Video: McGregor Says He’ll “Breeze Past” $10 Million Mark At UFC 196, Diaz Walks Off

Another joint interview between Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz on Friday didn’t go as “smoothly” as this one did.

“Woooo! I’ll take over from here Nate, you can bounce!” is how the live via satellite split-screen interview between the two started …

mcgregor-diaz-walks-out

Another joint interview between Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz on Friday didn’t go as “smoothly” as this one did.

“Woooo! I’ll take over from here Nate, you can bounce!” is how the live via satellite split-screen interview between the two started off after “The Notorious” one was told by the host of the program that they would be talking about money since they were on CNBC.

From there, things only went downhill.

After some early business talk, the UFC Featherweight Champion spoke about “breezing past” the ten million dollar mark at UFC 196 on Saturday.

For his part, Diaz wouldn’t disclose his salary. He wouldn’t reveal much of anything, actually.

A visibly hostile and/or uninterested Diaz wouldn’t divulge much information at all and remained pretty short with his responses. So, when he got annoyed to the point that he took his microphone off and stood up and walked out on the interview before it was over, by that point, it certainly didn’t come as a surprise.

Diaz will be walking out to the Octagon to fight UFC Featherweight Champion “The Notorious” Conor McGregor in the main event of UFC 196 later this evening from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Don’t forget to keep MMANews.com in mind for your source of UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz live round-by-round results coverage later this evening. As we always say, we’ll gladly take the proverbial “Pepsi Challenge” against any other MMA website in the world in terms of having the fastest-updated and most-detailed round-by-round live results coverage of a UFC event. No one can match MMANews.com for live MMA results coverage, something we will proudly put on display yet again later this evening. We hope to see you here!

Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz: Keys to Victory for Fighters at UFC 196

As much as Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz is a battle between two of the UFC’s biggest trash talkers, it’s also a clash of styles. McGregor—who is jumping two weight classes to face Diaz—has promised to finish his opponent inside the first ro…

As much as Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz is a battle between two of the UFC’s biggest trash talkers, it’s also a clash of styles. McGregor—who is jumping two weight classes to face Diaz—has promised to finish his opponent inside the first round.

It’s certainly possible. Here’s what McGregor must do to accomplish his goal, and what Diaz has to do to upset the Notorious One’s plans at UFC 196 on Saturday:

 

McGregor’s Keys to Victory

Keep It Standing

According to EA Sports, McGregor is the premier stand-up fighter in the UFC today:

You’d have to agree with the game developers. McGregor has captured 17 of his 19 wins via TKO/KO. While Diaz has a three-inch height and two-inch reach advantage, per FightMetric.com, McGregor is quicker with a more diverse array of strikes.

If he can keep the fight upright, McGregor has a great chance to win by stoppage.

 

End It Early

Only one man has ever gone the distance with McGregor. That was Max Holloway back in August 2013.

McGregor isn’t used to being dragged deep into fights. He had enough reserves in the tank to beat Chad Mendes at the end of the second round in July 2015. However, had the American survived the frame, who knows what would have happened in the third?

McGregor would be much better off ending this fight early rather than allowing Diaz to stick around.

 

Diaz’s Keys to Victory

Get the Fight to the Ground

Few have a Brazilian jiu-jitsu game that can rival Diaz’s. His long arms and skill level make him one of the most dangerous submission artists in the UFC.

Getting the fight to the ground could prove to be problematic. Diaz only has a 30 percent takedown accuracy rating. If he struggles to make this a ground fight, it’s going to be a tough night for Diaz.

 

Take McGregor Deep

While McGregor looks to be carrying the newfound weight well, Diaz is still more used to carrying 170 pounds, as he previously campaigned at welterweight. He too came up in weight class this time, but a 15-pound jump from lightweight is nothing compared to the 25-pound jump McGregor had. Diaz probably weighs close to 170 pounds normally.

Because of that, he may have a deeper gas tank. That’s all the more reason to take McGregor into the championship rounds. Facing a potentially weary and discouraged McGregor late in the fight would be the best-case scenario for Diaz.

 

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UFC 196: If Nate Diaz Expects To Go to the Mat with Conor McGregor, What Then?

After lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos pulled out of his title defense at UFC 196 against Conor McGregor with a broken foot, Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt and Stockton slapper Nate Diaz agreed to step in on 10 days’ notice. Diaz, typically a ligh…

After lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos pulled out of his title defense at UFC 196 against Conor McGregor with a broken foot, Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt and Stockton slapper Nate Diaz agreed to step in on 10 days’ notice. Diaz, typically a lightweight, stipulated the fight take place at 170 pounds—welterweight, a division led by Robbie Lawler. 

