How Conor McGregor and Floyd Mayweather Made the Impossible Fight Happen

The weekend after Conor McGregor knocks out Floyd Mayweather Jr., he’s going to Ibiza and he’s going to rent a yacht.       
McGregor’s childhood buddy is getting married, and the fighter wants to get together on this 100-foot boat….

The weekend after Conor McGregor knocks out Floyd Mayweather Jr., he’s going to Ibiza and he’s going to rent a yacht.       

McGregor’s childhood buddy is getting married, and the fighter wants to get together on this 100-foot boat. He can picture them all cruising along the eastern coast of Spain, surrounded by travel-brochure sunshine and technicolor water. Call it a cross between a wedding reception and a victory party.

“We’re just going to have fun,” McGregor says. “Celebrating that knockout. Enjoying life—and I’ll be silked-up from head to toe.”

Of course, this is just a dream for now. As he visualizes the celebration during an interview with Bleacher Report, the fight is still 15 days away.

It’s a muggy Las Vegas evening in mid-August, and McGregor’s open workout and media day at the UFC Performance Institute have been running characteristically late. After abusing a series of heavy bags over the course of 12 three-minute rounds, he disappeared for more than an hour, leaving gathered reporters milling around an empty microphone setup, waiting to ask him questions. When he finally did show back up—cradling his infant son like a football in one arm and having exchanged his personalized Versace fight robe for a skin-tight white shirt and pink paisley pants—he made it worth everyone’s while.

McGregor held court for nearly 40 minutes on every topic from his chances against Mayweather to his public feud with sparring partner Paulie Malignaggi. In the end, everybody seemed to go home happy. In that way, the media day was a classic McGregor experience: He’s going to give you a great show, but he’s going to do it on his own terms.

Now, he’s squeezing in a few last one-on-interviews before his private training session begins at 11:30 p.m.

As is almost always the case, he’s having a blast. He thrives on this, McGregor keeps reminding us. He lives to be under the lights.

“I take a step back every day and just kind of relish it all,” he says. “I never look to let things pass—to live it and not actually feel it. I always want to feel where I am and acknowledge it, so I can truly enjoy it and embrace it.”

Part of McGregor’s Ibiza dream is certain to come true. The trip is booked, and he’s estimated to make between $75-150 million versus Mayweather, so he can afford to rent or buy any yacht he wants, any time, for the rest of his life.

The celebration, though, is more speculative. McGregor is going off as close to a 4-to-1 underdog against Mayweather, according to OddsShark, and even that line seems generous. The only people truly expecting a KO win are McGregor, his close-knit team and his legion of Irish fans. Nearly everyone else forecasts a lopsided victory for Mayweather.

Yet here in the interview room, McGregor is deadly serious about his dreams. He possesses them with an unwavering, full-fisted confidence. He believes in them completely, and then forces the rest of the world to believe through sheer strength of will and the power in his Mack truck left hand.

In a few minutes, he’ll breeze out of the room, drop his baby boy off at home and return to work out and spar until well after midnight. If he’s feeling pressure, or nerves or the grind of a fight camp, it doesn’t show. Perhaps he even has a bit more bounce in his step these days. Perhaps the glint in his eye is a tad keener as he discusses his hopes and dreams.

He might get badly beaten on Aug. 26, but the truth is he’s already won. The swaggering, 29-year-old Dublin native has succeeded in pulling off one of the greatest coups in combat sports history.

He’s already convinced his UFC bosses to let him do something they have never allowed before. He’s already talked the greatest boxer of his generation into meeting him in the ring. He’s in the process of luring in an audience many expect will break the all-time pay-per-view buys record—all for a fight that isn’t projected to be all that competitive.

How did McGregor do it?

That’s a great question.

For a long time, a matchup with Mayweather was thought to be impossible—too out there even for a guy who occasionally calls himself “Mystic Mac.”

Somehow, though, here we are.

The story of how it all came to be is a meandering one. It’s part verifiable fact, part rumor and part recollection—often vague—from the people who built it.

We don’t really think about things that can’t happen. When we dream and we have certain ambitions, we just work hard and we go get it. — Audie Attar, Conor McGregor’s agent

Even in the final days leading up to this fight, there’s still a surreal quality to it. But McGregor has already turned many of our doubts to dust.

“We don’t really think about things that can’t happen,” explains Audie Attar, McGregor’s agent. “When we dream and we have certain ambitions, we just work hard and we go get it.”

 

“I would kill him in less than 30 seconds.”

The first time McGregor publicly uttered Mayweather’s name was on a frigid day in New York City in early 2015.

McGregor and longtime girlfriend Dee Devlin were touring the city with Esquire writer Chris Jones for a profile that would run in the publication’s May issue. This was a big deal for McGregor. After jetting to a 5-0 start in the UFC, he was well-known in MMA circles and beginning to come into his own with the mainstream. The Esquire story would be some of his first real crossover exposure, and his unique cocktail of machismo and sartorial flair figured to play perfectly to the magazine’s male-dominated readership.

“It was an interesting time because he wasn’t really famous yet,” Jones says. “We walked around New York, and he got recognized a couple of times … but [mostly] nobody looked twice at him.”

Problem was, the weather was too cold to spend the day exploring NYC. The trio retreated inside for lunch, where Jones ended up asking what he thought was one of the more innocuous questions of the day-long interview.

“This is going to sound stupid in retrospect, now that it’s become this big deal,” Jones says, “but at the time, I didn’t think much of it. I think I just asked him: ‘How would you do against Floyd Mayweather?'”

McGregor’s answer, delivered in the fighter’s trademark emphatic brogue, would land him on the map in a way he hadn’t previously experienced.

“If I fought Floyd, I would kill him in less than 30 seconds,” McGregor told Jones. “It would take me less than 30 seconds to wrap around him like a boa constrictor and strangle him.”

At first, Jones says he failed to separate this over-the-top declaration from the torrent of other vehement proclamations McGregor made that day. But when the story came out online in April, the Mayweather quote broke big. Suddenly, platforms that hadn’t paid any attention to McGregor before were scrambling to write UFC Fighter Calls Out Money Mayweather stories.

“I was shocked,” Jones says. “That quote went everywhere.”

It got so much attention that Mayweather responded, telling TMZ Sports: “I don’t take that dude seriously. He’s just trying to get himself some publicity.”

