Conor McGregor continues to dominate headlines in mixed martial arts (MMA), even if it’s for an event put on by the UFC’s direct competition. The UFC lightweight champ caused a huge scene today (Fri., November 10, 2017) when he jumped into the cage at Bellator 187 from Dublin to celebrate with Straight Blast Gym teammate […]
Conor McGregor continues to dominate headlines in mixed martial arts (MMA), even if it’s for an event put on by the UFC’s direct competition.
The UFC lightweight champ caused a huge scene today (Fri., November 10, 2017) when he jumped into the cage at Bellator 187 from Dublin to celebrate with Straight Blast Gym teammate Charlie Ward after he beat Irish fighter John Redmond.
The boisterous celebration caused the bout’s referee Marc Goddard, who previously scolded McGregor cageside at last month’s UFC Gdansk, to step in and touch McGregor before telling him to leave, at which point the UFC champion shoved the official. Check out the outrageous scene right here:
It seems as though there’s a slight possibility that the UFC could use Conor McGregor before year’s end. McGregor hasn’t competed inside the Octagon since November of last year when he headlined UFC 205 from Madison Square Garden opposite Eddie Alvarez. “The Notorious One” downed “The Underground King” in the second round of the bout […]
It seems as though there’s a slight possibility that the UFC could use Conor McGregor before year’s end.
McGregor hasn’t competed inside the Octagon since November of last year when he headlined UFC 205 from Madison Square Garden opposite Eddie Alvarez. “The Notorious One” downed “The Underground King” in the second round of the bout via knockout to capture the lightweight throne, becoming the first dual-weight champion in UFC history in the process.
Shortly after McGregor was forced to vacate his featherweight title and decided to take some time off from competition in order to enjoy the birth of his first child. That break was short-lived, however, as McGregor then signed on to make his professional boxing debut against Floyd “Money” Mayweather.
The Irishman would come up just short as he suffered a 10th round TKO loss after eating a barrage of unanswered shots. Now the MMA world awaits his return; which will likely come against interim lightweight champion Tony Ferguson, who defeated Kevin Lee in the main event of UFC 216 to capture the gold.
Recently UFC President Dana White spoke to the Los Angeles Times‘ Lance Pugmire and revealed that McGregor’s next fight could be finalized by the end of the week. White has until the end of the week to determine the main event for the UFC’s pay-per-view (PPV) event on Dec. 30 in Las Vegas and is hoping McGregor can compete on the card (quotes via Bleacher Report):
“That’s all this week,” White said. “We’re working on that [main event]. I have to have it done by the end of the week.”
Following Georges St-Pierre’s riveting third-round submission to win the middleweight title from Michael Bisping in the main event of last Saturday’s (November 4, 2017) UFC 217, several high-profile fights sit on the bargaining table for the UFC’s newest two-weight champ. The obvious one is a unification bout with current interim middleweight champ Robert Whittaker, who […]
Following Georges St-Pierre’s riveting third-round submission to win the middleweight title from Michael Bisping in the main event of last Saturday’s (November 4, 2017) UFC 217, several high-profile fights sit on the bargaining table for the UFC’s newest two-weight champ.
The obvious one is a unification bout with current interim middleweight champ Robert Whittaker, who is currently recovering from a knee injury suffered while winning the interim belt versus Yoel Romero at July’s UFC 213. It’s a fight that UFC President Dana White insists will be next for GSP, yet there’s another high-profile bout that would out-draw this fight in spades.
That’s St-Pierre’s oft-discussed super fight with lightweight champ Conor McGregor, a bout that’s gained a ton of steam since St-Pierre officially won the middleweight title amidst speculation about his effectiveness after four years off. Both fighters would potentially hold up their respective divisions to make it happen – although that’s nothing new with McGregor – but it would also almost certainly be the biggest fight the UFC could stage at this point, and perhaps ever.
If and when either fight happens, St-Pierre is already favored over McGregor and an underdog to Whittaker according to early odds recently released on Bovada.com. According to their numbers, St-Pierre is a -150 favorite over McGregor, who came in at +120, and a -135 underdog to Whittaker, who is currently a -165 favorite.
This marks a change from the initial release of the odds yesterday, when St-Pierre was a -160 favorite over +130 dog Whittaker. Many hardcore fans believe the much younger Whittaker would defeat St-Pierre after trouncing Romero and Ronaldo Souza in 2017, and apparently the betting public agreed enough to skew the odds in Whittaker’s favor – and by no small margin – in just one day’s time.
