Losing to Holly Holm was substantially more impactful for Ronda Rousey than anybody envisioned.
Rousey said she had self-destructive musings in the wake of being thumped out for the main loss of her UFC vocation.
"Truly, my idea, I was similar to, in the medicinal room and I was similar to down in the corner, I was in the corner and I was similar to 'what am I any more in case I'm not this?' I was truly staying there and pondering killing myself and that correct second I'm similar to 'I'm nothing, what do I do any longer and nobody gives a s*** about me any longer without this,'" Rousey said battling back tears.
"What's more, to be completely forthright, I turned upward and I saw my man Travis (Browne) was standing up there and I gazed toward him and I was similar to, 'I need his infants. I have to stay alive.' Really that was it. I haven't told anyone that. I think I just let him know that."
Rousey's story is much all the more frightful considering she lost her dad to suicide when she was 8. She went ahead to advise Degeneres she battled to discover the purpose behind her stunning annihilation.
"I do trust all the best things originate from the most noticeably awful things," Rousey said, doing a reversal to UFC 193 and that overwhelming kick from Holm. "I'm attempting to think about the explanation behind this and what my genuine object is. Perhaps winning all the time isn't what's best for everyone."
Rousey bounced back pleasantly from her November thrashing catching a facilitating gig on "Saturday Night Live" and the front of Sports Illustrated's 2016 bathing suit issue. She said she trusts she's "still undefeated in light of the fact that being vanquished is a decision."
In any case, just to be clear, despite everything she needs to tackle Holm who is battling Miesha Tate in UFC 196 in her profoundly foreseen come back to UFC.
"In the first place I need to battle Holly," Rousey said. "I need to beat her and make everything right once more."
No comments:
Post a Comment