Veteran promoter Bob Arum, in a letter submitted to Congress, warned that fighters who sign into a UBO system may not receive the same safeguards built into the original Ali Act. Those safeguards were designed to prevent long-term contractual control, require financial transparency around fight revenue, and keep a separation between those who promote fights and those who represent fighters.

Legal figures connected to the sport, including Pat English, have also raised concerns that the proposed structure allows a single entity to control matchmaking, titles, and contracts within the same system. That model already exists in mixed martial arts, where centralized control has drawn legal challenges over fighter pay.

The issue is not whether the UBO system exists. The issue is how fighters will have to deal with it. If the biggest broadcast deals, titles, and schedules sit inside that structure, fighters may have to enter it to compete at the highest level. Once inside, critics argue, the protections tied to the current Ali Act framework may not follow.

That creates a simple trade-off. A fighter can remain outside the system and retain the existing safeguards, or sign into it and gain access to its platform under different terms. The bill presents that as a choice. Opponents of the legislation see it as pressure.

Congress has yet to vote on the measure. But the concern raised by Arum and others is already clear: if access to opportunity and access to protections no longer sit in the same place, fighters will be the ones deciding which one they are willing to give up.

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