UFC 189: Chad Mendes Welcomes Everything About Fight with Conor McGregor

“You don’t have to get ready when you stay ready” is a common saying in combat sports, and Chad Mendes is proof of the substance behind the cliche. 
After suffering setbacks in his two attempts to dethrone featherweight king Jose Aldo from his lon…

“You don’t have to get ready when you stay ready” is a common saying in combat sports, and Chad Mendes is proof of the substance behind the cliche. 

After suffering setbacks in his two attempts to dethrone featherweight king Jose Aldo from his long reign atop the 145-pound division, it appeared as if the Team Alpha Male staple would need to cover some serious real estate in his weight class before putting himself into title contention once again. Yet mixed martial arts is a sport where anything can happen and often does, and just when the Sacramento-based fighter was settling in to work his way back to the top, the opportunity of a lifetime came in a call from the UFC.

When Aldo suffered a rib injury that could potentially force him out of his highly anticipated bout against Conor McGregor at UFC 189 on July 11, the UFC reached out to see if Mendes would be interested in stepping in should the Nova Uniao standout be unable to go. Without wasting a moment, he jumped on the opportunity and was in Las Vegas 24 hours later beginning his preparation.

As things would shake out, Aldo withdrew from his main event bout against the Irish upstart, and suddenly the UFC’s Plan B became the new showcase fight for the promotion’s biggest card of the year. 

Now, where Mendes was in championship limbo following his second loss to Aldo, he will have the opportunity to become the interim 145-pound champion with a victory over McGregor. He has dreamed of becoming a UFC titleholder since his professional career began seven years ago, and short notice or not, the 30-year-old Californian has every intention of making his dream come true Saturday night. 

“I’m feeling damn good right now,” Mendes told the media in attendance for UFC 189 open workouts. “I’m the type of guy that over-trains pretty damn quick so three to four weeks into a training camp I feel peaked out. With the base that I already had built, jumping into this two-and-half-week training camp was actually perfect.

“I feel so ready. I feel fast and explosive. I don’t feel full of injuries and beat up, but only time will tell. I feel great heading into Saturday night is all I can say.”

Shortly after the UFC announced Mendes was in, heated talk between the perennial featherweight contender and the Dublin-born superstar commenced. The SBG Ireland representative has proved to be equally apt in the art of verbal warfare as he is at settling his opposition inside the cage, but Mendes has shrugged off every barb McGregor has launched in his direction. 

He knows every taunt McGregor rolls out will ultimately translate into more attention surrounding the fight, and the more attention, the better when it comes to promoting their fight.

“It’s always exciting to get in there when there is a lot of hype surrounding a fight,” Mendes said. “It’s actually tough to get in there when there is none. Sometimes, it’s tough to stay motivated to stay in the gym when you are going through the same grind every single day. When you have something feeding your fire, it’s great.

“[Trash-talk] is all just part of it. I’ve been a top-level competitor my entire life, and I’ve dealt with it plenty in the past. I get in there, deal with it and beat them up and go on with your life. This is just part of it and what has put all these microphones in front of me today. I’m 100 percent OK with it. This is a huge opportunity for me, and I can’t wait to get in there and perform.”

And while Mendes has earned huge opportunities before and stumbled in those showings, the basic foundation of his drive is to keeping getting up and pushing forward despite the setbacks that may arise along the way. That caliber of determination is one his friend and mentor Urijah Faber has seen in Mendes even before he jumped into MMA, and it’s a quality the Team Alpha Male leader has seen thrive in Mendes as he has worked to become one of the best 145-pound fighters in the world.

“It’s exciting to see what he’s done,” Urijah Faber told Bleacher Report. “I’ve known him since he was in high school, and that’s when I started recruiting him. To see him realize his dream as a professional fighter as the world champ is pretty amazing. It’s always exciting to have him get in and be able to perform at any level, take the bull by the horns and get a big victory.”

 

Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.

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So, What Happens If Chad Mendes Upsets Conor McGregor at UFC 189?

It’s always awkward when you know a fight promoter has a rooting interest.
In the case of Saturday’s UFC 189 main event between Conor McGregor and Chad Mendes, it doesn’t take a lick of guesswork to figure out what ownership wants to …

It’s always awkward when you know a fight promoter has a rooting interest.

In the case of Saturday’s UFC 189 main event between Conor McGregor and Chad Mendes, it doesn’t take a lick of guesswork to figure out what ownership wants to happen. We know it for a stone-cold fact, because the UFC’s first preference had already been on the books for months: to have McGregor fight Jose Aldo in a high-profile grudge match for the featherweight title.

The fight company had booked that fight, put it on billboards, produced a documentary series about it and bankrolled at least one stunning and pricey television commercial to advertise it.

