Bisping / McGann Lawsuit Gives Insight Into “The Count’s” UFC Earnings and Other Fin

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ErikMagraken

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Apr 9, 2015
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Litigation is one of the great tools in shedding light on topics otherwise kept private.

To this end fighter pay and other contractual details often come to light when parties have a disagreement resolved in the public forum of the judiciary.

Last month former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping found himself largely on the losing side of a dispute with his former manager Anthony McGann. McGann sued Bisping for various payments he claimed were owed under a Management Agreement with the fighter. The lawsuit ultimately was harsh for both parties with Mr. Justice Salter of the London High Court finding both litigants courtroom conduct and testimony left much to be desired.

The Court did, however, rule that a valid contract was in place between the parties for many years and that McGann was entitled to 15%-20% of Bisping’s gross purses paid out over several years. In so finding the Court noted the following earnings of Bisping for the below bouts-

  • Bisping vs. Haynes – $25,000
  • Bisping vs. Schafer – $140,000 (including $101,000 event bonus, $15,000 in sponsorship)
  • Bisping vs. Sinosic – $169,000
  • Bisping vs. Hamill – $149,000
  • Bisping vs. Evans – $212,000
  • Bisping vs. McCarthy – $149,000
  • Bisping vs. Day – $226,000
  • Bisping vs. Leban – $279,000
  • Bisping vs. Henderson – $306,000
  • Bisping vs. Kang – $346,000
  • Bisping vs. Silva – $252,000
  • Bisping vs. Miller – $400,000
  • Bisping vs. Akiyama – $412,000
  • Bisping vs. Rivera – $424,000
  • Bisping vs. Miller – $425,000
  • Bisping vs. Sonnen – $300,000
  • Bisping vs. Stann – $425,000
  • Bisping vs. Belfort – $300,000
  • Bisping vs. Belcher – $425,000
  • Bisping vs. Kennedy – $300,000
The above can be contrasted with the purses Bisping received as speculated by some in the MMA community.

The Court noted that based on the contractual relationship that was deemed to exist McGann was entitled to the following payments from these purses:

303.1 USD 64,500 in respect of commission at 20% on sums withheld by overseas tax authorities (Issues (2) and (10))

303.2 USD 40,000 in respect of commission at 20% on the value of the Range Rovers (Issue 3)

303.3 USD 63,750 and USD 975 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings in connection with the bout against Jason Miller in December 2011 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.4 USD 45,000 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Chael Sonnen in January 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.5 USD 63,750 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Brian Stann in September 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.6 USD 45,000 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Belfort in January 2013 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.7 USD 63,750 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Belcher in April 2013 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.8 USD 45,000 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Tim Kennedy in April2014 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.9 Contractual interest on the sum of USD 67,350 awarded in paragraph 303.3 above at the rate of 4 % over the base rate of HSBC Bank Plc from 13 December 2011 to the date of judgment (Issue 11).

The judgement revealed a handful of other interesting topics as well such as

  • the fact that Bisping received two Range Rovers for his appearances on TUF each valued at approximately $100,000
  • That one TUF coach was paid by receiving a new tractor
    • Dana White testified with the court finding that “Mr White was plainly trying to tell the truth, but that he had little or no useful evidence to give in relation to any matter other than the Range Rover issues.
    • The court found that “Mr Bisping was also a knowing participant with Mr McGann in the scheme to defraud the Australian Tax Authorities by overstating Mr Bisping’s expenses in 2010 and 2011
    • A host of e-mails and other correspondence between the parties was reproduced in full in the reasons
    • Other financial details came to light such as sponsorship pay for various bouts
 

Gay For Longo

*insert Matt Serra meme
Jan 22, 2016
16,758
18,007
1st thing that jumps out.... how in the hell did he get a pay increase after what hendo did to him in the first fight
And I'm not complaining, I'm a bisping fan and glad he's made a good living
 

Gay For Longo

*insert Matt Serra meme
Jan 22, 2016
16,758
18,007
Litigation is one of the great tools in shedding light on topics otherwise kept private.

To this end fighter pay and other contractual details often come to light when parties have a disagreement resolved in the public forum of the judiciary.

Last month former UFC middleweight champion Michael Bisping found himself largely on the losing side of a dispute with his former manager Anthony McGann. McGann sued Bisping for various payments he claimed were owed under a Management Agreement with the fighter. The lawsuit ultimately was harsh for both parties with Mr. Justice Salter of the London High Court finding both litigants courtroom conduct and testimony left much to be desired.

