To the naked eye,
Michelle Waterson looks more like she should be gracing the pages of
Maxim rather than beating up on opponents in caged combat. Just like
the old cliché “looks can be deceiving” goes though, it turns out that
the petite, 22 year old, otherwise known as the “Karate Hottie,” packs
as much firepower as she does gorgeous looks.
Waterson, a former bikini model and native of
Aurora, Colorado, has been throwing kicks and punches since the age
of 10 when she took her first Karate class and, on Friday, she will
attempt to give her hometown fans a dose of brutal theatrics when she
makes her seventh professional start in mixed martial arts (MMA) competition
at Broomfield Event Center.
“It’s gonna be an explosive fight,” said Waterson,
who will face Tyra Parker on the 10-bout Strikeforce “Payback” card.
The matchup will mark Waterson’s debut with the growing Strikeforce
organization. “I heard Tyra’s really aggressive and good on the ground
so it should be very exciting for the fans.”
As a contestant on the 2007 Oxygen network series,
“Fight Girls,” a reality program that gave female kickboxers the opportunity
to train and battle one another while living at a Las Vegas, Nevada
martial arts camp, Waterson introduced herself to a national audience.
“It was a great experience,” said Waterson of
the time she spent filming the show. “It helped me become a stronger
person and helped me learn how to deal with problems on my own. It also
showed me that fighting is not just physical, but also mental.”
Shortly before the TV stint, Waterson, who is
half American and half Thai by descent, took a trip to Thailand where
she fell in love with the country’s national sport – Muay Thai (Thai
kickboxing).
It was the culmination of her past experiences
in martial arts and her burning desire to excel at the sport of MMA
that, a year and a half ago, led her to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where
she has taken up residence to train under Greg Jackson, guru of one
of the most finely tuned fight teams in the country.
“I needed to come here to take my career to
the next level,” explained Waterson. “I’ve learned how to grapple on
the ground and use my wrestling as a weapon. I’m a much more well-rounded
fighter now.
Her work with Team Jackson produced dividends
five weeks ago when she forced an opponent to submit from an armbar
just 22 seconds into their bout. “Albuquerque has become a second home
for me, and the Jackson team has become my family.”
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