Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz: Odds and Predictions Before Weigh-In

The most exciting fighter in UFC returns to the Octagon on Saturday night, as Conor McGregor is moving up two weight classes to challenge Nate Diaz at UFC 196. 
McGregor was originally scheduled to defend his featherweight title against Rafael dos…

The most exciting fighter in UFC returns to the Octagon on Saturday night, as Conor McGregor is moving up two weight classes to challenge Nate Diaz at UFC 196

McGregor was originally scheduled to defend his featherweight title against Rafael dos Anjos, but an injury to dos Anjos forced a last-minute change. Diaz offered his services coming off a December victory over Michael Johnson. 

It’s been an unconventional road to UFC 196, but the main event promises to be one of the year’s most fascinating because of the change in weight for McGregor. 

 

Key Storyline: The Weight Class

It’s not unusual for fighters to switch between weight classes in their careers. Anderson Silva, at the height of his middleweight powers, jumped up to 205 pounds for matches with James Irvin and Forrest Griffin

Usually, though, the jump is just one weight class, and there tends to be a long gap between matches so a smaller fighter can get more accustomed to moving around with the additional pounds.

Using Silva as an example again, he had four months between fights before taking on Irvin and Griffin. McGregor has fought at lightweight but has been competing at featherweight for his last 10 bouts dating back to February 2012. 

This is McGregor’s debut at welterweight, meaning he’s carrying 25 extra pounds. Diaz has alternated between lightweight and welterweight, so the 170-pound limit won’t have any impact on him. 

It’s a credit to McGregor’s competitiveness that he took this fight—not that he’s lacking any confidence, per MMAFighting.com’s Ariel Helwani:

MMA fighter Chris Fields said in an interview with Raf Diallo of Newstalk 106-108 in Ireland he thinks the added weight will actually help McGregor: “If you think of it like this, it’s like trying to run a car on very little fuel, especially for the last few weeks of camp and Conor would be the same when he fights at featherweight. You’re almost just battling against the weight rather than getting ready for the fight.”

UFC President Dana White told Sports Illustrated it was McGregor who pushed for the 170-pound weight limit: “I tell Conor, ‘[Diaz] can’t do 160 pounds, he wants to do 165 pounds. McGregor’s response: ‘You tell him it’s 170.’”

Diaz had trouble making weight for his fight with Dos Anjos in December 2014, tipping the scales more than five pounds over the 155-pound limit. He did hit that mark against Johnson four months ago, so even with a short preparation time, the 30-year-old shouldn’t have any problem staying around 170 pounds. 

Diaz is naturally bigger than McGregor. He’s three inches taller at 6’0″ and has a two-inch reach advantage (76 versus 74), though his 38-inch legs are two inches shorter than the Notorious One’s. McGregor’s greatest asset is his willingness to aggressively attack anything that moves inside the Octagon. 

That physical style will suit McGregor well in a heavier weight class against a bigger opponent than he’s accustomed to seeing. 

 

Prediction

There’s a fearlessness to McGregor that is hard to ignore. Many fighters in the past have expressed their reluctance to move up even one weight class for a potential marquee matchup that would generate huge money for them and UFC. 

Diaz is a fighter who needs to be motivated to perform well. This is the biggest fight of his career, so if he can’t come out ready to attack, he never will. He’s also been an inconsistent UFC fighter, owning an 8-8 record in his last 16 bouts. 

McGregor hasn’t lost since 2010, three years before making his UFC debut. He’s taken down some of the best fighters in the business, including Chad Mendes and Jose Aldo in his last two matches. Even at a new weight class, his winning streak will continue in impressive fashion. 

McGregor wins via second-round TKO

 

Stats courtesy of UFC.com unless otherwise noted.

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Nate Diaz Lands Unseen Ninja Strike On Conor McGregor During Brawl

Yeah we missed it at first too, but if you watch again you’ll see that Nate Diaz landed a clean and unanswered shot on Conor McGregor… If you’ve been keeping up with the UFC this week you’ll know it’s all been about Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz. The two outspoken fan favorites will collide in the main

The post Nate Diaz Lands Unseen Ninja Strike On Conor McGregor During Brawl appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Yeah we missed it at first too, but if you watch again you’ll see that Nate Diaz landed a clean and unanswered shot on Conor McGregor…

If you’ve been keeping up with the UFC this week you’ll know it’s all been about Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz. The two outspoken fan favorites will collide in the main event of UFC 196 this Saturday March 5, and it’s been a very eventful 24 hours in this heated rivalry. Not only have the two been trash talking the living daylights out of each other, but McGregor and Diaz damn near started the fight on stage last night.

