Ultimate Seduction wrote: » Is he not allowed to have friends, and look after the people he grew up with, or does he have to ditch all the "hangers on" soon as he comes in to a bit of money? Criticism for being loyal. Good one
wonderfullife wrote: » I suspect they have good reasons for being afraid of criticizing him because I've often wondered why Tom Egan and, to a lesser extent, Chris Fields went from key members of the inner circle to borderline persona non grata, in Tom's case he's dropped a few hints that he wasn't afraid to give it to Conor straight.
BloodyFunday wrote: » A friend of mine says lately he isnt hanging with his usual pals and hes gone off the rails. Terrible waste
ASOT wrote: » Your friends spoofing, gone off the rails yes but still the same group of lads.
BloodyFunday wrote: » I wouldnt recognise them my self. Its crazy how its spiralling tbf.
sc86 wrote: » how much has jk made from this? bar his book , i would doubt its life change amounts?
LollipopJimmy wrote: » I have to ask why people keep bringing JK into it and expect him to come out publicly and say something? A few points on that, JK is his coach, not his manager, JK is the boss on the mats but it ends there, everywhere else Conor is in charge. Somebody else earlier was also asking why James Kavanagh stayed quiet surrounding the ****** incident? I mean come on, now bringing JK's family into it? JK is, rightly so imo, going to keep his mouth shut on the whole thing.
Paully D wrote: » I think the criticism of John Kavanagh being happy to just sit back and count his money is somewhat unfair. It's worth remembering that John will have lost money hand over fist for years, let fighters stay with him for free, fed them etc, while at the same time having nothing himself. He has also put in the hard work in the gym with Conor over the years and is entitled to whatever is due from that. What do people want him to do? If John washed his hands of him and Conor went further off the rails then you'd have people on here saying he should have stuck by him and not ditched him when the going got tough because of how much he has benefited from Conor. For all we know John could be having a word with him every day of the week only for it to be constantly falling on deaf ears. It wouldn't be the first time when it comes to Conor. I far from agree with everything John does and doesn't do, but he's blameless here IMO.
Paully D wrote: » What do people want him to do? ... For all we know John could be having a word with him every day of the week only for it to be constantly falling on deaf ears. It wouldn't be the first time when it comes to Conor. I far from agree with everything John does and doesn't do, but he's blameless here IMO.
Redmond revealed that McGregor briefly spoke of his respect for both Redmond and Team Ryano head coach, Andy Ryan, during his explosive appearance in the Bellator cage. “After it he said, ‘I respect you, John’ and, ‘I respect you, Andy’, I guess after seeing the thing with Artem in Poland last month it looks like emotions have boiled over a few times for him,” he said.
The Nal wrote: » Where are these pics of McGregor buying coke in Sin?
Ultimate Seduction wrote: » Meltdown?? FfS lads get a grip.
Paully D wrote: » From MMA Fighting:
According to Irish veteran Redmond, McGregor’s behavior overshadowed the fight. He also believes that the UFC lightweight champion’s appearance had an impact on the fight not going into a second round. “We had a good fight in there and I think him jumping into the cage overshadowed the whole fight and the whole event,” Redmond told MMA Fighting. “I don’t want to piss and moan about it. I don’t want anyone taking pity on me or anything like that. I didn’t get the win, but I showed I was in charge of the fight up until that big shot at the end of the round. “I think the fight was far from finished and all the madness that was going on in there didn’t help me getting a chance to go out for the second.” For Redmond, the “circus” that McGregor created in the ring forced the commission to put an end to the fight as quickly as possible. “I think there was a lot of panic in the ring as soon as he got in there. I think everybody was just concerned with getting him out of there as quickly as possible,” Redmond said. “Marc Goddard was going to let the fight go into the second, but then the commission seemed to overrule his decision. I think that decision was swayed because of the circus and madness that was going down at the time. It was just a mad scene. I’ve never seen anything like it.”
wonderfullife wrote: » That's certainly one quote you could pick out of that article but here's a few more...https://www.mmafighting.com/2017/11/12/16640014/john-redmond-says-conor-mcgregor-overshadowed-his-bellator-bout-influenced-stoppage-vs-charlie-ward He's directly accusing Conor of pressuring Marc Goddard and the Commission into stopping the contest and goes on to demand a rematch.
kerrylad1 wrote: » Jesus lads,I never post here.BUT,he is a Young lad,loaded,the best at what he does.He goes off the rails at times,SO WHAT.It is not his fault, he is a supposed (icon).let him live,I did much worse in my 20,s/30,s.We all eventually grow up.Hats off to him.
dulux99 wrote: » He's young and loaded so fair play to him for carrying on like a bully and being a complete prick to everyone within a few yards of him. Cool, gotcha. Actually on second reading, he's not a young lad. He's a 29 year old father and business owner. Hes not a 16 year old who's just been thrown into the limelight out of nowhere.[/quot Sweet Jesus,I'm very old,if 29 isn't young.I must ring the funeral home,and make arrangements.
Tazzimus wrote: » He's not an oul lad but he's old enough to have a bit of cop on, he's only 3 years younger than me and I don't consider myself old. I know I'm not a teenager anymore though.