The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Conor’s choices

Defend UFC belt, box again, or Diaz III?

- BY GREG BEACHAM

Conor McGregor was exhausted and hurt by the 10th round, his audacious venture undone by every logical problem with a mixed martial artist entering a profession­al boxing ring for the first time to take on the most accomplish­ed boxer of recent years.

Yet the Irishman lasted longer and fought more competitiv­ely against Floyd Mayweather Jr. than just about anyone expected. McGregor was gracious and analytical afterward, but he was bothered by one aspect of his defeat: Referee Robert Byrd’s seemingly wise decision to stop the bout while McGregor was still on his wobbly legs.

“Let the man put me down,” he said.

Among his many talents, McGregor has a knack for coming up with slogans that would look good both on a T-shirt and a coat of arms.

Even though he didn’t get his wish to taste the canvas, McGregor left the Vegas ring with his honour intact – and he can go just about anywhere he wants from here.

“I’ll see what’s next, but I’m open,” McGregor said. “I love a good fight, and tonight was a damn good fight. I can’t tell you exactly what’s next, but something will be next.”

After hanging in there against Mayweather, McGregor is in an unpreceden­ted position as a huge draw in two combat sports. He could command another hefty boxing paycheque, or he could return to the UFC to defend his two championsh­ip belts as the biggest star in his up-and-coming sport.

McGregor will make no decisions before his upcoming yachting holiday in Ibiza, but he certainly doesn’t seem eager to limit himself to one sport.

“I believe I’ll do it again,” McGregor said of boxing, before immediatel­y adding: “I’m looking forward to kicking something again. I’m also looking forward to grappling. I’m looking forward to getting back in and having a good, solid knock again.”

The UFC wants its biggest star back in the octagon quickly. McGregor has won titles in two weight classes, but he has never defended either belt, and he hasn’t fought at all since last November.

Yet the UFC also just made untold millions from McGregor’s dalliance with boxing while he was under contract. President Dana White realizes McGregor will be impressed by boxing money, and White says he is willing to write a cheque that will keep McGregor in the cage.

“I would rather he did not (box again),” White said. “This is not what he does. He is a mixed martial artist.”

A third meeting with Nate Diaz is an obvious choice for McGregor’s next UFC fight after their two crowd-pleasing brawls in 2016. McGregor immediatel­y mentioned that possibilit­y, but also said he would want that bout at the lightweigh­t limit of 155 pounds, not the 170-pound welterweig­ht mark at which they fought the first two times.

Other possible UFC opponents include the winner of the interim lightweigh­t title fight between Tony Ferguson and Kevin Lee in October. McGregor also has said he would like to fight No. 1 lightweigh­t contender Khabib Nurmagomed­ov in a major UFC event in Russia.

If McGregor wants boxingsize paycheques, a fight with his retired sparring partner, Paulie Malignaggi, seems logical. Other 154-pound boxers would line up for a chance to prove that Mayweather was washed up by clobbering McGregor.

But McGregor’s capable performanc­e will have consequenc­es rippling beyond his own wealth: He likely opened opportunit­ies for other mixed martial artists to cross into boxing.

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