View Full Version : 2x Olympic freestyler Daniel Cormier making the transition to MMA


Nodogoshi
08-21-2009, 03:16 PM
Daniel Cormier Triumphs Over Disappointment and Tragedy

For a year after the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing, Daniel Cormier sat, pouted and licked his wounds. Four years after finishing one spot short of a medal in Athens, Cormier was captain of the 2008 U.S. Olympic freestyle wrestling team. It was his best shot at gold, a shot that was stuffed by dehydration brought on by weight cutting, dehydration so severe that he had to withdraw from the competition.

But after a year of self pity the wrestler suddenly he felt a change. “Something weird happened, man,” Cormier said. “I started to feel that burn and that itch to compete again.” He reconnected with Dewayne Zinkin, CEO & president of Zinkin Entertainment & Sports Management, who had pitched him an MMA career in 2001, an offer he turned down in favor of chasing an Olympic medal. After two Olympic Games he returned to San Jose, Calif. to train with American Kickboxing Academy for a week and later received daily beatings from training partner and close friend Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal.

That week was all it took for the wrestler to set a new athletic course. On Aug. 10, Zinkin Entertainment & Sports Management announced that it had signed Cormier. Many MMA newcomers toil in anonymity for at least a year but all eyes will fixate on Cormier immediately. That is what happens when you compile a 117-6 collegiate record, three All-American honors and six U.S. senior national championships.

“If you’re expected to do something and people see big things from you in the future, you have to embrace that,” Cormier said. “That means you have the opportunity to do something special. And then you have to be prepared for the success, because with that success becomes responsibility.”
Cormier has proven it since age 10, training in his native Louisiana summers where the temperature climbed to 120 degrees. Three high school championships led him to Colby Community College and two junior college national titles before he was NCAA Division I runner-up at Oklahoma State his senior year.

“I know what lies at the end of the rainbow, man,” Cormier said. “In order to be a champion – I want to be a champion in everything I do, I can’t even play video games without getting super heated – you have to work. It’s a wrestler’s mentality. I’m going to work as hard as anybody in the world. And with the right mental state, anything’s possible.”

Cormier’s biography reads like a testimony the power of perseverance. When he was seven, his father was shot and killed by his step-grandfather. His junior year in high school, a close friend died in a car accident, and another wreck took a cousin a year later. A friend at Oklahoma State, Daniel Lawson, perished in a plane crash. But the most devastating was losing his three-month-old daughter, Kaedyn Imri, in a 2003 car crash.

“Since my daughter passed, nothing has ever been so bad,” Cormier said. “That sums it all up, because I can always think back six years ago how I felt on that day. Through athletics I was able to move on with my life. Through wrestling I was able to lose myself in that sport for a little bit.”

Now Cormier will lose himself in MMA. But it won’t all be drudgery for the longtime pro wrestling fan. Taking a cue from his friend Lawal, Cormier hopes to conjure an elaborate entrance to unveil in front of a U.S. audience before the end of the year.

“You have to be careful not to take yourself too seriously,” Cormier said.
..........

Move BRICKS™
08-21-2009, 04:08 PM
LAY N PRAY LAY N PRAY!

All kidding aside, Cormier is a freakin' monster.

F l i c k e r
08-22-2009, 12:31 AM
He is going to the Wrestling Weight division?

lol, he will do good. If anything, you can make it pretty far with just wrestling. Specially in the wrestling division. Until you get your title shot... and get raped.

Nodogoshi
08-22-2009, 12:40 AM
He is going to the Wrestling Weight division?

lol, he will do good. If anything, you can make it pretty far with just wrestling. Specially in the wrestling division. Until you get your title shot... and get raped.
What exactly are you talking about?

He's going to 205. He says he'll fight at HW at first so he doesn't have to cut weight.

Nodogoshi
08-22-2009, 12:43 AM
..........
Here is an interview:
2007 World Team Trials Champion. Five-time US Nationals Champion. Fourth Place in the 2004 Olympic Games. 2003 Pan-American Gold Medalist. Second-place in the 2001 NCAA Championships.

It’s very possible Daniel Cormier could melt down the contents of his trophy room and put a dent in the national debt. A freestyle wrestler formerly with Oklahoma State University, the multi-decorated Olympian missed the 2008 Beijing Olympics due to dehydration and has elected not to train for the 2012 Games.

Instead, Cormier now spends his days bouncing between the American Kickboxing Academy in San Jose, Calif., and dodging the mitts of noted boxing trainer Pepe Johnson in Tulsa, Okla. The idea is to become as proficient a mixed martial artist as friend and training partner Josh Koscheck, along with the dozens of other accredited wrestlers who have made careers, names, and small fortunes in a high-profile sport custom-made for their skills.

Still months away from his debut -- he’d like to get a fight in by year’s end -- Cormier spoke to Sherdog.com about dodging a quarter-million dollar bonus, getting into a rumble backed by Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal, and refusing to leave wrestling completely behind.

Sherdog.com: You’re electing not to prepare for the 2012 Olympics, but USA Wrestling has made an aggressive push to keep wrestlers in their fold: they’re offering $250,000 to any athlete who wins a Gold Medal there. Wasn’t that tempting?

