Quote: Nate Diaz ‘Not Just Looking For Conor McGregor’

It’s been almost two years since fans have seen Nate Diaz compete in the octagon when he lost a razor-thin majority decision to archrival Conor McGregor at August 2016’s UFC 202. The younger Diaz brother has stayed on the sidelines since, holding out for the monstrous trilogy fight with McGregor that has been looked at as […]

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It’s been almost two years since fans have seen Nate Diaz compete in the octagon when he lost a razor-thin majority decision to archrival Conor McGregor at August 2016’s UFC 202.

The younger Diaz brother has stayed on the sidelines since, holding out for the monstrous trilogy fight with McGregor that has been looked at as a foregone conclusion ever since ‘The Notorious’ tied the score at one apiece following Diaz’ shocking submission victory in their short-notice first match-up at UFC 196.

He’s remained active on social media in the time since as well, calling out many of the top lightweights on social media to elicit criticism from said fighters that he’s been turning down high-profile bouts at an incredible clip. He’s reportedly been offered opponents like Eddie Alvarez, Tony Ferguson, and even welterweight champion Tyron Woodley, only to turn them down and stay on the bench.

So even though Diaz claims he wants to be active, it seems he’ll only consider a return fight against McGregor, and for a longtime veteran clearly only motivated by the biggest and best payday right now, you can hardly blame him based on that point of view.

However, that’s not succinctly the case according to Diaz’ longtime friend and teammate Jake Shields, who revealed during this week’s edition of The MMA Hour (via MMA Mania) that Diaz is not only looking for McGregor but simply the biggest and most lucrative fight possible:

“He’s not just looking for Conor. He’s looking for a fight that makes sense and that’s going to give him a big payday and a lot of hype.”

There’s little evidence to doubt that any fight involving Diaz’ return would be big business no matter whom he fought, yet the obvious blockbuster is the third fight with McGregor that seemed like it was a stark eventuality but now may be in doubt considering the Irish former champion is awaiting court and perceived to be facing current 155-pound champion Khabib Nurmagomedov if and when he does return.

That would leave precious few opponents who truly move the needle for Diaz, and that count could be even fewer when names he would actually fight are taken into account.

It’s laughable to consider him a welterweight title contender, especially with Rafael dos Anjos facing Colby Covington for the interim welterweight title at UFC 225 and Woodley expected to return from surgery to fight the winner. That makes Woodley vs. Diaz unlikely, although there may not be another bout Diaz is willing to return for.

Shields may claim Diaz isn’t just looking for his last McGregor payday, but who else may he be looking for?

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Dana White Shuts Door On Khabib vs. Conor McGregor In Russia

Earlier today (Mon., April 30, 2018), UFC President Dana White spoke up to TMZ Sports about when the UFC would punish Conor McGregor for his recent Brooklyn bus attack which left him incarcerated and awaiting court on assault charges. McGregor’s pending court date and potential punishment (in addition to any from the UFC, is they […]

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Earlier today (Mon., April 30, 2018), UFC President Dana White spoke up to TMZ Sports about when the UFC would punish Conor McGregor for his recent Brooklyn bus attack which left him incarcerated and awaiting court on assault charges.

McGregor’s pending court date and potential punishment (in addition to any from the UFC, is they do decide to) has the megastar’s fighting future in overall uncertainty, something you probably could have claimed it already was in after his huge payday to box Floyd Mayweather last summer.

The UFC is waiting to see what happens in New York before they decide what to do with McGregor, yet it would seem they’re cooling on punishing him in order to hopefully have his services return before the end of the year.

If and when he does return, there’s a clear megafight between him and current lightweight champ Khabib Nurmagomedov, who was the target of his brutal, violent bus attack a day before winning the title over short-notice replacement Al Iaquinta at UFC 223. The bout could arguably be one of if not the biggest MMA bouts of all-time, and there’ve been whispers from McGregor’s team that ‘The Notorious’ wants it to happen in Khabib’s native Russia a lá “Rocky 4.”

A long-off possibility that would undoubtedly put it among the biggest spectacles in MMA history, there’s still a ton of red tape to pass up for the UFC to make their first trip to Russia, so White isn’t all that bullish on putting on Khabib vs. McGregor outside of the UFC’s home base of Vegas.

