Herald on Sunday

Mutual hatred feeds the hype

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The last time Conor McGregor was in a UFC cage, he was merely the biggest star in the history of mixed martial arts.

In the 23 months since, the loquacious Irishman has become exponentia­lly richer and much more famous. With his boxing loss to Floyd Mayweather as the catalyst, McGregor has ascended to a new level of stardom and success outside MMA and outside sports.

Even UFC President Dana White wondered whether McGregor (21-3) would decide to fight on, but he did.

McGregor returns to the octagon at UFC 229 today to fight lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov (26-0) in a Las Vegas arena full of boisterous Irish fans. The pay-per-view show could be the most-watched and most lucrative in the UFC’s history, according to both White and the former two-belt champion at the center of it all.

“I came back for the love of this,” McGregor said. “To come back and shut this man up.”

McGregor’s mere presence sells a fight these days, even when that presence has been limited. The UFC did strikingly little overt promotion of this bout, limiting McGregor’s public appearance­s to a combative news conference in New York and a handful of outings in Vegas — all of which McGregor used to promote his new whiskey venture.

“He can say what he wants,” Nurmagomed­ov said. “When a drunk guy talks, no one listens.”

Yet the fighters’ faces are everywhere this week, their artificial­ly coloured eyes glaring from the official fight posters at bars and clubs across the world. UFC 229 has entered the public consciousn­ess largely because of McGregor’s magnetism, and it seems likely to become the best-selling pay-perview event in the promotion’s history. White is optimistic it will challenge the world’s biggest boxing events in total sales.

The fight’s promotion was mostly done in April, when McGregor attacked a bus containing several fighters in his attempt to fight Nurmagomed­ov, who had confronted one of McGregor’s teammates that week. Their mutual disdain is powerful, as evidenced at their weigh-in yesterday at which McGregor slapped Nurmagomed­ov’s extended fist and then threw a front kick that didn’t land.

McGregor unleashed a vintage stream of insults and invective against the champion all week. Nurmagomed­ov was no less sharp in fewer words, particular­ly when he addressed the pro-Irish crowd at the weigh-in.

“Tomorrow I’m going to smash your boy, guys,” Nurmagomed­ov said. “I’m going to smash your boy.”

But beyond the bombast and spectacle that accompanie­s McGregor everywhere, this matchup is a fascinatin­g chance to re-examine a classic MMA debate: Who wins in a matchup between a top striker and an elite wrestler?

McGregor’s punching power is formidable and unquestion­able, while Nurmagomed­ov might be the best grappler in the game — and neither man excels at the other’s specialty. The stark contrast in strengths makes this matchup tough to predict, even if Nurmagomed­ov is the favourite at the Vegas sports books.

Nurmagomed­ov has shown a recklessne­ss and a willingnes­s to brawl at certain points in his previous fights — and McGregor would love that, particular­ly if the ferocious counterpun­cher gets a chance to end it early before Nurmagomed­ov’s famed conditioni­ng can become a factor. If Nurmagomed­ov can get the fight on the ground or push it into the late rounds, McGregor’s chances seem likely to wither.

Although Nurmagomed­ov has rarely even been tested in his career, he also has no victories over fighters of McGregor’s class. His most accomplish­ed previous opponents were former lightweigh­t champ Rafael dos Anjos, who lost a clear decision to Nurmagomed­ov on the preliminar­y card of a show in Orlando four and a half years ago, and Edson Barboza, who got trounced by Nurmagomed­ov last December.

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