After quitting job, Hague banking on peak performance against Tuchscherer at UFC 109
Tim Hague (10-2 MMA, 1-1 UFC) is climbing the UFC's heavyweight ladder all over again.
Hague, a native of Boyle, Alberta, Canada, first came to the octagon on the heels of a pink slip from his job as a kindergarten teacher when only two kids showed up for the first day of school.
This time around, Hague is fighting on his own dime out of choice after quitting jobs as an environmental soil sampler and construction hand to fight Chris Tuchscherer (17-2 MMA, 0-1 UFC) this Saturday at UFC 109.
The stakes are just as high; in his most recent UFC appearance, he wound up on the wrong side of the fastest knockout in the promotion's history when he ran full-force into Todd Duffee's jab at UFC 102 this past August.
"I'm 100 percent ready to prove that wasn't the real Tim Hague in that fight and that I'm a much better fighter than I showed," Hague recently told MMAjunkie.com (
www.mmajunkie.com).
Hague remembers being anxious to score a knockout against Duffee and loading up a little too much for his favorite combination: a right-hand feint followed by a left hook. He remembers falling and muttering an expletive before Duffee finished him off.
But Hague is not the type to soul-search after a loss. There's no big lesson – he just got too hyped up.
"I don't know if it's the hardest I've ever been hit, but it's the hardest I've ever ran into a punch," Hague said with a chuckle.
Another type of anxiety also colored Hague's octagon debut at UFC 98 this past May.
Unemployed with a newborn back home, Hague fought the urge to cry when he thought of the unknowns inside the cage. He could get hurt and not be able to work; he could come back home just $5,000 richer for almost three months of sweat.
But Hague prevailed that night when he submitted seasoned striker Pat Barry in a come-from-behind victory. He missed a "Submission of the Night" bonus but took home a $10,000 check.
Earning $15,000 for a year of work isn't exactly Fortune 500 income, but the 264-pound fighter said the lean times leading up to this fight are a small price to pay for another octagon victory.
"If I have to scrape by, I'll scrape by," Hague said. "My wife and I make sacrifices where we need to."
Following the Duffee loss, Hague's camp moved to a different gym in nearby Edmonton. The Canadian also brought in a new strength and conditioning coach along with a 270-pound collegiate wrestler to prepare for Tuchscherer.
The 258-pound Tuchscherer is a wrestling standout that has amassed a 17-2 record and trains with UFC heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar. Not unlike Hague's over-before-it-started turn with Duffee, Tuchscherer got a raw deal in his UFC 104 debut when Gabriel Gonzaga soccer-kicked him in the groin and took away any chance of a fair fight.
Hague holds Tuchscherer partly responsible for the outcome with the Brazilian.
"He came out against Gonzaga and did the exact same thing he always does," Hague said. "He was up against a better striker, and he put his head down and tried to bull-rush Gonzaga, and you saw what happened."
Hague would love to stand and bang this weekend but expects Tuchscherer won't let him do so for too long.
"If he comes out and tries to strike with me, I'll be more than happy to oblige," Hague said. "But I'm prepared that once he starts eating a little leather, he's going to go back to what he knows best and try and take me down."
Tuchscherer had a chuckle of his own when he heard Hague thought he was a one-trick pony.
"He can go ahead and think that," Tuchscherer told MMAjunkie.com. "That's all the better for me."
While Hague would welcome a chance to train at the somewhat top-secret gym where Tuchscherer rolls with Lesnar and others, he has no intention of changing his style.
"I like to tell it like it is, and personally, I think [Tuchschere's] fighting style is a little boring," Hague said. "But that being said, he's built himself a 17-2 record for a reason. To beat him I'm going to have to be on the top of my game."
With both men coming off losses, Hague and Tuchscherer each need to impress on Saturday.
Hague realizes that as well, and he is confident that his time away from blue-collar life has been well spent.
"I can't wait to fight and show everyone that my last fight was just a minor speedbump," Hague said.