November 10, 2024

Conor McGregor vs. Dustin Poirier: UFC 264 | Live stream, TV, start time, PPV price, full list of fights, betting odds, how to watch MMA 2021

McGregor #McGregor

By the time Saturday is over Conor McGregor will be a contender for a title or fading into a UFC has been. Dustin Poirier stands at the crossroads of McGregor’s colorful career hoping to finish him off again Saturday night in the rubber match of a trilogy that began seven years ago.

The winner will square off against lightweight champion Charles Oliveira.

UFC 264: McGregor vs. Poirier 3

You can watch the main event fights exclusively on ESPN+ pay-per-view, which does require a subscription and purchase of the fight.

Start time: Main Card PPV starts at 10 p.m. EST | Prelims: 8 p.m. | Early Prelims: 6 p.m.

TV channel/schedule: ESPN, ESPN Deportes for prelims – The Prelims will air on ESPN and ESPN Deportes. However, the main event will not air on TV channels and can only be streamed via ESPN+ pay-per-view in the U.S. You can, however, watch the fight on your TV by adding ESPN+ to your smart TV or streaming device such as a Roku or Amazon Fire Stick.

Line, spread, betting odds: McGregor -325 (Bovada) |

Live stream: ESPN+ PPV for the Main Event | The Prelims can be streamed on standard ESPN+ as well as fuboTV, which comes with a free seven-day trial. | Standard ESPN+ for Early Prelims

UFC 264 Price: Cost for the pay-per-view fight: The price to watch UFC 264 is $69.99, which is on top of the cost to access ESPN+, which is already a paid service. New subscribers can get the fight and an annual ESPN+ subscription for $89.99.

What is ESPN+? – ESPN+ isn’t a replacement for a normal ESPN subscription through your cable provider. Instead, it’s an auxiliary service that provides original content and some live sports. It also gives customers access to exclusive content on ESPN.com and access to pay-per-view MMA events.

UFC 264 Card: Full list of fights, odds

  • Dustin Poirier -125 vs. Conor McGregor +105, lightweight
  • Stephen Thompson -160 vs. Gilbert Burns +135, welterweight
  • Tai Tuivasa -130 vs. Greg Hardy +110, heavyweight
  • Irene Aldana -120 vs. Yana Kunitskaya +100, women’s bantamweight
  • Sean O’Malley -800 vs. Kris Moutinho +550, bantamweight
  • Max Griffin -190 vs. Carlos Condit +160, welterweight
  • Michel Pereira -160 vs. Niko Price +135, welterweight
  • Dricus Du Plessis -125 vs. Trevin Giles +105, middleweight
  • Ilia Topuria -230 vs. Ryan Hall +190, featherweight
  • Jennifer Maia -180 vs. Jessica Eye +155, women’s flyweight
  • Brad Tavares -160 vs. Omari Akhmedov +135, middleweight
  • Zhalgas Zhumaglov -330 vs. Jerome Rivera +260, flyweight
  • Alen Amedovski -140 vs. Hu Yaozong +120, middleweight
  • More coverage via the Associated Press

    LAS VEGAS (AP) — Conor McGregor was soundly beaten by Dustin Poirier less than six months ago. That doesn’t seem like enough time for the Irish superstar to patch all the holes Poirier punched in his game.

    When they complete their rivalry trilogy Saturday night in the main event of UFC 264, Poirier (27-6) enters the cage as a better-rounded, more tested fighter than McGregor (22-5), who is competing in mixed martial arts for only the fourth time in nearly five years.

    Yet McGregor’s famed punching power — and the world’s memory of his meteoric rise through his sport — remain tantalizing enough to create uncertainty in the minds of millions of fight fans. McGregor has done the improbable before, and he’ll probably never lose the ability to stoke his fans’ imaginations.

    “This is my bread and butter,” McGregor said. “This is what wakes me up in the morning with fire in my belly. … I love to come in here, defy the odds, do the unthinkable and put on a show.”

    That sounds somewhat like the old Conor, the former plumber who conquered the MMA world with two heavy hands and an unmatched gift of gab.

    But will the same man get out of his luxury car at T-Mobile Arena? Can a self-described “fat-cat” multimillionaire return to his feral, ferocious form for another electrifying victory?

    Poirier knows the possibility exists, and it’s reason enough to watch the conclusion to this three-fight epic that began with McGregor’s first-round knockout of Poirier in 2014 and continued with Poirier’s second-round stoppage of McGregor in Abu Dhabi.

    “I have a healthy fear going into every fight,” Poirier said. “I know the dangers. I know what this guy can do.”

    The winner of the main event gets the next lightweight title shot against champion Charles Oliveira, according to UFC President Dana White.

    UFC 264 is co-headlined by a bout between former welterweight title challengers Gilbert Burns and Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson. The pay-per-view card also includes a heavyweight matchup between Tai Tuivasa and former NFL player Greg Hardy, while the undercard is topped by welterweights Carlos Condit and Max Griffin.

    Anyone who saw UFC 257 last January knows how comfortably Poirier handled McGregor’s strengths. In the rematch, McGregor must either do his thing much better, or he must adapt and evolve — something he hasn’t done successfully over the past five years.

    Poirier highlighted weaknesses and exploited opportunities in the brash, pugnacious approach that made McGregor the biggest name in combat sports. Patiently implementing his game plan, Poirier battered McGregor with painful leg kicks before finishing him with fists, stopping the former two-division UFC champion on punches for the first time in McGregor’s career.

    McGregor had a solid first round on his feet, but he did it while using a more conventional boxing stance, not the karate-influenced approach that made him so unpredictable earlier in his career. McGregor showed an inability or unwillingness to check Poirier’s leg kicks in that stance until later in the fight, which inevitably meant McGregor’s right leg was beaten into painful uselessness.

    McGregor’s coaches have said he will adjust to the kicks, and he might even dish out more of his own, as he did against Nate Diaz a half-decade ago. Improving his aggression could lead to more counterpunching opportunities for McGregor, who thrives on them.

    McGregor is no stranger to crossroads moments, but this two-bout series with Poirier could define what’s left in the remarkable career of a fighter who turns 33 next Wednesday.

    If he loses again, McGregor’s more cogent supporters would be forced to acknowledge he has become more of a spectacle fighter than a championship contender. He’ll never lack for big-time spotlights and willing opponents, but he also would be excused for retiring for a fourth time — and for actually sticking to it this time.

    But if McGregor somehow wins, his next bout would be for a title. He would be back in legitimate contention for an honor that isn’t built on his past achievements.

    Poirier is taking his own step backward to move forward: He could have waited for the title shot at Oliveira, who only won the 155-pound belt in May. Instead, Poirier agreed to this highly lucrative trilogy fight with the obvious risk of a loss that would derail his hopes of winning an undisputed title belt.

    Even after McGregor baited and berated Poirier throughout their final news conference Thursday, Poirier is confident he made the right decision to finish the task of erasing another swath of McGregor’s mystique.

    “It’s just business,” Poirier said. “I see a man here. … It’s a fight, and I beat him (last time). What’s his excuse going to be on Saturday?”

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