
Dominick Cruz explains why latest shoulder injury prompted retirement: 'I was on borrowed time'
Former UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz felt his career was 'on borrowed time' as he dealt with a recurring shoulder issue.
The injury bug has haunted Cruz (24-4 MMA, 7-3 UFC), affecting multiple areas of his body, leading to many starts and stops over his professional MMA career that began in 2005. Even though he was dealing with a shoulder issue, Cruz decided to book a fight for Feb. 22 against Rob Font, which would have been his first since a loss to Marlon Vera in August 2022.
However, his body wouldn't allow him to complete a full camp, even with adjusting the intensity, and decided to withdraw from the fight and call it a career.
'I had one dislocation about eight weeks prior to this recent one that I posted,' Cruz said on 'The Anik & Florian Podcast.' 'That one kind of set the stage that, 'OK, I'm on a different kind of timeline than just age,' which I didn't really add to the equation. It was more, just like I feel good, I'm still fast, all these things, right? Then, your shoulder falls out.
'I rehabbed it for six weeks straight, then I went and sparred with Jeremy Stephens and a few pro boxers just to see where it was really at after the rehab I had done, and I did really well. I felt really good, nothing messed with me at all. After that, I booked the fight, and they offered me Rob Font.'
Cruz admits there was some hesitation in booking the fight, but he felt his body would get in no better shape than it was at that time. Unfortunately, his shoulder failed him again.
'Sorry, Rob Font as well,' Cruz said. 'I respect the guy. He's done a lot in the sport himself and a lot of big things. So, nobody wants to pull out as a pro fighter because it sets somebody else off, too. It sets the fans off, it sets the fighter off; it's more than just me when you pull out, and that's why I didn't want to do it. But I knew I was on borred time, to put it quickly. I was on borrowed time after the first dislocation.'
In order to reduce the liklihood of damaging his shoulder again, Cruz said he changed up his training camp routine to dial back live sparring and grappling. However, when he went live, the injury occured, and it wasn't a dislocation that could be quickly popped back into place like the previous occurance. Cruz said he had to go to the hospital to get X-rays done so the medical team could figure out which way to pull his arm to reset it.
According to Cruz, this disclocation was so excrutiaingly painful that it prompted him to reasses his career, and think about what day-to-day life could be like years from now if he pressed forward.
'It was a 20 on a scale of one to 10,' Cruz said. 'It just changed my perspective of where the shoulder is at because – you know, I already had tendon damage that had torn, and that's why the shoulder starts coming out because the tendons are no longer connected. So, there's separation and that thing can just fly out. So, if it can happen twice in six to eight months, that's when the shoulder just stops working on you.
'… How much is my shoulder worth? How much is being able to (raise my arm above my head) worth? That's full range of motion. It's still painful, I have a lot of rehab to do, but is that worth more than what I'm getting paid for this last fight? Definitely. Now, if they offered me a couple mil or something like that, I don't know, I might have showed up and gone with a 50 percent arm and maybe done that. You gotta figure out what your arm's worth.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'I was heartbroken': How Merab Dvalishvili overcame early MMA failures to become UFC champ
Imagine you uproot your entire life, move to a new country where you don't speak the language, all to chase one very specific dream. Then imagine that after you step out to try your hand at the dream you come home a loser. That was Merab Dvalishvili back in 2014. He came to the United States from his home country of Georgia. He didn't speak English and had no idea where to even begin in his quest to become a pro fighter. Advertisement A decade later he would become UFC men's bantamweight champ, but not before he started his pro MMA career with a loss via majority decision. Dvalishvili would wind up losing two of his first three pro fights, in fact, which was more than a little disheartening for a guy who was barely scraping by at a construction job by day just so he could train as a fighter each night. 'I was heartbroken,' Dvalishvili told Uncrowned ahead of his title defense against former champ Sean O'Malley at UFC 316 on Saturday. 'I lost a fight. You know, you can lose maybe a tennis game, a soccer game. But this is a fight. When you take a loss in a fight, it's hard. I was thinking, maybe I wasn't good enough. Maybe I should quit.' He was 23 at the time. He told himself that perhaps the thing to do was take some time off from MMA. Just work his job and live his life for a little while. See what it would feel like to just be a regular person for a little while. Maybe he didn't have to beat himself up over a dream that seemed so distant and unattainable. So he drifted away from the ranks of professional MMA. He went nearly a year and a half without a fight. Advertisement 'But what happened was, when I was away from MMA, I missed it,' Dvalishvili said. 'I said, you know, I don't care. If I lose, if I win, I just want to keep fighting because I love this. When I came back, I was super motivated.' Dvalishvili then reeled off six straight wins. He became champion in New Jersey's Ring of Combat promotion, which is where he first got the attention of UFC CEO Dana White. When the UFC signed him in 2017, it seemed like the dream he'd almost given up on was starting to come true. Then he lost his first fight in the UFC by a razor-thin margin on the judges' scorecards. Then he lost his second when cageside officials made a controversial call to award opponent Ricky Simon the victory even after Dvalishvili appeared to survive a late choke attempt all the way until the final horn. That call by officials dropped Dvalishvili to 0-2 in the UFC, which jeopardized his roster spot and put him seemingly miles away from a UFC title. Ray Longo, Dvalishvili's coach, was incensed. Advertisement 'I thought that was horrible,' Longo said. 