They’ll go there one day with Nurmagomedov, he said, but it won’t be with McGregor in tow:

“If you do a fight that big, you’ve got to do it in Vegas,” White said. “Khabib will fight in Russia at some point, but it won’t be that fight.”

At this point, there’s no concrete evidence nor confirmation on when McGregor will return to the octagon – or if he ever will – something that could be causing the UFC to forego the logistical nightmare of booking their biggest fight on foreign soil for the time being.

In theory, McGregor could be facing jail time that significantly hinders his ability to fight this year, but in reality, his sheer amount of money coupled with the fact that the Brooklyn incident, although cringe-worthy and horrifying, was his first arrest in the United States. With the high-priced legal counsel he’s almost definitely already assembled, he should ultimately agree to lesser charges and receive a small punishment in court.

That would open the door to him receiving little to no punishment from the UFC in turn, allowing him to conceivably come back and compete in a monster title bout to end the year.

Just don’t count on it being in Russia.

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Coach Says Conor McGregor Will Fight Khabib In Russia ‘Like Rocky’

The hottest topics in mixed martial arts remain when and against whom former UFC featherweight and lightweight champion Conor McGregor will return. We haven’t heard much if any, concrete evidence about when the outspoken Irish star will indeed come back to the sport that made him if he ever does. What we have seen, however, is a disturbing series […]

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The hottest topics in mixed martial arts remain when and against whom former UFC featherweight and lightweight champion Conor McGregor will return.

We haven’t heard much if any, concrete evidence about when the outspoken Irish star will indeed come back to the sport that made him if he ever does. What we have seen, however, is a disturbing series of outside-the-cage incidents ending with his latest and most serious outburst earlier this month when he threw a metal dolly through a bus containing Khabib Nurmagomedov before UFC 223, landing him in jail overnight with his next court date set for June 14.

So he may or may not return, and it may or may not be put off even longer by his disgusting act that forced three fights off of the Brooklyn, N.Y.-based PPV. If and when he does, a high-profile match-up with current lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov feels like a no-brainer as it would obviously be one of if not the most lucrative fight in MMA history.

According to McGregor’s striking coach Owen Roddy during his interview with the BBC MMA Show (via SportsJoe.ie), the Irish star truly wants to head into hostile territory and face Nurmagomedov on his home soil after training like Rocky Balboa in Siberia:

“Conor’s a mad thing. He’s very funny. He turned around to me and he’s like, ‘There’s talk of me fighting Khabib. I might do it in Russia’.

“And he’s like, ‘You know what we’ll do? We’ll do it like Rocky, we’ll go to Siberia. We’ll train in the snow and I’ll get one of those yokes that you put on your shoulders to get the lats’.”

It may seem like another one of McGregor’s longtime coaches offering some sound bytes to the media about his next conquest, and to some degree, it may be.

Yet Roddy insisted McGregor had his mind made up and was just crazy enough to fight ‘The Eagle’ in Russia:

“He was serious. He was like, ‘Let’s go!’

“I says, ‘I’m not going to Siberia!’

“But that’s it. He could go. Conor does mad things, and that’s what we love him for. There’s not many people who would do that but Conor’s like, ‘I’ll go to Russia and fight you in your back garden just to prove who I am’.”

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Quote: Khabib Hasn’t Finished Many Fights Lately

There’s no doubt a Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Conor McGregor title fight would be the biggest MMA fight of 2018 – and perhaps of all-time. Now that UFC lightweight champion Nurmagomedov has the belt many had predicted he would win since he was signed by the UFC and debuted in 2012, ‘The Eagle’ is now the […]

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There’s no doubt a Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Conor McGregor title fight would be the biggest MMA fight of 2018 – and perhaps of all-time.

Now that UFC lightweight champion Nurmagomedov has the belt many had predicted he would win since he was signed by the UFC and debuted in 2012, ‘The Eagle’ is now the marked man in the talented 155-pound fray after McGregor spent a year-and-a-half as champion without seriously entertaining defending the belt.

