Conor Anthony McGregor was born on July 14, 1988, in Crumlin, a working-class suburb of Dublin, Ireland. He grew up playing soccer, then discovered boxing at age twelve at the Crumlin Boxing Club. He trained alongside future world champion Kimbo Slice at various gyms, training initially in boxing before encountering MMA through his coach Tom Egan. He worked as a plumbing apprentice while training, before leaving the apprenticeship to pursue fighting professionally, supported initially by Ireland's social welfare system — a detail he has cited publicly as evidence that commitment to a goal requires willingness to accept difficult circumstances in its service.
McGregor's early UFC career (he signed in 2013) was characterized by the combination that would define his public persona: extraordinary knockout power in the featherweight division, and a verbal confidence in pre-fight promotion that was simultaneously genuine trash talk and sophisticated marketing. The 'Notorious' persona — the tailored suits, the proclamations of his own greatness, the psychological warfare with opponents in pre-fight press conferences — was not an external construction but the performance of an internal reality: McGregor genuinely believed what he was saying, and his belief was more persuasive than most fighters' claims precisely because it was authentic.
The 2015 defeat of José Aldo — who had been unbeaten for ten years and was widely considered the greatest featherweight of all time — in thirteen seconds is one of the most startling moments in UFC history. McGregor became the first fighter to hold UFC titles simultaneously in two weight classes (featherweight and lightweight) in 2016. The 2017 boxing match with Floyd Mayweather Jr. — a MMA fighter facing the greatest defensive boxer of his era in Mayweather's own domain — generated approximately $600 million in revenue, demonstrating McGregor's promotional ability regardless of the athletic outcome (he lost by TKO in the tenth round).
McGregor's career since 2017 has been marked by inactivity relative to his peak, by legal difficulties in Ireland and the US, and by his increasing focus on his Proper Twelve Irish whiskey brand, which he launched in 2018 and sold for a reported $600 million in 2021. He has spoken about his intention to fight again; his 2021 trilogy with Dustin Poirier ended with a severe leg injury that required surgery and a long rehabilitation. He remains one of the most recognized athletes on earth and the highest-earning MMA fighter in history, having generated over $1 billion in fight-related revenue.