Aldo’s Manager: Conor McGregor Will Lose To Nate Diaz Again

This week, news arrived that the rumored Nate Diaz vs. Conor McGregor welterweight rematch was confirmed for the main event of July 9’s blockbuster UFC 200 card from the all-new T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. A bit more surprising, however, was that longtime former featherweight champion Jose Aldo will face Frankie Edgar for the

The post Aldo’s Manager: Conor McGregor Will Lose To Nate Diaz Again appeared first on LowKick MMA.

This week, news arrived that the rumored Nate Diaz vs. Conor McGregor welterweight rematch was confirmed for the main event of July 9’s blockbuster UFC 200 card from the all-new T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

A bit more surprising, however, was that longtime former featherweight champion Jose Aldo will face Frankie Edgar for the interim title to decide the next challenger for McGregor’s 145-pound belt, which will inauspiciously sit on the pine while the Irishman sorts out his differences with Diaz at 170 pounds.

After Aldo and Edgar campaigned fervently for the match-up with McGregor after he lost to Diaz by submission at March’s UFC 196, the belt remained stagnant when a rematch that many feel is beyond unnecessary was made a reality. Aldo and his team aren’t exactly happy about it, but his longtime manager and coach Andre Pederneiras recently spoke to MMA Fighting about his star pupil’s mindset heading into the interim rematch with ‘The Answer’:

“We were expecting the fight with Conor, but we can’t live to mourn. Aldo has a date and a fight booked, and it’s for the interim belt, so let’s work to win this title and fight Conor again.”

ufc featherweight champion

Aldo, who lost his title in a shocking 13 seconds to McGregor last year, famously outlasted Edgar by decision in a heated match at 2013’s UFC 156, a bout where ‘Junior’ controlled much of the early action with his trademark low kicks before Edgar bounced back with a late push. Regardless of the result there, Pederneiras believes both fighters have changed and it will be quite the different affair:

“Both fighters have evolved a lot (since UFC 156),” he added. “It’s going to be interesting to see how they both prepare for each other in this new fight.”

Pederneiras did reaffirm his belief that Aldo should be fighting for the true featherweight title right now, but the Nova Uniao head man also seemed to be at peace with the interim championship up for grabs:

“Of course! Our goal is the title. Like we made clear previously, we would only fight for the title, and that’s what’s happening now.

Moving on to one of the many topics of the hour in MMA this week, Pederneiras touched on the pending Diaz vs. McGregor match.

Read on to the next page to find out his thoughts on the controversial rematch…..

The post Aldo’s Manager: Conor McGregor Will Lose To Nate Diaz Again appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Nate Diaz Had A Simple Reaction To Conor McGregor’s Latest Callout

He might have been submitted by Nate Diaz in the second round of their main event bout at March 5’s UFC 196, but featherweight champion Conor McGregor still threw some trash talk at the Stockton slugger with a descriptive photo yesterday that teased a different result in the rematch. Understandably miffed at how McGregor’s first-ever loss has

The post Nate Diaz Had A Simple Reaction To Conor McGregor’s Latest Callout appeared first on LowKick MMA.

He might have been submitted by Nate Diaz in the second round of their main event bout at March 5’s UFC 196, but featherweight champion Conor McGregor still threw some trash talk at the Stockton slugger with a descriptive photo yesterday that teased a different result in the rematch.

Understandably miffed at how McGregor’s first-ever loss has been portrayed, Diaz took to his own Instagram account to post a simple reply that featured only a telling image rather than any semblance of trash talk. Check it out:

????

A photo posted by natediaz209 (@natediaz209) on


Looking at Diaz vs. McGregor I from that point of view, it obviously seems as if Diaz dominated the bout, and when he hit the Irish superstar with a two-punch combination that wobbled him in the second frame, he obviously did just that by locking on the fight-ending rear-naked choke.

The facts of the matter have also riled up the mixed martial arts community, as many believe ‘Notorious’ should go back to featherweight to defend his title against Frankie Edgar or Jose Aldo considering he has zero defenses since he won it in December.

