Geordie Shore star Aaron Chalmers reveals Twitter trolls wished suicide on him after Bellator loss
Newcastle MMA ace suffered his first professional loss on February 9 in front of his home fans and was abused but some sick critics
Newcastle MMA ace suffered his first professional loss on February 9 in front of his home fans and was abused but some sick critics
GEORDIE SHORE star Aaron Chalmers could handle watching sick Twitter trolls wish suicide on him - but not repeats of his first MMA loss.
The 31-year-old Bellator ace was heartbroken after losing a close contest with Corey Browning in front of his home Newcastle crowd on February 9, ending his four-fight win streak.
The inked reality TV star was in tears after the loss and disgusted by his performance but the hard man could handle the vile abuse that was sent his way by pathetic online bullies.
Chalmers, who battled anxiety problems after the loss, said: “Initially, after the fight, I could not watch it back because I was that embarrassed. It looked like I went in there having never trained in my life.
“I was apologising to everyone backstage, while they were trying to tell me ‘well done’ because it was f***ing shocking.
"Why don’t you just kill yourself?"
A message sent to Aaron Chalmers
“I keep tabs on my social media accounts but I seem to always overlook the good and get drawn to the bad.
“I was getting messages saying ‘why don’t you just kill yourself?’
“But if I kill myself then who will these people have a go at?
“ The people that send this sort of abuse, and it’s not just to me, have never had the guts to step in a gym in their lives and they probably never will.”
Chalmers, who put on a brave performance that should have convinced doubters of his fighting validity, will be back in the cage on June 22 at Wembley Arena.
The Newcastle lad is a constant target for spiteful social media users and they revelled in the fact he lost in front of his home fans.
But he has vowed to turn the poison into positivity and let the boo-boys line his pockets.
The striker said: “I can handle the hate. I don’t mind being the villain and hearing out angry people get when they see me get in the ring.
“These people want to boo and abuse me but they are still paying to come and see me or watch me on TV.
“They can come along and hope I can get beat but as long as they pay their money it’s good enough for me.”
Tickets to Bellator London: Mousasi vs. Lovato Jr. go on sale Friday 5th April and can be purchased online from and