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Thread: McGregor vs. Mayweather, August 26

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  1. #1
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    McGregor vs. Mayweather, August 26

    First off, anything could happen, but IMO Mayweather is going to smoke McGregor. This will be a pure boxing match under strictly enforced boxing rules. There is nothing McGregor can do in this match that Mayweather hasn't already seen. I predict that Mayweather will win easily. I hope that McGregor surprises, but I highly doubt it. The potential is for a very boring, one-sided match in Mayweather's favor. And I say this as someone who likes Conor McGregor and strongly dislikes Floyd Mayweather.

    This match is the equivalent of Mayweather going into a fight under strictly MMA rules. In such a case, McGregor would make short work of Mayweather. But under strict boxing rules, Mayweather is king of the match. McGregor has some boxing background, but has never had a pro boxing match in his life. Yes, he's bigger, stronger and a harder puncher than Mayweather. So were many of Mayweather's other opponents, who WERE world class pro boxers.

    Last edited by Jimbo; 06-19-2017 at 08:14 AM.

  2. #2
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    I'm not venturing a call yet

    I'm just excited to see Boxing pull together a megamatch like this.

    FLOYD MAYWEATHER VS CONOR MCGREGOR: COULD AUGUST 26 LAS VEGAS SUPERFIGHT MAKE $600 MILLION?
    BY TEDDY CUTLER ON 6/15/17 AT 9:26 AM
    Floyd Mayweather v Conor McGregor Fight Confirmed For August 26

    It’s a contest between boxing’s pay-per-view king and the highest-grossing UFC star in history.

    If ever a fight were a certainty to draw money, it would be Floyd Mayweather’s super-bout against Conor McGregor scheduled for August 26 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    The contest, which will be fought under boxing rules over 12 three-minute rounds, brings together two of combat sports’ brashest talkers and slickest practitioners with the added lure of the “Sport of Kings” against its brash young cousin.

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    Forbes has predicted that the bout, which will take place at the T-Mobile Arena, could draw between 5.3 and 5.5 million pay-per-view buys.

    That would comfortably shatter the previous record for a boxing pay-per-view bout held by Mayweather against Manny Pacquiao on May 2, 2015.

    That fight ended up generating more than $400 million in ppv revenue, in addition to a live gate of $72,198,500.

    Mayweather features in the top three highest-grossing cards of all time. His fight against Saul Alvarez generated 2.2 million ppv buys and $150 million in revenue, according to ESPN. Mayweather’s victory over Oscar De La Hoya from May 2007 held the previous all-time record with 2.4 million buys and around $136 million in revenue.

    The T-Mobile Arena seats 20,000 for boxing and MMA events. With high demand and low availability, it’s not hard to see prices for individual seats climbing into the thousands of dollars. Combine that with the fact that Mayweather vs Pacquiao cost $99 to watch on ppv in the U.S.—this will likely not be set any lower—and it’s possible that the event could gross more than $600 million at the top end of expectations.

    All of which is good news for the two men and their entourages. It remains to be seen whether the action can match the hype, and the money.
    Gene Ching
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  3. #3
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    I was initially mildly interested in this...

    ...now I'm getting mildly disgusted.

    FLOYD MAYWEATHER AND CONOR MCGREGOR’S MONEY FIGHT TOUR IS AN UNNECESSARY DISPLAY OF TOXIC MASCULINITY
    BY CHRIS RIOTTA ON 7/18/17 AT 8:10 PM

    Irish mixed martial artist Conor McGregor will take on eleven-time undefeated boxing champion Floyd Mayweather this summer in one of the most mismatched—albeit predictable—fights in history.

    Unless the world is turned on its head, the showdown between both stars will play out like a typical rollercoaster ride: hours and hours of standing in line, anxiously waiting for the big moment to arrive, followed by 20 to 30 seconds of adrenaline-pumping action before a hard and fast stop completes the entire experience.

