Los Angeles Times

Future for McGregor cloudy if he loses Saturday

If the garrulous fighter comes up short, it could cause matchup problems for the UFC.

- By Lance Pugmire

What once was genuine now seems contrived. What used to be endearing has made a turn toward annoying.

Conor McGregor kept the fans who came to his public workout Wednesday waiting for 45 minutes beyond the scheduled start time. McGregor is habitually late for these events, but the payoff is usually some verbal entertainm­ent.

This time, he turned his back to the crowd to conduct a television interview with Fox, returned for a short session of flashing his punching speed and targeted kicks, hyped his new whiskey and spoke for no more than 90 seconds about Saturday’s UFC 229 main event fight against lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov.

“It’s good to be back,” he said after taking a near twoyear-long absence from the octagon to participat­e in, among other things, a boxing loss last year that paid him $100 million against Floyd Mayweather Jr., and an April hand-truck-throwing incident toward a bus occupied by Nurmagomed­ov that confined the boisterous Irishman to a Brooklyn jail for one night.

“Saturday night, I’m going to take his head off,” Mc-

Gregor continued. “Trust me. Devastatin­g KO,” contending Nurmagomed­ov is “too easy to hit, too flatfooted, too predictabl­e. … I always come out of the gate [on] fire. I don’t give a ... about anything — any wrestling, any technique. … I’m coming for that man’s head from the … bell. Trust me on that.”

The words seemed partially pulled from the scripts of his old UFC fights and the Mayweather promotion.

McGregor’s “a very popular fighter. People love him — rightly or wrongly — and they’ll tune in to watch him win or get knocked out,” former UFC middleweig­ht champion and Fox UFC analyst Michael Bisping said. “Either way, it results in payper-view sales, a lot of money, and ultimately he’s winning.

“If he loses, where does he go from there? That’s the question.”

While McGregor (21-3) has struck a six-fight extension with the UFC, he stands as a slight (plus-140) underdog against Nurmagomed­ov. McGregor’s strategy will be to land a power punch on Nurmagomed­ov, expected to seek takedowns of the Irishman and “maul” him, as the new lightweigh­t champion has said.

It’s a compelling draw, one UFC President Dana White said he expects to break the 1.6-million-payper-view record.

Still, a defeat could cause major headaches for White and the UFC.

While he has plenty of possible opponents to summon afterward, all of them would specialize in taking the fight to the canvas like Nurmagomed­ov.

Among the options are a trilogy date with Nate Diaz, a move up in weight against welterweig­ht champion Tyron Woodley, or a meeting with Orange County’s former interim lightweigh­t champion Tony Ferguson.

Defeat exposes fighters, diminishes their drawing power and transforms the rapid-tongued brilliance of McGregor into the ramblings of a man desperate to recapture what has vanished.

Was Wednesday’s appearance a preview of that?.

Bisping says he envisions two endings: an early McGregor knockout victory, or an extended punishment by Nurmagomed­ov, who not only dodged that hand truck that McGregor tried to throw at him but has listened as the Irishman has belittled his father, his Islamic religious beliefs, his political friends and his relationsh­ip with Vladimir Putin without the flinching of other McGregor foes.

“I don’t underestim­ate his striking game,” Nurmagomed­ov said. “He’s very good on timing, power. People have to wait for Saturday night. It’s a very interestin­g fight, stylistica­lly. You have to improve yourself as champion because I’ve noticed a lot of champions … they change with [the acclaim of] a lot of [public] appearance­s and the money. These things can change your skills. You have to be focused.”

 ?? Steve Marcus Associated Press ?? UFC LIGHTWEIGH­T FIGHTER Conor McGregor, right, works on his timing during an open workout Wednesday in Las Vegas. McGregor meets champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov on Saturday night.
Steve Marcus Associated Press UFC LIGHTWEIGH­T FIGHTER Conor McGregor, right, works on his timing during an open workout Wednesday in Las Vegas. McGregor meets champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov on Saturday night.

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