In all, UFC President Dana White said the company spent $10 million promoting the fight. The more conspiracy-minded might even tell you the UFC had orchestrated it from the beginning, feeding McGregor a series of overmatched, stand-up-oriented opponents for the express purpose of quickly and publicly building him into the division’s top contender.

Then Aldo ruined everything, breaking his ribs and tapping out of the fight, even after the UFC assured us again and again he would go through with it.

Aldo was replaced by Mendes, and now the organization’s best hope rests on a series of dominoes falling in precise order: McGregor wins this weekend, Aldo heals quickly, and they all put together a do-over in time to repurpose some of those pricey TV ads.

Of course, there is one obvious fly in the ointment.

It’s the 5’6”, 30-year-old wrestler from Northern California.

Mendes is no domino. He’s not a fall guy or a patsy. He’s one of the best 145-pound fighters in the world, with a 17-2 record and five T/KO stoppages in his last six victories. His only two professional losses are to Aldo, and even though oddsmakers are giving a slight edge to McGregor, Mendes is as live a dog as perhaps we’ve ever seen in the Octagon.

We already know who Aldo is pulling for, as he tried to rally his fans behind the American on social media on Wednesday:

So, what if Mendes wins?

What if he pulls it off?

What if he comes in on two weeks’ notice and rolls through the unproven McGregor like he rolled through Ricardo Lamas three months ago? Like he rolled through Nik Lentz in late 2013? Like he rolled through Clay Guida two summers ago?

As Sherdog.com’s Patrick Wyman wrote this week, that’s not outside the realm of possibility:

Even on short notice, Mendes presents a much different stylistic puzzle (than Aldo). His crisp lateral movement will make it difficult for the pressure fighter (McGregor) to back him into the cage, and he remains the strongest and most technical wrestler in the division, with the takedown acumen to seriously trouble McGregor and disrupt his rhythm. …The pick is Mendes by close decision in a fun, back-and-forth fight.

So…what then?

Well, for starters, everybody calm down.

Even if McGregor loses to Mendes on Saturday—even if he loses badly—it won’t be the end of the world or the end of the road for him. If we’ve learned anything from the last several years in the fight business, it’s that a good-looking suit and an impressive way with words will keep you relevant far, far longer than it should.

No matter what happens against Mendes, the UFC isn’t going to let its investment in McGregor just go up in smoke. I wrote about the strange bromance between the Irish dandy and Zuffa bosses as far back as last October, and things certainly haven’t gotten any less cozy between them since then.

One of the last times we heard from McGregor before the UFC 189 tornado really started churning, he was living in Las Vegas and training every day at the UFC-owned The Ultimate Fighter training center. He told MMAFighting.com’s Ariel Helwani that he wouldn’t rest until he’s co-promoting MMA events alongside the owners of the UFC:

We will continue to grow and grow and grow until eventually it will be me in association with Zuffa. That’s where I feel I am going. … Essentially I see Dana and Lorenzo (Fertitta) as business partners. I don’t see them as employers, I see them as business partners, and business is phenomenal. So, I feel as it grows up and grows, eventually we will become legit partners, in association—a progression, that’s the way I see things going.

The vast majority of McGregor’s big talk can be shrugged off as exaggeration, but it’s clear the UFC sees star power in him and wants to nurture it.

This bout against Mendes is an undoubtedly huge signpost along that road. It’ll be McGregor’s first pay-per-view main event, his first chance to taste UFC gold and his first opportunity to get acquainted with competition at the elite levels of the featherweight division.

If he wins, then no one can question his fitness as an opponent for Aldo or accuse the UFC of treating him with kid gloves.

Losing, on the other hand, would be a significant setback, but it wouldn’t ruin him. His bosses wouldn’t abandon him, and neither would his legion of Irish fans. McGregor would still be a guy who can make any media appearance sing. He’d still command a fair amount of attention from the public. At 26 years old, he’d still have plenty of time to make good on his own championship prophecies.

In fact, we would probably all be shocked at the speed with which the UFC could rehabilitate his image. All it would take would be a win or two against a few more Dennis Sivers or Diego Brandaos and he’d be right back where he is today.

For Mendes, the same is probably not true. Even under disadvantageous circumstances, a loss to McGregor would be sort of a disaster. Suddenly, his three total defeats might start to seem career-defining. In other words, he’s arguably taking the highest-risk gamble of all here, though it comes with the chance of a huge reward.

This is more than just an opportunity for Mendes to play spoiler.

After two previous losses to the champion, this is a chance for him to once again become an essential part of the 145-pound puzzle. A win over McGregor makes him the interim champion and means nobody can move forward with any plans until he fights Aldo one more time.

