While Dana White may have preferred Holly Holm wait for the Ronda Rousey rematch instead of taking a fight during the interim, the UFC President couldn’t help but admire the way “The Preacher’s Daughter” went out at UFC 196.
Holm was choked out by M…
While Dana White may have preferred Holly Holm wait for the Ronda Rousey rematch instead of taking a fight during the interim, the UFC President couldn’t help but admire the way “The Preacher’s Daughter” went out at UFC 196.
Holm was choked out by Miesha Tate in the co-main event of UFC 196 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, but according to White, “she went out like a gangster.”
“She went out like a gangster,” said White during his appearance on the Max and Marcellus show. “She get choked, she held on, she tried to fight the choke.”
White continued, “Holly Holm technically did everything right to fight the choke. She went up against the fence so Miehsa couldn’t get her other hook in. Then Miesha held on to that choke so tight, she knew she was getting choked, so she got off the fence and tried to dump her on her head, and Miesha still didn’t let go. Those two women both, the way Miesha took that drop on the head, and the way Holly didn’t tap, gangsters.”
Conor McGregor’s best subject has always been math.
Make no mistake, McGregor has mostly gotten perfect marks for his all-around MMA skills, too. His powerful left-handed striking style has perhaps been exceeded only by the ferocity of his person…
ConorMcGregor’s best subject has always been math.
Make no mistake, McGregor has mostly gotten perfect marks for his all-around MMA skills, too. His powerful left-handed striking style has perhaps been exceeded only by the ferocity of his personality. His trash talk has been dynamic, and his march from relative unknown to full-fledged combat sports icon has been breathtaking in both its speed and efficiency.
But cold, hard numbers have always been his true strength.
Prior to his loss to Nate Diaz at UFC 196 on March 5, McGregorhadn’t faced much adversity during his near-three-year campaign in the Octagon. He’d gone 7-0, won the featherweight title and proved that most of the fight company’s longstanding rules of engagement just didn’t apply to him.
The UFC was so smitten that it granted him the opportunity to move up to 155 pounds this month to try to complete his personal quest of simultaneously holding two titles in two different weight classes.
The organization had almost never done that before, but it did it for McGregor. Why?
Because of the numbers.
For a short primer in how much money the Irishman has been making for the UFC during his last few fights, allow MMA Mania’s John S. Nash to ballpark the figures for you:
None of this has ever been lost on McGregor, of course. While we’re tallying his many gifts, we should include perhaps a better understanding of the business end of fighting than any other athlete in MMA history.
“Love the numbers and the numbers will love you,” he quipped on social media in the days following his victory over Chad Mendes at UFC 189 in July 2015. “Ignore the numbers and the numbers will ignore you.”
According to a press release on Friday (h/t MMAJunkie), UFC 196 is “trending” toward becoming the best-selling pay-per-view in UFC history. McGregor should (and will) get the credit for that—with help from Holly Holm and Miesha Tate, as well as a last-minute assist from Diaz.
But if those sales figures are accurate, it means a record number of people tuned in to UFC 196 only to see McGregor get tired, boxed up and submitted in fairly easy fashion by Diaz.
How well the numbers continue to love McGregor after that remains to be seen.
For the first time in his UFC career, he finds himself retreat though certainly not out of the hunt. McGregor is still the featherweight champion, and his best immediate option is to recommit to making the difficult weight cut to 145 pounds for a title defense against either Jose Aldo or Frankie Edgar.
Either fight—almost certainly scheduled for UFC 200—would bring more big money and big exposure, as well as a good opportunity for McGregor to start rehabilitating his image inside the cage.
Stakes would be high, though, and it’d shape up as an absolutely must-win for him.
An integral part of being “The Notorious” ConorMcGregor is the possibility that he could be the best fighter in the world, after all. It’ll be hard to convince spectators—especially casual, mainstream types—to continue to suspend their disbelief if the losses start to pile up.
McGregor‘s early-career success was buttressed by a borderline mystical belief in himself. He has famously bragged, “I predict these things” while calling his shots against previously vanquished opponents. A big reason why that persona has worked thus far is that he’s been able to back up the talk with action.
The monster pay-per-view buys and heavyweight checks McGregor likes to crow about depend directly and inexorably on that. One thing can’t exist without the other.
McGregor‘s image can likely withstand one loss. How many, though, before all his trash talk starts to seem empty? How long before his love of the numbers starts yielding diminishing returns?
Perhaps for exactly that reason, the fighter’s UFC bosses are doing their best to manicure the public reaction to the Diaz defeat. They remain committed, dogmatically repeating the company line that the loss happened because McGregor “jumped up two weight classes” to face Diaz.
ConorMcGregor is so much fun in the fight business. Guys don’t do that [moving up in weight]. Guys who are making the money that ConorMcGregor makes, has the money in the bank and all the things that are going on with him—he has a world title—he just decides to jump up two weight classes and fight somebody else.
That level of rhetoric has seemed to satisfy the mainstream media so far, though most hardcore MMA fans understand it’s only half-true.
