Let’s Talk About Conor McGregor’s Achilles’ Heel

When it was over, Floyd Mayweather Jr. admitted that his plan all along was to let Conor McGregor punch himself out.
Mayweather had just scored a 10th-round TKO victory over McGregor in last Saturday’s much-hyped junior middleweight boxing match at T-M…

When it was over, Floyd Mayweather Jr. admitted that his plan all along was to let Conor McGregor punch himself out.

Mayweather had just scored a 10th-round TKO victory over McGregor in last Saturday’s much-hyped junior middleweight boxing match at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Fielding a post-fight question from Showtime Sports interviewer Jim Gray, the veteran pugilist explained why he’d started the bout so slowly and allowed McGregor to build an early lead before roaring back for the finish.

“Our game plan was to take our time, let him shoot all his heavy shots early on and then take him down at the end, down the stretch,” Mayweather said. “We know in MMA he fights 25 minutes real hard and after that he starts to slow down.”

If this was indeed Mayweather’s strategy, it was an effective one.

It was also well-informed.

Those familiar with McGregor’s body of work as a two-division UFC champion already knew the swaggering Irishman’s one Achilles’ heel—aside from perhaps his submission defense—could be his endurance.

If you count Saturday’s match against Mayweather, McGregor is now 11 fights into his run on the worldwide stage. He’s fought in two different sports, four total weight classes and against a very disparate group of opponents. All told, the results have been overwhelmingly positive. McGregor is 9-2 since 2013 (again, counting Mayweather), has won titles in two weight classes and set box office records in both MMA and boxing.

On the rare occasions things go wrong for him, however, there appears to be one constant: McGregor gets tired.

After both of the fighter’s high-profile losses—first to Nate Diaz at UFC 196 in March 2016, then to Mayweather—McGregor has at least partially blamed his own gas tank.

Case in point: Following Saturday’s referee stoppage, the 29-year-old Dublin native steadfastly maintained that Mayweather never really hurt him. The real problem, McGregor insisted during his own interview with Gray, was that he got too winded.

“I was just a little fatigued,” he said. “I get a little wobbly when I’m tired. It is fatigue. The referee could have let it keep going, let the man put me down. I am clear-headed. Where were the final two rounds? Let me wobble to the corner and make him put me down.”

On Thursday, McGregor essentially doubled-down on that assertion. He detailed his training for the fight in a lengthy Instagram post, going so far as to say he might have won if he’d made a couple of minor tweaks to his preparations:

Of course, there are a lot of other perfectly good—and arguably unavoidable—reasons why McGregor might have slowed down against Mayweather.

Boxing provides a different cardiovascular challenge than MMA, and by the time Mayweather ended their fight with strikes, the two had been battling for just over 28 total minutes. That made it the longest bout of McGregor’s career.

Both fighters also had relatively short training camps between the bout’s announcement in June and fight night. Factor in the otherworldly level of competition McGregor faced in his first boxing match, the magnitude of the event itself and Mayweather’s consistent work to the body during the fight and perhaps anyone would’ve been fatigued by the end.

Then again, we’ve seen endurance be a factor in McGregor’s MMA bouts as well.

In the wake of that second-round submission loss to Diaz, McGregor told the UFC’s Megan Olivi he’d been “inefficient” with his energy. He also promised to go back to the training room and figure out how to solve the problem.

“I lost in there,” McGregor said. “There were errors, but errors can be fixed if you face them head on.”

A bit more than five-and-a-half months later, he and Diaz rematched at UFC 202 and it was obvious McGregor had indeed taken steps to address the issue. He was noticeably more reserved during his walk to the cage and introductions and appeared more deliberate once the fight started.

He began by feeding Diaz a steady diet of low kicks to supplement his normal left-handed power punching. The strategy seemed to work early on, as McGregor dropped Diaz to the canvas with strikes three times during the fight’s first seven minutes. As the second round wore on, however, McGregor began to lag—just as he had in their first fight.

The third round was a borderline 10-8 win by Diaz. Though McGregor rebounded during the championship fourth and fifth frames and ultimately squeaked by with a majority decision victory, a profile of him began to emerge.

