Conor McGregor knows he's got "the dough" but demands credit too for his contribution to MMA

UFC 264: Conor McGregor vs. Dustin Poirier
UFC 264: Conor McGregor vs. Dustin Poirier

Conor McGregor went on another tweet-and-delete spree on Twitter where the Irishman made multiple bold statements on Twitter and then went on to delete them.

In one deleted tweet, McGregor expressed in fighting at middleweight.

"I'd be a big fridge at middleweight. But hot like oven same time, ye know yourself, catch it on ppv. Don't know tho. It be hard work. Those rounds against those [middleweights/ light heavyweights], they were alternating fresh each round. I've put in psycho work doing this job over the years."

Adding to that, 'The Notorious' said that although he had received the money he deserved for his contributions to the sport, he was yet to receive due credit for the same.

"I know I get the dough but I should get the credit too. Mostly people lying to themselves. I'm not on this throne by chance. I worked for all of this. Insanely hard."

You can take a look at the screenshot of the deleted tweets below:

Conor McGregor demands credit for his hard work
Conor McGregor demands credit for his hard work

Conor Mcgregor is undoubtedly the biggest star in the sport of mixed martial arts. 'The Notorious' has made significant contributions to the growth and success of the sport as well as the UFC.

His fight against Khabib Nurmagomedov at UFC 229 was the biggest MMA pay-per-view event of all time and had about 2.4 million buys.

'Mystic Mac' also fought Floyd Mayweather in a boxing match and the fight sold about 4.3 million pay-per-views.


Conor McGregor's achievements inside the octagon

Apart from his massive success in terms of pay-per-view numbers, Conor Mcgregor has also achieved numerous astonishing feats inside the octagon.

The Irishman has the UFC record for the fastest knockout in a title fight. McGregor achieved this feat at UFC 194 when he defeated Jose Aldo in just 13 seconds to become the new featherweight champion.

McGregor also became the first double champion in UFC history when he knocked out Eddie Alvarez in the second round at UFC 205 to win the lightweight belt.

With his 40-second win over Donald Cerrone at UFC 246, McGregor also became one of the only two fighters (the other being Jared Cannonier) to score knockout victories in three different weight classes.

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