Conor McGregor Won’t Land a Punch on Floyd Mayweather, Says Oscar De La Hoya

Boxing legend and Golden Boy promoter Oscar De La Hoya doesn’t expect Conor McGregor to lay a glove on Floyd Mayweather Jr. when they meet on Saturday.
McGregor will take on the iconic fighter in his first-ever professional boxing bout, having changed …

Boxing legend and Golden Boy promoter Oscar De La Hoya doesn’t expect Conor McGregor to lay a glove on Floyd Mayweather Jr. when they meet on Saturday.

McGregor will take on the iconic fighter in his first-ever professional boxing bout, having changed codes from MMA. Speaking to TMZ Sports, De la Hoya, who lost to Mayweather via split decision in 2007, doesn’t expect the UFC lightweight champion to adapt well:

“There’s a better chance that I come out of retirement and challenge Mike Tyson; it’s not gonna happen” said the 44-year-old when asked if he’d put Saul “Canelo” Alvarez up against McGregor if he pulled off an upset. “I’m gonna go as far as saying that McGregor is not going to land one punch.”

           

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.   

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Mayweather vs. McGregor Odds: Vegas Fight Lines for Money vs. Notorious

Floyd Mayweather Jr. will attempt to defend his perfect record as he battles Conor McGregor in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday.
Money remains the favourite to defeat the UFC superstar, but Notorious has honed his boxing skills ahead of the anticipa…

Floyd Mayweather Jr. will attempt to defend his perfect record as he battles Conor McGregor in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday.

Money remains the favourite to defeat the UFC superstar, but Notorious has honed his boxing skills ahead of the anticipated bout at 154 pounds.

Mayweather will achieve a record of 50-0 if he prevails in the encounter, making him statistically the most successful boxer of the modern era as he surpasses Rocky Marciano’s 49-0.

Per Joe Osborne of OddsShark, Money is currently 1-4 to win at the T-Mobile Arena in Nevada.

Here are the latest odds before the big fight:

             

Mayweather Jr. win: 1-4

Mayweather by KO, TKO or DQ: 4-5

Draw: 33-1

McGregor win: 3-1

McGregor by KO, TKO or DQ: 13-4

Fight to go the distance: Yes: 9-4, No: 33-100

All odds provided courtesy of OddsShark and Oddschecker.com.

                 

Preview

Fight nights do not come bigger as Mayweather returns to the ring, exiting retirement to battle McGregor at light middleweight.

Money is defending the honour of his sport, as boxing has witnessed the rapid rise of MMA over the past decade.

If McGregor beats the greatest boxer of his generation at his first attempt in a ring, the interest in pugilism could be damaged.

The clash of styles will be fascinating, with Money happy to defend behind the jab, as Notorious attempts the spectacular.

McGregor pines to be the entertainer, but he is as fierce as they come when combat is the primary subject matter.

In the Octagon, the Irishman would dominate Mayweather, but this fight takes place in Money’s favoured environment.

According to BBC Sport, McGregor has said Mayweather will be beaten within two rounds, but if Money is present in the latter rounds he will then decide to “embarrass him or put him out of his misery.”

Per Arash Markazi of ESPN, Mayweather commented McGregor will have earned a moral victory if he simply lasts the distance:

Punch power and resistance will be key in the fight, and McGregor‘s youthful advantage and movement could facilitate a shocking night.

The Dublin-born fighter has tipped the odds in his favour many times before, but Mayweather would constitute the most impressive scalp of his career.

Notorious will enter with a style Money has not faced before, and, at 40, the former five-weight world champion might have bitten off more than he can chew against a motivated warrior.

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Floyd Mayweather Sr. Responds to Justin Bieber Dissociating from Boxing Star

Floyd Mayweather Sr. addressed the reported rift between his son, Floyd Mayweather Jr., and pop star Justin Bieber in a TMZ Sports interview.
As can be seen in the video on the site, Mayweather’s father suggested just because Bieber has changed doesn’t…

Floyd Mayweather Sr. addressed the reported rift between his son, Floyd Mayweather Jr., and pop star Justin Bieber in a TMZ Sports interview.

