Mayweather vs. McGregor Odds: Final Betting Lines Roundup, Props Update

With UFC champion Conor McGregor set to step into the ring for the first time as a pro boxer against one of the greatest pugilists of all time in Floyd Mayweather, the latter is finally starting to see money come back on him as a heavy favorite.
Accord…

With UFC champion Conor McGregor set to step into the ring for the first time as a pro boxer against one of the greatest pugilists of all time in Floyd Mayweather, the latter is finally starting to see money come back on him as a heavy favorite.

According to sportsbooks monitored by OddsShark on Friday night, Mayweather was as high as -700 (bet $700 to win $100) in Las Vegas, with the top underdog payback on McGregor returning +500 (bet $100 to win $500).

Friday’s weigh-ins at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevadaalso the site of Saturday’s megafightsaw McGregor come in at 153 pounds, with the undefeated former world welterweight champ Mayweather (49-0) much lighter than the 154-pound limit at 149.5. McGregor is expected to be closer to 170 when he makes his super-welterweight boxing debut, per the Showtime feed.

 

The lowest price on Mayweather is -450, although that may not last much longer heading into Saturday if the late money continues to back him. Regardless, the public will have hundreds of other ways to wager on what will be the most heavily bet-on fight in sports history with the addition of props.

This matchup is expected to fall short of Super Bowl numbers in terms of betting handle, but the interest already has topped the previous record for a boxing match set by Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao on May 2, 2015. Mayweather won that bout over Pacquiao via 12-round unanimous decision.

        

Printable Mayweather vs. McGregor Props Party Game

Many of the top props available involve knockdowns and knockouts by both sides. For the record, Mayweather has not scored a knockout victory in nearly six years (September 17, 2011). Meanwhile, McGregor has seen just two of his 24 MMA fights go three rounds or more, with him totaling 18 knockouts among his 21 career wins.

That said, Mayweather winning by KO, TKO or DQ remains the -140 favorite as far as method of victory goes for either fighter. McGregor winning via KO, TKO or DQ is worth +333, with a Mayweather victory by decision or technical decision slightly more likely at +250. McGregor has guaranteed a knockout within four rounds, and that pays +500.

However, Mayweather also said on Friday that he would finish McGregor within the distance, and under 9.5 rounds is still a solid favorite at -175 for totals bettors.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Secret That Led Conor McGregor to Fame, Fortune and Floyd Mayweather

On the cusp of making his professional boxing debut against one of the greatest boxers of all time, Conor McGregor is preparing to make history again.
From the moment he first entered the Octagon, McGregor has faced a slew of doubters and odds thought …

On the cusp of making his professional boxing debut against one of the greatest boxers of all time, Conor McGregor is preparing to make history again.

From the moment he first entered the Octagon, McGregor has faced a slew of doubters and odds thought to be insurmountable. Against opponent after opponent, McGregor has been doubted and scorned, his doubters utilizing a litany of bold predictions to explain why he simply can’t or won’t beat the next guy in line.

He’s terrible.

OK, he can punch, but let’s see what happens when he faces a wrestler.

OK, so he beat a wrestler, but only because it was on short notice. Just wait until Jose Aldo gets ahold of him.

OK, so he beat Aldo, but it was a fluke punch.

He tapped out to Diaz. And Diaz beat him in the rematch, but the judges screwed him. They hate the Diaz brothers.

There’s no way he can compete against Eddie Alvarez. And anyway, he’s just moving up because he’s scared of Aldo.

OK, so he beat Alvarez. But he still hasn’t defended his featherweight title. He’s still scared of Aldo and probably Max Holloway. Where would he be without his mouth?

McGregor has won the UFC’s featherweight and lightweight titles, becoming the first person in history to hold two championships simultaneously. Outside of the loss to Diaz, he has a perfect record in the Octagon, with seven of his nine wins coming by knockout.

The doubters continue to doubt, and they likely always will. But McGregor’s penchant for upsetting the apple cart has led him to August 26 and to Floyd Mayweather Jr. He has arrived here partially through hard work and his otherworldly striking skills.

But the real credit for McGregor’s rise from humble beginnings in Dublin, Ireland, to the world stage must be given to his extraordinary belief in a philosophy formed in the 1800s by an American philosopher from New Hampshire.

     

Origins

Phineas Quimby never called it the Law of Attraction.