The second UFC 196 pre-fight show between ‘The Notorious’ and his Stockton opposite was just an absolute fan’s dream. The two had an intense moment on stage when Conor McGregor smacked away Nate Diaz’s extended fist, and havoc ensued as the two scuffled, and the 209 crew rushed the stage to join the antics.

FotorCreated1

Following this moment of live action madness came yet more bonkers footage from Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz’s appearance on FOX Sports. As they sat with Jay and Dan, things got heated real quick. Check it out:
 But one moment has gone amiss here, as we may have missed the obvious at the UFC 196 presser brawl.

continue to the video after the jump

The post Nate Diaz Lands Unseen Ninja Strike On Conor McGregor During Brawl appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC 196: Bleacher Report Main Card Staff Predictions

UFC 196 hits Las Vegas this Saturday, and the Bleacher Report staff is here to provide you with predictions for how we think each main card tilt will go.
And, yes, there is some dissension in the ranks.
In the main event, Nate Diaz battles UFC featherw…

UFC 196 hits Las Vegas this Saturday, and the Bleacher Report staff is here to provide you with predictions for how we think each main card tilt will go.

And, yes, there is some dissension in the ranks.

In the main event, Nate Diaz battles UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor in a welterweight bout. Diaz replaces lightweight titleholder Rafael dos Anjos following an injury to the Brazilian, and the press events since then have been nothing short of spectacular.

There is still a title fight on the card, however, as Holly Holm defends her crown against Miesha Tate in the co-main event.

Three other strong supporting fights help fill out the UFC 196 fight card. Who will win? Which B/R staff member will come out on top?

There is only one way to find out. Read on for detail musings on all five UFC 196 main card contests.

Begin Slideshow

Conor McGregor & Nate Diaz Go Berserk During Incredible Interview

This is the most amazing interview you will ever see. Stockton snitches, GAZELLES, skinny fat bitches and midget killers. it’s all here… Remember when former UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones and current boss Daniel Cormier shared one of the most heated rivalries in MMA history? The lead up to their eventual UFC 182 fight was filled

The post Conor McGregor & Nate Diaz Go Berserk During Incredible Interview appeared first on LowKick MMA.

This is the most amazing interview you will ever see. Stockton snitches, GAZELLES, skinny fat bitches and midget killers. it’s all here…

Remember when former UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones and current boss Daniel Cormier shared one of the most heated rivalries in MMA history? The lead up to their eventual UFC 182 fight was filled with crazy brawls and intense face offs, but remember they had six months to fill, and the latest beef between Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz has only had 12 days to brew. In that time, ‘The Notorious’ and the bad boy from Stockton have done a bang up job.

The first UFC 196 presser that happened the day after the fight’s announcement was fun to watch, nothing too extreme, but it got our interest. Then came the second presser, which went down last night (Thursday March 3, 2016). The two squared off and very nearly got in to an all out scrap, then the 209 massive in Jake Shields, Nick Diaz and many others rushed the stage, and for a moment there were flashbacks to the infamous UFC 178 brawl between DC and Jones. All settled, but it was far from over.

ConorDestroyNate2

After the strange interviews with Diaz earlier this week, it seemed that perhaps the normally outspoken grappler was already feeling the strain of this fight. He even complimented McGregor, stating he felt the Irish boxer could do well at welterweight. A confused Karyn Bryant had to remind Nate that this was his next opponent they were discussing, it was truly bizarre and out of character.

Anyway, the UFC, sensing that perhaps the rivalry was beginning to fall out of context, set up another Jones/Cormier type situation. Separating McGregor and Diaz but giving them a split screen live chat with Jay & Dan of FOX Sports, the promotion intended on getting some serious trash talk across the airwaves and in to our welcoming eyeballs and ears.

Possibly even the UFC could not have foreseen what happened, which was potentially the greatest interview in all combat sports history.

