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11th October 2018
03:41pm BST

Brett Okamoto of ESPN believes McGregor and Nurmagomedov were tied at 28-28 heading into the fateful fourth. That has sparked a fevered response but it cannot be denied that McGregor battled his way back into the mix until fatigue and Nurmagomedov's constant switch-ups caused his downfall.
McGregor created some UFC history, on October 6, by taking a round off 'The Eagle'. It was the first time in the Dagestani's 11 UFC fights that he ever lost a round.
Okamoto felt McGregor was never in serious trouble in that first round, despite his being taken down by his opponent's ankle-grab. In terms of significant strikes, in that round, Nurmagomedov landed 7 of 9 attempts. McGregor landed 6 of 7.
McGregor did stuff another Nurmagomedov takedown attempt but the champion passed guard once in that round. To our mind, Nurmagomedov shaded it. Okamoto gave the round to McGregor and (as you can see below) had the score level going into round four.
https://twitter.com/bokamotoESPN/status/1048796541438156800
https://twitter.com/bokamotoESPN/status/1048798087144075267
https://twitter.com/bokamotoESPN/status/1048799676202270722
Discussing the 28-28 call on 'The A Side', Shaun Al-Shatti said, "I can't talk for Brett but I had Conor losing the first round and losing the second round 10-8. I had him winning the third round... so heading into the ultimate, final round makes it 29-27."
Marc Raimondi, his colleague, added, "Brett is a colleague of ours and we're not going to bury the guy, but he f**ked up. It happens; whatever."
McGregor has yet to give his take on how he saw the fight going down but he will surely be heartened by a leading MMA writer and presenter stating he was right in there, and level on the scorecards, until that fourth round.Explore more on these topics: