Hooked On Fight Content- 11.12.21

Ahead of a big combat sports weekend, it’s only right I wrap up the best bits of content this week.

Dustin’s arrival at UFC269

This is a nice little training shot by Dustin Poirier ahead of his fight with Charles Oliveira this weekend. 

Paid in full has become Dustin’s slogan in the fight game, and I appreciated how he had a hashtag ending sequence in the video. Content like that allows your audience to have a phrase they associate with you regardless of whenever they hear it. 

Steps like that put you in the right direction of building a solid online community. 

Reflecting on the best finishes 

Ahead of UFC269, the content team created a compilation of the hottest knockouts from fighters featuring on the card. 

This type of fight content will usually be effective at scoring high engagement as it’s something fans value their money’s worth for when purchasing/viewing a combat sports event. 

Focusing promotional content around key moments like this is an effective strategy to build momentum and an appetite for the main event. 

Funniest combat sports stare downs 

Whenever the Sidemen get involved in creating content that represents your brand, you know you’re doing something right. 

Face-offs across combat sports are a great way to win the competitive edge against your competitor and build an appetite for the fans. 

It’s also something that has a high ‘shareability’ rate amongst various fan bases due to the humour, tension and emotion they attract across different demographics. 

A YouTuber is one of the U.S.’s top 10 most searched athletes on Google 

The Google Year of Search was released recently, and surprisingly for many, Jake Paul has found himself as the 10th most search athlete this year in the U.S. 

Personally, it doesn’t surprise me to see this. Jake has grown to become one of the biggest stars in combat sports this year and it’s clear why.

1) Self-promotion. He’s adopted a similar promotional model to Floyd Mayweather where he’s willing to play the ‘villain’, considering it supports PPV sales. 

2) Content Creation. He’s entered boxing with a large audience, many of who are from the next-gen with an ability to produce engaging content in an important era. 

3) Strategic call-outs. Paul’s received much backlash for not fighting a boxer in his first 4 boxing matches. The reason behind this includes Jake knowing MMA fighters have strong leverage in combat sports but aren’t always known for their boxing. This way, he’s built his profile while not taking a huge risk of tarnishing his record in his primary career. 

The Suga Show

Sean O’Malley is becoming one of the UFC’s biggest stars to date with over 1.5m social media followers and one of the most eye-catching haircuts in the game. 

The content team recently got Sean to sit down and react to some of the promotions most viral moments. 

This content piece caught my eye because the entire production was branded around Sugar Sean. From the adjusted brand colour of the UFC logo to the background gradient siSean’sng Sean’s hair colour. 

When you have growing stars within your brand, it’s integral to incorporate whatever possible to promote them through content creation. 


That’s a wrap! What was your most insightful piece of content this week?

Hooked On Fight Content- 04.12.21

The weekend has arrived, meaning it’s time to wrap up the most outstanding pieces of content across the fight game! This week includes Hasbulla, MVP, a throwback to UFC268 and more!

Whatever you do, don’t ask MVP to look at you!

None other than MVP made noise on his socials this week. The above clip is from his win against Jeremie Holloway via an Achilles lock. 

This was a special fight for MVP as he’s previously won most of his fights via striking prowess, but this one was via a submission. 

The video has over 400k views, and it incorporates various elements of fan engagement. It’s a highlight from his career, a ‘memeable’ piece of content and something that will create discussion. 

What exactly did Colby say to Kamaru at the end of their rematch?

It’s fair to say Colby and Kamaru shared a heart to heart at the end of UFC268. Despite their long-standing rivalry, even they could grace respect to one another. 

The clip has over 45.6k views and demonstrates the appetite of sports fans wanting to get close and personal to their favourite athletes. 

If you represent an athlete or are an athlete building your personal brand, ensure that you maximise behind the scenes content across socials as that’s what fans appreciate. 

We may have found a new Wonderboy

It’s almost like we’re looking at the new Wonderboy of MMA on IG! I came across Nat’s IG page earlier this week and love what he does, especially this reel. 

This video follows the three content Es. Entertaining, Engaging and Educating. Someone scrolling along this post could find it beneficial to better their MMA skills or even be inspired to try a martial art themselves. 

Clips like this are also a great opportunity to engage your audience. You can create challenges from them, encourage hashtag sharing to boost reach and be on your way to building an online community. 

Speechless

Rafael Fiziev calling out Hasbulla Magomedov was one of the most unorthodox call-outs the combat sports world has ever seen. The 10-1 lightweight is fighting against 10-1 Brad Riddell this weekend, and the UFC has made a big deal of it with one of their latest IG reels.