Read on after the jump for the full segment which will leave your sides aching

The post Conor McGregor & Nate Diaz Go Berserk During Incredible Interview appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz: The Complete Breakdown

When a broken foot forced lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos to pull out of UFC 196 on March 5, chaos briefly reigned.
Featherweight titleholder Conor McGregor (19-2; 7-0 UFC) is the biggest draw in the sport, per reliable estimates of the UFC 194 b…

When a broken foot forced lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos to pull out of UFC 196 on March 5, chaos briefly reigned.

Featherweight titleholder Conor McGregor (19-2; 7-0 UFC) is the biggest draw in the sport, per reliable estimates of the UFC 194 buyrate from Wrestling Observer Newsletter’s Dave Meltzer (h/t MMAPayout.com), and the appeal of the UFC’s first champion vs. champion matchup since 2009 is difficult to top.

The UFC outdid itself with the replacement fight. Veteran lightweight and fan favorite Nate Diaz (18-10; 13-8 UFC) stepped up to take the bout on less than two weeks’ notice, and the two men agreed to fight at welterweight, a full 25 pounds above McGregor‘s normal weight.

There’s no denying the featherweight champion’s guts. Taking a fight on short notice against a much different stylistic challenge 25 pounds above the 145-pound limit where he usually fights is a heady task, but that also gives him a vast array of explanations should something go wrong.

The oddsmakers don’t think it will. They have pegged McGregor as a 4-1 favorite, and the amount of money that has poured in on McGregor indicates that the public is behind him as well.

Despite those odds, this is a tricky fight for the rising Irishman. Let’s explore both McGregor and Diaz in depth and then take a look at how they match up.

 

Conor McGregor

Record: 19-2; 17 KO, 1 SUB, 1 DEC

Height: 5’9″

Reach: 74″ 

McGregor is one of the most gifted punchers the sport of MMA has ever seen, and he backs up his ridiculous power with a skilled technical arsenal that allows him to plant his laser-straight left hand on opponents early and often.

Diverse footwork and the constant pursuit of clean angles form the basis of his success in landing the left hand. It’s easy to mistake McGregor for a straightforward pressure fighter, and he certainly excels at aggressively pushing his opponent toward the fence.

Pressure was his game plan against Max Holloway, Dennis Siver and Chad Mendes, and in all three cases he executed it perfectly. He cuts off the space of the cage with his footwork, and his liberal use of front, side and spinning kicks serve to cut off his opponents’ lateral movement while forcing them straight backward toward the cage.

Once they hit the fence, McGregor fires the left hand liberally and picks his spots to dig into increasingly devastating flurries with both hands. 

It would be a mistake, however, to pigeonhole McGregor as a pressure fighter. His cage-cutting footwork is excellent, but he’s nearly as good operating in open space and letting his opponent comes to him. Counters are a specialty, particularly when he steps back and to his left, pivots slightly and drops the straight left hand across the plane of his opponent’s body.

That’s the punch that finished Jose Aldo last December, and it’s a mirror image of the brutal shot that he used to knock out Ivan Buchinger in Cage Warriors more than three years ago. Note in both cases how McGregor‘s lead foot is slightly inside his opponent’s and how the punch comes perpendicular to the opponent’s stance.

While he hasn’t used them much in recent years, McGregor also has nice counter uppercuts as his opponent comes forward.

Whether he’s pressuring or moving cleanly in open space, McGregor‘s footwork and spatial awareness are excellent and more than up to either task. Both enable him to control the distance in precise chunks, which keeps his opponent on the end of his long kicks and punches and allows him to maintain a blisteringly quick pace. When he really gets into a rhythm, McGregor might throw more than 30 strikes in one minute.

With all of that said, his striking game isn’t without its disadvantages.

Aside from occasionally flashing a right jab and the odd right uppercut, almost everything McGregor throws comes from the left side. The threat of his left high kick plays together with the straight left, freezing his opponent’s head in place for the straight or catching him as he tries to slip, as Siver did.

No opponent has successfully exploited the left-side dominance yet, but it’s conceivable that someone could.

The bigger problem is how hittable McGregor is. He’s not without defensive acumen, as he can move his head and use his active hands to parry strikes, but he relies heavily on angles and distance to avoid his opponent’s shots. Luckily, his chin has been harder than granite thus far, but that simply can’t last forever.