    The fight, scheduled for August 26, could be one of the most viewed (and expensive) boxing matches in recent years, trailing behind Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao’s underwhelming "fight of the century" in 2015. But, in essence, it’s a total nothing burger. Save for the fact that Mayweather came out of retirement to bring his total victories to 50-0, and that McGregor is an MMA fighter entering the boxing ring instead of his normal octagon, the outcome will likely be no more thrilling than it is expected.


    Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor holding a televised press conference in London, Britain, July 14, 2017.
    REUTERS

    So, in an attempt to hype up fans who will fork over $89.95 or more for Showtime’s pay per view experience, the two fighters have turned to hurling insults at each other riddled with racial undertones and offensive language during a four-day world tour. The unnecessary charade and name-calling does a disservice to the sport and industry behind boxing, and continues promoting the toxic masculinity that has spurred a continued rise in hate crimes against virtually all marginalized communities.

    Whether McGregor knows it or not, his statements about Mayweather and black bodies in general fanned the flames of racism that have plagued professional sporting events since their inceptions. He’s railed on Mayweather for being illiterate during their nightly onstage shouting matches, suggested his appearance lacks that of a "real man" and yelled at him to "dance for me, boy"—a belittling phrase white men have used to demean black men for centuries.

    In a now-viral interview along the red carpet for the world tour, McGregor described black boxers as “dancing monkeys” in a scene from the third film in the Rocky series. His father has since had to come out in defense of the Irish fighter, promising he isn’t racist and that the upcoming match has nothing to do with skin color.



    "Race is a factor in all aspects of our lives," ESPN analyst Domonique Foxworth said Thursday. "It’s a factor particularly apparent in boxing because they always traffic in that. In this particular case, I think Floyd has made a lot of money by playing up or playing into the historic black trope of 'the black brute.' He’s played that up, and people hate that and get angry, and they want to see him put in his place.

    "There is no one more perfect to combat that in this day in age than Conor McGregor," Foxworth continued. "A lot of poor white citizens in America have been angry for many years for what they feel to be is this society turning against them. Conor has embodied that and become that, and is an awful lot like our president in that he is moving from one arena that he’s been very successful to an arena that he has not had very much success, and he’s talking very brass and offending people, hoping to have success."

    Mayweather is also guilty of pushing the lines for what could be considered appropriate to say during a televised event, calling McGregor a "***got" during one of their heated exchanges. That term has been used by countless attackers as they beat and kill LGBTQI citizens. It’s a loaded phrase that has become even more problematic as the rate of trans folks’ murders have surged in 2016, with figures on their way to breaking records in 2017.

    It doesn’t matter if McGregor isn’t actually a racist, or whether Mayweather truly has respect for the queer community or not. What does, however, is that both men are wholly aware of the attention their words will receive. In fact, that’s exactly why they’ve said what they have: By calling each other derogatory nicknames and in creating such controversies, the fighters are playing into universal themes of racism, oppression and hatred. The two celebrities are knowingly exploiting the current polarization amongst intercultural communities in an effort to maximize the profits both will receive the night of their match.

    If McGregor and Mayweather’s antics are the new normal in promotional boxing tours, what will young fighters of all creeds have to look up to? As long as this type of rhetoric continues in boxing and professional sports, high-profile events like the one arriving in late-August will only continue to become more divisive, damaging and dirty.
    Gene Ching
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  4. #4
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    Floyd is the real racist.


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    I know it goes against the norm but my gut says McGregor will take this... you heard it here first.
    Quote Originally Posted by lkfmdc View Post
    point sparring is a great way to train

  6. #6
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    Bruce Lee vs. Wong Jack Man = Mayweather vs. McGregor?

    I don't really agree with this but it's postable on the Birth of the Dragon and McGregor vs. Mayweather, August 26 threads.


    #BirthOfTheDragon
    Birth Of The Dragon: How Bruce Lee And Wong Jack Man Were The Original Mayweather Vs. McGregor
    August 16, 2017 at 10:11AM
    By Carlos Rosario Gonzalez, writer at CREATORS.CO
    This Earth's Sorcerer Supreme and collector of all six Infinity Stones. I'm currently stuck in the Matrix and can't get out. I also write.