This wasn’t the first time the boxer had jawed with an MMA fighter. During Ronda Rousey’s unbeaten UFC run from 2013-15, she and Mayweather intermittently swiped at each other in interviews. In a way, the budding Mayweather-McGregor beef picked up where the bad blood with Rousey left off.

In July 2015, McGregor appeared on the Conan O’Brien show and again fielded questions about Mayweather.

In December, the boxer took shots at McGregor and Rousey in an interview with FightHype.com, and McGregor clapped back on Instagram.

Still, no one was seriously entertaining the idea of a bout between the two. McGregor fought three times in the UFC in 2015, winning the interim featherweight title and then unifying the belt by knocking out perennial world No. 1 Jose Aldo in 13 seconds at UFC 194. Meanwhile, Mayweather finally had his long-delayed superfight with Manny Pacquiao in May, shattering the all-time pay-per-view buys record. In September, he beat Andre Berto via lackluster unanimous decision and announced his retirement.

If anything, Mayweather and McGregor appeared to be drifting in opposite directions. In May 2016, an article by the UK Sun‘s James Beal and Matt Heath-Smith claiming the two were “on the verge of [a] billion-dollar mega-fight” elicited only snickers. UFC President Dana White poured cold water on the report, telling Yahoo Sports’ Kevin Iole it was “just a tabloid story.”

A curious thing began to happen, though, amid all this public bluster. Each time the fighters tweeted or Instagrammed at each other, internet traffic went crazy. Everywhere they traveled, fans asked about the beef and the media lobbed questions, even if some of it was tongue-in-cheek. For a couple of consummate self-promoters like Mayweather and McGregor, this didn’t go unnoticed.

“Social media played a vital role in getting this fight done,” says Mayweather Promotions CEO Leonard Ellerbe. “All the enthusiasm from the fans—from the MMA fans to the casual fans to the boxing fans—who want to actually see this fight take place. It’s been a global interest. You’ve got two worlds clashing.”

McGregor is often lauded as a visionary, but it was Mayweather who first began to believe their fight could be a real thing. As the boxer eased into retirement, he saw the MMA champion becoming the biggest story in combat sports. Maybe, just maybe, Mayweather reasoned, there was something substantive brewing.

In the days following the UK Sun report, McGregor took more potshots at Mayweather during a “Sunday Conversation” with ESPN’s Kenny Mayne. Dana White went on the Dan Patrick Show and said if Mayweather wanted to fight McGregor, he should “call me.”

Later that month, Mayweather tweeted a fake fight poster teasing a bout with McGregor. Along with an interview he gave to FightHype.com around the same time, the boxer started putting it out there he would come out of retirement to fight McGregor—in a boxing ring, of course. Skepticism still loomed, but now both principals had gone on record saying they were game. The discussion began to become something more than purely hypothetical.

“Give credit to Floyd Mayweather,” says Stephen Espinoza, executive vice president of Showtime Sports and a longtime Mayweather partner. “He’s the one who saw this as a real opportunity—as something that could happen and could be huge—way earlier than anyone else did.”

Give credit to Floyd Mayweather. He’s the one who saw this as a real opportunity—as something that could happen and could be huge—way earlier than anyone else did. — Showtime Sports VP Stephen Espinoza

Still there was one big obstacle: McGregor was locked into one of the UFC’s notoriously rigid exclusive contracts. He’d need the company’s blessing before he could move forward, and almost nobody thought that was possible.

“It became clear very quickly that this was not something the UFC was in support of,” Espinoza says. “… So, Floyd kept [things] alive, but a lot of us were skeptical because we didn’t think there was any point at which UFC would actually agree to cooperate with it.”

 

“You gotta stay open-minded in the fight business.”

It’s a few days after McGregor’s open workout and Q&A, and Dana White is in a Las Vegas Champ Sports looking at shoes. A kid who works there approaches him.

This isn’t unusual for White. After nearly two decades as the face of the UFC, he’s used to getting pulled aside in public, taking pictures with fans and signing autographs. This time, though, the kid doesn’t want White’s signature. He wants to talk about Mayweather-McGregor.

“The kid who was working there comes up to me and says, ‘Dana, I bought a brand-new, massive TV just for the McGregor fight,'” White says. “He said, ‘I swear to God, I’m throwing the biggest party ever.'”

After leaving the store, White gets another message from a fan who’s pumped to watch the fight. This time it’s Robert Downey Jr., texting to say he’s also planning the biggest party ever, on the set of the next Avengers movie.

So you might say there’s interest here from a broad range of demographics.

“It’s incredible how big this fight is and how far it spans with people,” White says. “We’re already breaking records.”

Even the brash UFC boss can’t conceal a note of wonder that he’s about to co-promote a boxing match with Mayweather. White says he originally counted himself among those who thought this fight was a pipe dream. The fact it’s really happening seems to amuse him.

“The one thing I’ve learned in this business, there’s a lot of crazy things that happen,” he says. “You gotta stay open-minded in the fight business.”

It’s incredible how big this fight is and how far it spans with people. We’re already breaking records. — Dana White

People expected that open-mindedness to be tested by this booking. With the exception of a foray by Chuck Liddell into the Pride FC middleweight grand prix in Japan in 2003, UFC fighters have always remained exclusive to the Octagon. When Randy Couture attempted to free himself from his UFC contract to chase a dream matchup with heavyweight legend Fedor Emelianenko in 2007, the company took him to court. During 2008, the UFC also publicly squashed the notion that boxer Roy Jones Jr. might fight middleweight champion Anderson Silva.

Conventional wisdom said McGregor’s attempts would suffer the same fate. The relationship between the UFC and its all-time biggest PPV draw was already running hot and cold, after all. The organization had pulled McGregor from its gala UFC 200 lineup in April 2016 after the two sides couldn’t agree on his press obligations. Though the following year UFC brass allowed him to move up in weight to fight lightweight titleist Eddie Alvarez at UFC 205—in McGregor’s successful bid to become a two-division champ, another first for the promotion—it stripped him of the featherweight title just 15 days later.

A potential fight against Mayweather felt like just another opportunity for McGregor and his bosses to butt heads, and some of the fighter’s initial public moves indicated that’s exactly what was happening.