The Irishman lived up to Dana White‘s claim that McGregor will fight anyone, anywhere, at any weight and agreed to the fight. Diaz will be the tallest opponent McGregor has faced and has a two-inch reach advantage. 

Given that Diaz’s last fight, against Michael Johnson in December, was entirely on the feet, this may suggest we’ll see more of his boxing. However, Diaz said, per Fox Sports: “The fight might end up on the ground. Most likely, it will.”

He didn’t elaborate any further on how he expects the fight to get there, but what would happen if it does—and if he keeps it there?

While we haven’t seen a ton of McGregor’s grappling in the Octagon, we can evaluate what we have seen, what we know about his training and how he might fare in the above scenario.

First, a brief breakdown of their grappling games.

 

Nate Diaz

A first-degree black belt under Cesar Gracie, Diaz has 11 submission wins on his pro record, the most recent being a guillotine on Jim Miller in May 2012. When he’s on the ground, he has the easy, pliable grace of high-level Brazilian jiu-jitsu players, with limbs that transition from seemingly formless to rigidly braced so fluidly that it can be hard to spot.

Another indication of his comfort on the ground is how he uses his weight and balance to create leverage; for example, Diaz can easily shift his weight from his hands and knees to mostly his head and one shoulder, using his opponent’s body as a post to facilitate movement while freeing his limbs to work. This degree of proficiency was evident in his fight with Benson Henderson, where he used his long legs like compressed springs to stave off Henderson’s ground-and-pound more than once.

And the kneebar set up halfway through Round 3? Brilliant. 

Skip ahead to 6:00 in the video below and watch how readily he gives up his back when Kurt Pellegrino takes half guard after Diaz throws him. If you look closely, you can see that he when he does so, he reaches between his legs to grab Pellegrino’s shin. Diaz makes thwarting a back take and getting to his feet look effortless.

Diaz’s wrestling is minimal, and this is never more obvious than in his ease on his back. As a grappler, Diaz seems to prefer it, using his proficiency and long limbs to control his opponent and his opponent’s offense. This is frequently where he sets up submissions, achieving a high guard by climbing up his opponent’s torso, where he begins isolating limbs. He’s so comfortable on his back that he will stay there even if it means eating shots.

He does have a solid sprawl and has utilized it to lock up guillotines, although McGregor is unlikely to try for a takedown. Diaz’s takedown game is reliant on trips and throws, and we may see one if he can tie McGregor up in the clinch.

 

Conor McGregor

McGregor trains at Straight Blast Gym in Dublin, one school of several dozen under the SBG banner. SBG has a much shorter history than the Gracies, but in the 15 years since its inception, the gym has produced multiple high-level fighters. This includes Gunnar Nelson, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt and world champion. 

McGregor’s grappling has surfaced in a few of his UFC fights, however briefly. Here’s what we saw and what we can take away from it.

From the top, McGregor is comfortable, as you might expect of any fighter in the advantageous position. He doesn’t shy away and force the fight back to the feet, but he does attempt to finish with striking—not submissions.

He is adept at collapsing his opponent’s structures, whether they’re defensive or offensive. He did so when Dennis Siver attempted a granby roll after being dropped, utilizing Siver’s own instinct to avoid giving up his back to take full mount.

McGregor also nullified Diego Brandao’s attempts for anything from the bottom with heavy pressure that took away his opponent’s leverage. From the top, McGregor knows how and where to be heavy. He incorporates elements of grappling as a means of control integrated into his game rather than as a myopia of discipline. This is impressive and part of what makes his style look so fluid and effortless. However, the question of whether he could progress in a fight with grappling as its own end is so far generally unanswered. 

In guard or on bottom, McGregor seems far less comfortable. In his fight against Max Holloway, he failed to pass Holloway’s guard, eventually standing and trying to pass on the feet, where he also failed. He then fell back into closed guard. It was when Holloway opened his guard and pushed McGregor away that he was finally able to pass. But when his opponent maintains a closed guard, McGregor, so far, seems limited and passive.

When McGregor fought Chad Mendes, reportedly on an 80 percent torn ACL, according to comments he made at a fan Q&A (h/t MMA Fighting), the wrestler took him down multiple times, ending up in McGregor’s closed guard. Rather than work for a high guard or set up a submission, McGregor often waited, flat on his back, throwing harmless punches. From there, he would put a foot into Mendes’ hip and push, creating enough space to get back to his feet or wait for the referee to stand them up. But the latter didn’t happen, and Mendes began passing his guard.

