James Haskell chats fears in entering the world of MMA, rugby highs & lows and the future

James Haskell chats only to Sky Sports about his sudden endeavour to the world of MMA, his lifestyle in rugby and the near long run…
«MMA is a single sport, and you are only pushing yourself to be too dangerous as you’re able to be in a quarter hour. . .anything can happen.» – Tim Kennedy, MMA fighter that is retired.
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«Martial arts is like a mountain. You find the very best. And you increase and you climb, and you finally get to the summit, and you realise it was a false summit, and also in front of you lies an whole brand new mountain range.» – MMA and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu teacher, Robert Owens.
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«I hope to God you encounter ready, since if you don’t I will beat you into a living death.» – Ken Shamrock
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Professional sportspeople have tried to change disciplines. It has been done. But few, if any, have truly succeeded.
Before reverting back to the NBA michael Jordan spent a year playing baseball. Dwain Chambers tried and failed to create it in Rugby League and football following his GB sports career. Andrew Flintoff fought in a boxing profession that’s broadly viewed after his superb cricketing achievements.
You can find exceptions. Sir Ian Botham was a footballer with Scunthorpe before turning right into a first-class cricket career. All Blacks center Sonny Bill Williams has competed as a professional boxer. Olympic medal winning fisherman Victoria Pendleton evolved into a amateur jockey. Biking paraolympian Dame Sarah Story began as a swimmer.
But to master two sports in the level is near-on hopeless. To master two sports that both take intense physical toil within an athlete’s physique.
77-cap England rugby James Haskell sits at a cramped editing package on a Thursday morning mulling on his appearance on Sky Sports News having supported his intentions to attempt just this: that the 34-year-old is embarking on a career in MMA with Bellator.
If rugby is considered a game played by guys at a level of intensity and physicality, afterward MMA is a discipline.
Pictures of knees and elbows of sacrifices to inclined and stricken opponents, of fighters displaying instincts to dash in and assault counterparts like animals as opposed to retreat, have observed the game frequently portrayed.
It is undeniably brutal. For some, enough and barbaric to elicit revulsion. For many others, a demonstration of willpower, talent and guts.
Fighting is not the same world – and it is one in which even the best experience profound unease. Haskell, a beginner in this world of savagery, openly admits to this feeling of trepidation which comes .
«There is a massive element of dread in this for me,» he states, laced with the type of straight-talking honesty he has become famous for across social media. «Unless you’ve got a psychological defect, there are a component of fear for anyone entering this.
«There’s an element of testing yourself and steeling yourself to go into conflict and deal with this.
«it is a contact sport and the concept is to knock another bloke outside and find the win. It is the exact same in rugby: you need to challenge your self. But that’s where the comparison ends. A whole lot of individuals talk about these being identical sports, but they are not.
«If you are ambitious at football, it does not mean that you’re any good at fighting and everybody has a plan – to – mention a famous quote – till you get banged from the face.
«I’d done a while for Bellator – a few comment and TV – and I was contacted through my agent to go to get a meeting. I thought they needed me to perform more work, some reporting and punditry, but a guy named David Green who operates for Bellator stated:’No, we would like you to fight.’
«I laughed as you’d imagine and then said:’Right, what exactly does this imply?’ I went away and we had a talk about everything and talked.
«I thought to myself, you just get one chance at life. I am always up for trying new chances, why do I not wish give the best shot I can to it and to do this? Wherever it happens , it’ll be fascinating.
«The most significant issue is the training and doing exactly what my trainers say until I get in the cage, as you find a few of these’celebrities’ go and fight and it’s like they’ve never taken a punch earlier , never been anywhere close to that.
«Shootfighters gym is a different world to that. Their fighters are prepared by them in a manner that is suitable, they think in tough sparringthat first occasion arises I’d have been in a place that is fantastic.
«I am obsessed with individuals who have the skills to battle. People think they’re tough but then you meet somebody who is hard and knows what they are doing and it is a completely different kettle of fish. Watching people get dismantled is intriguing for me.
«I am just excited about it. That is the whole point of existence, although I believe I’m going to learn a lot about myself, a lot about what I can take and can’t take.
«What is the point of constantly sitting in a chamber and thinking:’I could do so, I really could do that.’ We are going to seek out for real now.»
Having supported his retirement from rugby was due to chronic toe and ankle difficulties restricting the intensity and frequency with which he wished to train, there is almost a part of irony to the fact Haskell has entered to what many think is the most reckless sport on the planet.
The admits to having been anxious ahead of retirement – harbouring habitual and totally normal concerns over the unknown and what’s next – but contains, in fact, proven busy.
One minute he’s been DJ-ing alongside Craig David the next he’s spoken to hundreds of apprentices around the UK, at Ibiza. Some days he has taken part in a golfing event others he’s fight , alongside David Haye doing or training the following DJ set.
