In an article just posted by the Associated Press, both Tito Ortiz and UFC
President Dana White lashed out at each other as Ortiz heads into his
self-proclaimed final UFC fight this weekend against the undefeated Lyoto
Machida.
When Tito Ortiz gets in the cage Saturday night at UFC 84, he will
be taking on more than unbeaten Brazilian Lyoto Machida.
The Huntington Beach Bad Boy is looking to make a point at the MGM
Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas as he exits the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
"I'm fighting Machida of course but I think I'm really fighting the
company," Ortiz said, referring to the UFC. "I'm fighting (UFC president) Dana
White and I'm fighting for my freedom. Fighting the power, as they say."
The 33-year-old Ortiz has fought 20 times in the UFC, dating to UFC
13 in May 1997. A former light-heavyweight champion who was once the face of
MMA, his rivalry with Chuck "The Iceman" Liddell and Ken Shamrock were financial
bonanzas for the UFC.
With one fight left on his contract, Ortiz can't wait to leave the
organization. And the UFC apparently can't wait to show him the door.
"Tito is an idiot," White said on a recent media conference call.
"He's one of the dumbest human beings I've ever met. Everything that comes out
of his mouth makes no sense. And I just have no interest in being in the Tito
Ortiz business anymore."
And this comes from the man who used to manage Ortiz.
The UFC has done Ortiz no favors by putting him up against the
29-year-old Machida (12-0), who has beaten Rich Franklin and B.J. Penn and is
coming off a comprehensive win over Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou. They have billed
Ortiz's fight fourth on a card headlined by the lightweight title fight between
Penn, the current 155-pound champion, and former title-holder Sean Sherk.
Ortiz (16-5-1) said the UFC wants rid of him because he is
challenging its financial structure.
"You know I think it really came down to me understanding the revenue
that they were making and having a feeling that I should be getting a part of
the revenue that I'm building for them," Ortiz said. "I remember when he (White)
was my manager and he was fighting for the same things that I'm fighting for
now, when SEG (Semaphore Entertainment Group) owed the company, he was saying,
`Yeah, I want Tito to be making more money, I want him to make more pay-per-view
(revenue).'
"And now all of sudden that I'm saying it myself, I'm a moron because
of saying it?" he added. "I'm a stupid guy because I understand the business
now? That I see the numbers they're making now, and how about kicking back to us
fighters that are putting our lives on the line in the Octagon? That's when it
became very disrespectful of Dana, saying I'm a moron, saying these things about
me."
While Ortiz's recent results -- a draw with Rashad Evans, a second
loss to Liddell and two wins over an aging Shamrock -- have not been stellar, he
would give a rival promoter an instant headliner.
Ortiz still talks a good game and he polarizes fans. He can look
forward to some hefty paychecks if he joins EliteXC, Mark Cuban's HDNet Fights
or Affliction (providing he can handle teaming up with a rival clothing
company).
"I made these guys a lot of money and they have no respect for me,
they really treat me bad and I'm just going to go elsewhere where a company
respects me," Ortiz said.