Conor MMA’s Biggest Rags-to-Riches Story Yet—He Just Needed Boxing to Do It

“We’re not here to take part—we’re here to take over.”
Those words—which Conor McGregor uttered after knocking out Diego Brandao in July 2014—birthed an icon in Ireland, another warrior to carry forth the tricolor and f…

“We’re not here to take part—we’re here to take over.”

Those words—which Conor McGregor uttered after knocking out Diego Brandao in July 2014birthed an icon in Ireland, another warrior to carry forth the tricolor and foist the tiny nation upon his back for an ascent up the mountain of combat sports.

At the time, they were more imaginative than anything, a battle cry from a burgeoning star who had just blasted his way to a win on the strength of his eventually famous left hand.

He’d done it live on UFC Fight Pass, an online subscription service that only the most hardcore mixed martial arts fans would care to pay for, and it thus occurred before an audience size one might expect for such a platform.

Three years later, that star has fully arrived, ascending to every lofty statement he’s made.

He’s taken over the game. He’s taken over multiple games. His next fight will garner him more dollars than that fight on the internet had viewers.

He is Conor McGregor, and he told you he’d be here and he’d do this and you’d all just have to sit there and like it. He’s the ultimate rags-to-riches tale of a man gone from a plumber collecting welfare to a bona fide one-man global brand in a time frame equivalent to a presidential term.

It’s never been seen before in MMA.

What he didn’t tell you was he’d need boxing to do it.

It’s been a common narrative since McGregor signed to fight Floyd Mayweather Jr. that he has never boxed before, but that’s inaccurate. McGregor was a boxer long before he was ever the biggest name in MMA history; he’s just never devoted himself to it exclusively.

Early indications of an interest in boxing were instructive of the general path McGregor would take, but perhaps not so clear as to the magnitude. Past instances have seen him acknowledge the interest more generally as a foundation for his MMA success, but never as an obvious career path.

He told Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter in 2015 that, as a young footballer in Ireland, he stumbled across a boxing gym and would occasionally spectate before and after his time on the pitch. After a childhood move forced him to engage his own solitude more often, he turned that spectatorship into action and got more serious about martial arts.

He began kickboxing but worked on his boxing more seriously as well.

“I realized I was enjoying combat sports a lot more than I was enjoying football,” he said. “Instead of going to the football club, I would go next door to the boxing club.”

On August 26, McGregor will hit a level in boxing that he surely never contemplated while hitting mitts in a stale-smelling fight factory in the Lucan part of Dublin. He’ll face both his stiffest and most famous competition when he toes the line opposite Mayweather.

It will be a professional boxing match, McGregor’s first ever and Mayweather’s 50th.

It’s a bout that was improbable when the two began sniping in the media but one that was churned out quickly once it became apparent everyone involved wanted it.

Now, McGregor will score more money than he’s ever seen in his life, a total many believe will hit $100 million—probably the salary of every plumber in Ireland combined for the year and then some—simply for lacing up the big gloves and jumping into another sport for a night.

That proposition alone is both courageous and outrageous, a testament to McGregor’s sheer force of will. He’ll fight the best boxer of his generation without ever having competed in professional boxing, and he believes he’s going to win.

A separate 2015 interview with B/R’s Jonathan Snowden showcased that self-belief and the matter-of-fact way McGregor approaches his fights.

“I don’t speak trash. I speak truth. Occasionally, I might throw in a little insult here or there, but this is the Irish way,” he said. “If I feel something is the way it is, I will say it. I will let it be known. Some people can’t handle the truth. That’s not my problem.”

He’ll be part of the promotional team under his newly formed McGregor Sports and Entertainment, and it will charge nearly twice the going rate for a UFC pay-per-view to see him under the Marquess of Queensberry rules.

And all of it—the price tag, the promoting, the payday—would not have been possible in MMA. It would not have been possible in the UFC.

The salaries there are too paltry, the style of a promotion too authoritarian and absent of fighter input. Time and again, those beholden to MMA have lamented how little their pursuits provide for them financially.

It’s a tale nearly as old as the sport itself, and it has made McGregor even more divisive among his fellow athletes than he was before he signed to fight Mayweather. While some love and respect him for his willingness to go big, others sit in frustration at his ability to hold up entire UFC divisions.

