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Conor McGregor’s Comeback Has Everything: Money, Mystery, And Max Holloway

Conor McGregor’s Comeback Has Everything: Money, Mystery, And Max Holloway

 Las Vegas, Nevada – Conor McGregor is still the biggest name in mixed martial arts. He is also, somehow, the long shot.

That is what makes his return so fascinating. The most famous fighter in UFC history is coming back to the Octagon on July 11th at UFC 329 in Las Vegas against Max Holloway, a familiar opponent from another era of his career. The matchup is loaded with nostalgia, money, risk, and uncertainty. It is not just McGregor returning after nearly five years away from competition. It is McGregor returning with a new deal, a dangerous opponent, and something he rarely carried during his rise to superstardom: genuine underdog status.

For years, McGregor has been less of a fighter than a weather system. When he moves, the sport reacts. When he speaks, the clips travel. When his name appears on a fight poster, casual fans who have ignored MMA for months suddenly remember how to find the channel, the app, the bar, or the paywall. That has always been his power. Even after years of inactivity, controversy, injury, business ventures, movie appearances, and false starts, McGregor still creates the kind of attention most fighters spend entire careers chasing.

The latest proof came when UFC CEO Dana White announced McGregor’s return while Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions was staging its first live MMA event on Netflix. Whether intentional or not, the timing felt like classic UFC counterprogramming. A rival promotion had the spotlight. Then McGregor’s name entered the room, and suddenly the conversation shifted.

That is the business value of Conor McGregor. He can be gone for years and still hijack a news cycle in minutes.

But, this comeback is different because the old assumptions no longer apply. McGregor has not fought since July 2021, when he broke his leg in his trilogy loss to Dustin Poirier. He has not won a fight since January 2020, when he stopped Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in Las Vegas. In the years since, the sport has moved on. Champions have changed. Divisions have evolved. The pace of elite MMA has accelerated. Holloway, meanwhile, has stayed active, stayed dangerous, and rebuilt his own star power.

That is why oddsmakers have not treated McGregor like the king returning to reclaim the throne. They have treated him like a question mark.

Holloway opened as a heavy favorite, with McGregor listed as a sizable underdog. That number tells the real story. McGregor may still be the bigger attraction, but Holloway is being viewed as the safer fighter. The public may still care more about McGregor, but the betting market sees the danger in age, inactivity, injuries, and the simple fact that Holloway has been living inside the modern fight game while McGregor has been orbiting around it.

That creates a rare promotional contradiction. McGregor is the A-side, the draw, the headline, and the reason the event feels massive. Yet, he is also the fighter with more to prove.

The Holloway matchup makes that tension even better. McGregor defeated Holloway by unanimous decision in 2013, long before both men became global names. At the time, McGregor was a rising Irish prospect beginning his takeover of the featherweight division. Holloway was young, talented, and still developing into the volume-striking machine who would later become one of the most respected fighters of his generation.

Thirteen years later, the rematch tells a very different story. McGregor is now the returning legend trying to prove there is still something left. Holloway is the active, battle-tested former champion who has every reason to believe the sport has tilted in his direction. This is not simply a sequel. It is a time capsule being reopened under completely different conditions.

McGregor, of course, is selling it exactly the way McGregor sells everything. He has said his body is fresh, his mind is sharp, and his preparation is going well. He has called Holloway a quality opponent, pointed back to their first fight, and suggested he plans to show his growth and improvements. That is the confident McGregor fans remember: bold, theatrical, dismissive of doubt, and fully aware that every sentence can become promotion.

The contract angle adds another layer. McGregor said he received “a great deal” from the UFC and that the promotion “honored” him. That matters because his return comes during a changing business era for the company. The UFC has moved into a new media rights world, with numbered events now tied to Paramount+ rather than the old pay-per-view structure that helped make McGregor absurdly wealthy. For a fighter whose value was historically connected to pay-per-view points and blockbuster sales, the structure of this return was always going to matter.

