Conor McGregor Admits He “Got Lost” in His Own Fame

Conor McGregor has never been a normal UFC star.

He became the biggest name in MMA, crossed over into boxing, made ridiculous money, built businesses, and turned every fight week into a global event. But now, McGregor is admitting that level of fame came with a cost.

The former two-division UFC champion said he “got lost” during his rise to superstardom, acknowledging that fame has pitfalls and that he made mistakes outside the cage.

For McGregor, this is one of the most honest moments of his career.

At his peak, he was untouchable. He knocked out José Aldo in 13 seconds, became the UFC’s first simultaneous two-division champion, fought Floyd Mayweather in one of the biggest combat sports events ever, and became the face of the UFC. But somewhere along the way, the chaos outside the octagon began to overshadow the brilliance inside it.

That is what makes this admission so important.

McGregor’s legacy has always been complicated. In the cage, he changed MMA forever. His confidence, trash talk, precision striking, and ability to sell fights helped turn the UFC into an even bigger global brand. But outside the cage, legal issues, controversies, long layoffs, and missed comeback opportunities damaged his reputation.

Now, McGregor seems to understand that fame did not just elevate him. It consumed him.

The big question is whether this self-reflection can lead to a real comeback. McGregor has not fought since suffering a broken leg against Dustin Poirier in 2021, but is set to fight Max Holloway Saturday July 11th in Las Vegas, Nevada.

They will be watching to see if he has truly changed.

McGregor’s story is still one of the wildest in sports: a fighter who talked his way to the top, backed it up with historic performances, then struggled under the weight of his own celebrity.

Now he is trying to write a different final chapter.

And for one of the most polarizing athletes of all time, that may be his toughest fight yet.

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Landon Kardian