Anyone going to watch this? I'd love to get a report posted here.

Former WWE star Bobby Lashley makes MMA debut
By Sharon Robb | South Florida Sun-Sentinel
December 11, 2008

WWE Presents Wrestlemania 23

COCONUT CREEK - Bobby Lashley sees the look on people's faces when he tells them he wants to win mixed martial arts titles.

The strapping hulk of a man can hear it in their voices when he is mentioned in the same sentence as World Wrestling Entertainment and Kimbo Slice.

"Those are the people who don't know me, what I'm about or where I come from," said Lashley between two-a-day workouts at American Top Team.

At 32, Lashley is preparing to make his heavyweight pro debut Saturday night on the Mixed Fighting Alliance "There Will Be Blood" card at AmericanAirlines Arena. He will fight Joshua Franklin, a 30-year-old fighter also making his pro debut.

The former WWE fan favorite is part of a growing trend of wrestlers who hope to make it as professional fighters, including UFC champion Brock Lesnar, who recently knocked off legend Randy Couture.

"It wasn't only about the money in the WWE, I enjoyed the crowds," Lashley said. "I was in WrestleMania representing Donald Trump [in 2007] in front of 85,000 people [at Ford Field in Detroit]. It was crazy.

"I know what people are saying. I think I lost some of my credibility as a fighter, wrestler and competitor being in the WWE. I know I have a lot to lose."

Lashley knows what he's up against in the mixed martial arts world. Every day he looks around on the mats, the cage and boxing ring at ATT and sees some of the world's best fighters well-versed in wrestling, submissions and striking.

However, since the UFC began 15 years ago, athletes with strong wrestling backgrounds have been successful. In the 1990s top amateur wrestlers Mark Coleman, Don Frye, Kevin Randleman, Dan Severn and Couture have all fought their way to the top for titles in the UFC, where top stars now command millions for fights and endorsement deals.

What the skeptics don't know about Lashley is that before the WWE he was an accomplished wrestler for 18 years with Olympic aspirations. He chose the WWE "because I needed the money at the time and didn't know if the opportunity would ever present itself again."

Born in Junction City, Kan., the four-time All-American won three national wrestling titles (1996-98) for Missouri Valley College. He then joined the Army, where he continued to wrestle, and won a silver medal at the World Games, which set him up as an Olympic hopeful.

In 2003, Lashley was still wrestling and trying to make a transition into mixed martial arts when he was injured during a bank robbery in Colorado Springs, Colo., where he lived and hoped to train for the 2004 Olympic trials.

"I was going to the bank to put some money in and it got robbed," Lashley said. "During the robbery I took a dive from a bullet that was shot at the back of my head. I busted my knee wide open and it ended my amateur wrestling career. It turned out to be my calling at the time."

While rehabbing after a second surgery, the WWE came knocking "because I was big and they liked my look [6 feet 3 and 255 pounds of muscle] and athletic ability." He signed with the WWE in November 2003 and moved into "pro wrestling and entertainment." He was released on good terms in January.

"The WWE signed me right away and it kept me in great shape for mixed martial arts, which was always in the back of my mind," Lashley said. "I knew I would always have an opportunity to come back and compete someday, even though people discredit what I did before the WWE."

Along with opportunity came sacrifices. He moved to South Florida to train and build a new resume. His children, Kyra, 4, and 4-month-old son Myles live in Parker, Colo., where he visited for Thanksgiving before resuming training.

"That's the tough part, but it's what I have to do to get to that next step, " Lashley said. "I am going to prove myself. I want to show people what I can do. This is where I want to be right now, without a doubt."
Marvez: Bobby Lashley pumped about MMA debut Saturday
Submitted by SHNS on Thu, 12/11/2008 - 14:34.

World Wrestling Entertainment fans can still dream of a Bobby Lashley-vs.-Brock Lesnar matchup.

It just won't be happening in a pro-wrestling ring.

