Tito Ortiz, the man who cannot let go of the UFC and vice versa talks about his career with ESPN.
 
 "I’m the Last of the Mohicans. Out of the fighters who helped build the   UFC from what it was in the 1990s to what it is now in 2011, they’re all   gone except for me. Chuck Liddell has retired; Randy Couture has   retired. I’m the last man standing, and now everyone thinks Ryan Bader   is going to put me down, too.
I’ve been stopped due to punches, but I’ve not been knocked cold. But Bader has heavy, heavy hands...
I don’t want to go. I’m not going to go. I am going to push the pace and   win this fight July 2. My back is right against wall. I’m coming out   swinging."
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"Yeah, it sucks that I’ve not had my hand raised since 2006. I hate it. I   can’t tell you how much I hate it and how bad it sucks. I’m used to   winning. I'm used to dominating, walking through guys and feeling   indestructible like I did when I was champion. To go this long without a   win, when you are a winner who fought for everything he has in life --   it’s horrible.
But people need to look at the big details to know what’s been happening   in these fights. I’ll never be someone who accepts second place --   never -- but, honestly, I feel I have won some of these fights.
After Chuck Liddell beat me in December 2006, I took on Rashad Evans,   who went on to be a world champion and has lost only once since. And I   beat him. It was only a "draw" because I got a point taken off for the   one, single time when I grabbed the fence. It was a draw, but I was the   better fighter in the cage. I won.
Then I fought Lyoto Machida, a great fighter who also went on to win the   world title. I almost caught him in a triangle and tapped him out. He   admitted he thought he was going to pass out. I lost and it sucked, but  I  was competitive."
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