Fire-Breathing Luke Rockhold Looks to Reassert Himself as Top UFC Middleweight

Now that Luke Rockhold is finally set to return to the Octagon on Saturday in the main event of UFC Fight Night 116, you think it’s possible the disgruntled former middleweight champ might tone things down a bit?
Yeah, good luck with that.
Nobody has t…

Now that Luke Rockhold is finally set to return to the Octagon on Saturday in the main event of UFC Fight Night 116, you think it’s possible the disgruntled former middleweight champ might tone things down a bit?

Yeah, good luck with that.

Nobody has taken the 185-pound weight class’s recent slowdown as personally as Rockhold. As he prepares to meet former two-division World Series of Fighting champ Dave Branch at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, Rockhold is still breathing fire about it in interviews (NSFW quotes ahead).

“I’m f–king tired of waiting,” Rockhold said during a recent appearance on MMAjunkie Radio, via Junkie’s Stephen Marrocco. “I’m not f–king around. I’m tired of this s–t. I’m tired of talking about it. I’m coming with a vengeance.”

The object of Rockhold’s ire, of course, is the ongoing logjam atop the division he once briefly ruled. Since the 32-year-old American Kickboxing Academy product conceded his title to Michael Bisping via stunning first-round knockout at UFC 199 in June 2016, all things concerning the championship have slowed to a crawl.

Bisping has defended the title just once since toppling Rockhold, and it was against 46-year-old Dan Henderson at UFC 204 in October of last year. Bisping won the fight via unanimous decision, but he then cast the division into suspended animation while he courted an on-again, off-again matchup against Georges St-Pierre.

With St-Pierre saying he needed until at least this October to get ready and Bisping opting for knee surgery, matchmakers had little choice but to put an interim title on Robert Whittaker following his win over Yoel Romero at UFC 213 in July.

A once-vibrant crop of contenders that featured Romero, Jacare Souza and Chris Weidman has thinned considerably since then. It used to be that you could make the argument that middleweight was as deep and interesting as any division in the UFC. Now people are talking about beefed-up welterweight Kelvin Gastelum as a potential title contender if he gets past 42-year-old Anderson Silva on November 25.

Meanwhile, Rockhold spent the last 15 months steadfastly trying to convince his bosses that he had other options.

During his extended sabbatical in the wake of the Bisping loss, Rockhold signed with the same modeling agency that represents UFC fighter Alan Jouban and actor Channing Tatum. When he wasn’t proposing a general strike among his fellow 185-pound fighters, he was showing up cageside with pop star Demi Lovato.

The message was clear: Life was good. Rockhold was in no hurry to return to the Octagon.

“I’m not coming back after all this time and fighting some chump on a worthless card,” he told Ariel Helwani during an appearance on The MMA Hour in June. “I’m coming back in style and making some noise.”

That sentiment makes the Branch booking an interesting one.

UFC Fight Night 116 may not be “worthless” in Rockhold’s estimation, but it certainly doesn’t qualify as a noisemaker. On its face, it’s enough to make you wonder if Rockhold was just posturing in his demands for something bigger or if his fallback career opportunities didn’t turn out to be as lucrative as he’d hoped.

Then there’s Branch himself, who rolls into this bout on a 13-1 tear since a loss to Rousimar Palhares ended his first stint in the UFC in March 2011. While spending the next five years competing in smaller organizations, Branch became that rare fighter who actually improved his standing in the sport without the promotional oomph of the UFC behind him.

He returned to MMA‘s biggest stage in May and won a split decision over highly touted Polish fighter Krzysztof Jotko.

All that means the MMA world is still very much in the process of figuring out how good this revamped version of Branch really is. Right now, he could be a pushover opponent for Rockhold in his comeback fight, a deceptively tough but unheralded stumbling block or something in between.

Which is it? We won’t know until Saturday night.

Nonetheless, Rockhold says a victory over Branch (which he implies is already in the bag) shouldn’t just put him back on the short list of contenders for Bisping’s belt—it should allow him to leapfrog St-Pierre.

“I think Georges St-Pierre is a joke,” Rockhold said on MMAjunkie Radio. “I still don’t have faith that Georges makes it to the fight, so we’ll see what happens.”

