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Jacobs High grad is ‘The Real’ Diehl

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So she watches Joey’s fights from a nearby hallway or while standing behind her brother-in-law – unwilling to completely take in the sport’s brutal nature with her son at the center of it all.

“It’s what he loves, and what he’s good at and so you want to support him, but you say, ‘Oh my God, should I even be watching this?' ” Linda said. “I never see very many other mothers around.”

Diehl is 3-3 in his six professional bouts and prefers to treat next month’s Bellator event as just another fight.

He still remembers the feeling he had his first fight, calling it surreal. But now, this is his life.

“Once that first fight was done, everything’s been different,” Diehl said. “It’s hard to explain how – it’s just a different feeling.”

Curran sees a different fighter, too. Diehl is much more skilled and confident. He manages fights better and gets the most of his 135-pound frame.

With a good showing at Bellator, Curran figures Diehl has the makings of the kind of tough, exciting fighter promoters are looking for. And with Diehl committed to do whatever it takes to make a living as a professional fighter, Curran envisions big things ahead for one of the scrappiest fighters in his gym.

“Joey is on a collision course with success. I have no doubt about that,” Curran said. “It’s just going to take time. You can’t rush it.”

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