Dana White has clarified a significant coverage shift for Zuffa Boxing, confirming that fighters signed to the promotion might be allowed to compete at Ring Journal reveals and maintain a number of championship belts concurrently.
Throughout a current press convention, White addressed questions on cross-promotional flexibility throughout the new boxing enterprise. When requested instantly whether or not Zuffa fighters may compete at Ring reveals, White gave an easy reply: “Sure.”
The exchange continued when a reporter pressed for clarification about how the dual-belt system would function, given that both Zuffa Boxing and Ring Magazine award their own championships. White’s response was equally direct: “You can have both belts.”
This marks a notable evolution from the promotion’s initial stance. When Zuffa Boxing was first announced in September 2025, White told Ring Magazine’s Max Kellerman that the organization would only recognize two championships: the Zuffa belt and the Ring Magazine belt. At the time, he declared he would “not recognize any of the other sanctioning bodies,” referring to the WBC, WBA, WBO, and IBF.
Dana White Confirms Zuffa Boxing Fighters Allowed to Fight for Multiple Championships
The shift became apparent in January 2026 when Zuffa Boxing signed IBF cruiserweight champion Jai Opetaia. Opetaia’s co-promoter Mick Francis revealed that regardless of White’s public place on sanctioning our bodies, Zuffa agreed to permit the Australian fighter to pursue title unifications. “They may let Jai battle for the titles and unify the division, which is precisely what he needs to do,” Francis advised Boxing King Media.
White later acknowledged his earlier statements had been too rigid. “It’s all a work in progress,” he said at a January press conference. “These guys all come from somewhere and had dreams from when they first put on a pair of gloves. We’re going to do everything in our power to make sure that these guys can do what they wanted to do.”
Former WBA junior welterweight champion Jose Valenzuela, who signed with Zuffa Boxing and competed at the promotion’s second event on February 1, echoed this flexibility in an interview with BoxingScene. “I’m going to be fighting three times a year. They’re paying me great. I’m fighting on Paramount+. I can still fight on a Ring Magazine card, and that’s where the pound-for-pound fighters are fighting,” Valenzuela explained.
The cross-promotional arrangement works partly because Ring Magazine is owned by Turki Alalshikh, the Saudi entertainment leader who co-founded Zuffa Boxing alongside White. Alalshikh additionally funds the separate Riyadh Season boxing occasions, making a pathway for Zuffa fighters to graduate to larger reveals whereas sustaining their promotional ties.
Zuffa Boxing launched its first occasion on January 23, 2026, on the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, with a five-year broadcast deal price roughly $100 million yearly by means of Paramount+. The promotion has scheduled 12 occasions for 2026 and is constructing a roster of greater than 200 fighters, focusing totally on prospects and creating expertise.
While White initially positioned Zuffa Boxing as an alternative to traditional sanctioning bodies, the recent statements suggest a more pragmatic approach that allows fighters to pursue opportunities across multiple promotional platforms while remaining under contract with the new organization.