Cormier: Oh, yeah, it was. People get upset about the pay you get in wrestling. But when you win, you get paid. In my career, I think I’ve been compensated pretty fairly by USA Wrestling. They took care of me. Without USA Wrestling, none of these opportunities would be available to me. Some people get upset about the pay, and obviously there were times I felt like we could’ve gotten more. But I think I was treated fairly over the course of my career.

Sherdog.com: It’s really playing the odds. In the next two years, you could make a lot more than $250,000 if your fight career goes well. That money in wrestling is all-or-nothing proposition, no?

Cormier: I think it is. There are a lot of incentives to do it [fighting]. It’s possible for us wrestlers to do well and make quite a bit of money, but you gotta win. It all depends on how well I do in the cage.

I want to stress that, even though I’m moving to MMA, it doesn’t mean I won’t get in any wrestling competitions in the future. I still want to compete. I love wrestling. I think the biggest mistake a lot of wrestlers make is that they don’t go back and compete. You see guys going into jiu-jitsu tournaments and grappling tournaments to get better. Why is it any different than going to a wrestling competition and wrestling really good wrestlers and keeping yourself sharp?

Sherdog.com: Koscheck started out not knowing anything but wrestling. Now he’s good with his hands and has kept some of his fights standing. How do you think you’ll adapt? Will you always be a wrestler first?

Cormier: I want to put on entertaining fights. I’ve been a fan long enough to know that I don’t want to sit there and watch a guy lay on top of another guy. I’ve done that my entire life with wrestling. I really don’t want to put on any more wrestling matches. I will, if I’m not comfortable or I’m put in a situation where I need to, but I want to put on an exciting fight. And in order to do that, I’ve got to have high-impact wrestling moves in terms of throws, really hard double legs, slams, and mix that in with some striking.

Sherdog.com: Your last Olympic weight was 211 lbs. Where do you think you’ll come in for a fight?

Cormier: I see myself long-term fighting at 205. But in the beginning, I see myself fighting up at heavyweight because right now I want to enjoy this. I don’t want to cut all the weight I did throughout my whole career.

Sherdog.com: What do you weigh right now?

Cormier: Right now, probably 245 or 250. I’m a big guy. But with the correct diet, I’ll be able to knock that weight off pretty quickly. These guys train so hard at AKA that the weight just peels off of you.

Sherdog.com: Another wrestler with notoriety, Cael Sanderson, gets asked about MMA constantly, but he says he doesn’t have the appetite for it. Do you mind punching people? Do you mind taking punches?

Cormier: I don’t mind it. I’m really not a guy that likes to hurt people. But it’s a sport now, and most times guys don’t get seriously hurt. That’s how I’ve allowed myself to deal with it: the idea of hitting people. It’s a sport. Guys got hurt training in wrestling and it just killed me.

Sherdog.com: Have you been in many street fights?

Cormier: [Laughs]. Growing up in Louisiana, man, you had to, to survive. Otherwise, you’d just get punked everyday. That’s one thing I’ll never be, a punk. I’ve been in quite a few, actually.

Sherdog.com: Have you been in any since you matured physically and had these wrestling credentials?

Cormier: I got into a pretty big brawl in Colorado Springs when I was 22 or 23. It was me and Mo Lawal and a lot of other guys. A big old brawl. We were with the whole US volleyball team and we were all hanging out and having a good time. Then one guy hit one of the girls on the volleyball team. We had to defend them. Obviously, the guy regretted the decision that he made.

Sherdog.com: I don’t doubt it. Do you think your list of credentials precedes you in the ring? Gives you a psychological advantage?

Cormier: S---t, I would hope so. But ultimately, I’ll have to back it up.

Nodogoshi
08-22-2009, 12:47 AM
Here is an interview:
I found the story of him and Mo Lawel brawling at Colorado springs funny as ****.

Sherdog.com: Have you been in many street fights?

Cormier: [Laughs]. Growing up in Louisiana, man, you had to, to survive. Otherwise, you’d just get punked everyday. That’s one thing I’ll never be, a punk. I’ve been in quite a few, actually.

Sherdog.com: Have you been in any since you matured physically and had these wrestling credentials?

Cormier: I got into a pretty big brawl in Colorado Springs when I was 22 or 23. It was me and Mo Lawal and a lot of other guys. A big old brawl. We were with the whole US volleyball team and we were all hanging out and having a good time. Then one guy hit one of the girls on the volleyball team. We had to defend them. Obviously, the guy regretted the decision that he made.

I can just picture him and Mo Lawel macking on the Olympic volleyball players, and then suddenly all hell breaks loose and they have to take down an entire mob:lol1:

Lucky Charms
08-22-2009, 02:06 AM
If he's 250 now, and he was dehydrated cutting to 211, shouldn't he just stay at heavyweight his whole career? If he comes in at a solid 240 or higher, nobody is going to hold him on his back, not even Lesnar.

Nodogoshi
08-22-2009, 02:42 AM
If he's 250 now, and he was dehydrated cutting to 211, shouldn't he just stay at heavyweight his whole career? If he comes in at a solid 240 or higher, nobody is going to hold him on his back, not even Lesnar.
Nah, he'll make 205 no prob.

Wrestling tournaments are different because you have multiple matches over several days. In prize fighting you weigh in the day before and can rehydrate pre-fight.