In the space of 20 hours, the clip gained over 588k likes and close to 10k comments. Those metrics make this reel one of the UFC’s most significantly engaged posts from the last month.

This post is highly engaging because it has the ‘memeability’ factor. I’m sure many of you have seen Hasbulla memes scattered across social media, which potentially influenced the 18-year-old being invited to UFC267. The UFC has maintained this attention by including him in a social media post.

Now that’s what I call a redemption trailer

YouTube boxer, Deji, has announced he’s making a comeback to boxing following his defeat to TikToker, Vinnie Hacker, last summer. Deji is yet to win a fight in his preliminary boxing career, and many have questioned whether the YouTuber should box again.

On November 29, Deji Tweeted ‘December 2 2021’ implying he’s planning to make a boxing-related announcement. This was then followed up with a YouTube trailer that included training footage, quotes about Deji’s journey thus far and a shot of Wembley arena.

What worked successfully with this trailer was the messages that were communicated. There’s a suggestion he’s got an opponent lined up; his next fight could be at Wembley arena, and he’s currently training. All of that was done inside 1 minute and 32 seconds.


That’s a wrap! What was your key insight this week?

Hooked On Fight Content 27.11.21

Another week is coming to a close, but not without another edition of hooked on fight content.

Kevin Holland with the memes

Big mouth is back with plugging some of the most hysterical MMA memes. Six days ago, someone compared Sweden’s Khamzat Chimaev as ‘evil Khabib’ and Ian ‘the future’ Garry being the nice ‘Conor McGregor’.

The post has gained approximately 51k likes, which makes this his 2nd highest engaged post this month. I get what you’re thinking; what makes this so engaging? Well, it’s comparing the new generation of fighters to previous generations. Just like that, you’ve tapped into two different audiences, or maybe two of the same demographics who’ve followed the sport to this day.

Despite memes supposing to make you laugh, there are lessons to be learnt, especially from Kevin.

Francis Ngannou x Watford FC

This was a link-up many wouldn’t have expected. Heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou does his regular promotion for betting partner of the UFC, Stake.com, who are also partners for English football club Watford FC.

Before Watford’s thrilling win against Man United last weekend, Francis wished the boys luck, including a special wish to fellow countryman Nicolas Nkoulou.

Focusing on the bigger picture, stake.com have spotted an opportunity to endorse two of their key partners in one post. Subconsciously, they’ve increased their reach towards two distinctive audiences, football fans and MMA fans. It doesn’t only benefit Stake.com’s outreach; it’s an opportunity for Francis to maximise impact by gaining new followers and a presence amongst the football landscape.

Amir Aliakbari keeping his reflexes sharp

MMA world champion Amir Aliakbari is caught keeping his reflexes awake this week by ONE. 

The IG clip has over 500k plays, and it’s mostly due to combat sports fans loving training footage. On this note, there are many ways you can create avenues of content through training footage, from activating challenges to get your profile trending, tutorials to educate your fans on best practices or simple clips to wow your audience. 

Either way, as long as you follow the algorithm of keeping it educational, entertaining and engaging, you can’t go wrong. 

I think Leon believes he deserves a title shot

It’s looking like a never-ending story at this point, but Mojahed Fudailat shows his support to the British welterweight to achieve his ultimate ambition. Leon has rightfully advocated for this moment for a long time, considering he’s won 9 of his last 11 fights, ever since he lost to the current champ over six years ago.

When you excessively push a narrative, it becomes a chance for external forces to create content from it to benefit their outcomes. Mojahed has done exactly this by sampling voiceovers from previous Leon Edwards related content to make a YouTube parody video to grow his own brand.

Exactly which Fury is Jake Paul fighting in December?

It’s getting a bit confusing at this point. You had John Fury getting heated at Jake Paul in the virtual press conference on Wednesday, Tyson Fury making personal remarks towards Jake, but we do not hear anywhere near as much from Tommy Fury. I wonder why…

Nevertheless, Tyson Fury made some explicit comments about Jake Paul’s girlfriend this week, and Jake Paul came up with an entertaining response via TikTok. Thus far, the clip has 2.8m views, over 250k likes and 4k+ comments.

Despite the response seeming ‘cringy’ and ‘childish’ for some, it’s a reason why Jake Paul is an effective self-promoter. Paul and his team are reactive to his comments, and they find a way to make the situation (whether good or bad) beneficial towards him. The clip above has likely increased Jake’s brand awareness and potential new audiences talking about his upcoming fight.

