”

The UFC has decided to move some events to its Apex facility. Have you guys considered doing something like this?

“Viacom owns Paramount pictures. We could go to a lot and do the same thing. The question is: When is the right time to do it? I’m not sure that’s going to be anytime soon. We’ll monitor it for the next 30 days, and hopefully the testing will become a little bit more available, and you’ll get the results back quicker. I think that’s the most important thing: Test everybody. Then you can throw an event like that. You can say, ‘We’ll test everybody. If you guys come into the building, you know everybody is clean.’ It’s a very interesting time. I’ve never seen anything like this in my lifetime.”

Seemingly anyone can catch coronavirus, but do you think the nature of MMA makes the athletes more susceptible?

“I think they’re probably the least at risk. I know a couple basketball players have been infected with the virus, but they’re saying if you’re young, athletic, and in-shape, you’re kind of out of the age group it’s been impacting. I think that (group) is a little bit older, and health issues may already be in place. Who knows? It might be a situation where the younger athletes can sustain a virus to their immune system. Listen, I’m not a doctor. I have no idea. I’m just regurgitating what I’m hearing on the news. That’s really what this conversation is moving to.”

Beyond this event, what is the plan for the other events on the schedule? Can you even plan anything at this point?

“Everything is on hold. The whole schedule is on hold. I told my staff, ‘Look, guys. Stay home. Enjoy your family. Do the prep work you can do, but I don’t expect to see you in the office anytime soon. I’ll give you a call as things start to develop.’ It’s really unnecessary because we’re a team that travels on the road 30 days a year. That’s a lot of on-the-road traveling. These guys can stay home and we’ll talk through cellphone and the video system. We’ll figure it out. San Jose might get moved. Maybe it doesn’t. I haven’t talked to the venue there. I think a lot of people are waiting for the rest of the speech to see what happens today. I think a lot of people thought there would be a travel ban. I’m not sure what (president Trump) is going to do.

“… That’s why a lot of our fighters and some of our staff are like, ‘We’ve got to get out of here.’ They feel like Trump is going to put a travel ban on the whole country. Most of our staff lives in California.”

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Bellator 241 was due to be headlined by featherweight and lightweight champion Patricio Freire (30-4 MMA, 18-4 BMMA), who was set to put his 145-pound title on the line against Pedro Carvalho (11-3 MMA, 4-0 BMMA) in the quarterfinals of Bellator’s ongoing featherweight grand prix. The co-main event was scheduled to feature the other remaining quarterfinal matchup between Emmanuel Sanchez (19-4 MMA, 11-3 BMMA) and Daniel Weichel (40-11 MMA, 9-3 BMMA).

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Scott Coker, Matt Erickson, Nolan King react to Bellator 241’s postponement due to coronavirus

Scott Coker, Matt Erickson, Nolan King react to Bellator 241’s postponement due to coronavirus

Scott Coker, Matt Erickson, Nolan King react to Bellator 241’s postponement due to coronavirus

Coronavirus prompts Bellator 241 postponement hours before event was set to begin

After initially deciding to proceed behind closed doors, Bellator made the change to postpone the event altogether.

Bellator 241 officially has been postponed, promotion president Scott Coker announced Friday just hours before the event was set to begin.

The health and safety of everyone involved have, and will remain, our top priority as we move forward,” Coker said in a statement after the news was first reported by Fightful.com. “After carefully monitoring the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak, Bellator MMA has chosen to postpone this evening’s Bellator 241 event at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut. We would like to apologize to our athletes and fans, as well as our broadcast partner DAZN, but we feel this is the best decision to be made at this time.”

Bellator officials told MMA Junkie that all fighters will be compensated with their show money being paid.

On Tuesday, Connecticut Gov. Ted Lamont declared a public health emergency and on Thursday signed an executive order that, in part, prohibits public gatherings in excess of 250 people.

Following that order, Bellator transitioned their event to a behind-closed-doors show, but now, after further monitoring of the situation surrounding the coronavirus outbreak, the promotion has taken the decision to postpone the show.

The global coronavirus pandemic has prompted a plethora of sporting events and leagues – including the NBA, NHL, NCAA tournaments, MLS, and English Premier League among others – to be suspended or postponed.

Bellator 241 was due to be headlined by featherweight and lightweight champion Patricio Freire (30-4 MMA, 18-4 BMMA), who was set to put his 145-pound title on the line against Pedro Carvalho (11-3 MMA, 4-0 BMMA) in the quarterfinals of Bellator’s ongoing featherweight grand prix. The co-main event was scheduled to feature the other remaining quarterfinal matchup, between Emmanuel Sanchez (19-4 MMA, 11-3 BMMA) and Daniel Weichel (40-11 MMA, 9-3 BMMA).

The MMA Road Show with John Morgan, No. 259 – Las Vegas – Coronavirus concerns

“The MMA Road Show with John Morgan” No. 259 sees the boys discussing the impact the coronavirus is having on the MMA world.

Episode No. 259 of “The MMA Road Show with John Morgan” podcast is now available for streaming and download.

MMA Junkie lead staff reporter John Morgan hosts the show while traveling the world to cover the sport.

Is there any way to not talk about coronavirus? John Morgan and Cold Coffee both admit they would prefer talking about this weekend’s UFC and Bellator events, but how can you not focus on the massive issue at hand?

Check it out on iTunes or at themmaroadshow.com. You can also subscribe via RSS.

Bellator 241 live and official results (7:30 p.m. ET)

Bellator 241 takes place Friday, and you can join us for a live video stream and official results beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET (4:30 p.m. PT).

Bellator 241 takes place Friday, and you can join us for a live video stream and official results beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET (4:30 p.m. PT).

The event takes place at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. The main card streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie. In an unprecedented situation for the promotion, the event will take place in an empty arena with fans no longer allowed to attend due to the worldwide coronavirus outbreak.

In the main event, featherweight and lightweight champion Patricio Freire (30-4 MMA, 18-4 BMMA) puts his 145-pound title on the line against Pedro Carvalho (11-3 MMA, 4-0 BMMA) in a fight that doubles as a quarterfinal bout in the ongoing featherweight tournament. In the co-main event, Emmanuel Sanchez (19-4 MMA, 11-3 BMMA) meets Daniel Weichel (40-11 MMA, 9-3 BMMA) in another quarterfinal fight.

Official Bellator 241 results include:

MAIN CARD (DAZN, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Champ Patricio Freire vs. Pedro Carvalho – for featherweight title; featherweight tournament quarterfinal
  • Emmanuel Sanchez vs. Daniel Weichel – featherweight tournament quarterfinal
  • Ronny Markes vs. Matt Mitrione
  • Paul Daley vs. Sabah Homasi
  • Nick Newell vs. Zach Zane
  • Fabio Aguiar vs. Anatoly Tokov

PRELIMINARY CARD (MMA Junkie, 7:30 p.m. ET)

  • Pat McCrohan vs. Jordan Newman
  • Mark Lemminger vs. Ion Pascu
  • Jessy Miele vs. Leslie Smith
  • Nate Andrews vs. Killys Mota
  • Marcus Surin vs. Vladimir Tokov
  • Romero Cotton vs. Justin Sumter
  • Kevin Ferguson Jr. vs. Kaheem Murray
  • Billy Goff vs. Robson Gracie Jr.

Bellator 241 discussion thread

Bellator 241 takes place Friday in Connecticut, and you can discuss the event here.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. – MMA Junkie is on scene and reporting live from Friday’s Bellator 241 event at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn., which kicks off at 7:30 p.m. ET (4:30 p.m. PT). You can discuss the event here.

Be sure to follow along with the latest card updates in our Bellator 241 live results post, and then discuss the event in the comments section below.

Round-by-round updates and official results begin at approximately 7:30 p.m. ET for the preliminary card and 10 p.m. ET for the main card.

In need of rebound after no contest, ‘Baby Slice’ staying relaxed, focused for Bellator 241

After having what he thought was a win overturned in his most recent fight, Kevin Ferguson Jr. is in need of a rebound.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. – After having what he thought was a win overturned in his most recent fight, [autotag]Kevin Ferguson Jr.[/autotag] is in need of a rebound.

“Baby Slice” Ferguson had a 38-second TKO victory flipped to a no contest when he was deemed to have landed illegal blows against Craig Campbell this past October. That came on the heels of a TKO loss more than a year prior, which means Ferguson is looking for his first win in nearly two years.

Ferguson Jr. (3-2 MMA, 3-2 BMMA) takes on Kaheem Murray (3-3 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) in a 160-pound contract weight bout on the preliminary card at Bellator 241, which takes place at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. The main card streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie.

Can Kimbo Slice’s son get back in the win column? Check out the video above to hear Ferguson break down the fight and his career so far.

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Leslie Smith plans to ‘focus on the finish’ ahead of Bellator 241 return

Bellator women’s featherweight contender Leslie Smith says her recent decision loss has reminded her to press for the finish ahead of her bout at Bellator 241.

UNCASVILLE, Conn – [autotag]Leslie Smith[/autotag] returns to action at Bellator 241 on Friday after being served with a sharp reminder of one of MMA’s age-old mantras: “Never leave it in the hands of the judges.”

Smith lost a unanimous decision against Arlene Blencowe at Bellator 233 last time out, and admitted that she had become just a little too comfortable being in a fistfight, rather than going hard for the stoppage.

“It’s a reminder to never leave it to the judges – frickin’ judges!” she sighed. “I know it. Everyone knows you can’t leave to the judges. But it’s easy to forget that sometimes, especially if you’re like me and you’re just having a really good time fighting and having fun punching people in the face. It reminds me that I need to really focus on the finish, so that’s what I’m going to do in this fight.”

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Smith (11-8-1 MMA, 1-1 BMMA) takes on Jessy Miele (9-3 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) in a featherweight bout at Mohegan Sun Arena. The event takes place Friday at Mohegan Sun Arena. The main card streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie. And, after watching tape of her opponent’s recent performances, Smith said she’s looking forward to facing a fighter with a fighting style she believes will mesh well with her own.

“I think that she’s a very well-rounded fighter, and I’m excited to see that it looks like she comes forward, and I think she’s going to bring out a very good and exciting fight,” Smith said. “I’m looking forward to that.”

“I’m ready for everything. In (her) last fight I saw she had a lot of confidence in the striking. … I’m excited about fighting people that have a lot of confidence in the striking because I just love to punch people in the face. It’s a lot easier to punch someone in the face when they’re trying to punch you in the face at the same time, so that’s where I know that I shine the most. I’m ready for any place else that it might end up, and we’ll see.”

Victory could potentially push Smith towards her goal of a title fight with newly-crowned 145-pound champion Cris Cyborg, though she admitted that she isn’t concerning herself with that possibility as she focuses on the job at hand.

“I have no idea (if I’ll be next); it’s not really anything that’s in my control,” Smith said. “That is always the hot question, ‘If you win this, are you going to get a title fight?’ or ‘How far away from a title fight are you?’ Well, I’ve been hearing ‘title fight’ since I signed for the division. I don’t write the contracts, I just sign them, so all I can do is win the fight and then we’ll see what comes up.”

Bellator 241 breakdown: Will Emmanuel Sanchez have his revenge vs. Daniel Weichel?

MMA Junkie fight analyst Dan Tom takes a closer look at the Bellator 241 co-main event between Emmanuel Sanchez and Daniel Weichel.

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MMA Junkie analyst Dan Tom breaks down the Bellator’s top bouts. Today, we look at the co-main event for Bellator 241.

Bellator 241 takes place Friday at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. The main card streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie.

Daniel Weichel (40-11 MMA, 9-3 BMMA)

Staple info:

  • Height: 5’10” Age: 35 Weight: 145 lbs. Reach: 71″
  • Last fight: Decision win over Saul Rogers (Sept. 28, 2019)
  • Camp: MMA Spirit (Germany)
  • Stance/striking style: Orthodox/kickboxing
  • Risk management: Good

Supplemental info:

+ M-1 Global lightweight title
+ Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt
+ 5 KO victories
+ 22 submission wins
+ 20 first-round finishes
+ Consistent pace and pressure
+ Solid feints and footwork
+ Fundamentally sound striker
^ Seldom out of position
+ Strong inside of the clinch
+ Serviceable wrestling ability
+ Good transitional grappler
+ Excellent submission acumen

Emmanuel Sanchez (19-4 MMA, 11-3 BMMA)

Staple info:

  • Height: 5’9″ Age: 29 Weight: 145 lbs. Reach: 76″
  • Last fight: Submission win over Tywan Claxton (Sept. 7, 2019)
  • Camp: Roufusport (Milwaukee, WI)
  • Stance/striking style: Orthodox/kickboxing
  • Risk management: Fair

Supplemental info:

+ Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt
+ 1 KO victory
+ 8 submission victories
+ 6 first-round finishes
+ Relentless pace and pressure
^ Improves as the fight wears on
+ Solid combination striker
^ Punctuates well with kicks
+ Excellent transitional grappler
+ Superb scrambler
^ Impeccable improvisation
+ Active and attacking guard
^ Strikes, sweeps, scrambles

Point of interest: Striking the second time around

The co-main event in Uncasville features a fun rematch that takes place within the confines of Bellator’s featherweight grand prix.

In their first meeting, [autotag]Daniel Weichel[/autotag] was able to edge out [autotag]Emmanuel Sanchez[/autotag] via well-placed counters and instances of control. Both men have continued to sharpen their tools since then, as I will be curious to see if either adjust their vaunted styles for their second meeting.

Hailing from the Roufusport academy, Sanchez possesses all the well-rounded tools you would suspect to see from that gym, something that further fills the bank of techniques that his combinations draw from. Not afraid to string his punches together, Sanchez will vary his levels of attack, punctuating his presence with weapons that range from switch-kicks to spinning assaults.

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The 29-year-old’s talents and vigor only seem to pick to up steam as the fight wears on, however – despite Sanchez’s best efforts to roll his head offline after his attacks – his aggression traditionally tends to make him a bit hittable in the early going, which could be, once again, problematic against a sharpshooter like Weichel.

Despite starting his career as an overly enthusiastic striker who shot sporadically, Weichel has shored up his fundamentals over time and become a sound defensive fighter. The 18-year pro works well behind a high guard, keeping short, jab-cross counters on a hair-trigger.

When feeling in stride, Weichel will punctuate his offensive flurries with hard kicks that range from up high to down low. Still, with Weichel not beyond being countered himself, I will be interested to see if the German fights more or less conservative considering both the high-output opponent and five-round affair that will be in front of him.

Next point of interest: Potential grappling pitfalls