Sure, the UFC 196 bout was contested at 170 pounds, but Diazisn’t a natural welterweight. The only reason he and McGregor agreed on that weight was due to the short notice given to them after Rafael Dos Anjos dropped out with a foot injury.
In reality, this was a makeshift matchup between two natural lightweights who merely agreed not to cut weight. On fight night, perhaps Diaz outweighed McGregor by 10 pounds or so, but likely no more than that.
Weight may have helped Diaz absorb McGregor’s early power punches, and the added bulk may also have contributed to McGregor tiring out quickly. But the implication that McGregor lost because he stepped up in weight to fight a giant is obviously just not true.
That line of reasoning robs Diaz of the credit he deserves for winning.
He came into their fight with very little time to train and—in his own telling—fresh from a pleasure cruise in Mexico. It’s a disservice to him not to point out what he did well against McGregor—weathering his best shots, luring him into a classic “Diaz-style” bout and ultimately winning the day with his pressure boxing style.
But that rationalization is no good for neatly explaining away McGregor’s loss, so the people in charge of selling his next fight may not be interested.
The notion that Diaz won because he was the better fighter and not just because McGregor bit off more than he could chew weight-wise is, in fact, a dangerous one from a promotional standpoint.
Because perhaps it portends more rough days ahead.
For now, McGregor’s highfalutin ideas about challenging Robbie Lawler for the welterweight title—and indeed, maybe even fighting Dos Anjos—are on hold. He’ll go back to featherweight and continue to take on all comers.
White was right about at least one thing during that radio appearance, however: We should celebrate McGregor’s martial spirit. His willingness to fight anyone at any weight is one of the legitimately very admirable things about him.
Because of it, his marketability certainly remains viable in the short term. He handled the Diaz loss with pitch-perfect finesse. He was humble, introspective and honorable, and that will no doubt play well with fans as he moves on to the next thing.
But the proof has to be in the doing.
He has to win fights to make The McGregor Machine go.
Chad Dundas covers MMA for Bleacher Report. His debut novel Champion of the World is now available for preorder.
This past Saturday’s UFC 196 pay-per-view event from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada was epic, to say the least. After the event, not only was fans, media members and fighters were talking about the event, celebrities and mainstream media members were talking about it, which is very important for not only
This past Saturday’s UFC 196 pay-per-view event from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada was epic, to say the least. After the event, not only was fans, media members and fighters were talking about the event, celebrities and mainstream media members were talking about it, which is very important for not only the sport but for the UFC’s business.
UFC President Dana White recently announced that the event earned 1.5 million PPV buys, which is almost as big as UFC 100, which is record for the most PPV buys that a UFC event has done. That event featured Brock Lesnar vs. Frank Mir 2 for the heavyweight title and did 1.6 million buys.
“People have been telling me ‘what are you going to do when Chuck Liddell retires?’ then ‘what are you going to do when GSP is gone?’ There is always new great fighters coming down the pipeline,” White told ESPN’s, Max & Marcellus. “In this sport, we put the best against the best, or sometimes we do crazy stuff like on Saturday night, where Conor McGregor says ‘I want to fight Nate Diaz. I’ll fight him at 170 [pounds].’
“These are things that capture people’s imaginations. That is why the thing does 1.5 million PPV buys. That is because it captures the imaginations of fight fans.”
The main event for UFC 196 was Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz in a welterweight bout while Holly Holm vs. Miesha Tate for the women’s bantamweight title was the co-main event at the event.
The UFC returns to PPV with UFC 197 next month with Daniel Cormier vs. Jon Jones 2 for the light heavyweight title.
UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor is set to return. Full details here… It was a pretty rough ride for the UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor at UFC 196, as he fought and lost to submission master Nate Diaz in the pay-per-view main event. Just under a week ago now in Sin City was one of
UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor is set to return. Full details here…
It was a pretty rough ride for the UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor at UFC 196, as he fought and lost to submission master Nate Diaz in the pay-per-view main event. Just under a week ago now in Sin City was one of the most memorable UFC events ever, and so much hinged on that main event showdown. Who knows what would have happened if Rafael dos Anjos had made it to the fight, as he was originally scheduled to face McGregor with the lightweight strap on the line before falling out injured.
As it was, ‘The Notorious’ and Diaz made good use of their 11-day window of hype opportunity, setting the internet alight with some classic confrontations and showdowns. McGregor fell foul to the lethal grappling skills of Diaz, but the Stockton bad boy was also lighting the Irishman up in the striking. Opinions of how McGregor was perhaps ill suited to welterweight have been expressed many times since that night.
Now the talk turns to what’s next for each man. For Nate Diaz, it’s a well deserved bump in to the limelight, and there’s even been talk from Firas Zahabi of a fight with Georges St-Pierre. The former welterweight champion has been inactive since 2013 when he lost won a split decision against Johny Hendricks at UFC 167. But the UFC hasn’t yet revealed what is exactly planned for Diaz, unlike the man he beat at UFC 196.
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