
The UFC may be entering a different kind of MMA market, with pressure no longer coming only from familiar rivals.
Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions launched its first MMA card last weekend, bringing another high-profile name into the sport’s promotional space.
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That arrives alongside fighter pay complaints and questions over UFC star power, making Scott Coker’s planned return feel more significant.
Scott Coker announces MMA return with new global promotion
Photo by José Prestes/PxImages/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Former Strikeforce founder and Bellator president, Coker has announced he is returning to MMA with a new global league planned for 2027.
His new project has raised $60 million, with financing led by Creator Sports Capital and support from investors across sport, media, technology and finance.
Tony Hawk is among the names attached to the venture, giving the project wider crossover appeal beyond the traditional MMA audience.
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Coker claims there is demand for a fresh global MMA brand built around competition, athlete respect and fighter stories.
UFC gap remains huge despite fresh competition
Coker’s return is still not an immediate threat to the UFC’s power because the financial gap between both operations is enormous.
His new league has raised $60 million, which is serious launch money, but it sits in a different world from UFC’s commercial scale.
For instance, the UFC’s new Paramount deal is worth $7.7 billion, reshaping its media future and distribution model.
That gives the UFC security, reach and leverage that no new promotion can quickly match.
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Still, MVP and Coker’s arrival both matter. They create alternatives, increase pressure, and force MMA’s market leader to defend more than just rankings.
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