Conor McGregor has lost his civil jury appeal against a finding that he sexually assaulted a woman.
In November, McGregor was ordered to pay £206,000 in damages plus costs to Nikita Hand, who accused him of raping her in a hotel in Dublin in 2018.
McGregor appealed on the grounds that his lawyers believed his answers to police during interviews should not have been put before the jury.
His barrister also argued that a question on the “issue paper” given to the jury to help them decide their verdict should have been worded differently.
Three senior judges at the Court of Appeal in Dublin dismissed the appeal on all grounds.
The appeal was based around several issues arising from the civil trial at Dublin’s High Court last year.
They included reference to the question “did Conor McGregor assault Nikita Hand?” being asked of the jury on the issue paper.
Conor McGregor’s legal team said it should have specified sexual assault.
However, a barrister for Ms Hand said “assault” covers a wide variety of assaults adding “what we were dealing with was assault by rape”.
He added the question put to the jury “was agreed and the jury could not have been confused by it”.
McGregor was also appealing an issue around the handling of his answers in interviews with gardaí (Irish police officers).
His legal team explained that the jury heard McGregor gave about 100 “no comment” answers to gardaí.
His barrister said he had a right to silence in police interviews and it was “left hanging”, allowing the jury to draw an adverse inference.
Ms Hand’s legal team countered this argument by saying that if this was such a serious issue for McGregor at the time “surely an application to discharge the jury would have been made”.
Her barrister said such an application was not made.
McGregor’s legal appeal was also raising an issue about the judge’s charge to the jury during the civil trial.