Michelle Waterson-Gomez reflects on pioneering 17-year MMA career, why she decided to retire

Michelle Waterson-Gomez knew it was time.

At UFC 303, ā€œThe Karate Hottieā€ officially signaled the end of her 17-year career when she announced her retirement following a loss to Gillian Robertson. During Waterson-Gomezā€™s post-fight interview with Joe Rogan, the promotion played a heartwarming video on the T-Mobile Arena screens recapping some of her best moments inside the cage.

In an emotional conversation, Waterson-Gomez appeared on The MMA Hour afterward to talk about what led her to make the decision to hang up the gloves for good.

ā€œIā€™ve been fighting for over 17 years,ā€ Waterson-Gomez said. ā€œMy husband sacrificed a lot in order for me to fight. He sacrificed his own fighting career. As long as my daughterā€™s been born, sheā€™s been a gym kid. You take her to the gym, she was in the car seat, sheā€™s had to sacrifice birthdays, events, change around things on her end so mommy can train, so mommy can fight. Sheā€™s getting older, and I want to be in her corner. I want to be in my husbandā€™s corner. There are a lot of things that heā€™s doing right now that I want to be a part of.

ā€œIā€™m not getting any younger. I think that you just kind of have to recognize things for what they are, and as a fighter and a competitor, if I could, I would stay in chasing the wins, chasing that incredible high that you get when you win, chasing the gold. But I think I just had to recognize where I was at in my MMA career, and the amount of time and sacrifice I was putting into that could be put into a different direction, where I can get a win in different areas of life.ā€

Heading into her final fight, Waterson-Gomez said she only told a handful of people (including close friend and teammate Holly Holm) that she was planning to retire, because she didnā€™t want to anyone to think she wasnā€™t fully committed to preparing for Robertson. She knew the Canadian was a tough opponent and all of her thoughts were on ending a four-fight losing skid.

The bout didnā€™t go Waterson-Gomezā€™s way, as Robertson outworked her to take a unanimous decision, but the support and respect sheā€™s received since UFC 303 has been overwhelming.

ā€œIt fills my heart, it really does,ā€ Waterson-Gomez said. ā€œItā€™s crazy. If you were to ask me when I was a little girl, what did you think you were going to be when you grow up, I would have never in a million years imagined that I would be a professional fighter for the UFC, but thatā€™s where the road took me and I am so eternally grateful for that. Itā€™s really shaped me into the person I am today.

ā€œThe fight game is tough. Itā€™s unforgiving. Youā€™re met with challenges every step of the way and it can be a lonely road sometimes. You have to be very selfish in order to climb the ladder, but thatā€™s kind of how life is and I think thatā€™s why I fell in love with fighting is because itā€™s just a mirror representation of what life is. Itā€™s tough. Youā€™re going to be met with adversity. Itā€™s supposed to be hard. Youā€™re supposed to have struggles and youā€™re supposed to meet those struggles with excitement. Youā€™re supposed to overcome those challenges and become a better person from it.ā€

Waterson-Gomez never fought for a title in her UFC run, and her 6-9 record with the promotion doesnā€™t scream all-time great, but she consistently went the distance with the best of the best and earned a devoted fan following. When she made her pro debut in 2007, it was five years before the first show held by all-women MMA promotion Invicta FC and six years before UFC would host its first womenā€™s fight.

When Waterson-Gomez started as a pro, there was no promise of fame or riches for a female fighter. But she persisted, becoming a UFC mainstay and one of the most respected veterans on the roster.

ā€œI think Iā€™m the most proud of believing in myself enough to try,ā€ Waterson-Gomez said. ā€œPutting myself in front of really, really hard, almost untouchable goals, and reaching out like that. Iā€™m a little karate girl from rural Colorado. Rashad [Evans] told me, ā€˜Youā€™re not even supposed to be here, peanut.ā€™ Truthfully, he wasnā€™t saying it in a mean way, but like, ā€˜You forced your way in.ā€™

ā€œI did point-sparring karate growing up, and itā€™s very outside of who I am to be a fighter ā€” and I wanted to know that I could, and so I did. And I stayed at the top for a really long time and Iā€™m really proud of that. I fought the best in the world, stayed in the top 10 for as long as I could for the majority of my career until this last year. I was able to climb pretty high, and Iā€™m really proud of that.ā€

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