B/R MMA Roundtable: Is Floyd Being Real in Denying MMA Rumors?

It started with a rambling appearance on Periscope. Floyd Mayweather Jr., as he often does, offered fans a window into his life of pugilism and absurd wealth while discussing a host of topics.
Many of the things he said along the way were worth raising…

It started with a rambling appearance on Periscope. Floyd Mayweather Jr., as he often does, offered fans a window into his life of pugilism and absurd wealth while discussing a host of topics.

Many of the things he said along the way were worth raising an eyebrow over, given the controversial subjects touched upon and Mayweather’s complete lack of filter. One thing that was just downright strange, though, was the discussion of his possibly fighting…in the UFC.

“You already know I’m a money-getting motherf–ker. I’m Money May,” he said (h/t MMA Mania‘s Ryan Harkness for the transcription). “They just called me not too long ago and asked me to come back. I can come right back to the UFC. … I can do a three- or four-fight deal in the Octagon and make a billion dollars.”

The statement, essentially, came out of nowhere and wouldn’t have been especially noteworthy on its own. Mayweather, after all, is known to say just about anything for attention, and discussing the UFC, positively or negatively, has traditionally turned heads for him.

(Warning: NSFW language)

His words became a bit more meaningful, though, when longtime UFC commentator Joe Rogan, on his podcast, stated that Mayweather was “legitimately” talking with the company about a transition to MMA. Then things got serious when company president Dana White told ESPN “it’s real” in regard to the negotiations. Mayweather fired back later that day, flatly saying to FightHype (via MMA Weekly, h/t MMA Fighting), “I’m not doing it,” but it’s hard to completely dismiss the rumors, and even harder not to wonder if this is simply a negotiating tactic playing out in public.

While the odds of Mayweather transitioning to MMA are long regardless of whether the two sides are negotiating, it’s worth discussing the ramifications that a Money-UFC team-up would have, and what a fight involving the 50-0 boxer might look like. With that in mind, the Bleacher Report MMA team is here to discuss the possibly ongoing negotiations, what it means for the sport and what a fight might look like.

Steven Rondina

At face value, the entire notion of Mayweather fighting in the UFC feels kind of absurd. The UFC is historically stingy when it comes to its athletes, and that doesn’t mesh well with a guy whose well-deserved nickname is “Money.” What’s more, Mayweather is also a competitor who traditionally likes to stack the deck in his favor on every conceivable level. Transitioning to MMA at 40 years old? To face a legitimate opponent? That’s not really his modus operandi.

The more I think about it, though, the more this kind of, sort of makes sense.

Conor McGregor has pushed the UFC out of its comfort zone when it comes to fighter pay to the point where the UFC’s current ownership, which is desperate for needle-moving fights, might be willing to float Mayweather a legitimate offer. On the flipside, Mayweather’s options in the ring feel somewhat limited at this time, with a can-crushing affair unlikely to yield the kind of returns he looks for and a legitimate opponent likely to put a beating on him at this point.

There’s a very real chance that all of this is just a symptom of White being a blowhard…but this whole situation just makes too much sense. If Floyd were ever going to step into the cage, now would be the time, no?

Jeremy Botter

I mean, look. We’re already well established in Twilight Zone territory at this point. Remember a few years ago, when somebody would’ve mentioned this fight and we all would’ve laughed and (probably) pointed in their general direction?

Yeah, those days are gone. The UFC’s new-ish ownership group has some huge loan repayments to make, and it can’t make them without throwing a few things out with the bathwater. One of those things is the old business model established by the Fertitta brothers, and the other is a healthy dose of common sense. What was once a not-in-a-million-years proposition is now an eye toward reaping the biggest profits available.

And make no mistake about it: if Mayweather steps into that Octagon, it’s going to be enormously financially lucrative, regardless of the opponent. It’s one of those things where you’ll tell everyone you won’t watch, but of course you will, because you can’t help yourself. Prizefighting was built on just such a foundation. Mayweather vs. CM Punk? Dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. But also? #WouldWatch

Nathan McCarter

I would watch this clown car roll into town 100 percent. However, what I am most interested in seeing, on the small chance this were to happen, is how the UFC fills out the card. It will provide great insight into which fighters (who don’t have pay-per-view points on their current deals) the UFC has a vested interest in promoting.

The Mayweather story itself doesn’t interest me all that much because we know what will happen against any credible well-rounded fighter. We’ve seen it before. But the implications for the business and how it affects other fighters is the story that I will be tuned into on a daily basis. Mayweather’s presence will have residual effects.