Perhaps McGregor is a competitor who comes out of his corner fast but fades the longer his fights go on.

Mayweather clearly knew this headed into their boxing match and used it to his advantage.

McGregor knows it too, but implied during a post-fight interview with ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto that the situation is under control. He also noted he thinks it may be more a psychological problem than physical.

“I don’t know what it is; it’s a mental thing or something,” McGregor said. “It happened in the Diaz 2 fight as well. I had a little stage at the end of the second round and end of the third, but then look what happened in the fourth and then the fifth—I came back. I overcame it.”

In fairness, he has a point.

So far, McGregor’s endurance hasn’t exactly derailed his rise. He did win the second fight against Diaz, after all, and in his only other UFC fight to go the distance—a three-rounder against a very green Max Holloway in August 2013—he didn’t appear to suffer from fatigue at all.

More often than not, McGregor has ended his fights so quickly that he hasn’t had to test his energy reserves. Of his 21 professional MMA wins, 19 have been first- or second-round stoppages.

It’s not at all unusual for MMA fighters to struggle with their cardio, either. The sport is so grueling that even top professionals are spent after 15-25 minutes of competition. For someone who typically starts as fast and throws as hard as McGregor does, there are bound to be hurdles.

Still, McGregor’s conditioning issues appear more obvious than most—maybe because he’s been so good in every other aspect of the fight game. It’s striking to watch a guy who is otherwise so mentally and physically sound consistently encounter the same problem.

It’s also an awkward look for someone who spent much of the lead-up to the Mayweather bout hocking his new for-purchase “McGregor Fast” conditioning program.

McGregor is so meticulous and calculated that it’s hard to believe he’ll let such an obvious flaw hang around for long.

But if Mayweather knew the correct strategy was to weather McGregor’s early storm and start to pressure him later in the fight, McGregor’s future MMA opponents will know it, too.

The blueprint of how to beat him is out there now. You can bet guys like Diaz, Tony Ferguson, Kevin Lee and Khabib Nurmagomedov all took note.

But if McGregor’s biggest weakness to this point has been his endurance, one of his biggest strengths has been his analytical nature.

As he moves forward, he’ll know he needs to adapt and close the holes in his game.

The fun part will be seeing how he responds.

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Conor McGregor Says Floyd Mayweather Has ‘Strong Tools’ He Could Take into MMA

UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor believes Floyd Mayweather Jr. has some “strong tools” that’d enable him to be a success in MMA. 
McGregor had his first professional boxing fight on Saturday against the iconic Mayweather, but he was stopped…

UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor believes Floyd Mayweather Jr. has some “strong tools” that’d enable him to be a success in MMA

McGregor had his first professional boxing fight on Saturday against the iconic Mayweather, but he was stopped in the 10th round. In an Instagram post on Thursday discussing all aspects of the contest, the Irishman paid tribute to his opponent and his abilities as a fighter:

“I always told him he was not a fighter but a boxer,” said McGregor. “But sharing the ring with him he is certainly a solid fighter. Strong in the clinch. Great understanding of frames and head position. He has some very strong tools he could bring into an MMA game for sure.”

            

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

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Conor McGregor Is the Perfect Loser

You want to know something weird? Conor McGregor isn’t beloved by everyone in Ireland.
McGregor is almost certainly the most famous athlete in the history of the country. Nobody comes close, really. But instead of being beloved and accepted by ev…

You want to know something weird? Conor McGregor isn’t beloved by everyone in Ireland.

McGregor is almost certainly the most famous athlete in the history of the country. Nobody comes close, really. But instead of being beloved and accepted by everyone of all age groups, McGregor is polarizing. He is divisive, and the divide is largely along age lines.

Two years ago, I went to Dublin to try to get a sense of the place that helped mold and create him. I discovered two groups: those who love him unconditionally and those who believe his attitude and antics make him a poor representative of the country. The younger generation loves McGregor. The older folks believe he could carry himself a lot better, to be a better representative for his home.

After his loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr. last weekend in Las Vegas, I have to wonder if the Irish elders’ view of McGregor might be changing.