Just a few days after the UFC stripped him of his 145-pound belt, news broke that McGregor had obtained a boxing license in California. This only fueled internet conspiracy theories he might be on the verge of challenging his UFC contract in court. Some thought McGregor could potentially cite the federal Muhammad Ali Reform Boxing Act, which forbids boxers from signing exclusive deals with promoters but doesn’t extend to MMA fighters.

Two months later, in January 2017, McGregor said as much during a pay-per-view interview with journalist Ariel Helwani in London, emphatically stating his next fight would be in boxing and against Mayweather. While McGregor noted he’d rather have the UFC’s blessing, he said he was willing to go it alone.

“With the Ali Act, I believe I can [do it],” McGregor said. “… I think it’s smoother if everyone just gets together and gets involved, but, again, everyone’s got to know their place.”

The same night, at a UFC event in Denver, Colorado, media asked White to respond to McGregor’s comments.

“You know how I feel about Conor,” White said. “I’ve always shown Conor nothing but respect. If he wants to go down that road with us, it’ll be an epic fall.”

Even now, McGregor’s team implies things with the UFC got off to a rocky start, though it’s unclear how much actual back-and-forth was going on.

“If I were to go and look at some of the public statements that were made, I don’t think they were necessarily on board initially,” Attar says. “But, look, credit to Dana and the UFC for recognizing a serious opportunity—and recognizing that they had a special athlete and a special individual in Conor that could potentially pull something off that nobody has ever pulled off in the history of sports.”

The bad feelings—if indeed there were any—were fleeting. That contentious contract negotiation many people expected? White says it never materialized. Even during the time he warned of an “epic fall” for McGregor, he insists they were always on good terms.

“There was never anything where we were battling back and forth,” he says.

When asked if the Ali Act ever came up during the deal-making process, White says: “Not even a little bit.”

For his part, Attar says McGregor received that California boxing license merely as another way to gauge interest in his boxing career. They were hungry for more data supporting the idea that McGregor could be a draw in the sweet science, numbers underscoring his market viability. A slightly less jargon-filled way to say it might be that it was at least partially a publicity stunt—and it sure worked.

“When that news hit of us filing for the license, it almost broke the internet,” Attar says. “Nobody was talking about whatever the most recent current event [in MMA] was. Nobody was talking about that. This became international news.”

Once it was time for the posturing to stop and the haggling to begin, Team McGregor and White did it in friendly territory, meeting in the office of recently departed UFC co-owner Lorenzo Fertitta. Fertitta had exited the company not long after he and his brother Frank sold it to WME-IMG in July 2016 for a reported $4.2 billion. Long seen as a calming presence, Fertitta is regarded as something of a mentor to McGregor. White says it made perfect sense to call him in for this negotiation, despite the fact the former top boss is no longer involved in the day-to-day operations of the UFC.

“Even when he’s out, he’s in,” White says. “He’s my best friend and my partner for 17 years, and he helped build this thing. Conor loves and trusts the guy, too, so we all went and met at his office.”

Whatever the secret ingredient was, the meeting was fruitful. Perhaps what observers expected to be a complicated deal turned out to be more straightforward—just a matter of the company agreeing to let McGregor fight Mayweather in exchange for a cut of the earnings. Most of the concrete numbers involved in Mayweather vs. McGregor are protected by confidentiality agreements, so no one can say exactly what that split is—but it’s clear that everyone is happy with the terms.

“For the most part this came together quickly,” Attar says. “You’re always going to have challenges in deals of this magnitude—it’s expected—but, again, I’m proud and honored that everybody allowed their cooler heads to prevail and everybody saw that this was a great opportunity.”

On May 18, 2017, White announced McGregor’s side of the deal was done. With the biggest apparent obstacle to the fight cleared, the once-impossible fantasy matchup had begun to feel more like an inevitability.

Fast forward to August, and McGregor says all parties are better off for working together.

“To do it without [the UFC] and not have them on board—it probably could’ve been [that way], but there was no need for it,” McGregor says. “I’m very happy with how it all played out. The relationship has only gotten stronger through this. It has gone to a different level now. We are partners now, true partners.”

 

“I was cheesing, man. I was like, yeah!”

The enormity of the accomplishment is just starting to sink in for Attar when he runs into Fertitta at what will become an infamous sparring session in early August.

The former UFC owner has stopped in to check out McGregor’s training, and at one point Fertitta pulls him aside for a chat. He confides in the agent that on the drive to the workout he passed a Mayweather-McGregor billboard and had to pinch himself to make sure it was real.

You know you’re involved in a pretty big deal when even the billionaires can’t quite believe it. Attar says he knows the feeling.

“I had my little ah-ha moment, too,” he says. “When I got to Vegas and came into the baggage claim at the airport, it says ‘Welcome to Las Vegas’ and in the background you could see: ‘Mayweather vs. McGregor.’ I was cheesing, man. I was like, yeah! But at the end of the day, you have to shake it off and get back to work, because it isn’t over yet.”

Attar is right to be proud that his team at Paradigm Sports Management landed this deal. In many ways, it represents the biggest business win ever achieved by a UFC fighter.

“Audie has been instrumental in the growth of my entire business game,” McGregor says in praise of his longtime agent. “He knows [our] worth. That’s rule No. 1: Know your worth. Know the numbers, know what you deserve and then seek to get that. If it’s not got? Well, then you leave it sit and that’s it—there’s no rush, no panic. I think his patience is one of his best attributes.”

While Mayweather has long been in McGregor’s sights—telling friends he wanted to box the legend as far back as spring 2015—Attar says McGregor didn’t start to think seriously about chasing the bout until after he’d defeated Alvarez at UFC 205 in November. Following that win, McGregor paused from his breakneck UFC schedule to announce a lengthy paternity leave. He and Devlin welcomed their son Conor Jr. in May, just around the time Mayweather talks started to heat up. That makes these heady times, even by McGregor’s standards—starting a family while simultaneously tumbling into the biggest opportunity of his professional life.

Or, perhaps more accurately, willing it into existence.

Even after McGregor and the UFC reached their deal, White still had to hammer out an agreement with Mayweather. Luckily, it sounds as though that was as close to a formality as any deal of this size could be. White sat down with Ellerbe and promoter Al Haymon and, while there were stipulations and hang-ups and confidentiality agreements to work out, each man emerged from the experience offering raving reviews.

