Cape Times

McGregor has a taste for money

-

LAS VEGAS: Described as the fight the fans asked for by the executives who made it happen, Saturday’s clash between Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor was only ever about one thing ... money.

Having beaten the Irish pretender with a 10th-round technical knockout, Mayweather can retire with a perfect 50-0 record and a payday said to be worth up to 300 million dollars, and the American has promised never to return to the ring.

McGregor, however, is a different story.

His 30-million-dollar purse for the fight is 10 times his previous best disclosed purse from the Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip (UFC), where, as he says, he endures “shinbones to the head” as he makes his living.

In the altogether more genteel surroundin­gs of the boxing ring, he made a lot more money with a lot less damage, and his appetite has surely been whetted by the enormous riches on offer.

Mayweather was adamant that no amount of money would tempt him back into the ring once more.

“Rocky Marciano is a legend and I look forward to going into the Hall of Fame one day,” Mayweather said in a post-fight interview. “This was my last fight tonight. For sure. “I didn’t have to come back. “We do foolish things sometimes but I am not a damn fool. If I see an opportunit­y to make $300 million in 36 minutes why not. I had to do.

“But this is the last one, you have my word on it.”

But McGregor has made no secret of his desire for more.

Asked what he liked most about his boxing experience, “Money” Mayweather prompted UFC lightweigh­t champion McGregor to say the cash.

“The cheque is alright. The cheque is not bad,” the Irishman laughed as he sipped his own “Notorius”-brand whiskey on the podium of the postfight media conference.

“I’ve already been raising the MMA (mixed martial arts) cheques. I’m still going to be raising the MMA cheques when I go back there,” he added.

The 29-year-old has started his own website, a clothing line and a number of other businesses, and he was clearly delighted to see the logo of his latest venture, McGregor Sports and Entertainm­ent, in the ring at Saturday’s fight.

The value of his brand, however, stems from what he does in the ring or the octagon and the brash personalit­y he displays as he goes about his sporting business.

UFC president Dana White is keen for McGregor’s boxing experiment to end sooner rather than later, and said that he was in a position to offer McGregor similar riches for mixed martial arts bouts.

“If our fights do what the (pay-per-view) buys did here tonight, and the gate, we’ll all be good, trust me. Nobody will be bitching about anything,” White told reporters.

“It takes two very special people in the right place at the right time to do the freakish kind of numbers and the watercoole­r talk that these guys had. You’ve got to have the right people in the right place at the right time.”

With Mayweather, holder of a handful of the biggest pay-per-view sales of all time, vacating the stage at the age of 40, there is an opening for McGregor to move in and take over as the biggest draw in combat sports.

The problem is that there are few prospectiv­e opponents for him in either boxing or MMA who can generate that kind of interest.

A bitter training-camp row between McGregor and boxer Paulie Malignaggi might provide the kind of intrigue that would get fans to part with their money to see them face each other in the ring, but McGregor is most likely to return to the octagon to fight Nate Diaz.

Diaz gave McGregor his first UFC defeat in a 170pound matchup in 2016, which McGregor avenged months later with an epic five-round decision victory at the T-Mobile Arena, before going on to win the organisati­on’s lightweigh­t title. With the teak-tough California­n more than a match for McGregor in terms of trash talk, a trilogy fight to bring that rivalry to a close is about the only thing that would make sense – and the required amount of dollars – for McGregor at this point.

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? FEELING LIKE A MILLION BUCKS AND MORE: Floyd Mayweather climbs the ring ropes to celebrate his win against Conor McGregor in Las Vegas
Picture: EPA FEELING LIKE A MILLION BUCKS AND MORE: Floyd Mayweather climbs the ring ropes to celebrate his win against Conor McGregor in Las Vegas

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa