Scott Coker: With Jon Jones to heavyweight, Bellator has best 205-pound division on the planet

Scott Coker has put the spotlight squarely on Bellator’s light heavyweights.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. – Bellator president [autotag]Scott Coker[/autotag] feels good about his promotion’s light heavyweight division.

Coker is confident that Bellator now has the best 205-pound weight class in the world after UFC champion Jon Jones decided to vacate his belt and move up to heavyweight earlier this week.

With arguably one of the greatest fighters of all time gone from the UFC light heavyweight division, Coker believes his roster of fighters is better than any organization’s.

“Listen, with Jon Jones moving up to heavyweight, I think we have the best 205-pound weight class on the planet with Bader, Gegard wants to move up, we have (Lyoto) Machida, and we have Corey Anderson now,” Coker told MMA Junkie on Thursday. “We have a bunch of killers in that weight class. To me, we have a great roster of fights for him (Corey Anderson) – and even Phil Davis. I mean, we’ll be able to put some great fights together, and I’m excited about that division.”

[lawrence-related id=546362,546299,546540]

Bellator has many notable names in its light heavyweight division. Fighters such as Ryan Bader, Phil Davis, Lyoto Machida, Gegard Mousasi, Liam McGeary, Vadim Nemkov, and Raphael Carvalho are some of the names on the roster.

But in addition to those names, Bellator recently signed former UFC contender Corey Anderson. Coker is excited about the newest Bellator member.

“I got to meet him. I got breakfast with him and DC (Daniel Cormier) probably like two weeks ago, and he’s been training with DC,” Coker said. “DC said, ‘Hey, you have to take a look at this kid.’

“At the same time, Rich and Mike (Bellator matchmakers) were saying, ‘Hey, we should really sign him. He’s a top four or five guy in the world. He’d be a great addition to our 205 division.'”

[vertical-gallery id=546611]

Scott Coker stands by decision to cancel Bellator 241 amid coronavirus outbreak: ‘I just didn’t feel comfortable’

Bellator president Scott Coker discusses cancelation on Bellator 241, how promotion will be impacted by coronavirus moving forward.

[autotag]Scott Coker[/autotag] doesn’t regret the call to cancel last week’s Bellator 241.

The Bellator president believes he ultimately made the right choice in postponing the card just hours away from the event going live amid the ongoing coronavirus outbreak in the U.S.

The card was supposed to take place this past Friday night at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. Patricio “Pitbull” Freire and Pedro Carvalho were scheduled to headline the event in a featherweight title fight that also served as a Bellator featherweight grand prix quarterfinal.

“It’s a tough call,” Coker said on a recent episode of “The Luke Thomas Show.” “All the fighters were there, they weighed in, and it was already decided it was going to be a situation with no crowd. But certain things, I started talking to my staff saying, ‘If you don’t feel comfortable and want to be with your families, please go.’ The President had an emergency announcement and a lot of people thought it was going to shut the country down, that was the speculation.

“At the end of the day, I say we made the right call. I feel really good about that, and so does the company. When this thing finally comes to an end one day hopefully soon, we’ll get back to promoting the fights.”

At the time, there was a lot of uncertainty around how badly and how soon the outbreak could affect the U.S. Coker had the option to continue the event, but behind closed doors, barring fans from attending the the fights.

Yet, Coker and his team still decided not to continue on, and he says the decision boiled down to one key factor.

“There was one thing on my mind: ‘Is my staff, my fighters, my production crew, are we putting our people in harms way?,’ and I just couldn’t come to an answer on that,” Coker explained.

“I believe we made the right call because who really knows, right? I wasn’t sure about the situation, and rumors start flying around. And at the end of the day, I just didn’t feel comfortable, some of my staff didn’t feel comfortable, some of the production crew didn’t feel comfortable. So after a while, you go, ‘This is not going to be an event that we’re going to want to promote and feel good about promoting.’

“We’re talking about hours away from the first fight, so everyone was there, and then it was a matter of scrambling and getting everyone out of there. Because if there was a ban on flights, we need to get everyone to the airport and get them back into the city. We had people from out of the country that couldn’t fly after Monday, so we just felt the need that we needed to get these guys out of here. There is a time where people should be at home with their families hunkering down and being ready for whatever it is that’s going to come next.”

[lawrence-related id=499767,499628,499551]

Even with no event, Bellator still paid fighters, staff, and contractors that were supposed to work Bellator 241. Everyone was paid in full.

Coker is not sure to what extent coronavirus will affect MMA and sports in general. He’s not sure how the future will hold for Bellator, but at least there’s some time to address future events.

“We don’t know how long this is going to go on, how long before we can get test kits, test everyone, and create a vaccine,” Coker said. “Right now, there is so much uncertainty. I don’t want to speculate, but I don’t look at it as just the MMA industry. I look at it as a whole sports-and-entertainment sector and the talking about billions of dollars at that point.

“NBA is down, MLB is postponed, masses are canceled. I was in New York earlier in the week, and we had an amazing press conference and that to me seems like months ago now compared to when we were there announcing all of our great fights. It just seems like such great distance of time from that.

“We’re on a whole new pattern like everyone else. The only thing we can say is that on our calendar we didn’t have anything scheduled until May 9, so that gives us a couple of months window to see how it unfolds.”

[vertical-gallery id=498437]

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