Still, given the number of fellow UFC athletes who’ve taken to calling out boxers or trying to get on the Mayweather-McGregor undercard, McGregor has done something right.

Bottom line: He has created a one-time payout unlike anything MMA or the UFC could ever offer him.

Even though McGregor‘s already the biggest star and the biggest earner there, UFC President Dana White himself said of making Mayweather-McGregor that he’d never stand in the way of McGregor’s earning such a payday.

McGregor got his way and his priority all along.

“The whole division can hate me. The whole roster can hate me. The whole of America can hate me. I only need one American to love me,” McGregor said, a grin creeping onto his face. “And that’s Mr. Benjamin Franklin. As long as he loves me, I am good.”

He told you he’d be here and that he’d do this.

I predict these things,” he said after knocking out Dustin Poirier at UFC 178.

Once again he has. He just never predicted how.

With a track record like McGregor’s, though? That’s a minor criticism.

           

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder

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Mayweather vs. McGregor Undercard: 2 Title Fights Among Bouts Announced

The undercard for the Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor fight has been announced. Jonathan Snowden of Bleacher Report shared the bouts:

The festivities begin Saturday, Aug. 26 on Showtime PPV at 9 p.m. ET.
“What a night this will be for fight fans,”…

The undercard for the Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor fight has been announced. Jonathan Snowden of Bleacher Report shared the bouts:

The festivities begin Saturday, Aug. 26 on Showtime PPV at 9 p.m. ET.

“What a night this will be for fight fans,” said Mayweather Promotions CEO Leonard Ellerbe in a press release. “Not only will they witness a first of its kind main event, but they will also see two incredible world title fights, as Mayweather Promotions’ very own current and former world champions go head-to-head in separate bouts.”

The undercard bout to see showcases 22-year-old Gervonta Davis (18-0) as he defends his IBF junior lightweight world championship for the second time against undefeated Francisco Fonseca (19-0-1). Davis is the youngest defending champion in the U.S. and has won an impressive nine straight matchups by knockout.

The other intriguing fight on this card features Badou Jack (21-1-2), who moves up in weight to face WBA light heavyweight champion Nathan Cleverly (30-3).

“This is a fight I have wanted ever since Badou Jack moved to light heavyweight, and I’m delighted to fight in Vegas on an event like this,” Cleverly said.

“To be a part of this event and fighting on this card is historic,” Jack added. “Nothing beats it. I’m excited to get back in the ring. I’m getting ready to take that belt and win a title in my second weight class.”

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Mayweather vs. McGregor: Showtime ‘All Access’ Episode 3 TV Schedule, Preview

The countdown is on, and we are starting to speed closer to the superfight between undefeated boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. and UFC champion Conor McGregor, scheduled for August 26 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Showtime has been following both fight…

The countdown is on, and we are starting to speed closer to the superfight between undefeated boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. and UFC champion Conor McGregor, scheduled for August 26 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Showtime has been following both fighters for its All Access series, and the third installment will be broadcast Friday night on the network at 10 p.m. ET.

The second episode was both revealing and controversial. The controversy took place when McGregor flew in retired fighter and current boxing analyst Paulie Malignaggi for a sparring session at the Irish fighter’s training camp in Las Vegas. After filming all the introductions, the McGregor camp ordered that all cameras turned off as the two men stepped in the ring.

While the series is about access to the two fighters, McGregor cut it off at the most interesting moment. McGregor said he got the best of Malignaggi in the sparring session and offered a still photograph that showed him with both hands behind his back at one point. However, viewers were not shown any pictures of punches landing from either fighter.

Malignaggi was not happy because McGregor said that he was able to handle Malignaggi, and the former boxer says that is not the case and he wants the video released.

Since the airing of the broadcast, Malignaggi has been a guest on various radio sports-talk shows in an attempt to get his side of the story out.

While McGregor spent most of the second episode training or talking about the upcoming fight, Mayweather was not in the gym at any point. He spent much of the episode talking about how rich he was or showing off the actual cash he has one of his assistants carry in a large satchel.

He also vacationed in Miami, went shopping with his children and talked about a future business opportunity as a strip club owner.

Mayweather has to get back in the ring at one point or another before the fight with McGregor, and with just over two weeks to go before the fight, it seems that this is the right time for him to start working to get in decent shape.

Clearly, Mayweather has little respect for a mixed-martial arts fighter who has not had a single professional boxing match to this point in his career.

