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Conor McGregor vs Max Holloway 2 : Preview & Prediction — UFC 329
MMAStacks Staff·June 30, 2026·5 min read
<h2><p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><h1>Fight Overview</h1></span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;">Conor McGregor hasn't stepped into an Octagon since July 2021, when he broke his leg against Dustin Poirier at UFC 264 and disappeared from competition for five straight years. Now he's 37, he's at welterweight for the first time, and his opponent is one of the most active and prolific strikers in the history of the sport. Max Holloway, 27-9, has fought five times since McGregor last competed. He's beaten Justin Gaethje with one of the cleanest knockout finishes anyone has landed in years, defended the BMF belt against Poirier, and just came off losing that belt to Charles Oliveira in March via a wrestling-heavy shutout that, honestly, had nothing to do with his striking. UFC 329 is International Fight Week in Las Vegas on July 11, and the T-Mobile Arena is going to be loud from the first walkout. That part was never in question. Whether McGregor can actually compete against this version of Holloway after a five-year layoff is a different conversation entirely.</span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><h2>Max Holloway</h2></span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;">Holloway owns the UFC all-time records for most significant strikes landed with 3,655 and total strikes with 3,907, and no other fighter in the promotion's history is within a thousand of either number. That's not a stat you throw out casually, that's a description of what Holloway actually does inside a cage. He throws, he keeps throwing, and he makes it hurt over time whether or not any single shot finishes the fight. His recent losses don't really suggest he's declining, which is what the casual narrative around this fight gets wrong. Ilia Topuria knocked him out at UFC 308 in a featherweight title fight, which is fair, Topuria knocks most people out. Oliveira beat him at UFC 326 by taking him down repeatedly and refusing to let him up for 25 minutes. Those are losses to two of the best fighters on the planet in their respective styles, not evidence that Holloway can't compete. Against McGregor, who isn't dragging anyone down and wrestling them into submission, Holloway should get to do exactly what he does best. Volume, pace, body work, and the kind of relentless forward pressure that wears on fighters over three or four rounds in ways that don't always show up clean on a stat sheet.</span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><h2>Conor McGregor</h2></span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;">Five years is a long time. People keep saying it and it's worth sitting with, because it's genuinely unprecedented for a fighter of McGregor's profile to come back at this level against this opponent after this long. His left hand is still the best weapon in the conversation when he's right, the timing on his counter left crosses is as pure as anything the division has ever seen, and his footwork and distance management were elite before the layoff. Whether those tools survived five years of inactivity is the real question, and nobody knows the answer yet, McGregor included. He's 37, stepping up in weight against someone who fights every six months and has thrown more punches than anyone in UFC history. The early rounds are his window. If he can catch Holloway with something clean in round one or two and put him on the canvas, this fight changes completely. Holloway has been stopped before, Topuria proved that. But McGregor needs to find those openings before Holloway's volume starts to compound, because by round three this gets harder for him, not easier.</span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><h2>The Key Matchup</h2></span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;">The tactical picture here is actually more interesting than the hype around it suggests. Holloway's last loss came because Oliveira took him down and kept him there, which has nothing to do with McGregor's skill set. McGregor is a counter-striker, not a wrestler, which means this fight almost certainly stays standing for long stretches, and that's exactly where Holloway lives. The question is whether McGregor's counter-striking timing is sharp enough after five years to pick Holloway apart before the volume accumulates. Holloway doesn't engage predictably, and his footwork has gotten smarter over the last few years, making it harder for counter-punchers to sit back and wait on him. McGregor needs early knockdowns. Without one by round three, the pace and output start tilting heavily in Holloway's direction.</span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><h2>Prediction</h2></span></p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal"><span style="font-weight: normal;">Holloway wins this, most likely by TKO somewhere in rounds three or four, though a decision isn't out of the question if McGregor's movement holds up longer than expected. McGregor will look sharp early, land something clean in the first or second that gets the crowd on their feet, and for a minute or two it'll feel like the comeback story is writing itself. Then the output gap starts to show. Five years off against a guy who has never stopped throwing in his entire career is a gap that footwork and timing alone can't fully close. Holloway by TKO, round four, judges scoring it wide if it goes the distance.</span></p></h2>
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