I’d also be interested in any new promotional tactics the UFC may employ, as it has gotten quite bland in that regard over the years. With a new TV deal on the horizon, a potential Mayweather fight could bring out the best presentation to date.

Jonathan Snowden

I understand how interesting this could be as a spectacle and how much money could flow into the UFC’s coffers as a result. I sat on the floor watching Mayweather fight McGregor with a smile I simply couldn’t erase from my face.

But as an athletic contest, this is straight garbage. A fight hasn’t even been announced yet, and the stench is already overwhelming.

McGregor had very little chance against Mayweather—but the slim possibility existed that he could waylay him with a hard shot and walk away an unlikely victor.

Even that chance will elude Mayweather if he decides to step into the cage.

If you haven’t seen it, take a quick peek at UFC 118 on Fight Pass. Watch James Toney, one of the most gifted boxers I’ve ever seen, take the center of the Octagon.

Then watch Randy Couture shoot the world’s slowest single leg from a yard away and put him helplessly on his back. It was as embarrassing as it was predictable.

A common thread connects boxing and MMA striking. The strategies and techniques vary to some degree—but they come from the same world.

Grappling? Grappling is something else entirely, foreign, scary and baffling, even after years of training.

When you train in a grappling sport for the first time, you often find yourself up against the smallest person in the gym, even if the weight difference is substantial.

This isn’t to provide you with a chance to be competitive. It’s the first of many humblings to come. It takes years to get good on the mat, a daily grind that all too often ends with your tapping frantically or trying to re-establish blood flow to your brain.

Mayweather won’t have time to get the reps he needs to succeed. Victory isn’t just unlikely—it’s hopeless.

Scott Harris

No, Mayweather has no chance of winning an MMA fight. Yes, a Mayweather dalliance in the UFC would nevertheless be appointment television and lucrative for all involved.

At the risk of sounding hopelessly naive, though, wouldn’t it be nice to see the UFC cultivate fan interest from the bottom up? The UFC is like a sports team that has every opportunity to build through the draft and farm system but ignores that methodology in favor of splashy free-agent signings.

On its face, that’s fine. We’re all here to make money. But the more often the UFC visits this particular ATM, the more it delegitimizes itself and its own athletes. It says something that Demetrious Johnson, the best MMA fighter on the planet and maybe ever, feels the need to put himself forward for a big-money fight with Mayweather. Shouldn’t the UFC have made a bigger star out of him already?

The UFC is desperate for name value, it is said. But isn’t that the UFC’s job? To promote fighters? What about Max Holloway and Robert Whittaker and Francis Ngannou and Amanda Nunes and a hundred other great fighters who are sitting under the UFC’s nose waiting to become household names while the UFC wrings its hands about a dearth of marketable talent?

Sure, novelty fights will always be big sellers. But figuring out how to make stars out of all the talent you already have? Now that’s a license to print money.

Steven Rondina

There’s definitely something to be said about the UFC’s inability to build stars and how that ties into the company’s frequent reliance on Mayweather to drum up headlines. The same goes for the fact that boxers have largely struggled when crossing over and how the UFC would need to steer into that in order to protect both the sports’ credibilities and its own brand.

The fact remains, though, that the UFC and Mayweather should be having at least a basic level of negotiation.

All signs say that Mayweather is looking for another fight at a time where there are few safe opponents available for him. All signs say that Endeavor wants to make the biggest fights possible in 2018 ahead of signing a new TV deal for the UFC. Even if Mayweather isn’t seriously looking to take the plunge or even if the UFC isn’t willing to ruin its credibility as a sports organization, both sides have something to gain from talking to the other.

Once again, it’s incredibly unlikely that Mayweather takes off his boots, tapes on some four-ounce gloves and dons a pair of atrocious Reebok trunks for $2,500. But given how huge their last date was, I’d be surprised if the two haven’t exchanged some text messages in the months since.

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Nate Diaz on UFC: I Think They Want me to Ask & Beg

Nate Diaz isn’t one to crack under pressure, even when playing hardball with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). Diaz last competed back in Aug. 2016. Fresh off his stunning second-round submission win over Conor McGregor, Diaz took on the …

Nate Diaz isn’t one to crack under pressure, even when playing hardball with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). Diaz last competed back in Aug. 2016. Fresh off his stunning second-round submission win over Conor McGregor, Diaz took on the “Notorious” one again in the main event of UFC 202. This time, McGregor earned the win […]

Rogan: Floyd Mayweather ‘Legitimately’ Discussing Fight in UFC

The rumors regarding Floyd Mayweather Jr. making a run in MMA just keep on getting louder. The latest example? Longtime UFC commentator Joe Rogan recounting some interesting conversations he had with UFC President Dana White on his podcast, T…

The rumors regarding Floyd Mayweather Jr. making a run in MMA just keep on getting louder. The latest example? Longtime UFC commentator Joe Rogan recounting some interesting conversations he had with UFC President Dana White on his podcastThe Joe Rogan Experience (warning, NSFW language). 

