Tai
Tuivasa
hit a low point when he dropped his fourth consecutive

UFC
bout earlier this year.

Advertisement

After a first-round submission loss to Marcin
Tybura
at UFC Fight Night 239 on March 16, Tuivasa told
Fox Sports Australia that he exited the UFC
Apex almost immediately, walking barefoot in Las Vegas while still
wearing his fight gear.

“I was so angry,” Tuivasa said. “And my head, it was everywhere. I
just kept saying to myself, ‘How s—t is this…how s—t is it to be a
loser?’”

The 31-year-old Tuivasa quickly became a fan favorite in the
promotion thanks to his affable nature, penchant for knockouts and
post-fight shoey celebrations. “Bam Bam” had endured a three-fight
losing streak earlier in his UFC tenure, but he rebounded with a
five-fight tear that culminated with a brutal elbow finish of
knockout king Derrick
Lewis
at UFC 271 in February 2022.

Since then, however, Tuivasa has fallen on hard times, suffering
losses to Tybura, Alexander
Volkov
, Sergei
Pavlovich
and Ciryl Gane
all inside the distance. He hoped that the Tybura fight would mark
a turnaround, but it didn’t. Tuivasa now knows that he still wasn’t
in the right head space.

“The reason for losing my last couple of fights, it’s been mental,”
he said. “Those times, I haven’t been in the fight. Or not really.
I wanted to fight. Wanted to hurt. But I just wasn’t there, you
know? I’ve carried s—t from outside the cage into my fights, and
it’s shown.

“Because I really wanted that fight to be where everything changed.
Wanted that to be my comeback. But I was still too angry. So it
wasn’t.”

Tuivasa doesn’t specify exactly what was going on outside the cage,
only that it was “personal stuff.” However, by moving his training
camp away from his hometown of Sydney, Tuivasa was able to gain
some fresh perspective. He believes that setting up shop in Dubai
has improved his focus significantly ahead of his UFC 305
meeting with Jairzinho
Rozenstruik
on Saturday.

UFC 305: Du Plessis vs. Adesanya Saturday at 10 ET on
ESPN+. Order Now!

“But it gets to the point where you say ‘OK, f-k it’,” Tuivasa
said. “Having to leave my son, it’s tough. But I’m from the hood,
man. I know nobody changes anything but me. And over in Dubai I’m
away from everything and everyone. The only thing on my mind is
fighting.”

Tuivasa admits that if he’s at home, he can sometimes become
distracted.

“Because I’m a normal bloke,” he said. “Love my mates, love a
drink. I’ve got a lot of family in Sydney, a lot of friends and
things going on. Again, I’m a f—ing normal person and it’s easy for
me to get caught up. Which is why I needed to get away. And in
Dubai, I’m away from everything. Tuned in. I’ve been off the drink
… absolutely focused.”

Perhaps just as important, Tuivasa claims to be in the right frame
of mind.

“And I feel prepared now,” Tuivasa isaid. “Not just physically fit,
either. I’m mentally ready. And fighting, it’s 80 percent mental.
So I’m not going in there just to get things f—ing done with. I’m
going in there to win. And I know I’ve done everything to prepare
for that.“

IMAK ADMIN

By IMAK ADMIN

Internationaler Kampfkunst und Kampfsport Kleinanzeiger