Regardless of the outcome of the fight on Saturday night, UFC Featherweight Champion Conor McGregor will be setting a new UFC record for his Welterweight rematch against Nate Diaz at UFC 202.
Marc Ramondi of MMAFighting.com is reporting that “The No…
Regardless of the outcome of the fight on Saturday night, UFC Featherweight Champion Conor McGregor will be setting a new UFC record for his Welterweight rematch against Nate Diaz at UFC 202.
Marc Ramondi of MMAFighting.com is reporting that “The Notorious” one will earn a $3 million guaranteed salary for his 170-pound rematch against Nate Diaz at the UFC 202 pay-per-view event on Saturday night.
Prior to last month’s historic UFC 200 event, McGregor held the record for the largest guaranteed fight purse paid to a fighter in the UFC with a $1 million payday reported to the Nevada Athletic Commission for his first fight with Nate Diaz at UFC 196 back in March.
At UFC 200, WWE Superstar and former UFC Heavyweight Champion Brock Lesnar broke the record for largest guaranteed purse with a reported $2.5 million purse for his one-time-only Octagon return against Mark Hunt.
In typical Conor McGregor fashion, the Irish mega-star will bump Lesnar down to second place and reclaim the distinction in his very first fight since setting the original record when he attempts to avenge the loss he suffered to Diaz at tonight’s UFC 202 pay-per-view.
For his part, Diaz will be earning a reported $2 million purse for the fight, which is expected to break the all-time pay-per-view record this weekend.
For UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 results, click here.
With only a few short hours left until tonight’s (Sat., August 20, 2016) UFC 202 from Las Vegas, Nevada, the MMA world waits with baited breath to see what will happen in the second fight of featherweight champion Conor McGregor’s long, strange rivalry with Nate Diaz. By now we all know what happened in the
With only a few short hours left until tonight’s (Sat., August 20, 2016) UFC 202 from Las Vegas, Nevada, the MMA world waits with baited breath to see what will happen in the second fight of featherweight champion Conor McGregor’s long, strange rivalry with Nate Diaz.
By now we all know what happened in the first fight at UFC 196, where Diaz filled in for then-lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos on just 11 days’ notice to batter and submit “The Notorious” in the second round after losing the first round to several heavy blows.
But what followed after McGregor showed a surprising amount of humility, honesty, and class at the UFC 196 post-fight presser arguably has the ultra-popular champion fighting for a large chunk of his lofty fighting status. His short ‘retirement’ that ultimately lead to his removal from the originally scheduled rematch with Diaz at UFC 200, coupled with the strange, dangerous bottle-and-can-throwing incident at Wednesday’s pre-fight press conference suggest that Diaz might just be inside McGregor’s head. We’ll find out tonight, but at the end of the day, he just has to win in order to silence his critics.
Yes, he’ll always have the featherweight title he’s never defended, something that UFC President Dana White has gone on record saying he will do in his next bout regardless of what happens with Diaz tonight.
However, two straight losses to a fighter who’s being billed as a welterweight but is, in reality, a lightweight who while no doubt a top contender, has lost to many of the top 155-pound fighters in MMA, would obviously be devastating to the ridiculously lofty bar McGregor has set for himself with his nonstop trash talk. There will be excuses made, but the fact will remain that there just hasn’t ever been a UFC champion who is coming off two losses to the same opponent.
It would also lend McGregor’s frequent stinging tongue lashes much less weight, as it’s hard to get fans to take a fighter seriously who says they’re going to destroy everyone in their path while on a losing streak. Again, the featherweight fray that McGregor has by all accounts dominated since his UFC debut in April 2013 will always be there, but it’s still a matter of whether or not he can actually make that weight safely again. “The Notorious” has put on serious muscle mass for his move up to lightweight and then welterweight, and even his longtime coach John Kavanagh has stated he doesn’t want to see his prized fighter make the draining cut down to 145 again.
Case in point, check out how drained McGregor looks compared to the much more bloated form he was in at UFC 196:
That picture is quite a shocking contrast, and in an era where the health impacts of extreme weight cuts are being taken more and more seriously by the day, it might not be a good look for the sport’s biggest star to put himself through another drastic and taxing cut. The weight issue coupled with the daunting specter of a two-fight losing streak to Diaz not surprisingly makes tonight’s main event a bout with absolutely stratospheric stakes for the Irish superstar, and therefore, it’s a bout he must win.
The fight is also one that carries astronomical stakes for the UFC. With talent agency WME-IMG and their investors recently having bought the UFC for upwards of $4 billion in the midst of the most unpredictable run of title changes in UFC history, the promotion is in serious need of stars. McGregor, along with Ronda Rousey, is obviously their biggest one, so another loss would be devastating for his legitimacy and the new owners’ profit margins. Some rumors have surfaced that WME has already soured on their massive purchase, and while that speculation is just rumor, it wouldn’t be hard to suggest that they may have a serious case of buyers’ remorse were McGregor to lose again and leave them with a long list of champions who absolutely struggle to sell a pay-per-view on their own.
