Toronto Star

Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes

- GREG BEACHAM

was cleared from concussion protocol and will face the Buffalo Bills in the AFC championsh­ip game Sunday.

Olympic champion Penny Oleksiak and world backstroke champion Kylie Masse were among six swimmers named early to Canada’s Olympic team.

Conor McGregor returns to the octagon to face Dustin Poirier on Saturday at UFC 257.

Conor McGregor had ambitious plans for 2020. Like most everybody’s big plans last year, they were ruined by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Now safely inside the UFC’s Fight Island bubble, the most popular man in combat sports is getting back to work on accomplish­ing everything he set out to do when he rededicate­d himself to fighting over a year ago.

“I feel like I’m only starting, man,” the 32-year-old McGregor said this week. “Everyone wants to say, ‘Hey, Conor, you’ve done it all! You’re so rich! What are you doing here?’ I want to be here. I want to perform for the fans.”

McGregor (22-4) returns at UFC 257 in Abu Dhabi on Sunday for a rematch with Dustin Poirier, a fellow power puncher with a flair for dramatic finishes. The winner of this pay-perview event airing Saturday night in North America will be one fight away from regaining the lightweigh­t title both men have held in recent years.

UFC 257 is co-headlined by title-contending lightweigh­ts Dan Hooker and Michael Chandler, who is making his UFC debut after a decade in the rival Bellator promotion.

McGregor now struggles to conjure the trash-talking, flamboyant persona that once made him more famous than anything he had yet achieved in the octagon. Now financiall­y secure, McGregor still lives a wild life at times, but it is cushioned by a growing sense of his finite time left in sports and his evaluation of his legacy.

“All the money, all the belts, all that comes and that goes,” McGregor said. “You know what lives on? A fighter’s highlights. Look at Roy Jones Jr.’s highlights, Mike Tyson’s highlights. I still look at them today. Ali’s highlights. I want my highlight reel to be like a movie. That’s what I’m after. I’m looking to get in and perform and put on amazing highlights that I can sit as an old man with my son, and just watch back and just enjoy life.”

When McGregor knocked out veteran welterweig­ht Donald (Cowboy) Cerrone in just 40 seconds last January, he seemed set for a ferocious return to the sport he had largely neglected for the previous three years. McGregor spoke of wanting to fight four times in 2020, culminatin­g in another shot at lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov.

The pandemic understand­ably curtailed those plans, but Nurmagomed­ov’s retirement after beating Justin Gaethje last fall cleared a path to regaining the lightweigh­t belt for McGregor or Poirier. Both men already have lost to Nurmagomed­ov, who has sent mixed signals about his likelihood of reneging on his retirement vow.

Although McGregor and Poirier are both well-versed in the promotiona­l tool of performati­ve verbal sparring, they’ve been model citizens in Abu Dhabi. Both men have been unfailingl­y polite to each other, and McGregor’s company even made a generous donation to Poirier’s charitable foundation.

At their final news conference, Poirier laughed at the paucity of ferocity between the UFC 257 main-event fighters, saying it might seem like “we’re up here giving each other back massages.”

“I know we have this competitiv­e fire, and it’s still there,” McGregor added. “There’s no denying that. We’re going to have a clash, and it’s going to be a good, firework-filled bout, but the respect is admirable for this man from me.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada