Follow MMA at work
Sport Spreadsheet follows live MMA — the UFC and PFL — as fight cards and results inside a spreadsheet that reads as work. A fight card is already a list of matchups, so it slots into a sheet cleanly.
MMA runs on a global schedule of fight nights, and the international events — cards staged in Abu Dhabi, Australia or Asia — routinely start in the middle of a working day somewhere. Here's how to keep an eye on the card and the results from your desk without a broadcast giving you away.
Why MMA is hard to follow at work
Between the numbered pay-per-views and the near-weekly Fight Nights, there's an MMA card most weekends, and events staged on the other side of the world land squarely in office hours. A live fight on your monitor is impossible to explain away; a card of matchups and results reads as an ordinary list.
MMA we cover
| Competition | Region | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| UFC | International | Live |
| Professional Fighters League | International | Live |
What you can follow
The full fight card — bout order, fighters and weight classes — and results as each fight is decided, across the UFC and PFL, laid out as rows in the grid. (MMA is card-and-result level: there's no live table or ball-by-ball feed to fake.)
Guides by competition
Questions
- Can I follow the UFC at work?
- Yes — the fight card, bout order and results as they land, for the UFC and PFL, laid out as rows in the grid with a one-key boss button.
- Is there live round-by-round data?
- No — MMA coverage is at card-and-result level (the matchups and who won). We don't fake a feed that doesn't exist.
Open the spreadsheet
Today's mma fixtures and the live table are one quiet tab away. Free, instant, no account.