Paulie Malignaggi leaves Las Vegas, angry at Conor McGregor in sparring dispute
It’s hardly a shock that the fight that was put together via social media is blowing up on social media.
Former boxing world champion Paulie Malignaggi, who had been in Las Vegas sparring with Conor McGregor to help prepare the UFC lightweight champion for his Aug. 26 fight at T-Mobile Arena with Floyd Mayweather, flew home to New York on Friday.
Malignaggi was angry at photos that McGregor released of their sparring at the UFC Performance Institute that seemed to show McGregor knocking Malignaggi down.
A post shared by Conor McGregor Official (@thenotoriousmma) on Aug 2, 2017 at 4:27am PDT
It is a similar complaint to one that boxer Chris van Heerden made about McGregor when van Heerden accused McGregor of selectively editing their sparring footage to create the impression he was doing better than he was.
Malignaggi, who is 36-8 with seven knockouts in a boxing career in which he won the IBF super lightweight title and the WBA welterweight crown, will be part of the Showtime broadcast crew for the pay-per-view event.
Malignaggi, who announced after a March loss that he would retire only to later say he planned to continue to box, was none too happy with McGregor’s post and took to Instagram himself.
A post shared by Paul Malignaggi (@paulmalignaggi) on Aug 3, 2017 at 8:07pm PDT
He also vented on Twitter, telling a very specific story about what happened between him and McGregor in the ring and what, exactly, he was upset about after the whole ordeal.
Its not nice 2 paint a pic that isn't true, this was a pushdown in sparring, post the whole video rounds 1 through 12 UNEDITED https://t.co/R82BLiMMVm
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
I came to help this camp out, not to be exploited, now your gonna get the truth though. Post FULL UNEDITED VIDEO FROM TUES night #Ethics
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
I came to help this camp out, not to be exploited, now your gonna get the truth though. Post FULL UNEDITED VIDEO FROM TUES night #Ethics
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
I actually beat his ass, 24 hrsoff a flight 2 lol, which is why Im saying post the vid, I try not 2 be petty but seems it's late 4 that now. https://t.co/vSE2Iw4ffM
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
I did interview BECAUSE of the pics, I'm not ur average sparring partner u post pics with me media will hound me, I've said stop with pics. https://t.co/9c85977PQ5
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
Only his personal photographers allowed in the gym. Don't just invent you're own reality of things because it's how u wish it to be buddy. https://t.co/OsnN2AkL56
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
Nah I pretty much talked shit that whole sparring session while I beat the breaks off him, the push down was his frustration from it. https://t.co/m0IDBP0pB2
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
Very good observation there, good way to educate the Conor groupies and casuals. Cortez reaction is a big hint. https://t.co/mnAN6ZU9U3
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
The pics cause the media to rush me for answers, unlike u I'm not an irrelevant nobody, pics of me cause a media rush I can't avoid, get it? https://t.co/fIPwsJiJMd
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
Maybe but I didn't Pay for anything, a video exists, UFC PI has 24 hr cameras, when the fight is over will they release UNEDITED film? https://t.co/U4sPatwsIn
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
Ur kidding with that question right? Like no way u r this stupid. Conor's people n ONLY Conors people allowed in gym, his photogs only. https://t.co/5uawAV2NoC
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
Hate to say it but it's clear when I look back at my time there that there was an agenda from the start, too many clues. https://t.co/dxjLvu3Oyt
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
I did but I didn't get paid anyway. Now go back and be a good Lil groupie and tweet about your Conor fantasies and stories. https://t.co/iojI1r3dMW
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
That kind of sparring is normal for boxers on a high level, I boxed many yrs so it's normal but to put a weird spin on things is unethical. https://t.co/rcUKRnakaN
— Paul Malignaggi (@PaulMalignaggi) August 4, 2017
In the grand scheme of things, it all means nothing. A sparring session isn’t a fight, and McGregor is considerably larger than Malignaggi. What it will do, though, is draw even more interest to a card that is expected to set pay-per-view, live gate and total gross revenue records.
Malignaggi will get a bit more notoriety out of it — though probably not all the kind he wishes it was — and McGregor will rake in a few more bucks based on the extra pay-per-view units this “controversy” helps move.