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“Rebirth of the Monster”
Six Questions with Kevin Randleman
“LAWLER vs. SHIELDS” -- June 6, ScottradeCenter, St. Louis,
Missouri,
Live on SHOWTIME at 10 p.m. ET/PT; First Non-Televised Fight: 6:45
P.M. CT
NEW YORK
(June 5, 2009) —
Kevin Randleman is
ready to seize the moment. After four years in and out of the ring
because of a variety of ailments, the ex-UFC
belt-holder and two-time NCAA Division I national wrestling champion
says he’s more focused and eager than ever to step in the cage for
his much-anticipated Strikeforce debut against
Mike Whitehead.
The
two will battle
in a light heavyweight matchup that will take place Saturday,
June 6, during an incredible five-fight
STRIKEFORCE “Lawler vs. Shields”
show to be televised on SHOWTIME®
(10 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the west coast) from the ScottradeCenter
in St. Louis.
World-ranked
fighters Ruthless” Robbie Lawler
(middleweight) and Jake Shields
(welterweight) will square off at a catch weight of 182
pounds in the main event and
Andrei “Pitbull’’ Arlovski and
Brett “The Grim’’ Rogers
will meet in another exciting undercard matchup. Also,
Scott “Hands Of Steel’’ Smith
takes on Cesar Gracie black belt
Nick Diaz and
knockout artist Phil Baroni
will meet Joe Riggs.
Tickets, starting
at $30, are on sale at the ScottradeCenter box office, all
Ticketmaster locations (800-745-3000), Ticketmaster online (www.ticketmaster.com)
and Strikeforce’s official website (www.strikeforce.com).
Doors at the ScottradeCenter will open at 6:30 p.m. CT on Saturday,
June 6. The first non-televised preliminary bout will begin at 6:45
p.m.
Randleman, 37,
answered six quick questions regarding Saturday night’s fight.
SHOWTIME:
Your outlook on life and fighting has really changed over the last
several years and you were recently married. How are things going
for you overall?
RANDLEMAN:
“Well, I finally realized what being a star and being famous does to
people. This fight is different for me because I’ve trained like I
never have in the past—exactly the way you’re supposed to. I’m just
focused. Before when I was a UFC champion and I was with PRIDE I
would be out two weeks before a fight having fun and partying. I
still trained but I didn’t train diligently like I did for this
one.”
SHOWITME:
You have had a problem in the past with keeping bad influences away
from you. How have you been able to do that at this point in your
life?
RANDLEMAN:
“Oh, man. I was crazy. You know, I did have a lot of bad influences
in my life. I’ve had to change my phone number three times in four
years just so people would stop calling me. You have friends who say
they are your friends but they’re really not. They just want to go
out with you. My friends were takers, they weren’t givers. So they
wanted to go out with me so they could pick up girls like I could or
they wanted to go out with me because they could get into clubs free
or they always had a good time. And it always ended up being late
nights … 5, 6, 7 o’clock in the morning. Stuff like that. Since I
moved from Ohio to Las Vegas, everything in my life has changed. The
mentality of my life has changed. I realized that everything I was
doing in my life was wrong but I was so used to being chaotic and
having chaos in my world and always being angry that it was easy to
just go into fights being mad at the world. All that has changed for
me.”
SHOWTIME:
You have had some serious
medical issues over the past several years, including a severe
fungal lung infection. Did you ever have doubts that you would be
able to get back in the cage?
RANDLEMAN:
“The injuries have slowed me down and I’ve been on some very strong
pain killers. I would always just pray that if I ever had chance to
do this again I would cut everything out. I don’t go to the bars
anymore, I don’t go to the clubs. I have one woman in my life and
she’s the greatest thing that’s ever happened to me. We’ve been
married just six weeks. Now when I look in the mirror I can truly
say I am a champion. I’ve always been a champion because I’ve
overcome so much over and over again.
“This is my third
time around and the thing I’ve done differently this time is I’ve
stopped everything I had done before. Its easy to associate fun with
going out with the boys and staying out all night but to me that’s
not the life of a champion. I’ve taken the left when I should’ve
gone right. Now I look at champions like Jake Shields and I see how
they’ve done it right.”
SHOWTIME:
This is truly a comeback for
you. What can we expect to see Saturday?
RANDLEMAN:
“LL Cool J has a great song: ‘Don’t call it a comeback. I’ve been
here for years.’ Don’t call it a comeback. Sometimes you have to
take small steps back. You get knocked down and you have to get back
up and stand strong. I don’t think of it as a comeback. I look at it
like I needed to go back to school and learn a lot more. I think I’m
very lucky. I’m not a religious man but I’m a very spiritual man and
I believe in good and evil and I believe that I was a good person
all my life who did a lot of bad things. This time I appreciate the
guy across from me because I know how hard it is to get in this
cage. I’m just going to give it my all Saturday night. I don’t
anticipate anybody at 205 being able to knock me out or take me
out.”
SHOWTIME:
If this isn’t a comeback then
what should we call it?
RANDLEMAN:
“Think of it as the ‘Rebirth of the Monster.’ But I’m not a monster
anymore. I’m not running around in the streets like a crazy man. I
just want to fight. I just want to be the guy I always was but was
too scared to be. The best thing that ever happened to me was the
UFC firing me because I was just too crazy and too out of control.
And it’s taken a lot of time for me to understand where I went wrong
but I’ve finally realized it was all my fault. I can’t blame anyone
in the world for the mistakes I’ve made. I look in the mirror every
day and say, ‘You’re the reason why you failed.’ “
SHOWTIME:
What are your major motivations
for getting back in the cage?
RANDLEMAN:
“There has always
been so much chaos in my life that now that it’s calm I feel
nervous. But not because I’m fighting Mike Whitehead or whoever on
June 6. I’m not nervous because I’m angry. I’m nervous because I
know for one year I’ve trained for this fight. I’ve been training
because I knew I had to be ready to fight once I got that contract.
And my last three fights I’ve gotten better and better and better.
Right now I feel like I’m in the sewers. People don’t know my name
and that’s exactly what I like. I’m not fighting again for the fame.
I’m fighting for the money and for the wins. And I know that the
wins will take care of the money.” |