Given the sudden lack of other viable contenders for either of the UFC’s two middleweight champions—Bisping and Whittaker—now would be an opportune time for Rockhold to reassert his position near the top.

A win over Branch would make him the most obvious next opponent for Bisping, provided the brash Brit beats GSP. If St-Pierre wins the title or if Bisping’s belt somehow remains stuck in the mud, it’s conceivable Rockhold could next take on Whittaker instead.

Whatever happens, the only sure bet is Rockhold won’t be happy about it.

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Can Henry Cejudo’s Conor McGregor Impression Be Good Enough to Win a UFC Title?

Henry Cejudo looked like a new man in the cage Saturday at UFC 215.
No, seriously, he looked like a different person—like a miniature, right-handed Conor McGregor.
Cejudo certainly had some surprises cooked up for Wilson Reis in their flyweight c…

Henry Cejudo looked like a new man in the cage Saturday at UFC 215.

No, seriously, he looked like a different person—like a miniature, right-handed Conor McGregor.

Cejudo certainly had some surprises cooked up for Wilson Reis in their flyweight contender fight at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The former Olympic wrestler adopted the distinctive wide-open, karate stance and pawing lead hand from McGregor’s trademark offense and battered Reis en route to a second-round TKO victory.

The performance was so impressive that it single-handedly revitalized Cejudo’s championship aspirations after back-to-back losses to titlist Demetrious Johnson and perennial world No. 2 Joseph Benavidez in 2016.

If Cejudo has finally harnessed his considerable athleticism and become a fully realized MMA fighter, there’s no telling how high he might fly.

But is it possible he could ride his dead-on Conor McGregor impression all the way to the 125-pound title?

He seems to think so.

“I know I’m the one to beat Demetrious Johnson,” Cejudo said at the UFC 215 post-fight press conference. “No disrespect to these fighters, no disrespect to any of them…but I believe I have the style to eventually beat him, and I truly do believe that.”

Obviously, serious discussion of anybody beating Johnson can’t be taken up lightly. The longtime flyweight kingpin was on the verge of breaking Anderson Silva’s record for consecutive UFC title defenses at UFC 215 before his scheduled bout against Ray Borg was scratched just before the weigh-ins.

It’s probably a stretch to think that Cejudo might be ready to rematch Johnson immediately, after the champion finished him via first-round TKO at UFC 197 a bit more than a year ago. It’d probably be prudent to see if his newfound striking prowess holds up over at least one more fight.

Even Cejudo agrees he doesn’t want to rush into anything. He said at the press conference:

“Emotionally, I do want to fight him right away. Technically, am I going to be ready for this guy? I don’t want to just fight Demetrious; I want to beat him. He’s been on my mind since he beat me. I’m a competitor, man. To get stopped in front of 20,000 people, that hurts. I think about it a lot. There’s a reason why he’s the pound-for-pound best fighter in the world. That’s who I have to beat. Not just fight—beat.”

Even if it takes another fight or two to retake No. 1 contender status, however, Cejudo certainly picked an interesting time to reassert himself in the flyweight division.

The 125-pound title picture feels wide-open after the Johnson-Borg cancelation.

Mighty Mouse is trying to get that matchup rebooked for UFC 216 in Las Vegas October 7, but that’s not a sure thing. Meanwhile, 24-year-old Sergio Pettis lurks as a potential future No. 1 contender and Johnson has already discussed his desire to entertain bantamweights Cody Garbrandt or TJ Dillashaw after he has Silva’s title defense record in hand.

In a weight class this relatively shallow, it’s almost certain that Cejudo eventually ends up getting another chance to become champion—especially if his performances continue looking so McGregor-esque.

The sudden similarities between him and the UFC’s superstar lightweight champion were so noticeable, McGregor’s longtime coach, John Kavanagh, couldn’t resist having a little fun with it on Twitter:

The new style was undeniably successful for Cejudo against Reis. He controlled the distance well, using an obvious speed advantage to sting the 32-year-old Brazilian with right hands while using his left to swat away Reis’ jab much the same way McGregor does with his right.

