Conor McGregor now has the world at his mercy following UFC 202 victory

By Justin Faux / Expert

In one of the great UFC main events of all-time, a bloodied, beaten, and exhausted Conor McGregor fought tooth-and-nail with Nate Diaz for 25 minutes on Sunday.

The bout, which headlined UFC 202 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, almost slipped through McGregor’s fingers.

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The 28-year-old dominated the first two rounds, chopping his bigger opponent down to size with a series of low kicks, and dropping Diaz three times with punches during the first ten minutes.

Reminiscent of the first bout between these two at UFC 196 in March, the John Kavanagh-trained fighter took an early lead but began to wither as the fight reached the later rounds.

By the close of the third round, the quick-on-his-feet Irishman had turned into a heavily-tattooed punching bag, eating a steady diet of punches and elbows from the Stockton, California poster boy.

In the first fight, which only lasted nine minutes and change, McGregor gave in to his exhaustion, surrendering the fight in the second round.

History looked like it was about to repeat itself when McGregor slumped on his stool between the third and fourth frames. His trainer gave directions, but McGregor sat unresponsive with his mouth wide open, huffing and puffing.

Staring down the barrel of a second-straight loss to Diaz, ‘The Notorious’ McGregor found his second wind, outstriking his bloodied and battered adversary in the fourth.

That delayed surge in energy ultimately gave McGregor the win, although not without controversy. The fight was ruled as a majority decision for the Dubliner, with two of the three judges awarding him the victory, while another scored the bout a draw.

Whether you felt he was the rightful winner or not, McGregor’s performance was first-rate. His highlight-reel will always show a loop of crippling knockouts but make no mistake, this UFC 202 performance is his career high point.

When the chips were down, the hard-hitting southpaw found another gear and valiantly fought on at a time when it would’ve been much easier to quit.

Moreover, McGregor even called for a trilogy fight with his tough-as-nails rival on Sunday. “Surprise, surprise, the king is back,” he said in the cage after the fight. “If you want this trilogy, it’s on my terms. I came up to 170 (pounds), now you’ll come back to 155 and we’ll finish what we’ve started.”

The first fight between these two was one of the two highest grossing mixed martial arts events in history, and early estimates for the rematch suggest it will sell over a million pay-per-view units also.

The problem with scheduling the third McGregor-Diaz clash for the tail-end of 2016 is that the sharp-tongued fighter currently holds featherweight gold, a title he won before skipping town to chase bigger opponents.

As it stands, the 145-pound division has been handcuffed since last December. Even though the weight class has crowned an interim champion in Jose Aldo, it has largely been stuck in a holding pattern since McGregor’s exit.

That’s a problem UFC president Dana White plans to address, telling ESPN that McGregor could be stripped of his title if he doesn’t return to featherweight to unify both titles with Aldo.

“Conor has to defend his title,” he said. “Or make a decision to give it up.”

McGregor, on the other hand, doesn’t have the same level of urgency to return to the division he once – albeit briefly – lorded over.

“I don’t think they want to strip the belt,” he suggested at the post-fight press conference “If they want to give my belt to the guy I KO’d in 13 seconds, how can they?”

The Irishman has a point, but he received his chance at redemption after an embarrassing loss, and now the Brazilian should be afforded the same opportunity.

The third Diaz fight will be waiting for McGregor when he returns to lightweight, especially since the 209 native claims he “won’t be doing s***” until he gets a third crack at the pay-per-view king.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-23T09:42:02+00:00

Alex Wood

Roar Guru


Out of curiosity what was #1? On McGregor and greatness: I think he will be defined by what he learned from these two fights - does he learn that cardio is a weakness and continue to work on it, or accept that having beaten Diaz he's got enough? And does he build up an obvious grappling weakness or follow the Cro-Cop-Lidell protocol and rely on his ability to stay standing? The answer to those two questions will define Connor's legacy.

