Video: UFC Champion Conor McGregor is ‘Living The High Life’

It’s no secret that Conor McGregor likes the finer things in life. The reigning Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight title holder and former featherweight champion last competed at UFC 205. He headlined the historic event inside Madison Square Garden in New York City. “Notorious” finished Eddie Alvarez inside two rounds to capture the 155-pound gold. […]

It’s no secret that Conor McGregor likes the finer things in life. The reigning Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight title holder and former featherweight champion last competed at UFC 205. He headlined the historic event inside Madison Square Garden in New York City. “Notorious” finished Eddie Alvarez inside two rounds to capture the 155-pound gold. […]

New UFC Owners’ Rough Start To 2017 Echoes Shades Of 2014

As I sit here on the rare Sunday afternoon where there isn’t a UFC event to discuss and dissect, I can’t help but look back at how, after the two most wildly successful years in promotion history, the UFC has started off 2017 tepidly, and how that reflects on new ownership during their pivotal formative

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As I sit here on the rare Sunday afternoon where there isn’t a UFC event to discuss and dissect, I can’t help but look back at how, after the two most wildly successful years in promotion history, the UFC has started off 2017 tepidly, and how that reflects on new ownership during their pivotal formative months.

Much of that, I suppose, was to be expected given that they had booked their two biggest stars – Conor McGregor and Ronda Rousey (obviously) – for two of the final three pay-per-view (PPV) cards of the year, leaving them with little legitimate star power to drive their surging momentum into 2017. With McGregor out to welcome his first child as he teases a boxing match with Floyd Mayweather and Rousey uncertain to ever return, MMA’s biggest promotion’s need for stars has never been more apparent.

With so few high-profile events to start the year, it’s easy to fall into the trap of writing yet another UFC-bashing piece lamenting the efforts of the new owners. While they have made some strange booking decisions early on, the jury is still fully out on them and the rest of 2017 should be much better than the first two months of the year. It has to be.

However, WME-IMG has simply made some strange calls that reek of inexperience in the fight game; something to be expected from the talent management giant. The scenario of UFC 208, which was moved from California to Brooklyn with the haphazard main event of Germaine de Randamie vs. Holly Holm, predictably tanked at the box office. One has to wonder if waiting the extra month or two for Cris “Cyborg” to get her USADA issues cleared up – she already has – would have been worth the wait rather than throwing together a pay card for an uninspired belt in a division with three fighters because the company had to begin paying loans was hasty at best, foolish at worst.

Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas of USA Today Sports

And if Joe Rogan’s insistence that WME bigwigs were giving women’s bantamweight champ Amanda Nunes no chance against Ronda Rousey, auspiciously a high-profile WME-IMG client, is true, then their lack of knowledge for MMA shows. This, paired with the overall rut the UFC is in right now, echoes clear contrasts to the UFC’s most recent down year of 204, where profits dropped a lofty 40 percent amidst a series of huge fight cancellations due to injury – and also a transition period from the heydays of former champions Anderson Silva and Georges St-Pierre to the generation-defining superstardom of McGregor and Rousey.

The difference is, their champions were either hurt or in semi-retirement that year, so WME-IMG doesn’t have that excuse.

The record-setting purchase of the UFC for $4.2 billion last summer was clearly motivated by the record numbers the promotion was earning with McGregor and Rousey’s biggest cards. But that was when both superstars were headlining three huge cards a year, and they all did big numbers, which means things had to be clicking to create a run like that. The cat is out of the bag in terms of the fighter’s money, as they see what the promotion sold for and now understandably want a fair slice.

The new ownership has none of that momentum right now, and maybe there was nothing they could do about it. But they won’t be getting three fights from their infamous Irish champ this year – they’ll be lucky to get one – and Rousey probably won’t fight again. The luster of her thought-to-be invincible aura has long been demolished anyhow.

That’s the fight game, and it’s notoriously unforgiving (pun intended). As it has been for all of combat sports’ history, big names sell, so having a bunch of lower-level cards, even if they deliver hard-hitting action for the hardcore fans as they have been, isn’t enough and never will be. GSP will be back later this year, and potentially Jon Jones if he can get his act together long enough to set foot in the cage. Those are two names the UFC only got one combined fight from in 2014, a number that needs to increase if the silent bosses of the UFC are to avoid a similar valley this year.

So far, they’re not off to the best start.

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Beneil Dariush: ‘I Don’t Mind’ Fighting Edson Barboza in Brazil

Beneil Dariush recognizes the dangers of fighting in hostile territory. The ninth ranked Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight battles fifth ranked Edson Barboza on March 11. The two will be featured in the co-main event of UFC Fight Night 106. The action takes place inside the Centro de Formacao Olimpica do Nordeste in Fortaleza, Brazil. In […]

Beneil Dariush recognizes the dangers of fighting in hostile territory. The ninth ranked Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight battles fifth ranked Edson Barboza on March 11. The two will be featured in the co-main event of UFC Fight Night 106. The action takes place inside the Centro de Formacao Olimpica do Nordeste in Fortaleza, Brazil. In […]

T.J. Dillashaw to Cody Garbrandt: If you knocked me out in the gym, where is the footage?

T.J. Dillashaw says UFC bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt hasn’t released the footage of his gym KO because it never happened.

Last month, newly-crowned UFC bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt teased at releasing video footage of a knockout he scored over T.J. Dillashaw at Team Alpha Male (TAM).

‘No Love’ says he knocked out Dillashaw in sparring practice when he was just 1-0 as a professional fighter, but his former training partner says it never happened.

