Zero-Cool wrote: » Well that was ****ing vicious.https://twitter.com/SportsCenter/status/1030657233363890176?s=19
xtal191 wrote: » Delighted he got beat, very unlikable fella
JoeyJJ wrote: » Hard to listen to him for too long. He is smart you know...
MartyMcFly84 wrote: » Its true a lot of younger fighters are following the a following Conor's blue print. Why would they not? They train closely with him and Conor is the only fighter from Ireland to make a real living out of MMA and also be arguably the most recognised sports personality in the world. Its a pretty common thing to do across all walks to life, to follow and try and replicate someone who was successful in that field before you.
JoeyJJ wrote: » McGregor was confident when at his stage, cocky etc. However didn't have a platform like Gallagher has at present. This attitude gets attention however you need to be top 10 guy to get away with it. He isn't yet. McGregor was top of the IRE/UK/EU circuit and his marketing was limited to that so he was fine saying he was going to be this and that.
MartyMcFly84 wrote: » Conor was always cocky. Even when he was 17 and before he had a single MMA fight. Many of the "pro" fights on Irish fighters records from the early days of MMA here were not full pro rules fights . With the old C, B ,A class system many experienced Irish fighters never had amateur fights and their pro fights were really under what is now amateur rules. Alot of what worked for Conor was the mental projection. Dressing and acting like the lifestyle he wants to have . Another way to say it would be "dress for the job you want to have not for the job you have". The more economically prudent would disagree with that, but it worked for Conor so it is natural others following in his path want to emulate the same steps to success.
Granted I think you know Conor personally so you’ll know better than I do, but I seem to remember him being quite open about how skint he was until he made it to the UFC? ‘We don’t have a pot to piss in’ was his famous line on the MMA hour. Driving a banged up old 206 which I think was Dee’s, as he didn’t even have a car. I just feel like the SBG lads equate success in MMA = being able to shop for runners in Brown Thomas. It’s a terrible mentality to have at the beginning of a sporting career. The guys who make it are the guys who want to achieve things in a sporting sense, and I just don’t see that in any of them. Especially Gallagher. From day 1 he was all about the fancy watches and all that sh*te. Take Darren Till for example – he’s not much older than James and he’s said many times he couldn’t care less about the money side of it (for now anyway) and he wants to achieve things in the sport first and foremost.
MartyMcFly84 wrote: » Before Conor no one had made it, and it was true that no one had a pot to piss in. But he started spending big also as soon as he started making big. Personally I would not conduct myself like that, but I am a grown man not a young fella emulating a hero. That said James is paid extremely well for the number of pro fights he has had. Him following Conor's blue print got him that early success and money. If he was quiet and humble he still wouldn't have a pot to piss in.
rob316 wrote: » He even does that stupid slowed down talking Conor does.
dulux99 wrote: » I will say one thing positive about James Gallagher having just watched the Helwani interview - if he does rematch Banderas in December then I'll have a lot of respect for him. I can't see bellator putting them together again, but he'll go up in my estimation if it goes through. Because, Banderas looks a level or two above him to me.
Porthallian wrote: » Can't see that fight being made as it's a lose-lose situation for Bellator if you think about it. Gallagher loses 2 in a row = disaster. Or Gallagher wins and Bandejas hype of beating Gallagher is pretty much gone.