“It was a joy to work with those guys,” Ellerbe says. “They have some excellent leadership and they have a great understanding of how to make deals. Everything was really smooth.”

Compared to the marathon slog of the Pacquiao negotiations, Mayweather-McGregor proceeded in record time. It took just a couple weeks for the formal agreement to be reached. First targeted for September 16, the bout actually had to be moved up after it lost its proposed date to the Canelo Alvarez vs. Gennady Golovkin fight.

“Late August is, speaking candidly, probably too soon,” Espinoza says. “But November or December seemed like a lost opportunity and too long. Faced with those two choices, I think everybody said let’s jump into it and get it done—strike while the iron is hot.”

This means the lead-up to the biggest bout in history has been a little like “assembling a moving car while you’re in it,” Espinoza says.

Both the production side and the fighters have likely been scrambling to get ready. The madcap nature merely adds another layer to the already crazy mix. It’s still hard to fathom that in less than a week, these two men will climb into a ring and fight each other. It still doesn’t seem possible and yet it will be.

In the middle of it all sits McGregor, decked out in his paisley pants, dreaming of Ibiza and dreaming of shocking the world.

The nature of the triumph he’s already scored is in no way lost on him.

“Everyone involved was just intelligent and understood everyone else’s position,” McGregor says. “It happened seamlessly. Good business is good business. You’ve got to put your hands up to good business.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Floyd Will Win Boxing Match, but How About a ‘Real’ Fight Against McGregor?

The sports world will probably end up having some fun at Conor McGregor’s expense Aug. 26.
If the betting odds, historical precedent and nearly every fight analyst alive are correct, McGregor’s quest to box Floyd Mayweather Jr. won’t end well for the p…

The sports world will probably end up having some fun at Conor McGregor’s expense Aug. 26.

If the betting odds, historical precedent and nearly every fight analyst alive are correct, McGregor’s quest to box Floyd Mayweather Jr. won’t end well for the plucky mixed martial artist. The overwhelming likelihood is that McGregor gets pieced-up badly by the greatest boxer of his generation that Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

In an age where fans watch sports as much to live-tweet snarky comments as bask in the athletic greatness, it’s also easy to imagine McGregor as the butt of a few (thousand) internet memes. The sheer size of the media circus around this bout demands it.

But while popular culture crowds around to point and laugh at the reigning UFC lightweight champion’s folly, it’s useful to remember one thing: Mayweather will win this boxing match, but McGregor would dominate him in nearly any other kind of fight.

In fact, holding this bout under strict Marquess of Queensberry rules is Mayweather’s only chance to win.

If it were an MMA match? McGregor obviously takes that.

A kickboxing fight? McGregor wins that, too.

A grappling match? McGregor.

A “real” no-rules street fight in one of the dojo basements or boat salvage yards where Kimbo Slice made his name? McGregor all the way.

“That would be suicide for Floyd Mayweather Jr. […],” former WBO super-middleweight boxing champion Chris Eubank told Joe.co.uk’s Darragh Murphy recently. “You’re fit for boxing, you’re not fit for mixed martial arts or street fights or no-holds-barred fights. Conor McGregor would destroy him. There’s no discussion with that.”

The Notorious One has spent the last nine years compiling a professional MMA record of 21-3. In November 2016, he became the first fighter ever to simultaneously hold two championships in two different UFC weight classes after he jumped from 145 to 155 pounds and knocked out then-champ Eddie Alvarez at UFC 205.

While ascending to the upper echelon of MMA, McGregor has cultivated an overall skill set far more diverse and nuanced than the one Mayweather uses to win his boxing matches.

While primarily known as a heavy-handed southpaw striker, McGregor is also a brown belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu under coach John Kavanagh. In order go to 9-1 in UFC competition since 2013, he’s had to defeat a set of opponents that included NCAA All-American wrestler Chad Mendes, decorated kickboxer Dennis Siver, and BJJ black belts Diego Brandao and Jose Aldo (though, admittedly, the latter took only 13 seconds).

McGregor’s only slip-up in the UFC to date was a submission loss to Nate Diaz in a welterweight fight in March 2016, but he battled back to defeat Diaz in their rematch by majority decision less than six months later.

Any contest that allowed for more than just pure boxing would let McGregor turn those skills loose on Mayweather, who has none of the same diversity in his arsenal. McGregor could easily take him to the ground and submit him if he chose, or he could use his vaunted kicking game to stay out of punching range and punish Mayweather to the legs, body and head.

“That thing would be over real quick […],” UFC President Dana White told Jimmy Kimmel during a recent TV appearance, about how an MMA fight between Mayweather and McGregor would go. “Floyd would take a couple of leg kicks, and that would be the end of that.”

By McGregor’s own estimation, it would take him “less than 30 seconds to wrap around [Mayweather] like a boa constrictor and strangle him,” as he told Esquire‘s Chris Jones back in April 2015.

So, as Mayweather blows the Irishman out of the water inside the squared circle later this month, it will be instructive to remember that McGregor will always be the better all-around fighter.

“What you’re doing is you’re putting Conor McGregor into a situation where he’s holding back nine-tenths of his arsenal […]” former professional boxer and current MMA fighter Heather Hardy said, according to Business Insider’s Scott Davis. “If both of those guys got in a fight on the street, McGregor would whup his ass.”

Why, then, would the 29-year-old Dublin native thrust himself into certain destruction, facing Mayweather in the only kind of bout where the recently retired 40-year-old pugilist has every advantage?

Partly, it’s because Mayweather calls the shots here. It’s also because—as White likes to say—McGregor is just a wild man.

Mostly, though, it’s all about the money.

The economics of combat sports dictate that boxing Mayweather is the only way for McGregor to set his family up for generations to come.

In MMA, where McGregor is unquestionably the biggest star, athletes earn far less than top-of-the-food-chain boxers. Even as the UFC’s highest-paid athlete, McGregor banked just $3 million in reported base salary for his rematch with Diaz at UFC 202—and that fight became the UFC’s biggest seller of all time on pay-per-view.

Compare that with Mayweather, who made over $220 million to fight Manny Pacquiao in 2015, and it becomes apparent why McGregor would want to strap on a pair of boxing gloves and sign up for a sure-fire beating.