Who do you believe should be favored in St-Pierre’s prospective bouts in the foreseeable future?
With the MMA world focused on this weekend’s (Sat., November 4, 2017) UFC 217 from New York City, the hottest topics in the fight game are still when and against whom UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor will set foot back into the Octagon. McGregor teased a title defense against interim lightweight champion Tony Ferguson during […]
With the MMA world focused on this weekend’s (Sat., November 4, 2017) UFC 217 from New York City, the hottest topics in the fight game are still when and against whom UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor will set foot back into the Octagon.
McGregor teased a title defense against interim lightweight champion Tony Ferguson during a recent Q&A in his native Dublin, but also left the door open for a potential trilogy bout with rival Nate Diaz or any number of potential boxing crossover fights.
That left his UFC return uncertain at best, but based on what he revealed during a short Q&A session surrounding the debut of the documentary film about his life, there’s a much bigger topic that has to be hashed out before “The Notorious” fights for the UFC again. According to MMA Junkie’s Chamatkar Sandhu, McGregor revealed he will not fight until he has a promoter’s stake:
McGregor says now that he's also a promoter he's not stepping into the Octagon again unless he has a promoters stake.
That may not come as a surprise to many, as during a down 2017 without him in the actual UFC, it’s clear the promotion needs him, perhaps much more than he needs them. If he does indeed get the promoter’s stake in the company that he very well may deserve, he’d like to get a fight booked in Ireland:
McGregor says before it's all said and done he'd like to get a fight done in Ireland.
Sandhu clarified that the Q&A session was a short one, but the main takeaways were that the UFC was understandably trying to get McGregor back into the octagon before year’s end to bolster a sinking bottom line, and McGregor wouldn’t be playing ball without part ownership of his next fight:
That's it. It was a short Q&A but the main takeaway is the UFC want McGregor back in by the end of the year but CM wants a promoters stake.
So McGregor has reportedly drawn a proverbial line in the sand for new UFC owners Endeavor (formerly WME-IMG), and after they let him take the entirety of 2017 off MMA to fight Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a boxing ring, they most likely aren’t going to be too happy about the position he’s now put them in.
They also don’t seem like people who like to be pushed around, even by the biggest star in MMA.
Should the UFC give in and grant McGregor his promoter’s stake, or is he getting too big for his own good?
UFC 217 may be taking place this weekend (Sat., November 4, 2017) from New York, but much of the focus of the MMA world still remains on just whom lightweight champion Conor McGregor will face in his awaited Octagon return. Today (Tues., October 31, 2017) we may have some direct insight into his plans, as […]
UFC 217 may be taking place this weekend (Sat., November 4, 2017) from New York, but much of the focus of the MMA world still remains on just whom lightweight champion Conor McGregor will face in his awaited Octagon return.
Today (Tues., October 31, 2017) we may have some direct insight into his plans, as McGregor revealed to Ireland’s entertainment.ie (via MMA Fighting) that interim lightweight champ Tony Ferguson, the hardcore MMA community’s overwhelming choice for his next bout, is the logical next choice for him:
“I’ve got everyone clawing at me, trying to get at me, and that’s from multiple sports, multiple organizations, multiple everything. It’s been like that for a long, long time, I feel, so it’s just another day for me. I know there are many contenders in the UFC. There are many boxing contenders as well. What interests me is certainly a UFC bout, certainly a defense of my lightweight title. There is a fighter with the interim lightweight belt. I feel that will be next. We’ll see how negotiations go.”
McGregor has yet to participate in an official title defense since first winning the UFC featherweight title from Jose Aldo at December 2015’s UFC 194, after which he engaged in his now-legendary rivalry with fan favorite Nate Diaz before winning the lightweight title from Eddie Alvarez at UFC 205 last November, after which he was stripped of the 145-pound belt.
He’s been out of action for the entirety of 2017 thus far after meeting Floyd Mayweather in a boxing match August 26.
The other frontrunner for his next fight is his trilogy bout with Diaz, a fight that has been losing steam as discussions of the Ferguson match-up gain momentum. McGregor acknowledged that was still a possibility, however, just like one of several potential boxing crossover matches:
“The Diaz trilogy is also there,” McGregor said. “I can defend my belt against Nate. Maybe we can persuade one of these boxing opponents to step into the Octagon, or there’s also boxing bouts as well. So, there’s so many options. I feel to legitimize the belt — there’s an interim champion, I’m the unified champion — I feel that will be next. We are currently in contract negotiations, and we’ll see where it goes.”