While striking is McGregor‘s wheelhouse, he’s hardly helpless elsewhere. He prefers to separate from the clinch, but he can hit a gorgeous double-overhooks throw and land sharp knees when he chooses to stay there. Well-timed singles, doubles and knee taps add the threat of the takedown, though he rarely chooses to use them.

Generally speaking, McGregor‘s takedown defense has been fine. He struggled a bit against Chad Mendes, though the knee injury he suffered before the fight was reportedly to blame, as his coach John Kavanagh told The MMA Hour’s Ariel Helwani afterward. It could continue to be an issue, or McGregor could be bulletproof. Until he faces another strong wrestler, it’s impossible to say.

On the mat, McGregor passes nicely and possesses exceptional posture, which allows him to drop vicious ground strikes. His base is strong, and his control is smooth. He offers little from his back, however, and might get stuck there against a strong top player. While he hasn’t been submitted in years, there’s reason to suspect that a savvy submission artist might catch him in transition.

In sum, McGregor is an intelligent, crafty striker with enormous power. The rest of his game is good enough to keep him in his wheelhouse, and few opponents can withstand the thunder in his hands or the quick pace at which he likes to work for long.

 

Nate Diaz

Record: 18-10; 4 KO, 11 SUB, 3 DEC

Height: 6’0″

Reach: 76″ 

Diaz the Younger is no longer the brash 22-year-old who defeated Manny Gamburyan and won The Ultimate Fighter 5 back in 2007. Nor is he the too-small welterweight whom the rising Rory MacDonald repeatedly suplexed in 2011.

The 2016 version of Diaz has finally come into his own as a rangy and skilled lightweight with a great deal of craft to his game. He’s not his brother, either—a swarming pressure fighter who relies on pace, toughness and forcing his opponent to the fence where he can drop head-body combinations of five or 10 punches at a time.

Nate, unlike Nick, is at his best in the open space in the middle of the cage, where the southpaw can put his length and active lead hand to use. The digging shoe-shine combinations Nick throws against the fence are nowhere to be found; instead, Nate is all about a lengthy jab, snapping straight left and a slick counter right hook.

He effectively plays with distance and rhythm. He likes to place his head above his lead leg while snapping off sharp jabs or a crisp one-two, which baits his opponent into a response; how can he not try to hit Diaz when his head is right there, just begging for a punch? When the opponent throws, Diaz pulls his head back over his rear leg, a substantial distance, and slips in one or two right-hook counters.

By placing his head so far forward, Diaz completely confuses his opponent’s sense of the range where he can land shots and where he’s safe.

This simple sequence—jab, jab, jab-cross, right-hook counter to the opponent’s response—is his bread and butter, and it’s shockingly effective even against skilled opposition. It plays off Diaz‘s length, understanding of distance and his ability to set a rhythm and then break it at will.

Pace is Diaz‘s strongest suit. When he finds his groove, as he almost always does, he will throw upwards of 20 or even 30 strikes in a minute. Not all of them are full-power shots, as he’ll tap away with half-speed strikes to set a rhythm, but he has surprising pop when he does commit. It’s exhausting to keep up with Diaz, particularly when he mixes in shots to the body.

There are distinct weaknesses to his approach, though. While he’s better at defending kicks than he used to be, dedicated low kickers can do serious damage to his legs as long as they set them up and move immediately after throwing. His footwork is somewhat crude, and technically sound opposition can create safe angles from which to attack with both punches and kicks.

In general, defense isn’t Diaz‘s forte. He’s not as easy to hit cleanly as his reputation suggests, and he does a good job of using his hands, shoulders and rolling away from strikes to take some of the sting off. His pace ensures that he’ll eat a fair few strikes regardless, though, and some of them will be flush.

He hasn’t gotten much credit for it, but Diaz is an excellent clinch fighter. Sneaky trips and throws give him the threat of the takedown, and his long arms and tall frame give him surprising leverage despite his lack of raw musculature. Sharp knees and short punches add the threat of effective dirty boxing. Still, Diaz isn’t a particularly imposing wrestler, and defending takedowns has never been a strength.