    The biggest sporting event of the year will come to fruition on August 26 when two of the world's greatest fighters face each other for the first time. Mayweather vs. McGregor not only pits the respective undefeated boxing phenom against the current UFC Lightweight champion, it clashes the venerated world of professional boxing with the rising global sport of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA).

    Today, MMA has merited the designation of sport that is growing in popularity and respect. Martial arts as a whole has revitalized itself in entertainment, from movies and television shows to video games. More and more old-school fighting video games are making a comeback—Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite is arguably one of the most anticipated fighting games of the year, for example. In Hollywood, plenty of young actors and stunt people are making a name for themselves with a repertoire of martial arts skills on their resume, and as a result, the stunt choreography and fight sequences in movies and TV shows are getting better and better. Just look at the praise garnered for martial arts-heavy shows like Netflix's Daredevil and AMC's Into the Badlands.

    But MMA's story of evolving from a combination of boxing and other fighting disciplines and becoming a worldwide sensation isn't new. In 1964 Bruce Lee and his new take on Wing Chun transfixed the West Coast of the United States. It was also in that year that Lee’s new approach on Chinese martial arts clashed with the Kung Fu of the past, when Wushu master Wong Jack Man faced Lee in a duel. When two of the world’s greatest Kung Fu masters faced each other for the first time in that fight over 50 years ago, it revolutionized Kung Fu for the masses.

    No one really knows how the fight went down, but we’ll finally see a glimpse of the legend in the movie Birth of the Dragon. If we look at that legendary fight, we can draw some parallels to the upcoming one, and how the history of fighting has influenced both.

    Bruce Lee And Conor McGregor

    Bruce Lee gave rise to what we know today as Mixed Martial Arts. His take on Kung Fu was unique and vastly different from what early masters of the art were teaching their students. Eventually, Lee’s fighting style evolved into his own discipline, Jeet Kune Do; it's when it made its way into movies that the discipline became famous.

    But before Lee became the Hollywood legend that he is today, he was teaching his Kung Fu ways to San Francisco residents. When he participated in his first competition at the Long Beach International Karate Championships, Lee became a local sensation and won the crowd over with his one-inch punch. Much like Lee, we can see the same fire in Conor McGregor.

    McGregor channels Bruce Lee entirely; that is why he calls Lee his inspiration.


    The current champ has been the talk of the MMA universe ever since he made his UFC debut, winning by way of knockout. His cocky, fiery personality inside and outside of the octagon has inspired many rising UFC fighters, and like Lee, McGregor has brought his own spin to an ancient fighting style. In addition to being a mixed martial artist, McGregor also sees himself as a boxer. Like Lee, however, his boxing is a culmination of different disciplines put into one. That's what's so intriguing about the UFC champ; he's a modern-day version of Bruce Lee, and fans seem to agree. From his fighting style to his philosophies, McGregor channels Bruce Lee entirely; that is why he calls Lee his inspiration.

    What’s more, the similarities between Lee and McGregor don’t end in their mutual abilities. Their greatest fights may just be their greatest equivalence. McGregor will meet his match when he faces Floyd Mayweather Jr. on August 26, just like Lee fought his greatest adversary Wong Jack Man in an abandoned warehouse in 1964.

    Wong Jack Man And Floyd Mayweather Jr.

    While much is debated about the epic fight between Bruce Lee and Wong Jack Man, what's fact is that Wong was one of the best fighters of his time. His skills in the various branches of Chinese martial arts made him an expert in the sport and a respected, popular name both in China and the United States. The parallels between Wong and Mayweather are clear.

    Like Mayweather, Wong was fearless and full of spirit, sticking to the ancient ways of Kung Fu. Wong's bout with Bruce Lee saw the old style of Chinese martial arts clash with Lee's new system, just like how Mayweather's traditional boxing background will run up against McGregor's modified hybrid style.

    But of course, it was more than just kicking and punching. The fight between Wong and Lee was as much a battle between opposite philosophies as it was a physical fight.