Dillashaw, who left the Team Alpha Male squad in 2015, says Garbrandt won’t be releasing any knockout footage because it doesn’t exist.

“He keeps talking, he has footage on it,” Dillashaw told Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour, per MMA Fighting’s Dave Doyle. “I think that’s hilarious because he’s digging himself a hole. If you’ve got footage on it, put it out. It has not happened. If he does, put it out there, because it didn’t happen.”

Although Dillashaw acknowledges that Garbrandt has serious power and says they went at it in training, the 31-year-old asserts that he was never knocked out.

“We’ve definitely thrown down,” Dillashaw said. “Don’t get me wrong, Cody is a tough kid. It’s funny for him to talk about how he’s knocked me out before. The closest I’ve been to being knocked out is in the John Dodson fight when he clipped me.”

Dillashaw, who now trains out of Colorado’s Elevation Fight Team, lost the 135-pound title to Dominick Cruz last year but is still considered one of the best bantamweights in the world. The California-born fighter rebounded with two straight wins over Raphael Assuncao and John Lineker and is slated to challenge Garbrandt in the second half of 2017.

Dillashaw once again reaffirmed that he doesn’t recall any knockout in training, and challenged the 25-year-old Garbrandt to release whatever footage he has.

“Put it out there,” Dillashaw said. “And if it did [happen], I must not remember it because I got knocked out. It didn’t happen.”

The two bantamweight rivals are currently coaching opposite each other on The Ultimate Fighter 25, with the season debut expected to broadcast April 19 on FOX Sports 1.

T.J. Dillashaw says UFC bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt hasn’t released the footage of his gym KO because it never happened.

Last month, newly-crowned UFC bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt teased at releasing video footage of a knockout he scored over T.J. Dillashaw at Team Alpha Male (TAM).

‘No Love’ says he knocked out Dillashaw in sparring practice when he was just 1-0 as a professional fighter, but his former training partner says it never happened.

Dillashaw, who left the Team Alpha Male squad in 2015, says Garbrandt won’t be releasing any knockout footage because it doesn’t exist.

“He keeps talking, he has footage on it,” Dillashaw told Ariel Helwani on The MMA Hour, per MMA Fighting’s Dave Doyle. “I think that’s hilarious because he’s digging himself a hole. If you’ve got footage on it, put it out. It has not happened. If he does, put it out there, because it didn’t happen.”

Although Dillashaw acknowledges that Garbrandt has serious power and says they went at it in training, the 31-year-old asserts that he was never knocked out.

“We’ve definitely thrown down,” Dillashaw said. “Don’t get me wrong, Cody is a tough kid. It’s funny for him to talk about how he’s knocked me out before. The closest I’ve been to being knocked out is in the John Dodson fight when he clipped me.”

Dillashaw, who now trains out of Colorado’s Elevation Fight Team, lost the 135-pound title to Dominick Cruz last year but is still considered one of the best bantamweights in the world. The California-born fighter rebounded with two straight wins over Raphael Assuncao and John Lineker and is slated to challenge Garbrandt in the second half of 2017.

Dillashaw once again reaffirmed that he doesn’t recall any knockout in training, and challenged the 25-year-old Garbrandt to release whatever footage he has.

“Put it out there,” Dillashaw said. “And if it did [happen], I must not remember it because I got knocked out. It didn’t happen.”

The two bantamweight rivals are currently coaching opposite each other on The Ultimate Fighter 25, with the season debut expected to broadcast April 19 on FOX Sports 1.

Video: Conor McGregor Flashes Wealth With Cars, Clothes & Planes

UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor likes to spend his money. ‘The Notorious One’s’ latest edition to The Mac Life video library featured him taking a private jet ride to California, where he cruised the streets in his luxury vehicle. He then stopped by Dolce & Gabbana to check out some of the finest material to

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UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor likes to spend his money.

‘The Notorious One’s’ latest edition to The Mac Life video library featured him taking a private jet ride to California, where he cruised the streets in his luxury vehicle. He then stopped by Dolce & Gabbana to check out some of the finest material to dress himself in.

McGregor’s California trip comes on the cusp of rumors that he and boxing legend Floyd Mayweather Jr. are attempting to set up a mega superfight inside the boxing ring. The UFC 155-pound champ has already gotten his license to lace up the gloves in California, and is looking to do the same in Las Vegas.

In his last Octagon appearance McGregor made UFC history by defeating Eddie Alvarez in the UFC’s first ever show in New York City form Madison Square Garden, becoming the first ever dual-weight champ in promotion history. After the hefty payday the Irish knockout artist has been very active on social media flaunting his newfound wealth, much like Mayweather who also has a reputation for spending big cheddar.

You can check out McGregor’s luxurious Cali visit here:

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Mike Goldberg Explains Story Behind Sitting In The Crowd At UFC Fight Night 103

After wrapping up his nearly 20-year career with the Ultimate Fighting Championship at the UFC 207: Rousey vs. Nunes pay-per-view this past December, longtime UFC announcer Mike Goldberg popped up in the crowd at the Talking Stick Resort Arena in his hometown of Phoenix, Arizona to watch his friend and UFC Hall Of Famer B.J. […]

After wrapping up his nearly 20-year career with the Ultimate Fighting Championship at the UFC 207: Rousey vs. Nunes pay-per-view this past December, longtime UFC announcer Mike Goldberg popped up in the crowd at the Talking Stick Resort Arena in his hometown of Phoenix, Arizona to watch his friend and UFC Hall Of Famer B.J. […]