Michael Conlan serves up dream debut with a sprinkling of Conor McGregor

All about Belfast boxer at Madison Square Garden until McGregor couldn’t help himself

Michael Conlan celebrates after wining his super bantamweight bout against Tim Ibarra at Madison Square Garden, new York. Conlan stopped Ibarra in the third round. Photo: Frank Franklin II/AP Photo
Michael Conlan celebrates after wining his super bantamweight bout against Tim Ibarra at Madison Square Garden, new York. Conlan stopped Ibarra in the third round. Photo: Frank Franklin II/AP Photo

With a dream of a professional debut on Friday night in New York, Michael Conlan all but erased the nightmarish end that befell his decorated amateur career at the Rio Olympics eight months ago.

The Belfast fighter broke his maiden with a third-round TKO of Tim Ibarra in a junior featherweight tilt slated for six rounds before a sold-out crowd of 5,102 at the Theater at Madison Square Garden.

A fighter’s pro debut is typically a celebratory yet unremarkable affair. Not Friday night. Conlan’s first paying fight in the main event of a Top Rank card took place amid the atmosphere and trappings of a major bout: complete with prestige ring announcer Michael Buffer, Irish dancers performing in the ring before his entrance and a buzzing, well-lubricated St Patrick’s Day crowd that packed the room to the corners. He was accompanied on his ringwalk by UFC champion Conor McGregor, his friend and countryman, who had told him in the locker room: “Relax, let it come to you. This is your night.” Sage advice, as it were.

Conlan, 25, appeared a bit overanxious from the opening bell, loading up on his punches and missing his target more often than not, sometimes wildly. When he connected with an overhand right followed by a left, it took the crowd into hysterics. “Use the jab!” barked McGregor from ringside. “Just the jab! Just the jab!”

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The Irishman dialed it back in the second and began concentrating on the body, though the overly timid Ibarra wasn’t exactly returning with hellfire. Then came the third, when Conlan immediately started bullying his overmatched opponent against the ropes and opening fire, leaving Ibarra practically frozen in the face of the onslaught. After a particularly vicious right hand landed flush, referee Benjy Esteves Jr had seen enough, putting a stop to it at the 0:59 mark.

Conlan connects with a right hand to the face of Ibarra. Photo: Frank Franklin II/AP Photo
Conlan connects with a right hand to the face of Ibarra. Photo: Frank Franklin II/AP Photo

“It was a debut you couldn’t even dream of,” Conlan said. “I was relaxed coming to the ring but then you want to impress and perform. I didn’t think I performed that well but who has a debut like this and has this much pressure on them? It was like nothing I ever experienced before. I am happy with how things went.”

Matthew Macklin, the former middleweight contender who manages Conlan, was happy that his charge was able to settle down.

“He was too eager at first,” said the three-times world title challenger, who this week said he believed Conlan could be the greatest Irish boxer of all time. “He had a lot of pressure on his shoulders. Once he got it together, he got it done.”

Added McGregor: “The biggest thing is the win. It doesn’t matter how you get there, but you must win.”

Top Rank, like Macklin, believe they have a star in Conlan, who won gold at 123lbs at the 2015 world amateur championships and a bronze medal at 114lbs at the London Olympics – but made international headlines after winding up on the wrong end of a widely disputed decision in the bantamweight quarterfinals in Rio and giving double middle fingers to the judges while still in the ring.

The promoter is hopeful Friday’s show will be the first of many St Patrick’s Day cards headlined by Conlan, whom they hope to build into a consistent Madison Square Garden attraction in the mold of Miguel Cotto. It is the biggest push any Olympian has received in the United States since Oscar De La Hoya in 1992.

Conor McGregor joined Conlan for the ring walk and was in his corner for the fight. Photo: Frank Franklin II/AP Photo
Conor McGregor joined Conlan for the ring walk and was in his corner for the fight. Photo: Frank Franklin II/AP Photo

McGregor, who is said to have been in initial talks to fight Floyd Mayweather, had initially deferred the spotlight to Conlan. But he couldn't resist a chance to prod the boxing media on the press row in the immediate aftermath, many of whom had traveled great distances in advance of Saturday's middleweight title unification fight between Gennady Golovkin and Daniel Jacobs in the big room next door.

“I am boxing!” he bellowed toward the press section. “Watch me take over boxing, trust me on that. No one in this boxing game knows what’s coming. Trust me on that. I’m going to step in there and shock the whole goddamn world. Trust me on that.

“Look me in the eyes, 28 years of age, confident as a motherfucker. Long, rangy, dangerous with every hand. Trust me, I’m going to stop Floyd. You’re all going to eat your words. The whole world is going to eat their words. It’s getting close. Don’t worry about it. You’ll hear about it. I’m out of here.”

(Guardian service)