Just like Lesnar, Lashley has abandoned WWE stardom to pursue mixed-martial-arts fighting. Lashley makes his debut Saturday against fellow newcomer Joshua Franklin on a non-televised Mixed Fighting Alliance show in Miami.

Lashley has spent 2008 honing his skills in MMA, a discipline that combines boxing, Olympic-style wrestling and other traditional martial arts. Lashley, 32, is so serious about his new craft that the Colorado Springs, Colo., resident temporarily relocated to South Florida several months ago to train at the renowned American Top Team academy.

"I am completely confident and jazzed up about this fight," Lashley said in a recent telephone interview. "I've had the best trainers and partners to work with. When you have to battle every day with 70 of the toughest fighters in the world, you're going to be ready."

Like Lesnar in 2004, Lashley stunned pro-wrestling fans last year when quitting WWE. Only months earlier, Lashley had landed the marquee spot of representing Donald Trump in the latter's "Battle of the Billionaires" feud with WWE owner Vince McMahon. Lashley pinned Eddie "Umaga" Fatu at "Wrestlemania 23," resulting in McMahon's getting his head shaved.

Lashley wouldn't give specific reasons why he left WWE, a reticence believed to have stemmed from a confidentiality agreement between the two parties. Internet reports have speculated that his departure was linked to WWE's release of real-life girlfriend Kristal Marshall in September 2007 while Lashley recovered from shoulder surgery.

Lashley did allow that backstage politics played a major role in his WWE departure.

"I'm not going to say there weren't people there who tried to make things difficult for me," said Lashley, who was rushed into a prominent WWE slot shortly after his 2005 debut. "I always worked my (tail) off. There are some guys there who won't even warm up before a match and just go out and do blah, blah, blah. I didn't have the same skills yet as some people there. But I was working at it all the time and at the gym to make my appearance as good as possible.

"Sometimes in life, you have to work around things and keep climbing. I tried, but I was fighting a losing battle."

A national amateur-wrestling champion at Missouri Valley College, Lashley said he considered an MMA career before signing with WWE. He even broached McMahon about the possibility of MMA work while still under contract. Lashley said McMahon asked for patience, as WWE was considering an MMA venture before deciding against it.

"I was watching some people I had trained with become successful in MMA," the 6-2, 250-pound Lashley said. "When I had some time off after my (shoulder) injury, I had the opportunity to roll around with some of the MMA guys. That's when I had that burning desire to become a fighter again. Even when I was wrestling (in WWE), I always had the urge to grab somebody and start throwing punches."

Lashley admits to missing pro wrestling -- his lone match since leaving WWE was in Mexico earlier this year -- and didn't discount the possibility of working for a U.S. promotion again on a sporadic basis. Lashley, though, made it clear that MMA is his top priority even though he is uncertain of his next step after facing Franklin. That's largely because the MMA promotion Lashley signed with -- the upstart American Fight League -- has shuttered operations until at least early 2009.

"If I have to do 15 small shows around the U.S. or go to Japan, I want to start setting my sights on my next opponent as soon as this (Franklin) fight is over with," Lashley said.

Lashley said he is impressed with how smoothly Lesnar's transition to MMA has gone. In just his fourth overall bout last month, Lesnar defeated MMA legend Randy Couture to win the Ultimate Fighting Championship heavyweight title.

"I think one thing he did is shut people up who tried to take away everything he did in his amateur career, put a WWE logo on him and say he couldn't do it," said Lashley, referring to Lesnar's college-wrestling success at the University of Minnesota. "He didn't try to fight his critics. He just kept his nose to the grindstone and earned people's respect."

Although he has never met Lesnar, Lashley dreams of the day when he may be fighting for an MMA title.

"Eventually we'll cross paths, whether it's fighting, training, talking or shaking hands," Lashley said. "We'll see which it is."

A bout between former UFC heavyweights Jeff Monson and Ricco Rodriguez headlines Saturday night's Mixed Fighting Alliance show. For more information, visit www.mfamma.com.