But McGregor had his own moments in the fight, particularly in the first round that he appeared to win, and with a more efficient utlization of his energy, a rematch could most certainly have a different outcome.

Diaz will most likely come into the bout supremely confident, however, and it seems McGregor’s already suspect ground game was called into serious question during the telling fight. A veteran of several more high-profile bouts as well, Diaz is also the bigger fighter on top of it all, a disadvantage McGregor saw go his way in extreme fashion during his dominant, undefeated run at featherweight.

Regardless, heat for their rematch is starting to build whether fans like it or not. And even if other fights might seem to make more sense for McGregor, let’s be honest — we’re all going to be tuning in at UFC 200.

Whether or not we watch a different result is up to McGregor.

The post Nate Diaz Had A Simple Reaction To Conor McGregor’s Latest Callout appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Find Out How Conor McGregor Already Started The Next Trash Talk Battle With Nate Diaz….

It’s not tough to understand why Nate Diaz doesn’t think Conor McGregor’s smack talk is going to be all that effective heading into their supposed rematch at July’s UFC 200, but that obviously isn’t going to stop ‘The Notorious’ from stirring the pot, and it appears he’s already getting started. With the rematch still not

The post Find Out How Conor McGregor Already Started The Next Trash Talk Battle With Nate Diaz…. appeared first on LowKick MMA.

It’s not tough to understand why Nate Diaz doesn’t think Conor McGregor’s smack talk is going to be all that effective heading into their supposed rematch at July’s UFC 200, but that obviously isn’t going to stop ‘The Notorious’ from stirring the pot, and it appears he’s already getting started.

With the rematch still not officially confirmed by the UFC, McGregor took to Instagram just a few moments ago to post a picture of himself slugging a bloodied Diaz with a caption advising Diaz, who won the fight by second-round submission, to enjoy his win. Check it out:

It was a good knock. Enjoy it. We’ll see the next time.

A photo posted by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on

While there’s little doubt that McGregor was indeed landing a ton of powerful punches on the youngest Diaz brother in the first round, it also became clear that the brash talk talker couldn’t sustain the pace, evident by his fading when Diaz nailed him with a perfect one-two. From there, it became a foregone conclusion that McGregor would be thoroughly handled on the ground as he was carved up by Diaz’ black belt-level Brazilian jiu-jitsu skills.

The result has left fans wondering why they would reschedule a fight that had such a decisive result the first time around, and obviously the issue of McGregor defending his featherweight title looms large, but the promotion understandably wants him to avenge his only UFC loss to regain the luster that made him the UFC’s biggest star.

He certainly could do just that, but starting the trash talk battle with a fighter who made submitting him look easy on days’ notice only three weeks ago may just not hold any water. Does it with you?

The post Find Out How Conor McGregor Already Started The Next Trash Talk Battle With Nate Diaz…. appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Nate Diaz Wants To Remind You He’s Only One Class Above Conor McGregor

After throughly throttling Conor McGregor by second-round submission in the main event of March 5’s monumental UFC 196 from Las Vegas, Nate Diaz isn’t exactly pleased with how the attention has still gone to the popular Irishman despite his stoppage loss. He’s now rumored to rematch McGregor in the main event of UFC 200, and

The post Nate Diaz Wants To Remind You He’s Only One Class Above Conor McGregor appeared first on LowKick MMA.

After throughly throttling Conor McGregor by second-round submission in the main event of March 5’s monumental UFC 196 from Las Vegas, Nate Diaz isn’t exactly pleased with how the attention has still gone to the popular Irishman despite his stoppage loss.

He’s now rumored to rematch McGregor in the main event of UFC 200, and the buzz for that fight is already building (even if a lot of it comes in the form of backlash).

