The Citizen (Gauteng)

McGregor mania is back

UFC 257: CALM, MEASURED SUPERSTAR PROMISES TO DISH UP ‘MASTERPIEC­E’

- Abu Dhabi

Conor McGregor promised a “masterpiec­e” when the biggest draw card in mixed martial arts returns to the fray tomorrow against US lightweigh­t Dustin Poirier in the headline event on the UFC 257 card in Abu Dhabi.

“This is the best I have even been, for sure,” said McGregor on Thursday at the pre-fight press conference streamed live from the Etihad Arena. “I’ll show the world what’s what.”

After spending 12 months out of action – but never far from the spotlight – the former double division champion McGregor was back holding court inside the “Fight Island” bio-secure hub, establishe­d last July to help shield MMA athletes from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

While in the past there had been trash talk and fireworks at McGregor press events, this time around what appeared was a more measured man as the 32-year-old Irishman paid tribute to his opponent, predicted a first-round finish, and revealed he hoped to one day be remembered alongside the greats of combat sports.

“All the money, all the belts, all everything, that comes and that goes,” said McGregor. “You know what lives on? Highlights.

“You look at Roy Jones Jnr’s highlights, you look at Mike Tyson’s highlights, you look at Muhammad Ali’s highlights. I want my highlight reel to be like a movie.”

McGregor (22-4) was last seen demolishin­g American welterweig­ht Donald Cerrone (36-15) via a knockout in just 40 seconds at UFC 246 in Las Vegas last January, a feat that made him only the second-ever UFC fighter to score knockouts across three weight divisions (featherwei­ght, lightweigh­t and welterweig­ht).

While only his second fight in four years, it was the type of explosive, all-action performanc­e that has lifted McGregor to the top of the fight game.

The Dublin-born fighter, who once received welfare payments, holds a slew of other records and achievemen­ts in MMA that attest to his continued importance to both the sport and to the UFC.

The 13 seconds needed to lift the featherwei­ght crown from Brazilian Joe Aldo (29-7) in 2013 remains the quickest title win in UFC history, while McGregor went on to lift the lightweigh­t crown from American Eddie Alvarez (30-7) in 2016, before relinquish­ing it due to lack of activity inside the cage.

McGregor has been involved in the UFC’s top three pay-per-view events, with his loss to Russian lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed (29-0) at UFC 229 in 2018 garnering a record 2.4 million buys.

McGregor’s often brash and outspoken style has helped him gather around 39 million social media followers and his crossover appeal – from a sport only in its third decade of existence – has helped him amass a fortune estimated at around $120 million by Forbes magazine.

There have also been a number of scandals that have kept McGregor in the headlines, including conviction­s for, and accusation­s, of assault.

But McGregor’s profession­al successes continue to hinge on what goes on inside the UFC’s caged “octagon” and he returns to fight his way back to the title he relinquish­ed in 2018, after taking a year away from the sport for the birth of his first child and for the Mayweather fight.

“I have so many weapons in my arsenal,” said McGregor. “They’re all fine-tuned. I’m in a phenomenal place and I look forward to getting out and showcasing it, painting my picture and putting on a beautiful performanc­e for all the fans around the world.”

The 32-year-old Poirier (26-6) has fought McGregor once before, losing via first-round knockout in 2014 at featherwei­ght. –

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 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? FACE-OFF. Dustin Poirier (left) and Conor McGregor will meet in a blockbuste­r UFC lightweigh­t clash on UFC Fight Island in the early hours of tomorrow morning.
Picture: Getty Images FACE-OFF. Dustin Poirier (left) and Conor McGregor will meet in a blockbuste­r UFC lightweigh­t clash on UFC Fight Island in the early hours of tomorrow morning.

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