Jake Paul may not be the most likeable personality, but he’s certainly one that upcoming fighters can learn from to boost their personal appeal.


That’s a wrap for this week; as always, feel free to share what insights you found most beneficial and if there’s anything I’ve missed.

Hooked on fight content- 20.11.21

Another week passes, and once again, a dull moment never exists in the fight business. This week, I look at BT Sport Boxing’s coverage of Alvarez vs Plant, Adesanya creating a storytelling piece, Mokaev promoting his arrival at the UFC, Darren Till showing off his wrestling defence and a return of Khabib Nurmagomedov!

Words exchanged between Canelo Alvarez and Caleb Plant

It’s been over two weeks since we saw Canelo Alvarez become boxing’s undisputed middleweight champion; it’s a moment that will be remembered for a lifetime, especially with this clip from BT Sport Boxing.

Canelo and Caleb had a heated rivalry leading up to this fight; however, they’re paid respect to each other after their contest. The video is BT Sport Boxing’s most engaged IG clip with over 400k views and 57k likes.

Moments of sportsmanship are always an effective content piece because they provoke strong emotions out of the viewer. The moment someone shows respect or sportsmanship towards their opponent, it’s a chance for the viewer to change their opinion on that athlete.

Israel Adesanya: nosebleeds to nosebleeds

The last stylebender reflects on becoming the UFC’s middleweight champion, which started six years ago when he watched Robert Whittaker defeat Uriah Hall as a fan.  

If you’ve been following my blog for a while, you’ll know I’m a fan of how Izzy creates content. He takes his YouTube channel seriously and isn’t afraid to be different across his social channels.

This IG carousel he’s shared is essentially short-form storytelling. It’s what entices helps to transform your audiences into a highly engaged community who’ll follow your legacy.

Muhammad Mokaev’s IG live with Hasbulla

A couple of days ago, Muhammad officially became the youngest fighter to sign with the UFC. The 21-year-old is currently 6-0 in his professional career and rightfully has high hopes for the future.

On Friday, Muhammad had an IG live session with social media sensation Hasbulla Magomedov, which lasted under 2.5 minutes. Mokaev posted the analytics on his Twitter, and the two reached over 34.5k accounts, 13.7k concurrent viewers and 5.9k content interactions.

This caught my eye as athletes don’t typically share their social media insights with their fans. On the other hand, Hasbulla has skyrocketed to fame, especially recently appearing as a fan at UFC267. Hasbulla and Muhammad both come from Dagestan, meaning they both likely share a community of fans.

As an athlete, it’s key to recognise when you have a synergy with someone; it’s worth collaborating in some shape or form. Whether through content or another avenue, it’s a chance to boost your reach and your audience.

Darren Till shows off his wrestling defence

The Scouse fighter shares previous fight clips where he demonstrated impressive takedown defence in the UFC. His last fight against Dereck Brunson was one that Darren took with a pinch of salt, considering how skilled Brunson is at wrestling.

The video is Till’s most engaged one this month, accumulating over 500k views. Sharing fight clips like this is a chance to tease a return to the Octagon or create conversation amongst your fan base.

Daniel Cormier interviews Khabib Nurmagomedov for EA Sports

To promote UFC4’s prime icons update for Khabib Nurmagomedov, EA Sports organised an interview between the former 29-0 lightweight champion and his good friend and UFC legend, Daniel Cormier.

The interview highlights the rise of Khabib’s latest prodigy, Islam Makhachev. Khabib and Daniel talk about his development through the UFC, and it was filmed before his fight against New Zealand’s Dan Hooker.

EA Sports captured some of their game footage during the interview, featuring Islam alongside intro and outro sequences of their prime icons updates. EA Sports has effectively found a way to get involved in one of the UFC latest events through content creation to promote an exclusive game feature.


That’s a wrap! What was your key insight this week?

Hooked On Fight Content- 13.11.21

Another week passes, but not without a fight content wrap-up. This week we have content reviews across ONE, boxing, the UFC and the one and only, Mojahed Fudailat.

Anatoliy Malykhin calls out Arjan Singh Bhullar

10-0 Anatoliy Malykhin called out MMA World Champion Arjan Singh Bhullar earlier this week. The video has over 57k views on Instagram; the most Anatoliy has received ever since September. Fighters referring to each other as ‘chicken’ commonly suggest their desired competitor is afraid of them.

