Which two matches are you most looking forward to?

  • Floyd 'Money' Mayweather Jr vs Conor McGregor

    Votes: 96 73.8%
  • Gervonta 'Tank' Davis vs Francisco Fonseca [IBF Junior Lightweight Title Match]

    Votes: 22 16.9%
  • Nathan Cleverley vs Badou Jack [WBA Light Heavyweight Title Match]

    Votes: 10 7.7%
  • Andrew Tabiti vs Steve Cunningham [USBA Cruiserweight Title Match]

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Shawn Porter vs Thomas Dulorme

    Votes: 6 4.6%
  • Canelo is putting the beats on GGG Sept 16th stay tuned

    Votes: 39 30.0%
  • GGG is putting the beats on Canelo Sept 16th stay tuned

    Votes: 17 13.1%

  • Total voters
    130
  • Poll closed .

iceberg_is_on_fire

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Former Sparring Partner Admits McGregor Was Not Hard To Hit - Boxing News

Former Sparring Partner Admits McGregor Was Not Hard To Hit

Conor McGregor should rely on the skills that have made him a two-weight UFC champ and not try to out-box Floyd Mayweather when the two clash in Las Vegas on Saturday, former sparring partner Steve Collins Jr.

The Irish mixed martial arts fighter turned up at the Dublin gym run by Collins Jnr's uncle Paschal about two years ago looking to hone his boxing skills, and the 27-year-old light heavyweight was happy to go toe to toe with him.

"I arrived early as my uncle told me to come in to do some pad work before the place opened and Conor came up. He must have cleared it with my uncle as he had the place to himself, he had the gym closed off," Collins Jr said to Reuters.

conor-mcgregor%20(9).jpg


He started off sparring a guy for a round or two but the guy couldn't keep up with Conor's pace, so my uncle asked me if I'd spar him. I said fine, and got in there for five, six, seven rounds," he explained.

"Conor didn't care about the size difference between us, he just kept going. He barely took a break in between rounds, he'd just take a sip of water or whatever."

The Collins family are as close to boxing royalty as it gets in Ireland, with Steve Collins Senior a former WBO middleweight and super-middleweight world champ, and uncle Paschal a renowned boxing coach.

Collins Jnr, who has 10 wins, one loss and one draw in his 12 professional fights, was impressed by the offensive skills of the 29-year-old McGregor, who has never fought as a pro boxer.

"As an MMA fighter his boxing skills were brilliant - great stance, great balance, great shot selection and timing, he judged distance very well, superior to most MMA fighters."

However, the boxer did find chinks in the armour of the UFC lightweight champion.

"His only weakness really was his defence. I didn't find it to hard to land leather on him, and if you've got a guy like Floyd, he may find it even easier. If I had to pick one thing, it was that his defence wasn't brilliant," he said.

The boxing world has scoffed at the notion that McGregor can bring himself up to Floyd's level in the space of a few weeks, but Collins says he may not have to.

"I think he'll have to rely on what he already knows. There is so much to learn in boxing, even Mayweather is still learning, so Conor has to work with what he has.

"It takes years to be a complete fighter, and it will all be new to him on the day," he said.

Mayweather, who has not fought in nearly two years, needs a win to surpass Rocky Marciano's record and reach 50-0 for his career, while McGregor, who is making his professional boxing debut, is 21-3 in mixed martial arts.

Currently in training for a fight in Belfast in September, Collins Jnr says he will watch the fight but he won't travel to Las Vegas or stay up into the small hours to do so.

"If I was on Mayweather or McGregor money I'd go to Vegas, but I'm not!

"I'm in training so I can't afford to stay up all night, but we're going to record it and watch it together at the gym the next morning," he said, adding that he expected an exciting fight.

"Things Conor never expected are going to happen to him in the ring, and how he reacts to that will say a lot about him."
 
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Former Sparring Partner Admits McGregor Was Not Hard To Hit - Boxing News

Former Sparring Partner Admits McGregor Was Not Hard To Hit

Conor McGregor should rely on the skills that have made him a two-weight UFC champ and not try to out-box Floyd Mayweather when the two clash in Las Vegas on Saturday, former sparring partner Steve Collins Jr.

