17 too late

At 17, you probably don’t know for sure if this is what you want to commit your life into. If you were, you wouldn’t be asking this question. That doesn’t mean you can’t train. If you enjoy it, train, because that is the most important part of pursuing anything.

I’m a professional boxer, and I started training just for fun, with the idea that I want to eventually get into MMA (funny because I don’t even watch MMA now). I loved training and naturally entered amateur bouts when I had the chance and the next thing I know, I had acquired a pro license. Once you put so much time and effort into learning the craft, it is natural to want to test yourself in a professional bout. I started pretty late at 20, and didn’t seriously train until 25 because of school and military service. I am/was a professional fighter but I didn’t consider myself a “career fighter” as in that I was going to pursue fighting as my main source of income. The same process could have happened when I was in my early teens and I could have pursued a professional career on a more serious level.

So my input is, train for fun and train to learn because you enjoy it, and you may find yourself realizing this is what you want to do to before you even get an “Aha” moment in deciding what you want to do. Very few people with no connection to fighting and martial arts wake up one morning and go “I’m gonna be a fighter!” to drop everything and become a full time fighter. Most train, get better, and eventually get fights. You have the advantage of being still young so have fun.
 
Why do you want to be a professional MMA fighter if you've only had two Muay Thai lessons and never even had an amateur fight? Shouldn't you actually see what it's like to train for a fight and get punched in the face before you decide to devote your whole life to something?
when you know, you just know right?
 
I don't give a fuck if your street-fighting record is 200-0. Some kid trying to "knock you silly" is WAY different than a trained fighter trying to beat your ass in front of several hundred/thousand people after you've been training for A) at least a year in all aspects of the game before your first fight B) training for this one fight for the past 6-8 weeks. You're going to be in the gym 5-6 days per week, you'll be staying in on a Friday night so that you can train in the morning, you'll probably be staying in on Saturday night so that you can recover and not drink/eat too much, you'll be constantly looking at everything you eat so that you can cut weight, and you'll be doing things like not jerking off so that you can save your testosterone for fight prep. And you'll be doing it so that you can have a 50/50 shot of winning that night. You will lose some fights, you'll get the crap kicked out of you on a weekly basis in the gym, you'll probably wind up broke and unable to hold a real job because your head will be so beaten in from those years spent in the cage, and you may suffer long-term brain damage. Sound like the lifestyle that you want to have? Does it really? For a few people, this is the life for them. For most, it isn't. I was 8-0 as an amateur fighter, but after a few years, I realized that I was never going to make that GSP money. I was going to lose some pro fights, and I'd never make it to the highest levels of the game where the money is actually at. So I decided not to quit my day job, and I saved myself a pretty miserable life. Fighting was an absolute blast for a few years. But that shit gets old after a while. Go train for a year, and then ask yourself if that's how you want to spend all day, every day for the next 15 years. Go to your local gym and ask yourself if those guys are going to propel you to the highest levels of the sport. Are you Jon Jones special?
does your user name mean that you act like a thug in the sub-forums on a mma website?
 
does your user name mean that you act like a thug in the sub-forums on a mma website?
Haha, it actually comes from Yves Edwards. I loved his line of being a "thug-jitsu" master, and I was definitely a submission guy. Hence, sub-thug.
 
Haha, it actually comes from Yves Edwards. I loved his line of being a "thug-jitsu" master, and I was definitely a submission guy. Hence, sub-thug.
<mma4>

lol dude that's pretty cool actually.
 
im all for people trying to follow a passion, but just make sure you have a plan A ahead of mma. Get a good degree/education or a job you can fall back on. IF you do commit to mma dont become one of those guys whose body and finances are broken because they thought they were gonna make that superstar money and have no backup
 
contact the best wrestler at your high school. ask him to rough you up with some grappling. its easy to say you want to do this when youve never been ground and pounded
 
i think posts like this may be why you only have 96 likes...

bcs.gif
 
TS, if you weren't already using you're mom's ovaries as speedbags I have bad news for you.
 
Back
Top