As can be seen in the video on the site, Mayweather’s father suggested just because Bieber has changed doesn’t mean the boxer has to change as well.

The TMZ Sports story added some context to the developments: “As we previously reported, Floyd Jr. is furious with his former friend—who’s been distancing himself after some counseling from his church. Bieber even decided to unfollow Floyd on Instagram as part of a bigger plan to back away from people who don’t share the same Christian values.”

Perhaps most notably, Mayweather Sr. said “it’s a maybe” when asked if Bieber would receive an invite to the party after Saturday’s fight in Las Vegas.

If Bieber does go to the fight, he will see his friend (or apparent former friend) go for his 50th win in 50 tries in the boxing ring. A 50-0 mark would move Mayweather past the legendary Rocky Marciano, who finished his illustrious career with the same 49-0 record Money has now.

Conor McGregor—who has never fought a professional boxing match in his career—is all that stands in Mayweather’s way of the 50-0 record. While McGregor has made an impressive career for himself in the UFC, he will have to deal with the same speed and defensive propensity Mayweather used to flummox every other boxer he has faced.

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Floyd Mayweather To Conor McGregor: If You’re Gonna Give It, Be Ready To Take It Too

Earlier today (Wed. August 23, 2017) the final press conference before Floyd Mayweather and UFC lightweight champ Conor McGregor’s boxing bout took place before they go to head Saturday night. “The Notorious One” started things off by boasting about his prediction to finish Mayweather within two rounds due to the recent change in glove size. […]

The post Floyd Mayweather To Conor McGregor: If You’re Gonna Give It, Be Ready To Take It Too appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Earlier today (Wed. August 23, 2017) the final press conference before Floyd Mayweather and UFC lightweight champ Conor McGregor’s boxing bout took place before they go to head Saturday night.

“The Notorious One” started things off by boasting about his prediction to finish Mayweather within two rounds due to the recent change in glove size. He also doubled down on his vow to push the action forward and claimed he is prepared to go all 12 rounds if need be. Mayweather then took the podium in a very professional matter and seemed to subtly warn McGregor to be prepared to take some damage, as well as give some out:

“The be in the sport 21 years, I had to take it extremely serious,” Mayweather said. “For you guys to think that Saturday I’m not taking this serious – I’m taking this extremely serious, but the thing is this: When it’s all said and done I know one thing that I can do, I can fight. I can give it, and I can take it. But for me to be 49-0, it’s obvious I’m not receiving it, I’m giving it.”

When asked to clarify his comments after the press conference, Mayweather stated that he is also coming to fight and if McGregor wants to come out and engage in a brawl, he better be prepared to absorb some damage as well:

“I’m just saying a lot of times you got guys talking about,” Mayweather said. “What they’re gonna do, what they’re gonna give, how they’re gonna be aggressive. But you also have to realize, there’s two sides to everything. So the same way you talking about giving it, hopefully you can be able to take it also. So that’s what I was talking about.”

 

The post Floyd Mayweather To Conor McGregor: If You’re Gonna Give It, Be Ready To Take It Too appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

How I Learned to Stop Hating and Admit Floyd Mayweather’s a Boxing Revolutionary

Floyd Mayweather is really rich. You may have heard that already. Probably from him. 
Money, for the famously undefeated boxer, is not just something he makes—it’s a lifestyle, nickname and friend. It travels with him in huge bricks, sometim…

Floyd Mayweather is really rich. You may have heard that already. Probably from him. 

Money, for the famously undefeated boxer, is not just something he makes—it’s a lifestyle, nickname and friend. It travels with him in huge bricks, sometimes in a duffel bag, sometimes laid out in front of him on a private plane, his ever-present raison d’etre.