But Quimby, the creator of what would eventually become known as the New Thought Movement, described the concept in his teachings on health and medicine.

“By my theory or truth I come in contact with your enemy, and restore you to your health and happiness. This I do partly mentally and partly by talking till I correct the wrong impressions and establish the Truth, and the Truth is the cure.” — The Quimby Manuscripts

The first instance of the “law of attraction” phrase appearing in print came in 1877’s Isis Unveiled, a dense two-volume book by Russian occultist and theosophist Helena Blavatsky:

“If the law of attraction is admitted as governing the one, why should it be excluded from influencing the other? Leaving logic to answer, we turn to the common experience of mankind, and there find a mass of testimony corroborative of the immortality of the soul, if we judge but from analogies.

Stripped to its essence, the law of attraction is this: the belief that a person brings positive or negative experiences into their lives simply by focusing on positive or negative thoughts.

Believers in the law of attraction subscribe to the theory that both human beings and their thoughts are made of pure energy—the “astral light” as described by Blavatsky—and that the energy attracts identical energy. Positive thoughts attract positive results and experiences, while negative thoughts attract negative results and experiences. Therefore, humans can influence their lives in specific positive or negative ways simply with the power of their own thoughts.

But more than just a mere positive or negative influencer, law of attraction adherents believe we have the power to will specific things and moments into existence by visualizing them. By acting as if we’ve already received or experienced the thing or moment we are visualizing.

By the late 19th century, authors influenced by Quimby began utilizing the foundations of his teachings in their own published work. Prentice Mulford and Ralph Waldo Trine—who counted Henry Ford among his closest friends—expanded on Quimby’s concept, taking it beyond the boundaries of personal medicine and applying it to their lives as a whole.

The concept began gaining steam as the 1800s gave way to a new century, but two significant moments in the early 1900s caused the idea to spread like wildfire.

The first of them happened on October 29, 1929, a date which would forever be known by its nickname: Black Tuesday. The United States stock market crashed, plunging the country and the world into a financial Great Depression that would last a decade.

The second flashpoint was the 1937 publication of a book by a self-help author from South Carolina. Think and Grow Rich, written by Napoleon Hill (who claimed to be inspired to write the book by his friend, the ultra-rich Andrew Carnegie), was astutely timed and marketed to reach an audience desperate to reverse their monetary fortunes, or at least daydream of doing so.

Other books had used the same concept to varying degrees of commercial success—most notably The Science of Getting Rich, published in 1910 by Wallace Wattles. Hill’s book was a runaway commercial success. It remains one of the highest-selling self-help books in history.

Wattles’ book would have a different kind of impact. And it would take a few years.

Seventy years, to be exact.

     

The Secret

Rhonda Byrne was a producer for Australian television shows when her daughter gave her Wattles’ book during a period of great personal difficulty in 2004. Byrne connected with the book so much that she began reading every other book on the subject she could find. After she’d exhausted her reading materials, she began speaking with and interviewing teachers and self-help gurus specializing in the law of attraction, including famed Chicken Soup series author Jack Canfield.

From these interviews, Byrne began producing a film based on the law of attraction. But she added her own personal twist. And she simplified the law into four basic conditions that anyone can follow:

  • Determine what you want.
  • Ask the universe for it.
  • Behave as if you already have what you are asking for.
  • Be open to receive what the universe sends you.

The movie, entitled The Secret, was first released on DVD in 2006 and then as a companion book later that year. It became an instant global sensation in both formats, and the book has been translated to 50 languages, sold over 20 million copies and spawned several sequels and parodies.

It was a DVD copy of The Secret that found its way into Conor McGregor’s hands. Conor’s big sister Erin owned the movie. After correctly sensing that her brother might be a little directionless and unsure of what to do with his life, Erin handed her copy of the movie to her brother. Conor promptly set aside the DVD and forgot about it.

But a few months later, feeling even more rudderless, Conor pulled out the DVD and popped it into the player to watch with his girlfriend Dee. And at first, it didn’t connect.

“Even when I first watched it, I was like, this is bulls–t,” McGregor told Bleacher Report in 2015. “But then something clicked for me.” He wanted to be rich and famous, and this DVD was telling him he could be both? All he had to do was visualize it and believe, and his visions would manifest in his life?