With just over a minute left in the first round, Cejudo stunned Reis with a high kick and a left-right punching combo. A few seconds later, he dropped Reis with a straight right and as the Brazilian scrambled back to his feet, Cejudo hit him with a thudding leg kick and a series of knees from the clinch.

Cejudo then closed out the round with a takedown, effectively diversifying his attack with a dizzying array of techniques. Reis managed to survive until the bell, but Cejudo opened the second by dropping him with another straight right and pouring on strikes until the referee called things off just 26 seconds into the stanza.

It was Cejudo’s first stoppage victory in seven fights in the Octagon, and the results were no accident.

He said in advance of this fight that he went to Brazil to train with Bellator MMA fighters Patricky and Patricio Freire and told UFC color commentator Joe Rogan in the cage that he “brought back a little of that karate stuff.”

As a guy who understands the promotional side of the sport, Cejudo also notes that for the 125-pound weight class to shake its low-profile position in the UFC landscape, it wouldn’t hurt to have a few more stoppages.

“We need fights like this,” Cejudo said after the Reis fight, via the Edmonton Sun‘s Robert Tychkowski. “We need knockouts in the flyweight division. I hit hard; I’m a little tank.”

Of course, looking like Conor McGregor in a fight against Reis and doing it in a potential fight against Johnson are two very different tricks. After Saturday night’s finish, Cejudo strode to the side of the cage to have words with reigning flyweight champ, who was sitting ringside after his own bout was called off.

“I just gave him a thumbs-up,” Cejudo told Rogan, when asked what he’d said to Johnson. “I said he’s the champ for a reason. It was just fun and games, man, but I do want to fight him [again] eventually someday, for sure.”

Maybe we shouldn’t have that fight tomorrow, but if Cejudo can continue to grow and improve in MMA, it should be one we all have circled on our calendars for the future.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 215: Resurgent Rafael dos Anjos Puts Welterweight Division on Notice

After 2016 saw him drop his lightweight title and be summarily written out of the 155-pound title picture by back-to-back losses, Rafael dos Anjos looks reborn at welterweight.
That was the takeaway from Dos Anjos’ impressive first-round submission win…

After 2016 saw him drop his lightweight title and be summarily written out of the 155-pound title picture by back-to-back losses, Rafael dos Anjos looks reborn at welterweight.

That was the takeaway from Dos Anjos’ impressive first-round submission win over Neil Magny on Saturday in the co-main event of UFC 215. The victory gave the 32-year-old Brazilian two in a row at 170 pounds and abruptly put the top contenders in his newfound division on notice.

Now that Dos Anjos no longer has to nearly kill himself making weight, he’s back to being bad, bad news.

“I was struggling so much to make weight [at lightweight],” Dos Anjos told UFC color commentator Joe Rogan in the cage after the fight. “I want to see my kids grow. I want to see my grandkids. That’s why I decided to move up.”

With a dearth of fresh title contenders for welterweight champion Tyron Woodley, it’s possible Dos Anjos might find himself filling that void without much further ado.

He entered this fight at No. 10 on the UFC’s official 170-pound rankings, following a unanimous-decision win over former Strikeforce welterweight champion Tarec Saffidine in his divisional debut in June. After effortlessly dispatching the sixth-ranked Magny, it’s a good bet he’ll be knocking on the door of the top five when the next batch of rankings are released.

The 30-year-old Magny entered fresh on the heels of a victory over former champ Johny Hendricks at UFC 207, but Dos Anjos made short work of him on this night at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Dos Anjos rendered Magny’s significant height and reach advantages null when he scooped the Brooklyn, New York native off his feet with a powerful low kick in the early going. From there, Dos Anjos presented a clinic on how to use top position to work for a finish.

He moved from half guard to mount with an ease befitting his status as a Brazilian jiu jitsu black belt. On the way, he threatened with a guillotine choke and pestered Magny with a series of elbows and a wicked knee to the gut.

As Magny tried to reposition himself to avoid Dos Anjos’ elbows, the former champion locked up an arm-triangle choke and slid back to the side. Magny couldn’t fight it off for long and tapped out with just three minutes, 43 seconds gone in the first round.

Call it a return to form for Dos Anjos, who went 10-1 between 2012-15 and won the 155-pound title from Anthony Pettis at UFC 185. During that run, Dos Anjos made his name as an aggressive striker and hard-nosed grappler while taking out a series of other well-known UFC attractions like Benson Henderson, Nate Diaz and Donald Cerrone.