But, as he waits in the greenroom for an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live, finally getting an opportunity to answer my inquiries, Mayweather doesn‘t seem particularly keen on discussing his taxes, investments or vast wealth. How much money is Floyd Mayweather worth? How many properties around the country does he own?

“It’s a lot,” he tells Bleacher Report. “…It is all about diversifying yourself and seeing an opportunity when it comes across your desk. I get a ton of offers to invest in various entities and pick the opportunities I am comfortable with and see future potential with.”

His hesitance to go into detail is OK with me. Because Floyd Mayweather isn’t just some rich guy jetting around the world doing rich guy things. Mayweather, at 40, remains the most polarizing figure in sports.

“There are those who don’t like his persona and consider him a villain and want him to lose,” Showtime Sports executive vice president Stephen Espinoza says. “There’s a part of the audience that wants to see success and hubris collapse upon itself. 

“Others love him. This is a guy who has flaws like all of us do. But he took himself from the humblest of beginnings to record-breaking wealth. In less than one generation. And without the help of a major sponsor. He’s a relatively small, African-American boxer who doesn‘t knock people out. The fact that, without any corporate support, he has generated the amount of wealth he has, is remarkable.”

Going into his fight Saturday against UFC star Conor McGregor, he’s staked his reputation on perfection. His prizefighting record stands at 49-0. One more victory will leave him alone on the mountaintop, above even the great Rocky Marciano for all eternity. When the bout is over, promoter Leonard Ellerbe tells me, his career earnings will exceed $1 billion.

This success, and his unyielding desire to tell you all about it, hasn’t made Mayweather beloved. In fact, the popular consensus is that he’s a boring fighter, a runner. A criminal and a coward

“I don’t have time for negative people or thoughts in my life,” he says. “I will continue to enjoy my success and live the way I want to. I wish everyone the best in what they have and do with it too.”

There are dueling narratives competing to tell Mayweather’s tale. In one, he’s TBE. The best ever. Yes, that includes Muhammad Ali. Yes, that includes “Sugar” Ray Robinson. If anyone reading is old enough to care, yes, that includes Joe Louis, too. 

Others proclaim him a carefully manufactured myth, a good fighter, sure, but nothing special when judged against historical peers. 

Which is true?

The latter seems to be winning the war in the public’s consciousness. But is it fair? Are we critical of Mayweather by rote, accepting a story that is, in the parlance of our times, little more than fake news? 

Who is Floyd Mayweather? How did he, a small, unlikable African-American stylist in a sport increasingly dominated by ethnic heroes and knockout artists, become the biggest star in the game? How did we find ourselves here, on the eve of a bout many consider little better than spectacle and far from the hallowed days of our youths, when, in our hoary memories at least, this all meant something? 

That’s five question marks in a row with nary an answer. Perhaps then, this is an issue that requires more robust study. On the eve of his final bout, let’s look back at every Mayweather fight, from first to last, with fresh eyes, discovering the truth, if such a thing exists, in the process. 


Boxing promoters lie. In many ways, it’s central to the profession. They lie to fighters, to television executives, to each other and, ultimately, to themselves.

Most often, the public is their willing patsy. We know they score lower than “used car salesman” or “congressman” on any metric of integrity. We fall for them anyway, trudging into the trenches again and again to have our hearts broken. 

See that lumpy former college football lineman? Totally the next Tyson. This kid over here with passable speed? He’s the next Willie Pep.

Boxing promoters lie. But sometimes, whether an accident of the universe or an intentional glimpse behind the curtain, a truth escapes into this world, slipping out of the torrent of never-ending hokum and inanity, waiting to be discovered.

Which was true when promoter Bob Arum called Mayweather “the successor in a line that starts with Ray Robinson, goes to Muhammad Ali, then Sugar Ray Leonard” after a 1998 fight? It’s hard to say. On the one hand, Mayweather was less than two years into his pro career. On the other, he had dispatched respected super featherweight champion Genaro Hernandez in just eight rounds.