The Irish mixed martial arts fighter turned up at the Dublin gym run by Collins Jnr's uncle Paschal about two years ago looking to hone his boxing skills, and the 27-year-old light heavyweight was happy to go toe to toe with him.

"I arrived early as my uncle told me to come in to do some pad work before the place opened and Conor came up. He must have cleared it with my uncle as he had the place to himself, he had the gym closed off," Collins Jr said to Reuters.

conor-mcgregor%20(9).jpg


He started off sparring a guy for a round or two but the guy couldn't keep up with Conor's pace, so my uncle asked me if I'd spar him. I said fine, and got in there for five, six, seven rounds," he explained.

"Conor didn't care about the size difference between us, he just kept going. He barely took a break in between rounds, he'd just take a sip of water or whatever."

The Collins family are as close to boxing royalty as it gets in Ireland, with Steve Collins Senior a former WBO middleweight and super-middleweight world champ, and uncle Paschal a renowned boxing coach.

Collins Jnr, who has 10 wins, one loss and one draw in his 12 professional fights, was impressed by the offensive skills of the 29-year-old McGregor, who has never fought as a pro boxer.

"As an MMA fighter his boxing skills were brilliant - great stance, great balance, great shot selection and timing, he judged distance very well, superior to most MMA fighters."

However, the boxer did find chinks in the armour of the UFC lightweight champion.

"His only weakness really was his defence. I didn't find it to hard to land leather on him, and if you've got a guy like Floyd, he may find it even easier. If I had to pick one thing, it was that his defence wasn't brilliant," he said.

The boxing world has scoffed at the notion that McGregor can bring himself up to Floyd's level in the space of a few weeks, but Collins says he may not have to.

"I think he'll have to rely on what he already knows. There is so much to learn in boxing, even Mayweather is still learning, so Conor has to work with what he has.

"It takes years to be a complete fighter, and it will all be new to him on the day," he said.

Mayweather, who has not fought in nearly two years, needs a win to surpass Rocky Marciano's record and reach 50-0 for his career, while McGregor, who is making his professional boxing debut, is 21-3 in mixed martial arts.

Currently in training for a fight in Belfast in September, Collins Jnr says he will watch the fight but he won't travel to Las Vegas or stay up into the small hours to do so.

"If I was on Mayweather or McGregor money I'd go to Vegas, but I'm not!

"I'm in training so I can't afford to stay up all night, but we're going to record it and watch it together at the gym the next morning," he said, adding that he expected an exciting fight.

"Things Conor never expected are going to happen to him in the ring, and how he reacts to that will say a lot about him."


Maaaaaan nobody tryna hear this cac shyt. Irish mfs still cacs. Idk why they known for fighting when they all would get dusted off by the average nikka
 

TNC

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why is it good to MMA?


Its not, but there are ways you can use it to your advantage.


In MMA you can get a lot of rest periods in the clinch, in the guard, or in neutral positions. You also benefit from being heavier in grappling exchanges. Most guys can't cut 40lbs and keep it off so if you cut a lot at the right time, you can make weight then immediately put it back on and come in heavier for the fight.

Overall I think it has as many disadvantages than advantages, but it depends on your style on if you can maximize it. In Boxing.... I think its a detriment.
 

reservoirdogs

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Its not, but there are ways you can use it to your advantage.


In MMA you can get a lot of rest periods in the clinch, in the guard, or in neutral positions. You also benefit from being heavier in grappling exchanges. Most guys can't cut 40lbs and keep it off so if you cut a lot at the right time, you can make weight then immediately put it back on and come in heavier for the fight.

Overall I think it has as many disadvantages than advantages, but it depends on your style on if you can maximize it. In Boxing.... I think its a detriment.
In boxing there are wight cuts too but definitely not that big ones... at least that's not the usual and if someone still does it then it usually doesn't end well
so compared to MMA and probably wrestling boxing weight cuts are less hardcore
 
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