The third episode should reveal how both fighters are preparing for their confrontation.

The Mayweather-McGregor bout will be available on Showtime pay-per-view at a cost of $89.95 ($99.95 for high definition).

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Floyd Mayweather, Conor McGregor Glove Requests to Be Voted on by NSAC

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor have reportedly submitted requests to the Nevada State Athletic Commission requesting to wear eight-ounce gloves for their Aug. 26 boxing match at T-Mobile Arena. 
According to ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto, the …

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor have reportedly submitted requests to the Nevada State Athletic Commission requesting to wear eight-ounce gloves for their Aug. 26 boxing match at T-Mobile Arena. 

According to ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto, the move to eight-ounce gloves, if approved, would represent a shift from NSAC rules that require fighters weighing in above 147 pounds to duke it out with 10-ounce mitts. 

McGregor and Mayweather will reportedly appear in front of NSAC commissioners Aug. 16 to make their pitches in favor of the move to eight-ounce gloves. 

“The commission will hear both camps’ reasoning as to why it should deviate from its regulations during a scheduled meeting on Aug. 16,” NSAC executive director Bob Bennett said, per Okamoto. “Our chairman Anthony Marnell will then lead a conversation with the other commission members and they will vote on it that day.”

Mayweather previously stated he would be content to fight with eight-ounce gloves. He also went so far as to tell McGregor during their press tour he’d enter the ring donning four-ounce gloves that UFC fighters typically wear, according to Showtime Boxing‘s Mauro Ranallo

But as Okamoto noted, the NSAC will have to determine the fighters won’t be at greater risk of injury in order to approve a last-minute change to lighter gloves. 

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5 Reasons Conor McGregor Maybe, Just Maybe, Can Defeat Floyd Mayweather

Look, I know what you’re thinking, and you’re completely right. On paper, Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Conor McGregor is one of the most egregious mismatches in the history of combat sports.
Mayweather is 49-0 in the ring, with clean wins over many of the …

Look, I know what you’re thinking, and you’re completely right. On paper, Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Conor McGregor is one of the most egregious mismatches in the history of combat sports.

Mayweather is 49-0 in the ring, with clean wins over many of the best boxers of his generation, including Oscar De La Hoya, Juan Manuel Marquez and Manny Pacquiao. Peppered in there are a slew of accolades, including an Olympic bronze medal, numerous display cases of championship titles and countless Boxer of the Year awards.

McGregor, meanwhile, is 0-0. Despite achieving amazing things in mixed martial arts, he has no professional or amateur boxing experience.

By almost every metric, Mayweather has an insurmountable advantage over McGregor in a strictly stand-up fight. The key word there, of course, is “almost.”

Believe it or not, there are a handful of areas where the UFC lightweight champ bests Mayweather. With that in mind, it’s worth discussing what advantages McGregor has and how they could maybe, just maybe, lead him to a win on August 26 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

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Canelo Alvarez Says Fight with Conor McGregor Possible If Floyd Mayweather Loses

Canelo Alvarez isn’t closing the door on a potential boxing match with Conor McGregor, but it comes with the caveat that the UFC star has to beat Floyd Mayweather. 
In an interview with Jack Jorgensen of Fansided, Alvarez laid out the scenario tha…

Canelo Alvarez isn’t closing the door on a potential boxing match with Conor McGregor, but it comes with the caveat that the UFC star has to beat Floyd Mayweather

In an interview with Jack Jorgensen of Fansided, Alvarez laid out the scenario that would lead him to want a match with McGregor. 

“If that miracle was to happen, then we have a conversation,” Alvarez said. “If that miracle were to happen, but I doubt it very much that Conor beats Floyd.”

McGregor and Mayweather are scheduled to fight on Aug. 26, but Canelo is also deep in preparation for his marquee showdown against Gennady Golovkin on Sept. 16. 

This will be the first professional boxing match in McGregor’s career. The 29-year-old has a 21-3 career record in mixed martial arts, including a 9-1 mark in UFC. He’s the only fighter in UFC history to hold two championships simultaneously when he won the lightweight title while holding the featherweight title.

If any active boxer knows the difficulty of trying to knock Mayweather from the ranks of the undefeated, it’s Alvarez. The Mexican superstar’s only blemish in 51 career matches was a majority decision loss against Mayweather in Sept. 2013. 

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