Despite this video coming across as exaggerated and cringy to some, it’s an effective start to selling a narrative. This video will likely get the attention of different MMA touchpoints, including meme pages and general news channels, increasing awareness, engagement, and traffic to Malykhin’s profile.

The Paul’s continuing to troll the Fury’s

Next month will see 4-0 Jake Paul take on 7-0 Tommy Fury in Miami. Tyson Fury recently posted an Instagram story to introduce himself as Tommy’s training partner ahead of his upcoming bout. Jake and Logan were reactive to this and decided to make their own parody of the clip. Jake and Tommy are from opposite sides of the Atlantic, meaning there will be differences in how they interpret each other, especially when it comes to trash talk.

Little gimmicks like this may seem childish and harmless, but Jake has efficiently used these moments to promote his fights. For example, stealing Floyd Mayweather’s hat became a monetisation opportunity for Jake and Floyd was continuously asked about it in various interviews, and press conferences post the event.

This moment created by Jake and Logan can be promoted for future occasions, such as when Jake and Tommy eventually meet at a press conference.

Alexander Volkanovski- athlete driven marketing

Alexander Volkanovski has some awesome content on his IG feed. He’s got his own series called “Cooking with Volk” where he creates short video walkthroughs of his favourite recipes. 

For Alexander, this is probably great fun as it should be. Although, it’s an important lesson to learn about athlete-driven marketing. The cooking with volk videos is some of Volkanovski’s most engaged/viewed videos on his channel. 

The next-gen have never been so enticed into their athlete’s personal interests and hobbies. 

There’s never been a better opportunity for athlete’s to capitalise on building a community of super fans through entertaining content like Alexander. 

Adesanya fears Alex Pereria

Mojahed is back at it again with the MMA animated parodies, but this time, he’s created one of Israel Adesanya hypothetically reacting to Alex Pereria’s KO in the UFC last weekend. 

Alex and Izzy have some history; Pereria had KO’d Adesanya back when they competed in kickboxing. Since Alex signed to the UFC this year, this previous event has been a significant talking point. 

Mojahed does what most marketers should do best, creating a reactive narrative out of a minor storyline.

What can’t Canelo live without? 

This week, GQ Sports linked up with undisputed champ Canelo Alvarez for a Q&A session. GQ also shot some content with UFC Champ Israel Adesanya a few weeks ago. 

What works well with this content is it gives Canelo fans personalised content to consume. Athlete driven marketing has never been more powerful currently. The next generation of sports fans is curious to explore the lives of their favourite stars outside of what they see on their TV screens and digital devices. 

Therefore, if you’re a brand representing an athlete or an athlete in the process of building your brand, consider producing content that shines a light outside of your sport and reflects your personality. That way, you’re on your way to building an engaged community. 

That’s a wrap! What was your key content insight this week?

Hooked On Fight Content- 06.11.21

Another week is close to biting the dust, but before it does, we have content to review from ONE, the UFC and the boxing world!

Happy Halloween from ONE Championship

ONE Championship took to Instagram to wish their fans a happy Halloween with some archived footage of Melvin Manhoef vs Brock Larson. Melvin running around the Octagon after Brock was a viral clip from this fight, and ONE have maximised the opportunity to tribute it to dubbing Pennywise from IT in the video.

The clip has over 2m plays thus far, making it their most-viewed Instagram video in over a month. There are many more creative ways to produce Halloween-themed content than putting out a generic social media poster these days. It also shows the multiple purposes you can use archived content for.

Whether you’re a marketer working for a brand or a creator, make multiple uses of your content. Such as creating them into GIF’s, out of context compilations or animated pieces. You’ll find an increase in reach, engagement and awareness.

Canelo Alvarez has come a long way!

November 6th will be the biggest day in Canelo’s boxing career, as he aims to unify the division by facing 21-0 Caleb Plant. Canelo’s journey to becoming 56-1-2 is sensational; he’s posted a video timeline of his career highlights ahead of his fight this weekend.

During fight week, it’s natural for broadcasters, right holders and brands to produce nostalgic content like this for the athletes involved. It reminds the consumer about the legacy their favourite fighters have created in the sport, which gradually increases the excitement for the main event.

CEO of EPO

UFC welterweight champion Kamaru Usman will again defend his title against Colby Covington this weekend at UFC268. During the build-up, Colby has made bold claims that Kamaru is a drug cheat.

Usman hasn’t ever failed a USADA test. Therefore, he didn’t entertain a response to Colby’s accusations until today. The Nigerian Nightmare released an Instagram reel wearing a bomber jacket with a ‘tested by USADA’ badge.

