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Conor McGregor’s Statement: “I Am Not Retired”

And on the third day, he was risen.

Just as the main event between Nate Diaz and Conor McGregor at UFC 200 seemed to have sailed away and out of site, McGregor today potentially changed the landscape, as he took to social media in order to offer his perspective to the last couple of days.

McGregor’s statement can be found on his Facebook, but reads as such:

 

“I am just trying to do my job and fight here.
I am paid to fight. I am not yet paid to promote.
I have become lost in the game of promotion and forgot about the art of fighting.
There comes a time when you need to stop handing out flyers and get back to the damn shop.
50 world tours, 200 press conferences, 1 million interviews, 2 million photo shoots, and at the end of it all I’m left looking down the barrel of a lens, staring defeat in the face, thinking of nothing but my incorrect fight preparation. And the many distractions that led to this.
Nothing else was going through my mind.
It is time to go back and live the life that got me this life.
Sitting in a car on the way to some dump in Conneticut or somewhere, to speak to Tim and Suzie on the nobody gives a fuck morning show did not get me this life.
Talking to some lady that deep down doesn’t give a fuck about what I’m doing, but just wants some sound bites so she can maybe get her little tight ass a nice raise, and I’m cool with that too, I’ve been giving you all raises. But I need to focus on me now.
I’m coming for my revenge here.
I flew an entire team to Portugal and to Iceland to make my adjustments in preparation and fix my errors I made with the weight and the cardio prep.
With the right adjustments and the right focus, I will finish what I started in that last fight.
I will not do this if I am back on the road handing out flyers again.
I will always play the game and play it better than anybody, but just for this one, where I am coming off a loss, I asked for some leeway where I can just train and focus. I did not shut down all media requests. I simply wanted a slight adjustment.
But it was denied.
There had been 10 million dollars allocated for the promotion of this event is what they told me.
So as a gesture of good will, I went and not only saved that 10 million dollars in promotion money, I then went and tripled it for them.
And all with one tweet.
Keep that 10 mill to promote the other bums that need it. My shows are good.
I must isolate myself now.
I am facing a taller, longer and heavier man. I need to prepare correctly this time.
I can not dance for you this time.
It is time for the other monkeys to dance. I’ve danced us all the way here.
Nate’s little mush head looks good up on that stage these days. Stuff him in front of the camera for it.
He came in with no shit to do that last one. I’d already done press conferences, interviews and shot the ads before RDA pulled out.
Maybe I’ll hit Cabo this time and skull some shots pre-fight with no obligation.
I’m doing what I need for me now.
It is time to be selfish with my training again. It is the only way.
I feel the $400million I have generated for the company in my last three events, all inside 8 months, is enough to get me this slight leeway.
I am still ready to go for UFC 200.
I will offer, like I already did, to fly to New York for the big press conference that was scheduled, and then I will go back into training. With no distractions.
If this is not enough or they feel I have not deserved to sit this promotion run out this one time, well then I don’t know what to say.
For the record also –
For USADA and for the UFC and my contract stipulations –
I AM NOT RETIRED.

McGregor’s statement puts everything into an odd place. Usually in such public disagreements between employee and corporation, it’s easy to make a claim that one side is more ‘right’ than the other. For example, when Nick Diaz missed his flights because he didn’t feel like attending a press conference, it wasn’t hard to sympathise with the UFC position that he was being unprofessional.

But this time, it’s fair to say McGregor has a point.

He’s done more promotion than any fighter in the sports history, he’s drawn in more money for the UFC than anyone else, and in that respect, perhaps he’s earned a bit of time away from being in front of the camera.

Should the UFC decide to give ground and allow Conor to miss the promotion that they’ve already booked for him, then it opens up a dangerous precedent, one that the company has seemed eager to avoid. Should they take him off the card, then UFC 200 loses it’s biggest drawing power, as well as the inevitable ticket sales from Ireland.

While some sites are currently reporting that sources have stated that the bout remains to be cancelled, we are yet to hear an official statement from the UFC themselves.

 

Written by Oscar Stephens-Willis

Oscar is a journalist from London, currently residing in Seattle. He has had work published by NBC News, The Central Circuit and The Voyager.

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