There’s most likely a path to victory for McGregor this evening, but with him predicting a second-round knockout of the iron-chinned Diaz, the high-volume five-round affair that will probably be required might not be what McGregor plans on implementing.
We’ll have to wait and see what transpires in one of the most intriguing MMA fights of the year (and perhaps ever), yet regardless of what goes down from the T-Mobile Arena tonight, the stakes are unquestionably high for McGregor, and in an unprecedented manner never before matched in the relatively young sport of MMA.
The exact same thing could – and should – be said for the UFC and its new owners.
MMANews.com is your source for UFC 202 Results and live coverage. UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 takes place live from Las Vegas, Nevada, and we will be providing the absolute best live results coverage of the highly anticipated pay-per-view featurin…
MMANews.com is your source for UFC 202 Results and live coverage. UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 takes place live from Las Vegas, Nevada, and we will be providing the absolute best live results coverage of the highly anticipated pay-per-view featuring an absolutely stacked lineup, including the highly-anticipated 170-pound rematch between Nate Diaz and UFC Featherweight Champion Conor McGregor, the striking fans dream fight between Anthony “Rumble” Johnson and Glover Teixeira, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone vs. Rick Story, Cody “No Love” Garbrandt vs. Takeya Mizugaki and more.
UFC 202 kicks off live tonight with a three-fight preliminary card on UFC Fight Pass starting at 6:30pm ET. / 3:30pm PT., featuring Neil Magny vs. Lorenz Larkin in the main event, as well as a four-fight preliminary card headlined by Cody Garbrandt vs. Takeya Mizugaki on FOX Sports 1 starting at 8pm ET. / 5pm PT. After the FS1 prelims, starting at 10pm ET. / 7pm PT., it will be time for the UFC 202 pay-per-view headlined by Nate Diaz vs. Conor McGregor 2.
MMANews.com will be providing live, quick-match UFC 202 results coverage of the two preliminary cards this evening, and the fastest, most detailed round-by-round results coverage of every fight on the pay-per-view portion of the show from start-to-finish. We welcome fans to test our updates against the competition this evening, as it will not take long for you to figure out where you want to be when the big fights get started.
The following is the official lineup for tonight’s event:
– Marvin Vettori def. Alberto Uda via Submission (guillotine) at 4:30 of Round 1
– Colby Covington def. Max Griffin via TKO (strikes) at 2:28 of Round 3
– Lorenz Larkin def. Neil Magny via TKO (strikes) at 4:08 of Round 1
– Cortney Casey def. Randa Markos via submission (armbar) at 4:34 of Round 1
– Artem Lobov def. Chris Avila via unanimous decision after three rounds
– Raquel Pennington (135.5) vs. Elizabeth Phillips (134)
– Cody Garbrandt (136) vs. Takeya Mizugaki (136)
UFC 202 Main Card (PPV at 10pm ET)
– Tim Means (171) vs. Sabah Homasi (170.5)
= Hyun Gyu Lim (171) vs. Mike Perry (169)
– Rick Story (171) vs. Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone (170)
– Anthony “Rumble” Johnson (205.5) vs. Glover Teixeira (205.5)
– Nate Diaz (170.5) vs. Conor McGregor (168)
Fight day is finally here. Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz have done a great job of giving us many more reasons to tune in to UFC 202 this week. As if their rivalry wasn’t interesting enough, the two burst in to life at the pre-fight press conference this past Wednesday. Bottles of water were thrown and
Fight day is finally here. Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz have done a great job of giving us many more reasons to tune in to UFC 202 this week. As if their rivalry wasn’t interesting enough, the two burst in to life at the pre-fight press conference this past Wednesday. Bottles of water were thrown and fingers were shown during the crazy scene in Las Vegas. UFC president Dana White later insisted both men would face ramifications from the Nevada Athletic Commission. Was it real or fake, does it even matter at this stage?
The era of money fights is truly here, and fronting that green crusade are McGregor and Diaz. It’s funny to think their paths only crossed through chance. Now they’re the most well-known pairing in UFC history. As we look forward to tonight’s big fight, the time for talk is very nearly over, but that didn’t stop Nate Diaz from firing a few last-minute shots.
Nate Diaz’s Army
The popular Stockton brawler spoke during the FOX Sports weigh-ins show, as quoted by MMAFighting.com, to send yet another warning to Conor McGregor. After the Irishman had threatened to take out Nate Diaz and his ‘bitch tits’ crew on stage, the 209 bad boy had the following response:
“Should have brought an army motherf**ker. Should have brought everybody because it’s gonna be down if we see you.”
“I’m going on 13 years in fighting now,” Diaz said. “It feels like what it feels like. I’m gonna go home and relax, chillax. I got my team here. My bro is here. Everybody is always here. But I’ve got a lot of support from people, so it’s all good. I’m just ready to go in there and do my thing. As ready as I can be.”
“It’s what it is,” Diaz said. “We weighed in, we faced off and now it’s time to go, so it’s all good. … I’m expecting a fight. Tune in, we’re gonna get down.”