Dos Anjos never really caught on as a drawing card, however, and he unexpectedly lost his title to Eddie Alvarez in July 2016, at the low-profile UFC Fight Night 90. That event took place on a Thursday night and aired exclusively on the UFC’s digital subscription service, as part of a three-night extravaganza leading up to the gala UFC 200 fight card.

It made for an ignominious end to Dos Anjos’ run as 155-pound titleist. When he also lost his next bout, to the surging Tony Ferguson in November of that year, he essentially dropped off the crowded lightweight map. It seemed like the end of him as a championship-level fighter.

But on a UFC 215 pay-per-view card that had to be revamped after Demetrious Johnson’s scheduled flyweight title defense against Ray Borg was scratched just before weigh-ins, Dos Anjos roared back to contender status.

Despite that earlier win over Saffiedine, he needed this victory over a solid, middle-of-the-pack welterweight like Magny to prove he’s a serious threat there.

It would be a meteoric reemergence if Dos Anjos managed to roll these two victories straight into a title fight against Woodley, but it also isn’t impossible.

Woodley is just shy of two months removed from a tepid victory over Demian Maia at UFC 214. His previous title defense against Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson at UFC 209 didn’t earn rave reviews, either.

If UFC matchmakers are looking for a challenger who can match Woodley stylistically and push the pace against him physically, they may have found their man in Dos Anjos.

His arrival in the 170-pound title picture is well-timed, too. The top end of the division is currently clogged with guys Woodley has already beaten, including Thompson, Maia, Robbie Lawler and Carlos Condit.

Assuming the landscape remains the same, fight company brass might not have many good options to give Woodley next, aside from Jorge Masvidal or Dos Anjos.

“Tyron, I respect you,” Dos Anjos said at the post-fight press conference, “but I’m coming for that belt.”

Exactly what happens next, of course, might hinge on the plans of returning former champion Georges St-Pierre. After a lengthy negotiation over his comeback bout, St-Pierre is booked to take on Michael Bisping for the middleweight title at UFC 217 on Nov. 4.

Depending on how that fight goes, GSP could choose to remain at 185 pounds or return to the welterweight division he ruled with extreme prejudice from roughly 2006-13.

For now, however, Dos Anjos appears well-positioned in his new home.

If all that was keeping him from competing at his full potential at lightweight truly was the massive weight cut, the welterweight division has a new—and very dangerous—contender on its hands.

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For What It’s Worth, UFC 215 Finds Demetrious Johnson on Cusp of History

Provided he defeats Ray Borg on Saturday in the main event of UFC 215, Demetrious Johnson will finally break Anderson Silva’s longstanding record for consecutive UFC title defenses.
This milestone obviously means a lot to Johnson.
The men’s flyweight c…

Provided he defeats Ray Borg on Saturday in the main event of UFC 215, Demetrious Johnson will finally break Anderson Silva’s longstanding record for consecutive UFC title defenses.

This milestone obviously means a lot to Johnson.

The men’s flyweight champion has been citing it as a motivating factor since at least before his second win over John Dodson two years and four fights ago. Beating Borg this weekend will give Johnson 11 straight defenses, moving him out of a tie with Silva and into uncharted waters of historic dominance for a UFC titlist.

Considering the turnover at the top in many of the rest of the fight company’s weight classes over the last couple of years, it will be a doubly amazing feat—and “Mighty Mouse” says he’s still a long way from satisfied.

“I hope I can get to 20,” Johnson told ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto recently. “I’m on pace to get two or three fights per year, and I think I’ve got five or six years left in me. Maybe I’ll get to something like 18 and walk away from the sport—retire as champion. I think 15 to 18 title defenses is something that would be in the record books forever.”

There’s no mystery in this record’s appeal to him. As of Saturday, Johnson will have been 125-pound champ for a staggering 1,808 days, and he’s set to go off as a 9-1 favorite over Borg, according to OddsShark. Since winning the flyweight belt at UFC 152 in September 2012, he’s been so far ahead of his competition there isn’t much for him to focus on besides immortality.

