Dana White is not happy about the news that longtime elite boxer Manny Pacquiao and UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor are working on a match in April. He’s not one bit happy. Speaking at the UFC Fight Night 123 post-fight press conferen…
Dana White is not happy about the news that longtime elite boxer Manny Pacquiao and UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor are working on a match in April. He’s not one bit happy. Speaking at the UFC Fight Night 123 post-fight press conference, White had pointed words for the Filipino pugilist.
“That would be weird, because (McGregor’s) under contract with us,” said White when asked about Pacquiao’s statement (h/t MMAJunkie.com). “If that’s true, I will be suing Manny Pacquiao and whoever is representing him.”
White denying the fight is no surprise. McGregor and the UFC are in reportedly contentious contract negotiations following the Irish striker’s “Money Fight” with Floyd Mayweather in August, something White himself alluded to in an interview last week. Acknowledging the rumors of McGregor working with Pacquiao would not only call into question White’s control over a fighter that (theoretically) is under his employ but would also strengthen McGregor’s leverage at the bargaining table.
That, of course, doesn’t mean the rumors aren’t true.
At 38 years old and already semi-retired, Pacquiao only has a few fights left in him. McGregor represents a seemingly low-risk but undeniably high-reward opportunity for the part-timer, who could use a rebound match after a controversial decision loss to Jeff Horn.
Meanwhile, despite being under contract with the UFC, the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act leaves McGregor’s exclusivity with the company up for debate (a topic that was heavilydiscussed ahead of the contest). With that in mind, McGregor gains a great deal of haggling horsepower by having strong suitors in multiple sports, a fact that certainly isn’t lost on Team Notorious.
That said, don’t get too excited about a Mac-Pac superfight yet. The UFC will likely bend over backwards to keep McGregor in the Octagon, and per Yahoo, Pacquiao himself is hedging his bets by acknowledging McGregor as one of a handful of potential foes.
While it might take a bit, and while things might get heated in meantime, look for McGregor’s next fight to take place in a cage, not a ring.
HBO boxing announcer Jim Lampley expressed his belief Tuesday that Floyd Mayweather Jr. intentionally threw rounds during his Aug. 26 win over Conor McGregor.
In an interview with TMZ Sports, Lampley said Mayweather “obviously” gave McGregor some round…
HBO boxing announcer Jim Lampley expressed his belief Tuesday that Floyd Mayweather Jr. intentionally threw rounds during his Aug. 26 win over Conor McGregor.
In an interview with TMZ Sports, Lampley said Mayweather “obviously” gave McGregor some rounds early in the fight in an effort to goad the public into buying another fight down the line: “He allowed Conor to quote ‘win’ three rounds so that the whole global MMA wish community could have something to latch on to. I think there’s a decent chance there’s enough suckers out there Floyd could maybe make another $150 million, why not?”
Lampley called the fight a “marvelous scam” and a “setup” before making it clear he thinks a rematch between Mayweather and McGregor could be in the works due to the money at stake.
Per ESPN.com’sDan Rafael, Mayweather earned a guaranteed purse of $100 million, while McGregor reeled in at least $30 million.
Mayweather said after the bout that he was retired for good, but the 40-year-old has stepped away from boxing on multiple occasions only to return.
While Mayweather overwhelmed McGregor in the latter stages of their fight and beat him by technical knockout in the 10th round, the early rounds were a feeling-out process that saw the UFC Lightweight champion hold his own.
Mayweather left little doubt that he is the superior boxer despite McGregor hanging in there, which raises the question of whether there is truly a market in support of a rematch between them.
While Floyd Mayweather’s victory over Conor McGregor surpassed many fans’ expectations in terms of entertainment value, UFC President Dana White is skeptical about the odds of a rematch between the two stars.
Asked about the possible bout on Pard…
While Floyd Mayweather‘s victory over Conor McGregor surpassed many fans’ expectations in terms of entertainment value, UFC President Dana White is skeptical about the odds of a rematch between the two stars.
Asked about the possible bout on Pardon My Take (h/t Sports Illustrated‘s Chris Chavez), White said, “I never say never but I doubt it.”
It’s not like fans were left with any doubt regarding who was the superior boxer following Mayweather’s TKO victory in August. McGregor looked good early on, but he ran out of gas midway through the fight, making the gulf in class between him and McGregor clear.
Money talks, though. ESPN.com’sDan Rafaelreported in August that Mayweather was set to earn at least $100 million from the fight, with his total payout likely surpassing $200 million. McGregor, meanwhile, made a minimum of $30 million that likely climbed above $100 million.
The allure of a massive payday could get Mayweather and McGregor back in the ring, even if a rematch is largely unnecessary.
White’s comments about a possible rematch aren’t all that surprising since he arguably has a vested interest in getting McGregor away from a boxing ring.