Tune in tonight
Make sure you stay with us here at LowKickMMA for all the live coverage, breaking stories and results from UFC 202. Here’s the full fight card from Las Vegas:
Event: UFC 202: “Diaz vs. McGregor 2” Date: Sat., Aug. 20, 2016, on pay-per-view (PPV) Location: T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada
UFC 202 PPV Main Event:
170 lbs.: Nate Diaz vs. Conor McGregor
UFC 202 PPV Co-Main Event:
205 lbs.: Anthony Johnson vs. Glover Teixeira
UFC 202 Main Card (10 p.m. ET):
170 lbs.: Donald Cerrone vs. Rick Story 170 lbs.: Hyun Gyu Lim vs. Mike Perry 170 lbs.: Tim Means vs. Sabah Homasi
UFC 202 “Prelims” on FOX Sports 1 (8 p.m. ET):
135 lbs.: Cody Garbrandt vs. Takeya Mizugaki 135 lbs.: Raquel Pennington vs. Elizabeth Phillips 145 lbs.: Chris Avila vs. Artem Lobov 135 lbs.: Randa Markos vs. Cortney Casey
UFC 202 “Prelims” on UFC Fight Pass (6 p.m. ET):
170 lbs.: Neil Magny vs. Lorenz Larkin 170 lbs.: Colby Covington vs. Max Griffin 185 lbs.: Alberto Uda vs. Marvin Vettori
It would appear that Brock Lesnar is no fan of Conor McGregor… When Conor McGregor fired shots at the entire World Wrestling Entertainment roster recently, his intentions were obvious. ‘The Notorious’ was using his powerful social media following and already huge name to get mixed up in more publicity. As they say, any publicity is good publicity,
It would appear that Brock Lesnar is no fan of Conor McGregor…
When Conor McGregor fired shots at the entire World Wrestling Entertainment roster recently, his intentions were obvious. ‘The Notorious’ was using his powerful social media following and already huge name to get mixed up in more publicity. As they say, any publicity is good publicity, and for McGregor it appears to be all good. His threats to the WWE stars were met with a myriad of angry responses, as expected.
Pro wrestling legends Chris Jericho, Ric Flair, John Cena and Kurt Angle were included in the long list of offended WWE employees. The line of people wanted a piece of McGregor continued to grow, much to the delight of the polarizing Irish star. All this and we haven’t even addressed the madness of this UFC 202 fight week.
Brock Lesnar
While we are on the subject of pro wrestlers against fighters, one particular name has cropped up with a history in both fields. WWE superstar and former UFC heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar was asked about McGregor’s recent comments, and his response was explicit and direct.
Here’s the video:
“I take shits bigger than that kid. I know you guys all play fucking video games and you live in this false reality and shit. Listen, I’m 290 fucking pounds, this guy is 145 pounds. If he’s lucky and he’s getting up and eating his Weeties in the morning. He wants to challenge. If Conor McGregor wants to say some shit to me, come here Conor, face-to-face, and say some fucking shit.”
Wow, not your average pro wrestler interview by a long stretch.
BROCK SMASH!
Lesnar’s future in the UFC is pretty much over since he failed two UFC 200 drug tests. Perhaps he might want to concern himself more with the man who really wants to get in his face, Mark Hunt. As far as Conor McGregor in the WWE is concerned, at this point don’t count out any possibility. Money talks and all that.
Ahead of tonight’s UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 pay-per-view and Sunday night’s WWE SummerSlam show, crossover star Brock Lesnar made a bold challenge to the UFC mega-star to do what he has already done and conquer both …
https://youtu.be/MgP26W_Ol8Q
Ahead of tonight’s UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 pay-per-view and Sunday night’s WWE SummerSlam show, crossover star Brock Lesnar made a bold challenge to the UFC mega-star to do what he has already done and conquer both worlds.
Lesnar spoke with radio personality Sam Roberts at the WWE 2K17 event, who asked him if he had interest in meeting McGregor inside a WWE ring. Lesnar, clearly aware of McGregor’s recent comments about himself being “juiced to the eyeballs” during his UFC return last month, had plenty to say.
“I take s–ts bigger than that kid,” said Lesnar during the brief interview, which you can watch above. “I know you guys all play f–king video games and you live this f–king false sense of reality and s–t. I’m two hundred and f–king ninety pounds. This guy is one hundred and forty five pounds, that’s if he’s lucky and gets up and eats his Wheaties.”
Lesnar continued, ultimately issuing a challenge to the Irish MMA champion to put his money where his mouth is and back up his recent statements about “most of the WWE guys being messed up p*ssies.”
“If Conor McGregor wants to say some s–t to me and get his name out there more than he already has, by dropping my name, I got f–king about 10 words for him… come here face to face Conor, and say it to my face. Otherwise, leave me and the f–king WWE out of it became I came to your arena and kicked ass. Now if you want, if you’re so f–king tough, come to our arena and try to kick some ass. Get the f–k out of here.”
Brock Lesnar returns to the squared circle Sunday night against Randy Orton in a match billed as “15 Years in the Making” at the WWE SummerSlam pay-per-view.
Conor McGregor makes his Octagon return against Nate Diaz in an attempt to avenge his lone UFC defeat at tonight’s UFC 202 pay-per-view. Join us here at MMANews.com for live coverage!