Conor McGregor Discusses Using 8 Oz. Gloves vs. Floyd Mayweather at Media Day

One day after Floyd Mayweather got to dazzle the media with a public workout, Conor McGregor took his turn in the spotlight Friday by showing what he could do at the UFC Performance Institute in Las Vegas. 
ESPN’s Brett Okamoto reported Thurs…

One day after Floyd Mayweather got to dazzle the media with a public workout, Conor McGregor took his turn in the spotlight Friday by showing what he could do at the UFC Performance Institute in Las Vegas. 

ESPN’s Brett Okamoto reported Thursday that the Nevada State Athletic Commission would hold a vote after Mayweather and McGregor submitted a request to wear eight-ounce gloves for their showdown on Aug. 26. 

Nevada rules stipulate 10-ounce gloves be worn in a fight contested at a weight greater than 147 pounds. The Mayweather-McGregor matchup is set to take place at 154 pounds. 

McGregor, who previously promised to end the fight within four rounds, said he would be able to stop Mayweather inside of two rounds if the eight-ounce gloves get approved:

Even though this fight didn’t officially come together until June, McGregor said he’s had the boxing superstar on his mind for a long time:

Mayweather has not been particularly kind to mixed martial arts over the years. He had this to say about the sport in a 2015 interview with FightHype (via Bloody Elbow’s Anton Tabuena):

“I’m in the $100 million business, not the $100,000 business. I shouldn’t even be stooping to certain levels, because it doesn’t make any sense. 

“People that’s in MMA, I wish them nothing but the best. I don’t have anything negative to say about them. The hand I was dealt in life, I was dealt a royal flush and I just have to be thankful and appreciative of the hand I was dealt. I don’t have anything negative to say about anyone. I wish everyone of them nothing but the best.”

Just as interesting as what McGregor had to say was the way he looked working out in his preparation for a boxing match. 

MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani captured video of McGregor throwing punches at a bag:

It’s impossible to read anything definitive about McGregor‘s boxing skills into that short video, but that has been a key talking point in the lead up to this fight. 

Former boxer Paulie Malignaggi was working as McGregor‘s sparring partner before quitting on Aug. 3 after disagreeing with what he felt was UFC doctoring their work to make McGregor appear better at boxing than he actually is. 

Here’s what Malignaggi told ESPN’s Brett Okamoto about his decision to walk away from being McGregor‘s sparring partner:

“I wanted to be part of this event, but I didn’t want to become the story, and that’s what this has turned into. I won’t release any information about his game plan or what he’s working on—I wouldn’t do that. But this has become a fiasco. It’s a circus.

“And I do want that sparring video released. The UFC’s PI definitely has that video. I understand it can’t come out now, but Conor, if you have any balls, release what really happened.”

McGregor addressed Malignaggi‘s comments during the press conference after his workout, telling reporters Malignaggi took “head trauma” in sparring and “the soars were not good for him.”

When asked if he was worried Malignaggi would leak any secrets to Mayweather, McGregor simply said, “Let him. He (Mayweather) can’t prepare for me.”

The tone of the two press conferences over the past two days was completely different. Mayweather was often discussing the business side of the fight and tickets still being available, with the actual fight with McGregor being thrown seemingly as a reminder. 

McGregor devoted his attention to talking down Mayweather and making sure the world knows he’s not going into his first professional boxing match with any fear or intimidation.

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UFC Applying to Co-Promote Mayweather vs. McGregor Fight Through NAC

The UFC officially filed an application with the Nevada Athletic Commission to co-promote the Aug. 26 boxing match between Conor McGregor, its lightweight champion, and Floyd Mayweather Jr. at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
On Friday, Marc Raimon…

The UFC officially filed an application with the Nevada Athletic Commission to co-promote the Aug. 26 boxing match between Conor McGregor, its lightweight champion, and Floyd Mayweather Jr. at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

On Friday, Marc Raimondi of MMA Fighting reported the NAC will hold a vote on whether to allow the UFC to formally promote the fight during an Aug. 16 meeting. The NAC executive director, Bob Bennett, told the outlet the move would also allow the promotion to pay McGregor for the event.

The vote is part of a loaded agenda for the governing body’s Aug. 16 gathering. Other topics are scheduled to include deciding whether to grant boxing licenses to both fighters, choosing the referee and judges for the bout and voting on whether the allow eight-ounce gloves, per MMA Fighting.

Although Mayweather Promotions has so far been the only official promoter for the hyped cross-sport event, UFC has been highly involved in the process. UFC President Dana White was present when the sides embarked on a recent worldwide promotional tour.