But exactly what this record (and Johnson breaking it) means to anyone outside of the fighter and his inner circle is a matter of opinion.

You might not even know Johnson was on the cusp of history unless you’ve had your ear pressed firmly to the ground of hardcore MMA circles.

It’s not as though the UFC has been shouting Johnson’s potential achievement from the rooftops. UFC 215, in fact, will be a fairly low-profile pay-per-view event headlined by a pair of champions who’ve found themselves in the fight company’s doghouse in recent months.

Women’s bantamweight champ Amanda Nunes cast herself in hot water after pulling out of a UFC 213 title defense against Valentina Shevchenko the week of the fight in July. A do-over of that bout will now serve as UFC 215’s co-main event.

Johnson himself—normally a drama-free workhorse for the UFC during his championship run—publicly clashed with the organization in June over his next opponent. The UFC wanted Johnson to fight former men’s bantamweight champ T.J. Dillashaw, but Johnson insisted on breaking this record against an actual flyweight before entertaining the idea of fighting men from other weight classes.

The public tiff has put the fighter and his bosses uncharacteristically at odds headed into this matchup.

“You want Ray Borg, we’ll give you Ray Borg,” a sarcastic UFC President Dana White told MMAjunkie’s John Morgan and Ken Hathaway recently. “I’m sure the fans will be clamoring, and ticket sales will be through the roof and pay-per-views will be off the charts.”

Ticket sales and PPV buys have been the only real problem for Johnson for some time now.

If you’ve watched him fight anytime during his five-year reign, you already knows he’s an incredible champion and perhaps the most complete MMA fighter of all time. Since dropping from bantamweight in the wake of a loss to Dominick Cruz in late 2011, he and head coach Matt Hume have polished his skill set to the point of near flawlessness.

If anything, the 31-year-old is still getting better. Johnson’s most recent run of victories against Wilson Reis, Tim Elliott, Henry Cejudo and Dodson has been increasingly stellar—arguably all the more so given that Elliot pushed him in unexpected ways during their fight in December 2016.

Yet, this old refrain is becoming fairly well-worn in fight circles: Johnson has been a revelation in the cage but hasn’t done particularly big business at the box office.

This weekend marks the first time he’s headlined a pay-per-view since the Dodson fight—when UFC 191 pulled down a meager estimated buyrate of 115,000, via MMA Payout. Roughly half of his title defenses have been relegated to free network TV broadcasts, where he also fetches unremarkable ratings.

For unknown reasons, most fans have decided they’re disinterested in Johnson’s brand and that makes him breaking Silva’s record a somewhat slippery accomplishment.

It’s not meaningless by any stretch. Eleven title defenses is still 11 title defenses—a run of sustained success unequaled in the near 25-year history of the UFC. It’s a terrific accolade for Johnson, who is the only flyweight champion the Octagon has ever known.

But it’s not exactly a hallowed number, either.

This isn’t Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hit streak, Wilt Chamberlain’s 100 points in a game or even Tom Brady’s five Super Bowl rings. MMA is a different sport, with a different business model and different values. Johnson’s longevity is a wonder, but it’s not as though fans have been on the edge of their seats for years, waiting to see who—if anyone—would ever break Silva’s record.

And while discussions over who is the greatest of all time are constantly swirling, MMA is too young for any kind of meaningful historical reverence.

The UFC flyweight division, for example, has only existed since early 2012. Johnson has obviously been the very best of the company’s top of 125-pound fighters, but his is a comparatively new and comparatively shallow weight class, even by MMA standards.

It’s impossible to argue against his skill set, but we likely won’t know where he fits in among MMA’s all-time greats until the sport itself has enough history for fans to revel in it. Not to mention, enough years removed from which to view his greatness.

For now, it’s hard to compare feats in different weight classes and across the sport’s many flash-in-the-pan eras. Who’s to say that Johnson surpassing Silva—whose run as middleweight champ spanned from 2006-13—makes him any better or worse a champion than Silva, Georges St-Pierre or even Jon Jones?

Who’s to say Johnson’s current run of 13 straight victories is any more or less impressive than Silva’s 17 during his heyday, St-Pierre’s 17-1 UFC mark from 2005-13 or the streak in 2011-12 where Jones effortlessly defeated five former light heavyweight champions in a row.

