I remember when I first walked into an American locker room, and no one had ever seen a 130-pound wrestler before. Those guys thought I was such a joke.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There was a rumor I was walking around at 183 pounds. When I left my room to fight Conor McGregor, I was 179 pounds. That means by the time I walked in the cage, I was probably 175, 174 pounds.
Sometimes - and I don't mean it disrespectfully - the easiest people to work in the wrestling business are the people in the locker room.
I can look back now and say, 'Aw, that was a little dumb taking huge bumps onto concrete before a couple of hundred fans,' but if it wasn't for that attitude and that type of work ethic, I never would have gotten to WWE.
Being a wrestler is like walking on the treadmill of life. You get off it and it just keeps going.
I was a striker before a wrestler. I've always wanted to knock people out.
I grew up a wrestler; for a long time in Oklahoma I was a wrestler.
I was dating a guy that was a huge wrestling fan and I'm embarrassed to say it now but I used to make fun of him for watching it.
Sometimes it's hard to get people to take me seriously as an actor when they just see me as this WWE muscle head.
I never was an amateur wrestler.
After watching wrestling for 20 years, I thought I had enough confidence to do it. There were no wrestling schools at the time.
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