McGregor is one of UFC’s biggest names. Four of the company’sfive biggest buy rateshave come with the lightweight champion headlining the card. With Ronda Rousey’s mixed martial arts career in flux and Jon Jones facing alengthy suspension, UFC needs all the star power it can get.
McGregor is already approaching nearly a year since his last fight in UFC—a victory over Eddie Alvarez at UFC 205 in November. The last thing UFC needs is for him to continue his boxing career, thus necessitating even more time away from the Octagon.
The fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor did not break gate records for boxing, falling short of Mayweather’s bout with Manny Pacquiao.
According to Marc Raimondi of MMA Fighting, the Mayweather vs. McGregor contest gene…
The fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and ConorMcGregor did not break gate records for boxing, falling short of Mayweather’s bout with Manny Pacquiao.
According to Marc Raimondi of MMA Fighting, the Mayweather vs. McGregor contest generated $55,414,865.79 in ticket sales, compared to the $72,198,500 gate of Mayweather vs. Pacquiao.
Per Raimondi, UFC president Dana White had claimed gate receipts would equal $70 million, but it appears his estimation was inflated.
However, Showtime Sports executive Stephen Espinoza told The MMA Hour (h/t Raimondi) pay-per-view sales could match or surpass the 4.6 million mark set by Mayweather vs. Pacquiao.
Espinoza said:
“We are now sort of mid-4 million. If we see the kind of growth that we typically see, then we’ll break the record. I don’t want to assume we get the typical growth, because this is not a typical event. There are many different ways in which this event behaved differently. But we have a very good shot at breaking the record.“
Mayweather was victorious as he stopped McGregor in Las Vegas, winning by technical knockout in the 10th round.
Showtime executive vice president Stephen Espinoza told Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Snowden on Friday that the Aug. 26 superfight between Conor McGregor and Floyd Mayweather Jr. is “tracking” to generate more than 4 million pay-per-view purchases.
Accor…
Showtime executive vice president Stephen Espinoza told Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Snowden on Friday that the Aug. 26 superfight between Conor McGregor and Floyd Mayweather Jr. is “tracking” to generate more than 4 million pay-per-view purchases.
According to the Los Angeles Times‘ Lance Pugmire, Espinoza said “it’s too early to declare a hard number,” but the fight is “tracking in the mid-to-high 4 million pay-per view buys.”
Pugmire added the fight is “expected” to top $600 million in total revenue and has a chance to exceed the record 4.6 million pay-per-view purchases generated by Mayweather’s 2015 fight against Manny Pacquiao.
“If we don’t reach the record, we’re going to be very, very close,” Espinoza said.
According to Pugmire, final pay-per-view numbers are expected to be released next week.
Skepticism rightly enveloped the lead-up to the fight, which pitted the undefeated Mayweather against McGregor in the UFC lightweight champion’s first-ever boxing match.
But in a pleasant surprise, Mayweather and McGregor put on a far more entertaining and competitive show than anyone could have expected.
While McGregor was ultimately defeated via 10th-round TKO, the Irishman held his own before the stoppage. According to MMA Fighting’sMike Chiappetta, McGregor landed 111 punches total—30 more than Pacquiao connected on in his unanimous decision defeat against Mayweather.
“He’s a tough competitor,” Mayweather said after improving to 50-0, perMMAFighting. “I think we gave the fans want they wanted to see. He was a lot better than I thought he was.”
Should he or shouldn’t he?
The UFC’s biggest superstar, Conor McGregor, just pocketed $30 million for one night of work as a professional boxer.
Taking home at least 10 times what he’s ever made in a UFC fight by switching over to boxing begs the …
Should he or shouldn’t he?
The UFC’s biggest superstar, ConorMcGregor, just pocketed $30 million for one night of work as a professional boxer.
Taking home at least 10 times what he’s ever made in a UFC fight by switching over to boxing begs the question for Team McGregor: Should Conor ditch MMA for boxing?
What He Learned in The Fight
Make no mistake: The novice professional boxer needs to shore up his game in a few particular areas if he hopes to compete against elite fighters and continue to rake in millions.
McGregor most assuredly learned valuable lessons facing the top fighter of a generation. Mayweather’s Round 10 knockout win over McGregor highlighted the areas McGregor should focus on moving forward.
First, McGregor had no hope on Saturday of landing any significant punches when fighting on the inside. He lacks the natural intuition a pure inside fighter possesses, and while he’d need to augment his skillful counterpunching with some kind of inside game, it’d probably be best for him at this late age to focus on keeping his opponents at the end of his long punches.
It’s been done before. Recently retired longtime heavyweight champion WladimirKlitschko enjoyed one of the better careers in heavyweight history after he ditched his inside efforts for a long-distance technique.