«There are low phases [in retirement] and there were low periods in regards to if I saw rugby or bits and pieces around the game. I would become quite melancholy,» he states.
«I would be right down, and that I could not really watch lots of England games because it reminds me of enjoying with. But I couldn’t reconcile in my mind that even though I wanted to be there, I still could not have completed the job that I needed to do.
«I moved to the England camp another day and it was very nice and cathartic for me. I put a great deal of things to rest people and thought:’You know what, I am done with this.’
«With regards to my worries around earning and money, bizarrely I have never been busier. It has been quite mad and wonderful, and weird. It has wrecked my mind a bit.
«What I enjoy about consenting to the fight stuff is that it’s put down an anchor and I have got some subject , while also providing me the liberty to pursue different things as I’m not peaking physically every week.
«Rugby and battling are very different disciplines. My requirements rugby have been the capability to operate, accelerate, change direction. Footwork was crucial and I couldn’t do it with toe and my ankle. I really don’t have any of that element in fighting.
«Look, I’m a 34-year-old retired rugby player, there are drawbacks in whatever you do, but because of me, I have always kept myself in great shape and that I hope the men training me to put me in the best possible shape.
«They would never put me into a cage or risk me if I was not ready. It’s a demanding game and you’ve got to be ready for that»
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Produced as the oldest of two sons in Windsor, Maidenhead established the atmosphere for Haskell’s youth with daddy Jonathan a entrepreneur and mother Susie from the corporate gift enterprise.
A profession in MMA was never something which crossed Haskell’s mind. But then again, despite finishing as the third England back-row of time supporting Joe Worsley and Lawrence Dallaglio, neither was a lifetime .
«I have always joked that I wished to become a digger driver. I wanted to drive a JCB daily and tarmac streets. And then I wanted to maintain the SAS,» Haskell says chuckling.
«However, I do not think I would have got in the SAS and also my mum was convinced that I would get shot. I’d been given, I don’t think when I snapped a JCB all day, I would have necessarily repaid my parents, even though it’s a really skilled job. I believe they’d bigger ambitions.
«Rugby came about by accident. Since I went to a college that had that kind of 20, I had a trial for England U16’s. I didn’t get in and found it very upsetting and catastrophic. I decided there and then that I would give it one more move or sack it off.
«A family was a fitness expert, I started training together in something a bit like a Rocky montage and went from a skinny, scrawny, patriotic bloke to, at the words of different teammates at the moment, a bit of a freak in 18.
«I deferred my university entrance with the goal of giving it a try for a single year, and 18 years after I was doing this.
«The fighting is just another thing where a few folks are enthusiastic, some individuals have written me off, however it is a personal journey and I will place the work in. I’ll flog myself into the floor to be in a position to do it.»
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At a career that took him in Wasps into Stade Francis in France, the Ricoh Black Rams at Japan, Highlanders in New Zealand, back to Wasps and then fellow-Premiership club Northampton Saints, Haskell gets the awards to point to a stellar two decades in the game.
As a kid coming with Wasps, he made the holy grail of this club game in the shape of a European Cup trophy off the seat in 2007, while he observed that a Premiership title a year later in 2008 – successes he admits today to have taken for granted in the time of just 22 and 23.
With England, Grand Slam Six Nations victory arrived in 2016, as did a unforgettable 3-0 excursion success in Australia if Haskell was crowned Man of the Series – performances possibly where Haskell was his best but also endured the toe injury that would finally put in motion the start of the end.
«It’s difficult because we moved to Australia and did some thing nobody had completed before. In other games I had similar performances but individuals are seeking to be free if you have a win and if the team is in a good place, individuals will hype that up.
«I played with a game against South Africa once where I put 33 tackles in and I think that it was the best defensive display of my entire life, but certain journalists gave me 5/10 and said I didn’t play well.
«Australia was the perfect storm, where I’d played very nicely, was about the ball, felt quite confident and Eddie Jones had supported me.
«A lot of trainers do not know the ability of confidence and financing your players. What Jones did was not rocket science, so he treated me like a grownup, like I was precious and I would have run through walls .»
British & Irish Lions fame followed in 2017, but with his remedy by Wasps, there have been lows also, at a career of several highs after 13 seasons of support.
«Leaving Wasps, after all the time I’d given themwas a definite low point: that the club not providing me a contract offer and sacking off me basically, before I found an amazing new house in Northampton.
«This was an extremely emotional period of time for me for certain because we believe in rugby and game about devotion, but it’s sort of a little nonsense all that things.
«It’s company and they believed they’d find a better deal enrolling people from overseas, didn’t want me and didn’t believe I had that value.
«I regret not having the ability to get to the World Cup. I feel sad that I did not get to finish because I would like to, and I sort of faded from this Test picture.
«I got my {l

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