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24th August 2017
11:59am BST

“If you want me to stick around, if you want me to keep doing what I’m doing, let’s talk. But I want ownership now. I want equal share. I want what I deserve.”A few months shy of a year later Dana White appears to be open to the request, as he told MMAJunkie.
“It’s never been done, but anything is possible. There’s a lot of people who feel like they’re worth this, and they’re worth that – we know what this kid’s worth.”https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/879861407088611329 McGregor is the unicorn who smashes PPV records, takes tough fights on short notice and has done wonders for getting the UFC brand more mainstream coverage. He is good for business. That's why White tells the rest of the roster 'If you're not Conor McGregor, shut up!' even after the Dubliner's 'fuck the UFC' Instagram post was seen by the masses. However, giving McGregor an ownership stake, something that no other active fighter has ever received, could have serious consequences. McGregor's never pushed for a fighters union, he's never spoken out against the controversial Reebok deal, he's never tried to improve working conditions for fighters across the board. Everything he's asked of the UFC has been for himself or his team, but he has done all this as a fighter. https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/880056984648785920 Remember why McGregor sent that retirement tweet in the first place? It was all because he was upset with the promotion punishing him for not adhering to their unreasonable media obligation demands. His rematch against Nate Diaz was removed from UFC 200 was in retaliation for him refusing to attend a presser in Las Vegas just as his fight camp was starting. When the UFC said 'jump', McGregor responded with 'catch ya's later.' Although he is an employee (or independent contractor), he had the requisite power to take a stand that paid off. UFC 200 was a failure, UFC 202 was an overwhelming success. McGregor is a company man, but he's not the company, man. Change that dynamic now, and run the risk of losing the most vocal indirect representative of the fighters to the other side. We're not saying McGregor hasn't earned it, but expect a strong reaction from his fellow fighters on the roster if he achieves ownership status.
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