Conor McGregor is showing a different side of himself before Max Holloway rematch

22 May 2026 • 2:55 AM MYT
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Image from: Conor McGregor is showing a different side of himself before Max Holloway rematch
Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Conor McGregor is getting ready for his rematch with Max Holloway at UFC 329 in Las Vegas on 11 July 2026, and this fight already feels bigger than just a rematch.

The headlines will focus on McGregor’s return to face Holloway again, more than a decade after their first meeting in 2013, a fight McGregor won by unanimous decision.

But the build-up has also shown a different side of McGregor, especially in how he has been training around younger fighters. That matters, because his impact has always reached beyond just what happens inside the Octagon.

McGregor’s comeback means more than just another fight

Image from: Conor McGregor is showing a different side of himself before Max Holloway rematch
Photo By Thomas King/Sportsfile via Getty Images

McGregor’s return is naturally going to draw attention. He has not fought in the UFC since 2021, when his trilogy bout with Dustin Poirier ended with a serious leg injury.

That alone makes the Holloway rematch a major event. It is a chance to see not just where he stands, but what remains after the long layoff, the injuries, and everything else that has come with his career over the years.

He has already said he feels better than ever ahead of the fight, which is something you would expect to hear from any fighter making a comeback.

But what is more interesting is what he is choosing to show outside of the usual promotional work.

The next generation focus adds real depth to this return

One of his recent training posts stood out because it was not just about him. It showed him working with younger fighters, at a time when it would have been easy to make everything about his own return.

That is what makes it interesting. It does not take away from the Holloway storyline, it adds something more to it.

This is not a new angle either. McGregor has already spent time coaching prospects on The Ultimate Fighter 31, focusing on developing fighters rather than working with established veterans.

He was good in that role too. Beyond the power and the personality, McGregor’s real strengths were always about the details, the timing, the belief, and the way he could make fighters around him feel like something bigger was possible.

McGregor’s influence goes beyond his record

McGregor’s record sits at 22-6, but the numbers do not fully explain why he is still such a huge presence in the sport.

He changed what Irish MMA looked like, and he helped open doors for younger fighters to move from local gyms to the world stage.

That is why his work with prospects matters. It is not a side project or charity branding, it is part of why he still matters in the sport.

Fighters like Ian Machado Garry have spoken about how much McGregor meant to them growing up, and that influence has not gone away for the next wave of fighters.

McGregor will always face heavy criticism because he has made himself impossible to ignore.

But the next stage of his career should not be reduced to whether he can still sell a fight. Everyone knows he can do that.

This is the Conor McGregor that matters now

The Holloway fight will settle questions about where he stands as a fighter. But these moments around training are showing something different, what he can still offer beyond just the spectacle.

He does not need to be rebranded as a mentor for this to mean something. That would be too simple.

He just needs to show that his experience and visibility can help the next generation coming through. That is why this build-up feels important.

Holloway will test McGregor in the cage, but younger fighters are still learning from him outside of it. For everything that will come with fight week, that might be the side of him that matters most now.

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