It was clear, whether he was the next Leonard or not, that Mayweather was on track to become something special.

“He was praised as a likely savant early on because he was lightning quick and had great hands,” boxing historian Patrick Connor says. “Many recognized that kind of precognitive ability to defend and counter. And as it became more clear that we had an actual great fighter on our hands and not just some guy saying he was great, more scrutiny came with that.”

Watching Mayweather’s career, especially in his formative years, is a revelation. Today’s Mayweather, so cool and calculating, can be seen only in glimpses. Instead, an apex predator lurked in the ring, diving in with left hooks and straight right hands, willing to exchange when reward outweighed risk.

In the first defense of his title, he faced down Angel Manfredy, who walked to the ring carrying a devil mask and accompanied by Kid Rock. He walked out with only shreds of his pride. Manfredy was supposed to provide a stern test. Instead, in a bubble tent set up in the parking lot of a Native American casino in Miami, he provided an object lesson—speed kills.

“At 130-135 pounds he was wrecking shop and seemed able to hurt most opponents,” Connor says. “That changed as he moved up, and especially at welterweight. The jump from 140 to 147 has always been considered a huge one, historically. And when the welterweight division is thick, even more so.”

 

In the ring, he made even the toughest bouts look comically easy. Against “Goyo” Vargas, a former featherweight title holder, he even took time out to correct HBO play-by-play man Jim Lampley as he claimed Floyd had switched to southpaw for the second time in the fight.

“Third time,” Mayweather, who happened to be in the corner near the announce team, replied.

“Thanks for the correction,” a bemused Lampley replied.

That fight, cakewalk that it was, is a turning point in Mayweather’s career. He injured his hands in the bout, a problem that would plague him throughout his career. By the time Mayweather made the move to 140 pounds and above, he was a different fighter. 

“His bad hands likely played a part. How much isn’t clear,” Connor says. “But I also think, as Floyd understood that keeping his 0 intact became important to how he sold himself, adopting a style that protected that even more was likely an attractive option for him.”

To an opponent looking to do him harm, modern Mayweather is little more than a mirage, a wisp of smoke so delicate that he dissipates as punches move nothing but the air around him. Lots of pro boxers play defense with their feet, turning a 36-minute bout into a half-marathon. Mayweather, especially as a young man, could play that game with the best of them.

But, despite his reputation, he’s rarely been that kind of fighter. He doesn‘t have to be. And, perhaps, that disdain hurts his foes even more than losing—he’s so overwhelmingly confident, so in control of a boxing ring, that he doesn‘t even do them the courtesy of running. 

He stands right in the pocket, or even back against the ropes, still as a statue, all but begging to be demolished. In theory, this gives his opponent a chance.  But in reality, as HBO commentator Larry Merchant pointed out during the Vargas fight, “they have Mayweather right where he wants them.”

Once there, finally free to unleash their pent-up fury, they find Mayweather has disappeared. What makes it a magic trick is that his body rarely moves at all. He’s there somewhere behind a barrage of forearms, shoulders and endless right hands, mind racing, eyes darting, processing information at a faster rate than anyone else in the sport.

Mayweather is cable internet, his foes a squawking dial-up connection still trying to connect while Floyd is already in motion.

What makes him great is incremental. He never flails out of the way in panic mode, no matter how dark the heart of the man standing in front of him, quarters so tight that he can feel each breath that escapes his opponent’s body.

He moves his head exactly as much as he needs to for a punch to miss, remaining close and composed enough to strike back, right hand darting out like the tongue of a snake, retracting before anyone ever knows he’s moved at all. 

You can watch in slow motion as the great Miguel Cotto comes a centimeter from a devastating, fight-changing blow, only to fail miserably and pay a stiff price. Witness Phillip N’Dou, throw six, eight, 10 punches in vain, Mayweather watching each subtle change in body position and reacting accordingly, there to be hit but not.

