Omackeral wrote: » Do you know what MMA is? It's an amalgamation of Boxing, Jiu Jitsu, Karate, Sambo, amateur wrestling among others. Some of these are literally thousands of years old. They're not only sports, they're Olympic sports. Olympians have competed in MMA.
pimpmyhat wrote: » Yes but had two Brazilians been asked in the 1960s /70s I'm sure they would of known of George Best then.
pimpmyhat wrote: » If two Brazilians were to be asked in 2070 did they know of McGregor they probably wouldn't ��
JohnnyFlash wrote: » It’s a sad reflection on society that cage fighting is even counted as a sport. The almost pornographic desire from its fans to see blood spilled, faces kicked, and bones broken. That primal need for violence they cannot control. The unresolved anger issues.
facehugger99 wrote: » Sure plenty of journeymen fighters have went the distance with Mayweather when he was in his prime. I'm given to understand Mcgregor was coughing up a lung with exhaustion after a few rounds and Mayweather didn't have to break sweat - despite the fact he's been chillin' out for a few years eating Cheetos. Like I say, he's hardly a 'sports' star - shouldn't be in the conversation TBH.
pleas advice wrote: » Inspired by another thread here, who do you think would make the list? I'd have Roy Keane at the top, followed by Rory McIlroy and Brian O'Driscoll, who else would make the top 5?
xckjoo wrote: » MMA is huge in Brazil. One of the cornerstones of MMA is Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, which (surprisingly) comes from Brazil. They're very proud of it. You picked poor examples
begbysback wrote: » This means nothing, French fries anyone?
Tombo2001 wrote: » Three most famous by a long distance are (i) McGregor (ii) McIlroy (iii) Eoin Morgan. No-one else comes close to these.
xckjoo wrote: » What?
The Tetrarch wrote: » I had to look up (iii). Never heard of him. McGregor would be infamous. Liam Brady would be well known, more imo than Roy Keane. Sean Kelly would be the most famous Irish sports person.
The Tetrarch wrote: » Sean Kelly would be the most famous Irish sports person.
The Tetrarch wrote: » McGregor is not known for sport. He is known for bad behaviour.
JohnnyFlash wrote: » UFC is popular amongst two main elements - criminals, and relatively young men with anger issues. There’s billions of people on this planet who have never heard of it, never watched one of those boring cage fights, or ever had the displeasure of seeing that gurning moron, McGregor.
Tombo2001 wrote: » No convinced. Big deal in the British Isles, never played in the world cup. Would an average Brazilian know him?
Mysterypunter wrote: » Hakan Sukur? Turkey finished 3rd
begbysback wrote: » French fries originated in Belgium
Omackeral wrote: » I think potentially another way to gauge someone's fame is asking different generations. Would your parents know who someone is, that you know? Would your grandparents? Would a 10 year old? If it goes across generations, it's a good clue. My 8 year old nephew would know who Conor McGregor is. So would my mother. I think my grandmother probably would too. Not many other sports stars would tick all those boxes. My nan and mother would know Mike Tyson but the child wouldn't. The child and myself would know Neymar but my grandmother wouldn't.
Duffy the Vampire Slayer wrote: » In relation to Robbie Keane, back in 2013 and 2014, he was the only Irish sportsperson people in Asia and South America wanted to talk about. Again, we can't judge global fame by what Americans think.