    When Fighting Philosophies Clash

    When Lee opened his martial arts school, the Jun Fan Gung Institute, in 1964, he wasn’t yet the Bruce Lee that we all know and love. The "be like water" way of mind hadn't yet entered into Lee's philosophical paradigm. The younger Lee was a constant rush of adrenaline and more than a little arrogant in his ways. Lee's optimism was a great virtue, but it was partnered with a healthy dose of conceit. His calm, relaxed demeanor of later years was far from present, and his urge to win and prove himself was high.

    Enter Wong Jack Man, a Chinese martial arts master whose philosophy was everything Bruce Lee's was not. Lee's aggressive, kicking whirlwind faced off against Wong's serene, controlled dance of motion. And it prevailed.

    Lee's aggressive, kicking whirlwind faced off against Wong's serene, controlled dance of motion.


    While the outcome of the fight is up to interpretation, there was another outcome that is more important. From that day forward Lee had a new mentality. He went forth to create his own discipline in Jeet Kune Do and became as great a philosopher as he was an actor and martial arts expert. The sport changed for the better, continually evolving and leading to its resurgence in the modern world of entertainment; today there's a full roster of MMA names to thank for the martial arts resurgence that's currently influencing sports and entertainment. But while these personalities are the catalyst of the modern martial arts renaissance, they are all still the offspring that sprouted from the legend of Bruce Lee and Wong Jack Man.

    While none of us got to witness the mythical fight between Lee and Wong, we'll get the chance to watch its equivalent on August 26. Another physical and philosophical clash of masters in their respective disciplines is in the very fabric of Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Conor McGregor. Regardless of the victor, the boxing world will learn from the MMA world and vice versa. Two philosophies will clash and, like Lee vs. Wong, a new spirit will blossom.

    The greatest fight of our time is right upon us, mirroring the greatest fight that came about over 50 years ago.

    Watch the legendary fight between Bruce Lee and Wong Jack Man when Birth of the Dragon releases in the U.S. on August 25.
    Gene Ching
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  7. #7
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    wth?

    This made me chuckle for all the wrong reasons.

    Mini McGregor Falls To Mini Mayweather In Likely Preview Of Actual Fight
    Dan McQuade
    Yesterday 12:02pm


    Photo: Dan McQuade/Deadspin/GMG

    They’ve held almost every kind of wrestling at the building formerly known as the ECW Arena. But according to the guy who sold me my ticket, Friday night was the first time the 2300 Arena was hosting Micro Championship Wrestling.

    I guess I was glad to be one of the hundred or so who attended MCW’s first-ever appearance in the storied South Philly warehouse/venue. It started 45 minutes late. Before any matches, the wrestlers were all introduced by Johnny G (the former Johnny Attitude, whom you may remember for his mockery of Goldberg in WCW).

    Each of the wrestlers had a standard American wrestling gimmick (cowboy, Samoan, pimp, U.S. soldier, Mexican, Sting). There were three faces and three heels. The stars of the evening were the champ, Philly native Huggy Cub, and the heel Blixx, the Sting knockoff. Blixx, who was my favorite of the wrestlers, insulted us for buying tickets to this farce. He also said he was going to make Huggy Cub “look like Mitch Williams in the 1993 World Series.” Ouch.

    Huggy Cub had about 20 members of his family in attendance for his victory over Blixx and his win in an impromptu battle royal afterward. But it was Huggy Cub’s performance as Mini Mayweather (“Micro Money” on the poster) in the main event that was his best role.

    In a match with an outcome that was considerably more in doubt than that of the actual fight this Saturday, Mini Mayweather defeated Mini McGregor. Mini McGregor (“Mini McConnor”) was played by Lt. Dan. (Yes, they gave the guy with the soldier gimmick a Forrest Gump joke name.)

    It was by far the best part of the night. Blixx announced. Mini McGregor and Mini Mayweather proceeded to have a wrestling match that ended in a double 10-count after a double clothesline. Somehow, this led to Mini Mayweather wrapping a gold chain around his glove and landing a KO punch. Yes, they did the WrestleMania 24 ending.