Khabib has promised to do the opposite of that, but with his holy month of Ramadan coming up, he’s still aiming for a November or December return. When he does step back into the octagon, there’s no bigger or better fight for him than to face “The Notorious” provided the infamous Irish former champ is willing to agree to it, and that fact was only amplified into the stratosphere after McGregor’s shocking Brooklyn bus attack for which he’ll next appear in court on June 14.

So with Nurmagomedov vs. McGregor the hottest prospective match-up in the UFC right now, both sides have begun to weigh-in on the dream bout. That includes McGregor’s longtime striking coach Owen Roddy, who recently told The BBC MMA Show (via Bloody Elbow) that they weren’t impressed with Nurmagomedov’s recent track record of mostly decision wins:

“At the end of the day, Khabib hasn’t finished many fights lately. Now he always says he does that on purpose, but I don’t think so. If you’re going to go in and finish somebody, you go in and finish somebody. He says, ‘I like punish people for five rounds’, I always say, ‘If you’re going to give Conor McGregor five attempts to land a shot on you..’.

“So even if he went in and didn’t land the first round, or the second, or the third, or the fourth, he still has five attempts to land one shot. I’ve seen Conor McGregor go in and land within the first thirty seconds of the first round.”

While it’s true Khabib has finished two of his last four bouts, he has also won his last two fights by decision and five of his last seven. In Roddy’s mind, that’s made him a less-than-deserving (or dangerous) champion, but the same thing was often said about dominant former welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre during his decision-filled, late-career run.

From that point of view, it may appear he isn’t the most prolific finisher at 155 pounds, and he’s never been known for his knockout power or striking overall, really. What he is known best for is grinding his opponents into the mat using his peerless, dominant wrestling prowess, something that’s obviously helped him amass an unheard-of 25-0 record in arguably the toughest division in all of MMA.

He may not make it five full rounds with McGregor if he chooses to strike with him – that much is true – but can McGregor last five full rounds defending takedowns and getting back up from the inevitable attempts that are successful after gassing in fights where his grappling was put to the test?

As Dana White says, we’ll see what happens.

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Graphic Images: Tony Ferguson Has Staples Removed In Disgusting Video

Former interim UFC lightweight champion Tony Ferguson is currently recovering from a torn LCL suffered tripping over a cable the week before UFC 223, and he’s not shy about chronicling the road to his comeback. Ferguson has stayed incredibly active on social media in the weeks after UFC 223, mainly engaging in a bitter feud […]

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Former interim UFC lightweight champion Tony Ferguson is currently recovering from a torn LCL suffered tripping over a cable the week before UFC 223, and he’s not shy about chronicling the road to his comeback.

Ferguson has stayed incredibly active on social media in the weeks after UFC 223, mainly engaging in a bitter feud with Al Iaquinta, the man who replaced him against Khabib Nurmagomedov. But he’s also used social media to post the steps of his recovery, and last night he posted an especially gruesome one.

Ferguson posted the following video of him getting his staples removed from his still-swollen knee. Check it out right here, and be warned:

Surgery for a torn LCL like Ferguson had usually require a recovery time of 3-9 months, although “El Cucuy” claims his doctor told him he’s been healing like comic book superhero Wolverine.

In the meantime, he’ll try to stay relevant by stirring up beef on Twitter, and from the looks of things, grossing MMA fans out.

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Al Iaquinta Sounds Off On ‘Weird’ Tony Ferguson Amidst Twitter Beef

UFC lightweights Tony Ferguson and Al Iaquinta have jumped headfirst into a raging online battle in the weeks after UFC 223. The Long Island-based Iaquinta replaced Ferguson to battle Khabib Nurmagomedov in the main event of the chaotic April 7 card, fighting valiantly but ultimately being dominated by a pair of 50-43 scorecards in a […]

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UFC lightweights Tony Ferguson and Al Iaquinta have jumped headfirst into a raging online battle in the weeks after UFC 223.

The Long Island-based Iaquinta replaced Ferguson to battle Khabib Nurmagomedov in the main event of the chaotic April 7 card, fighting valiantly but ultimately being dominated by a pair of 50-43 scorecards in a lopsided unanimous decision.

