Tito Ortiz was the UFC's poster boy more than a decade ago, when members of Congress were making rumblings about banning it, no pay-per-view distributor would dare touch it and Dana White was a hotel bellman trying to figure a way to break into boxing.
Now, with White as its president, the UFC is so popular that one of its fighters landed on the cover of Sports Illustrated, its pay-per-view sales in 2006 eclipsed those of the WWE and boxing and it breaks attendance records in most venues it visits.
Ortiz still remains one of the sport's primary draws, along with heavyweight champion Randy Couture and ex-light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell.
Even after a lengthy feud with White, which culminated in a humiliating special on Spike TV in which it appeared that Ortiz had backed out of a planned boxing match between them, his popularity hasn't waned.
The UFC has plastered his face on billboards around the country promoting his fight at UFC 73 on July 7 at ARCO Arena in Sacramento, Calif., against unbeaten Rashad Evans, despite there being two championship matches on the card.
"I've worked my butt off over the last 10 years for the UFC to get it where it is today," Ortiz said. "I was the main poster boy when they were in the dark ages. When they were $40 million down, I was the guy pushing the company and being articulate in all my speeches and my interviews.
"It's kind of been a process of educating the people on what the sport really is. People were so used to hearing it called 'human cockfighting' or seeing bar brawling with no rules, that they just were horrified by it. But I went out and educated the fans to try to help the company and to try to build this sport."
Ortiz doesn't confine his battles to the Octagon, though. He's openly feuded with White, his one-time manager and major nemesis, over his contract and has spoken out against what he believes are "ridiculously low" fighter salaries. He insisted in his contract renewal he signed in 2006 that he get to fight White in a boxing match.
He makes his money, though, as one of the world's elite mixed martial artists and points out proudly that since 2000, his only losses are to Randy Couture, who holds the UFC's heavyweight title, and Liddell, its long-time light heavyweight champion.
Ortiz said he made $4 million total from the UFC in four fights in 2006. He pointed out that boxers Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather Jr. made more than $20 million apiece for their May 5 fight.
He once held out for nearly a year and White concedes "we have a very colorful history together, not all of it good."
Ortiz complained that the UFC hasn't promoted him properly and said it's not an accident.
"They're not doing a lot of things to promote me, which is fine," Ortiz said. "That's the way the UFC wants to do it. That's the way they want to hold me down so that when it comes to negotiation time, they can say, 'Look, nobody wants to watch you any more. Nobody wants to see you.'
"It's a negotiation tactic on their part. They've done it before and I know they're going to do it again."
White despises talking about fighter salaries and has made his feelings so well known that it's had a chilling effect on fighters. They recognize White's almost complete autonomy in running the company and are unwilling to cross him by complaining publicly about their pay.
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"It's kind of been a process of educating the people on what the sport really is. People were so used to hearing it called 'human cockfighting' or seeing bar brawling with no rules, that they just were horrified by it. But I went out and educated the fans to try to help the company and to try to build this sport."
Ortiz doesn't confine his battles to the Octagon, though. He's openly feuded with White, his one-time manager and major nemesis, over his contract and has spoken out against what he believes are "ridiculously low" fighter salaries. He insisted in his contract renewal he signed in 2006 that he get to fight White in a boxing match.
He makes his money, though, as one of the world's elite mixed martial artists and points out proudly that since 2000, his only losses are to Randy Couture, who holds the UFC's heavyweight title, and Liddell, its long-time light heavyweight champion.
Ortiz said he made $4 million total from the UFC in four fights in 2006. He pointed out that boxers Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather Jr. made more than $20 million apiece for their May 5 fight.
He once held out for nearly a year and White concedes "we have a very colorful history together, not all of it good."
Ortiz complained that the UFC hasn't promoted him properly and said it's not an accident.
"They're not doing a lot of things to promote me, which is fine," Ortiz said. "That's the way the UFC wants to do it. That's the way they want to hold me down so that when it comes to negotiation time, they can say, 'Look, nobody wants to watch you any more. Nobody wants to see you.'
"It's a negotiation tactic on their part. They've done it before and I know they're going to do it again."
White despises talking about fighter salaries and has made his feelings so well known that it's had a chilling effect on fighters. They recognize White's almost complete autonomy in running the company and are unwilling to cross him by complaining publicly about their pay.">
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