McGregor may make $75-100 million for his trouble, per ForbesBrian Mazique, and that could convince anyone that a punches-only bout against one of the greatest of all time is a good idea.

“[I’m] about to quadruple my net worth with half a fight,” McGregor said during the last stop on the promotional world tour he did alongside Mayweather last month. “I’m in shock every single day I wake up. Half a fight, I get to quadruple my net worth for half a f–king fight. Sign me up.”

McGregor could never do that fighting exclusively in MMA—where it is believed promoters keep the largest portion of the profits. A 2015 report by Bloody Elbow’s John S. Nash estimated that UFC athletes are paid somewhere between 13 and 16 percent of total revenue, while the fight company pockets most of the rest.

McGregor may have single-handedly boosted those percentages in recent years after participating in four of the promotion’s top five all-time biggest PPVs. But as long as that estimated 85-15 split exists, it will be impossible for an MMA athlete to make Mayweather money.

Throughout his meteoric rise to the top of mixed-rules fighting, McGregor has been nothing if not money-conscious. Besides his Mack truck left hand and Hall of Fame gift of gab, it’s his defining characteristic.

You can’t blame him for looking around the fight-sports landscape for the most lucrative opportunity. It’s just that to make it happen, he had to enter this classic Faustian bargain—get beat up playing Mayweather’s game but become filthy rich in the process.

The rub for McGregor is that the irony may be lost on many casual fans. The fighter should be applauded for having the guts to cross over into boxing and take on one of the best in the world, but it doesn’t seem likely that will be the overwhelming response to this fight.

Before we all get swept up in the hysteria, just keep repeating it quietly to yourself: Conor McGregor would beat Floyd Mayweather in any kind of fight…except the one the that two men will actually compete.

Then try to remember that as you’re Photoshopping Crying Jordan Face over McGregor’s gorilla chest tattoo.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Jon Jones vs. Brock Lesnar Could Be the Biggest, Best Fight in UFC History

Life moves fast around here.
No sooner did MMA complete what may turn out to be its biggest fight of 2017 on Saturday at UFC 214—with Jon Jones dispatching Daniel Cormier via third-round KO—than the fight company began trying to load next y…

Life moves fast around here.

No sooner did MMA complete what may turn out to be its biggest fight of 2017 on Saturday at UFC 214—with Jon Jones dispatching Daniel Cormier via third-round KO—than the fight company began trying to load next year’s marquee attraction on to the launch pad.

“Brock Lesnar,” Jones said on the mic after defeating Cormier to reclaim the organization’s light heavyweight title. “If you want to know what it feels like to get your ass kicked by a guy who weighs 40 pounds less than you, meet me in the Octagon.”

If Jones and Lesnar make good on their threats to fight each other at heavyweight during 2018, it would be an unbelievable spectacle. It would also be the leader in the clubhouse to become the UFC’s biggest-selling fight of all time.

Both parties have independently said they’re ready, and UFC President Dana White is interested in the idea. A blaze of attention has sparked around the potential fight after Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter tweeted July 20 that Jones vs. Lesnar was at the top of the organization’s wishlist for the coming year:

As Botter noted, a lot of tumblers still have to drop for this bout to become a reality. UFC Vice President of Athlete Health and Performance Jeff Novitzky debunked initial reports that Lesnar had already re-entered the UFC’s drug-testing pool, per John Morgan of MMAjunkieThe big man would still have to serve the remaining time on a suspension he picked up after testing positive around his most recent comeback fight.

With Lesnar enjoying a lucrative but low-impact regular role with WWE, he could also merely be using all this Jones talk as a negotiating tactic for his next pro wrestling contract.

But we can dream, can’t we? Joining me to discuss the possibility of Jones vs. Lesnar is Bleacher Report lead combat sports writer Jonathan Snowden.


     

Chad Dundas: On one hand, Jones vs. Lesnar seems too weird and wonderful to happen. It feels like something the UFC would have teased us with back in 2013, only to have it fall apart after a combination of injury, unsuccessful contract negotiations, drug-test failures and other mundane calamities.

But if the journey of Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor from fantasy to reality has taught us anything, it’s that we should be more careful about throwing around phrases like “never ever” and “publicity stunt.”

Not to sound like a broken record, either, but we are more than a year into the WME-IMG era in the UFC, during which we have all been told that increasing revenue is the rule of the day. If our new Octagon overlords are serious about pumping up profits, Jones vs. Lesnar would be about the most effective move on the game board.

Could this fight happen? Would both guys take it? Would the MMA stars align to allow us to be this happy?

     

Jonathan Snowden: Both fighters would take the fight without a moment’s hesitation. Did you see Jones address the possibility in a BT Sport interview? I haven’t seen someone say “yes” that quickly since the last time I asked my wife whether she wanted me to watch the kids while she got some alone time.

That’s fast!

As for Lesnar, I don’t see any reason he wouldn’t take the fight too. Whatever flaws the man may have, cowardice and hesitancy are not among them. This is a guy who fought Frank Mir in just his second MMA fight and came back after five years of WWE hijinks to dismantle the UFC’s hardest puncher in Mark Hunt.

Neither of these men knows fear in the way us mere mortals do.

My concern is this fight is too good to go down. UFC’s track record when it comes to promoting superfights isn’t so grand. We didn’t get Frank Shamrock vs. Bas RuttenWanderlei Silva vs. Chuck Liddell in their primes, Fedor Emelianenko vs. Randy Couture or Anderson Silva vs. Georges St-Pierre. That’s four “didn’t gets” without scratching the surface of missed opportunities.

But the new UFC is all about finding ways to separate fools from their money. And if we are any indication, an awful lot of fools would be quick to toss $60 at White to see this fight.

       

Chad: Maybe I’m still high on the revelation that Mayweather vs. McGregor is going to happen, but I have some hope Jones vs. Lesnar can too.

For one thing, unlike Silva or Emelianenko, it should be no huge trick for the UFC to get both these fighters under contract. It already has Jones, and Lesnar‘s UFC 200 appearance against Hunt showed his WWE deal isn’t an insurmountable obstacle. We don’t think this one will take a Couture-style Hail Mary lawsuit to get on paper.

You know what else I like about the prospect of a Lesnar-Jones matchup? It makes sense, athletically as well as promotionally.