    I can only hope the actual fight is as good as this one was.
    There's a vid of the match if you follow the link. srsly.
    Gene Ching
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    This made me chuckle for all the wrong reasons.



    There's a vid of the match if you follow the link. srsly.
    Pretty sure that's a good approximation of what will happen with Conor and Floyd.

    Mayweather is going to lay McGregor out in the short run for the simple reason the game is Mayweathers and not McGregors.

    Oh sure, McGregor is training in boxing etc, but Floyd lives and breaths that and only that.
    Not to mention his record. Guy is gonna knock the irishman out. McGregor is totally stoppable. Mayweather has not shown to be thus far.
    Kung Fu is good for you.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by David Jamieson View Post
    Pretty sure that's a good approximation of what will happen with Conor and Floyd.

    Mayweather is going to lay McGregor out in the short run for the simple reason the game is Mayweathers and not McGregors.

    Oh sure, McGregor is training in boxing etc, but Floyd lives and breaths that and only that.
    Not to mention his record. Guy is gonna knock the irishman out. McGregor is totally stoppable. Mayweather has not shown to be thus far.
    I also believe that Mayweather's going to win, but I have doubts he'll get a stoppage. He'd have to hit McGregor with a TON of punches, as he was never a big power puncher. The only chance for McGregor to win is by KO, and that's a very big long shot. I predict it will be a very one-sided win for Mayweather (probably by an easy unanimous decision).

    Boxer Paul Malignaggi, who had been brought in to help McGregor for the fight, has said that McGregor's boxing is a joke. I don't know the veracity of his claims vs. the McGregor camp's. BUT we have to remember: this is NOT a boxing vs. MMA fight; it's an MMA fighter (albeit a top-notch one) going up against perhaps the best P4P boxer of his generation, in the boxer's own game. Ironically, McGregor will become the richest MMA fighter ever, by losing to Mayweather.

    But we'll all know what'll happen soon enough.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 08-22-2017 at 02:06 PM.

  10. #10
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    This is straight out hilarious

    MAYWEATHER TO BIEBER
    YOU'RE DEAD TO ME!!!

    8/21/2017 1:00 AM PDT
    Floyd Mayweather Angrily Breaks With Justin Bieber after Instagram Diss
    EXCLUSIVE



    Justin Bieber is not only off Floyd Mayweather's Money Team, he's now one of Floyd's mortal enemies ... TMZ has learned.
    Sources connected to both Justin and Floyd tell us, the folks at the Hillsong Church have been counseling Justin for months on taking a hard look at his friends and pulling back from those who are bad influences.
    We're told church pastors did not single out Floyd as a bad influence, but Justin decided on his own he needed some distance. Our sources say Justin didn't want a clean break from Floyd, he just wanted to "reset boundaries" ... walling himself off from things like Floyd's obsession with strip clubs.
    Justin unfollowed Floyd on Instagram as part of the resetting of boundaries, and our sources say Floyd went "insane, nuclear." He lashed out at Justin, called him a "traitor" because Floyd had stuck with Justin during his meltdown when everyone was attacking Bieber.
    Sources connected with Floyd say the boxer continues to be incensed at Justin ... screaming incensed.
    Now it makes sense why Justin curiously told our photog last week he didn't think Floyd would knock Conor McGregor out at next Saturday's fight.
    We're told Justin will likely be a no-show at the fight.
    There's a vid of Bieber's prediction behind the link.

    I don't know what it is about this fight, but it has become hysterical on many oblique levels.
    Gene Ching
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  11. #11
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    $4b

    The UFC ruined itself for $4 billion
    By Michael Blaustein September 14, 2017 | 10:35am


    Getty Images

    The great circus sideshow that was Conor McGregor’s detour into boxing is over, and UFC president Dana White could not be happier about it.

    “I’m ready to get back to the UFC and do what I do,” White said with a huge smile at the post-fight press conference in the early hours of the Sunday morning after the fight. “I’m not looking to do this again.”