McGregor understood that better than anyone. Earlier this year, he suggested his old deal was essentially void because of the new media landscape and said he was due a new contract. Now he is back, publicly satisfied, and heading into a fight that could reshape his leverage all over again.

That may be the biggest business story hiding underneath the fight story. McGregor reportedly still has fights left on his UFC deal, and he remains one of the few combat sports figures who could command serious attention in almost any marketplace. In a streaming world where Netflix, Amazon, Paramount, and other platforms are spending enormous money on live sports, a free or nearly free Conor McGregor would be a fascinating asset. The UFC knows that. McGregor knows that. Everyone in combat sports knows that.

So, this is not just about beating Holloway. It is about what McGregor looks like while trying.

If he loses badly, the comeback becomes another reminder that fame cannot stop time. The sport will still cover him, still debate him, and still replay the highlights, but the idea of McGregor as a serious elite fighter may finally collapse under the weight of evidence. A one-sided Holloway win would not erase McGregor’s legacy, but it would change the way the next negotiation feels.

If McGregor is competitive, the machine keeps rolling. Even in defeat, a sharp, dangerous, entertaining McGregor could justify another major fight. The UFC has always understood that he does not need a belt to sell. He needs a story, an opponent, and enough uncertainty to make people believe something wild might happen.

But, if McGregor wins, the entire sport turns upside down again.

A victory over Holloway would immediately become one of the biggest comeback moments in modern UFC history. It would give McGregor proof that he is not just a nostalgia act. It would give the UFC a summer storyline with massive mainstream reach. It would give his team enormous leverage heading into whatever comes next. And, it would give fans the one thing McGregor has always been best at producing: chaos with a price tag.

That is why this fight matters more than a typical celebrity comeback. McGregor is not returning against a soft opponent built to make him look good. Holloway is not a faded name being wheeled out for familiarity. He is active, respected, durable, and dangerous. He has the cardio, rhythm, and confidence to make five rounds miserable for a fighter who has not been through a real MMA fight in years.

The welterweight setting adds even more intrigue. Their first meeting came at featherweight. This one comes at 170 pounds, far removed from the division where both men first crossed paths. McGregor’s power has always been part of the myth, but timing, distance, reaction speed, and gas tank are different questions after a long layoff. Holloway’s volume has always been part of his greatness, but facing McGregor under the bright lights of International Fight Week brings its own pressure.

That is the hidden genius of the matchup. It is familiar enough to sell instantly and uncertain enough to argue about endlessly.

For the UFC, the timing could not be better. The company has been thriving as a business, but mainstream attention in the United States often comes in waves. Stars matter. Personalities matter. Events need stories that reach beyond hardcore fans. McGregor provides that in a way almost nobody else does. He does not just headline cards. He turns fight week into a cultural event.

That is why the sport keeps making room for him, even after all the chaos, all the delays, and all the reasons to move on. McGregor is complicated. He is polarizing. He is not the same fighter who sprinted through featherweight, knocked out Jose Aldo, and turned press conferences into theater. But he remains the rare combat sports figure who can make people care before the first promo package even airs.

This return is not just a comeback. It is a test of whether celebrity, muscle memory, and old greatness can survive against activity, youth, and current form. It is the biggest personality in the sport walking into a fight where the odds say the other man should win. It is the UFC’s most bankable star trying to prove he is still more than a business asset.

That is what makes it compelling. McGregor has spent most of his career making other fighters feel like supporting characters in his movie. Now, for the first time in a long time, he is the attraction and the question.

The Notorious is back. The deal is done. The opponent is real. The opponent is dangerous. The odds are against him. McGregor has always been great at turning attention into money. On July 11th, he gets the chance to turn doubt into one more unforgettable moment.

Andrew Carswell

Andrew Carswell is a combat sports columnist and college writing professor, based in Las Vegas, NV, whose work examines the intersection of fighting, media, business, and culture. His commentary and analysis have been featured in various magazines, newspapers, and media outlets, including Yahoo! News, and USA TODAY. Blending journalistic insight and experience with a fan’s perspective, Carswell writes about the fight game as both a cultural phenomenon and a global business.

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