Conor was in. He and Dee began practicing the law of attraction daily, even in the most trivial of situations.

“We would be driving to the shop and visualizing the exact car park space,” he said. “And then we’d be able to get it every time.”

In my 2015 profile of McGregor, I detailed how this moment was Conor’s own personal flashpoint. It marked the end of the old Conor and the beginning of the new. From then onward, the law of attraction played a central role in Conor McGregor’s daily life.

Today, Erin says she believes Conor always had the ability to control his life with positive thinking, even as a child. She believes it was always buried inside him. But his father Tony says there was nothing remarkable about him, nothing that would lead you to believe he would eventually become what he is today.

But everyone, from Conor to his parents and sister, believes that the moment Conor watched The Secret was the moment everything changed. This was the moment he slowly began to morph from a quiet boy into a brash and confident man, a man who spoke about the things he wanted and then went about the business of obtaining them. This was the moment when the dreams of a world championship, of financial windfalls and fame beyond measure began to take root.

This was the birth of Conor McGregor, UFC superstar.

 

Is It The Secret or Just Self-Belief?

Maybe you’ve read The Secret or any of the other books based on Quimby’s philosophy. Maybe you picked up the book because, hey, McGregor‘s got something going for him, right? Maybe it sounds like a bunch of nonsense, but can it really hurt to try?

And chances are, you discovered the same thing I did when you tried to apply The Secret to your life.

I have no green Lamborghinis sitting in my driveway. I only own two watches, the most expensive of which cost me $170 using a cruise ship discount. The two suits I own are just regular disappointing suits with no expletives in the pinstriping. And I have no UFC championship belts, or any kind of world championship at all, really. 

And honestly, it’s probably my fault. 

The law of attraction is widely considered a pseudoscience: a belief claimed to be scientific without any actual scientific evidence to back it up. Critics point out the inability to actually test the claims made by its followers; they also maintain that the law of attraction completely misrepresents the way actual human brain waves work. Physicists Victor Stenger and Leon Lederman published numerous works critical of the way followers of the law of attraction use a sort of quantum mysticism to gloss over anything they can’t account for. 

Simply put, there’s no scientific method to prove the law of attraction works, and thus claims of positive results are nothing more than anecdotal and personal evidence. When it didn’t work for me, I found it easy to chalk it up as a bunch of gibberish. 

But maybe I wasn’t doing it right. Maybe I needed to visualize harder or believe more or get more emotional. Maybe I didn’t really believe in the same way McGregor believes things are going to happen for him. 

Maybe The Secret is just a bunch of hogwash, a marketing scheme that preys on those who want to dream their way into a better future. Or maybe all of the above is true. 

The one true thing: There is something to be said for the power of thinking on the bright side and the role it can have in positively impacting your life.

Sure, willing riches into existence just by thinking about them is a bit much for most of us. It’s easy to scoff at the law of attraction and mock The Secret because it all just sounds so ridiculous, doesn’t it? It does. It sounds silly. 

But it is clear something has had a positive effect on Conor McGregor’s life. How else do you explain the unexplained? Better yet, why do we feel the need to attribute his remarkable accomplishments to an outside source or system?

He has shown, over the course of the past few years alone, a profound ability to believe so fervently that it all ends up coming true, just like he saw it in his mind’s eye. And he’s not waiting until something good happens to let us know he visualized it beforehand; he’s telling us what is about to happen, and then it usually happens, sometimes with chilling accuracy. He’s been telling us for years what his future holds, and we’ve never really listened, mostly because we’ve been too busy dismissing him.

Something inside Conor McGregor makes him different than the rest of us. He’s got something I don’t.

It’s the thing that made him boast of championships and being filthy rich when he was still just a poor kid living on the outskirts of Dublin. It’s the thing that made him crow about ruling his division before ever winning a title. It’s the thing that made him a legitimate game-changer and trailblazer for future athletes in his sport, showing them how much they are truly worth and how they can get a bigger share of the pie.

And it’s the thing that has him 100 percent assured he is going to beat Floyd Mayweather, even when the rest of the world is laughing at him and giving him no chance.

Can you blame him for being confident? After all, he’s been doubted before.