In the first round, this resulted in McGregor’s shoulders pinned to the mat, and his escape was short-lived as Mendes easily wrangled him back into half guard. It was on a passing attempt that McGregor improved his position, recovering his full closed guard.

In the second round, McGregor was able to capitalize on the movement of the guard pass again and got his legs between them. By extending his legs, he was able to roll Mendes off and away and take the fight back to standing.  

McGregor has not demonstrated an active defense from his closed guard, a position that is considered dominant in pure grappling. Nor has he demonstrated an active offense from the position. Instead, he seems to be biding his time. In MMA, if a fighter isn’t active with his closed guard, his opponent will likely eventually open it for him. McGregor can’t count on the ref standing them up.

 

McGregor vs. Diaz

If this goes to the ground, it’s unlikely McGregor will land Diaz into his closed guard, unless it’s off a takedown gone awry. If that happens, I can’t imagine McGregor would elect to stay there with the likes of Diaz. 

Against a wrestler such as Mendes, McGregor could capitalize on any space offered during guard passing and transitions and escape, but Diaz will be grappling with jiu-jitsu. And he is a high-level practitioner; his pressure and control of space will make escape attempts far more difficult.

More likely, McGregor would find himself under some form of Diaz control. Should this come in the way of a closed guard, McGregor’s best option is to open the guard, stand and disengage. If he can’t do that, collapsing his posture and staying tight to Diaz will help keep his arms safe. Without space to work, Diaz will, at least temporarily, be less of a threat. But that’s a stopgap, and McGregor should pray for a stand up from there. He might be able to stall to the end of a round, but he wouldn’t impede Diaz for long.

While McGregor has shown grappling savvy, he seems distinctly uncomfortable in some common positions, and playing the waiting game with Diaz, should he get into one of them, would be unwise. McGregor needs to exercise caution here; Diaz is fast and dangerous. 

Given that McGregor’s defensive grappling game is fairly inactive, he’ll be a sitting duck for Diaz if the submission artist gets into a position of control. And, as we’ve seen, even when Diaz gives up his back, he still has plenty of control. Unless McGregor is conservative when he can’t stop the fight from going to the mat, Diaz’s extensive jiu-jitsu arsenal and knowledge should put an end to McGregor’s promise of anyone, anywhere, at any weight, without too much difficulty.

Knowing Diaz as we do, his performance will be spectacular and full of middle fingers. In past fights, he’s tended toward guillotines and triangles. With this fight, I see McGregor trying to create space on the ground rather than engage, and that space is more likely to result in a triangle or armbar. 

You never really know with the Diaz brothers, though, but it’s bound to be exciting. UFC 196 is live on pay-per-view Saturday night.

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Conor McGregor’s Ambition Takes Him from Phenom to Champ to (Possibly) Legend

The rise in UFC is rarely a vertical climb. It is usually filled with stops and starts, setbacks and recoveries. Like climbing Mount Everest, it often requires acclimation to the highest levels, forcing you to back down and regroup before retracing ste…

The rise in UFC is rarely a vertical climb. It is usually filled with stops and starts, setbacks and recoveries. Like climbing Mount Everest, it often requires acclimation to the highest levels, forcing you to back down and regroup before retracing steps and ascending further. Throughout the modern history of mixed martial arts, this is how it’s been—with few exceptions.

Count among those deviations the career of Conor McGregor, the Irishman who went from phenom to champion in record time and who, by the end of the year, may well complete a climb so dizzying it almost defies belief.

Less than three years ago, as reported by MMAjunkie, McGregor was broke and collecting social welfare in the Republic of Ireland; these days, he is undisputedly the biggest male star in MMA, having headlined two events over the last year that have drawn a combined 2 million buys, generating revenue of over $100 million in the process.

These types of rapid ascensions tend to produce conservatism, as risk gives way to protecting the newly found and hard-won status quo with the intent of ensuring every ounce of money and marketability is squeezed out of a fleeting prime.

It is an understandable approach, but it is not one for McGregor. Always the outlier, the 27-year-old UFC featherweight champion will attempt to write the next chapter of his saga on Saturday night with an unprecedented move, becoming the first reigning UFC titleholder to go up two weight classes as he takes on Nate Diaz in the main event of UFC 196.