“Floyd talked about it, apparently,” he said Tuesday. “This is one thing I can tell you, Dana told me that Floyd wants to make a deal in the UFC. Like legitimately. So I texted him ‘is Floyd really talking about fighting in MMA?’ And he goes ‘yeah, he’s f–king crazy, I told him he’d get killed but he’s still talking about doing it.'”

At face value, this wouldn’t raise much of an eyebrow as Rogan and White are known to embellish to almost comical degrees. That said, it comes at an interesting time for Mayweather.

Money, last seen in the boxing ring in August opposite UFC fighter Conor McGregor, has been teasing a return since October. But while there’s little doubt that Mayweather remains a major pay-per-view draw, there are few low-risk, high-reward options out there at this time.

Mayweather’s 2015 bout with Andre Berto reportedly tallied between 400,000 and 550,000 pay-per-view buys, the lowest since his rise to stardom in 2007, which casts doubt on whether a squash match would be worth his time. On the flipside, while matches with top boxing stars such as Canelo Alvarez, Gennady Golovkin or Vasyl Lomachenko might do strong numbers, Mayweather would likely open as an underdog against any of them. 

A move to the UFC, and an MMA rematch with McGregor in particular, would leave his boxing legacy untarnished while also potentially offering him the largest paycheck available. That, of course, is what matters most to Mayweather, and that fact isn’t lost on him.

“You already know I’m a money-getting motherf–ker,” Mayweather said last week (h/t Ryan Harkness of MMAMania.com). “I’m Money May. They just called me not too long ago and asked me to come back … I can do a three or four-fight deal in the Octagon and make a billion dollars.”

That said, it’s far too early for fans to start planning a trip to Las Vegas for Mayweather vs. McGregor 2. While UFC ownership and The Money Team managed to come together for one match, it’s likely they won’t be able to do it again.

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Khabib Is Keeping His Weight A Secret Prior To UFC 219

It’s no secret that Khabib Nurmagomedov has struggled to make weight in the past. The top-ranked UFC lightweight was forced out of his scheduled interim title bout with Tony Ferguson at March’s UFC 209 due to an excessive weight cut. This time, the Dagistani is keeping his cards close to his vest and isn’t disclosing […]

The post Khabib Is Keeping His Weight A Secret Prior To UFC 219 appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

It’s no secret that Khabib Nurmagomedov has struggled to make weight in the past.

The top-ranked UFC lightweight was forced out of his scheduled interim title bout with Tony Ferguson at March’s UFC 209 due to an excessive weight cut.

This time, the Dagistani is keeping his cards close to his vest and isn’t disclosing any information about his current weight as he prepares for a fight against Edson Barboza at UFC 219.

All he said is that he is eight days ahead of schedule at a recent media luncheon for UFC 219 via MMA Fighting:

“Not big. Asking fighters how much they weigh and how old they are is not a good idea. How old are you and how much do you weigh (are) two questions you can’t ask women and fighters.”

“I want to see my fights, too. I’m a very big fan of MMA. I watch all fights. It’s not only about UFC; I watch Bellator and other organizations. I like my fights, too. I think first of all, you have to make weight. If you don’t make weight, there’s going to be trouble.”

The undefeated lightweight contender is a hulking presence in the cage but has struggled more than once in making weight against Darrell Horcher and Abel Trujillo.

Nurmagomedov and Barboza could be battling for the next crack at the (interim) lightweight belt as champion Conor McGregor mulls over his next move, but nothing is even remotely certain in the UFC lightweight division as of right now.

Do you think Khabib will make weight for UFC 219? Will his weight cut affect his performance against Barboza?

The post Khabib Is Keeping His Weight A Secret Prior To UFC 219 appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Coach: Conor McGregor Not “Obsessing” Over Mayweather Loss Like Diaz

Conor McGregor’s head coach John Kavanagh saw first hand how the UFC lightweight champion responds to losing. After the Diaz defeat at UFC 196, Kavanagh said McGregor obsessed over it until evening the score at UFC 202. Kavanagh discussed McGregor’s response after losing to boxing legend Floyd Mayweather to Express Sport (via Bloody Elbow) and […]

The post Coach: Conor McGregor Not “Obsessing” Over Mayweather Loss Like Diaz appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Conor McGregor’s head coach John Kavanagh saw first hand how the UFC lightweight champion responds to losing. After the Diaz defeat at UFC 196, Kavanagh said McGregor obsessed over it until evening the score at UFC 202.

