"I'm happy where I'm at," Schaub told MMAjunkie.com Radio (MMAjunkie.com Radio | MMAjunkie.com) of his upcoming fight, which takes place April 21 at Philips Arena in Atlanta and airs live on pay-per-view following preliminary-card fights on Facebook and FX. "I have a lot of growth to do, and I think I can compete with anyone in the world. I think I'm going to be world champ. I think this is a step back. But I think you find out what a guy's made [of] after a loss.
"This sport is easy when everyone is tooting your horn, telling you how good you are. It's when you lose if you find out if it's for you. For me, I'm embracing the challenge, and it's a journey for me."
Schaub has probably heard that cliche as much as anyone else who's ever played sports or lived life, for that matter. But he believes in it, because to do otherwise would be to open doors for doubt and make defeat acceptable. And that's a compromise he'll fight until he can't.
Roy Nelson knocked him out cold in the finale of "TUF 10," and he went on to beat his next four opponents including MMA legend Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic. Even if a pivotal opportunity slipped through his fingers, it led to others that gave him the fuel to keep going.
"Brazil was a great experience," he said. "I mean, who fights Nogueira in Brazil on the first big UFC card? That was crazy for me. I fought guys like Mirko 'Cro Cop,' and I think if you add up the record of the guys I've fought in the past four fights, it's pretty crazy considering I only have 15 fights including 'The Ultimate Fighter.'
"Happy? Yes, where I'm at. I get the win over Ben Rothwell, I'm right back in there. I just cannot stand losing, man. Even when you guys mention it, it just hurts. It really does. I hate losing more than I like winning."
So Schaub pushes himself relentlessly in the gym. He goes back to basics after admittedly getting lazy, ending every practice session with 100 jabs on the mitts. He sets up Saturday night fight nights in the gym with his coaches and training partners he's flown in to mimic Rothwell.
"We try to put a lot of pressure on me," he said. "Obviously, you can never mimic the exact feeling you get being in the octagon, but we're trying to get as close as we can. But there's a lot of pressure, and I get fresh guys every round. That's how I deal with it. I'm not too concerned about it, this being my seventh fight in the UFC. I'm just excited more than anything."
After his first loss, he texted UFC matchmaker Joe Silva and UFC president Dana White, saying he wanted to get back in the octagon as quickly as possible. This time, he didn't pursue them. A couple of proposed fights fell through, but he didn't press. Three quarters of a year have passed since the loss to Nogueira, and Schaub feels he's gotten much needed time to get back to doing what he does best: getting in opponents' faces and beating them up.
He's still fast and young. He's not innocent enough to press forward as if nothing happened, but wise enough to put the recent setback on the shelf.
"You give me eight months to train, you're definitely going to see a better version of me," Schaub said.
I'm kind of torn on this, i think Schaub is a pretty good fighter but I'm not so sure he'd be able to hang with the likes of Dos Santos, Overeem and Mir. Wouldn't mind seeing him fight Cain though, think Schaub needs some more legit challengers.
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