Brett Okamoto of ESPN.com passed along comments from White last month about what he expects when McGregor, a sizable underdog, takes on the undefeated Mayweather.

“All these naysayers, let me tell you what,” he said. “This fight goes two ways. Either Floyd Mayweather runs around and does his style of fighting, defense, stays away from Conor and tries to not get hit. Conor will go right after Floyd Mayweather and try to knock him out. That’s Conor‘s style. When have you ever seen a boring Conor McGregor fight?

“And then there’s the other side, where Floyd thinks that Conor is so weak at boxing he comes right after him. Speed kills, tries to use his speed and actually knock Conor McGregor out. I want it to be a good fight and I truly believe it will be a good fight.”

McGregor‘s chances are bolstered by the fact Mayweather is coming off a nearly two-year layoff since his last victory over Andre Berto in September 2015. The five-division world champion also hasn’t won via knockout since his bout with Victor Ortiz in 2011.

That said, the UFC superstar is making his first foray into a boxing ring against one of the most accomplished fighters in history, which creates a monumental challenge.

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Conor McGregor Reveals Versace Robe on Instagram Ahead of Floyd Mayweather Fight

Conor McGregor will be a heavy underdog when he faces Floyd Mayweather Jr. on Aug. 26, but the UFC lightweight champion may be set to approach the ring in style.
On Thursday, McGregor tweeted a photo of a robe that was sent to him by Versace:

McGregor…

Conor McGregor will be a heavy underdog when he faces Floyd Mayweather Jr. on Aug. 26, but the UFC lightweight champion may be set to approach the ring in style.

On Thursday, McGregor tweeted a photo of a robe that was sent to him by Versace:

McGregor is preparing for his first professional boxing match, while Mayweather will look to improve his career record to 50-0.

McGregor has already made some intriguing fashion statements during the build toward the fight, including wearing a suit pinstriped with the words “f–k you” at a press event with Mayweather.

The 29-year-old Irishman has oozed with confidence since the fight was announced, but few are giving him a legitimate chance.

Although he is 21-3 in his MMA career and a two-division champion, his only boxing experience aside from his recent training is amateur in nature.

Conversely, Mayweather is arguably one of the best pound-for-pound fighters of all time with wins over the likes of Manny Pacquiao, Canelo Alvarez and Oscar De La Hoya on his resume.

Mayweather admitted to ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith in a recent interview that he isn’t the same fighter he once was, but even an older and slower Mayweather has the advantage entering Aug. 26.

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Floyd Mayweather, Leonard Ellerbe Discuss Tickets, Oscar De La Hoya at Media Day

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and his camp have heard all the speculation about his August 26 prizefight with Conor McGregor not living up to the box office or in-ring expectations.
Mayweather and promoter Leonard Ellerbe took to the media Thursday for an …

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and his camp have heard all the speculation about his August 26 prizefight with Conor McGregor not living up to the box office or in-ring expectations.

Mayweather and promoter Leonard Ellerbe took to the media Thursday for an open workout and meeting with reporters in an attempt to sell the bout.

“Forget what y’all are hearing. We’re doing crazy numbers,” Mayweather told reporters.

“We are going to blow past our own record of $72 million dollars. What are we talking about? This fight is massive,” Ellerbe told reporters.

Ellerbe also took particular exception to the narrative being created by Oscar De La Hoya and his promotional team, which has taken aim at the Mayweather-McGregor match in recent weeks. De La Hoya called it “disrespectful” to have the bout so close in proximity to the Gennady Golovkin vs. Canelo Alvarez bout September 16.

“It was disrespectful,” De La Hoya said on SportsCenter in June (via MMA Fighting). “I would have thought that Dana White would have a little more respect with this boxing event taking place, because look, you just don’t do that. I mean, it’s like having the Super Bowl and then three weeks later the World Series takes place, the final game. It just doesn’t happen.”

Ellerbe referred to De La Hoya as “that other idiot” and claimed their promotional team was lying about the Canelo fight’s being sold out.

“Jealousy is a terrible thing. Move on,” Ellerbe said. “Why are so worried about Floyd Mayweather?”

Mayweather said he believes his bout with McGregor will sell out even though it hasn’t reached the mark with two weeks remaining.

He also took time out in the presser to apologize for using a gay slur to insult McGregor during their press stop in London. He refused to comment on McGregor’s wearing a C.J. Watson jersey, a barb that not-so-subtly referenced Mayweather’s ex-girlfriend.

“I don’t know anything about any jerseys,” Mayweather said. “Anyone can wear whatever they want.”

McGregor will hold his version of an open workout and press conference Friday. 

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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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