If not, it should. There may be no better winner in all of sport than McGregor. And there is certainly no better loser.

 

Leading up to a fight, he’s brash, bold and arrogant to the point of being insufferable. Though the hardcore McGregorites will continue to fawn over anything he says or does no matter how far over the line he may go, there does seem to come a point for the rest of us where enough is just enough.

My personal breaking point came on Day 3 of the seemingly never-ending World Tour the pair embarked on to build hype for the fight. That was when I understood the point a Dublin cab driver tried to make to me two years ago.

“He’s got all the talent in the world,” the driver told me. “We just wish he’d carry himself a little differently. You understand?”

I did, but I didn’t.

I do now.

All that pre-fight bravado and buffoonery vanishes after the ending of a McGregor fight, though. In losing to Mayweather, McGregor was again gracious and respectful. You could visibly see the pre-fight veneer he’d constructed melt away. In its place was a fighter thankful for the opportunity to step in the ring with such a renowned boxer. He was grateful for the chance to prove the doubters wrong.

To prove he belonged.

(Warning: Video contains NSFW language)

In a sport where so few athletes are willing to give their opponents due credit, McGregor stands alone for his willingness to help build back up what he spent so much time tearing down. He makes no excuses about injuries nobody knows about. In fact, when he was preparing to face late replacement Chad Mendes—who stepped in for Jose Aldo at UFC 189 the first time the pair was scheduled to fight—McGregor was hiding a nasty ACL injury suffered while training with Rory MacDonald.

And even after finishing Mendes, he made no mention of the injury. It would be some time before he’d even confirm it, and even then he downplayed the significance.

Every fighter deals with some sort of injury going into every fight. It is the nature of the sport. The human body simply can’t stand up to the rigors of a full-time training camp without suffering some sort of trauma, no matter how supremely conditioned you may be. But McGregor is one of the few who refuses to use wear and tear or even significant injuries as an excuse for a loss.

In victory, McGregor is just as magnanimous, and sometimes even sorrowful. Witness his words to Aldo moments after their years-long feud came to an end in just 13 shocking seconds. 

“I’m sorry,” McGregor said. “We’ll go again. And again.”

McGregor has revolutionized mixed martial arts in profound ways, ways that will forever alter the landscape of what we once thought possible on the business side of things. Generations of future fighters have a new gold standard to model themselves after when it comes to business acumen and maximizing their earning potential. He has broken through the glass ceiling and continues to venture into uncharted territories.

But those same generations of future fighters—and the ones currently plying their trade in today’s UFC and Bellator—can also learn a lot from McGregor about being a professional when the fight is over. The quickest way to lose the respect of the fans is to make excuses for your performance and your loss.

The quickest way to earn it is by doing what McGregor does, by taking responsibility for what happened, by giving your opponent the respect they deserve and by moving forward and learning from the knowledge you gleaned in defeat.

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Dana White Says Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor Fight Drew 6.5M PPV Buys

UFC President Dana White said Saturday’s fight in Las Vegas between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor drew 6.5 million pay-per-view buys in a conversation posted on Instagram by Mike Dyce of Sports Illustrated (warning: contains NSFW languag…

UFC President Dana White said Saturday’s fight in Las Vegas between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor drew 6.5 million pay-per-view buys in a conversation posted on Instagram by Mike Dyce of Sports Illustrated (warning: contains NSFW language):

White offered the buy number during a conversation with Urijah Faber and Snoop Dogg. Dave Meltzer of MMA Fighting noted White was likely referring to the worldwide figure—not the number of buys in North America.

Meltzer reported the bout is expected to top numbers done by the Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight from 2015 in a number of other countries—the United Kingdom, Canada and Ireland among the most notable—but “not necessarily” in the United States.

The U.S. numbers are most important for the overall gross because it was $99.95 here, rather than the cheaper prices available elsewhere in the world. Mayweather-Pacquiao did 4.6 million pay-per-view buys in North America and 5.5 million worldwide.

These do not include streaming numbers. The bout was made available by UFC.tv, though their streaming service had a number of issues. Cable providers also had trouble providing the event, which led to a brief delay for the beginning of the Mayweather-McGregor bout. 