The move is a risk almost entirely without reward; McGregor had planned to shift up one division to fight lightweight kingpin Rafael Dos Anjos in a champion vs. champion fight, which in itself is fairly rare. Instead, he had those plans scuttled when Dos Anjos broke his foot in training. So what does he do? Forget one division—make it two.

A fight with Diaz offers an immediate payday but also endangers his long-term earnings potential, which could be negatively impacted by a loss. A defeat might also slow down or even put an end to his plan of chasing multiple world titles.

Still, he moves forward. It is the kind of audacity that has made him a lightning rod for attention, while simultaneously forcing even his detractors to offer begrudging respect.

It is, in a strange way, madness.

“You play it safe, you don’t take risks, you won’t go all the way,” he told the media following Wednesday’s open workouts in Las Vegas. “I take risks, and that’s why I go all the way.”

This was it in a nutshell, McGregor’s words escaping with that unmistakable Irish brogue, this time tinted with a hint of surprise in his voice as though it was so obvious to him he couldn’t understand why it wasn’t clear to the rest of us.

This is a man fueled by ambition, operating on multiple levels.

So how did he get here? McGregor intuitively understands the game far better than most fighters. For the most part, the current crop of athletes believe their work is done in the gym and during fight week. McGregor never stops. He is either training or promoting a fight or setting up rainy-day feuds. Sure, he is blessed with the gift of gab, but he wields it like a surgical scalpel, cutting his opponents, leaving wounds that force attention.

Consider all of the realistic, open rivalries he has ongoing that could produce him another monster payday: Dos Anjos, Donald Cerrone, Nick Diaz, Jose Aldo, Frankie Edgar and Robbie Lawler. He’s even called out heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum. You’d be hard-pressed to find another fighter with as many as two natural rivals. 

All of that ensures he stays in the headlines, leading to more attention, more bullseyes on his back and more eyeballs on his fights. In time, it becomes a self-feeding machine with all roads coming back to him.

Amazingly, it has been this way almost since the beginning.

The McGregor phenomenon was born in just 67 seconds. It took him that long to knock out Marcus Brimage on his UFC debut back in 2013. Immediately after, he was the talk of the fighting world. UFC president Dana White declared himself “blown away,” and the Irish Independent announced McGregor had transformed into a “global superstar.”

By the time of his second fight in August 2013, the UFC was including him in open workouts, a spot usually reserved for main eventers and former champs. McGregor fit right in.

It’s been straight upward ever since, capping an undefeated featherweight run with a stunning 13-second knockout of longtime champion Jose Aldo in December. 

Amazingly, even given this two-division jump, the fight with Diaz is being viewed by many as nothing more than a fun diversion before McGregor gets back to the challenge of chasing multiple belts. According to Odds Shark, he is a 1-5 favorite to win, leaving many to wonder what might be next.

While the Diaz fight is no gimme, a McGregor win would open up the world to him. Instead of going through Dos Anjos, as he originally planned, he could jump directly to Lawler, the UFC’s welterweight champ, possibly at this summer’s expected blockbuster show, UFC 200. In the build to the Diaz bout, McGregor called the idea of fighting Lawler “appealing.”

If that 25-pound jump between title matches seems absurd, well, that’s just the landscape McGregor has built for himself, one where the impossible is just a speed bump.

“I’m open to whatever he’s considering doing,” UFC president Dana White said at the UFC 196 press conference on Thursday. He continued:

If he wants to fight at 170 and he wants to fight Robbie Lawler, Conor is tough to deny these days. Nobody’s ever done this—145 pounds going to 170—and it’s one of those things when you talk about these guys, the money’s in the bank and all the things are going on, they have all this opportunity. Conor really does step up and fight anybody, anywhere, anytime. It’s impressive, it’s fun and this is what makes you love the fight business.

Amazingly, there are knowledgeable people in the game who believe McGregor is capable of beating Lawler. Former UFC heavyweight Brendan Schaub is one. So is professional MMA gambler Luca Fury. 

If they are right, and McGregor does it, he would stake a claim no one who has walked through the Octagon doors has ever made before him. And once he does that, where does it end? Three world titles? Four? Objectively, it all seems irrational, but when McGregor talks, he has a way of convincing you of the impossible.

After all, here we are. A few short years ago, he was collecting welfare. In the near future, legendary status awaits.