McGregor could easily follow suit. Like Klitschko, McGregor possesses an excellent jab to go along with tremendous power in his other fist. Many a fighter has made a career out of the jab-cross combo and McGregor has the tools to do it, too.
Second, many were surprised at the lack of pop on McGregor‘s punches, especially after the first couple of rounds. While conditioning was probably a factor, McGregor‘s lack of zip probably had more to do with balance and stance than anything else.
Boxers and MMA fighters fight out of different stances with different techniques and footwork. While an MMA fighter has to be prepared for knees, elbows, tackles and kicks, a boxer is free to focus his defense on just his opponent’s fists.
McGregor is a world-class puncher by any standard. How many times have we seen the boisterous knockout artist drop an opponent while moving backwards? Only a born puncher like McGregor can do something like that.
But against Mayweather, McGregor just seemed to be out of his element. He couldn’t plant his feet well enough to drive through his punches using his legs, and for some reason, he was hesitant through much of the fight to put full force behind his punches.
To be an elite boxer, McGregor would need to find a top-notch boxing trainer to shore up his footwork and balance—someone who could teach him the subtle nuance he lacked against Mayweather.
The next area of concern for McGregor was his lack of conditioning. He appeared noticeably tired after Round 3, and by Rounds 9 and 10, McGregor could hardly hold himself up.
That just won’t work.
McGregor would be wise to hire a boxing-oriented strength and conditioning coach before his next 12-round fight. He was woefully underprepared to fight 12 three-minute boxing rounds on Saturday, so at least adding someone to his current teamwho understands the rigors of the sweet science would be well-advised.
What He Learned From His Paycheck
Elite boxers make as much as or more than any other professional athlete in the world. There are no salary caps and no teammates with which they must share revenue. Boxers enjoy the status of being the attraction of the sporting event.
The fighter is the team. McGregor is already one of the most popular fighting teams in the sport right now.
Given the difference between boxing and the UFC’s payment structures, McGregor has every reason to believe he could make a successful transition over to the business of boxing. As a professional boxer, McGregor would be able to negotiate for a larger portion of fight revenues than can under the current UFC umbrella. Seven-figure paydays are common in the sport of boxing for main-event fighters, especially those fighting on premier cable destinations like HBO and Showtime. Meanwhile, it has been a rare occurrence for UFC fighters. In fact, according to CBSSports.com’s Brandon Wise, only five UFC fighters in history have ever earned purses over $1 million.
Ditching the UFC and attaching himself to a boxing promoter like Mayweather Promotions or Top Rank would truly give McGregor the bargaining power he has thus far lacked with Dana White and Co.
A certain A-side against any other boxer in the sport, McGregor could call his own shots and make his own mark on the fighting world in any way that suits him.
Being already established as one of the historically great and immensely popular MMA stars, McGregor‘s move into boxing could garner him a further foothold as a household name. He could simultaneously hold the title of most popular fighter in two different sports markets: MMA and boxing. Should that occur, who knows what kind of sponsorship opportunities McGregor could land moving forward?
And the $30 million McGregor just made versus Mayweather is only the beginning. That number should skyrocket after the final pay-per-view numbers come in from last weekend, potentially tripling McGregor‘s earnings toward $90 million.
How exactly is McGregor supposed to go back to making comparative peanuts as a UFC fighter? If White hopes to keep McGregor around as a fighter on his roster, he better be ready to pony up more dough than ever before. Even that might not be enough.
Potential Big-Money Bouts
Bleacher Report’s Lyle Fitzsimmons suggested several noteworthy crossover options for McGregor, should he continue boxing. The No. 1 fight on the list would be an easy sell PPV bout against former sparring partner Paulie Malignaggi. The two men’s bad blood spilled over into the promotion of Mayweather-McGregor, so they already have a leg up in selling the fight.
A former world champion, Malignaggi is long past his best days as a professional fighter and would probably net McGregor a payday purse a few times greater than what he earns in the UFC.
Moreover, the light-hitting Malignaggi would be a fair testing ground for McGregor as a boxer. Should he win, which he’d likely be favored to do, exponentially bigger fights with huge paydays would reveal themselves on down the line.
The most intriguing names include Miguel Cotto, Canelo Alvarez, GennadyGolovkin and Manny Pacquiao. Even secondary opponents like former middleweight champion “Irish” Andy Lee and current junior welterweight titleholders JermellCharlo and Erislandy Lara would do big numbers with McGregor.
McGregor would be wise to at least ponder the move from MMA to boxing. He is 29 years old and the clock for a successful transition is ticking loudly.
Tick-tock, Conor. It’s time to choose.
With Mayweather now allegedly retired and McGregor‘s good-enough debut in the can, the boxing PPV throne is vacant and ripe for the taking.