Dana White criticised Conor McGregor for bringing Dustin Poirier’s wife into his trash talk before and after Saturday night’s dramatic UFC 264 main event. Former two-weight champ McGregor (22-6) suffered a brutal leg break in the final seconds of the first round, with Poirier (28-6, one no contest) winning by doctor stoppage. The Irishman had attempted to rile “The Diamond” up all week by insulting his wife, Jolie, who joined her husband in the Octagon after his win, with McGregor subjecting her to more crude comments in his own post-fight interview. Jolie Poirier gave McGregor the middle finger as she and Dustin walked past “The Notorious” on their way out of the cage while he was speaking to Joe Rogan, stricken on the ground. “I don’t like that, that’s not good,” UFC president White said at the post-event press conference inside T-Mobile Arena. “Leave people’s family and wives and all that stuff out of it. Family has nothing to do with it.” White confirmed McGregor had broken has lower tibia, and that he would go into surgery on Sunday morning, and also suggested he would be open to a fourth fight between the two. UFC 264: Khabib mocks McGregor after leg break – ‘good always defeats evil’ “These second leg breaks, in the last three fights or something, it sucks, it’s brutal. It’s not the way you wanna see fights end,” he said, referencing Chris Weidman suffering a broken leg at UFC 261 in May. “Dustin will fight for the title and when Conor’s healed and ready to go, you do the rematch, I guess. That’s a fight that didn’t get finished. “You can’t have a fight finish that way, so we’ll see how this whole thing plays out. Who knows how long Conor’s out? Poirier will do his thing until Conor’s ready.” “Listen, the rematch is there,” he added. “He’s got the rematch with him like the rematch with [Nate] Diaz. I don’t know what the landscape will look like when’s he’s ready, how long it will be. Definitely I can’t say right here, right now but you always have that rematch. “You can’t do the hypotheticals in this sport, it’s all about timing, what’s happened since. I don’t know how much rehab or therapy he’s [McGregor] gonna need.” Poirier is set to challenge lightweight champ Charles Oliveira later this year, with the Brazilian calling for his first title defence in December. White was quick to praise the American for his performance, but also McGregor. “I think he [McGregor] definitely was on the receiving end of some elbows and punches but that’s part of the game. Everybody takes that,” he said. “He got back up on his feet and was throwing punches, his ankle snapped from throwing punches. He was fighting back, not like up against the cage and defenceless and Dustin was unloading. If his ankle doesn’t break, I think we get another round. “The s***** part for Dustin is he gets out of the guillotine, got top position, lands great elbows, punches. Ends up winning the round, then Conor breaks his ankle, so the storyline is all Conor broke his ankle instead of Dustin looked good.”