
Share
19th August 2016
07:21pm BST

The most expensive, and therefore best, seats for the card are located Octagon-side and they have been cut by $2,000 (from $9,995 to $7,995) in the space of one day while other premium seats were slashed from $2,950 to $1,850.
While the August 20 event is still projected to bring in over $7 million in gate revenue, it is unlikely to better UFC 194's $10 million which is the largest gate of any mixed martial arts event in Las Vegas.
The quality of the card has been questioned by some cynical fight fans and the fact that there is no title fights on the card may have had a detrimental effect on public interest.
There will presumably be far fewer Irish fans in attendance as many had bought tickets for UFC 200, the event that McGregor vs. Diaz II was originally scheduled to headline, and could not cancel their hotels and flights when the rematch was eventually pulled from the card. And two trips to Las Vegas in the span of a month is understandably an expense that not many can afford. McGregor's early media silence throughout his fight camp won't have helped either but the bottle-throwing antics at the pre-fight press conference will certainly have salvaged some hype. Massive Mayo v Tipperary preview plus a big interview with Eamon McGee in the latest GAA Hour.Subscribe here on iTunes.Diaz storms out of #ufc202 presser, starts throwing bottles. McGregor returns fire. pic.twitter.com/J7D3hngMWC
— Darragh Murphy (@DarrMurphy) August 17, 2016
Explore more on these topics: