
UFC analyst: 'Washed' Michael Chandler winnable fight for Conor McGregor at White House
Chandler (23-10 MMA, 2-5 UFC) spent over a year waiting for McGregor (22-6 MMA, 10-4 UFC) to return, and the pair were eventually booked to fight at UFC 303 last June. However, McGregor withdrew due to a broken pinky toe and has not been scheduled for a fight since.
With the UFC working on an event at the White House next July, McGregor has re-entered the drug testing pool. If he does indeed end up coming back, Bisping sees Chandler as the perfect opponent for him to get his first win since 2020.
"He doesn't need to fight, and fair play to the guy," Bisping said of McGregor on his YouTube channel. "I do respect the fact that he still wants to fight because, as he said, and as I know, there's no other feeling like it. Will he still be the same Conor McGregor? I very much doubt it. 2016 is nine years ago. That's crazy. Things move on, simple as that.
"McGregor's getting a little bit older, but if he wants to come back and he wants to fight on the White House, great. Fair play. Who would he fight? Well, of course, there is the match with Michael Chandler, and it would just be mental if that fight with Michael Chandler actually ended up materializing after Michael Chandler sat on the sidelines for what feels like a goddamn eternity."
Chandler, 39, has lost five of his past six fights. Although he's fought top-level competition in the octagon, it's his most recent performance against Paddy Pimblett at UFC 314 which has Bisping concerned.
"Him vs. Chandler, yes an interesting fight, 100 percent – certainly a fight that I would favor Conor McGregor to win," Bisping said. "I think it would be a perfect opponent to come back to and face after so much time away, because the version of Michael Chandler that we saw against Paddy Pimblett was washed. He was done. He was over the hill. He looked terrible."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Anthony Hernandez 'still not really sold' on Khamzat Chimaev before UFC 319
Anthony Hernandez thinks Khamzat Chimaev is still unproven heading into his first UFC title fight. Chimaev (14-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) challenges middleweight champion Dricus Du Plessis (23-2 MMA, 9-0 UFC) in the UFC 319 headliner on Aug. 16 from United Center in Chicago (ESPN+ pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+). Chimaev is the betting favorite heading into his fight with Du Plessis, who holds wins over former champions Robert Whittaker, Israel Adesanya and Sean Strickland. However, Hernandez isn't ready to buy into the undefeated phenom's hype just yet. "I think DDP is going to shock the world again," Hernandez told MMA Junkie. "He's a big, tough, awkward motherf*cker, and I'm still not really sold on Khamzat. I understand he's good, and he's dangerous, yada yada, but he's kind of fought all small guys who have come up. (Kamaru) Usman gave him a run for his money off the couch, so how does he do with somebody that's like a real 85'er?" Hernandez (14-2 MMA, 8-2 UFC) will look to enter the middleweight title picture when he takes on Roman Dolidze (15-3 MMA, 9-3) in Saturday's UFC on ESPN 72 (ESPN, ESPN+) main event at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Khamzat Chimaev addresses Dricus Du Plessis 'weird' style, UFC 319 pre-fight trash talk
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. – Khamzat Chimaev isn't too concerned with how UFC middleweight champion Dricus Du Plessis looks while fighting inside the cage. While many have found Du Plessis (23-2 MMA, 9-0 UFC) to have an awkward style, Chimaev (14-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) knows how effective it can be. After all, it led him to the peak of the UFC's 185-pound division. Chimaev will get his opportunity to see how different his style first hand when they clash inside the cage in the main event of UFC 319 in Chicago. "Everyone says he has a weird style, very weird – that's MMA, MMA style," Chimaev told reporters at a media day. "I don't think he's some crazy, weird (fighter), but he does his job. He does good and he's a good fighter. I am better." Chimaev has proven to be one of the biggest problems in the division, but he, too, is not without criticism. If a fight makes it out of the first round, where Chimaev has finished five of his eight bouts, questions about his cardio have risen due to his performances in decision wins against Gilbert Burns and Kamaru Usman. It's an issue that Chimaev and team have focused on leading into his first shot at UFC gold by bringing in a new strength and conditioning coach. His head coach, Joakim Karlsson, said Chimaev's cardio is on a different level now. The early aggression from Chimaev could dictate the outcome of the fight. He intends to get Du Plessis to the canvas to find out how he will deal with his grappling game that led to finishes of former champ Robert Whittaker and contenders such as Kevin Holland and Li Jingliang. "When someone laying down on the mats, it's how weird you are on the ground," Chimaev said. "Ground and pound, submissions – they don't care about your style. We will see. We'll be happy to see him in the cage. We will fight him striking, wrestling, grappling. I want to know how he can handle it." Karlsson not only said Chimaev's cardio is vastly improved, but he has also taken training overall more seriously ahead of UFC 319. The fight promotion side of the game has been apparent on social media as well, as Chimaev and Du Plessis have gone back and forth trading barbs online. For Chimaev, it's all business, and if it ruffles the champ's feathers, then so be it. "We're just making money, having fun," Chimaev said. "If he wants to take it personally, it's up to him. For me, it's just work. It makes people happy, it makes me happy. Like I said before, beating somebody makes me happy."


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Arman Tsarukyan accuses Ilia Topuria of ducking: 'He knows I'm a big problem'
Arman Tsarukyan feels Ilia Topuria is avoiding him in fear of losing his UFC title. NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. – Arman Tsarukyan isn't buying Ilia Topuria's reasoning for not wanting to defend his UFC lightweight title against him. Topuria claims he doesn't trust Tsarukyan on making it to the fight, and points out Tsarukyan's last-minute withdrawal from his UFC lightweight title fight against then-champion Islam Makhachev earlier this year at UFC 311. Despite that being the first time Tsarukyan (22-3 MMA, 9-2 UFC) has withdrawn from a booked fight in his six years with the promotion, Topuria went as far as saying that he's willing to vacate his belt, should the UFC give the title shot to the Armenian fighter. Tsarukyan thinks this is just a cover-up for the real reason, and feels Topuria is "for sure" ducking him. "He feels that he's going to lose that fight, and it's better to give the belt and then like go up or wait to see what happens with me because he knows I'm a big problem for him," Tsarukyan told MMA Junkie and other reporters during a media day scrum. "I'm going to get his title, he knows that, and he wants an easy fight with Paddy (Pimblett) or (Justin) Gaethje or someone, just make money and defend, but with me, it's going to be hard for him." Tsarukyan, who pulled out of the fight with Makhachev due to a back injury, assures that he's now healthy and ready to go. He'd be even willing to fight soon and then be ready again to fight Topuria at the end of the year should the UFC want one more fight out of him. "I already told them I'm ready September or October," Tsarukyan said. "I'm in shape and I train twice a day. I'm healthy now, so if they tell me October with somebody and December with Ilia, for sure."