The UFC, a privately owned sports league valued at $12 billion, recently hosted its 300th pay-per-view event. With a virtual monopoly on high-level mixed martial arts and no athlete representation, the organization remunerates its stars with a pitiful 18.6% of revenue (compared to the 50-50 owner-player split in many top sports leagues).

Moicano, a seventeen-fight veteran of the organization, put his body on the line on the biggest card of the year, earning just $77k after tax. With management fees, training costs and medical bills, little will be left. And what is left will depreciate over time. It’s easy to see why top athletes need to sell t-shirts and caps just to make ends meet.

Rather than use his post-fight interview to build hype for future match ups or thank the company that ripped him off, Moicano did something much smarter: he talked about money.