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UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz Fight Card, TV Info, Predictions and More

UFC Featherweight champion Conor McGregor is jumping two weight classes to take on Nate Diaz in the main event of UFC 196 on Saturday night in Las Vegas. McGregor was originally supposed to face UFC Lightweight champion Rafael Dos Anjos, but the Brazil…

UFC Featherweight champion Conor McGregor is jumping two weight classes to take on Nate Diaz in the main event of UFC 196 on Saturday night in Las Vegas. McGregor was originally supposed to face UFC Lightweight champion Rafael Dos Anjos, but the Brazilian was forced to pull out with an injured foot.

Diaz is stepping up at short notice, but the two men are making up for lost time with plenty of trash talking leading up to the bout. Take a listen to the pre-fight press conference:

(Warning video contains NSFW language)

If nothing else, the in-cage banter between the two men should be compelling. Here’s a look at the entire schedule, card, predictions and viewing information.

UFC Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m. ET    
Matchups Weight Class Prediction
Julian Erosa vs. Teruto Ishihara Featherweight Erosa by submission
Jason Saggp vs. Justin Salas Lightweight Saggo by decision
Diego Sanchez vs. Jim Miller Lightweight Miller by submission
Fox Sports Prelims ar 8p.m. ET    
Darren Elkins vs. Chas Skelly Featherweight Skelly by decision
Vitor Miranda vs. Marcelo Guimaraes Middleweight Miranda by TKO
Erick Silva vs. Nordine Taleb Welterweight Taleb by TKO
Brandon Thatch vs. Siyar Bahadurzada Welterweight Thatch by TKO
PPV Main Card at 10 p.m. ET    
Amanda Nunes vs. Valentina Shevchenko Women’s Bantamweight Shevchenko by submission
Corey Anderson vs. Tom Lawlor Light Heavyweight Anderson by decision
Gian Villante vs. Ilir Latifi Light Heavyweight Latifi by TKO
(c) Holly Holm vs. Miesha Tate Women’s Bantamweight Championship Holm by TKO
Conro McGregor vs, Nate Diaz Welterweight McGregor by TKO

 

Latifi Will Win in Explosive Fashion

Gian Villante is one of the most highly touted light heavyweights in the UFC, but he’s proven to be susceptible to strong and effective strikers.

He’s been stopped twice in his career by strikes, and he was losing to Corey Anderson in April 2015 before landing a huge right hand that turned the tide. Villante‘s opponent on Saturday is Ilir Latifi, and he brings a pair of unforgiving fists into the Octagon.

The powerful Swede is known as “The Sledgehammer,” and with good reason. He’s won two fights in a row with both coming by way of TKO/KO. Villante‘s potential weakness makes him a prime candidate to become Latifi‘s third-straight KO victim.

 

Holm Will Stop Tate

Folks who long for a rematch between UFC Women’s Bantamweight champion Holly Holm and Ronda Rousey needn’t worry about the former losing her title to Miesha Tate.

There’s some concern that Holm might experience a letdown after upsetting Rousey in 2015, but that isn’t likely. Holm told the Washington Post‘s Jeff Wagenheim she doesn’t want to be a “one-hit wonder.”

Holm‘s awareness will allow her to maintain the edge she needs to beat Tate. The champion is a superior athlete and striker. Tate may be better on the ground, but isn’t that what we thought about Rousey?

Expect Holm to get the finish via second-round TKO.

 

McGregor Will Punish Diaz

The trash talk was awesome, but in the Octagon Diaz will prove to be no match for McGregor. Normally, a two-division leap would spell trouble for a fighter. However, McGregor has been starving himself to make 145 pounds.

If you look at the way he looks at the weigh-in and press conference, he looks to be carrying the 170 pounds well. If he has his normal crisp movements, Diaz doesn’t have much of a chance.

McGregor is faster and stronger. Diaz has a huge edge on the ground, but he lacks the explosiveness to close the distance and take McGregor to the ground. McGregor will have his way.

The Notorious One will win by second-round TKO.

 

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Watch Conor McGregor Demonstrate Capoeira Kick On Conan

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Conor McGregor has been making the round of media tours this week leading up the his highly anticipated bout with Nate Diaz. The 27 year-old was recently on Conan and although he has said that he would like to beat Diaz by an uppercut, he also plans to use various capoeira kicks to defeat the Stockton product.

McGregor demonstrated the kick on Conan leaving the audience members impressed. Take a look!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O6hAm0LC7dA

456232006

Conor McGregor has been making the round of media tours this week leading up the his highly anticipated bout with Nate Diaz. The 27 year-old was recently on Conan and although he has said that he would like to beat Diaz by an uppercut, he also plans to use various capoeira kicks to defeat the Stockton product.

McGregor demonstrated the kick on Conan leaving the audience members impressed. Take a look!