These moments, over 49 fights and two decades, are nearly endless. Over and over again, we’ve seen him take the best fighters in the world, from the swaggering puncher Diego Corrales to the quietly confident Juan Manuel Marquez, and make them look human. Hall of Famers, men like Arturo Gatti, appear helpless before his superior, well, everything.

Even then, Mayweather is rarely satisfied. The great ones never are.

“I don’t even watch the fights because it’s hard for me to watch,” he told reporters on a conference call last week. “It could be any of my top fights that people say that they love the most, but I say I could’ve been better. I could have done that better because I’m critical of myself and I feel like there’s never been enough. When I go out there and compete, I could’ve done something better, I could’ve been better. So, it’s good to not even watch it.”

Somehow, because we never know what we’ve got until it’s gone, this routine excellence has become predictable and even a little dull.

Boxing is an ugly business. Calling it the sweet science seems a particularly cruel joke. Most fighters leave the ring without even the pretense of hope for a bright future. Those few who manage to walk away with pockets bulging don’t tend to hold on to it for long.

No one expects a happy ending.

Inside the ring, too, boxing is a brutal enterprise. It’s mostly an endless grind of punching the air, punching a bag and, finally, punching another man. Most fights, too, are a repetitive slog, forward and backward shuffling occasionally interrupted by a punch or two. The best-case scenario, for the spectator at least, is two men foolishly risking their long-term health to prove a point to the other fighter or, more likely, to themselves.

Beauty, true beauty, is rare. Against this stark, grim landscape, it’s almost off-putting and unwelcome. And few have been more beautiful in the ring than Mayweather. His is an artistry unmatched in this era, an ability to judge distance, time and geometry and then make the right decision in the amount of time it takes most people to even register a punch has been thrown. 

“I don’t think that I’m the same Floyd Mayweather that I was 10 years ago,” he says. “I’m not even the same Floyd Mayweather that I was five or two years ago. But I still said that I still have a high IQ in that ring. And I said experience-wise, it leans towards me, just period. 

“Most times when I go out there and compete against any fighter, experience will always lean towards me because I’ve been in the ring and been at such a high level for so long.”

Mayweather is often accused of being a defensive fighter, boxing’s original sin. Sure, we give lip service to the idea that the point of the sport is to “hit without being hit.” But no one truly believes it. 

In his first reign as champion, Muhammad Ali was fast as a hiccup, capable of shutting down opponents with disturbing ease, talking to them the whole time. 

No one loved him for it.

Only after time revealed him to be human, after sacrificing his body in endless battles of attrition, did the public truly come to admire him. 

Mayweather never made that concession to boxing fans. He never had to. Hiding in his defensive shell, left arm carefully covering his belly, right hand protecting his chin from a left hook, shoulder and preternatural reflexes there to guard against anything else that might come his way, Mayweather fights only when he wants to. He’ll poke his head out to throw a speedy right hand, then retreat back inside to do it again and again.

Truly gifted defensive fighters rarely sit the throne in the sport of boxing. Sure, they are appreciated by hardcore fans, the kind who make lists dating back a century, then argue about them on the internet. But their bouts take place either on the undercard of true stars or in front of a sprinkling of fans on cable television when they venture out on their own.

That was true of Mayweather, too. It wasn’t, however, a fate he was willing to accept. He knew more was possible, that crossover attempts with the hip-hop community were poorly executed and conceived. He knew he could be the biggest star in the sport if just given the chance. 

“I always believed in my abilities and knew I was going to be able to have substantial financial success in the sport,” Mayweather says. “I just felt that in order to do that I had to take matters into my own hands. The whole time, and in the early stage of my career, I started and stayed paying attention to what they were doing and how they were doing it. I knew with the right people around me, like Al Haymon as an adviser, I would be able to do it myself.”

Almost no one else believed in him. HBO offered a deal he called a “slave contract.” He feuded with promoters, partners and even his own family. Something better, he knew, was out there for him. He was intent on finding it, even if he had to make the journey by himself.

