Local MMA Fighter Corinne Laframboise Is Aiming for the UFC

Laframboise Lives and Breathes MMA

Laframboise trains with her coach, former Olympic boxer Howard Grant. Photo Elisa Barbier

Corinne Laframboise was pinned to the ground by her opponent during the second round of her latest professional mixed martial arts fight.

Her back on the floor of the cage, she fought to regain control.

Laframboise hoisted her legs from Morgane Ribout’s waist to her neck, surprising her adversary with a triangle choke that ultimately won the Montreal fighter her bout at the Bell Centre.

As her opponent tapped out of the fight, Laframboise stood up, the exhaustion of the fight and emotion of the moment clear on her face. She congratulated her opponent, and paced around the centre of the ring, taking in the crowd and the exhilaration of the win before running to her coaches, a smile across her face as the team applauded her for a win in her hometown.

Two years ago, Laframboise stepped into the octagon for the first time. Competing in Germany, with no prior amateur experience in the sport, she came out on top, taking her first fight by submission.

Praised by her coaches for her work ethic, Laframboise’s momentum is propelling her forward, her last victory tipping her record to three wins, two losses.

In 2014, Laframboise dove head first into Brazilian jiu-jitsu, a sport that is played out on the ground, where fighters use techniques such as grappling, locks, and choking. After seeing the skill and beauty of the martial art firsthand at a gym one day, Laframboise felt compelled to immerse herself in it.

“For me, it’s black or white in life,” said Laframboise in French. “[So I thought], let’s go, I want to be all in.”

Driven by her newfound passion, she quickly upped her training to six or seven times a week.

“She’s a beast […] She’s ready to pay the price to get better,” said retired MMA fighter and Laframboise’s corner coach, Patrick Côté. “She is not very easy to get distracted […] She wants to live with the sport.”

“She wants to get to the UFC. She’s very, very focused on one goal: it’s to be an MMA fighter full-time.”

Laframboise trains as many as 25 hours a week, in hopes of reaching her UFC dreams. Photo Elisa Barbier

Between BJJ, muay thai, boxing, and wrestling, it’s been a series of passionate affairs with various disciplines that led the Saint-Mathieu-de-Beloeil native to professional MMA.

Four and a half years after setting foot in that first gym, Laframboise now trains between 20 and 25 hours a week, while working part-time as a dental hygienist.

If she works as hard at the profession as she does in boxing training, said former Olympic boxer Howard Grant, who’s been coaching Laframboise in the discipline for several years, she must be very good at what she does.

“She looks like she is nice, but in that cage […] she is mean. She wants to hurt you. Then you see her at work […] doing somebody’s teeth like she’s an angel but she’s really an animal.”

“I tell her a few times, ‘You’re a fucking idiot.’ Because she’s a dental hygienist […] She went to school for this,” Grant continued with a chuckle. “‘You went to school and you want to get kicked in the head?’ I don’t understand.”

Coming home victorious from her first fight, Laframboise also suffered a double fracture in her jaw, but she wasn’t deterred from competing.

“I didn’t slow down,” said Laframboise. “I can’t get in the cage, back down, and be scared. You start a step behind if you step into the ring [afraid].”

To excel in MMA, she explained, athletes must master the different disciplines before combining them. Balancing the training between many martial arts and conditioning is another challenge of being an MMA fighter.

“The biggest challenge of MMA is to be as well-rounded as possible,” said Côté. “You have to be good everywhere. In stand-up, in wrestling, on the ground. You have to be very, very well-rounded if you want success in that sport.”

The coach noted that while athletes can have their specialties in terms of fighting style, to reach the top, they have to be comfortable in any situation during a match. The true challenge of the sport is to combine skills and disciplines and excel in each area to find success.

“If it’s [on] sheer hard work alone, she’s going to make it, because she’s dedicated. She’s motivated, and she’s hungry. She wants to make it there.” — Howard Grant

MMA is the perfect storm for Laframboise, who always thrived in competitive environments, and who desires to push her limits. When it comes to her training, she goes all in. More than the physicality of the sport, she admires the humility that comes with martial arts.

“Push yourself,” she said. “Work for yourself. Humility, it keeps you in line.”

“I think she’s at the right place right now,” said Côté. “Every time she comes in the gym, I can see that in her eyes. I can see that she found the right place, she feels comfortable everywhere she goes.” Now that Laframboise has found her pace, the coach added, she is on the way to becoming unstoppable.

Next up: Getting a contract with the UFC, and ultimately winning the championship belt in the flyweight division.

“If it’s [on] sheer hard work alone, she’s going to make it, because she’s dedicated,” said Grant. “She’s motivated, and she’s hungry. She wants to make it there […] She’s very, very dedicated, this girl.”

In the recording of the final moments of the bout between Laframboise and Ribout, Côté’s voice is clearly heard. “Grab her head! Grab her head!” he yelled in French. For Laframboise, that moment speaks to the importance of having solid corner coaches, who see the fight from the outside and can offer guidance during the match.

“[During the fight], you think of nothing, because your job is done,” said Laframboise. “Your reflexes are supposed to be on. The ones who think are my coaches. It’s important to have a good corner.”

Outside of her training, Laframboise has found herself doing stunts for a movie and teaching BJJ to young girls. Photo Elisa Barbier

Prior to a fight, Laframboise researches her opponent with her coaches to get an informed idea of her future adversary. She analyzes footage of her opponent’s past fights, and also reads interviews and articles to get to know her.

However, despite her preparation, she explained, an opponent’s performance can never be predicted with complete accuracy. From her research,

Laframboise was expecting Ribout to have a right-handed fighting stance, but the French fighter changed sides.

Laframboise was taken aback for the first few seconds of the match, and had to adjust quickly. While she enters her fights with the intention to dominate, she knows the importance of adapting and being flexible in the ring.

Come fight day, she is excited and nervous all at once. She doesn’t want to lose, or lose quickly to her adversary, she said. Making her way into the ring buoyed by the tunes of A Tribe Called Red is a moment she relishes.

With the crowd cheering or booing her, Laframboise is in the spotlight walking towards the octagon, preparing for her fight. “It’s your moment. You make your entrance with your song. I get in the zone. I get in character, and I keep that focus.”

In her MMA journey, Laframboise stumbled into adjacent opportunities that bring her closer to her UFC goal. She was recently approached to be a stuntwoman in a movie, something she did not expect prior to her career. Teaching private BJJ lessons to young girls has also been fulfilling for Laframboise.

“Just knowing that you can make a movement […] that you can defend yourself, [it] breeds self confidence,” she said.

So many aspects of Laframboise’s MMA life have come together to bring her to where she is today. While it may not have been an easy journey, it’s something she completely dedicates her time and focus to.

“She’s very, very tough. Tough mentally,” said Grant. “She’s also very determined and stubborn at times. But it’s a lot of fun working with her because she’s one of the hardest workers I’ve worked with.”