Video: McGregor Talks At Length About His “Publicized Civil War” With The UFC

conor-mcgregor-espn

Conor McGregor described the UFC 200 situation with the promotion as a publicised civil war. pic.twitter.com/V41PFU1RZT

— Chamatkar Sandhu (@SandhuMMA) May 22, 2016

On Sunday, reigning UFC Featherweight Champion “The Notorious” Conor McGregor opened up with ESPN about what he is calling a “publicized civil war” he has been having with UFC management.

As McGregor explained, there was a lot going on, and all he really wanted to do was properly train for a 170-pound immediate rematch with the first man to beat him inside the Octagon, Nate Diaz.

“I was in a time where I was like, figuring out something,” McGregor said. “I didn’t just shut out and say no to everything. I just wanted to do reasonable media, and then, hey, all of a sudden, ‘Conor, it’s three months from the fight, we’ve got to drag you (onto) 40-hour flights to come and do a runaround, New York, Vegas, California, 70 press conferences, 70 talk shows, adverts, all of this,’ and it’s like, I already made you $400 million last week. That was only last week, that fight. I need to get right.”

McGregor continued, “That’s how it all came about. I just wanted to focus and I was deep in the process, and especially at that particular moment, I just wanted a little bit more time. I didn’t shut it off completely. Reasonable media, is what I said. I said I would do New York. I said I would do everything else after that. I just needed another little bit to set myself, and then the lack of communication, they weren’t having it. They were trying to push back on me, I was trying to push back on them, and look, it blew up then.”

UFC’s reigning 145-pound champion would go on, explaining that at the start he was basically having some fun, but things got a bit out of hand.

“I’ll tell you what, it blew up,” McGregor said. “I was just kind of having fun at the start. It was kind of half-hearted, and then it just went [crazy], and now all of a sudden you’re off UFC 200, and I was like, ‘alright, well f*ck you too then.’ It was fun. Seeing it all blow up like that, it was amusing for a while.

“There were times when I was … seeing the press conferences take place, and I was like, ah, I should’ve just jumped on the damn flight. I should’ve just stuck it out and went with it. But sometimes you’ve gotta do what’s right for you, and not do what’s right for everybody else — and especially if you’ve done what’s right for everybody else a million times over, you should have the right to be able to do what’s right for you sometimes. That’s what I felt.”

According to “The Notorious” one, he left things between he and the UFC “in a good place.”

“I’m committed to the fight game,” McGregor said. “I enjoy competition. I enjoy challenges. So, if a challenge is in front of me, and it appeals to me, then I will go and I will conquer it. I’m open to challenges. I enjoy fighting, period.”

H/T to MMAFighting.com for transcribing the above Conor McGregor quotes.

conor-mcgregor-espn

On Sunday, reigning UFC Featherweight Champion “The Notorious” Conor McGregor opened up with ESPN about what he is calling a “publicized civil war” he has been having with UFC management.

As McGregor explained, there was a lot going on, and all he really wanted to do was properly train for a 170-pound immediate rematch with the first man to beat him inside the Octagon, Nate Diaz.

“I was in a time where I was like, figuring out something,” McGregor said. “I didn’t just shut out and say no to everything. I just wanted to do reasonable media, and then, hey, all of a sudden, ‘Conor, it’s three months from the fight, we’ve got to drag you (onto) 40-hour flights to come and do a runaround, New York, Vegas, California, 70 press conferences, 70 talk shows, adverts, all of this,’ and it’s like, I already made you $400 million last week. That was only last week, that fight. I need to get right.”

McGregor continued, “That’s how it all came about. I just wanted to focus and I was deep in the process, and especially at that particular moment, I just wanted a little bit more time. I didn’t shut it off completely. Reasonable media, is what I said. I said I would do New York. I said I would do everything else after that. I just needed another little bit to set myself, and then the lack of communication, they weren’t having it. They were trying to push back on me, I was trying to push back on them, and look, it blew up then.”

UFC’s reigning 145-pound champion would go on, explaining that at the start he was basically having some fun, but things got a bit out of hand.

“I’ll tell you what, it blew up,” McGregor said. “I was just kind of having fun at the start. It was kind of half-hearted, and then it just went [crazy], and now all of a sudden you’re off UFC 200, and I was like, ‘alright, well f*ck you too then.’ It was fun. Seeing it all blow up like that, it was amusing for a while.

“There were times when I was … seeing the press conferences take place, and I was like, ah, I should’ve just jumped on the damn flight. I should’ve just stuck it out and went with it. But sometimes you’ve gotta do what’s right for you, and not do what’s right for everybody else — and especially if you’ve done what’s right for everybody else a million times over, you should have the right to be able to do what’s right for you sometimes. That’s what I felt.”

According to “The Notorious” one, he left things between he and the UFC “in a good place.”

“I’m committed to the fight game,” McGregor said. “I enjoy competition. I enjoy challenges. So, if a challenge is in front of me, and it appeals to me, then I will go and I will conquer it. I’m open to challenges. I enjoy fighting, period.”

H/T to MMAFighting.com for transcribing the above Conor McGregor quotes.