The Nal wrote: » Amazing oversight really. So complacent. Talking about Khabib more than Dustin, talking about Pacquiao at the end of the year.
froog wrote: » i can't see mcgregor ever agreeing to not be the headliner on a card. i can't see him trying to grind a series of wins together either to repair/build a legacy at LW either. the hunger is not there. i'd say there's a good chance we don't see him again. if he really wants to do something meaningful, he needs to switch camps. i mean it's telling that him and his team were saying this is the best version of mcgregor when it was clear to see it wasn't. surrounded by yes men and average coaches. move to america, do everything the coaches tell you and grind it out. but i doubt he has the hunger for that. then again, what else is going to do, whiskey ads for the rest of his life?
RoryMac wrote: » How many fights are left on McGregor's UFC deal? I thought it was 3 a while back before the Cerrone fight which would leave him with 1 now. Might make for very tough negotiations for a new deal if correct
[Deleted User] wrote: » Tough for who? Despite his loss, he's still a huge draw for the company. Are they going to let him walk out the door after the next fight?
RoryMac wrote: » Tough for both parties, there's going to be an element of doubt around how long McGregor can do these massive numbers now the air of invincibility is gone. The losses to Diaz & Khabib could kind of be explained away with the Diaz fight being at WW and Khabib being a special fighter. This ko loss can't be talked away.
pgj2015 wrote: » inactivity? then he trains really hard for the next couple of years,cuts out the partying, maybe becomes a tea.to.tal.er, fighting lesser fighters and beating them convincingly using his old fighting style. he could do it if he wanted.
RoryMac wrote: » How realistic do you think that is to happen?
pgj2015 wrote: » That is up to him. he wont be loving how he is feeling now so it might drive him on to rectify things.
brendanwalsh wrote: » Unfortunately, this is the end of Conor’s career. When he started off, he was young, hungry, desperate and had nothing in life except MMA to give him a future. Every ounce of his energy and being was put into being the champ champ until he finally delivered it. Last night we saw a different man. An old haggard looking Conor. The last few years of inactivity and extra curriculars has taken its toll on his face, his skill set and his body. His heart and hunger is no longer there. The mcgregor in diaz 2 faced adversity and fought through to come on stronger. Last night we saw him crumple and collapse. The sad fact is mcgregor is a one trick pony. He had lightning in a bottle with the rocket left hand, but now the fizz is gone out and the blueprint to beat him is clear. Avoid getting knocked out in the first minute and he’ll tire and you can pounce. His hunger is no longer there. Sleeping in silk sheets and play time with the kids is no way to prepare for a fight to the death. It’s a distraction, it takes your edge off and McGregor has lost his killer instinct. If he really wanted to improve he would leave behind the limitations of SBG and Kavanagh and head west to America and enter a top gym. Iron sharpens iron, and he won’t get any sharper training with copper Roddy and tin kavanagh and the boys from crumbling boxing centre. He wouldn’t be treated as a meal ticket and rather as another fighter to learn and earn respect on the mats, where the coach is in charge and dictates game plan and training. The fact kavanagh didn’t even mention once in between rounds about the calf kick is a damning indictment of his own limitations, and the disservice he is giving to Conor. SBG was found out a long time ago , and Conor flirted with training abroad but has a strange sense of loyalty to them and has never pushed on. Porier is a completely different beast to 7 years ago. Conor is the same one trick pony , but now with inactivity and general bodily abuse to boot. McGregor said he didn’t even feel sad after the loss. A true sign his killer instinct is gone. Too comfortable sleeping in the silk sheets and sitting on the mountain of cash. His time at the top is at last over, but truthfully ended in 2016. Thanks for the memories champ. Rest easy now, you don’t have to suffer anymore.
nullObjects wrote: » Am I crazy for thinking the Diaz fight makes sense at this point? If I was Dana I'd be looking at what can sell. Dustin probably won't want a rematch and the Khabib rematch doesn't make sense at this point. If he puts him against someone new in the division he has to spend marketing money even if it is McGregor but with Diaz he already has the narrative in place to sell it to people
rob316 wrote: » Drop that McGregor fast thing too it's embarrassing. It's supposed to be the ultimate conditioning program and he was blowing hard after the 1st round.
arccosh wrote: » he's tasted too much of the high life to regain the hunger
Calahonda52 wrote: » from his website 2016 Boxing legend Marvin Hagler once said “It’s hard to get out of bed in the morning to go for a run when you’re sleeping in silk sheets”. The sentiment being, of course, that once a fighter is on top of his sport and has made his money, they no longer have the drive or passion to put in the work required to stay there. UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor understands — but doesn’t relate.