Jordan Nicole Gaza says cheerleading helped her make smooth transition to MMA

According to a Feb. 24 report from BlogTalkRadio.com, Jordan Nicole "The Ninja Princess" Gaza thinks her time as a high school cheerleader helped her make a smooth transition to the sport of mixed martial arts.

"It was so intense, those practices and by the time I was a senior in high school, I was burnt out from it," Gaza said of her stint as a high school cheerleader in Texas. "It was crazy, hard and intense. People ask why I went from cheerleader to MMA fighter, thinking it's so different, and I'm like 'No, actually it's not.' The conditioning, the getting beat up, it's kind of the same thing in a way."

Gaza, who fights fellow Texan striker Amber Stautzenberger on Apr. 20 in North Dakota, explained that her body went through severe punishment during cheerleading training in high school.

"I would fall on my head a lot when I would tumble, but I never injured myself too badly from doing that," Gaza said. "Breaking all my fingers on a back hand spring [was the worst cheerleading injury I ever suffered." My fingers got caught on the mat and they all broke."

Despite the injuries "The Ninja Princess" suffered during cheerleading practices, she has no regrets. Gaza says the mental toughness she has inside the cage is the direct result of her years as a cheerleader.

"As a cheerleader, especially during tumbling, you have to have your mind right at all times," Gaza said. "You had to always focus and I feel like that helped me out a lot."

Unfortunately for all the male MMA fans out there who drool over Gaza day and night, she says her stint as a cheerleader did not help her flexibility.

"I'm probably the least flexible person in the world," Gaza laughed.

Advertisement

, Long Island MMA Examiner

Eric Holden, 29, has vast writing, editing and multimedia experience, most notably from a two-year stint as an MMA blogger for Y!CN, a Yahoo! Sports platform. He also had articles published in ESPN's Inside ...

Today's top buzz...