The Court did, however, rule that a valid contract was in place between the parties for many years and that McGann was entitled to 15%-20% of Bisping’s gross purses paid out over several years. In so finding the Court noted the following earnings of Bisping for the below bouts-

  • Bisping vs. Haynes – $25,000
  • Bisping vs. Schafer – $140,000 (including $101,000 event bonus, $15,000 in sponsorship)
  • Bisping vs. Sinosic – $169,000
  • Bisping vs. Hamill – $149,000
  • Bisping vs. Evans – $212,000
  • Bisping vs. McCarthy – $149,000
  • Bisping vs. Day – $226,000
  • Bisping vs. Leban – $279,000
  • Bisping vs. Henderson – $306,000
  • Bisping vs. Kang – $346,000
  • Bisping vs. Silva – $252,000
  • Bisping vs. Miller – $400,000
  • Bisping vs. Akiyama – $412,000
  • Bisping vs. Rivera – $424,000
  • Bisping vs. Miller – $425,000
  • Bisping vs. Sonnen – $300,000
  • Bisping vs. Stann – $425,000
  • Bisping vs. Belfort – $300,000
  • Bisping vs. Belcher – $425,000
  • Bisping vs. Kennedy – $300,000
The above can be contrasted with the purses Bisping received as speculated by some in the MMA community.

The Court noted that based on the contractual relationship that was deemed to exist McGann was entitled to the following payments from these purses:

303.1 USD 64,500 in respect of commission at 20% on sums withheld by overseas tax authorities (Issues (2) and (10))

303.2 USD 40,000 in respect of commission at 20% on the value of the Range Rovers (Issue 3)

303.3 USD 63,750 and USD 975 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings in connection with the bout against Jason Miller in December 2011 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.4 USD 45,000 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Chael Sonnen in January 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.5 USD 63,750 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Brian Stann in September 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.6 USD 45,000 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Belfort in January 2013 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.7 USD 63,750 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Belcher in April 2013 2012 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.8 USD 45,000 in respect of commission at 15% on Mr Bisping’s admitted earnings from Zuffa in connection with the bout against Tim Kennedy in April2014 (Issues 6 and 10)

303.9 Contractual interest on the sum of USD 67,350 awarded in paragraph 303.3 above at the rate of 4 % over the base rate of HSBC Bank Plc from 13 December 2011 to the date of judgment (Issue 11).

The judgement revealed a handful of other interesting topics as well such as

  • the fact that Bisping received two Range Rovers for his appearances on TUF each valued at approximately $100,000
  • That one TUF coach was paid by receiving a new tractor
    • Dana White testified with the court finding that “Mr White was plainly trying to tell the truth, but that he had little or no useful evidence to give in relation to any matter other than the Range Rover issues.
    • The court found that “Mr Bisping was also a knowing participant with Mr McGann in the scheme to defraud the Australian Tax Authorities by overstating Mr Bisping’s expenses in 2010 and 2011
    • A host of e-mails and other correspondence between the parties was reproduced in full in the reasons
    • Other financial details came to light such as sponsorship pay for various bouts
Oh and tractor was Hughes when he did tuf against i think gsp
Was a sick fucking tractor too
 

sparkuri

Pulse on the finger of The Community
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Jan 16, 2015
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This lawsuit was the greatest thing to happen to mma in a decade, perhaps forever.
Win or lose, the landscape is changed forever & enormously, as the power balance tips more toward fighters than it was.
It was PERFECT timing for Coker & Bellator as well as other smaller orgs.
 

lueVelvet

WHERT DA FERCK?
Aug 29, 2015
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Those are some impressive paydays for some of those bouts. I mean 400k for fighting Miller in 2011 and more than 400K for Akiyama in 2010? Good on him but I honestly expected those numbers to be a bit lower. :p
 
M

member 3289

Guest
From Haynes to Leben he was making a shit load more than what was speculated.

ErikMagraken @ErikMagraken what could this be attributed to, besides the two Land Rovers?

Could these so-called "discretionary/locker room bonuses" be real? I just thought that "discretionary bonus" meant meal vouchers at the UFC Performance Institute.
 

sparkuri

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Those are some impressive paydays for some of those bouts. I mean 400k for fighting Miller in 2011 and more than 400K for Akiyama in 2010? Good on him but I honestly expected those numbers to be a bit lower. :p
If he hadn't carried the UK demographic, you know those wouldn't be half that.
I wonder what will become of the tax situation. For both bisping and his manager.
 