2016-08-23T09:39:44+00:00

Alex Wood

Roar Guru


Interesting. I scored 48-47 Diaz with no 10-8 rounds and Diaz getting the second. That said, if I scored the fight as a whole rather than rounds McGregor did more damage, and scored more knock-downs so I'd give it to him... Either way, a great headliner to a card with some of the more spectacular highlight reel finishes we've seen in a while. Thanks for the article.

2016-08-22T21:27:24+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


I don't see any reason for conor to go back and defend his featherweight title. He has nothing left to lose there. I don't feel there's anyone at 145 who can beat him. And he hates the cut. It's brutal for him. He will be much more comfortable at light weight. He has no future in welterweight. I think a third fight with Diaz can be put on the back burner for a bit. There is some serious competition at 155. It'll be really harsh on the others if conor waltzes in and gets a title shot. I want to see him fight Khabib and then Alvarez for the title. Win or lose he then fights Diaz either for the title or just to stay up there in the rankings. Interesting times ahead in the ufc.

2016-08-22T11:24:57+00:00

Gavin

Guest


He will defend his belt if the weight cut isnt too much for him. It gets harder as you get older and reports suggest he was finding it extremely tough. Dana has pretty much said the rematch wont be the next fight and i think alvarez will be next with the money in the bank. Conor is right though, stripping him of his title if he doesnt defend it does weaken it but if he doesnt defend it now, i dont see him going back

AUTHOR

2016-08-22T06:28:43+00:00

Justin Faux

Expert


I can see how you could've come to that conclusion Steve. He was the most audacious fighter in UFC history, talking up a storm and knocking guys out, then at the first sign of danger he withered. It's the same reason that a segment of the fight watching community has left the Ronda Rousey Fan Club. It becomes challenging to support someone who, in defeat, disrespected her opponent and has done her best to silence the whispers of a comeback fight ever since. McGregor earned all his respect back (and then some) in one night, maybe Rousey can too someday.

AUTHOR

2016-08-22T06:18:42+00:00

Justin Faux

Expert


Co-sign on the fight, easily the second best prize fight I've seen all year. I think you touched on the big point there, there's no mistaking that McGregor can overcome adversity. There's a thin line that separates the really good from the great, and I think the Irishman crossed it at UFC 202.

AUTHOR

2016-08-22T06:13:38+00:00

Justin Faux

Expert


I scored the fight a 47-47 draw. Round one: clearly McGregor Round two: McGregor, but closer given Diaz' late flurry Round three: Dominant round for Diaz Round four: Clearly McGregor Round five: Clearly Diaz.

2016-08-22T04:17:11+00:00

Steve Kerr

Roar Rookie


I liked Conor at first, then got sick of his antics, and I really thought Diaz was going to show him up again. He's got me eating my words now- like Jimmy says above, the guy has the heart of a lion. Very impressive comeback.

2016-08-21T23:38:22+00:00

jimmy

Guest


Amazing fight...Lived up to the hype. I didn't think Conor had it in him, but his ability to come back in the fourth was just remarkable. And his patience not to go for the kill in the early rounds should be applauded. Diaz looked massive compared to McGregor. The size difference was something you rarely see these days...all the more reason Conor's win was so impressive. Especially impressed with his ability to stop the take-downs from Diaz. In your last article Justin, you mentioned Diaz's inability to take guys down, and the fact that he couldn't bring an exhausted Conor down to the mat, was telling. "Whether you felt he was the rightful winner or not"...I had Conor winning rounds 1, 2 and 4, so in my mind, the decision was a justifiable one, although I think it was an incredibly close fight. Whatever McGregor does next, I won't doubt him after this...I'd wondered if his wins against Mendes and Aldo were a little lucky, but no more...the guy has the heart of a lion. Great fight.

2016-08-21T23:05:48+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Good article. How did you score it? I thought it was very close, bc of the late trip/flip by Diaz, but the effectiveness of Conor's strikes gave him the edge. He's better at a lower weight, though.

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