Alvarez: I’m returning to my roots of not giving a F@$%
Eddie Alvarez: “When you get focused too much on winning I don’t feel like you’re able to be your total self. I do better when I care less.”

Former UFC lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez appeared recently on the MMA Tonight podcast and discussed his fight with Justin Gaethje on December 2, 2017, at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. He said his underwhelming performances in the UFC have been due to focusing too much on the outcome, and that for this fight, he is returning to his base of not “giving a f***.”
In my mind, I’m just looking, for myself, I just don’t feel like I’ve fought my best fight in the UFC yet, said Alvarez, as transcribed by Jed Meshew for MMA Fighting. I feel like I’m having a moment now where I want to say that I’m not giving a f*** and I feel like the less I give a f***, the better I fight. I think I cared a bit too much, even in my title fight which I won, I just cared a little bit too much and I didn’t risk enough. I just want to approach the game where I really just don’t give a f***. I think I fight better that way.
I think when I entered the UFC [I started caring too much]. There was a big thing, could I compete with the best guys in the world? Could I compete with the guys in the UFC? There was that whole stigma that the guys from the smaller promotions couldn’t hang with the best guys in the UFC so I just let my surroundings and the things I was hearing affect the way I was fighting. It made me focus more on winning than on being me. I was so worried about winning and proving people wrong that I could win the UFC world title, [but] when you get focused too much on winning I don’t feel like you’re able to be your total self. I do better when I care less.
Any fans tuning in, my preparation purely for this fight, if I’m working anything every day, really hard, I’m working on just not giving a f*** so you might want to tune in for this fight.
His next fight is vs. Justin Gaethje, a fighter who equally gives no f***s.
I respect the guy,” said Alvarez. “He trains hard, he has a good strong mind, and he’s undefeated. . . He reminds me a bit of myself when I first started and I felt like I was unbeatable. I felt [that way] until I met that one guy. A lot of the things that he does and the way he approaches the game is a lot like myself and he’s just waiting in a couple months to meet that guy.
