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Mayhem Miller says UFC denied his 120,000 dollar knee surgery claim

The Ariel Helwani Show · Mayhem Miller's Theory on What ACTUALLY Happened to Conor McGregor, Dark Side of Life Post Fighting · July 14, 2026
Mayhem Miller says UFC denied his 120,000 dollar knee surgery claim
The Ariel Helwani Show
The Ariel Helwani Show
Mayhem Miller's Theory on What ACTUALLY Happened to Conor McGregor, Dark Side of Life Post Fighting
"Yeah, they could deny it. Somebody up the chain had the power to, to deny it, and they did. Really? Oh yeah, pre-existing condition. Thanks, Obama."
Jason Miller disclosed that the UFC denied coverage for his $120,000 knee surgery, citing it as a pre-existing condition, despite the injury occurring during his fighting career. This contradicts current UFC claims about covering fighter injuries sustained in the cage. Miller had to pay for the surgery himself during a period when he was also out of work.

About this episode

Ariel Helwani sits down with former UFC fighter and Strikeforce veteran Jason 'Mayhem' Miller for a wide-ranging conversation covering UFC 313, fighter healthcare controversies, and Miller's personal journey. The episode delivers significant revelations about UFC's historical treatment of injured fighters, with Miller claiming the organization sent fighters cards to obtain pain pills and denied his $120,000 knee surgery as a pre-existing condition despite the injury occurring during his career. Miller provides expert analysis of Conor McGregor's devastating knee injury against Max Holloway, arguing the opening flying kick was a calculated tactical gamble that failed due to McGregor's age and weight. He praises Paddy Pimblett's submission victory and discusses the electric atmosphere at UFC 313, calling Pimblett a newly born star. The conversation takes personal turns as Miller opens up about his infamous Real Sports interview, revealing it was a deliberate cry for help about the system failing fighters that was edited to make him look unstable. He discusses his current life coaching fighters including Danny Ramirez for bare-knuckle boxing, his engagement to his longtime partner who owns kawaii store Japan LA, and how martial arts and stable relationships saved his life. Miller offers candid takes on bare-knuckle fighting, slap competitions, streaming culture, and the need for independent MMA hall of fame recognition. Throughout, he demonstrates the vulnerability and insight of a fighter who has been through the fire and emerged with hard-won wisdom about the sport's treatment of its warriors.

Key takeaways

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