wrestling / News

Ronda Rousey Explains Why Her Fight With Gina Carano Isn’t Going Through UFC

February 22, 2026 | Posted by Jeremy Thomas
Ronda Rousey WWE Smackdown Image Credit: WWE

Ronda Rousey and Gina Carano will fight in May, and she recently explained why the fight is going through MVP and not the UFC. Rousey and Carano will compete in a bout put on through Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions, which airs on Netflix on May May 16th.

Speaking with The Jim Rome Show, Rousey was asked why the fight went to MVP and not the UFC, the banner she previously fought under. Rousey said that she secured an agreement initially with Dana White for New Year’s, stating the deal would have been for the most for a fighter per PPV buy in history. However, she said Carano needed more time and that once she was ready, the UFC had finished its deal with Paramount and that the UFC didn’t want to set a precedent by paying her that mouth. You can see the highlights below:

On Reaching Out To Dana White:

‘Well, I reached out to her through Dana. So I asked Dana if he’d be interested. And he was like, ‘Of course, I’d be interested.’ And he like sent me this voice memo where — I can tell when he’s super excited about something, because he stutters. And he was stuttering all over the voice memo. I’m like, ‘Oh, he’s he’s down.’

“And so he reached out to Gina, and she said that she’d already lost 25 pounds and this was like, that walk back into the cage again is something that she’s always wanted to do. And so that’s when the talk started happening and got that that interest from her… she was down from from the first mention of it.”

On Arranging a Deal Through White:

“Yes, it it very much is [part of the saga of making the fight]. Well, originally I wanted to do it for New Year’s. And he — you know, I went to him and I’m like, ‘Dude, you always say that I’m the best fighter you ever worked with. Reward me for it. Don’t punish me for being easy to work with. Give me the best deal you ever gave anybody.’

“And he was, ‘All right, I’m going to go back and get you the best deal I ever had.’ So, he came back and he’s literally brought me the a deal where I would make more per PPV buy than anybody in history. If I hit my historical numbers, which I know we would have been able to succeed, I would have made as much as I did in my entire career. And um I was like, ‘Hell yeah, Dana, high five. Thanks.'”

On the UFC Passing On the Fight:

“But Gina needed more time. And it happened to go to the other side of when ESPN’s deal and their PPV model would be ending and they would be going to streaming [with Paramount]. And you know, they’re now a publicly traded company. And they — how do I put it? They didn’t want to set a precedent of giving me the guaranteed money that I deserve, because once I rise that raise that tide it lifts all the boats. And they just made a 7.7 billion dollar deal at Paramount.

“So it’s in their best interest actually not to put on the best fights possible, but to spend as little as money as possible so that he can keep it. Dana’s now legally obligated to maximize shareholder value. It’s not just about proving the concept of fighting and putting on the best fights possible, and proving that this is a sport to be taken seriously. I think now that it’s gone into — now that they’ve sold the company, it’s it’s kind of out of Dana’s hands, unfortunately. And now it’s falling onto Hunter Campbell and UFC Corp., where they don’t care about putting on the best fights possible. They care about putting on the most cost=effective fights possible. So it no longer made sense for for me to go over there, because they didn’t want to pay us the money that we deserve. Because then for the rest of the the time of the deal, they’re going to have to pay everybody else more. And so then I decided to look elsewhere.”

If you use any of the quotes in this article, please credit Jim Rome with a h/t to 411mania.com for the transcription.