    The truth of the matter is White has absolutely no say in the matter. And he knows it.

    “It takes two very special people in the right place at the right time to do the freakish kind of numbers and the water-cooler talk, all the things that this fight had. … This s–t doesn’t happen all the time,” White said.

    “I want to get back to business doing what I do, which is the UFC.”

    But nobody knows what the UFC even is anymore — including White.

    It used to be so simple. The UFC was where the best fighters in the world duked it out to see which martial art was best. Once that was figured out — it turns out that mixing striking, wrestling and jiu jitsu together is the way to go — the game evolved into a straight-up battle for supremacy. Men, and eventually women, were sorted into weight classes and fought to see who was the best at their size.


    White at the Mayweather-McGregor post-fight press conference.Getty Images

    Meritocracy was the bedrock principle from which the UFC built its hardcore fan base. Making the best fight the best was also how the UFC became a star-making machine because, unlike in boxing, the kings and queens of the organization were constantly under siege by up and comers. Therefore, anyone who could hold onto a belt for a long time was unquestionably great, and greatness is one path to stardom.

    The old UFC hit its pinnacle with Ronda Rousey, whose reign of unprecedented dominance came to an end just as uber talent agency WME-IMG stepped in and purchased the UFC for $4 billion.

    The May 2016 sale rocked the UFC to its core. On the management side, the man working in the shadows behind White, the company’s longtime match maker Joe Silva, announced his retirement. Worse still for the company as a whole, its stable of more than 500 contracted fighters all of a sudden knew exactly how much they were worth.

    For years, the UFC paid its fighters next to nothing because there was nowhere else for fighters to go and because there was no way for the fighters to know if they were getting a good deal or not. Unlike the NFL or NBA, nobody knew what franchises were worth or even if the sport had a viable future.

    As a result, the standard contracts for low-level fighters became what is called “5 & 5,” “10 & 10” or “20 & 20,” which means that the fighter is paid $20,000 to show up on weight on fight day and another $20,000 if he or she wins. Even champions coming in from other organizations, like Eddie Alvarez, were paid next to nothing. His first contract with the UFC paid him a measly “70 & 70,” according to MMA Junkie, a fact only revealed because his 2013 contract was part of a court case and thus became a public document. It is still the only full UFC contract to be made public.


    Eddie Alvarez gets punched by McGregor at UFC 205.Getty Images

    The UFC’s $4 billion price tag has opened the eyes of its best fighters, who are starting to demand bigger pay days. McGregor is the prime example of this new trend, but others are learning from his example. Flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson, the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, has been fighting with White about money and marketing opportunities for months, and the UFC boss has retaliated by threatening to dissolve the entire division. Welterweight champion Tyron Woodley, meanwhile, said after his most recent fight, against Demian Maia, that he purposely fought conservatively because he was promised a super fight with Georges St-Pierre. That fight may never happen because Michael Bisping, the middleweight champion, hasn’t fought for nearly a year as he’s waited for the announced, then canceled, then re-announced gigantic GSP payday, which is finally set to go down at Madison Square Garden in November.

    While those three divisions are in monetary chaos, more belts are in purgatory for entirely random reasons. The 35-year-old heavyweight champion Stipe Miocic is tied for the most title defenses in the division’s history, with two, but got his last three wins over a 40-year-old, a 37-year-old and a 33-year-old, Junior Dos Santos, who recently failed an anti-doping test. Meanwhile, over in the light heavyweight division, Jon Jones’ own anti-doping problems mean that the promotion’s one-time glamour division is now headless. The women’s featherweight division can only look on in envy seeing as it lacks bodies. Period. The UFC’s own website only lists three female featherweights: champion Cristiane “Cyborg” Justino, the woman she defeated for the belt, Tonya Evinger, and Megan Anderson, who has never stepped inside the UFC cage.