An aggressive and dangerous guard partially makes up for the wrestling deficit. Slick chains of triangles, armbars, omoplatas and sweeps, all executed with impeccable technique, are his main attacks from his back. When he finds top position, which doesn’t happen often enough, he passes smoothly and looks aggressively for submissions.

Transitions are another strength. He has a lethal guillotine that he used to finish Jim Miller, and he can get to the back in scrambles as well.

On the downside, big, technically sound top players can shut down Diaz‘s guard game and attempts to create transitions and control him from the top, as Rafael dos Anjos did. Even if he’s attacking with submissions, the judges might not reward that activity, which leaves him vulnerable to dropping rounds.

On the feet, Diaz is a great deal for anybody to handle. His swagger, ability to get inside his opponent’s head, pace and craft make up a creative and dangerous package, and he’s no picnic on the ground, either.

 

Betting Odds

McGregor -450, Diaz +400

 

Prediction

Both fighters will probably be content to keep this standing. Diaz will likely try to work the smaller McGregor over in the clinch, and he would be well served to at least try a few trips or throws. If there’s a place where the American has an undeniable advantage, it’s on the mat, where the combination of his aggressive and technically sound game and McGregor‘s history of tapping to submissions melds into a favorable stew.

There’s little reason to think that Diaz will have much success at getting the fight to the floor, though. McGregor‘s takedown defense has been strong, and he excels at pushing off and creating distance when opponents try to tie him up. Short of finding a dominant position or a submission in transition, grappling is likely a closed avenue for Diaz.

At range, this is a compelling matchup. Don’t write Diaz off: He’s the first opponent against whom McGregor will give up a substantial amount of height and reach, and Diaz knows how to use his length to his advantage. It’s entirely possible that Diaz will stick McGregor on the end of his long reach for some period of time, and it’s an open question as to how the Irishman will deal with that challenge.

What makes this even more interesting is that both fighters are southpaws. McGregor is a southpaw who feasts on orthodox fighters: He has beaten southpaws such as Dustin Poirier, of course, but his inside-angle counters and reliance on the straight left make him even more effective against right-handed fighters. Diaz, by contrast, has the kind of active lead hand that could give McGregor trouble.

The Irishman doesn’t jab much and doesn’t throw many right hooks. When he throws his left hand, as he will surely do early and often here, he tends to bring it back to his chest, leaving him open for Diaz‘s preferred right hook counter. Nor is McGregor the kind of slick defensive fighter who will go into The Matrix to slip and roll his way through Diaz‘s barrage of offense.

With all of that said, McGregor has vastly superior footwork, and the combination of his clean movement and command of angles with his deep kicking arsenal should go some way toward negating Diaz‘s reach advantage.

The Irishman also has a massive edge in power, and he has shown every sign of being able to match Diaz‘s pace. While the American is always in shape, and not having to cut weight should help, there’s a real question as to whether Diaz can last into the late rounds with his customary vigor.

What all of that boils down to is a recipe for an exciting fight that should be more competitive than the betting lines indicate. Diaz will put leather on the hittable McGregor, and vice versa.

Eventually, McGregor will either land something big or pile up enough damage to convince the judges that he’s in command. McGregor takes a fun, 49-46 decision.

 

All betting odds via Odds Shark. 

Patrick Wyman is the Senior MMA Analyst for Bleacher Report and the co-host of the Heavy Hands Podcast, your source for the finer points of face-punching. He can be found on Twitter and Facebook.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Rafael Dos Anjos Provides Injury Update To His Broken Foot

Six more weeks and UFC lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos expects to be training again.

That’s what the fighter posted on social media Thursday, providing his fans with an update to his status.

Dos Anjos was set to meet Conor McGregor this Sat…

rafael-dos-anjos-press-conference

Six more weeks and UFC lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos expects to be training again.

That’s what the fighter posted on social media Thursday, providing his fans with an update to his status.

Dos Anjos was set to meet Conor McGregor this Saturday night at UFC 196 for his title, but the injury – suffered in training – knocked him out and opened the door for Nate Diaz to step in.

It remains unknown if McGregor-dos Anjos will be rescheduled, though “Notorious” has seemed to have moved past the fight and onto thoughts of a bout with welterweight champion Robbie Lawler.