Making the media rounds with several appearances this week, Diaz described how the inaccurate portrayal of McGregor moving up two weight classes bothers him on ESPN’s SportsNation:

In the interview, Diaz spoke up about McGregor’s perceived move up to welterweight, where he met Diaz on short notice, to face champion Robbie Lawler. But the popular veteran said that is unlikely despite all the credit McGregor’s been given, as he is a natural lightweight:

“Yeah, it does bother me. He was already talking about going up and fighting the welterweight champ and taking him out and even fighting at 185 and all these things. When he lost the fight, he’s getting all this credit for going up two weight classes. But I’m really only one weight class above him. I’m a lightweight.

“I’m only one class ahead of him. He’s moving up and he already talked about being the welterweight champ. Now he fought a lightweight contender and he’s talking he went up two weight classes.”

As for the rematch, Diaz understandably questioned if McGregor would be able to sell the fight with as much quote-worthy smack talk now that his previous aura of invincibility has dissipated:

“He’s got his little moves, so he’s probably got a bunch of stuff lined up. But there’s not much to say.”

With one stoppage win over McGregor already, it’s tough to argue that the Irishman’s brash brand of trash talk will have the same effect the second time around, and there are also some serious questions about his ground game, an area Diaz where clearly excels.

Overall, it appears the UFC is going to go with Diaz vs. McGregor II in UFC 200’s main event, so for better or worse, McGregor is going to have to learn how to deal with iron-chinned Diaz’s multitude of ways to stop a fight.

Will he be able to in four months’ time?

The post Nate Diaz Wants To Remind You He’s Only One Class Above Conor McGregor appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Diaz Coach: I’d Tell Conor McGregor To Go Back To 145

It may not be official, but Nate Diaz is rumored to rematch featherweight champion Conor McGregor in the main event of July’s blockbuster UFC 200 from Las Vegas, Nevada. Since that somewhat surprising news broke last week, there has seemingly been an uproar from MMA fans given that Diaz wholly destroyed McGregor in the second round

The post Diaz Coach: I’d Tell Conor McGregor To Go Back To 145 appeared first on LowKick MMA.

It may not be official, but Nate Diaz is rumored to rematch featherweight champion Conor McGregor in the main event of July’s blockbuster UFC 200 from Las Vegas, Nevada.

Since that somewhat surprising news broke last week, there has seemingly been an uproar from MMA fans given that Diaz wholly destroyed McGregor in the second round of their massive main event at March 5’s UFC 196, rocking him with a crisp combo and a flurry of follow-up strikes that lead to a shocking rear-naked choke submission win.

There are also, on the other hand, of course the voracious McGregor faithful who contend that their man was lighting up Diaz on the feet in the first round, bloodying him at two weight classes above his normal 145 pounds. And they’d be right, at least in a certain sense, because ‘The Notorious’ did apparently win the first round before appearing to tire from fighting at 168 pounds when originally signed on to fight injured lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos at 155.

USATSI_9161343_168380322_lowres

Of course the counterargument (and they could go on for days in this electric rivalry) is that Diaz took the fight on only 11 days’ notice when ‘RDA’ broke his foot, and he was still able to rock, throttle, and submit McGregor even though he was on a yacht sipping tequila in Cabo barely two weeks before the fight. That’s the stance that Diaz’ boxing coach Richard Perez took in a recent appearance on the Deep Waters Podcast (via FOX Sports), noting that a rematch with Diaz would be even worse for McGregor after the popular Stockton persona had ample time to prepare:

“It would be better because we only had 11 days and we only trained for nine. Usually, when someone gets two weeks’ notice, chances are they are going to lose. But I had a lot of confidence in Nathan and Nathan had a lot of confidence in the way we train, and in the way he trains — he does bicycle riding, running, swimming.”

Well known for always staying in some kind of fight shape thanks to his competing in triathlons and vegan lifestyle, Diaz said that he would have been next to flawless if he had a full camp to train for McGregor, and obviously Perez agrees. He predicted that the rematch will be much more in favor of Diaz, so he and his team should perhaps reconsider:

“If I were McGregor’s trainer, I’d say, let’s go back to 145,” Perez continued. “You’re awesome there. Fight Frankie Edgar or some top guy like that. But I guess they want a rematch. That’s going to be different. In a full camp, Nathan don’t mess around.”

