Conor McGregor willing to face 'next in line' if not Khabib Nurmagomedov

ByBRETT OKAMOTO
October 23, 2018, 1:26 AM

Conor McGregor intends to return to the UFC's Octagon with his "confidence high" and is apparently willing to do so against someone other than Khabib Nurmagomedov.

In a rare public comment on social media, McGregor (21-4) said he was beaten "fair and square" by Nurmagomedov on Oct. 6 at UFC 229, but he vowed to return stronger than ever. The Irishman has already called for a rematch against Nurmagomedov, but he said Monday that he would accept another opponent if need be.

"It was a great fight and it was my pleasure," McGregor wrote on Instagram. "I will be back with my confidence high. Fully prepared. If it is not the rematch right away, no problem. I will face the next in line. It's all me always, anyway. See you soon my fighting fans I love you all."

McGregor, 30, returned from a nearly two-year layoff to challenge Nurmagomedov (27-0) for the UFC's lightweight title. He tapped to a neck crank in the fourth round.

In his social media post, McGregor said a right hand Nurmagomedov was "blessed" with landing in the second round, which briefly dropped him, changed the course of the fight. He admitted to not respecting Nurmagomedov's striking enough and not giving his own grappling enough credit.

"Round 2 he is running away around the cage before being blessed with a right hand that changed the course of the round, and the fight," McGregor said. "It was a nice shot. After the shot I bounced back up to engage instantly, but again he dipped under to disengage. That is the sport and it was a smart move that led to a dominant round, so no issue."

McGregor credited himself for his response in the third round, which he won on the official scorecards. It was the only round Nurmagomedov has lost in his UFC career. McGregor went on to say that he made a "crucial error" in the fourth round that led to the finish.

McGregor and Nurmagomedov are facing possible fines and suspensions from the Nevada State Athletic Commission for their post-fight actions at UFC 229. Nurmagomedov left the Octagon to confront McGregor's corner. McGregor was caught on camera throwing punches at members of Nurmagomedov's team in the ensuing chaos.

A rematch would obviously mean big business for the UFC, but president Dana White has been noncommittal on the idea. He told ESPN last week that the UFC will do "what's fair" and mentioned former interim champion Tony Ferguson as potentially the next No. 1 contender.

"I haven't even thought about a [McGregor] rematch," White said. "Obviously, I know Conor wants a rematch. We need to do what's right and what's fair. We'll see how it plays out. We literally haven't thought about it yet.

"... As a fight fan, you've got to with Tony. Tony had the belt, tweaked his knee, got stripped, this fight happens -- Tony never lost the [interim] belt in a fight. Neither did Conor, but Conor got the opportunity to actually fight [Nurmagomedov]. I think Tony deserves the next shot."