- UFC. Dana White teases return of legendary UFC star for a grudge match later this year
- UFC. Conor McGregor reappears partying in Dublin after canceling his UFC comeback... and no sign of injury!
Ever since the UFC 303 news of Conor McGregor's injury dropped, people have been speculating on whether the Irishman did suffer an injury or if he was only too unprepared for the fight due to the constant partying. Even MMA podcast host and former UFC star Chael Sonnen recently claimed McGregor is closer to retirement than this upcoming fight and said he wasn't buying the injury. Conor remained quiet for days after that, nobody knew if the injury was even real but he just came out to prove it's quite real with receipts and a message to Chael Sonnen. Conor is not happy with the slandering against his name from people like him.
McGregor has a broken pinky toe
McGregor took to Twitter to demand for Chael Sonnen to shut his mouth and proceeded to drop three images that finally show the injury he suffered. It's a broken pinky toe, which is a serious injury that will definitely keep him away from the octagon for a few more months. Rumors that he fractured his leg that was previusly injured during his last fight are proven to be bunk. McGregor even showed an x-ray image of the exact fracture he suffered. Plus, the foot on that area is profusely bruised and you can tell an injury like that would prevent anybody to even train. Let alone step into the octagon for an official UFC fight.
Mcgregor got into a Twitter rant to defend his position as one of the most profitable athletes in the world. He goes on to reveal that Michael Chandler is getting paid more than 10 times of what is stipulated on his UFC contract. As a way to flex, McGregor wrote the following: "Chandler is getting paid 10x of what his contract states for other fights. Meaning he would need to fight 10 fights to make what he would make in this one. I'm The One. For those saying he could have fought 2 or 3 times by now etc. He'd need 10 to break even with this cheque."