Los Angeles Times

Holloway will be going for two title belts

Featherwei­ght champ to fill in against Nurmagomed­ov in lightweigh­t fight.

- By Lance Pugmire lance.pugmire@latimes.com Twitter: @latimespug­mire

NEW YORK — Until his crazed reappearan­ce Thursday, two-belt champion Conor McGregor had vanished from the UFC along with his riches.

Enter Max Holloway, the organizati­on’s featherwei­ght champion who will put his 12-fight unbeaten streak on the line in Saturday’s UFC 223 main event against unbeaten Russian Khabib Nurmagomed­ov (25-0).

Holloway is filling in on short notice to replace the injured Tony Ferguson and will attempt to match McGregor’s feat of having two division title belts at the same time.

“Khabib is one of the best in the world and to be the best you have to beat the best,” Holloway (19-3) told reporters.

Refreshing words, especially as they contrast with the turn that Ireland’s McGregor has taken after becoming the UFC’s first simultaneo­us two-belt champion with his stoppage of then-lightweigh­t champion Eddie Alvarez in November 2016 at Madison Square Garden.

McGregor took his lucrative payday of $100 million following the technical knock out boxing loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr. in August and has spent more time making news outside the UFC octagon than inside.

On Thursday, following the UFC media-day event at Barclays Center, McGregor, accompanie­d by his entourage, sought to slam a metal security railing against a bus carrying fighters, including Nurmagomed­ov.

Recent flyweight title challenger Ray Borg said on Twitter that McGregor threw a glass that resulted in a cut atop the head of lightweigh­t fighter Michael Chiesa, who was scheduled to fight on Saturday’s payper-view card.

When McGregor returns now is unknown. UFC president Dana White was left with little choice but to tell Nurmagomed­ov when he signed to originally fight Ferguson earlier this year that Saturday’s bout would be for the full lightweigh­t belt.

Holloway, whose win streak dates to a 2013 loss to McGregor, declared himself recovered from an ankle injury that took him out of his scheduled March 3 title defense against Frankie Edgar, and now the clock ticks to Friday morning’s official weigh-in, with Holloway facing a massive weight cut and Nurmagomed­ov seeking to avoid a repeat of health trouble that stopped him from fighting Ferguson last year during his weight cut.

“I’ve been training and I’m ready,” Holloway said, formally agreeing to the fight just six days before fight night at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center on Easter Sunday. “Khabib is the best, so that’s enough reason to take this fight, but there is no one else like Max Holloway.”

Holloway posted backto-back victories over longreigni­ng featherwei­ght champion Jose Aldo of Brazil, impressive­ly stopping Aldo in the third round in December with superb striking and rapid movement.

“Everyone is talking about me taking this fight on short notice, but so is [Nurmagomed­ov] with me,” Holloway said.

While Nurmagomed­ov will seek to get the lankier Holloway to the canvas, the Russian will face a difficult test when both men are standing.

White seems genuinely enthused, not only by the curiosity of the outcome, but in what — beyond money — prompted Holloway to boldly accept the challenge.

“He’s a stud for taking this fight,” White said.

Because of his size — and with a McGregor return this year now up in the air — Holloway said he will determine after a potential victory about whether to return to featherwei­ght for a title defense against Los Angeles’ No. 1 contender Brian Ortega, or remain a lightweigh­t and press McGregor for a rematch.

First comes Nurmagomed­ov, a gifted wrestler who manhandled then-No. 4-rated lightweigh­t Edson Barboza so thoroughly in December, the judges awarded him scores of 30-25, 30-25, 30-24.

Describing his mood as “relaxed and confident,” Holloway said he was moved to step into the opening because “this is how you become a legend.”

 ?? Kathy Willens Associated Press ?? UFC CHAMPION Max Holloway answers questions ahead of fight with Russian Khabib Nurmagomed­ov.
Kathy Willens Associated Press UFC CHAMPION Max Holloway answers questions ahead of fight with Russian Khabib Nurmagomed­ov.

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