Chael Sonnen says UFC 151 was 'bigger than one bratty, entitled kid,' it's too late
We can argue all we want about who looks bad and who looks worse after the cancelation of UFC 151, but the one person who seems beyond reproach in this whole mess is – bizarrely enough – Chael Sonnen.
The controversial former middleweight contender is, according to UFC President Dana White, the lone fighter who was willing to step up on eight days' notice and face light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. He's also the one who assumed the fight was his after a phone call with UFC representatives on Wednesday night, he said, only to find out otherwise when the champion proved to have other ideas.
"All I ever heard was a flat-out offer," Sonnen told MMAjunkie.com (
www.mmajunkie.com). "It was, 'Hey, do you want to fight Jon Jones next Saturday night?' I said yes, and that was it. We got off the phone. I was just waiting on the contract at that point."
With that bit of business settled, Sonnen said he headed off to his evening training session where he practiced "like a normal day, except maybe a little bit harder," then returned home, where he thought there'd be a contract awaiting his signature. But no, not yet. Figuring it was only a matter of time, Sonnen went to bed. When he got a phone call from White at around six o'clock Thursday morning telling him that Jones had turned the fight down, he was confused.
"I didn't know that was an option," he said. "I've never heard of such a thing. I follow boxing real close and MMA and the whole bit, and I can't ever remember hearing of a thing like this where a champion is healthy and in shape and is headlining a card, and he won't take the fight. ...It's a unique situation."
The question on Sonnen's mind, he said, was why? Why would Jones, who was already in training and preparing for a bout on the same night, turn down a fight with him? Of course, Sonnen being Sonnen, he's not one to let the opportunity for a little trash talk slip by. Not when it's this inviting.
"I'm not saying that Jon Jones is chicken cordon bleu, and I'm not saying that he's chicken salad. What I'm saying is he is chicken shhhh ... should I finish the sentence?" Sonnen said.
Not bad, considering he's had less than a full day to work on it. But come on, seriously.
"Listen, I don't know Jon Jones and I won't try to guess," Sonnen said. "That's not my type of guy. I wasn't brought up that way. Those aren't the guys that helped me. I had Matt Lindland and Dan Henderson and Randy Couture. Not only physically did they show me the holds that I know how to use, but mentally, it's anybody, anytime, anywhere. Some guys love to put that on t-shirts and walk around like tough guys, but some of us actually live by that rule. It's a real important rule for me, because if there's one thing I hate it's a bully."
Here's where the careful reader might remark that this is the same exact term Jones used to describe Sonnen recently, telling MMAjunkie.com that the former middleweight was "a bona fide bully" for his remarks about Brazilians in the lead-up to his bouts with UFC 185-pound champion Anderson Silva.
But according to Sonnen, Jones "needs to consult a dictionary," because bullies don't call out fighters who are at the top of their game, as Sonnen insists he has, and they certainly aren't as willing as he is to step in and fight on short notice.
"It's very important to me that I'm not a bully, and the only litmus test I have for that is that I will fight any man there is," Sonnen said. "The day that changes, the day there's one single guy that I won't fight, then I won't fight any of them. I will never pick or say, 'Oh, I'll fight this guy because I think I can beat him.' That's what a bully does, and I'm not signing up to be one of those."
So what would Sonnen like to be? UFC light heavyweight champ, perhaps? Sure, that'd be nice, he said, "but I've got plenty of belts to keep my pants up."
How about some money then? A main event pay-per-view bout with Jones would probably have made for a very merry Christmas at the Sonnen household, but that wasn't his main motivation when he accepted the fight, he insisted.
"I'm the highest paid fighter in the UFC by a lot. It's not even close. I don't mean to bring up money and make it uncomfortable, but that's the reality. I don't need Jon Jones. If I had Jon Jones' contract, that would not be a good day for me. If Jon Jones had my contract, he'd burn his."
So what then? What was going through Sonnen's mind when, without a training camp to prepare or even much experience as a light heavyweight, he jumped at the chance to fight the man who many consider to be among the best fighters to ever compete in the division? If it wasn't about money or titles, what was it about?
Why, he's so very glad you asked.
"I was willing to step in to help the industry, to help the company, and to help the sport that I love," said Sonnen. "I have fans and friends and people I don't even know who are flying in to see this. There's people who have had to take time off work, save money, find babysitters, all so they can go out and see the greatest show known to man: a live UFC. There are fighters on the undercard who are quite literally depending on this $5,000 or $10,000 guarantee they get for showing up and walking out there and competing in the hardest sport in the world just to keep their lights on next month. And there's a domino effect from there. Those guys have managers and gym dues and sparring partners [for whom] the $75 or $100 they get is the difference between a meal or not. This is a huge deal. This is so much bigger than one bratty, entitled kid named Jon Jones."
And this is how, without throwing a single punch or even breaking a sweat, the legend of Chael Sonnen just got a little bit greater. Because, say what you want about Jones or White or the UFC itself, but it's hard to criticize the one guy who picked up the phone and said nothing but yes. Don't think he doesn't realize it, either.