At the Zuffa Boxing 4 post-fight press conference, Dana White reiterated his criticism of boxing’s traditional sanctioning bodies, presenting the situation with Jai Opetaia as clear evidence for Zuffa Boxing to operate on its own terms.
Jai Opetaia Caught Between IBF and Zuffa
Jai Opetaia entered fight week as the IBF and Ring cruiserweight champion. Zuffa had planned for his bout against Brandon Glanton to serve as the launchpad for its own new promotional title. Initially, the intention was for Opetaia to defend The Ring belt and compete for the new Zuffa strap, with the IBF title remaining part of his resume and prominently featured in the event’s marketing.
In the build-up, Opetaia publicly pushed back against rumors that the IBF belt would not be contested, asserting that the title would still be involved and that he had fulfilled all obligations, including sanctioning fees and the second-day weigh-in protocol. However, behind the scenes, the IBF had already expressed discomfort with Zuffa’s decision to present its proprietary belt as a full world title rather than merely a symbolic award on the same card.
According to various reports, Zuffa initially assured the IBF that any new belt would be framed as a trophy, not a rival championship. Yet, as the event drew nearer, Zuffa began promoting it as a world title. When Opetaia placed the IBF belt on the dais during the press conference, while the Zuffa belt occupied the center stage between the fighters, IBF officials felt their concerns were confirmed and proceeded to strip him of his title before fight night.
Dana White’s Firm Stance on Sanctioning Bodies
For months, White has warned that Zuffa Boxing would reject the “alphabet-title” system, arguing that sanctioning bodies have harmed the sport through their fees, politics, and the fragmentation of championships. He has consistently stated that Zuffa will align with The Ring’s lineal-style championship and its rankings while deliberately disregarding belts from the WBC, WBA, WBO, and IBF.
“You guys know how I feel about this crossover stuff. Every time there’s a big UFC card or a big Zuffa Boxing card, everybody wants to talk about UFC versus boxing, MMA versus boxing. That’s not what this is. Zuffa Boxing is its own thing. We’re here to fix what was wrong with boxing for a long time – one guy as a massive favorite, terrible undercards, fights that never get made because promoters don’t want to risk their guys. Boxing’s problem was always that the best didn’t fight the best often enough. We’re not doing any of that. We’re putting on competitive fights top to bottom, no tune-ups, no bullshit. If you tune in to a Zuffa Boxing show, you’re going to see real fights, not 30–1 against a guy who took the fight last week.”
White also added, “I see lawsuits coming.”
In earlier interviews, White had vowed to “get rid of the sanctioning organizations” within his events, promising that the best fighters would compete under a single structure, and that Zuffa-owned titles, supported by Ring Magazine’s rankings, would become the standard for his shows. At the same time, as Zuffa signed boxers like Opetaia who already held traditional belts, he acknowledged that the project was “a work in progress” and that he might need to work on a case-by-case basis with fighters whose careers were intertwined with those existing titles.
This tension was squarely evident at Zuffa Boxing 4. Opetaia fought with Zuffa and Ring belts in contention, but the IBF strap was gone, removed by a sanctioning body that refused to share prominence with a promoter-created title. For White, this fallout served as further ammunition for his familiar argument: that Zuffa’s model, characterized by competitive matchmaking and a simplified championship structure, is specifically designed to circumvent the very kind of title drama that overshadowed one of his inaugural major cruiserweight events.