And look how that turned out.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Mayweather vs. McGregor Predictions: Updated Pre-Weigh-in Projections

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor will have one last chance to fire shots in the psychological battle that precedes their boxing superfight when they get together for the official weigh-in Friday night.
The two men will strip down to their shorts…

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor will have one last chance to fire shots in the psychological battle that precedes their boxing superfight when they get together for the official weigh-in Friday night.

The two men will strip down to their shorts and step on the scales at 6 p.m. ET. Both men agreed to meet the 154-pound weight for the Saturday night fight, and while both fighters are likely to meet that weight, the rehydration process is likely to have an impact.

The weigh-in will be televised by Showtime.

McGregor is the naturally the bigger man, and he could weigh more than his opponent when the two men get in the ring at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. 

Mayweather does not appear to be worried about that or any other aspect of the fight. In the weeks leading up to the bout, the Showtime cameras have documented both fighters’ activities in the All-Access series as they prepare.

Mayweather has tended to his Las Vegas strip club, taken lavish vacations, showed off his huge stash of cash and bought luxuries for his family. When the cameras have shown him in the gym, he has appeared to give a half-hearted effort to train for the fight.

McGregor has been all business in the gym, spending hours there in an effort to step up his boxing skills. The MMA champion has never been in the boxing ring for a professional bout, and he has sparred with former boxer and current analyst Paulie Malignaggi and others in an effort to prepare for his bout with the 49-0 Mayweather.

McGregor has also spent hours bicycling in the Las Vegas-area desert in an attempt to improve his stamina in case the bout is a long one. The fight is scheduled for 12 rounds, but McGregor has said he will stop Mayweather within four rounds.

The buzz for the fight has been heavy throughout the buildup, and much of that has manifested itself in pre-fight wagering. Mayweather is a minus-450 favorite (risk $450 to earn a $100 profit) to win the fight, while McGregor is a plus-$325 underdog, according to OddsShark. The odds on Mayweather have come down quite a bit since the fight became official, as the large majority of bets have come in on the Irish fighter.

Mayweather was favored at 11-1 when the fight was announced, but the odds have been lowered steadily as the money poured in on McGregor.

“There’s plenty of money on a guy who has never been in a boxing ring. It’s uncharted waters, and that’s what makes it so interesting,” said oddsmaker Jimmy Vaccaro of the South Point resort, per Tim Dahlberg of the Associated Press (h/t Boston Globe).

       

Prediction

While McGregor is a dangerous man in an MMA ring and has not wavered in his outward confidence, the idea that he will consistently connect with powerful punches is difficult to accept.

Even though Mayweather’s training regimen has been limited, one of his greatest skills is his ability to avoid heavy punches and frustrate his opponent with his defense. He is one of the greatest defensive fighters of all-time, and several weeks of training and sparring sessions by McGregor is not going to change that.

Despite all the bluster on both sides, we see this fight going the distance. That’s the way most of Mayweather’s fights go, and Money should take a one-sided decision once again.

McGregor may have explanations and excuses after the fight, but none of that will matter as he gets beaten decisively.  

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

McGregor vs. Mayweather Odds, Inside the Kap Protest and More: The B/R Mag Show

Have the dog days of the summer sports calendar ever been so…intense?
This week’s Sports-Culture Power Rankings range from the so-called Fight of the Century (where Dave Schilling is bearing witness) to the future of the Colin Kaepernick debate and t…

Have the dog days of the summer sports calendar ever been so…intense?

This week’s Sports-Culture Power Rankings range from the so-called Fight of the Century (where Dave Schilling is bearing witness) to the future of the Colin Kaepernick debate and the #ImWithKap rally (where Natalie Weiner is holding court).

But, hey: At least there is somehow still NBA trade talk—including, but not limited to, why LeBron James is destined for the Lakers less than a year from now…if Isaiah Thomas even makes it in Cleveland that long.

After we find out who won the week, A Boogie wit da Hoodie is back with a new track and some NBA takes (“Don’t make me look bad, Melo”). And then it’s over to Roger Goodell’s office for some good old-fashioned protest.

       

Catch up on the rest of the week, quick: Click here to subscribe to The B/R Mag Show on iTunes. (Or here foriHeartRADIO, or here for TuneIn.)

Or you can just listen to Episode 12 of The B/R Mag Show below…

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

McGregor vs. Mayweather Odds, Inside the Kap Protest and More: The B/R Mag Show

Have the dog days of the summer sports calendar ever been so…intense?
This week’s Sports-Culture Power Rankings range from the so-called Fight of the Century (where Dave Schilling is bearing witness) to the future of the Colin Kaepernick debate and t…

Have the dog days of the summer sports calendar ever been so…intense?