In 2006, Mayweather bought Arum out and went it alone. 

“He bet on himself early,” Espinoza says. “There aren’t many guys, at that stage of his career, who would write a check to a promoter for $750,000. With nothing waiting on the other side. He essentially bought his freedom, with the confidence that there were not just greener pastures waiting for him, but enough opportunities to recoup that $750,000 many, many times over.”

It wasn’t, however, his work in the ring that made Mayweather boxing’s top attraction overnight. He was distinctly the B-side in both the Oscar De La Hoya fight and his next bout with English sensation Ricky Hatton. It was his willingness to embrace change and reinvent boxing promotion for a new generation that earned him a seat at the table as seven-figure paydays turned to eight and then nine-figure events.

 

“What Floyd and his partner Al Haymon recognized early on, was that there was a tremendous opportunity if they could set up a business model that did not rely on a promoter as a sort of middleman,” Espinoza says. “So, rather than the typical boxing model, which has the promoter at the center, taking in all the revenue, paying the fighters and making a hefty profit for himself, Floyd’s business model put himself at the center. He collects all the revenues and hires a promoter, paying him a portion of the proceeds. But he remains the master of his domain.

“Floyd doesn‘t have to negotiate with anybody what share of the proceeds he’s getting. He knows that, whatever is left after expenses and after the opponent is paid, is all his. There’s no split with a promoter. That put him ahead of the game and allowed him to control his own destiny and his revenue streams.” 

Mayweather wasn’t just next in a long line of stars. He was the first of his kind, building on the framework De Le Hoya had created when he went into business for himself at the tail end of his career and formed Golden Boy Promotions. Mayweather took that template even further, becoming more than a fighter—he was a budding mogul, both salesman and product, an industry unto himself.


The first time Floyd Mayweather spoke into the camera on HBO’s 24/7, the message was simple and stark.

“Look me in the eyes, Oscar. Look me in my eye. I’m going to kick your ass.”

Ten years later, it seems almost trite—the flashy bravado, the money thrown at the camera, the fast cars and lavish lifestyle paraded out for a generation of budding retail addicts looking for a fleeting thrill.

At the time, no one had seen anything like it. Mayweather took fans behind the scenes into his life, both the bright and shiny exhibitions of excess and the dark corners where family business was laid bare and insecurities came scuttling to the surface and into the slightest sliver of light.

“I was sitting around one day and it came to me that why not show the fans the whole picture of my life, in and outside the boxing ring,” Mayweather says. “It brought the fans closer to boxing’s own version of reality television and I was the star. Why not give them something different, something they could feel they were part of? That is what we did back then and still doing it with Showtime All Access now.”

It was magical television.

“Success has many fathers,” Espinoza says. “When the book is written on Floyd’s career, I’m sure many will claim part of the credit. But, ultimately, Floyd created Floyd and Floyd built Floyd through his connection with the audience. He was willing to embrace the villain character, the “Money” character. Which isn’t necessarily a character—it’s a version of himself. He was the perfect personality to come along with the rise of social media. And he took advantage of it like no other.

“The blueprint was created by Floyd. His intuitive sense of the market and the audience is uncanny. He doesn‘t talk in terms of things like brands, branding and being authentic. He doesn‘t throw around buzzwords. But if you look at what he’s done in establishing this persona, he’s a genius. It comes naturally and intuitively without anyone having taught him about handling the media and marketing. Those are just things he understands intuitively.”

Strangely, the more Mayweather revealed, the more opaque he seemed. He allowed a glimpse—but the real man also seemed just beyond reach, shadowed no matter how bright the lights. Mayweather has a pretty smile and an easy laugh. His eyes, too often, tell another story, though, one that reflects his hard-knock early life. Floyd may flash a smile, but danger lurks there just beneath the surface. 

All of this keeps it interesting, text and subtext colliding, hours of reality television creating a fascinating portrait of a man. It’s why, against all odds, he’s become the biggest attraction in all of athletics.

