logo
Shirtless Conor McGregor shares a kiss with fiancee Dee Devlin as they show off their affections on loved-up yacht holiday before he leers over her while sunbathing - amid 'cheating' scandal and 'nudes' claims

Shirtless Conor McGregor shares a kiss with fiancee Dee Devlin as they show off their affections on loved-up yacht holiday before he leers over her while sunbathing - amid 'cheating' scandal and 'nudes' claims

Daily Mail​4 days ago
Conor McGregor and his fiancée Dee Devlin continued to pack on the PDA during a yacht holiday in Porto Cervo, Sardinia, despite his alleged cheating scandal.
The Irish MMA fighter, 37, was embroiled in controversy over the weekend when he was photographed kissing a mystery brunette woman on a beach in Fort Lauderdale.
With his partner Dee - whom he shares four children with and has been engaged to since 2020 - nowhere in sight, questions were raised about their relationship.
Rapper Azealia Banks then added to the furore as she took to X - formerly known as Twitter - to accuse Conor of sexual harassment.
On Monday, Azealia, 34, shared nude photos which purported to show Conor, which she claimed he sent to her unprompted.
Amid the storm, Conor and Dee have firmly brushed off the criticism by continuing to show their affections for one another, and put on a very cosy display in one outing.
Conor also took to Instagram on Friday to prove they are united as he shared a video of her sunbathing in a bikini and made some rather suggestive remarks as he zoomed in on her body.
In the photographs taken on Tuesday, just hours after the allegations first emerged, the couple were seen looking amorous as they relaxed on a yacht in Sardinia.
Conor was pictured giving Dee a kiss on the forehead as they cuddled up to one another, while they were also seen chatting away to one another.
The former UFC fighter showed off his muscular and tattooed frame as he went shirtless in a pair of black board shorts.
He appeared to be keeping fit on his holidays as a barbell and exercise bike were both brought on board the luxury yacht, while Conor was also seen air boxing.
His partner Dee showed off her incredible figure in a vibrant coral patterned two-piece as she put on a united display with Conor.
The couple have been enjoying time in Sardinia together to celebrate Conor's 37th birthday - which was on July 14.
Dee shared a gushing tribute to Conor on the day and they have both been posting loved-up content to social media in the days since while enjoying their trip.
Conor was seen giving Dee a kiss on the forehead as they cuddled up to one another during their holiday
Their united display comes after concerns when Conor was seen smooching a mystery brunette in full view of fellow beachgoers in Fort Lauderdale.
Conor was spotted enjoying a cold beverage while the woman, who was dressed in a leopard print bikini, shared his sun lounger.
The pair chatted away in the shade as the sportsman cosied up to her by wrapping his arm around her back.
Dee - with whom he shares children, daughter Croia, five, and sons Conor Jr, eight, Rian, three and Mack, 19 months, with - was nowhere in sight.
However, Dee brushed off the scandal as she simply posted a loving tribute to Conor to her Instagram page on Monday.
Dee shared a post from a fan account on her Instagram story which read: 'Happy Birthday to the person who always keeps Dee entertained and makes her smile.'
Just hours later, Azealia set the internet ablaze after sharing alleged nude photos of Conor that she claims the disgraced star sent unprompted.
She accused Conor of sexual harassment when she shared nude photographs purporting to show the MMA star.
'How you gonna send a b**** a some crooked d*** pics then threaten her not to tell,' she wrote alongside the screenshots.
The couple appeared to be in good spirits as they smiled and laughed while enjoying the qualiy time together
'@TheNotoriousMMA n**** do you know who the f*** I am? This is HARAM.'
Azealia continued: 'Like how are you really going to sexually harrass me with the potato farmer d*** then threaten me not to tell???? Honey…… ain't u trying to be the president of Ireland what is it giving fam? Use some f***ing sunscreen damn.'
As well as the alleged nude selfies, the screenshots also showed a message from what purported to be Conor's account reading: 'Don't be a rat cos all rats get caught.'
Alongside one image which seemingly shows his manhood strapped to a dumbbell, the Irish fighter apparently wrote: 'Lifting weights.'
Azealia shared another screenshot of the alleged pictures suddenly being 'hidden' on X because she does not follow Conor's account.
Although it is unclear if he had anything to do with that alleged change, she commented: 'The motherf***er woke up early LOL.'
DailyMail.com reached out to the last-known attorneys on record for Conor, his agent and Azealia's agent for comment at the time.
It is the latest embarrassment to hit the sportsman's relationship with his partner Dee, who was ever-present by his side throughout his sexual assault court case last year.
Azealia also set the internet ablaze this week after sharing alleged nude photos of Conor that she claims the disgraced star sent unprompted
In 2024, Conor lost a civil case as jurors at the High Court in Dublin found him liable of raping Nikita Hand, 35, in a Dublin hotel on December 9, 2018, with the judge awarding Hand €250,000 in damages.
But despite the verdict, Dee emphatically made it clear that she intended to back Conor - attacking Nikita in a series of posts on Instagram at the time.
In the posts, she wrote: 'Conor and I dealt with these issues privately many years ago, as should be done in a relationship and we have come out stronger than ever.
'We have four beautiful children now whose smiling faces and happy hearts are a testament to who he is and who we are!'
The pair have been together for 15 years and got engaged in August 2020 after Conor proposed while they were celebrating his birthday.
The couple met as teenagers at a nightclub in 2008 and Dee has been a key player in the MMA star's story, supporting him when he was jobless and focused on making it as a professional fighter.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Do Agyemang & Kelly deserve to start Euros final?
Do Agyemang & Kelly deserve to start Euros final?