This week’s Sports-Culture Power Rankings range from the so-called Fight of the Century (where Dave Schilling is bearing witness) to the future of the Colin Kaepernick debate and the #ImWithKap rally (where Natalie Weiner is holding court).

But, hey: At least there is somehow still NBA trade talk—including, but not limited to, why LeBron James is destined for the Lakers less than a year from now…if Isaiah Thomas even makes it in Cleveland that long.

After we find out who won the week, A Boogie wit da Hoodie is back with a new track and some NBA takes (“Don’t make me look bad, Melo”). And then it’s over to Roger Goodell’s office for some good old-fashioned protest.

       

Catch up on the rest of the week, quick: Click here to subscribe to The B/R Mag Show on iTunes. (Or here foriHeartRADIO, or here for TuneIn.)

Or you can just listen to Episode 12 of The B/R Mag Show below…

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Mayweather vs. McGregor Odds: Latest Fight Lines for Money vs. Notorious

Floyd Mayweather Jr. will come out of retirement to face UFC superstar Conor McGregor in a boxing megafight in Las Vegas on Saturday.
Notorious is switching fight codes and will make his professional boxing debut against a legend of the sport…

Floyd Mayweather Jr. will come out of retirement to face UFC superstar Conor McGregor in a boxing megafight in Las Vegas on Saturday.

Notorious is switching fight codes and will make his professional boxing debut against a legend of the sport.

However, Money has been inactive since 2015, and at 40, he is giving away many years to his 29-year-old Irish opponent.

The veteran remains the favourite, with McGregor‘s lack of ring experience and craft weakening his chances.

Here are the latest odds before the pair square off:

                

Mayweather Jr. win: 1-4

Mayweather by KO, TKO or DQ: 4-5

Draw: 33-1

McGregor win: 3-1

McGregor by KO, TKO or DQ: 13-4

Fight to go the distance: Yes: 9-4, No: 33-100

All odds provided courtesy of OddsShark and Oddschecker.com.

                  

Preview

Mayweather has the added motivation in his return to the ring, safe in the knowledge that a victory would make him the most successful undefeated boxer at the top level in history.

Money is searching for his 50th win as a professional and will surpass Rocky Marciano’s 49-0 record if he defeats McGregor.

However, Notorious will look to stop Mayweather in his tracks, delivering a stain on the legend’s overall record.

According to MMA Fighting (h/t Coral Barry of Metro), Mayweather has fuelled rumours his opponent is struggling to make the weight at 154 pounds.

“I do my homework, I’ve been hearing a lot about him getting IV bags,” said Mayweather. “I don’t know if it’s true. I’m just saying rumours. He got seven IV bags and with the Nevada Commission, that’s illegal. But once again, I don’t know if it’s true. Allegedly, he’s got seven IV bags.”

Per TMZ Sports (h/t Barry), UFC president Dana White denied McGregor is struggling to make the weight for the huge spectacle.

Boxing fans expect Money to put on a clinic, but he has never faced a combat artist who has excellent footwork and genuine power in his punches.

Mayweather’s orthodox tactics could count against him if the Irishman goes in fast and hard, nullifying his opponent’s defence.

Money can defend against any of the best boxers in the world, but McGregor is unlikely to hide behind a jab for this contest.

Entertainment will be central to Notorious’ plan, but he will also want to humiliate Mayweather after a bitter war of words before their battle at the T-Mobile Arena.

A diamond-encrusted belt has been made for the winner of the fight, and McGregor tweeted he intends to collect it on Saturday:

Mayweather is taking a huge risk with his legacy as he puts his perfect record on the line against a debutant, but McGregor is a genuine warrior who thrives as the underdog.

In the Octagon, the pressure is always on Notorious to win, but pundits are not giving him a chance in Las Vegas.

McGregor must not be underestimated, and he has the technical acumen to knock out any opponent in any situation, despite not being a naturalised boxer.

Mayweather was rarely tested in the latter years of his career, and his punch resistance will be diminishing as he ages.

If McGregor lands early and tests Money’s chin, one of the biggest shocks of all time could be about happen.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com