Words matter. These are the best Mojo Rawley Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
If you’re in the WWE, you’re a superstar.
I played football my whole life, pretty much.
I was a walk-on at Maryland, I had to earn my scholarship and starter spot, and the things that’ve come after.
I take my training very seriously but I also take fun very seriously too.
You know, I analyze my faults and my weaknesses very carefully. I’m very hypercritical of myself.
That’s kind of the beauty of WWE, is everyone’s got their own story, they all have their own path in getting here. It’s just a very diverse and unique locker room.
You’re always reinventing yourself and looking for what’s new and what you haven’t done before.
These losses, when they mount up it’s hard to keep your cool.
I don’t make excuses.
That’s what Stay Hyped is all about, is ‘I can go when others can’t, I won’t tap out when others will.’ It’s kind of just living my mantra.
Even when I’m having fun, I’m constantly thinking of ways to incorporate it into my WWE persona, as that way I’m serving two purposes at once.
This is life right here. This is what happens. You get knocked down. You’ve got to step back up. How are you going to handle a loss? This is what Mojo Rawley is all about.
You can’t sign up for this kind of wrestling in school, so I went the football route first and I was successful at it.
I wrestled in front of seven people one time.
I am not one of these guys that looks to the locker room and points fingers. That has never been my MO.
I have a lot of shortcomings. I’m aware of that. I work on those things.
Sparring is probably the best cardio, but strength training is the best way to prevent the kind of injuries that come from roadwork and sparring.
I feel like I was born to do this. When I signed with the WWE, the newspaper and TV stations in my high-school community of Alexandria, Virginia, were like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is so perfect.’
Everybody goes home at the end of the day and looks at themselves in the mirror and sometimes they see things that they want to see that they like, and sometimes they see some things that they don’t like.
I made it to the NFL and I had an injury, a really bad injury, actually, where I was out for 18 months in football. And the doctor said it was career-ending.
The Full Sail crowd was one that I had a very special relationship with, when I first debuted they were right there with me and very supportive.
I watch a lot of tape. Anytime I have a match on TV, I watch it back, 10-20 times alone.
When you take someone’s best shot in the mouth, there’s nothing more they can give you.
If my character is over the top talking about partying and chicks and living the dream, then I’m going to go out and want to party more.
I’m a very humble guy.
I need to get hit in the face. I need to get dropped hard before I can really circle the wagons and proceed. It breaks you out of being complacent, of being in your comfort zone.
The monster that NXT has grown into is nothing short of unbelievable.
When I am a good guy on TV, my character tends to be almost identical to how I am as a real person. However, as a bad guy, I get to be the opposite. I get to be a jerk. I get to talk trash, I get to say all the things that I’m thinking but have to restrain myself from saying out of respect or decency.
The vast majority of my career anywhere I was essentially the only guy who believed in myself.
All it takes is one guy to change a locker room. To change the complexity or nature of an atmosphere.