Khabib Nurmagomedov says he does not have a ‘gram of regret’ for sparking Conor McGregor brawl

The UFC Lightweight Champion was suspended for nine months and fined £380,000 for sparking the infamous post-fight melee

Tom Kershaw
Tuesday 05 February 2019 06:05 EST
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UFC- Khabib Nurmagomedov apologies for post-fight melee after defeating Conor McGregor

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Khabib Nurmagomedov says he does not have a “gram of regret” about sparking the melee which overshadowed his win against Conor McGregor in August.

The UFC Lightweight Champion was suspended for nine months and fined £380,000 by the Nevada State Athletic Commission last week, leading Nurmagomedov to firmly withdraw any previous apologies.

“I’ve had many situations in my life that I regret, you can’t turn back time,’ Nurmagomedov told Russian channel Match TV.

“But this is not on the list of things I regret. If the situation happened again 100 times, I would do the same thing 100 times.

“I don’t have a gram of regret about my actions. Some people liked it, some people didn’t. It makes no difference. I did what I wanted to do.”

Nurmagomedov also hit out at the perceived bias of his punishment from a state which allows “drugs, prostitution and gambling”, and claimed Nevada’s governing body should instead “work on its own behaviour.”

When McGregor hurled a trolley at a bus Nurmagomedov was on – which then became a major element of the build-up to the pair’s bout – the Irishman was only banned for six months and fined £25,000.

“From the organisation [UFC] I felt support for his side, there were a lot of moments when I turned a blind eye,” Nurmagomedov continued.

“I was fined exactly 10 times more than McGregor. I believe that this attitude isn’t only towards me, but also towards our country.

A rematch between McGregor and Nurmagomedov now looks unlikely
A rematch between McGregor and Nurmagomedov now looks unlikely (Getty)

“Sport should be without politics. And in our fight, politics were very strongly felt. I hadn’t felt that before, but now I’ve begun to,” he added.

Nurmagomedov was offered the opportunity to reduce his suspension by three months, if he undertook an anti-bullying television appeal in Nevada, but the 30-year-old outright refused the suggestion.

Furthermore, once free to make his return to the octagon, Nurmagomedov has vowed he will never fight in Las Vegas again.

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