Coach: Conor McGregor’s Hands Will Be “A Lot Better” When He Returns

With no return date set for UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor’s first-ever title defense, the most speculated-upon topic in all of MMA is undoubtedly just what “The Notorious” will do next. The Irish UFC megastar has been out of the Octagon since winning the 155-pound belt over Eddie Alvarez at last November’s UFC 205, choosing […]

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With no return date set for UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor’s first-ever title defense, the most speculated-upon topic in all of MMA is undoubtedly just what “The Notorious” will do next.

The Irish UFC megastar has been out of the Octagon since winning the 155-pound belt over Eddie Alvarez at last November’s UFC 205, choosing to take some time to welcome his first child into the world before embarking on an overblown “rivalry” with boxing legend Floyd Mayweather Jr. that ended with McGregor getting stopped in the tenth round of their boxing super-circus on August 26.

Many if not most think he should return – and soon – to defend his title against interim champ Tony Ferguson, who won the second-place title against Kevin Lee in the main event of October’s UFC 216. Of course, the long-rumored trilogy fight with Nate Diaz is always there, too, so it’s anyone’s guess as to when and against whom McGregor will return. When he does, however, his longtime Straight Blast Gym (SBG) head coach John Kavanagh thinks he’s going to be better than ever.

Speaking in a recent interview with The Daily Star (via MMA Mania), Kavanagh said that due to his year of training specifically boxing, his star student’s hands will be even better than they were during his decorated opening run in the UFC:

“When would an MMA guy have a chance to take six months just to focus on one aspect of MMA?. Never is the answer, they’re always trying to work on everything. But when he does return to the Octagon, his hands are going to be a lot better than what they were. And I’m excited to see that.”

While his foray into boxing would understandably refine his striking technique, it also brings the question if McGregor then let his progression in wrestling and grappling, which has long been pointed out as his weakness, stagnate as he focused only on the stand-up portion of MMA.

Kavanagh said that the opposite of the case, noting that he and McGregor hit the mats recently so grappling was also in McGregor’s mind:

“You know, I was rolling with him two weeks ago and I was wondering how his jiu-jitsu would be,” Kavanagh said. “And I was very annoyed that he took my back and choked me. So he hasn’t lost too much there. Of course, he has to tighten up there before he goes to fight in the Octagon again. But he really does love grappling.

“Even in the lead up to the Mayweather fight, he would still kind of ask you about wrestling or jiu-jitsu, and he’d say, ‘hey, look at this’. I know it’s in his head all the time although he wasn’t physically training it. I know mentally he’s still thinking about it.”

McGregor may be thinking about it, yet it can’t be denied that the main struggles he had in the few UFC bouts he experienced adversity, most notably against Chad Mendes in a fight he came back to win by TKO, and of course against Diaz, who submitted McGregor after rocking him on the feet in their first showdown at March 2016’s UFC 196.

Ferguson is known for his unorthodox submission game and collegiate wrestling background, two things that could clearly give McGregor problems should they fight, but he’s also known for getting hit too much, something that could end his night early against the Irish heavy hitter – especially if his hands truly are better like Kavanagh says.

It’s an interesting clash of styles to be certain, yet at this point, McGregor fans are probably just hoping he announces his MMA return regardless of whom it’s against.

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Tyron Woodley Rips ‘Disgraceful’ Colby Covington

It seems like more fighters are coming out to give their take on rising UFC prospect Colby Covington. Covington was put into the spotlight after insulting the entire country of Brazil. He also made headlines once again after engaging in a street altercation with former UFC heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum. Either way, you look at […]

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It seems like more fighters are coming out to give their take on rising UFC prospect Colby Covington.

Covington was put into the spotlight after insulting the entire country of Brazil. He also made headlines once again after engaging in a street altercation with former UFC heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum. Either way, you look at it, good or bad, Covington is making some noise.