We can’t.

Not really.

So, while it will be incredible to see Johnson set a new standard for UFC championship tenure, it’s probably not going to change anyone’s mind about him.

For Johnson himself, that’s beside the point, though the fact he will break the record against a virtual unknown in Borg and on what will no doubt be one of the UFC’s lowest-selling PPVs of the year seems like a useful microcosm for the rest of the man’s career.

Chances are, if you’re a Demetrious Johnson fan, the new record will mean a great deal to you.

If you’re not, then maybe not quite so much.

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Let’s Talk About Conor McGregor’s Achilles’ Heel

When it was over, Floyd Mayweather Jr. admitted that his plan all along was to let Conor McGregor punch himself out.
Mayweather had just scored a 10th-round TKO victory over McGregor in last Saturday’s much-hyped junior middleweight boxing match at T-M…

When it was over, Floyd Mayweather Jr. admitted that his plan all along was to let Conor McGregor punch himself out.

Mayweather had just scored a 10th-round TKO victory over McGregor in last Saturday’s much-hyped junior middleweight boxing match at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Fielding a post-fight question from Showtime Sports interviewer Jim Gray, the veteran pugilist explained why he’d started the bout so slowly and allowed McGregor to build an early lead before roaring back for the finish.

“Our game plan was to take our time, let him shoot all his heavy shots early on and then take him down at the end, down the stretch,” Mayweather said. “We know in MMA he fights 25 minutes real hard and after that he starts to slow down.”

If this was indeed Mayweather’s strategy, it was an effective one.

It was also well-informed.

Those familiar with McGregor’s body of work as a two-division UFC champion already knew the swaggering Irishman’s one Achilles’ heel—aside from perhaps his submission defense—could be his endurance.

If you count Saturday’s match against Mayweather, McGregor is now 11 fights into his run on the worldwide stage. He’s fought in two different sports, four total weight classes and against a very disparate group of opponents. All told, the results have been overwhelmingly positive. McGregor is 9-2 since 2013 (again, counting Mayweather), has won titles in two weight classes and set box office records in both MMA and boxing.

On the rare occasions things go wrong for him, however, there appears to be one constant: McGregor gets tired.

After both of the fighter’s high-profile losses—first to Nate Diaz at UFC 196 in March 2016, then to Mayweather—McGregor has at least partially blamed his own gas tank.

Case in point: Following Saturday’s referee stoppage, the 29-year-old Dublin native steadfastly maintained that Mayweather never really hurt him. The real problem, McGregor insisted during his own interview with Gray, was that he got too winded.

“I was just a little fatigued,” he said. “I get a little wobbly when I’m tired. It is fatigue. The referee could have let it keep going, let the man put me down. I am clear-headed. Where were the final two rounds? Let me wobble to the corner and make him put me down.”

On Thursday, McGregor essentially doubled-down on that assertion. He detailed his training for the fight in a lengthy Instagram post, going so far as to say he might have won if he’d made a couple of minor tweaks to his preparations:

Of course, there are a lot of other perfectly good—and arguably unavoidable—reasons why McGregor might have slowed down against Mayweather.

Boxing provides a different cardiovascular challenge than MMA, and by the time Mayweather ended their fight with strikes, the two had been battling for just over 28 total minutes. That made it the longest bout of McGregor’s career.

Both fighters also had relatively short training camps between the bout’s announcement in June and fight night. Factor in the otherworldly level of competition McGregor faced in his first boxing match, the magnitude of the event itself and Mayweather’s consistent work to the body during the fight and perhaps anyone would’ve been fatigued by the end.

Then again, we’ve seen endurance be a factor in McGregor’s MMA bouts as well.

In the wake of that second-round submission loss to Diaz, McGregor told the UFC’s Megan Olivi he’d been “inefficient” with his energy. He also promised to go back to the training room and figure out how to solve the problem.

“I lost in there,” McGregor said. “There were errors, but errors can be fixed if you face them head on.”

A bit more than five-and-a-half months later, he and Diaz rematched at UFC 202 and it was obvious McGregor had indeed taken steps to address the issue. He was noticeably more reserved during his walk to the cage and introductions and appeared more deliberate once the fight started.