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Conor McGregor Used the WWE Playbook En Route to Crossover Success

Conor McGregor’s boxing skills allowed him to hang with Floyd Mayweather Jr. longer than anyone expected in the MMA vs. boxing megafight. It was his WWE-style bravado, verbal assaults and larger-than-life presence that helped make that bout the must-wa…

Conor McGregor‘s boxing skills allowed him to hang with Floyd Mayweather Jr. longer than anyone expected in the MMA vs. boxing megafight. It was his WWE-style bravado, verbal assaults and larger-than-life presence that helped make that bout the must-watch phenomenon that it was. 

McGregor is UFC’s biggest name. He’s a fighter even the most casual fan has an opinion about. 

And his star power is so great that his pro boxing debut on Saturday was the talk of the sports world. 

Everyone from P Diddy to LeBron James was in attendance that night. The pay-per-view numbers are expected to be historic. The Telegraph estimated the fight’s total revenue at $700 million. All this for a guy with a 0-0 boxing record.

It’s not just McGregor’s knockout power and defense that got him to this point and allowed him to churn this kind of buzz. His personality and trash-talk acumen moved him into the mainstream. It’s that part of his game that is heavily influenced by the world of pro wrestling.

McGregor is loud, brash and defiantly over the top. He cuts down opponents with one-liners and lands verbal body blows as he lays on the disrespect thick. 

His pre-fight promises sound they belong on WWE Raw.

McGregor told the media in 2013 ahead of his fight with Max Holloway: “There are two things I really like to do and that’s whoop ass and look good. I’m doing one of them right now, and on Saturday night, I’m doing the other.”

He gifted us equally entertaining quotes before tangling with Mayweather: 

The trash talk McGregor emits is art. It’s snappy and unforgiving. It’s the rhetoric of a pro wrestler, the kind of ammo The Rock, Stone Cold Steve Austin and Roddy Piper fired at their foes.

Former WWE champion Chris Jericho referred to McGregor in an interview with Sports Illustrated as a “yappy” guy who “knows the concept of cutting a wrestling promo.”

The Notorious One has not been shying about borrowing from Ric Flair in terms of his look, either.

McGregor’s flashy style often parallels that of the WWE Hall of Famer. He sports loud suits, sunglasses indoors, and the finest shoes and watches that money can buy.

The getup he sported at the press conference for his UFC 205 clash with Eddie Alvarez last November looked plucked straight from The Nature Boy’s collection:

At a 2013 press conference, McGregor spat lines that would have been right at home in a Flair promo: “These custom-made suits aren’t cheap. This solid gold pocket watch…three people died making this watch.”

Even McGregor’s gait has a WWE tinge to it.

The Irishman has long emulated The Chairman in the way he walks. Much like WWE head Vince McMahon, McGregor struts with his arms swinging dramatically at his sides, his head bobbing like a peacock.

Like Muhammad Ali before him, McGregor has realized that people will pay big bucks to see someone they find irksome get knocked around.

Ali explained that wrestler Gorgeous George influenced the way he presented himself. It’s clear that McGregor learned similar lessons from the squared circle.

The WWE-esque elements of McGregor’s total package have helped him stand out among all the other hard-hitting warriors of the Octagon. He has leaned on his personality to make a name beyond what his fists and feet could. 

McGregor infamously blasted WWE stars last fall but owes a debt to that world. Pro wrestling provided the blueprint to create headlines and make money from what comes out of his mouth.

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Mike Tyson Says He Respects Conor McGregor More After Floyd Mayweather Fight

Former world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson said he gained respect UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor after watching his fight Saturday night against Floyd Mayweather Jr. 
On Wednesday, TMZ Sports passed along comments from …

Former world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson said he gained respect UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor after watching his fight Saturday night against Floyd Mayweather Jr. 

On Wednesday, TMZ Sports passed along comments from Tyson about his view of McGregor after pushing Mayweather into the 10th round before suffering a knockout loss. 

“Yeah, I respect him [more after the fight],” Tyson said.

Tyson told the Pardon My Take podcast prior to the bout the MMA superstar was going to get “killed” in the boxing ring. 

                

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

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