The MMA world has largely given credit to Iaquinta, who was originally scheduled to meet Paul Felder at the event, for stepping up on 24 hours notice to face arguably the most dominant lightweight in the world. But former interim champion Ferguson, who’s recovering from the knee surgery that forced him out of his fourth scheduled fight with Khabib, isn’t among those supporters.

Instead, he’s taken to social media to call out Khabib for beating a “real estate agent, non-full-time fighter ranked number 11” for the title, which predictably prompted the outspoken, opinionated Iaquinta to respond on Twitter. Now, however, “Ragin’” Al has taken things to a new forum, going off on Ferguson in a spot with Submission Radio via Bloody Elbow. Iaquinta believes the way Ferguson was forced out of the biggest fight of his career was ridiculous, and thus his ‘weird’ rival shouldn’t be talking any trash from the sidelines:

“You’re a f—king idiot. If that happened to me, if I had to pull out of a title fight because I tripped over a wire, you’re not hearing me talk shit on twitter at all. I’m gonna hide somewhere, I’m not gonna act tough. He’s acting tough,” he continued. “Right now, a middle school kid could kick the shit out of him right now because he can’t do anything. You can’t talk shit when you’re in the state that you’re in.

“That guy is so weird. He’s so weird, he just doesn’t — who cares about that guy? He’s really just good at fighting and that’s it. If it wasn’t for fighting he’d be like a worthless person.”

There’s no doubt that Ferguson had become a polarizing personality during his impressive 10-fight win streak, often rubbing people the wrong way or even outright confusing them with his strangely-capitalized online posts and cryptic statements that were often tough to decipher.

But even though he won the interim title by stopping Kevin Lee last October, it hasn’t translated to mainstream success in any shape or form, and Iaquinta put that on his unique personality, twisting the knife by saying the only reason people even watch him is to see him get beat up and then somehow come back:

“There’s no point to Tony Ferguson besides, honestly, really like, people beating his ass. He gets dropped every fight and he’s out of his mind. People like watching get his ass kicked and come back and win. That’s the only thing that Tony Ferguson is good at in the world. No one likes his personality, he’s a weird dude.

“I don’t even know, what’s the point in that guy? There’s no point. Just go away. You tripped on a wire and I got the title shot, now you’re gonna come at me? I’ve fought with worse injuries than that, guaranteed, in my career. You get to fight week, you’re fighting. You don’t pull out of a fight during fight week. Don’t come after me cause I took advantage of a situation that he couldn’t capitalise on.

“How many fights in a row has he won? 10 fights? And he still hasn’t fought for a title? Like, there’s a reason for that. No one likes you. Go away.”

As far as their online trash talk battle is concerned, Iaquinta is sick of Ferguson’s supposedly two-faced congratulations followed by trash talk, and he’s also sick of him capitalizing every word in his posts:

“I really have no idea what the f—k the guy’s talking about at all. He says he was rooting for me and then he goes and says that. I don’t know. The guy’s weird. He’s making fun of my grammar and then he capitalizes letters and every letter. The first letter of every word is capitalized and he’s making fun – I put ‘your’ instead of ‘you’re.’ Same shit, it’s f—king twitter, shut up, who cares. That guy is just annoying.”

It may seem Ferguson is trying to keep himself relevant while injured by talking continued trash online, and in today’s social media-driven, fast-paced MMA world, that isn’t the worst idea given he’s facing what could be a lengthy recovery.

A big part of that is to apparently criticize and clap back at all of the parties involved at UFC 223, but Iaquinta put that in a brutally honest perspective by continuing to note that Ferguson was forced out of a big fight and has no room to talk until he can return to the cage:

“He really needs to go away until he can fight, and then once you fight, just fight, dude. Everyone likes you fighting. Not a single person likes that guy. Everyone on Twitter, everyone that I talk to is like, just shut up, man. You know, everyone was looking forward to that fight. He disappointed so many people, and I come in, you know, save the day. Don’t freaking say shit about me, bro.

He’s been dropped in every fight. I drop someone, I kill them, I put them out. It’s a different style match-up than me and Khabib, and I didn’t train right for that fight. And especially right now, I could beat the shit out of Tony Ferguson with my pinky finger. The guy can’t even walk. You can’t talk shit right now.”

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