Once again, the weight class will have to run through Mendes‘ backyard.

The UFC’s decision to make this fight for a interim title felt like one born more of pure promotional need—if not out-and-out spite—than anything else. Aldo will no doubt be ready to go again in a couple of months, but once he returns there will be no option for him besides a unification bout with whoever emerges victorious from UFC 189.

You can’t overstate what a tremendous bargaining chip that would be for Mendes. As he transitions into his 30s, already a two-time loser in championship chances, it’s unclear how many future bites at the apple he would get. He recently signed a new, long-term deal with the UFC, and stepping up on short notice will earn him some cache with his bosses, but if he means to spend the rest of his career on the short list of top contenders, this would be a good one for him to win.

For the UFC’s part? Well, it’s easy to speculate that perhaps it knew exactly what it was doing when it tabbed Mendes as the injury replacement. Perhaps it occurred to the fight company that Mendes had already lost twice to Aldo and—even if he beat McGregor on Saturday—wouldn’t be anybody’s pick to unseat the champion in a third fight.

As far as worst-case scenarios go, Mendes beating McGregor but then stumbling against Aldo once again wouldn’t be all that bad. It would put us right back where we started, awaiting a do-over between McGregor and the Brazilian champion.

Because, make no mistakea do-over is coming, and it’s coming as fast as the UFC can possibly make it happen.

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UFC 189 Conor McGregor vs. Chad Mendes Matchup Odds and Betting Preview

UFC 189 features two championship fights on Saturday in Las Vegas, but one of them will be for an interim title, as No. 3 featherweight contender Conor McGregor takes on No. 1 Chad Mendes as a solid betting favorite in the main event.
McGregor (17-2) h…

UFC 189 features two championship fights on Saturday in Las Vegas, but one of them will be for an interim title, as No. 3 featherweight contender Conor McGregor takes on No. 1 Chad Mendes as a solid betting favorite in the main event.

McGregor (17-2) has received a lot of early backing from MMA bettors, jumping to minus-175 (bet $175 to win $100) at sportsbooks monitored by Odds Shark against Mendes (17-2), who is the plus-145 underdog (bet $100 to win $145) despite suffering the only two losses of his career to UFC champion Jose Aldo.

Aldo was originally slated to face McGregor but had to pull out of the fight because of a rib injury, giving Mendes his second title shot in three bouts. Mendes and Aldo battled in what was named 2014 Fight of the Year at UFC 179 last October 25, with the champ doing just enough to earn a unanimous-decision victory over five rounds and defend his championship for the seventh time after being promoted from the WEC.

But McGregor is the UFC’s newest star, and he will have sizable eight-inch reach and three-inch height advantages against Mendes when he steps into the Octagon at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

The brash Irishman is riding a 13-fight winning streak and owns a perfect 5-0 mark in the UFC following three consecutive TKO victories that also won him Performance of the Night bonuses.

In the co-main event, UFC welterweight champ Robbie Lawler (25-10, one no-contest) will meet challenger Rory MacDonald (18-2), whose lone loss in his past nine fights came against Lawler in 2013.

Lawler was on the right side of a split-decision victory against MacDonald at UFC 167 and went on to win three of his next four, including a split decision over former champ Johny Hendricks last December for the title.

Regardless, much like McGregor, MacDonald is viewed as a future UFC champ and has been tabbed as a minus-185 betting favorite by oddsmakers in the rematch with Lawler (+150).

Both fighters have won three in a row, with MacDonald scoring a third-round TKO victory in his most recent bout against Tarec Saffiedine last October 4 in a Performance of the Night.

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UFC 189: Mendes vs. McGregor Fight Odds and Latest Expert Predictions

The odds are extremely tight for the UFC 189 main event Saturday. Per Odds Shark, Conor McGregor is the slight favorite to take down Jose Aldo’s replacement, Chad Mendes. McGregor’s odds are set at 19-20, and Mendes is just behind him at 87-100. Aldo w…

The odds are extremely tight for the UFC 189 main event Saturday. Per Odds Shark, Conor McGregor is the slight favorite to take down Jose Aldo’s replacement, Chad Mendes. McGregor‘s odds are set at 19-20, and Mendes is just behind him at 87-100. Aldo was forced to back out of the much-anticipated battle with McGregor because of a rib injury.  

Stylistically, Mendes presents a much different challenge for McGregor than Aldo. While Mendes does have explosive power, he’s also a world-class wrestler. That skill set could be the undoing of McGregor. The Irishman is purely a stand-up fighter who has yet to prove he’s capable of being effective on the ground.