There is one man who Covington might want to listen too, and that is UFC welterweight champion Tyron Woodley. The welterweight title is something that the UFC prospect wants the most.

During his appearance on Monday’s episode of The MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani, Woodley called Covington’s actions “embarrassing.”

“When I’m looking down the scope and I’m looking through my sniper rifle, you’re (Covington) not in the crosshairs,” Woodley said Monday. “There’s so many other fighters that are right in that mix that I’m looking at. There’s guys who are fighting, maybe rematches and former champions from different divisions, and people who are really running through it. There’s a lot of hungry guys, and he’s in that category with guys like Darren Till, Kamaru Usman. He’s right in there.

“The difference between them and him: Those guys are doing it with their gloves. They’re doing it with their actions. He’s just thinking that he’s supposed to talk his way into a title shot, and it’s sad that our sport does that.”

Since defeating former title contender Demian Maia at UFC Sao Paulo several weeks ago, Covington has been campaigning for the next title shot at Woodley. Although the division is stacked with worthy challengers, there is no clear-cut No. 1 contender right now.

“When you’ve got a person who, he had 5,000 followers until he disrespected an entire country, he doesn’t quite put himself on that same radar,” Woodley said. “When you’ve got a person who fabricates and makes up stories — Chael Sonnen was good at it, Michael Bisping is good at it, Conor McGregor is the best at it. If you’re going to go that road, at least sound right. Don’t on one hand be (saying), ‘I’m this tough guy,’ and your script sound stupid.

“Fans want to see blood and knockouts. They don’t want to see some guy just take somebody down over and over again. So I just find it really corny. And yeah, it’s worked, he talked himself into the Demian Maia and Dong Hyun Kim (fights), two guys I (beat). I wrote the book on Maia; he went out and checked it out at the library. Checked the book out, read it, and went out there and got bloodied by a jiu-jitsu guy. Now he thinks he’s going to fight for a title. Sit down somewhere. He’s embarrassing himself.”

Covington has used a past gym battle with Woodley as one of the main focal points of his campaign for the title shot. The UFC prospect has repeatedly claimed that he made Woodley quit in a sparring session at ATT.

“I like to let the things in training camp stay in training camp, but his (story) is so hilarious, (with) how many eyewitnesses (we had), so much video,” Woodley said. “Like, I don’t know if he remembers that my gym is camera-ed, so there’s so many videos that show the training. It’s just funny that he would just go on this rant, because he knows. I told him personally. … ‘Do whatever you want to do with it. If this how you feel like you need to make your name, have at it, do what you need to do.’ I said, ‘But I’m not going to give you the time of day.’

“He said, ‘I’m just trying to build a fight, man. I’m trying to make us both money.’ I’m like, ‘I’m already making money. What are you talking about? You don’t need to help me. I’m making money. I’m making more money on FOX than you make in fighting, so why would you need to help me out?’

“When he was the up-and-coming wrestler import, I was the guy who was like, ‘Oh, look, Colby’s here, he’s a wrestler too,’ kinda show him the ropes kind of deal. No respect, man. I remember what I paid him for training camp, that was all the money he had to his name, what I gave him. It was his whole life savings, what I paid him in training camp. Just the irony of this guy.”

Woodley isn’t surprised by Covington’s recent actions which include calling Brazilians “filthy animals” on national television then pressing charges against Werdum, who decided to hit him with a boomerang during their street altercation.

“When he came to my gym, he was like, ‘Oh, I need a manager who will pay me to manage me. I need a manager to pay me $40,000 to manage me. I need to be in the UFC right now.’ And at the time, he had one fight,” Woodley said. “He wanted me to tell him how to get sponsors and use my media kits. I’m like, dude, you need to sit down somewhere. I mean, some of his sponsors are from me, so it’s kinda funny. Like, ask him. Some of his sponsors are from me, and they stopped sponsoring him because he’s a complete moron. He makes the sport look horrible. He should’ve been suspended for what he said about Brazil.