Now that Jones has put the Cormier feud behind him, there’s no pressing business keeping him at light heavyweight. Conventional wisdom has always said he would wind up at heavyweight, and nobody is going to offer him the sort of payday or exposure Lesnar would.

Meanwhile, at 40, His Brockness has eased into part-time duty with both WWE and the UFC. His win over Hunt, though overturned, showed he can still be a force while simultaneously reminding us of his stylistic shortcomings. He continues to bring a ton of interest from casual and hardcore fans alike, but he’s not knocking on the door of a title shot at 265 pounds.

To me at least, it makes perfect sense to put Jones and Lesnar together.

And that’s to say nothing of the actual, physical matchup, which is intriguing enough to set my heart aflutter and my head spinning.

Jonathan: You know what’s amazing about Jon Jones, beside all the obvious things like his work ethic, skill and questionable decision-making? His pure size—measurables in the parlance of our world.

Against Cormier, he had a five-inch height advantage and a whopping 12-inch edge in reach. Having those edges allows Jones to strike well before he can be struck and helps him control where and when the fighting takes place.

This is kind of a big deal.

You know what else is amazing? He’d still have those physical advantages against Brock Lesnar!

We think of Lesnar as this gargantuan, a grizzly bear with a crew cut and the capacity to hate. But Jones is taller and has a longer reach. With 30 extra pounds on him, even the great Lesnar may be biting off more than he can chew.

In some ways, this is the single most fascinating fight I can imagine. It’s like Superman going man-to-beast with the Incredible Hulk. Do we dare pick a winner?

       

Chad: Jones may be taller and rangier, but even at 240 pounds or so, he would give up significant size to Lesnar, who cuts weight to make the 265-pound limit and might be around 280 on fight night.

But while physical size and strength may well define this matchup, they also are just the gateway to a million fascinating questions.

Jones would be the better-rounded, more mobile fighter, but would he be able to use those skills and his quickness to keep Lesnar off him? Would Brock just steamroll him down to the mat as many times as it took to get a stoppage or salt away a decision?

Further, if Brock does manage to muscle past Jones’ length and take him down, could he keep him there? 

Could Jones work his dynamic, diverse offense against Lesnar? Is Lesnar done for if it stays on the feet? Does the former heavyweight champ’s sheer power make the margin of error so small he would catch Jones with something and knock him out?

These are just the questions that immediately come off the top of my head. And frankly, I don’t know the answers to any of them.

I’d cautiously pick Jones, based on age, athleticism and all-around skill set. But if you told me Lesnar wound up being too damn big, I’d believe that too.

What say you?

       

Jonathan: Jones had fought some of the best wrestlers in UFC history before stepping into the cage with Cormier.

Ryan Bader, Matt Hamill, Chael Sonnen and Vladimir Matyushenko all fell way short. None of them even looked remotely competitive against Jones. He didn’t just fend off their feeble attempts; he took each wrestler down, bruising pride while also bruising bodies by beating them at their own game.

But there’s a difference between those men and Lesnar: 50 pounds of muscle.

You’re right that Lesnar would present the kind of challenge Jones has never faced in his outstanding career. But Jones has proved over and over again that he’s a man who steps up to challenges and never wilts. He would meet Lesnar head on and emerge victorious, adding another bullet point on what is already a Hall of Fame resume.

Jones has built his legend in the insular world of MMA. This is the fight that spreads the word to the masses. It’s not just the best fight you could possibly make for Jones—it’s the only one that would make him the next big thing.

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UFC 214: Cris Cyborg Adds ‘UFC Champion’ to Resume as Toughest Woman on Earth

At long last, Cris “Cyborg” Justino is UFC champion.
Justino bolstered her longstanding reputation as the most violent woman in MMA on Saturday at UFC 214, dismantling Tonya Evinger en route to a third-round TKO to win the organization’s vacant feather…

At long last, Cris “Cyborg” Justino is UFC champion.

Justino bolstered her longstanding reputation as the most violent woman in MMA on Saturday at UFC 214, dismantling Tonya Evinger en route to a third-round TKO to win the organization’s vacant featherweight title.

The victory caps Justino’s two-year search for UFC gold after signing with the company in March 2015. That delay seems outrageously long considering she’s been near peerless throughout her 12-year, 20-fight career.

The UFC belt now becomes the crown jewel in a collection that also includes a Strikeforce championship and Invicta FC title. Justino has now captured every premiere featherweight championship available in women’s MMA—and she’s done it all without facing a serious challenge to her dominance.

“I am very happy and proud to own this belt, and it will be really hard to take it away from me,” Justino said after the fight. “For the Cyborg Nation fans who were expecting the third belt, here it is.”

If there was any drawback to her lopsided win over Evinger in Anaheim, California, it was that the fight contained precious few highlight moments. That’s because Evinger lived up to her own billing as Justino’s most formidable opponent in years, despite moving up from bantamweight and taking the fight as a late replacement.

Justino dropped Evinger to the canvas with a counter left hook seconds into the first round, but the exchange proved that, while Cyborg had a clear edge in strength, Evinger wasn’t going to be easy to put away.

The smaller fighter remained game throughout the two-plus rounds she spent in the cage with Justino. Cyborg routinely punished Evinger’s legs with low kicks, snapped her head back with punches and swatted her face with high kicks, but Evinger refused to yield.

Evinger had put her own Invicta FC bantamweight title on ice to step in here after Invicta featherweight champion Megan Anderson pulled out June 27, citing “personal reasons.” She came in riding an 11-fight unbeaten streak and fulfilled her reputation as a wily and tough veteran.

Despite giving up significant size and power, Evinger succeeded in forcing Justino into the longest fight of her UFC career and the longest overall since 2013. Justino had no trouble finding a home for her venomous strikes, but every time she tried to finish Evinger with a flurry against the fence, the challenger would suck her into a clinch and slow her progress.

Without the stature necessary to consistently take Cyborg to the ground, however, it was a strategy that couldn’t go on forever.

The end came early in the third round after Justino struck Envinger against the fence with a superman punch. This time as Evinger tried to clinch, Justino opened up with a series of knees to the head. Those shots sent Evinger crumpling to the canvas and prompted referee Mike Beltran to halt the action.

The stoppage itself was anticlimactic, but at least the unanimous pick for the best women’s featherweight in the world finally had her title.