Where does all this leave us? Likely right back where we started.  

Critics, like Deadspin’s Charles Farrell, will never be satisfied, yearning for a different time and place when boxing was a different animal and it didn‘t take more than 20 years to amass 50 fights:

“Floyd Mayweather, Jr. is an unembellished fighter who, these days, knocks no one out. His unprecedented market value comes more from his mouth than from his fists; his slogan of “the best ever” can gain currency only with an audience that didn’t come up seeing legitimately great fighters, and doesn’t quite have the critical thinking needed to assess greatness. Floyd has hammered home his point about being undefeated so relentlessly that boxing fans have bought it. Being undefeated for nearly 19 years must make him the greatest fighter ever. Or at least one of the top two or three.”

True believers will go right on believing, holding firm to the notion that even a victory against a fighter without a single professional bout is one for the ages. There is no bridging this gap. 

On Sunday morning, the Mayweather era will be over, but the conversation will never be finished. That, more than anything else, is a sign Mayweather was one for the ages—when discussing the greats, you have to reckon with his legacy. He matters. And that is enough.

 

Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.

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Connor McGregor and Floyd Mayweather Trade Insults in Final Presser Before Fight

While Floyd Mayweather Jr. spent most of his afternoon in a more subdued state, Conor McGregor remained boisterous Wednesday in the final press conference before their bout in Las Vegas on Saturday. 
“I will break this old man…I don’t see him la…

While Floyd Mayweather Jr. spent most of his afternoon in a more subdued state, Conor McGregor remained boisterous Wednesday in the final press conference before their bout in Las Vegas on Saturday. 

“I will break this old man…I don’t see him lasting two rounds,” McGregor said. “I feel I’ll have the decision to end it inside one. He messed up with them eight-ounce gloves.

“I’m gonna f–k this boy up, make no mistake. And when it’s all said and done, I’m gonna feel a little bit sad. Because you all should have kept your mouths shut. You should have left me over in that other game where I’m from, that more ruthless game where we bounce heads off the canvas and drill them into the floor. You should have left me where I was because this man is not on my level, he’s not even a quarter of the man I am.”

McGregor, 29, will be making his professional boxing debut Saturday. He’s the only UFC fighter in history to hold multiple championships simultaneously.

Mayweather, 40, is one of the most decorated boxers in history. This will be his 50th professional fight and will give him a chance to move to 50-0, breaking a tie with Rocky Marciano. 

“Competing against the best, that’s what it’s about,” Mayweather said. “Taking chances. What city better than Las Vegas to take a chance? This city is built on gambling, and I’m taking a gamble but it’s worth it.”

Mayweather may be preparing to bet on himself in more than one way. Gambling expert RJ Bell reported Mayweather was considering a $5 million bet on himself. When asked, McGregor said he “may” bet on himself, but used the question as an opportunity to rip Money’s penchant for gambling:

“I think he has a big-time gambling problem. From seeing him, he gambles on halftimes and things like that. He shows what his wins are but never shows what the losses are. Maybe that’s why he’s in the position he’s in and had to take this fight.”

While McGregor was quick to say he’d take care of business early, Mayweather made it clear he’s confident in his ability to outbox his opponent. 

“Pacquiao got bombs, Canelo got bombs, Shane Mosely had bombs, and all of those guys are going into the Hall of Fame,” Mayweather said. “But one thing about me, I’ve got a grinning chin. The same way you give it, you have to be able to take it. Remember this.”

McGregor, undeterred as ever, did not seem remotely phased by the difference in experience. 

“The fight business is the fight business,” McGregor. “I can go into any rule sets, that’s what a true material artist can do. I am truly, truly skilled in many forms of fighting. After I get a victory Saturday night, I will most certainly look to compete in both sports.”

McGregor even joked about conquering both MMA and boxing, then creating his own hybrid of the two as a new sport. 

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