He began by feeding Diaz a steady diet of low kicks to supplement his normal left-handed power punching. The strategy seemed to work early on, as McGregor dropped Diaz to the canvas with strikes three times during the fight’s first seven minutes. As the second round wore on, however, McGregor began to lag—just as he had in their first fight.

The third round was a borderline 10-8 win by Diaz. Though McGregor rebounded during the championship fourth and fifth frames and ultimately squeaked by with a majority decision victory, a profile of him began to emerge.

Perhaps McGregor is a competitor who comes out of his corner fast but fades the longer his fights go on.

Mayweather clearly knew this headed into their boxing match and used it to his advantage.

McGregor knows it too, but implied during a post-fight interview with ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto that the situation is under control. He also noted he thinks it may be more a psychological problem than physical.

“I don’t know what it is; it’s a mental thing or something,” McGregor said. “It happened in the Diaz 2 fight as well. I had a little stage at the end of the second round and end of the third, but then look what happened in the fourth and then the fifth—I came back. I overcame it.”

In fairness, he has a point.

So far, McGregor’s endurance hasn’t exactly derailed his rise. He did win the second fight against Diaz, after all, and in his only other UFC fight to go the distance—a three-rounder against a very green Max Holloway in August 2013—he didn’t appear to suffer from fatigue at all.

More often than not, McGregor has ended his fights so quickly that he hasn’t had to test his energy reserves. Of his 21 professional MMA wins, 19 have been first- or second-round stoppages.

It’s not at all unusual for MMA fighters to struggle with their cardio, either. The sport is so grueling that even top professionals are spent after 15-25 minutes of competition. For someone who typically starts as fast and throws as hard as McGregor does, there are bound to be hurdles.

Still, McGregor’s conditioning issues appear more obvious than most—maybe because he’s been so good in every other aspect of the fight game. It’s striking to watch a guy who is otherwise so mentally and physically sound consistently encounter the same problem.

It’s also an awkward look for someone who spent much of the lead-up to the Mayweather bout hocking his new for-purchase “McGregor Fast” conditioning program.

McGregor is so meticulous and calculated that it’s hard to believe he’ll let such an obvious flaw hang around for long.

But if Mayweather knew the correct strategy was to weather McGregor’s early storm and start to pressure him later in the fight, McGregor’s future MMA opponents will know it, too.

The blueprint of how to beat him is out there now. You can bet guys like Diaz, Tony Ferguson, Kevin Lee and Khabib Nurmagomedov all took note.

But if McGregor’s biggest weakness to this point has been his endurance, one of his biggest strengths has been his analytical nature.

As he moves forward, he’ll know he needs to adapt and close the holes in his game.

The fun part will be seeing how he responds.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

How Can Conor McGregor Top the Floyd Mayweather Fight? How About UFC Ownership?

Lost in the clamorous rush toward last weekend’s megafight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor was a potential blockbuster development in the relationship between McGregor and the UFC.
For the first time, company president Dana White wouldn…

Lost in the clamorous rush toward last weekend’s megafight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor was a potential blockbuster development in the relationship between McGregor and the UFC.

For the first time, company president Dana White wouldn’t rule out granting the 29-year-old Irishman a future ownership stake in the billion-dollar MMA promotion.

“It’s never been done, but anything is possible,” White said during a news conference Tuesday when asked about taking McGregor on as a partner (via MMAjunkie). “… We know what this kid is worth.”

For fans wondering if the UFC and its notoriously money-conscious lightweight champion can remain on the same page moving forward, this provided a glimmer of hope.

After McGregor’s better-than-expected showing against Mayweather, the task now is to figure out how to capitalize on it—and how to monetize it beyond anybody’s wildest dreams.

Make no mistake, this could be a tricky proposition. Though McGregor has always maintained he would return to the Octagon after his first foray into professional boxing, he declared himself a free agent during the post-fight news conference following his 10th-round TKO loss to Mayweather.

“I have many options in MMA,” McGregor said, via MMAjunkie’s Steven Marrocco and John Morgan. “I’m sure there’s options that will present themselves in the boxing game. Right now, I’m a free agent. My name is on the ring.”