    Jon Jones Getty Images

    In total, six of the UFC’s 11 divisions are in complete flux because of either money issues or unpredictable twists of fate. That leaves just five divisions in relatively good shape, and even some of those have question marks hanging over them. Nobody knows when McGregor will return to the lightweight division, the bantamweights have been on hold for nearly a year as champion Cody Garbrandt deals with a mysterious back injury, and dominant female champions Joanna Jedrzejczyk and Amanda Nunes have had trouble turning their awe-inspiring skills into pay-per-view buys.

    The UFC used to solve all these problems by turning the meritocracy knob to 11. That’s how the torch was passed from generational stars like Chuck Liddell and Randy Couture to the likes of St-Pierre and Anderson Silva.

    However, since the WME-IMG takeover, a new model has been adopted. Ridiculous mega fights are now the name of the game. WWE star CM Punk made his MMA debut at age 37 and was promptly bulldozed by a relative nobody at UFC 203. Bisping sidelined himself for a year in order to fight at Madison Square Garden against St-Pierre, who last fought in 2013 as a welterweight. Even Jon Jones, before he failed his USADA test and was stripped of the light heavyweight title, got in on the action by calling out Brock Lesnar, who is currently suspended for failing his own PED test.

    The Jones-Lesnar fight that will now, in all likelihood, never happen is the ultimate expression of the new UFC. It would have been an economic boon for both fighters. Already highly paid by MMA standards, Jones and Lesnar could have marketed the fight as “MMA vs. pro wrestling” just like McGregor and Mayweather played up “MMA vs. Boxing.” For good measure, Jones and Lesnar also could have thrown in cliche fighting storylines like “big (Lesnar) vs. small (Jones),” and “white farmer vs. cocky black athlete.”


    Brock Lesnar (left) fights Mark Hunt at UFC 200.Getty Images

    There is no doubt that Jones-Lesnar would have been a gigantic payday. It also would have been completely and utterly empty. Lesnar has been popped for steroids multiples times and has fought only once in the past five years. Jones, meanwhile, has his own PED problems and would have been ducking a fight with Alexander Gustafsson, the current #1 contender who battled Jones in 2013 in what many consider to be the greatest title fight of all time.

    Despite the extremely problematic Jones-Lesnar fight and the variously broken weight classes, White swears that things are just like what they were in the good old days.

    “The way that I look at fights, and the way that I look at fighting is that we’re going to have fights that we put on that are for the UFC hardcore fans, we’re going to have some fights that will do better than others. Then we’ll have some fights that are big where we do the Diaz-Conor 1.5 million [pay-per-view buys],” White said shortly after Mayweather TKO’d McGregor.

    Looking into the future, there is nothing to suggest that White can put on either type of fight.

    Dana White on McGregor V Mayweather
    Gene Ching
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  12. #12
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    ttt 4 2018?

    YOB SHOCK Boozed-up louts used police tape as Karate Kid-style bandanas and pulled kung fu moves to mock Chinese tourists in Blairgowrie
    John Harrison and Robert Willemars shouted and swore at the coach party after drinking all night while watching the Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor fight. The visitors were so shocked they called police
    By Gordon Currie
    21st March 2018, 8:41 am Updated: 21st March 2018, 8:48 am

    BOOZED-UP yobs used a police cordon as Karate Kid-style bandanas then did kung fu moves in front of Chinese tourists.

    John Harrison, 23, and Robert Willemars, 22, shouted and swore at the coach trip party after drinking all night while watching the Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor fight on TV.


    HANDOUT - GETTY
    Pat Morita and Ralph Macchio in a scene from the film The Karate Kid

    The visitors were so shocked by the boxing fans that they called police.

    Perth Sheriff Court heard the pair had gone out to buy cigarettes in the early hours and found a sinkhole in the town which had been cordoned off by police with blue tape.

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    They took the ribbon and tied it round their foreheads before high kicking and karate chopping in front of bemused passers-by.

    When the Chinese tourists, who were staying at a nearby hotel, spotted them they alerted cops.


    REUTERS
    John Harrison and Robert Willemars had been drinking all night while watching the Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor fight on TV
    Classy. Real classy.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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