BBC News

time15 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Do Agyemang & Kelly deserve to start Euros final?

Not for the first time, Michelle Agyemang and Chloe Kelly proved to be England's Lionesses looked to be heading out of Euro 2025 as they trailed Italy 1-0 one minute left of added time in Tuesday's then the narrative was altered dramatically, as 19-year-old Agyemang scored in the 96th minute to take the game to extra time before Kelly drove home the rebound from her saved penalty to seal victory. It was another impressive comeback that was masterminded by the same players who helped rescue England's hopes in their quarter-final against as Sarina Wiegman begins to ponder how she will set up her side for Sunday's final against either Germany or Spain, should the attacking duo be promoted to the starting line-up? Or is it risky to change what has become a successful formula? 'Don't fix what isn't broken' There is a sense of deja vu about the role Kelly and Agyemang are Euro 2022, regular substitutes Alessia Russo and Ella Toone featured in all six games from the bench. Toone scored twice - including in the final - while Russo netted four goals, the most of any substitute at a women's European has made a point of highlighting her "finishers" - the players she brings on at the end of a game. For the England manager, they are as much a part of the equation as those who England striker Rachel Daly said Wiegman has "got it right so far" with her team selection."It's working. Don't fix what isn't broken," she said on the Daly Brightness podcast."People will call out 'start them' but there is so much to be said for people who can come on and make a difference. It's really difficult to do."Agyemang's stats at Euro 2025 are impressive. She averages 6.1 shots per 90 minutes, compared with Russo's 2.9 - although the magnitude of the difference is partly explained by England chasing games against tiring opposition when the young forward has come 15.17 touches in the opposition box per 90 minutes are also the most of any England thoughts have been echoed by former Lionesses goalkeeper Siobhan Chamberlain, who said Wiegman "loves to stick with what she knows"."I don't think Sarina Wiegman's going to change her team at all. If those 11 players are fit then those 11 players will start the final," she said on BBC Radio 5 Live Breakfast."England play the game for their substitutes, Alessia Russo and Ella Toone were the ones in the last Euros. This year she's got the same. "She's got her trusted 11. There have been a couple of tweaks but not much, and she knows she has talent to come off the bench and change the game when she needs it." Wiegman has to 'rip the script up' There is an opposing view, though - one that is partly fuelled by how much football the regular starting line-up have England midfielder Karen Carney highlighted the fact the Lionesses have had back-to-back games that have gone to extra just one change between the Sweden and Italy knockout games - Esme Morgan replacing Jess Carter - bringing in Agyemang and Kelly for the final would add fresh legs to a squad that could be Agyemang, Aggie Beever-Jones and Beth Mead make up four of the five substitutes who have been involved in the most goals at Euro 2025."I do think now with how many minutes the starting XI have continually played, I think that freshness is the most important thing," Carney said on ITV."Germany are powerhouses, Spain are the technical team, I do think she has to look at the squad and rip that script up slightly. I do think we need fresh legs to start."Plan A is isn't working, Plan B is magnificent. I want to make Plan A work more so I think with her changes in the starting XI, we have to have fresh energy in that team." Should Kelly & Agyemang start final? Fans' verdict Annabel: Agyemang and Kelly are injections of energy rather than lasting all game and Michelle is still only a teenager. I think they will be more hyped in the second half to be subbed on - maybe a bit earlier than last game! Greenwood, Mead, Toone, Hemp and Alessia would be Kelly should 100% start. She has the technical ability, and she puts in good crosses. I would still have Agyemang on the bench as an impact sub, but Beever-Jones should start up top with Russo. Well done girls, your mentality won the game!Jamie: Chloe Kelly and Michelle Agyemang should start on the bench in the final... the first 60 minutes are not as important as the last 60 minutes, when they will probably be needed the I think you have to start Kelly in front of Hemp and keep Morgan in place of Carter. Le Tissier for Stanway? I'd keep Agyemang on the bench, but bring her on after 60 minutes if things aren't working.

