Texarkana Gazette

Calmer McGregor: Irish star returns vs Cerrone at UFC 246

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LAS VEGAS — Conor McGregor became a two-division UFC champion because he was a tremendous fighter. He became the biggest mixed martial artist in the world only because he talked an even bigger game.

McGregor’s loquacious, pugnacious personalit­y was an enormous factor in his rise to previously unattainab­le heights in this still-young sport. Delivering ridiculous boasts and delectably profane insults with a charming Irish lilt, he needed less than five years to propel himself from low-profile shows in Dublin to UFC dominance and the unpreceden­ted payday of his boxing match with Floyd Mayweather.

But after three rough years inside and outside the cage, McGregor has changed his public approach to his profession for his comeback fight in Las Vegas this week.

He has promoted his meeting with Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone at UFC 246 on Saturday night with compliment­s for his opponent mixed with humble self-effacement. Now a father of two, McGregor (21-4) claims he is calmer and more centered than the rampaging superstar who has had more arrests (at least three) than sporting victories (zero) since 2016.

“Sometimes it’s tough, but I’m very grateful for the position I’m in,” McGregor said. “I’m very grateful for the support I have with the people. If I keep my focus right and my positivity sharp and keep the people who I respect around me, I will overcome all of that.”

The world will soon find out whether McGregor is the same fighter now that his trash talk has been recycled into good vibes.

The Budweiser-drinking, Harley-riding Cerrone (3613) has never been big on verbal competitio­n during his 14-year profession­al MMA career, anyway. He is more interested in standing in the center of the cage and trading shots with McGregor — and the Irish ex-champion says he is eager to play that game.

Cerrone once shared the MMA world’s dismissive­ness of the brash slugger from Ireland — or England, as Cerrone once thought during a memorable exchange five years ago in which the 6-foot-1 Cerrone criticized the 5-foot9 McGregor for moving up to lightweigh­t.

They’re meeting Saturday as welterweig­hts, a full 15 pounds above lightweigh­t. McGregor has long since earned Cerrone’s respect by “doing exactly what he said he was going to do.”

“He grew the sport so well,” Cerrone said. “The dude is a superstar. He brings a lot of eyes, a lot of attention. … He has such an awesome platform. Why not be a good role model? Why not be a good person? It’s the same thing I’ve been preaching the whole time. It’s good to see him taking the right path. I like it.”

McGregor’s fans will soon decide whether they like it as well.

McGregor and Cerrone are the main event and easily the biggest attraction at UFC 246, a rare marquee show in January in the promotion’s hometown. The UFC typically holds its biggest Vegas shows in December and March, but they slipped another event into T-Mobile Arena when McGregor chose this date for his return.

The UFC 246 card’s penultimat­e bout features bantamweig­hts Holly Holm and Raquel Pennington in a rematch of their meeting five years ago. Heavyweigh­t Alexei Oleinik, lightweigh­t Anthony Pettis and blue-chip flyweight prospect Maycee Barber also are on the show.

 ?? AP Photo/John Locher ?? ■ Conor McGregor motions to the crowd during a news conference for a UFC 246 mixed martial arts bout Wednesday in Las Vegas. McGregor is scheduled to fight Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in a welterweig­ht bout today.
AP Photo/John Locher ■ Conor McGregor motions to the crowd during a news conference for a UFC 246 mixed martial arts bout Wednesday in Las Vegas. McGregor is scheduled to fight Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in a welterweig­ht bout today.

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