UFC president Dana White testified in federal court that he is completely removed from fighter contract negotiations and matchmaking decisions, marking a structural shift inside the $12.1 billion promotion that TKO Group Holdings now operates under Endeavor's portfolio. White, who has led UFC for 25 years, told the court he does not handle fighter contracts. Chief Business Officer Hunter Campbell runs those talks.
The testimony came during antitrust litigation in which former fighters allege UFC systematically suppressed compensation. White's courtroom comments formalize what several agents already understood: the man who once negotiated every significant deal now focuses on broadcast appearances, sponsor dinners, and equity-holder relations. Matchmaker Mick Maynard and matchmaking VP Sean Shelby handle the fight cards. Campbell, a former mixed martial arts manager who joined UFC in 2017, controls the money conversations.
The timing matters because TKO merged UFC with WWE in April 2023, creating a public entity that must now report fighter pay as a line item. UFC's average disclosed fighter purse in 2023 was roughly $160,000 per athlete across all events, according to state athletic commission filings, though those figures exclude undisclosed locker-room bonuses and performance incentives. The antitrust plaintiffs argue UFC's exclusive contracts and ancillary revenue clauses—White's innovations during the Zuffa era—artificially cap what fighters earn compared to boxing's open market. White stepping back from negotiations removes his name from discovery documents going forward, but it does not remove the contracts he signed from 2001 through roughly 2020.
Sponsors care because fighter pay disputes create brand-safety risk. Bud Light, Toyo Tires, and DraftKings anchor UFC's $1.1 billion annual media and sponsorship revenue. A public fight over fighter compensation—especially one that produces sworn testimony about who knew what—complicates renewal conversations. One Fortune 500 CMO told colleagues in September that UFC's next media-rights cycle, which begins in 2025 negotiations, depends partly on whether fighter pay becomes a persistent storyline. Campbell's elevation to contract czar gives sponsors a business-affairs executive to call instead of a promoter known for profane press conferences.
Family offices sizing TKO equity are watching the litigation schedule. The antitrust case is set for trial in 2024, and damages could reach $1.6 billion if plaintiffs prevail and damages are trebled under antitrust law. White's testimony suggests UFC is building a corporate-governance defense: contracts are now handled by a licensed attorney (Campbell is a former lawyer) under standard procedures, not by a president operating on instinct. Whether that insulates TKO's valuation depends on how much historical liability the plaintiffs can prove.
What to watch: Campbell's next moves on contract restructuring, particularly whether UFC offers multi-fight deals with guaranteed minimums instead of bout-by-bout agreements. The promotion has quietly tested tiered base salaries with fighters ranked inside the top fifteen in each division. Expect Campbell to expand that model if the antitrust case survives summary judgment. Also watch whether White's reduced operational role leads to an official title change before TKO's 2024 investor day.
White remains UFC's public face and retains his president title, but the org chart now reflects what WWE's structure already showed: Endeavor's portfolio companies run on executive teams, not auteurs. The man who built UFC no longer prices its labor.