Diaz vs. McGregor 2 Results: Winner and Reaction from UFC 202

After months of buildup, Conor McGregor has his redemption. 
The Notorious eked out a majority decision over Nate Diaz in the main event at UFC 202 on Saturday.
MMAjunkie tweeted out the scorecards:

McGregor started the bout with a more deliberat…

After months of buildup, Conor McGregor has his redemption. 

The Notorious eked out a majority decision over Nate Diaz in the main event at UFC 202 on Saturday.

MMAjunkie tweeted out the scorecards:

McGregor started the bout with a more deliberate pace than he did the first time around, working kicks to Diaz’s lead leg and patiently countering with a precise overhand left to the head. 

ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto summed up the first round, scoring it for McGregor because of his control of the fight:

It was rinse, lather and repeat early in the second frame, as McGregor continued to tenderize Diaz’s lead leg with kicks and land clean shots to the head. He again floored Diaz early in the round with an overhand left but refused to engage his opponent on the ground.

The UFC showcased McGregor’s cross that continuously landed early in the bout:

However, a Diaz brother won’t go down without a fight, and shades of the first bout began to emerge in the latter half of the second round as Diaz upped his volume and started catching McGregor more and more. 

The UFC passed along a combination from Diaz as he began pushing the pace:

The third round descended into an all-out brawl as McGregor’s energy dwindled, and Diaz used unrelenting pressure to take the round. Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times considered scoring the frame 10-8 for the man from Stockton, California:

The fight took another turn in the championship rounds, as McGregor appeared to catch something of a second wind. His defense still suffered, but he was able to return fire with regularity, including elbows in the clinch.

Ariel Helwani of MMAFighting.com gave the fourth round to McGregor:

The fifth and final round was an encapsulation of the entire fight, as both bloodied fighters took turns landing big shots between deep breaths. Diaz punctuated the final round with a big takedown just before the final bell rang, bringing the epic fight to its conclusion. 

   

Post-Fight Reaction

With all the buildup leading to this fight, plenty of people weighed in with their thoughts about the outcome. 

Damon Martin of Fox Sports provided a statistical breakdown that really put the madness into perspective:

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson took to Twitter to shout out to both combatants for putting on an excellent fight:

Anytime there’s a fight as close as this one, there’s bound to be controversy about the score. However, Chamatkar Sandhu of MMAjunkie passed along a list of media scores, the majority of which were for the eventual winner, McGregor:

Martin of Fox Sports went ahead and suggested a time and place for the threematch to happen. After that fight, there probably aren’t many people who would argue with that. 

Coming up with an actual timeline for a possible trilogy fight might take some time. Sandhu also passed along the news that McGregor fought at least part of the time with a broken foot, which makes his performance all the more impressive:

Pablo S. Torre of the New York Daily News wasn’t surprised by that news:

Finally, Helwani took the time to congratulate McGregor’s coach on obviously having his fighter well-prepared in the rematch:

 

Impact of the Fight

The win added to the lore of Mystic Mac. 

McGregor had already proved he’s the next great featherweight. His meteoric rise and dispatching of Jose Aldo established that, and Saturday’s win cemented his position as one of the sport’s pound-for-pound best.

There aren’t many fighters who can lose in the fashion McGregor did in his first encounter with Diaz only to come back with the proper adjustments to overcome a size, reach and grappling disadvantage. 

This will serve to boost McGregor’s stock, which, by the way, was already at an all-time high despite the loss in the first matchup. According to Sandhu, McGregor set a new record for a disclosed purse for a UFC fight:

With his first UFC loss now avenged, the MMA world is McGregor’s oyster. 

UFC President Dana White already laid out some groundwork to attempt to steer McGregor in a certain direction, pre-emptively declaring an ultimatum regarding the featherweight title, per Fox Sports: UFC:

McGregor has talked about becoming a multiple-division champion in the past, but it doesn’t sound as though he’s committed to going back down to defend his featherweight belt after Aldo beat Frankie Edgar for the interim belt, per MMAjunkie:

I’ve beaten everybody in the division. If Frankie had won that last fight, after all that he and his team were talking, it would have been set it stone: I’m going back down to shut that man up. But he got slapped around that fight – couldn’t do nothing against a guy I KOd in one shot. So I’ve just got to see it out, see what happens after this fight.

The bottom line is that McGregor is a man who’s all about the bottom line. If he believes going back down to featherweight will be the best business decision, he will. If not, he’ll chase whatever the next big-money fight is. 

After his win over Diaz, it’s clear McGregor’s talent transcends weight classes. His ability to adjust after losing his first fight at welterweight is the kind of thing that makes a fighter great. 

Regardless of how fans feel about McGregor, they’ll tune in to see his next pursuit of greatness. And he’ll continue to be paid handsomely for it.

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