“Imagine he hadn’t said that. Imagine Tyron Woodley says that. I might’ve gotten kicked out of the UFC. Imagine me saying that. Come on now, be for real. Tyron Woodley saying that on the microphone — do you think that’s going to go by under the radar, then they’ll give me a guest appearance at a fight? And even more embarrassingly, you want to press charges because you got hit with a boomerang? Dude, get out of here. I’m embarrassed. I’m embarrassed to say he’s in my weight class.

“He should be kicked out of the UFC. Make that the headline. Tyron Woodley says Colby Covington should be kicked out of the UFC for pressing charges for somebody air tossing a boomerang in a plastic bag at his shoulder.”

Woodley is playing up the rumors of a potential fight with Nate Diaz at UFC 219 on December 30th. He has claimed that the UFC offered him a fight against Diaz, but Diaz won’t accept the fight.

“They know better than that,” Woodley said. “They just let him have his fun. This dude is talking about the money fight, and not even to be arrogant or whatever, he’s never seen a six- or seven-figure paycheck in his life. Like, if he’s fighting, I can sit there and watch television and get pay-per-view checks that come in that are maybe five to 10 times the amount of his entire purse. So why would I sit there and try to put him in a position to finally get to the point where he’s making a six-figure payday?

“That’s not my job. He has to do that, and the old-school way. Look at Kamaru Usman — how’s he doing it? He’s doing it by fighting guys. He’s looking for fights. He’s not faking like his foot’s hurt. Colby Covington could fight him right now, Dec. 30, but he said his foot’s hurt. So, I just don’t have any respect for guys like that. I think it’s very disgraceful to our sport. It was built on hard work, guys taking big fights.”

“He’s doing what he feels he needs to do to try to get (a title shot), but I’m telling you, sometimes people ask for something and it’s something that they don’t want,” Woodley said. “If he actually gets himself in position to be across the Octagon with me — one, two, three, whatever fights it takes him to get there — I promise you that it’s not going to end well for him. He’s never going to fight again.”

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Fabricio Werdum Blasts ‘B***h’ Colby Covington For Boomerang Incident

Former UFC heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum is coming off a unanimous decision win over Marcin Tybura in the main event of UFC Sydney on Saturday night. Even though his spirits should be high right now, he still has a black cloud over him as he is set to find himself back in Sydney Australia next […]

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Former UFC heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum is coming off a unanimous decision win over Marcin Tybura in the main event of UFC Sydney on Saturday night.

Even though his spirits should be high right now, he still has a black cloud over him as he is set to find himself back in Sydney Australia next month for a different reason than fighting.

Werdum will be required to appear in court on December 13th as a result of common assault summons over his heated altercation with UFC welterweight contender Colby Covington earlier this week.

It’s been well documented that the former UFC champion threw a boomerang at the UFC prospect after claiming that Covington hurled an ethnically-charged insult at him outside of the fighter hotel.

Footage of the incident was captured by Dan Hooker and posted on social media. Covington pursued charges against Werdum with local police as a result of the altercation. Werdum remains taken aback by how ridiculous all of this really is.

“This situation, I don’t believe,” Werdum said Saturday at UFC Sydney’s post-fight press conference (transcript courtesy of MMA Fighting). “Colby comes to Australia, and I’ve never seen him before. I’m just in my room with my coaches, ‘Hey, coach, let’s go cut my hair.’

“When I go out, [Covington] looked at me and he said, ‘Brazilian animals.’ I said I don’t believe this, and I just slapped his phone. I just touched his phone; that’s it, man. And he kicked me. He kicked me, but I’m ready for the (UFC Sydney) fight, I blocked his kick. And after that, the guys stand in the middle. And two minutes [before], I had one fan give me the boomerang. … [Covington] says a lot of things about my mom, my country. I just threw it. If I had maybe a burger or cake in my hands, I’d throw that for sure, but I had a boomerang.