“I was very calm this time, calculating the right time to throw the right punches and kicks,” Justino said. “I respect Tonya a lot. She is a hard fighter, and I hope she has a chance [at bantamweight].”

The road to the title wasn’t always linear, nor was it easy for Justino. The UFC had no 145-pound female division when she inked her initial deal with the company, and so her first two fights in the Octagon were contested at 140-pound catchweights.

Along the way, she publicly beefed with UFC superstar Ronda Rousey and at times with company president Dana White. The relationship between Cyborg and the UFC softened a bit in the weeks leading up to UFC 214, and one of the most interesting storylines of her budding title tenure will be how long that honeymoon period lasts.

Her UFC deal is set to lapse in October, raising questions about what the fight company can or should do with her next:

She has already established herself as a ruthless finisher and a decent drawing card but now helms a division that has been nothing but trouble since the UFC announced it in December 2016.

The company couldn’t come to terms with Justino in time to include her in the inaugural featherweight title fight at UFC 208. It ended up wrapping the title around the waist of Germaine de Randamie after she defeated Holly Holm by unanimous decision.

Soon after that matchup was announced, news also broke that Justino faced a possible suspension after popping positive for a banned diuretic during an out-of-competition test. Two months later, Justino was retroactively granted a therapeutic-use exemption, and her suspension was waived.

Still, that mess postponed Justino’s official featherweight debut, and in the meantime de Randamie’s title reign went up in flames. After she refused to fight Justino, the UFC stripped her in June and finally set Cyborg up for her long-awaited title shot this weekend.

With the gold now in hand, Justino could well face an upcoming fight against Holm. The Albuquerque, New Mexico, native got back in the win column after three consecutive losses with a head-kick KO of Bethe Correia in June. With a dearth of featherweight contenders, she might well make the most lucrative and sensible opponent for Justino’s first title defense.

The UFC could also still make the Anderson fight if the 27-year-old Australian is available to return to active duty. For now, though, the organization finally has the featherweight champion it set out to crown when it created this division.

And Justino finally owns the top prize in a sport she has dominated for years.

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The Man Who Doesn’t Throw Punches, Demian Maia, Can Come Full Circle at UFC 214

Demian Maia has waited a long time for this.
In order to earn Saturday’s welterweight title fight against champion Tyron Woodley in the co-main event of UFC 214, Maia had to build a seven-fight win streak dating back to May 2014.
At times during …

Demian Maia has waited a long time for this.

In order to earn Saturday’s welterweight title fight against champion Tyron Woodley in the co-main event of UFC 214, Maia had to build a seven-fight win streak dating back to May 2014.

At times during those three undefeated years, it felt as though matchmakers were going to make him keep winning fights until there was no one else left to grant a title shot.

So that’s exactly what the 39-year-old Brazilian jiu-jitsu master did.

Dubbed “The Man Who Doesn’t Throw Punches” by Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Snowden in May 2017, Maia used his distinctive brand of submission grappling to defeat an increasingly difficult string of competition inside the Octagon—until UFC head honchos could no longer ignore him.

Why the protracted ordeal?

Partly, it was style points.

For obvious reasons, the UFC has an easier time selling cold-eyed knockout artists to its fight-hungry fans. In a world still driven by pay-per-view buyrates, the company would love to have a hundred clones of Conor McGregor—with his cocksure attitude, copious tattoos and brick-heavy left hand.

Maia is the antithesis of that. The low-key BJJ ace doesn’t talk trash, style or profile, and he’ll only engage in fisticuffs if you force him. So, yeah, that makes him a tough sell at $60 a pop in high definition.

Partly, it was because the UFC had been burned on a Maia title shot before.

The last time the world’s largest MMA promotion allowed Maia the chance to fight for a championship, it was at middleweight. In April 2010, Maia traveled to Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, to take on Anderson Silva at UFC 112.

The results were far from ideal. In fact, their fight is still regarded as one of the worst title matches in UFC history.

In the sweltering heat, Silva spent 25 minutes toying with the obviously overmatched Maia. The champion eventually secured a unanimous-decision win, but UFC President Dana White laid into him at the post-fight press conference.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been more embarrassed in the 10 years of being in this business,” White said, via MMA Fighting’s Michael David Smith. “It was the most horrible thing I have ever seen.”

Perhaps aside from possessing a fighting style that isn’t the company’s favorite, it has taken Maia seven years to live down that underwhelming spectacle.

For that reason, this matchup with Woodley presents more than just an opportunity to win UFC gold. It’s also a chance for Maia to come full circle, erase the poor performances of his past and declare that a pure grappler can still be the best in the world in 2017.

Make no mistake, Maia’s style is a singularity in the modern UFC landscape. While the rest of MMA has evolved at a breakneck pace during its near-25-year-history in America, Maia chooses to rely on a traditional martial arts skill set.

Perhaps more accurately, he’s tried all this newfangled striking stuff and decided it’s not for him.

After going a respectable but more middling 12-6 fighting in the Octagon from 2007 to 2014, he’s caught fire during the last few years. Not coincidentally, you can pair that unlikely late-career resurgence with Maia’s conscious decision to go back to basics.

By recommitting himself to his world-class jiu-jitsu skills, Maia has eliminated some tools from his toolbox, but he’s also closed some holes in his game. Simply put, yes, he is really that good at this.

So good, that all of his opponents know exactly what he’s going to do, and they still can’t stop him.

“The best fighters make their opponents fight their fight,” coach Brandon Gibson said (via Snowden). Gibson trains recent Maia victim Carlos Condit. “You know Maia wants to go to the ground. You know he wants to advance position. You know he wants to be in mount or take the back. And he just gets there. There’s no secret to what he does. He’s just the best at it.”

When Maia talks about jiu-jitsu, he takes on a borderline proselytizing air, referencing its propensity to sharpen practitioners’ “self-consciousness and [ability] to understand yourself better” as much as how it makes him a successful professional athlete.

“I have a mission to share jiu-jitsu with the world,” Maia told Snowden. “I have something beautiful to share with people and a big platform, which is the UFC. I know that when I am fighting, there are many people who are influenced by me. So, I’ve got to use that to bring what I love to everyone.”

In Woodley, Maia faces the most difficult stylistic matchup of his current seven-fight run. The champion mixes heavy-handed strikes with a wrestling background he honed at the University of Missouri.