That declaration only gave more ammunition to skeptics, who questioned if he’ll be satisfied falling back into the UFC’s rank and file.

The marriage has not always been an easy one, after all.

As recently as late January, McGregor hinted he might try to make the Mayweather fight without the UFC’s blessing. White publicly fired back that the fighter would have an “epic fall” if he tried it.

Prior to that, the UFC and McGregor had clashed over his media obligations leading up to UFC 200 in July 2016. That tiff culminated with the fight company pulling him from the lineup and remanding him to the bench.

Things seemed to warm considerably between the two parties leading up to the Mayweather scrap, however. Possibly the fuzzy glow of all the money they were about to make had everybody feeling chummy.

In the final days before the bout, McGregor and White were frequently seen laughing and joking together in public. The executive even did some of his fight-week media spots in a “McGregor Sports and Entertainment” T-shirt.

“The relationship has only gotten stronger through this,” McGregor told Bleacher Report. “It has gone to a different level now. We are partners now, true partners.”

Still, the looming question is: What happens next?

As McGregor noted, he’ll have no shortage of options, though none seems like a sure-fire follow-up to the Mayweather fight.

McGregor performed just well enough in his boxing debut to make a second punching-only match seem intriguing. Certainly, former sparring partner Paulie Malignaggi is trying to keep their feud going, in the hope he can catch a ride on the McGregor hype train.

But the truth is, continuing to push his luck in boxing would be the quickest way for McGregor to squander his promotional momentum.

He would almost certainly lose to Malignaggi or any other competent pro. It’s one thing to look better than anticipated in a one-off loss to the greatest fighter of your generation. It’s another thing entirely if those losses start to pile up.

Most likely, McGregor will re-sign and return to the UFC, with any number of the organization’s top stars waiting to get a piece of him.

For starters, he’ll have a trilogy fight against Nate Diaz on tap. That pair’s first two meetings became the Nos. 1 and 2 best-selling pay-per-view events in UFC history, per Tapology. If McGregor managed to get even a sliver of the audience that watched him fight Mayweather to follow him back to the Octagon for a third bout with Diaz, the numbers could be stellar.

There is also the small matter of McGregor’s 155-pound title to sort out. Currently, Tony Ferguson and Kevin Lee are set to fight for an interim lightweight championship at UFC 216 in October. If McGregor is going to go on being the UFC champion, he’ll have to fight the winner of that bout.

For his part, Lee is preemptively trying to drum up a feud with McGregor.

“I’m going to f–k him up, you feel me?” Lee told TMZ Sports. “… He knows if the folks wouldn’t break it up, I’ll kill the man. I’ll murder him.”

Other potential names on McGregor’s dance card include top lightweight contender Khabib Nurmagomedov and returning former welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre.

McGregor has talked about trying to fight Nurmagomedov at a big-money event in Russia. If St-Pierre manages to wrest the 185-pound title away from Michael Bisping at UFC 217, a bout against McGregor would make sense—at least financially, if not so much athletically.

Still, all the above fights feel at best like lateral career moves for “Mystic Mac.” That’s not something he’s accustomed to experiencing. To date, each milestone McGregor has reached since he arrived on the big stage in 2013 has been larger than the last.

That climb to mainstream status culminated Saturday with the Mayweather fight, for which McGregor was expected to earn as much as $150 million. Now that he’s pulled it off, the one thing standing between McGregor and a UFC comeback is the organization adding enough zeros to his next paycheck to make it worth his while.

How could the UFC do that?

The answer, of course, might be that ownership stake.

It’s something McGregor has been demanding since after he defeated Eddie Alvarez to win the lightweight title at UFC 205 in November. It never seemed like a realistic possibility—until last week, when White seemed to tiptoe to the edge of saying he’d be willing to talk about it.

Now, the idea of “Conor McGregor, UFC co-owner” appears within reach.

And you know what? It’s probably a good idea.

With McGregor’s already considerable value to the UFC potentially skyrocketing after the Mayweather bout, cutting him a bigger slice of the organization’s action might be the only way to keep him under the UFC banner for life.

If McGregor and the fight company are intent on making things work long-term, it’s certainly going to take some grand gestures to keep everybody happy.

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