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Conor McGregor 'fires' Mike Perry from BKFC after boxing loss, spews expletives at Jake Paul: "A fat can of b*tch p*ss"

Conor McGregor heavily criticized Mike Perry and Jake Paul after their recent boxing match. Paul defeated Perry by a sixth-round KO on July 20 to extend his professional boxing record to 10-1.

Perry has risen to prominence as the face of bare-knuckle fighting in recent years and McGregor has acquired part ownership of BKFC. The Irishman hails bare-knuckle fighting as the 'purest' form of combat sports and is looking forward to its growth.

As a result, Perry's loss to Paul in boxing did not sit well with him. reacting to the fight result, he expressed his disappointment at Perry for underperforming while claiming that 'Platinum' was fired.

"Hey, Mike [Perry] you're released and you can go and compete in your smelly dirty boxing championship thing, the smell of it, good luck. You’re fired. @bareknucklefc."
McGregor's post on X
McGregor's post on X

In another post, McGregor went on a long rant, accusing Paul of weight bullying, steroid use, and calling out an old Mike Tyson after the win:

"Jake Paul is the biggest pi**bag I have ever seen in my life. 40-pound weight difference, juiced out of his head, and still shi**ing himself in there. Nakisa you should take him to Vegas oh that’s right you could never, the athletic commission testing, real testing, real fighting. Bi*ch a**es. You could never. And then calling out 60-year-old Mike Tyson fresh off an in flight medical emergency? I swear to god, a fat can of bi*ch pi*s. Most valuable pi**bag."
McGregor's post on X
McGregor's post on X

In the recent fight, Paul appeared to be the bigger fighter and used his superior punching power to disrupt Perry's game. Perry, who marched forward with his hands down, was repeatedly stung with powerful shots and knocked down two times before getting finished in the sixth round.

McGregor has been a critic of influencer boxing and has largely ignored repeated callouts from Jake Paul. His recent criticism of 'The Problem Child' reinforces his stance on influencer boxing.

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