Court Puts Pressure on Company Managing Kayla Harrison, Khabib Nurmagomedovâs Teammates Over UFC Anti-Trust Lawsuit
- - Court Puts Pressure on Company Managing Kayla Harrison, Khabib Nurmagomedovâs Teammates Over UFC Anti-Trust Lawsuit
Dushyant PatniOctober 31, 2025 at 2:20 AM
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Credits: IMAGO ©Credits: IMAGO
For years, the UFC antitrust saga has hovered over the sport like a storm cloud waiting to burst. Fighter pay, restrictive contracts, and allegations of business strong-arming have fueled a legal battle stretching back to 2014, when fighters such asCung Le and Jon Fitch first filed suit. After a decade of litigation, rejected settlements, and revised agreements, the UFC seemed to be inching toward closure until Judge Richard Boulware refused to sign off. His reason? He believed fighters deserved more.
That ruling reopened Pandoraâs box. A $375 million payout now awaits fighters from the Le class, but the sequel case, Johnson v. Zuffa, remains live. It targets UFC practices from 2017 onward, the era of Conor McGregor boxing Floyd Mayweather, Khabib Nurmagomedovâs rise, and the modern pay-per-view machine. And now, that lawsuit has reached a new front line: fighter management, specifically the powerhouse guiding some of the sportâs biggest stars.
This week, the spotlight shifted sharply to Dominance MMA, the management firm led by Ali Abdelazizâhome to names like Nurmagomedov, Kayla Harrison, Kamaru Usman, Henry Cejudo, and Islam Makhachev. As MMA insider @AFeldmanMMA revealed on X, âThe UFC antitrust lawsuit just got more INTERESTING. Dominance MMA, Ali Abdelazizâs management company, was subpoenaed as part of the case Johnson et al. v. Zuffa, LLC (Reference: ECF 216, ECF 226 & ECF 245).â
The court has subpoenaed Dominance as part of the case, forcing them to turn over internal records tied to UFC dealings. Emails, texts, contract communications, and sponsorship discussions are all under the lens. But Dominance pushed back. Hard.
They argued they are too small with âonly ONE employee and 7â12 independent contractorsâ and that compiling records would âshut the business downâ and cost six figures. They also insisted that many documents belong to fighters or sponsors and that plaintiffs should get information directly from the UFC. Their stance in short: we donât have it, we canât hand it over, and even if we could, youâre fishing.
The courtâs response? Basically: No excuses. Turn it over. Deadlines are now locked, with timelines for identifying devices, selecting a data vendor, reviewing search terms, and producing records, all before 18 November 2025.
As indicated in the post by Feldman, Dominance isnât just another agency. It manages more elite UFC stars than almost any other firm. Its negotiation history touches champions, megafights, and broadcast headliners. If the documents show UFC influence over fighter decisions, contract terms, sponsorship bans, and matchmaking pressure, the narrative could shift dramatically. This case isnât just about back pay. It questions whether the UFC controls the market not only through contracts but through the managers fightersâ trust to represent them. However, thatâs not the only legal drama surrounding Dana Whiteâs promotion.
Former UFC star Phil Davis files a lawsuit against the organization for hindering competition
The courtroom war now stretches well beyond the Octagon, targeting the promotionâs grip on fighters inside and outside its cage. Following the $375 million settlement for fighters from 2010â2017, the Johnson v. Zuffa case continues for those who fought from 2017 onward. But thereâs a twist. Many fighters in this era signed arbitration clauses and class-action waivers, complicating representation. So what did the lawyers do? They opened new fronts.
First, Misha Cirkunov was tapped to represent fighters bound by those more restrictive modern contracts. A surgical move, designed to ensure no one falls through legal cracks. But then came the curveball, Phil Davis stepping in to fight for athletes outside the UFC altogether.
As per MMA journalist John Nash, â*Phil Davis [alleges] the UFCâs scheme impairs professional MMA promotions like PFL in their ability to attract a critical mass of top-level MMA fighters necessary to compete with the UFC at the top tier of the sport of professional MMA. And otherwise substantially forecloses competition in the market relevant to the case.â*
No big names means no big fights. No big fights means lower revenue. Lower revenue means lower fighter pay, from veterans like Davis to hungry prospects trying to break through. The picture forming now stretches far beyond one subpoena or one management firm. From Dominance MMAâs forced compliance to the rise of lawsuits representing modern UFC fighters and even those competing elsewhere, the spotlight is widening on how power truly works in MMA.
The courts are no longer asking just whether fighters were underpaid; they are examining who controls access, leverage, and opportunity in the sportâs highest tier. And with suits like the Phil Davis action arguing UFC influence hurts everybody in the ecosystem, not just UFC athletes, the ripple effect may stretch across leagues like PFL, Bellatorâs new era under PFL ownership, and beyond.
The post Court Puts Pressure on Company Managing Kayla Harrison, Khabib Nurmagomedovâs Teammates Over UFC Anti-Trust Lawsuit appeared first on EssentiallySports.
Source: âAOL Sportsâ
