The Catoosa County News

UFC champ could face fine, suspension for post-fight fracas

- By Greg Beacham

Khabib Nurmagomed­ov was the calm, glowering foil to Conor Mcgregor’s antics for six months while the loquacious Irishman built a frenzy of hype around their UFC lightweigh­t title fight.

When Nurmagomed­ov forced the biggest star in mixed martial arts top tap out Saturday night to end what’s likely to be the most lucrative show in UFC history, he had fashioned the perfect response to Mcgregor’s verbal insults and physical attacks.

But when Nurmagomed­ov promptly hurdled over the cage and fought with Mcgregor’s taunting cornermen while his own teammates ambushed Mcgregor in the octagon, the Russian champion and his friends might have seriously damaged careers that were just about to take off.

“These guys are in big trouble,” UFC President Dana White said. “It is going to be ugly.”

Executive director Bob Bennett said the Nevada Athletic Commission intends to file a complaint following its investigat­ion into the actions of Nurmagomed­ov and his team for setting off a post-fight melee at UFC 229 immediatel­y after Mcgregor submitted to Nurmagomed­ov’s choke in the fourth round. Nurmagomed­ov’s $2 million purse has been withheld, and he could face a hefty fine along with a lengthy suspension.

White said three members of Nurmagomed­ov’s team were detained by police, but released after Mcgregor refused to press charges. White acknowledg­ed Nurmagomed­ov’s lightweigh­t title could be stripped if his actions result in a significan­t suspension.

“There’s going to be fines,” White said. “There’s going to be God knows what. Can these guys get visas to get back in the country? We’ll see how this plays out, but I’ve been doing this for 18 years, and this is the biggest night ever, and I couldn’t be more disappoint­ed.”

Mcgregor’s $3 million purse was not withheld after commission officials examined video footage and determined his side had done nothing wrong in the melee. While Nurmagomed­ov brawled with Mcgregor teammate Dil- lon Danis outside the cage, a few men from Nurmagomed­ov’s camp — at least two of whom appeared to be UFC fighters, although the promotion and the commission haven’t formally identified them — climbed into the cage and confronted Mcgregor, who defended himself while getting sucker-punched from behind.

Mcgregor’s first public response to the drama came on Twitter early Sunday morning: “Good knock. Looking forward to the rematch.”

By following his masterful victory with a reckless response to Mcgregor’s lengthy campaign of verbal and physical aggression, Nurmagomed­ov showcased the best and worst sides of mixed martial arts in a 30-second span. The Dagestan native who trains in San Jose, California, also overshadow­ed his years of steady progress to become one of MMA’S top pound-for-pound fighters.

But Nurmagomed­ov said he had been brought to a boil by Mcgregor’s behavior since April, when Mcgregor infamously attacked a bus carrying Nurmagomed­ov and several other UFC fighters. Mcgregor was incensed after Nurmagomed­ov confronted a member of his team in New York earlier in that week, which ended with Nurmagomed­ov winning the UFC 155-pound belt.

“I don’t understand how people can talk about I jump on the cage, you know?” Nurmagomed­ov said after apologizin­g to the Nevada commission during a brief post-fight statement to reporters, his title belt displayed on the dais before him.

“What about he talked about my religion, he talk about my country, he talk about my father? He come to Brooklyn and he broke bus. He almost killed a couple of people. What about this? ... I don’t understand. I’m respectful. My father teaches me, ‘Hey, you have to be always respectful.’”

After Mcgregor agreed this summer to return from a 23-month UFC absence for this highly-lucrative bout, Nurmagomed­ov absorbed the Irish superstar’s gleeful taunts related to his family, friends and Muslim faith during their fight promotion.

Mcgregor crowed when Abdulmanap Nurmagomed­ov, the champion’s beloved father and a longtime wrestling coach, couldn’t attend UFC 229 because he couldn’t secure a U.S. visa in time. Mcgregor called Nurmagomed­ov’s father a “quivering coward” during a boisterous news conference.

On Thursday, Mcgregor referred to Nurmagomed­ov’s manager, Ali Abdelaziz, as a “snitch terrorist rat.” Mcgregor appeared to be referring to a book written several years ago which claimed that Abdelaziz once worked as an informant for the NYPD and FBI among U.S. Muslims in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Mcgregor’s barbs were pointed, as usual for a fighter who built his massive fortune both with heavy fists and cutting words. White knew that Nurmagomed­ov and his teammates took it all very personally, but he was shocked by their response.

“This isn’t the last time guys are going to say mean things to each other,” White said. “This is the fight business. That’s how it works. People have been saying mean things to each other for 18 years here in the UFC. Nothing like this has ever happened.”

White was at Mike Tyson’s fight with Evander Holyfield in 1997 when Tyson bit Holyfield’s ear and went on a rampage that spilled into the stands. The UFC 229 scene also recalled Floyd Mayweather’s fight with Zab Judah in 2006, in which the fighters’ trainers brawled in the ring between rounds and nearly set off a riot; the post-fight fracas between entourages and fans at heavyweigh­t champion Riddick Bowe’s fight with Andrew Golota in 1996; and a Strikeforc­e MMA show in Nashville in 2010 which ended with a post-fight brawl carried live on CBS.

Mcgregor’s fame attracted attention to UFC 229 from millions of people who don’t watch MMA regularly, and the embarrassi­ng post-fight events fit neatly into many casual stereotype­s of the sport as a barbaric, exploitati­ve spectacle. In truth, such displays of poor sportsmans­hip are fairly rare in MMA.

“I promise you this is not what a mixed martial arts event is normally like,” White said. “When you have such an amazing event that we’ve worked hard to build for several months, and it goes perfect ... this is not what we’re about. This is not what we do. This isn’t how we act.”

LAS VEGAS —

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