This content could certainly be a monetisation avenue Kamaru could explore as he’s got his own merchandise collection with clothing brand, the Southern Gents. Kamaru’s response to Colby is also a proactive way to engage your fans while continuing to create a buzz before his title defence.  

In Aljamain’s corner

UFC bantamweight champion Aljamain Sterling has featured more recently on the UFC YouTube channel with a new series, ‘In Aljamain’s corner’. The series has three episodes thus far, and each explores a different element of Sterling’s preparations in fight camp.

This episode caught my eye because it’s a chance to educate the MMA audience about a fighter’s journey. The medical side of the sport is crucial to understanding how athletes get in shape, receive the right training and how injuries can impact them.

It’s also a chance for Sterling to share this content internally to engage his own fan base while he’s not competing.

The Pink Suit reporter returns

Formally known as Josh Cohen, is gradually becoming one of the most polarising UFC journalists in this era. However, that didn’t stop him from posing the question to Colby ‘Chaos’ Covington on whether he’ll release x-rays of his jaw from UFC245 if he loses this weekend.

To maximise impact, Josh has created a Cameo account entitled ‘The UFC Pink Suit Guy’, which is a nickname he’s picked up ever since the UFC254 press conference. This initiative opens a monetisation avenue alongside a chance to create personal relationships with his audience, similar to what Ariel Helwani and The Schmo have done.


There we have it! A mixture of memes, fan engagement and other content insights. What did you find most valuable from this week’s Hooked On Fight Content newsletter?

Hooked On Fight Content- 30.10.21

Another edition of Hooked On Fight Content is up! This week, UFC267 has stolen the show alongside a glimpse of boxing content.

Air Sandhagen cleared for takeoff

Today, none other than Cory Sandhagen will be competing for the interim bantamweight championship against the former world champion, Petr Yan. Earlier in the week, the UFC posted a tweet with the caption, “Air Sandhagen cleared for takeoff”. The post was a short 36-second video compilation of some flying knee finishes from Sandhagen.

The flying knee is a signature move that Cory is known for, and the UFC has creatively incorporated the aeroplane emoji to describe Cory’s fighting style. United Arab Emirates tourist page, Visit Abu Dhabi, were also tagged in the tweet who are dedicated to promoting the tourism element of the capital of the UAE.

The UFC has proactively found a theme to fit both their partners, Visit Abu Dhabi, and describe a signature move of Cory Sandhagen to produce content. A fantastic example of athlete-driven marketing.

Hasbulla will be at Fight Island

The man himself, Hasbulla Magomedov, will be arriving at UFC Fight Island this Saturday to support Islam Makhachev competing against Dan Hooker. Hasbulla is an 18-year-old dwarf from Dagestan, Russia, who sprouted into a social media sensation this year. On his Instagram account, he’s regularly expressing his passion for combat sports; now, he gets to do this at UFC267.

Earlier this year, Hasbulla was due to fight with another dwarf, Abdu Rozik, until it was claimed unethical by the Russian Dwarf Athletic Association. Their pre-fight press conference achieved 15m views, the highest level of traction for any fight press conference. Dan Hooker was asked how he feels about Hasbulla supporting Islam at his press conference, and Dan humorously responded that he has Abdu in his corner supporting him.

The UFC once again produce a great short-storytelling piece to create engagement and appeal to the wider audience beyond combat sport.

Dana White and Hasbulla have a meeting

Continuing the Hasbulla hype train, he’s secured himself a meeting with Dana White this weekend! On Dana White’s Twitter account, this is the biggest piece of promotion ahead of UFC267. During the UFC267 Press Conference, Dana revealed that he has plans for Hasbulla to work with the UFC in the future.

This video didn’t only receive significant engagement; it teased the MMA community about Hasbulla being associated with the UFC long term.

What do you think of the new UFC logo?

This caught my eye on Friday! A TikTok creator decided to re-create the UFC logo, and it caught the attention of none other than Dana White. It’s a parody of the original logo, but that’s not stopped the UFC from using Emily’s creation as their profile picture on TikTok.

As bizarre as it might sound, this is a great example of the UFC being culturally sensitive towards their TikTok community. TikTok has an enormous audience of the next generation who are impressionable and attached to creators and humour. This initiative is an opportunity for the UFC to raise further brand awareness towards MMA amongst the next generation.

Can you jump rope like Teofimo Lopez?