Kavanagh discussed McGregor’s response after losing to boxing legend Floyd Mayweather to Express Sport (via Bloody Elbow) and remarked how differently the champ has handled it.

“I think it’s different. After the Nate loss, it was an obsession.

“I don’t see that same level of interest in the Mayweather rematch. “Not that he would turn it down if it was offered. But certainly not in the same way that he was for the Diaz fight.”

There has been rumors ever since their August blockbuster encounter that Mayweather might offer McGregor a rematch, perhaps even in MMA. Just the other day Mayweather said he could sign a contract with the UFC whenever he wants.

However, all signs from McGregor himself point to a return to the Octagon. The lightweight champion has an interim champ in Tony Ferguson to fight, or perhaps a go at welterweight champion Tyron Woodley. Maybe even a trilogy with Diaz. With Conor, nothing is impossible.

McGregor posted an image of himself training in MMA on his Instagram yesterday, suggesting a strong possibility that his next fight will be in the UFC.

Solid rounds tonight at @sbgireland

A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on

Who would you like to see McGregor fight next?

The post Coach: Conor McGregor Not “Obsessing” Over Mayweather Loss Like Diaz appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

It’s OK to Be Out on Conor McGregor’s Nonsense

Conor McGregor has been a whole bunch of fun.
Love him or hate him, he’s been about as much fun as anyone to ever step foot in the Octagon.
He went from an apprentice collecting welfare to a UFC knockout artist seemingly overnight, and from there…

Conor McGregor has been a whole bunch of fun.

Love him or hate him, he’s been about as much fun as anyone to ever step foot in the Octagon.

He went from an apprentice collecting welfare to a UFC knockout artist seemingly overnight, and from there what unfolded was one of the greatest rises to the top of sports culture the world has ever seen—in MMA or anywhere.

Sitting here on the proverbial eve of 2018, McGregor is 9-1 in the UFC and has won bouts in three different weight classes. He’s held titles in two of them.

He’s won performance bonuses in nine of his 10 fights.

There is a real case to be made that, when accounting for the blend of skill and excitement that makes a fighter’s performances into appointment viewing, McGregor is the best in the history of MMA.

But you know something else?

If you’re tired of his nonsense, of the games and gamesmanship, the constant stream of nothing headlines and even nothing-er actions that have supported his MMA career in the past year, nobody in their right mind would blame you.

While his diversion into professional boxing was objectively delightful—the pomp and circumstance of it, the abject silliness of it that we suspended our disbelief for, the fact that he actually acquitted himself incredibly well on fight night—everything that has followed has been symbiotically head-scratching and cringe-inducing.

There was his run-in with a referee who was actively shepherding a fight, which culminated in him lunging into the cage and shoving that ref and another commission official.

There was his homophobic slur caught on camera, something for which he appeared genuinely contrite but which wasn’t a good look in any event.

There was his alleged run-in with the Irish mob, the type of thing that usually comes about only for the most irresponsible of human beings, much less of professional athletes.

There was his boneheaded display at a courthouse around the same time.

And, perhaps most importantly in the midst of all this, there was the complete and utter absence of his committing to doing the thing he does best: fight.

While McGregor was off fighting referees, Tony Ferguson was fighting Kevin Lee to become interim UFC lightweight champion. Eddie Alvarez had a big win over Justin Gaethje, and Khabib Nurmagomedov and Edson Barboza will fight at UFC 219 to muck up the 155-pound queue that much more.

If those aren’t enough, Max Holloway is ruling McGregor’s old roost at 145 pounds with an increasingly iron fist and swelling popularity, and he took to Twitter to burn the former featherweight king after his last win.

Yet the closest anyone has gotten to pinning McGregor down for his next fight? Why, boxing legend Manny Pacquiao, of course, because who doesn’t want to see an 0-1 pro boxer fight a 39-year-old, current Filipino senator?

And sure, yes, McGregor has since said that he wants his next fight to be in MMA, but what is that worth really? Not much, if reports from multiple sources, including the New York Post, are to be believed. The champ’s dipping and dodging regarding the specifics of such a return have done little to quiet concerns.

So just know that now, at this point in time, it’s OK to be out on McGregor and his nonsense. It’s been a fun ride with him to the top of the sport—one of the most fun rides the game will ever see, in fact—but the nonsense has come to overpower those good vibes. 

It’s just been going on too long, and there are too many other things in MMA to focus on.

 

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder.

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