With welterweight champion Belal Muhammad sidelined by a foot infection, the UFC is scrambling to find a new main event for the final pay-per-view of 2024. Top-ranked contender Shavkat Rakhmonov is calling for an interim title fight and naming Kamaru Usman as a perfect opponent for the Dec. 10 card.
While the fight itself makes sense based on availability, and the resumes for the two fighters involved, Muhammad immediately pushed back about the interim title considering he just won the belt in July, and he’s only expected to be out of action for approximately six weeks while receiving treatment on his foot. Veteran UFC welterweight Matt Brown understands the necessity to fill the void left by Muhammad’s absence at UFC 310, but as much as he enjoys the potential Rakhmonov vs. Usman fight, he just doesn’t see a need for an interim title.
“I think we all know at least it’s not a title,” Brown said on the latest episode of The Fighter vs. The Writer. “Belal has the f*cking title. He’ll be back soon. He’s going to fight the winner. This is a title contender match. Great.
“It’s a great fight. I’m stoked to see the fight. I’m just as stoked to see Shavkat and Usman as I would be for Shavkat and Belal, except it would be for the actual title with Belal.”
In recent years, the UFC has started introducing interim titles more often out of necessity to build up a pay-per-view than because a reigning champion isn’t able to defend the real belt for a significant amount of time.
In 2023, Jon Jones suffered a torn pectoral muscle that cancelled his fight against Stipe Miocic, and in his absence, the UFC booked an interim title bout between Tom Aspinall and Sergei Pavlovich instead. Aspinall won, but he won’t get the chance to unify the belts, because the UFC moved forward with rebooking Jones against Miocic.
Just months after Francis Ngannou won the heavyweight title, the UFC needed to find a main event for a card slated in August, but with the champion unable to make a quick turnaround, the promotion introduced an interim title for the fight between Ciryl Gane and Derrick Lewis.
Brown understands that the UFC must have some sort of internal research that shows fans are more apt to buy a pay-per-view card headlined by a title fight, but that doesn’t change the fact that more often than not, crowning an interim champion just isn’t necessary.
“They usually do that because they need to sell the pay-per-view and put a title on it, right?” Brown said. “I feel Usman would be selling PPV’s. We all know who Usman is. We all want to watch Usman fight. I don’t think putting a title in front of that fight really changes the dynamic of that fight. I get why they would do it, and I understand the logic behind it and maybe it makes it a bigger fight, but I don’t see why you can’t keep it five rounds and just say it’s not for the title.
“Unfortunately, it kind of diminishes what an interim title is. This is probably a stronger case for that than we’ve even seen in the past. We’ve had our own qualms for what they’ve done with these interim titles, but this one’s probably got to be one of the worst instances we’ve seen, right?”
It remains to be seen if the UFC pulls the trigger on an interim title, but Brown admits that’s really the risk you take when a promotion yields this much power.
On one side, the UFC has the ability to book the biggest and best fights available — an issue that has plagued a sport like boxing for decades — but that can also result in decisions like this really coming down to dollars rather than making the most sense.
“The blessings and the curses of having one company rule everything,” Brown said about the UFC. “We talk about Dana [White] taking over boxing, and we know the messes that you have in boxing all the time, but there’s sort of the blessing and the curse. They can just do that. It’s their company. They can do whatever the f*ck they want.
“The problem is there’s just no set rule set. There’s no guidelines. Like if you’re out for six months, we’re doing an interim title. There’s nothing like that for the rankings like the No. 1 guy’s going to get the next shot. If there was a set guideline, I think that would fix a lot of things.”
Like it or not, Brown says the UFC needs to sell pay-per-views, and if Rakhmonov vs. Usman with an interim title up for grabs gets a few more buys, then that’s almost certainly what’s going to happen.
“That’s the blessing and the curse of it being a business and being that it’s a private business, they’re out there to try to make money,” Brown said. “The curse is they do whatever the hell they want. You get these different interim titles.”
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