ironworks
11-02-2014, 12:00 AM
Halloween night means parties or trick-or-treating for most 28-year-old couples with three kids. For former UFC fighter Matt Riddle, and his wife Lisa, they are less than two weeks into a new direction in life -- trying to become pro wrestlers.
Riddle fought 12 times in UFC between 2008 and 2013, after coming in through the Ultimate Fighter reality show. He was a New York high school state champion at Saratoga Springs High School in 2004, then wrestled for two years at East Stroudsburg University, before working as a roofer. He had no fights nor formal training when he tried out for The Ultimate Fighter.
In those days, contestants on the show were selected jointly by the UFC and Spike. The UFC was picking based on people who could go on to be fighters in the organization. Spike would pick people based on personality or looks. One of the reasons they started doing the fights to get into the house was to weed out the guys who may have made for fine television characters, but weren't real fighters. Riddle had a good look, and a big smile and seemed to always be happy, but he never fought, even though he had a solid real wrestling background.
He walked into the cage for the first time and promptly scored such an outrageous knockout, breaking the jaw of Dan Simmler in two places, that he was the second guy picked by coach Rampage Jackson for the seventh season of the show. He lost to Dan Cramer in his next fight (a loss he would avenge a year later).
Those at the UFC recognized Riddle had potential. In fact, he was a name brought up specifically in those days when the idea of a UFC developmental system was being talked about, taking guys who had potential and athletic ability, but from an experience standpoint, weren't ready for UFC. But no such thing existed. He was in the UFC from day one, and, armed with his wrestling, won his first three fights. Then, by his own admission, he showed up out of shape for a fight with Nick Osipczak in Manchester, England, and learned a lesson. He got finished late in the third round.
"That was a bad night," Riddle recalls.
He never reached the top in the UFC. Still, he was competitive. He would have won his last four fights, except two of his wins were overturned for testing positive for marijuana. The second one led to his being let go by the organization after a run of going 7-3, with the two no-contests. Bellator wanted him, but he and CEO Bjorn Rebney had a public falling out after he blasted the organization, said he was retiring, then came out of retirement, pulled out of a fight, and was let go. His only fight since being released by the UFC in early 2013, was on Feb. 28 for Titan Fighting Championships, which he won via guillotine in the second round.
Fighting in the UFC was more something he fell into. As a kid, he and his wrestling dummy would spend all day on the trampoline with him practicing pro wrestling moves and he'd do backyard matches.
In late-2014, Riddle's trying to go back to his childhood.
Three times a week -- every Monday, Wednesday and Friday -- Riddle says that and his wife travel 90 minutes each direction to head to The Monster Factory in Paulsboro, N.J. It's one of the oldest pro wrestling schools in the country, opening up in the early-'80s by Larry Sharpe and one of the legendary names in pro wrestling history, the late "Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers. Among the stars who have trained there include the wrestler who put the gym on the map, the late Bam Bam Bigelow, along with King Kong Bundy and current WWE stars The Big Show and Sheamus.
"We get here early," says Riddle. "At 7:20 p.m., we start practicing what we know. Then we go over new material. I train Tuesday and Thursdays in MMA. I lift every day. This is the next part of my life. This is what I'm committed to. Tuesday and Thursday I'm doing MMA to pay the bills, and it covers the groceries for now. I make a decent penny doing privates (MMA lessons) and stuff."
When not train training at the school, he and his wide train at home going over what they can.
"It's his third day, he's every energetic, and respectful, and I don't have to get in his ear about things like being strict and getting right down to business," says Danny Cage, a former pro wrestler who now runs the school. "A lot of new students will have wandering eyes, and start daydreaming. He and his wife come in and get right down to business."
Cage did say during actual training he had to separate the two because they were talking to each other too much during class.
"It's understandable," he says. "They are married."
Riddle fought 12 times in UFC between 2008 and 2013, after coming in through the Ultimate Fighter reality show. He was a New York high school state champion at Saratoga Springs High School in 2004, then wrestled for two years at East Stroudsburg University, before working as a roofer. He had no fights nor formal training when he tried out for The Ultimate Fighter.
In those days, contestants on the show were selected jointly by the UFC and Spike. The UFC was picking based on people who could go on to be fighters in the organization. Spike would pick people based on personality or looks. One of the reasons they started doing the fights to get into the house was to weed out the guys who may have made for fine television characters, but weren't real fighters. Riddle had a good look, and a big smile and seemed to always be happy, but he never fought, even though he had a solid real wrestling background.
He walked into the cage for the first time and promptly scored such an outrageous knockout, breaking the jaw of Dan Simmler in two places, that he was the second guy picked by coach Rampage Jackson for the seventh season of the show. He lost to Dan Cramer in his next fight (a loss he would avenge a year later).
Those at the UFC recognized Riddle had potential. In fact, he was a name brought up specifically in those days when the idea of a UFC developmental system was being talked about, taking guys who had potential and athletic ability, but from an experience standpoint, weren't ready for UFC. But no such thing existed. He was in the UFC from day one, and, armed with his wrestling, won his first three fights. Then, by his own admission, he showed up out of shape for a fight with Nick Osipczak in Manchester, England, and learned a lesson. He got finished late in the third round.
"That was a bad night," Riddle recalls.
He never reached the top in the UFC. Still, he was competitive. He would have won his last four fights, except two of his wins were overturned for testing positive for marijuana. The second one led to his being let go by the organization after a run of going 7-3, with the two no-contests. Bellator wanted him, but he and CEO Bjorn Rebney had a public falling out after he blasted the organization, said he was retiring, then came out of retirement, pulled out of a fight, and was let go. His only fight since being released by the UFC in early 2013, was on Feb. 28 for Titan Fighting Championships, which he won via guillotine in the second round.
Fighting in the UFC was more something he fell into. As a kid, he and his wrestling dummy would spend all day on the trampoline with him practicing pro wrestling moves and he'd do backyard matches.
In late-2014, Riddle's trying to go back to his childhood.
Three times a week -- every Monday, Wednesday and Friday -- Riddle says that and his wife travel 90 minutes each direction to head to The Monster Factory in Paulsboro, N.J. It's one of the oldest pro wrestling schools in the country, opening up in the early-'80s by Larry Sharpe and one of the legendary names in pro wrestling history, the late "Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers. Among the stars who have trained there include the wrestler who put the gym on the map, the late Bam Bam Bigelow, along with King Kong Bundy and current WWE stars The Big Show and Sheamus.
"We get here early," says Riddle. "At 7:20 p.m., we start practicing what we know. Then we go over new material. I train Tuesday and Thursdays in MMA. I lift every day. This is the next part of my life. This is what I'm committed to. Tuesday and Thursday I'm doing MMA to pay the bills, and it covers the groceries for now. I make a decent penny doing privates (MMA lessons) and stuff."
When not train training at the school, he and his wide train at home going over what they can.
"It's his third day, he's every energetic, and respectful, and I don't have to get in his ear about things like being strict and getting right down to business," says Danny Cage, a former pro wrestler who now runs the school. "A lot of new students will have wandering eyes, and start daydreaming. He and his wife come in and get right down to business."
Cage did say during actual training he had to separate the two because they were talking to each other too much during class.
"It's understandable," he says. "They are married."