McGregor Offered A Welterweight Title Shot (Sort Of)

Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Welterweight champion Kamaru Usman’s manager is making it clear they want to offer Conor McGregor a shot at the 170 pound strap. Conor McGregor has flirted with the idea of going after the UFC welterweight b…

UFC 246: McGregor v Cowboy

Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Welterweight champion Kamaru Usman’s manager is making it clear they want to offer Conor McGregor a shot at the 170 pound strap.

Conor McGregor has flirted with the idea of going after the UFC welterweight belt in the past, but now he’s being offered a title shot on a silver platter. Unfortunately for him, that offer is coming not from the UFC or its matchmakers, but 170 pound champ Kamaru Usman’s manager Ali Abdelaziz.

Abdelaziz also manages lightweight champ Khabib Nurmagomedov and to say his relationship with McGregor is troubled would be an understatement. During the lead-up to McGregor vs. Nurmagomedov, Conor regularly called Ali a “snitch terrorist rat” amongst a wide variety of other insults. Rumor has it half the insults fired McGregor’s way from Ali clients like Khabib and Justin Gaethje were typed and tweeted by Ali himself. It’s a big ugly feud, and we’re not surprised Abdelaziz continues to keep himself deep in the middle of the it.

His latest angle: offering to set up a fight between McGregor and Usman. With Jorge Masvidal suddenly sounding more interested in another win over Nate Diaz, Ali had this suggestion.

Lest you think this is just more Twitter s**t talk, he underscored how serious he was by confirming with ESPN’s Brett Okamoto.

Of course, Ali doesn’t have the ability to set anything up, and the UFC isn’t exactly known for their flexibility in letting fighters matchmake their own biz. Any fight that endangers the possibility of McGregor and Khabib fighting sometime early 2021 isn’t going to garner much enthusiasm from the execs. But Conor McGregor is one of the few people capable of making demands, and a third belt may be just the kind of cheese to draw McGregor into their trap.

The trap being a massive Usman whose wrestling is so good he ragdolled Tyron Woodley for five rounds to win the welterweight belt. While I’ve certainly learned to stop doubting McGregor when it comes to his competitive spirit, a former featherweight attempting to dethrone a legit welterweight is up there with challenging Mayweather in your first boxing bout. It’s not going to result in victory, although I’m sure the lead up and fight would be worth watching anyway.