Arsenal vs AC Milan LIVE SCORE: Rice fires miles over as Gunners chase opener in tricky pre-season clash
Arsenal vs AC Milan LIVE SCORE: Rice fires miles over as Gunners chase opener in tricky pre-season clash

The Sun

time15 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Arsenal vs AC Milan LIVE SCORE: Rice fires miles over as Gunners chase opener in tricky pre-season clash

ARSENAL open their pre-season tour with a tricky clash against Italian giants AC Milan - and the action is unfolding RIGHT NOW! Summer signing Christian Norgaard starts on his debut while Martin Zubimendi and Kepa Arrizabalaga are named on the bench. Cristhian Mosquera has travelled late to meet the squad over in Asia after completing all of his required documents, but is not on the teamsheet. While £52m Noni Madueke will meet his teammates at a later date as he is on holiday following his participation with Chelsea in the Club World Cup. Today, 12:00 By Nyle Smith Arrivals The players have stepped foot in the Singapore stadium and are admiring the beautiful scenes. Today, 11:54 By Nyle Smith Silva is better than Gold Invincible and Arsenal icon Gilberto Silva has been interacting with the fans ahead of this huge match. Today, 11:42 By Nyle Smith Arsenal subs Arrizabalaga, Setford, Rojas-Fedorushchenko, Lewis-Skelly, Salmon, Nichols, Kiwior, Copley, Merino, Lokonga, Zubimendi, Kabia, Nelson, Trossard, Odegaard, Harriman-Annous. Today, 11:34 By Nyle Smith Arsenal starting team The Gunners' starting eleven for their first pre-season game has been revealed and one of the summer signings are making their debut. Raya; White, Saliba, Calafiori, Zinchenko; Norgaard, Rice, Nwaneri; Saka, Martinelli, Havertz By Nyle Smith Arsenal's starting XI hint The Singapore National Stadium announcer may have just dropped the biggest hint of who will be in Arsenal's starting eleven today. You could hear several names being called out, almost like a practice run. And the stars mentioned were, David Raya, William Saliba, Gabriel, Ben White, Bukayo Saka, Martin Odegaard and Gabriel Martinelli. Seems as if Mikel Arteta will be going very strong. Today, 11:33 By Nyle Smith Fanatics The fans are flooding the streets! Today, 11:24 By Down pore It wasn't always smiles though as the Gunners were forced to reschedule the first training session of their pre-season tour of Singapore due to THUNDERSTORMS. The Gunners landed in Singapore on Sunday afternoon ahead of clashes against AC Milan and Newcastle this week before flying out to Hong Kong to take on Tottenham. Boss Arteta had hoped to get straight to work on Monday morning before holding a press conference to preview the Milan game. But a huge downpour – which included thunder and lightning – scuppered those plans, with training instead moved to the afternoon ahead of the club's launch of their away kit later today. Today, 11:14 By Nyle Smith Singapore smiles It's all smiles in Singapore as the Gunners prepare for their first pre-season match against AC Milan.

Why are we so fascinated by the Coldplay couple?
Why are we so fascinated by the Coldplay couple?

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Why are we so fascinated by the Coldplay couple?