Thus far, McGregor‘s takedown defense percentage has been impregnable. Per FightMetric, he’s stopped 100 percent of the takedowns attempted against him. To put that number in the proper perspective, McGregor‘s opponents have only attempted five takedowns against him in the UFC. He’s yet to face a truly elite wrestler. That’ll change on Saturday night when he locks horns with Mendes

In his UFC career, Mendes has a 54 percent takedown accuracy rating. That’s pretty high considering the world-class competition he has faced in the UFC. This is clearly the key to the fight. With a decided height (5’9″) and reach advantage (74″), McGregor figures to dominate the stand-up exchanges if he can keep Mendes (5’6″, 66″) at a distance.

If Mendes can get on the inside, the game will change.

Brett Okamoto of ESPN.com gave Mendes a good chance to win based on his power and wrestling prowess but believes the short camp and McGregor‘s pressure will deliver the victory for the Irishman. Okamoto wrote:

I think Mendes will earn multiple takedowns in the opening frame and if he doesn’t knock McGregor out (which I do think is possible), he’ll at least get out to an early lead on the scorecards. But as the fight progresses, McGregor‘s pressure coupled with that extremely short fight camp will start to take its toll on Mendes. And once that happens, McGregor has the tools to take full advantage. 

It’s easy to see how Mendes could get out to a fast start with his wrestling. If this happens, he won’t allow McGregor to escape his predicament. We never know how a natural predator will respond when he’s wounded. If McGregor is put on his back and hurt, Mendes will finish the job.

Alex Ballentine of Bleacher Report also believes there’s a solid chance Mendes does some damage to McGregor but doesn’t see him breaking the Notorious’ winning streak. Ballentine said:

Unlike many flashy prospects before him, McGregor‘s game isn’t just predicated on pure power or speed. He’s displayed a fight IQ that is as high as any young fighter. His ability to adjust to opponents and lure them into his type of fight has been apparent in his run with the UFC. 

We may see him in more danger than he’s ever been in, but it’s hard to pick against his supreme confidence and style to make UFC 189 his official announcement to the MMA world as a bona fide star. 

No one seems to want to pull the trigger on a Mendes upset prediction. Allow me to be the guy who calls it. Mendes‘ physical strength, wrestling prowess, athleticism and will are the biggest factors in this matchup. McGregor has done an excellent job of self-promoting, and he is a legit talent. 

However, this is a bad matchup for him. McGregor‘s takedown defense isn’t as good as it appears, and Mendes will expose that. Was the fight camp short? Yes, it was, but in today’s UFC, where cancellations are commonplace, top contenders stay ready to step in and take advantage of opportunities.

As you can see from the video interview below from the UFC, Mendes has one of the best training groups in the sport. He’ll be prepared.

Mendes is a long-suffering contender who has only lost to Aldo in his career. The gap between him and every other featherweight in the world—besides maybe Frankie Edgar—is huge. Mendes will not only defeat McGregor; he’ll get it done in the first round via TKO.

Remember where you heard it. 

 

Follow Brian Mazique on Twitter.

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UFC 189 Prelim Predictions, Featuring Matt Brown vs. Tim Means

International Fight Week is upon us, and one of the biggest cards of the year is set to go down. That’s right, UFC 189 and its two title fights are just days away.
With Conor McGregor, Chad Mendes, Rory MacDonald and Robbie Lawler soakin…

International Fight Week is upon us, and one of the biggest cards of the year is set to go down. That’s right, UFC 189 and its two title fights are just days away.

With Conor McGregor, Chad Mendes, Rory MacDonald and Robbie Lawler soaking up the spotlight, the other fights on the card have received little attention—especially those on the preliminary card.

Hopefully, things turn around for me in this prediction piece. UFC Fight Night 70 saw me fly under the .500 mark.

Without further ado, here are the predictions for UFC 189’s preliminary card.

 

2015 Riley’s Record: 74-46

Last Event: UFC Fight Night 70 (1-3)

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UFC 189 Prelim Predictions, Featuring Matt Brown vs. Tim Means

International Fight Week is upon us, and one of the biggest cards of the year is set to go down. That’s right, UFC 189 and its two title fights are just days away.
With Conor McGregor, Chad Mendes, Rory MacDonald and Robbie Lawler soakin…

International Fight Week is upon us, and one of the biggest cards of the year is set to go down. That’s right, UFC 189 and its two title fights are just days away.

With Conor McGregor, Chad Mendes, Rory MacDonald and Robbie Lawler soaking up the spotlight, the other fights on the card have received little attention—especially those on the preliminary card.

Hopefully, things turn around for me in this prediction piece. UFC Fight Night 70 saw me fly under the .500 mark.

Without further ado, here are the predictions for UFC 189’s preliminary card.

 

2015 Riley’s Record: 74-46

Last Event: UFC Fight Night 70 (1-3)

Begin Slideshow