Teofimo has a big occasion coming up towards the end of November as he’s fighting George Kambosos at Maddison Square Garden. Training clips have always been a hot content source to engage your audience, especially seeing how Lopez is jumping rope.

This also opens an opportunity to create an interactive challenge with his audience. For example, Teofimo could create a skipping challenge to make a unique hashtag and encourage his audience to see how long they can skip. Initiatives like this will help athletes gradually build a highly engaged online community.

That’s a wrap! This weeks mix has involved short-form storytelling, athlete-driven marketing and methods to build an engaged online community. What was your biggest insight this week?

Hooked On Fight Content

Welcome back to Ash’s Sports Talk! I appreciate it’s been a while, but I thought I’d return with something special. Every weekend, expect a newsletter wrapping up the top pieces of fight content every week where I’ll be breaking down their impact on fan engagement and why they stand out. If you’re a marketer in the fight game, I suggest you give my blog a follow!

Paulo Costa vs Marvin Vetorri Press Conference parody

This Sunday, UFC Vegas 41 took place where Marvin Vetorri took on Paulo Costa in a 195lb catchweight fight. Ahead of this fight, short film and animation maker, Mojahed Fudailat, created a parody press conference animation of the two. The content piece captured the thoughts of Vetorri believing that Paulo Costa was drunk during a virtual interview they both did on ESPN MMA.

The video has 63k+ views, and Mojahed’s content has regularly captured the attention of key MMA figures such as Joe Rogan, Tony Ferguson, GSP, Tyron Woodley and more. As hysterical as the video appears, Mojahed’s content is a prime example of how meme marketing works. Some of his videos gain more views and engagement than original UFC highlights and press conferences.

Memes are the most engaging pieces of content online; if a brand can find an appropriate avenue to incorporate it into their fan engagement strategy, it can prove highly leverageable to entice new audiences.

Israel Adesanya’s interview with GQ Sports

The 21-1 Middleweight sat down with the sports arm of US high-end magazine, GQ Sports, where he discussed his experiences when he made his first million dollars. The 10-minute video covered Izzy’s economic environment growing up, how he spent his UFC paycheques, his thoughts on the fashion sense of other UFC fighters and more.

Israel has gradually grown into becoming one of the UFC’s biggest stars to date. He’s the first fighter to sign a sponsorship deal with a major sports brand in Puma. He’s the global brand ambassador for the betting operator, Stake.com and is responsible for headlining one of the top PPV events this year against Jan Blachowicz.

This content piece captures Izzy’s personality through the interpersonal topics he discusses. It’s also an effective solution to provide his fan base personal content to engage in while he’s not fighting in the UFC. He also maximises this opportunity by creating his own YouTube channel, FREESTYLEBENDER, which amplifies the power of modern athlete-driven marketing.

What’s Killer Bee’s favourite recovery method?

ONE Championship uploaded a short video this week asking their audience what their favourite way to recover is. Two short clips emerged with a cupping therapy video followed by ONE fighter, Killer Bee, receiving a neck massage.

Despite only a few seconds long, the clip has over 1.3m views and over 89k likes, making it one of their most engaged videos this week and throughout the month. The clip demonstrates that a sports fan’s interest goes beyond the competition element.

This is an important insight if you’re a fighter or you represent one to build engagement and awareness to your personal brand. Rather than filling your social media feed with training clips and pictures, show your audience what your training regime looks like, what therapies you go through, what your diet looks like during fight week and more.

Teofimo Lopez does the body shot challenge

Icelandic strongman, Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson, was caught doing a body shot challenge with professional boxer, Teofimo Lopez on Heber Cannon’s IG channel. The caption on this post is plugging energy drink brand Reign Body Fuel as it appeared to occur during a content shoot with Lopez.

Body shot challenges have proven to be an engaging piece of content in the combat sports community. Names such as Ryan Garcia and Francis Ngannou have featured in many of them.

It’s imaginable Reign Body Fuel have received numerous mentions, shares and engagement on their social channels from this one clip between Hafþór and Teofimo. This allows Reign to maximise impact by encouraging their audiences to remix the IG reel and get a challenge trending with a hashtag to enhance brand awareness.

What words were exchanged between Alvarez and Plant’s press conference scrap?

BT Sport Boxing share the close of the words exchanged between Canelo Alvarez & Caleb Plant during their press conference a few weeks ago, captured by Showtime.

This moment has been a significant piece of promotion that will likely feature in fight trailers, heated combat sports moments, compilations and memes. With this bout being only a couple of weeks away, it’s only beneficial to drive engagement and publicity to the fight.

