http://www.yahoo.com/sports/news/what-would-ufc-look-like-without-dana-white-195710660-mma.html
LAS VEGAS – Dana White is a visionary, an unquestionably driven and creative man who has shown a willingness to go to almost any length to get what he wants.
He was a 31-year-old without much money and no track record of business success when he took over as UFC president in January 2001, when he and partners Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta paid $2 million to purchase the company from Semaphore Entertainment Group.
More than 15 years later, the sport is legal and sanctioned in all 50 states. Since White took over, the UFC has put on shows in 21 countries and in 30 states.
It has a network television contract with Fox, is covered by a dedicated corps of media that reports on even the most minor roster moves and a fan base so eager for content that the UFC has created an online streaming service to help satisfy the demand.
The New York Times reported in 2013 that Viacom paid $50 million for Bellator in 2011. It is inconceivable that it would have paid $50,000 for it in January 2001 when it seemed that White stood alone in a world of billions singing the praises (and the prospects) of MMA.
Zuffa has not acknowledged the reports, and White has largely gone incommunicado with the media in the last few months. But multiple reports say the bidders, who are looking to purchase 100 percent of the company, want to keep White on to run it.Dana White and the UFC have denied reports that the company is up for sale, despite multiple reports to the contrary. (Getty)
It’s not that someone can’t take what White has built and keep the ship afloat, but buying the UFC without White is not substantially different than purchasing Coca-Cola and not getting the secret formula with it.
Part of White’s success has been the sheer force of his will. Much of the UFC’s appeal to potential buyers is that the talent cost is low relative to other professional sports.
He's fought fiercely to keep fighter purses and other business information like revenue, profit/loss and pay-per-view sales a secret. Information is power and White has kept a tight rein on the UFC’s financial data.
He was patient, even as the financial losses mounted in those first few years. He believed fully in the product and insisted repeatedly that it someday would become the biggest sport in the world.
Love him or loathe him, the 46-year-old president of the UFC is far and away the most important figure in the brief history of MMA.
White is no fan of a conservative, take-no-risks style of fighting. He encourages the fighters passionately to go for the finish, to eschew a game plan, to forget about risk and to put an exciting match above all else.