If Maia can’t take him down and keep him there long enough to work for a submission, this bout reads as an easy KO victory for Woodley. As such, he’s going off as about a 2-1 favorite, according to Odds Shark.

Then again, Maia has been beating the odds for the entirety of his recent UFC career.

If he can do it one more time and become welterweight champion, it’ll strike a blow for grapplers everywhere.

And the UFC will have a champion who makes his living by un-mixing the martial arts.

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UFC on Fox 25: Weidman Sticks Mostly to What Works in Crucial Win over Gastelum

The blueprint is still good for Chris Weidman.
Despite a three-fight skid that had the former middleweight champion looking down-and-out, Weidman proved his foundational skill set remains one of the best in MMA in a third-round submission victory over …

The blueprint is still good for Chris Weidman.

Despite a three-fight skid that had the former middleweight champion looking down-and-out, Weidman proved his foundational skill set remains one of the best in MMA in a third-round submission victory over Kelvin Gastelum on Saturday.

The pair’s back-and-forth main event at UFC on Fox 25 was a treat for fans at Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum during the Octagon’s first-ever trip to Long Island. It also provided Weidman, a New York native, the chance to get back in the win column on home soil.

“I know Long Island ain’t doubting me,” Weidman crowed to the live crowd after the win. “I know you’ve got my back. But to all these other dudes around the world: Keep doubting me. I dare you.”

On a night that treated the rest of the UFC’s New York contingent rather roughly, it appeared to lift the spirits of fans in the Empire State:

Feel-good moments have been few and far between for Weidman since losing his title to Luke Rockhold at UFC 194 in December 2015. The man who seemed poised for greatness after back-to-back wins over Anderson Silva in 2013 slipped into an uncharacteristic competitive funk, conceding ugly stoppage losses to Yoel Romero and Gegard Mousasi in his previous two contests.

Weidman also missed significant time due to neck surgery.

All that adversity conspired to make this bout a must win for him against the surging Gastelum. The younger fighter should’ve rightly come in on his own three-fight win streak, but had his win over Vitor Belfort in March made a no-contest after the 25-year-old Gastelum tested positive for marijuana.

Perhaps Weidman, 33, learned something during that recent losing streak, however. When he limits his mistakes and plays to his strengths, he remains among the best 185-pound fighters in the UFC.

Not to chalk too much up to pure bad luck, but it’s possible the stretch of defeats was never quite as bad as it looked on paper.

The title loss to Rockhold came after Weidman tried an uncharacteristically risky wheel kick that allowed Rockhold to put him on his back in the fourth round.

Eleven months later, he was acquitting himself well against Romero until the former Olympic wrestler blasted him with a highlight-reel flying knee to begin the third.

The loss to Mousasi happened after a protracted referee stoppage, where instant replay had to be used to determine if a series of knees Mousasi landed were illegal.

Nonetheless, it was likely no accident that Weidman kept close to his bread and butter in a fight he desperately needed to win this weekend.

He succeeded in turning the Gastelum bout into a takedown clinic, grounding his smaller opponent with his trademark single leg, an ankle pick, a sweep and a double leg over the first three rounds.

Weidman finished with seven takedowns, according to the official FightMetric statistics. He also officially out-landed Gastelum 36-26 in significant strikes and 75-28 in total strikes, though it often seemed Gastelum landed with more force. 

Weidman threatened with a kimura attempt in the first before finally coaxing out a tap with an arm triangle in the third.

It was the fourth submission win of Weidman’s 17-fight career and his first since he got Tom Lawlor with a d’arce choke at UFC 139 in November 2011. It advanced his overall record to 14-3.

The victory will no doubt bump Weidman up from the No. 5 spot in the UFC’s official rankings. It won’t make him the immediate consensus No. 1 contender, but with the futures of champion Michael Bisping and interim champ Robert Whittaker still undecided, he’s suddenly back in a good spot.

Given a choice between the two, Weidman made his preferred opponent clear.

“To that British bum who is crying in his freaking house right now: I’m back, baby,” Weidman said, needling Bisping after the win. “I’m back. Stop hiding from the real men. Let’s go.”

The win came with its dicey moments, though.

After controlling the fight’s opening stages, Weidman got caught by a winging overhand left from Gastelum that dropped him to the canvas just before the end of the first round. He recovered and survived until the horn, but it recalled the pattern of Weidman’s recent losses—where he seems to be going along fine until suddenly he isn’t.

Critics—who have dogged Weidman since his wins over Silva at UFCs 162 and 168—will no doubt point to that exchange as evidence that Weidman remains vulnerable and that this resurgence may be short-lived.

They’ll also likely note that many believe Gastelum is a natural welterweight, despite the fact he’d won his last four appearances at 185 pounds.

The California native said he felt no pressure headed into this meeting and certainly fought like it throughout their nearly 14 minutes together.

While Gastelum couldn’t stop Weidman from taking him down, he never panicked and succeeded in quickly getting back to his feet more often than not.

If anything, Gastelum appeared to be playing a waiting game. He seemed to content to make Weidman work for takedowns and top control, perhaps biding his time until the later rounds, when he hoped his larger opponent might begin to fade.

Unfortunately, Gastelum didn’t make it to the championship rounds. The two began the third by firing off aggressive flurries of punches, and Weidman appeared to sting Gastelum before taking him to the mat against the fence.

After the fight hit the ground, Weidman worked to side mount and locked up the arm-triangle choke that forced the submission with a minute, 15 seconds left on the clock.

The loss may derail most of Gastelum’s momentum, but it could also give some added credibility to his desire to return to 170 pounds. After missing weight three times as a welterweight, he found success at 185 pounds but always expressed a desire to return to the lighter division.

For Weidman, fortunes have clearly not been brighter for a number of years.

The future of the middleweight title remains murky after a proposed bout between Bisping and Georges St-Pierre appeared to get pulled off the table in May. If the UFC rebooks that fight or if Bisping can’t quickly take on Whittaker in a unification bout, it’s not out of the question Weidman could fight for the interim title.

If that bout came to pass, it would be another meeting with a slick, powerful striker for Weidman—and another fight where imposing his grappling-based game plan and limiting his mistakes on the feet would be the wisest path to victory.

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