“But nothing, man; it just (hit him) in the shoulder. This is nothing, man. How is a fighter going to the cops? The guy goes to the police for that? This is crazy. He’s like a — I don’t want to say the word, but he’s like a b*tch.”

Covington was in Australia this week to serve as a guest fighter for the UFC Sydney fight week festivities. After his altercation with Werdum, he was ultimately sent home to the U.S.

UFC executive David Shaw said Saturday that the organization is still looking into the incident.

“From a company standpoint, we’re still collecting as much information as we can,” Shaw said. “We spoke to Werdum and his team, we spoke to Covington, we spoke to the hotel security, we spoke to police.

So we are not at a point to make any conclusions yet, it’s just too early. There’s still a process that we need to go through. And listen, at this point it’s in the hands of the New South Wales Police, and I think Werdum’s going to have some conversations the next few weeks with them.”

Werdum plans on sorting all of this out once his court day comes and is confident that it will all get settled.

“When I come to Australia again, I’ll bring my family, for sure,” Werdum said. “I’ll stay here one week, for sure. I’ll just explain everything for the judge and that’s it, man, because I know I have a reason, I know I’m in the right.”

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Tyron Woodley Rips ‘Scared’ Nate Diaz For Avoiding UFC 219 Fight

Without a bonafide headliner – at least, until Cris Cyborg signed to fight Holly Holm for the women’s featherweight title – at December 30’s year-ending UFC 219 pay-per-view (PPV) from Las Vegas, rumors abounded this week that welterweight champion Tyron Woodley would face fan favorite Nate Diaz for the 170-pound belt. Talk of the fight […]

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Without a bonafide headliner – at least, until Cris Cyborg signed to fight Holly Holm for the women’s featherweight title – at December 30’s year-ending UFC 219 pay-per-view (PPV) from Las Vegas, rumors abounded this week that welterweight champion Tyron Woodley would face fan favorite Nate Diaz for the 170-pound belt.

Talk of the fight understandably made it a controversial one, as Diaz, a normal lightweight, only has a 3-3 record at welterweight and has been out of action since a close decision loss to Conor McGregor at August 2016’s UFC 202. But a deeper plan may be at hand, as the winner could potentially face McGregor to somehow grant “The Notorious” a shot at a third UFC title without defending his featherweight or lightweight belts once, especially if Diaz were somehow able to defeat the heavily favored ‘Chosen One.’

The bout is still in its early stages with a month-and-a-half remaining until UFC 219, but Woodley told TMZ that he had already signed on the dotted line and was awaiting Diaz’ reply. He took that stance to a new level at yesterday’s UFC Fight Night 121 weigh-in show (via MMA Fighting), prodding Diaz to sign by wondering why he was ‘scared’:

“I’m here. All I need is the paperwork sent — UFC 219, Dec. 30 needs a headliner. It’s been offered to me, it’s been offered to Nate Diaz. Unfortunately, one half has not accepted. So you guys, people listening and watching, you guys need to get the Twitter fingers and ask your man that said ‘Don’t be scared,’ why is he scared?”

Yet while the fight is the massive ‘money fight’ Woodley has been calling for ever since he won the 170-pound title from Robbie Lawler in July 2016 – he was first calling for it to be versus Nate’s brother Nick – it’s also a joke in terms of merit and overall adherence to the so-called ‘official’ UFC rankings, and Woodley is rightfully favored heavily in early odds for the bout.

But ‘The Chosen One’ replied to that suggestion with the observation that the rankings have gone out the window in the UFC recently, instead offering the view that Diaz’ overall body of work makes him deserve a welterweight title shot:

“Our sport is out of the blue at this point. So, there’s no real rules.

“I’m a huge fan of the Diaz boys. I’m a huge fan of what they’ve done for our sport. I feel like it’s not about the rankings anymore. Sometimes the rankings are a little shaky. When you think about who’s put in the most work, the most time, is he not deserving of the world title based upon what he did? Fighting Conor McGregor; even before, just fighting in these wars.”

