Conor McGregor quotes Tupac and 'Scarface' to trash Nate Diaz and his fans

Conor McGregor was in rare form on Thursday when he blasted Nate Diaz, his entire team and any of the fans who support him during an appearance at the UFC 202 open workouts.

As soon as he walked onto the stage, McGregor was already taunting the Diaz fans in attendance before unleashing a "Scarface" impression to kick off his brief question and answer session with the media.

McGregor has been edgy about doing much media ahead of his rematch with Diaz, so he kept things short and sweet after a brief grappling session with head coach John Kavanagh in front of a raucous crowd at the Red Rock Casino in Las Vegas.

McGregor made it clear that he wasn't there to talk and he certainly wasn't in town to get into a bottle throwing match with his opponent.

McGregor is here to fight and that's the only thing that matters to him.

"It's a big fight. We came here ready for war, not ready to throw little (expletive) bottles and go running. We are ready to fight so let's go," McGregor said.

"That fairytale he's been having is coming to an end. So all the fans have been giving him this invincible feeling that he can't be knocked out. He can be knocked out and he will be knocked out."

McGregor has been obsessed about the rematch with Diaz according to those closest to him and he's put over $300,000 into his training camp to prepare for the fight at UFC 202.

With so much on the line this weekend, McGregor is clearly not even contemplating a loss but he's not worried about what a defeat would do to his career or superstar status in the UFC.

The rematch with Diaz isn't about titles and it's not about rankings — it's a personal battle and McGregor wants to settle the score.

"My legacy's set in stone," McGregor said. "My legacy was set in stone when Jose (Aldo) crumbled in 13 seconds. This is just something else outside of this. This is just a straight fight. So I'm happy with that cause that's what I came here for.

"I came in here for a straight fight."

The end of the open workouts came in rather abrupt fashion when McGregor decided to make one final statement blasting his opponent and his entire team while doing his best Tupac Shakur impression as he quoted his infamous diss track from 1996 titled "Hit Em Up".

With that said, McGregor dropped the microphone and walked off stage as the crowd roared after his final words aimed at Diaz and his team.