Silverball

Member
Feb 24, 2015
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Now that we know Bisping was being well compensated (relative to the UFC) for nearly the entirety of his career, his decision to fight Gastelum so soon after nearly being KO'd and choked out by GSP makes even less sense.
 

lueVelvet

WHERT DA FERCK?
Aug 29, 2015
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Now that we know Bisping was being well compensated (relative to the UFC) for nearly the entirety of his career, his decision to fight Gastelum so soon after nearly being KO'd and choked out by GSP makes even less sense.
Unlike Conor, Bisping isn't only about the monies...
 
M

member 3289

Guest
Now that we know Bisping was being well compensated (relative to the UFC) for nearly the entirety of his career, his decision to fight Gastelum so soon after nearly being KO'd and choked out by GSP makes even less sense.
Taking short-notice fights was something he always did before becoming champ. Hell it's what won him the title (in addition to Luke Rockhold coming in to that fight waaaaay too cocky).

He was extremely selective in his fight choices once he became champ and was rightly criticized for it, but now that he doesn't have the belt any more it isn't that surprising for him to return to his old ways.
 

ErikMagraken

Posting Machine
Apr 9, 2015
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Now that we know Bisping was being well compensated (relative to the UFC) for nearly the entirety of his career, his decision to fight Gastelum so soon after nearly being KO'd and choked out by GSP makes even less sense.
It makes sense in context of him being ordered to pay McGann a whack of outstanding commissions.
 

silentsinger

Momofuku
Jun 23, 2015
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1st thing that jumps out.... how in the hell did he get a pay increase after what hendo did to him in the first fight
And I'm not complaining, I'm a bisping fan and glad he's made a good living
Poster boy for the UK. TUF increased his value hugely win or lose in that fight and he destroyed Hendo as a coach.
 

Onetrickpony

Stay gold
Nov 21, 2016
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  • Dana White testified with the court finding that “Mr White was plainly trying to tell the truth, but that he had little or no useful evidence to give in relation to any matter other than the Range Rover issues.
That paragraph is priceless.
 

silentsinger

Momofuku
Jun 23, 2015
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Very good points, I completely forgot that was a tuf finale fight
Sort of hate myself for it now but after meeting Hendo a couple of times and knowing how easy he was to get on with, I actually wanted him to win that fight. But yeah. That's why Mike's value went up.
 

Silverball

Member
Feb 24, 2015
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Unlike Conor, Bisping isn't only about the monies...
I never said he was, but, at this stage in Bisping's career, fighting for the money would help to explain his decision to take the Gastelum fight, especially knowing now how that turned out. After seeing what he's earned over the bulk of his career, I feel even stronger that someone should've stepped in and prevented Michael from returning so quickly.
 

Silverball

Member
Feb 24, 2015
4,319
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Taking short-notice fights was something he always did before becoming champ. Hell it's what won him the title (in addition to Luke Rockhold coming in to that fight waaaaay too cocky).

He was extremely selective in his fight choices once he became champ and was rightly criticized for it, but now that he doesn't have the belt any more it isn't that surprising for him to return to his old ways.
It's different when it's a guy who's pushing forty who's already talked about calling it a day on his career (Remember, the GSP fight was initially going to be his last one), but I also don't disagree with your point.
 

Coast

Land of the Prince Bishops
Oct 18, 2017
644
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Could these so-called "discretionary/locker room bonuses" be real? I just thought that "discretionary bonus" meant meal vouchers at the UFC Performance Institute.
If you've seen the UFC Bisping documentary "Destiny" Bisping talked about how after his first fight in the UFC (after TUF) he was called in to see Dana and Lorenzo, where they congratulated him and give him an envelope with a cheque for in it for 80k. The way he tells the story, it suggests that was money on top of what he earned, although I'm not 100% sure.

Video timestamped

 

kneeblock

Drapetomaniac
Apr 18, 2015
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Interesting disclosures in this filing. One thing likely inflating the numbers is sponsorships, which Bisping would have been collecting up until the Reebok deal. It was clear that starting with Kang and the end of his TUF contract, he got a significant base bump, based on both the publicly disclosed numbers and the numbers revealed here. Seems he genuinely had pretty good management if a lot of it was sponsorship.