It also re-emphasises the appetite sports fans have to feel close and personal to their favourite athletes. In this circumstance, many boxing fans were curious to hear what got Canelo triggered enough to push Caleb across the stage. Well, they now have their answer.


That’s a wrap! A mixture of fight content this week consists of athlete-driven marketing, personalised content, viral challenge content and the beauty of meme marketing. What did you find most insightful throughout this content batch?

Exclusive Interview with Patrick Curran- Co-founder of Curran Media

This week, I’ve interviewed Patrick Curran, co-founder of Curran Media. Curran Media are a different athlete marketing, management, video & brand development company helping athletes maximise their potential in & out of their sport. Patrick has had an amazing journey that he talks about today, alongside sharing his insights around content, digital trends and athlete-driven marketing.

Q1) Patrick, a pleasure to have you on Ash’s Sports Talk. How did your sports career begin? 

I played sports through high school, including division one American football, and I even coached within division’s 2 and 3. This led to me working within marketing departments at schools, and fast forward to about 5-6 years, I started working with big media companies around branding, including the UFC, which led to supporting athletes with optimising social media channels.

My brother and I started our own business 5-6 years ago between my college and coaching years. At the time, we had devised a fitness app that picked up interest and found us consulting in football coaching. We realised we were doing a lot around marketing at this point and were inspired to start our own business, Curran Media.

Q2) Tell me more about your current role at Curran Media, such as what you do and what sports you’re focused on? 

My brother and I co-founded the company. My role is around business development and creative standpoints, whereas my brother is more focused on securing deals. We’ve worked with athletes across American football, basketball, and MMA.

Every athlete is different at Curran Media, meaning it’s important to give them custom-based treatment to facilitate their needs. For example, approaching a brand partnership or campaign with an MMA athlete will differ from a basketball player. Plus, the interest from brands in particular industries will be more popular with different sports.

Q3) What does the process look like when forming/reaching out for a brand partnership?

It depends entirely on the situation. Some brands reach out to us or vice versa. Firstly, we identify if there are any synergies between what we’re both trying to achieve. Secondly, we’ll offer some creative thought behind how we can work together. Once the brainstorming is done, we’ll move towards figuring out logistics, budgets, and so on.

Q4) Athlete-driven marketing has changed tremendously in recent years; I don’t think more power is in the athletes to this day. What do you think are the defining factors to building a successful personal brand for an athlete? 

Build a community and one where your fans really care about you. That could be inspired by your athletic ability, sense of humour, style, or simply important values. Quite a few athletes don’t understand how to build a community on social. Ten years ago, to create a relationship, you would’ve only had meeting face-to-face as the only option. Now, you can build bonds by responding to a comment on an Instagram post.

Some athletes that have stood out to me when building a personal brand include Conor McGregor, a smart businessman and entertaining character in MMA. American footballer Juju Smith Schuster is another great example; he made 800,000 dollars through brand endorsements and content, significantly more than on the field. He’s funny, silly, does lots of community stuff, and ultimately, his digital success comes from showing different aspects of socials.

Q5) I see you’ve worked with some UFC fighters. I’ve grown into a vivid supporter of MMA because of it, mainly because of the variety of characters. How pivotal do you think that’s been to the UFC growing to where it is today? 

Every fighter has a different angle to garner attention, for the better and worse. For example, not everyone will appreciate how Colby Covington promotes himself. The interesting thing about MMA from other sports is the fan will tune in to see a fighter lose instead of winning; that culture doesn’t really exist in other sports like the NBA or NFL.

MMA fighters tend to truly say how they feel compared to other athlete’s, which makes them so much more accessible, and many fans will feel as if they know them personally. This allows fans to become super invested in them. It comes down to MMA fighters not being so polished as athletes in other sports; they don’t have major PR teams. Instead, it’s usually one manager who deals with them. Plus, they’ll likely encourage more trash talk and confrontations because that’s what increases the appetite of the MMA audience.

Q6) what trends and platforms can you see growing across digital that athletes can benefit from to boost their profiles? 

Tiktok is for everyone, and I recommend every athlete to be on it. I can’t think of any other platforms from an entertainment and engagement platform ahead of TikTok right now. There will always be new platforms on the rise, which we currently don’t know; however, athlete’s need to stay on top of this. Generally, athlete’s already have a following, it’s so easy to move onto another platform. By all means, be patient if necessary but don’t be late for the party.