Oft-criticized for speaking his minds on many issues in MMA, Woodley has a solid point here, as the rankings have been thrown by the wayside in favor of bouts that the UFC ownership believes will attract casual fans and therefore bigger pay-per-view sales.

But in 2017, that hasn’t translated into anything resembling that perceived success without McGregor fighting in the octagon.

Would a fight with Woodley and Diaz help solve that problem, or would it just add to the issues plaguing the UFC and their increasingly worthless rankings?

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Would A Nate Diaz Title Shot Do More Harm Than Good?

Yesterday (Tues., November 14, 2017) amidst a sea of Conor McGregor-Bellator 187 news, the mixed martial arts world was forced to shift its focus to the prospect of a potential return by UFC fan favorite Nate Diaz, who was rumored to be training for a comeback, possibly against Tony Ferguson and possibly even facing welterweight […]

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Yesterday (Tues., November 14, 2017) amidst a sea of Conor McGregor-Bellator 187 news, the mixed martial arts world was forced to shift its focus to the prospect of a potential return by UFC fan favorite Nate Diaz, who was rumored to be training for a comeback, possibly against Tony Ferguson and possibly even facing welterweight champion Tyron Woodley at December’s UFC 219.

And then today Woodley acknowledged he would return early from an injury suffered at UFC 214 to fight Diaz at UFC 219 if the chance arose.

If you’re thinking this fight is an odd one, you’re right; however, we shouldn’t really be surprised by anything the UFC does during a rollercoaster 2017 where new(ish) owners Endeavor continue to show they’re more about booking the fight they think might make a ton of money rather than the one that makes sense in terms of actual fighting skill and merit, the main tenets the UFC is built – or at least claims to be built – on.

To put Diaz’ body of work in Woodley’s welterweight division in context, the normal lightweight has a 3-3 record at 170 pounds, with wins over McGregor, Rory Markham, and Marcus Davis, and losses to McGregor, Rory MacDonald, and Dong Hyun Kim. It’s far from the resumé of a title challenger in one of (perhaps the) most stacked landscapes in the UFC, but Diaz is a draw because of historic rivalry with McGregor in 2016, and Endeavor needs a big draw to hopefully put up some big numbers to close what has otherwise been a disastrous year on PPV outside of Mayweather vs. McGregor and Jones vs. Cormier II.

So Diaz is a draw because he beat McGregor, the current UFC lightweight and former featherweight champion at 170 pounds, and that has potentially earned him a title shot at welterweight against a champion who has, ironically enough, been calling for a fight with Nate’s older brother Nick from the very minute he won the belt. In a way – mostly financial – the fight makes sense for all three involved parties. Woodley can get his coveted payday fight, Diaz can prove, or at least attempt to, that he can draw without McGregor, and the promotion might have somewhat of a smash on their hands – at least in terms of this year’s low standards.

But there’s a far seedier underbelly present to signing the bout, and it’s the continued erosion of the overall spirit of MMA – that the UFC is the cream of the crop where the best fighters fight the best challengers to decide who is truly at the top of the mountain. Obviously, that strategy has been thrown out the window in many ways this year, and thus far, the results have been mixed if we’re being incredibly kind.

Many hardcore fans will blast this fight for its lack of merit as they call for McGregor to defend his title against the next rightful contender, interim champ Tony Ferguson. Casual fans will tune in to this fight to see Diaz largely because of his history with McGregor, that much is true. It’s going to come down to a matter of if the UFC is willing to risk their once-revered reputation of pitting the best against the best just one week after MMA fighter-turned-Oklahoma Congressman MarkWayne Mullin questioned (or rather, grilled) UFC exec Marc Ratner on how the UFC has some extreme questions and inconsistencies in how they book their champions.

