Conor McGregor shared details on the time he spent cleaning a Brooklyn church as part of his community service for the infamous dolly incident.
In April 2018, The Irishman alongside multiple members of his entourage, stormed a bus carrying multiple fighters shortly after a UFC 223 media event. Thinking then-lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov was in the vehicle, McGregor launched a dolly into one of the windows, shattering glass and injuring multiple athletes on board. As a result, McGregor was charged with three counts of assault and one count of criminal mischief. After striking a plea deal, he was sentenced to five days of community service and was required to take anger management classes.
Nearly a year later, Conor McGregor met the terms of his sentence, sweeping floors at a church in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. Speaking about the experience in his recently-released Netflix documentary, ‘The Notorious’ appeared to spin the otherwise mundane task into a wholly positive experience.
“I’m coming across mad stuff in this church, just things on the wall,” McGregor said. I’ve just had the trippiest bleeding buzz of my life in there with that reverend, never experienced anything like that in my life….