'They took that win away from him, and I went a little crazy. I'm overprotective sometimes. But afterwards I remember I went to Merab like, are you not as upset as I am about this? He told me, 'I can't change it. All I can do is react to what happened.' And that's how Merab is still to this day. The good, the bad, he takes it in stride and keeps working his ass off regardless.' The guys at Longo's gym in Long Island all knew how good Dvalishvili was. They saw it in the practice room every day. They couldn't believe a fighter like him could be winless in two tries with the UFC. There were times, Longo said, when the team had to remind Dvalishvili that he was better than his record. 'The thing with Merab, he's the ultimate win-or-learn guy,' Longo said. 'Any time he lost, he made those corrections and he never lost that way again. He learned more from his losses than I think anybody I've ever seen.' The controversial defeat to Simon was the last time Dvalishvili went home a loser. He won his next 10 fights to secure a title shot against then-champion O'Malley late last year, then nabbed the belt with a one-sided decision victory at UFC 306. He's since defended it once, downing top contender Umar Nurmagomedov via unanimous decision in January, before booking Saturday's rematch against O'Malley. Merab Dvalishvili outworked Sean O'Malley in their first title fight to earn a unanimous decision victory. (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images) (USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Connect / Reuters) There are times, Dvalishvili said, when it almost feels surreal to think about how far he's come in his pursuit of the dream that is now his reality. Advertisement 'When I moved to the U.S., my goal was to go to the UFC,' Dvalishvili said. 'But I had no idea how to go to the UFC. It was difficult even to watch the UFC on TV [in Georgia]. When I came here, I don't know how to watch it or buy a paper and read about it. It was hard even to find a gym to train. I wasn't sure it would ever work for me. Even when I went to the UFC, I was still working construction. And thanks to God, everything worked for me.' The way Longo sees it, it wasn't just good fortune that propelled Dvalishvili to success. He watched the Georgian's rise from fledgling undercard fighter to UFC champion, and the one thing that never changed was Dvalishvili's attitude in the gym. Even after Dvalishvili left New York to live and train in Las Vegas — and even after his success in the cage brought him titles and money — his approach to training was always hard-nosed and relentless. 'Other guys are in the [UFC Performance Institute] to hang out or get a massage,' Longo said. 'Merab, I guarantee you, is there to work. He's always in the gym, always in shape. Other guys, you think maybe if you can get them on a short-notice fight you'll have a better chance. How are you going to do that with Merab? He never leaves the gym.' And why should he? As Dvalishvili explained, as soon as he's away from the sport for any length of time he's only reminded how much he loves it. This is why, he said, the work never feels much like work to him, even now. 'If you really love this sport, you have to fight for it,' Dvalishvili said. 'You have to stay positive. If you lose, don't blame nobody. Look for the reason in yourself. Work to fix your mistakes and get better. Most of all, never give up.'


USA Today
26 minutes ago
- USA Today
UFC 316 'Embedded' No. 4: Kayla Harrison takes bird watching to the next level
UFC 316 'Embedded' No. 4: Kayla Harrison takes bird watching to the next level The UFC is back in New Jersey for UFC 316, its sixth pay-per-view of the calendar year, and the popular "Embedded" fight week video series is here to document what's happening behind the scenes. UFC 316 (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) takes place Saturday at Prudential Center in Newark. In the headliner, bantamweight champion champion Merab Dvalishvili (19-4 MMA, 12-2 UFC) takes on challenger and ex-champ Sean O'Malley (18-2 MMA, 10-2 UFC) in a rematch. In the co-feature, women's bantamweight titleholder Julianna Peña (13-5 MMA, 8-3 UFC) meets Kayla Harrison (18-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC), a two-time Olympic gold medalist and two-time PFL $1 million champion who is one of the biggest title challenger betting favorites in UFC history. In addition, former Bellator bantamweight champion Patchy Mix (20-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) makes his highly anticipated UFC debut after freeing himself from the PFL when he takes on Mario Bautista (15-2 MMA, 9-2 UFC). The fourth episode of "Embedded" follows the featured fighters while they get ready for fight week. Here is the UFC's description of the episode from YouTube:


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Ian Machado Garry: Leon Edwards should retire, clearly doesn't have love for it anymore
Ian Machado Garry: Leon Edwards should retire, clearly doesn't have love for it anymore Ian Machado Garry doesn't think former UFC champ Leon Edwards can hang with the rising contenders anymore. After going on a 13-fight unbeaten streak, Edwards (22-5 MMA, 14-4 UFC) has dropped back-to-back fights – losing his welterweight title to Belal Muhammad at UFC 304, followed by a submission loss to Sean Brady at UFC Fight Night 255 in March. Judging by the dominant nature of his loss to Brady, Machado Garry (16-1 MMA, 9-1 UFC) questions Edwards' fighting spirit. "If I was Leon, I would be retiring," Machado Garry told talkSPORT MMA. "He clearly doesn't have the love for it anymore, clearly doesn't have the talent for it against the best young youth in the division. Just kick it in, say you were a world champion and go off into the streets of Birmingham and tell the people the story of what was, not what is." As for his own career, 27-year-old Machado Garry remains confident that he will realize his goal of becoming UFC champion. "It should have come back in UFC 315 in Canada. That's the truth: It should have," Machado Garry said of a title shot. "But they decided to go with a guy who's been out for a year and coming off a broken arm and not being active for a year. But that's up to them as a business, and they can do what they want. All I know is I was present for the world title fight between Belal Muhammad and Jack Della Maddalena in Canada, and had I fought that night, I would have a belt wrapped around my waist. That's what I fully believe."