Woodley vs. Diaz would be big, yet would it be big enough to continue what is essentially amounting to spitting on the legitimacy of MMA’s face?

What if Diaz somehow won? Then he could defend his 170-belt against McGregor in their long-rumored trilogy bout that is more of a foregone conclusion than anything else, lending McGregor a chance to win an unprecedented third title without fighting a legitimate contender in the division, much like he did at lightweight.

Now I’ve answered my own question, and that fight, which they’re understandably hoping for, would have a chance to be the biggest fight in MMA history in terms of overall numbers.

Welcome to today’s MMA climate, ladies and gentlemen, where dollars are valued over everything even if a fight may not make sense. I guess it shouldn’t be a surprise.

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Conor McGregor Camp Denies Commission Claim He’s Off UFC 219

Conor McGregor caused quite the stir after jumping into the cage at Bellator 187 in Dublin last Friday and getting into an altercation with referee Marc Goddard. He issued a formal apology online today but stuck to the stance that he was simply angered that Goddard would even have considered letting Ward’s dazed opponent John Redmond continue. […]

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Conor McGregor caused quite the stir after jumping into the cage at Bellator 187 in Dublin last Friday and getting into an altercation with referee Marc Goddard.

He issued a formal apology online today but stuck to the stance that he was simply angered that Goddard would even have considered letting Ward’s dazed opponent John Redmond continue.

While McGregor may have seen it as simply coming in to celebrate an SBG teammate’s big win, the powers that be saw differently. So much so that the sanctioning bodies that be are pushing for the UFC lightweight champion to be punished, essentially targeting his possible inclusion on the upcoming UFC 219 card.

ABC President Mike Mazzulli, who was cageside during McGregor’s outburst, claimed the brash Irishman has already been sanctioned by the UFC during an appearance on The MMA Hour:

“They already sanctioned him,” Mazzulli said. “So they did hit him. He’s not gonna be making any more money this year and I commend UFC for that. I really do.”

“There’s a zero tolerance for that,” Mazzulli said. “That’s why I said when you are a professional at that level, you have to handle yourself as a professional. There’s a lot of people that are looking up to you and respecting you as an individual, as a fighter. Don’t get me wrong, Conor McGregor is a great, great fighter. I’ve watched every single fight of his and that’s what I do, this is my job.

“But when it comes to what he did to Mr. Goddard and [Bellator employee] Michael Johnson, what would possess somebody to do that? Like I said, if it was at Mohegan, I guarantee you that the Mohegan Tribe Police Department would be removing Mr. Conor. There’s no doubt in my mind.”

Mazzulli continued on to offer his stance that McGregor was not bigger than the sport as a whole despite his behavior suggesting otherwise. In closing, Mazzulli said that McGregor was simply acting incredibly unprofessional, which was the stark opposite of how a champion on his level should behave at an event:

“Mr. McGregor is not bigger than MMA,” Mazzulli said. “We all know that. Mr. McGregor may not be around in five years, but MMA will still be. I think that is very important to understand, that fighter safety is the most important thing in the world. Because without fighter safety, this sport would not proceed to the next level like it always has.”

“First of all, I’m never comfortable when somebody takes it upon himself to act like a 5-year-old and jump in the cage,” Mazzulli said. “The bottom line is he was unprofessional, he was disrespectful and it was not acceptable in my eyes. In any situation. I don’t care if it’s anybody else jumping in the cage. We don’t do that as a professional.”

MMAFighting.com reached out to McGregor’s camp upon getting word of Mazzulli’s comment, to which his agent Audie Attar said Mazzulli’s claims were “not true.”

McGregor has not been officially added to UFC 219, but there have been several rumors that a fight between the lightweight champion and interim lightweight champ Tony Ferguson could headline the December 30th event in Las Vegas.

Do you believe McGregor should be punished for his actions at Bellator 187, and if so, should it go as far to remove him from potentially the biggest UFC pay-per-view event of the year?

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