Bellator Fighting Championships
airing now
Bellator
is a new MMA promotion that will be broadcast both
nationally and worldwide through ESPN beginning in April
2009...
Bellator’s
website broadcasts its purpose and mission thus:
Bellator Fighting Championships is a first of its kind
Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) promotion that will be
broadcast nationally in the U.S. starting April 2009
through an exclusive television agreement with ESPN
Deportes. Bellator will also be broadcast to countries
around the world through a collection of broadcast
agreements.
Bellator,
Latin for “Warrior,” began with the realization that the
fighters and the competition between the fighters must
be the central focus of any Mixed Martial Arts
organization. With that in mind, founder and CEO Bjorn
Rebney set into motion a new business model in MMA,
where elite, world-class fighters will control their own
destiny. At Bellator, fighters use their hands, knees,
elbows, feet, hips and heart to determine who fights for
the world title. In short, Bellator is a modern MMA
tournament, bringing together a collection of world
class competitors under one banner to fight for the
right to call themselves World Champion. While
matchmaking plays a key role in the development and
maturation of fighters at various stages of their
careers (particularly early in their careers), once
fighters become world-class competitors, our belief is
that they should be able to control their own destiny.
Bellator’s
events will be nationally televised through ESPN
Deportes, with each broadcast focusing solely on the
fights and fighters. Bellator Fighting Championships is
not a “reality television” program, but is instead real
sports programming in its purest form. Bellator is
simply the best fighting the best to determine who
becomes champion and who earns the largest purse.
Bellator’s premiere season consists of 12 two-hour
events which will be broadcast every Saturday night in
primetime, with the first show airing April 4, 2009. The
nationally televised events will showcase a combination
of tournament and non-tournament special feature bouts.
There will be four simultaneous tournaments taking place
in season #1 over a three month period: one in each of
the Featherweight (145 lb.), Lightweight (155 lb.),
Welterweight (170 lb.) and Middleweight (185 lb.)
divisions. Eight world-class fighters from around the
globe will be represented in each division. To win the
Bellator Championship, a fighter must win a total of
three fights, each consisting of three five-minute
rounds over a three month period. At the end of the
initial three month, 12-event season, Bellator will have
crowned four Bellator Champions and will have awarded
each Champion $175,000. In round #1 of the competition,
winners earn $25,000. In round #2 (Semi-Finals), winners
earn $50,000 and in the Finals, winners earn $100,000.
Bellator’s founders, Bjorn Rebney and Brad Epstein, are
experienced fighting sports and entertainment
professionals with a deep commitment to the purity and
integrity of the sport of MMA and its athletes. We
welcome feedback from all fighters and fans who want to
comment on Bellator or make suggestions on how we can
better serve the sport.
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