So ‘The Notorious’s’ plans remain wide open, even if Ferguson remains the frontrunner. Whom do you think he should return to face?
We’re only four days away from this weekend’s (Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City, and the overall hype for what should legitimately be the UFC’s biggest pay-per-view (PPV) of 2017 just doesn’t seem to be there. By all accounts, UFC 217 has all the makings of a blockbuster card, […]
We’re only four days away from this weekend’s (Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City, and the overall hype for what should legitimately be the UFC’s biggest pay-per-view (PPV) of 2017 just doesn’t seem to be there.
By all accounts, UFC 217 has all the makings of a blockbuster card, with a rarely-seen three title fights and the return of a bonified MMA legend and G.O.A.T. candidate in Georges St-Pierre.
Additionally, the Cody Garbrandt vs. T.J. Dillashaw co-main event was arguably one of the most anticipated title fights of the year until Garbrandt suffered a back injury and the bout lost much of its momentum, but it still remains one of the most closely-matched title fights in MMA and brings a true bad blood-fueled backstory along with it. Dominant women’s strawweight champ Joanna Jedrzejczyk will also attempt to tie Ronda Rousey’s record for most consecutive women’s title defenses with 6 when she meets Rose Namajunas for the gold.
Merely typing out that summary of all the MMA goodness UFC 217 contains is enough to make a true fan’s jaw drop, yet UFC 217 just isn’t bringing the attention that a potentially historic card like this one should. The topic has been debated over and again leading into this weekend, so much so that much of the discussion about the card has been centered on its supposed lack of attention rather than its world-class lineup and potential for explosive action in the cage. Even as I write about the topic today, I see surprisingly few articles about the event featured on MMA sites around the web, including our own.
What is the reasoning behind that, you ask? The reasons are myriad, but the main factor why UFC 217 simply isn’t delivering the buzz it should be is the fact that the UFC let their biggest star take the entire year off to fight (and lose to) Floyd Mayweather in a boxing match, and in doing so, they created a circus that was simply impossible to live up to in the minds of casual fans. True, the potential payday of Mayweather vs. McGregor was probably too big to pass up – even for the UFC’s secondary position in the deal – but it did not come without consequence.
In many ways, Mayweather vs. McGregor was indicative of today’s new era of MMA, one where fighters attempt to build up and sign on for the biggest possible bouts in terms of online exposure and money thanks to McGregor’s unparalleled success at doing just that. It’s a time where rankings and legitimacy mean little if a fight makes sense in terms of dollars. Prizefighters can hardly be blamed for operating along those lines, yet MayMac pushed it over the top into a territory the UFC is clearly struggling to recover from.
Here’s why. It all began with the over-the-top promotional world tour in July, a mixed bag of results that pushed hype for the fight to perhaps never-before-seen levels in MMA. Complete with racist undertones and homophobic slurs, the four-city whirlwind nevertheless accomplished its goal and propelled MayMac to a reportedly record-breaking PPV number worldwide.
That’s great for those involved, including the UFC – but here’s the main problem that has resulted in UFC 217 seeming like a sort of afterthought, which it clearly should not be: when you make a circus for casual fans, anything after that, especially in the months directly after it, will simply fail to live up to that unattainable bar.
The overall lack of PPV success in 2017 proves the climate we’re living in – one that predicates on an all-or-nothing basis based on McGregor – and this year, with “The Notorious” out of MMA action, it’s been next to nothing far more than it’s been all as UFC PPVs have faltered to record-setting lows in the past couple of months.
Perhaps Bisping’s lack of activity as middleweight champion as he waited all year for his so-called “money fight” with St-Pierre has fans tired of his antics and is, therefore, affecting UFC 217’s buzz adversely.
St-Pierre’s relatively unknown status with newer, more casual fans who began watching MMA because of MMA and Rousey will certainly contribute to its lack of success if it does not, however. GSP’s admitted lack of trash-talking skill also isn’t helping the fight sell in an era where a brash superstar like McGregor is king.
UFC 217 could certainly deliver at the last minute with a solid PPV performance that defies mine and many other media members’ predictions, or it may not. We’ll have to wait and see on that.
But the main motivating factor for UFC 217 not living up to the billing of a massive NYC event with three title fights will fall on the spectacle of Mayweather vs. McGregor because it was a once-in-a-lifetime event – for better or worse.
Once you set the bar at that level in today’s trash talk-centered MMA landscape, however, the UFC is finding out that it’s simply impossible to shift the focus to anything but, even if you offer fans three high-level title fights in one night.