With AFL's operations in limbo, Bobby Lashley branching out
After signing a contract in May with the Kentucky-based American Fight League, former collegiate wrestling champion and WWE superstar Bobby Lashley (0-0) is finally prepared to make his MMA debut.
With the AFL's operations currently on hiatus, Lashley will instead appear first for debuting Florida-based promotion Mixed Fighting Alliance.
"I guess that [the AFL] is loaning me out," Lashley recently told TAGG Radio (www.taggradio.com), the official radio partner of MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "I don't know what the situation is with them."
Lashley said he is still pleased to be a part of the AFL, but the desire to fight has forced him to pursue other options.
"I'm signed with the AFL, and I've been signed with them for about seven months now," Lashley said. "And it's given me a lot of opportunity to train. But it's gotten to that point where I need to get out there and start fighting.
"My management, we've been talking with different organizations, and we made the decision that we need to get out there and start taking some fights. So we talked with the AFL, and they were nice enough to allow me to go out and fight with a different organization and start building myself in this business."
Lashley, a massively muscled heavyweight that walks around at 260 pounds, said the recent success of fellow wrestling standout and new UFC heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar has peaked other organizations' interest in the 32-year-old.
"My contract, it's pretty binding with the AFL at this point," Lashley said. "I really can't make any decisions or deals with the UFC or Affliction. But I have met Dana White, and I have before talked with the people from the Affliction.
"Of course when I get a couple fights under my belt, or my contract expires -- or whatever happens with the AFL deal, if they go under -- we'll definitely be knocking on one of their doors really quick."
Lashley has been training with the all-star roster of American Top Team, and he looks forward to testing himself in live MMA action.
"I think there's a couple of checks that I need to go through," Lashley said. "There's a chin check, of course. There's a heart check. And then there's a check of my abilities. I think I'm going to have that in my first couple fights. I'll be able to determine that much."
Once those obstacles are out of the way, Lashley has no doubt he'll eventually be considered among the heavyweight division's elite.
"I think with my background and the training that I'm doing right now, I think I will be in the hunt for one of those titles in the near future," Lashley said. "I don't know if it's going to be five fights. I don't know if it's going to be 10 fights. But after the first couple fights, I'm sure we'll be able to make a determination."
And while a title shot would certainly seem to be a long shot for Lashley, stranger things have happened. Lesnar received his UFC title shot just three fights into his MMA career.
And how does Lashley think he would fare against the champ?
"If I had to go against Brock right now, I'd definitely be up for it," Lashley said. "I don't think that the weight would be a factor with me. As far as wrestling, I think a lot of it would be a battle of takedowns. The submission part I don't think would really come in to play. I think it would be a stand-up or a wrestling match. So I think I would fare well."
For now, Lashley will set aside any thought of a Lesnar bout. Instead, the debuting fighter will focus on his Dec. 13 fight with Joshua Franklin.
"I don't know too much about my opponent because I think he's debuting also," Lashley said. "With the guys that I've been training with, there's a lot of guys down there (at ATT) that have black belts in jiu-jitsu. I don't think this guy is up to that caliber, and I've been doing very, very well against the guys that I've been training against.
"I don't think I'm going to run into too many problems with this guy. This guy's a little lower level than some of the guys I've been training with."
And whether his future lies with the AFL, UFC or Affliction, Lashley believes he's well on his way to achieving his ultimate goal in MMA.
"When I came in to the sport of mixed martial arts, I didn't want everyone to say, 'OK, we've got another professional wrestler that's in here fighting and thinking that he's going to make this big move,'" Lashley said. "That's not what I was trying to do.
"Signing with ATT just proves that I'm coming in and I actually want to be a fighter that used to be a professional wrestler as opposed to a professional wrestler that's now fighting. If it takes me a few fights to earn that credibility, or earn that respect from different fighters, then that's what I'm going to do."
After signing a contract in May with the Kentucky-based American Fight League, former collegiate wrestling champion and WWE superstar Bobby Lashley (0-0) is finally prepared to make his MMA debut.
With the AFL's operations currently on hiatus, Lashley will instead appear first for debuting Florida-based promotion Mixed Fighting Alliance.
"I guess that [the AFL] is loaning me out," Lashley recently told TAGG Radio (www.taggradio.com), the official radio partner of MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "I don't know what the situation is with them."
Lashley said he is still pleased to be a part of the AFL, but the desire to fight has forced him to pursue other options.
"I'm signed with the AFL, and I've been signed with them for about seven months now," Lashley said. "And it's given me a lot of opportunity to train. But it's gotten to that point where I need to get out there and start fighting.
"My management, we've been talking with different organizations, and we made the decision that we need to get out there and start taking some fights. So we talked with the AFL, and they were nice enough to allow me to go out and fight with a different organization and start building myself in this business."
Lashley, a massively muscled heavyweight that walks around at 260 pounds, said the recent success of fellow wrestling standout and new UFC heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar has peaked other organizations' interest in the 32-year-old.
"My contract, it's pretty binding with the AFL at this point," Lashley said. "I really can't make any decisions or deals with the UFC or Affliction. But I have met Dana White, and I have before talked with the people from the Affliction.
"Of course when I get a couple fights under my belt, or my contract expires -- or whatever happens with the AFL deal, if they go under -- we'll definitely be knocking on one of their doors really quick."
Lashley has been training with the all-star roster of American Top Team, and he looks forward to testing himself in live MMA action.
"I think there's a couple of checks that I need to go through," Lashley said. "There's a chin check, of course. There's a heart check. And then there's a check of my abilities. I think I'm going to have that in my first couple fights. I'll be able to determine that much."
Once those obstacles are out of the way, Lashley has no doubt he'll eventually be considered among the heavyweight division's elite.
"I think with my background and the training that I'm doing right now, I think I will be in the hunt for one of those titles in the near future," Lashley said. "I don't know if it's going to be five fights. I don't know if it's going to be 10 fights. But after the first couple fights, I'm sure we'll be able to make a determination."
And while a title shot would certainly seem to be a long shot for Lashley, stranger things have happened. Lesnar received his UFC title shot just three fights into his MMA career.
And how does Lashley think he would fare against the champ?
"If I had to go against Brock right now, I'd definitely be up for it," Lashley said. "I don't think that the weight would be a factor with me. As far as wrestling, I think a lot of it would be a battle of takedowns. The submission part I don't think would really come in to play. I think it would be a stand-up or a wrestling match. So I think I would fare well."
For now, Lashley will set aside any thought of a Lesnar bout. Instead, the debuting fighter will focus on his Dec. 13 fight with Joshua Franklin.
"I don't know too much about my opponent because I think he's debuting also," Lashley said. "With the guys that I've been training with, there's a lot of guys down there (at ATT) that have black belts in jiu-jitsu. I don't think this guy is up to that caliber, and I've been doing very, very well against the guys that I've been training against.
"I don't think I'm going to run into too many problems with this guy. This guy's a little lower level than some of the guys I've been training with."
And whether his future lies with the AFL, UFC or Affliction, Lashley believes he's well on his way to achieving his ultimate goal in MMA.
"When I came in to the sport of mixed martial arts, I didn't want everyone to say, 'OK, we've got another professional wrestler that's in here fighting and thinking that he's going to make this big move,'" Lashley said. "That's not what I was trying to do.
"Signing with ATT just proves that I'm coming in and I actually want to be a fighter that used to be a professional wrestler as opposed to a professional wrestler that's now fighting. If it takes me a few fights to earn that credibility, or earn that respect from different fighters, then that's what I'm going to do."