The great thing about TikTok is that you can produce content in many ways, and it’s not all about synchronised dancing. However, make sure your content across different platforms is the same. I’ve seen major creative differences with some athlete’s who’ll have amazing TikTok accounts, but their Instagram accounts don’t match it.

Build a brand; it’s not just about having ‘nice pictures’.

Q7) Creating Curran Media, what have been some of the challenges you’ve come across along the way? 

We deal with humans, so challenges happen all the time. For example, people don’t get back to you in time. But, the biggest challenge occurred when we wanted to transition from athletes to work with media companies and big brands. We had zero true relationships, and it wasn’t easy to convince them that they could trust us as working with an individual is different to a company.

Now, we have a handful of college athlete’s we work with, which is a whole different market. A lot of them are super marketable and likely to play professionally. This means bigger agencies will be keeping their eye on them, and we’ve got to do our best to keep hold of our athletes. It’s annoying and frustrating. However, all we can do is give our absolute all for who we’re working with.

Q8) Patrick, what is your key piece of advice for someone wanting to pursue a career in sport? 

Do it, be active and give people a reason to want to work with you. Want to work in broadcasting? Well, start talking about the sport you love. Social media has given us a space where we can share our voice, use it. Start a podcast or a YouTube channel; you don’t have to have a thorough plan behind it, but strategise as you go along. Once you’ve found you’re angle, keep going.


What a brilliant interview with Patrick. He’s come a long way to establish Curran Media with his brother, and his successes are clearly paying off. What did you find most insightful about this weeks interview?

How does Khamzat Chimaev’s personal brand enhance his marketability?

With just under 3m social media followers, Khamzat Chimaev became one of the most notable names in the UFC last year. Khamzat had the best start possible to his UFC career with three decisive wins within three months. However, he, unfortunately, caught COVID and experienced lingering after effects, leaving Chimaev out of the Octagon for over a year. This October, He’s due to return by competing against top 15 ranked fighter Li Jingliang. But what has Khamzat been up to during his time off the UFC to build his personal brand?

Borz necklace

Chimaev is a member of the All Stars gym in Sweden, and his gym released an exclusive Khamzat Chimaev necklace. The pendant has an image of half of Chimaev’s face merged with a wolf. Khamzat has the nickname ‘Borz’, which is known as a Chechen wolf. This stood out to me because it’s more than a simple accessory; it’s a piece of merchandise representing Chimaev’s brand identity.

We see many other UFC fighters embody their nicknames through content creation or mainstream media. For example, Dustin ‘the Diamond’ Poirier regularly uses the diamond emoji on social media captions. Conor ‘The Notorious’ McGregor regularly walks out to Hypnotize by The Notorious B.I.G as his ring walk.

Considering Khamzat is early into his UFC career, this is a good start to establishing a strong brand presence through his nickname. This could lead to different avenues, such as borz-themed merchandise, content interlinked with Chimaev’s passion for Chechen wolves or something similar.

YouTube vlogs

The Russian born has regularly featured in YouTube videos and Swedish MMA Media outlet, Frontkick.online. Most content is training footage, daily vlogs and interviews.

Seeing how quick Chimaev’s growth sprouted after his third UFC win, he’s subsequently built an audience who will be curious to explore his life away from the Octagon. On the Frontkick.online YouTube channel, whenever Chimaev is mentioned in a video title, those are where the most views and engagement lie.

Chimaev currently hasn’t got his own YouTube channel but should consider it if he hasn’t already. He wouldn’t necessarily have to produce any new content, but having it available directly from himself allows him to create another engagement avenue with his fanbase.

Cross-nationality

Khamzat Chimaev told why he represents Sweden in the UFC

Khamzat was born in Chechnya, Russia but has lived in Sweden for the majority of his life. He’s also a devoted Muslim and proudly represents his culture in and out of the cage. Islam is one of the most followed religions worldwide, which has many followers from Russia, as we discovered with Khabib’s representation of it from Dagestan.

Chimaev could incorporate his cross-national culture into content creation in many ways. Whether that’s through vlogs across his home town, showing his fans his favourite national foods, iconic places within his neighbourhood and similar. It’s an opportunity to build fan orientated relationships that can evolve into monetization opportunities.


There’s plenty of potential with Chimaev and his personal brand, some of which has been fulfilled. His rise to UFC stardom is a very marketable opportunity for him regardless of being out of the Octagon for nearly a year. His fans will likely be very curious to keep updated with his story, and it’s Borz’s chance to begin building an engaged community of super fans.