Indeed the odds would dictate that Diaz would thoroughly control the rematch based on how he opened up McGregor’s glaring weakness on the ground with his black belt Brazilian Jiu-jitsu pedigree. McGregor could easily much better at his original home of 145 where he holds a monstrous size advantage, but his head coach John Kavanagh has repeatedly stated he doesn’t want the Irish superstar putting his body through the depleting cut down to featherweight anymore. Indeed, he looked a bit different at his last two respective weigh-ins:

ConorWeigh-InSideBySide3

 

If that is the case, however, many of the fans who are in opposition rematch think that McGregor should be forced to vacate the featherweight belt if he can’t defend it. Of course, the active Irishman hasn’t fought at featherweight for a grand total of three months and 11 days, hardly holding the division in limbo after Jose Aldo’s illustrious but inconsistent reign where he defended much less frequently.

If he does rematch Diaz, it’s going to get a lot longer than that, so the UFC obviously has a lot of thinking to do. Do you think that this would be a fight should go down in the supposed biggest card of arguably the UFC’s biggest year, and if so, is that because you believe McGregor would lose even worse?

The post Diaz Coach: I’d Tell Conor McGregor To Go Back To 145 appeared first on LowKick MMA.

What Happens If Nate Diaz Destroys Conor McGregor Again?

There was a whole bunch of questions being asked in the lead up to UFC 196, as UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor prepared to take on Rafael dos Anjos, in an attempt to make UFC history. The lightweight belt was on the line, and the Irish superstar was all set to duke it out with

The post What Happens If Nate Diaz Destroys Conor McGregor Again? appeared first on LowKick MMA.

There was a whole bunch of questions being asked in the lead up to UFC 196, as UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor prepared to take on Rafael dos Anjos, in an attempt to make UFC history. The lightweight belt was on the line, and the Irish superstar was all set to duke it out with his Brazilian rival, until the injury bug struck again. With ‘RDA’ out, Nate Diaz was drafted in and the welterweight main event was made official on just 11 days notice.

The consensus opinion was that Diaz would be out of shape, and essentially feature as the bitter half of a pay-per-view squash match. How wrong the consensus was, as the Stockton native battered and submitted McGregor in the second round of a thrilling affair. We asked the question before UFC 196, what happens if Nate Diaz beats Conor McGregor? The obvious answer was that ‘The Notorious’ would be sent packing back to featherweight, to finally defend his belt, once again we were very wrong.

diaz vs mcg2

Less than two weeks after their first fight had transpired was the shocking news that the two fierce rivals had agreed to fight again, this time at the milestone UFC 200 card. Again at 170 pounds, the announcement came as both confusing and frustrating to many hardcore fans of mixed martial arts and the UFC. With the featherweight division put on hold yet again, it was clear that the McGregor effect was still a massively controlling factor for the promotion. And yet again, we ask the question, what happens if Nate Diaz destroys Conor McGregor (again)?

Here’s our highly speculative outcomes:

A. McGregor 1

Back to featherweight

So the first and perhaps most obvious outcome of another loss to Nate Diaz would be that Conor McGregor would head back to the 145-pound division to defend his belt. The championship he won from Jose Aldo at UFC 194 is begging to be once again legitimized, but let’s not overlook how rarely it was defended back when ‘Scarface’ was on top. Of course with Aldo now a contender, and also Frankie Edgar screaming for a crack at the whip, it’s no wonder some fans are in disarray at the current booking of Diaz vs. McGregor 2.

To illustrate the point on how often Aldo defended the belt, this:


So things could be a lot worse, and McGregor has not pulled out of a UFC fight yet.

continue

The post What Happens If Nate Diaz Destroys Conor McGregor Again? appeared first on LowKick MMA.