Conor McGregor’s last fight and how it could affect UFC 329 comeback
Everyone remembers the leg break from Conor McGregor’s last fight against Dustin Poirier, but when you look at the stat sheet from UFC 264, the numbers tell you something interesting. On the feet, Conor McGregor wasn’t being completely outclassed, and on the feet is where I expect most of his UFC 329 contest against Max Holloway to happen.
McGregor technically out-landed Dustin Poirier 43-36 in total strikes, had 71% significant-strike accuracy, and went 8 of 8 on leg kicks (via UFCStats). But as always stats don’t tell you the full story, as McGregor initiated the grappling after being rocked hard by Poirier. I don’t think that Holloway presents the same sort of problem for McGregor, because he will be going for volume and scoring points, whereas Poirier had the strength to properly rock McGregor during the 12 minutes or so they had in the cage.
Conor McGregor Last Fight Stats
Poirier landed 36 of 66 significant strikes at 54%, whereas McGregor landed 27 of 38 at 71%. It was when the fight went to the ground that McGregor really got outworked, giving Poirier 3:18 of control time. Again, McGregor had to initiate the grappling when Poirier had him rocked:
| UFC 264 significant strikes | McGregor | Poirier |
|---|---|---|
| Sig. strikes | 27 of 38 (71%) | 36 of 66 (54%) |
| Total strikes | 43 of 54 | 36 of 66 |
| Head / Body / Leg | 13 / 6 / 8 | 35 / 0 / 1 |
| Distance | 17 of 26 | 8 of 20 |
| Ground | 9 of 11 | 28 of 46 |
| Takedowns | 0 of 0 | 1 of 2 |
| Control time | 0:00 | 3:18 |
What happened to Conor McGregor’s leg?
Poirier’s account of the leg break, which he said straight to Joe Rogan in the cage after the fight, was that the leg cracked on a check early in the round, then the leg broke when the Irish star stepped back off of a punch. McGregor threw 8 leg kicks, and if Poirier was catching those on a raised knee or elbow, that’s shin-on-bone trauma that the strikes landed column never actually records.
McGregor disputed this when he was interviewed by Rogan in the Octagon, saying that there was no check, and that Poirier didn’t check anything he threw at him. His camp later claimed he’d walked in with multiple stress fractures already in that leg, indicating that this was a bone just waiting to snap. The medical read splits the difference here, with the report saying it was years of cumulative damage overloading on one awkward step.
Whatever weakened that leg, McGregor now has a titanium rod from knee to ankle. That leg is now reinforced, but it has never been properly tested against the exact exchange that may have compromised it, and Holloway loves to check kicks and fires back at volume. If McGregor decides to commit to the leg-kick game he ran on Poirier, we find out in real time whether the repair holds under the sort of fight night pressure it hasn’t seen in five years.