The key name not on the list (of Strikeforce talent being brought to UFC) was Barnett. Barnett and Dana White had bitter feelings dating back to 2002 when Barnett beat Randy Couture to win the UFC heavyweight title, and then held the promotion up asking for $1 million to return and defend the title. As it turned out, Barnett failed a steroid test in the fight with Couture and was stripped of the title, and blamed UFC for the failed test. Barnett had always buried UFC when he was in Pride and Strikeforce, but after Strikeforce was bought, he changed his tune.
There were also issues that took place over the past year. Anything can happen. Dana White was non-committal about Barnett when asked, but others in the organization certainly pegged the odds of not being great that they would take him. For one, Barnett was earning $250,000 per fight with Strikeforce (you can see why they had to sell signing contracts like that, it was the cost of the heavyweight tournament, Fedor mainly, but others as well, with no way to recoup it because Showtime didn’t pay them enough to cover the costs). His contract expired with this show, and there is no matching rights clause or period where he can only negotiate with them. He is a complete free agent at this point.
Barnett would probably be one of the better heavyweights in UFC. If the top tier is Junior Dos Santos, Cain Velasquez, Cormier, Alistair Overeem and Fabricio Werdum, he’d be right behind them. Whether he’s worth that money not in the top five is a question, but they paid Mirko Cro Cop a lot more than that when he was past his prime.
Interestingly, Bjorn Rebney said that they have no interest in Barnett. This has to be Barnett’s reputation scaring them, because just as talent and nothing else, Barnett would figure to be a great fit. He would likely win the heavyweight title and give them an American heavyweight who knows how to entertain and talk, and legitimately is top ten in the world. Plus, for all the talk of wanting a Bellator/TNA joint promotional deal, Barnett is the single greatest fit possible. Again, as a pro wrestler, he’d be a top-tier talker right now. He’s been pro wrestling since 2003 and has worked main events in Japan for much of that time. When he’s in with quality guys, Barnett has the ability to have great matches. And at least a few years ago, Hulk Hogan liked Barnett when they were both working for New Japan. It’s almost an amazing fit for him on Spike TV as a network star, yet, it’s probably not going to happen.