UFC president Dana White believes a rematch between Conor McGregor and Khabib Nurmagomedov would be "the biggest fight in the sport's history" after the Irishman's explosive return to the octagon. McGregor ended a 15-month hiatus by overpowering American veteran Donald Cerrone en route to a ruthless 40-second stoppage in the UFC 246 headliner in Las Vegas for his first mixed martial arts win since November 2016. With McGregor so impressive in this welterweight outing, there will be a number of fighters clamouring to face him next, including 170lb champion Kamaru Usman and 'BMF' title holder Jorge Masvidal, both of whom were ringside to witness the Dubliner's eagerly-anticipated comeback. However, White pointed out a motivated McGregor would be a different prospect to the fighter Nurmagomedov beat in October 2018 to defend his lightweight title, after which the bad blood that had festered between the two camps led to a post-fight brawl that saw both combatants fined and suspended by the Nevada State Athletic Commission. The high-profile acrimony that still lingers between the pair means any return bout would rival any of boxing's biggest showdowns, according to White, who admitted he was stunned by McGregor's display on Saturday. "Conor McGregor looked ridiculous," White said. "Nobody saw that coming, nobody. I was blown away, he looked unbelievable. "Going into the Khabib fight, Conor had a lot of personal stuff, some stuff self-inflicted, he had injuries. He has been obsessed with getting that rematch because he knows that he wasn't 100 per cent right. "With how Khabib won the first fight and how famous he's become, we're looking at Hagler-Hearns, we're looking at Ali-Foreman, Ali-Frazier. "This is a massive fight with global appeal, it's the fight that you make, it's the fight that makes sense. Khabib versus Conor is the biggest fight in the sport's history." Nurmagomedov continued his unbeaten streak with a convincing victory over Dustin Poirier in the headline title unification bout at UFC 242 in Abu Dhabi last September. The Russian is scheduled to face Tony Ferguson at UFC 249 in April in a bout that will pique McGregor's interest although the 31-year-old insists his next opponent is irrelevant. "The lightweight title will be there, that will come back around, that shot," he said. "The who doesn't matter to me, I'm looking at dates now." As for taking on Masvidal? “Of course [I would fight him], let’s see what happens,” McGregor said. “I’d like to scoop up – that’s not a great belt is it? But I’ll still take it. Add it to the list.” There is also the potential of another meeting with Floyd Mayweather, who beat McGregor in a crossover boxing showdown to extend his perfect professional record to 50-0 before retiring. Mayweather said in November last year he was "coming out of retirement in 2020" and posted a mock fight poster featuring himself and McGregor on his Instagram to set tongues wagging. McGregor said: "We'll see what happens. Floyd is a funny man, the discussions are always ongoing, they never stop. He's far from retired and that rematch will happen at some stage." The former UFC featherweight and lightweight champion was nearly punch-perfect at the T-Mobile Arena, missing an overhand left but then connecting with several unorthodox shoulder strikes in the clinch to bloody Cerrone's nose in the opening few seconds. He then stepped back and a precision head kick over the guard landed square on the jaw of Cerrone, who was also caught by a flying knee and crumpled to the mat as the Dubliner went for an early finish. Cerrone was covered up as the rights and lefts rained down on him, prompting referee Herb Dean to call a halt to a brief one-sided contest within the first minute of the opening round. "I made history here, I set another record: I'm the first fighter in UFC history to secure knockout victories at featherweight, at lightweight and now at welterweight, so I'm very, very proud of that," McGregor said. "Donald holds the record for most head-kick knockouts, I'm so happy to get him down with a head kick myself. I'm very, very happy, very proud." McGregor was relatively untested at 170lbs and came in against an opponent with the most wins (23) and finishes (16) in UFC history, but Cerrone proved no match. Before he was taken to hospital, Cerrone said of McGregor's shoulder blows: "I'd never seen anything like that, they threw me way off guard. "He busted my nose then stepped back and head kicked me. I was like 'oh man, it's happening this fast? I got my ass whipped early'."