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Jacobs High grad is ‘The Real’ Diehl

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CRYSTAL LAKE – Give Joey Diehl a quick glance, an initial once-over, and he doesn’t look the part.

He’s 5-foot-4 and 130 pounds – a whopping 135 if he’s training. He hasn’t grown an inch since eighth grade. And yet, Diehl is what he is – a 21-year-old professional mixed martial arts fighter.

Look again. It’s hard to get over, Diehl admits.

The former Jacobs wrestler from Algonquin is a professional fighter only three years after he graduated high school and after deciding to quit his 40-hours-a-week job at his parents’ sheet metal company and opting not to attend Northern Illinois as planned. He’s a professional fighter even though before three years ago, Diehl had never hit anyone in his life.

That’s just not who Joey “The Real” Diehl is.

“I was never really that guy looking for fights,” Diehl said. “I’m not a jerk kind of a guy who likes to hit people.”

And yet, Diehl is a professional fighter.

His friends, at first, didn’t believe it. His mother, Linda Diehl, who still has trouble bringing herself to watch one of her son’s caged bouts, isn’t necessarily surprised that what began with an intense fascination with all things MMA and Ultimate Fighting Championships has become a way of life for the youngest of her three children.

Then there is Diehl, the self-proclaimed nice guy, who, after going 3-3 in six professional fights – which followed 12 straight amateur bout victories – can’t imagine life any other way.

“I was never good at team sports – I was too short for basketball, can’t catch, can’t throw,” Diehl said. “Back in high school, people would just assume they could pick on you. and it’s kind of nice to know you can defend yourself – especially when you’re a little guy.”

Six fights into his professional career, Diehl is considered a lower-level pro who will be part of the undercard at next month’s Bellator 84 event at The Venue at Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Ind. But considering what he’s learned about the sport – and more importantly about himself – in those six fights has been invaluable for a bantamweight fighter looking to make a name for himself.

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