It wasn't just that a man got caught cheating on his wife. It was that he did it in public. With the whole stadium watching. With Chris Martin, unknowingly, teeing it up. With a camera zooming in at the exact wrong – or maybe karmically perfect – moment. The CEO. The HR director. The affair. The panic. The humiliation. All of it caught, dissected and shared a million times over. We didn't watch that video because we love Coldplay (though, don't we?). We didn't watch just for the scandal. We watched because – despite our small steps toward enlightenment – we're all starving for the satisfaction of seeing someone finally get what they deserve. That's the part we need to talk about. According to a 2023 study in Computers in Human Behavior Reports, the satisfaction we feel during public shaming isn't just about justice – it's about pleasure. Their research found that people experience schadenfreude not only because they believe the person deserved it, but because it simply feels good to watch someone face consequences. We're not just looking for moral clarity. We're chasing the emotional high that comes with it. We don't just want closure, we want content. And cheating, exposed in public, has become the most satisfying genre of all. We as a culture are obsessed with catching cheaters – not just for the drama, but for the justice. We want to see betrayal punished. We want the liar exposed, the philanderer humiliated, the partner who was faithful and trusting to be vindicated. And if we can't get that in our own lives, we'll take it from strangers. This hunger has only grown over the years as the morally hollow have made careers out of turning scandal into spectacle and walking away untouched. But when the deception is undeniable, and the exposure unfiltered, it gives us something we rarely get: visible accountability. Within hours of that five-second clip surfacing, the internet did what it does best: turned a private moment into public symbolism. Their names were revealed along with their titles. Until the camera found them, they looked unbothered, cozy. Then her hand flew to cover her face. He ducked and waddled behind the seats. Then the entire internet gasped, and reached for their popcorn and pitchforks. You could feel the collective applause ripple through the comments section. We all know the feeling of being deceived. We know the sharp loneliness of loving someone who's looking elsewhere, of having suspicions but not proof, accusations returned with a side of gaslighting. So when someone gets caught in 4K, we devour the moment. The visuals were almost too perfect: the Coldplay ballad, the cheering crowd turning confused, the abrupt shift from smug to stunned. Don't we all wish we had that experience? A camera that didn't look away. A crowd that said: 'We see it, too.' Because in our own lives, we confront; they deflect. We cry; they move on. And there's no applause, no witness. Just you and an unrelenting ache, their version of what happened and the truth. The CEO and the HR director are merely serving as stand-ins for the guy who ghosted you after two years, the woman who swore nothing was going on with her co-worker, the husband who moved on so fast you wondered if you hallucinated your entire marriage. Watching those two squirm on screen is a kind of spiritual revenge. We tell ourselves it's about ethics, boundaries, accountability. But at the end of the day, don't we just want someone to answer for the betrayal we never got closure for? Of course, pain is not performance. And justice is not the same as humiliation. Public shaming feels like accountability – but it rarely is accountability. As Jon Ronson warns in his book So You've Been Publicly Shamed: 'An instant digital mob justice can devastate without offering redemption.' Watching strangers get exposed might feel good temporarily. We nod at the cosmic slap, but it doesn't fix the trust broken in a marriage or the respect damaged in a workplace. It doesn't change who they were when no one was watching. There's a flip side to witnessing this embarrassment that flickers just below the surface. We might laugh, but something in us recoils as we imagine the real cost to those involved: lost jobs, fractured marriages, psychological fallout for their children. A hyperlink trail that will follow them to the grave. As Evan Nierman, author of The Cancel Culture Curse and CEO of the crisis PR firm Red Banyan, puts it: 'The internet has a way of locking people into their worst moment. When a misstep goes viral, the court of public opinion rarely allows space for explanation, nuance, or repair.' And once the pile-on begins, it escalates fast. 'Digital shame operates at a scale and speed our psychology isn't built for,' he warns. 'What starts as a laugh can quickly spiral into character assassination, with consequences that long outlast a viral moment.' Yet this moment – our collective gasp at betrayal made universal – revealed something crucial: we're craving truth, acknowledgment. We're craving slow, messy, quiet reckoning with accountability that extends beyond the tap-and-scroll. But in a world where real accountability is rare, a viral headline like this feels close enough – as though love, loyalty and truth might still mean something, even if only for a moment on the Jumbotron. Jessica Ciencin Henriquez is a writer in Ojai, California, and the author of the forthcoming essay collection, If You Loved Me, You Would Know. You can find her on social media @TheWriterJess

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store