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Sanders, left, took the biggest fight of his life on short notice and still won. Credit his year-round fitness.
Sanders, left, took the biggest fight of his life on short notice and still won. Credit his year-round fitness. (Photo: AP Images)

Luke Sanders Is Always Ready for a Fight

The Nashville local wowed the world with a fast submission in his UFC debut. But it was only because he's a lifelong athlete whose fitness is never far from match-ready.

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Sanders, left, took the biggest fight of his life on short notice and still won. Credit his year-round fitness.
(Photo: AP Images)

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Imagine this: out of the blue, you get an offer for the job you've always wanted. The only catch is that you start in two weeks and the job is way above your current experience level.聽That鈥檚 about where Luke Sanders, from Nashville, Tennessee, found himself聽in early January when he got the聽call up to聽the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). While the 30-year-old mixed martial arts fighter was a veteran in the sport, when the call came聽he鈥檇 never fought in the UFC, instead dominating in the lesser Resurrection Fighting Alliance, the equivalent of baseball鈥檚 minor leagues. But Sanders kept his cool. On January聽17, he stepped into the octagonal ring on short notice to face a fighter ten pounds heavier than Sanders's normal weight class.

And then Sanders .

鈥淚鈥檓 an adult, and this is my business. So every day, when I wake up, I鈥檓 going to try to run it like it pays the bills for me,鈥 Sanders told 国产吃瓜黑料. 鈥淚 was ready for the opportunity.鈥

Sanders is more than just a fighter. He鈥檚 a father and an athlete, and he's spent years preparing not only聽for a shot at the UFC, but as a man who's passionate about both his and his clients' fitness goals. Currently a boxing instructor , he shares his secret to always hitting workouts, the importance of a trainer, and the one piece of fitness聽gear he can't do without.聽

OUTSIDE: Sunday was your聽debut, an opportunity most fighters spend most of their lives waiting for.聽How long have聽you been waiting for it?
SANDERS:聽I had a couple other offers on the line, but the UFC鈥檚 always been聽my goal. With the UFC, you don鈥檛 get signed unless you have a million followers, no matter what your record is. They have a full roster, so they鈥檙e not signing guys,聽unless they need you for a fight to fill in. I was waiting for that opportunity.聽

So this was a result of someone else dropping out?
Yeah, Dennis Bermudez got a staph infection, and he had to pull out of the fight. My manager called me, said, 鈥淭here鈥檚 a possible matchup. We鈥檒l know in a day or two.鈥 Well, as soon as it hit 24 hours, I just started blowing him up. 鈥淟ook, give me the fight. I want to bust this kid鈥檚 melon.鈥 I guess that sparked interest, because most people aren鈥檛 begging to fight (Maximo) Blanco, because he鈥檚 a dangerous dude.

One of the most amazing parts of your debut聽is that you weren鈥檛 in some off-season fat mode. You were ready for the biggest fight of your career聽within a few weeks.
At this point, I鈥檓 an adult, and this is my business. So every day, when I wake up, I鈥檓 going to try to run it like it pays the bills for me. I get up and I go to work, and I make sure I put in a hard day鈥檚 work. I get what I need to get done, and I try to live each day that way. I was ready for the opportunity. I figured it would come. When it did come, it still freaked me out. But I knew I was doing what I needed to do; I know what it takes to compete at that level. I know I belong at that level.聽

For someone not as familiar with an MMA fighter鈥檚 fitness, what does it take, day to day, to be at that level?聽
A typical day, I鈥檒l wake up and start with a 30-minute workout, a shakeout, to get my metabolism going.

What does that consist of?
I mix it up. It鈥檚 nothing real high intensity, but I get a good sweat going. One day I might run and do footwork drills, the next day it might be shadowboxing and jumping rope. Another day it might be high knees, low shuffles, karaoke, butt-kickers, lateral high knees鈥攄rills to be athletic.聽Then, a typical聽morning session is an hour-and-a-half. I alternate strength training and conditioning. So one day I鈥檒l have strength training with some conditioning involved, and the next day I鈥檒l do conditioning with strength.

How do the two differ?
Strength workouts are more for explosiveness, like medicine ball slams, kettlebell stuff, sandbag stuff, Olympic lifts, a lot of bands, hurdles, a lot of plyometrics, and body-weight stuff. It鈥檚 from A to Z, a little bit of everything.聽

And what goes into the conditioning?
Those are interval sprint workouts. It will be to simulate a fight, working on keeping my heart rate in different zones and maintaining the same pace throughout those zones.聽

Do you use a heart rate monitor for those workouts?
Leading up to a fight, I will be. But if I鈥檓 not in camp and don't officially have a fight, I don鈥檛 use one. I use one so聽I鈥檓 making sure I鈥檓 getting my heart rate back down鈥攁ctive rest鈥攕o I鈥檒l be a hundred percent to start the next round. Usually that鈥檚 a 30- to 35-minute workout, with a five-minute warm-up, and it鈥檚 about four to five miles, depending on where I鈥檓 at in my camp.

A lot of people got to know you because of your fight on Sunday. But you鈥檝e been a fitness professional for a long time. What are you teaching? And how did you get into that?
I鈥檝e always played sports. When I started fighting, I was looking at other ways to keep doing what I love while helping other people with their fitness goals. I started boxing and kickboxing, since I had that background. And I was able to learn from a lot of world-class coaches, like聽people who train football players for聽NFL Combines, to people who training Olympic wrestlers, to people who train professional golfers.聽 I was able to learn a whole lot of really cool information because of my profession, and I was able to develop my own style from each different trainer so that I can teach others some of the things I鈥檝e learned.聽

It was reported that you , and yet I've heard you鈥檙e still teaching. Why?
I鈥檓 teaching boxing at a gym called Title downtown in Nashville, and I鈥檓 teaching a strength class鈥擳RX, plyo, and sandbag stuff鈥攕outh of town. I teach each place a couple times a week. I like to stay busy. At this point I don鈥檛 think I would have to鈥擨 could pay the bills without (teaching),聽but I feel like the busier I am, the more motivated I am. If I鈥檝e got a lot of time throughout the day, then I get stagnant and lazy.聽

I鈥檓 sure you鈥檝e got access to whatever equipment you want, but if you had to slim down your workout gear to one thing, what would it be?
Resistance bands. You can do anything with a band. It鈥檚 good for stability, and it just builds a different type of muscle: a lean, strong, sturdy muscle. I think bands are really cool, and they鈥檙e not used as much as other tools.聽

What do you think the average person could learn from your fitness regimen?
I think having a trainer or a coach is a great start.聽I believe in mindless training. It鈥檚 hard to do it yourself, because you have to think about it, and that鈥檚 work. If you have a trainer, it takes the thinking out. And just show up.聽You feel better after you work out, and you know that. So just get it over with and your day will be that much better. Clients that come in, they might question themselves beforehand鈥攅verybody does. Hell, I do it every time I鈥檓 getting ready to go to the gym. But I know what my goals are. So you just have to remember that.

If you had a direct line to UFC president Dana White right now, what would you want him to know?
I鈥檓 here to stay.聽

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