Did Tito Ortiz and Chuck Liddell Just Fight Again

Mixed martial arts rivalries

Chuck "The Iceman" Liddell vs. "The Huntington Embankment Bad Boy" Tito Ortiz is a trilogy of mixed martial arts fights betwixt Chuck Liddell and Tito Ortiz; two that took place in the Ultimate Fighting Championship and 1 in the Golden Boy Promotions MMA promotion. All iii fights have ended in a knockout in the Light Heavyweight Division.

At the first coming together at UFC 47, Liddell won by knockout at 0:38 seconds in the second round. By this victory he became the first person to knockout Ortiz. The second time, was a UFC Lite Heavyweight Championship bout at UFC 66 in which Liddell won again by technical knockout at iii:59 in the third circular. Liddell and Ortiz were scheduled to meet a third time at UFC 115 merely Ortiz was forced out of the bout after an injury required him to receive cervix fusion surgery. Liddell instead fought Rich Franklin.

Background [edit]

Post-obit his win over Ortiz, Liddell one time again established himself as the number one contender for the UFC Light Heavyweight Title. He, along with then champion Randy Couture, went on to become opposing coaches in the first season of the UFC's eventual striking reality series The Ultimate Fighter. Subsequently the flavor'south conclusion, Liddell and Couture met for a second fourth dimension on April 16, 2005 at UFC 52. Liddell was successful in the rematch past defeating Couture via knockout at 2:03 of the first circular and thus becoming the new UFC Light Heavyweight Champion. The win, along with his exposure on the bear witness and the UFC's growing popularity, garnered Liddell much media attention and fame. He would go on to become a household name throughout 2005 and 2006 with notable title defenses over Jeremy Horn, Randy Couture, and Renato Sobral. The rubber match with Couture is to date the UFC's largest grossing gate at $iii.3 one thousand thousand and was widely marked as the UFC's first major trilogy.

Following the loss to Liddell, Ortiz then grabbed back-to-dorsum decision wins over Patrick Cote at UFC 50 and Vitor Belfort at UFC 51 before temporarily leaving the UFC due to contract disputes. Eventually, Ortiz returned in 2006 and defeated The Ultimate Fighter 1 winner and ascent star Forrest Griffin via split decision at UFC 59. Following the win, Ortiz resumed his long standing feud with Ken Shamrock. The two were opposing coaches on flavor iii of The Ultimate Fighter and afterward fought in a highly predictable rematch on July 8, 2006 at UFC 61, where Ortiz smothered Shamrock to a TKO victory at ane:18 of the first round. Due to the controversy surrounding the stoppage, Ortiz and Shamrock met a third fourth dimension on October 10, 2006 at Ortiz vs. Shamrock iii: The Final Affiliate where Ortiz once again dominated Shamrock en road to a TKO victory at 2:22 of the first round. Much like Liddell, Ortiz's exposure on the show, along with his feud with Shamrock, gained him notable popularity and made him the highest grossing UFC fighter in 2006.

UFC 66: Liddell vs. Ortiz Two [edit]

Date December 30, 2006
Title(s) on the line UFC Light Heavyweight Championship
Tale of the tape
Boxer United States Chuck Liddell United States Tito Ortiz
Nickname The Iceman The Huntington Beach Bad Male child
Hometown Santa Barbara, California Huntington Beach, California
Pre-fight record 19–3 xv–four
Recognition UFC Light Heavyweight Champion
Result
Liddell wins past technical knockout at 3:59 of circular 3

Headlining UFC 66 was a championship fight with ii of the UFC'south biggest light heavyweight stars, Light Heavyweight Champion Chuck Liddell defending his title against former champion Tito Ortiz. This fight was first announced by Ortiz at the UFC 63 weigh-ins on September 22, 2006.

In what would be ane of the most financially successful UFC events to date, Liddell fought a rematch with Ortiz at UFC 66, which took place on December 30, 2006. Midway through the first circular, Liddell defenseless Ortiz with a flurry punches that dropped Ortiz to the canvass. After taking heavy shot's from Liddell, Ortiz was able to scramble and survive the round. The 2nd round appeared to be more than even for both fighters with Liddell neutralizing Ortiz's wrestling ability and Ortiz defending confronting Liddell's strikes. As the catastrophe of the round neared, Ortiz successfully secured a takedown on Liddell and briefly pinned him against the cage equally Liddell scrambled before the bell rang. The showtime of the third circular was again even before Liddell pressured Ortiz with some other flurry of punches. After an exchange of blows, Ortiz attempted a single leg takedown but ended up mounted past Liddell, who began raining downward a series of strikes that Ortiz could not successfully defend. The referee and then stopped the fight and Liddell was declared the winner via TKO to successfully defend his Light Heavyweight Championship for a fourth time.

During the post fight press conference, Dana White awarded both fighters "Fight of the Night" honors. A humble Ortiz congratulated Liddell and declared him the pound for pound best fighter at the time. It was later revealed that Liddell tore his MCL prior to the fight. In addition, during the fight he popped the tendon out on the middle finger on his left paw. Ortiz himself claimed he may take broken his pes during a kick to Liddell'south articulatio genus. An MRI later showed that it did not break.

The Liddell/Ortiz rematch scored the UFC their beginning 1,100,000 buyrate, a total that would non exist achieved once again until UFC 91 in 2008.

The decline of Liddell and Ortiz [edit]

Post-obit his second win over Ortiz, Liddell was and then set to defend his title against UFC newcomer Quinton Jackson at UFC 71. Despite losing to Jackson in 2003 in the Pride Fighting Championship organisation in Japan, Liddell was favored to win the rematch. Liddell withal was chop-chop disposed of by Jackson, losing the fight via KO at 1:54 seconds in the start round and thus losing his title. Liddell returned to the octagon at UFC 76 to face The Ultimate Fighter ii alumni Keith Jardine where he was defeated via separate decision in a closely contested contest. The loss made it the offset time Liddell had suffered 2 consecutive losses. Liddell then met MMA Legend and dangerous slugger Wanderlei Silva at UFC 79, a bout that had been two years in the making. As predicted, the fight was a grueling, encarmine slugfest that saw both men exchanging thunderous blows. Afterwards a three circular war, Liddell was awarded a unanimous determination. The fight would get on to win "Fight of the Night" equally well as "Fight of the Year" awards. After establishing himself as a top contender again, Liddell went on to face up The Ultimate Fighter 2 winner Rashad Evans at UFC 88. Similar his previous bouts, Liddell controlled the pace with his strikes and kicks that kept Evans at bay. However, early in the second round, Liddell threw a right uppercut only as Evans connected with an overhand right, causing Liddell to fall unconscious to the mat. The knockout was dubbed "Knockout of the Twelvemonth" past MMA-website Sherdog and mark the kickoff time Liddell had been knocked out common cold. Following the loss, Liddell attempted to round out his skills with American Top Team in preparation for his adjacent fight against Mauricio Rua. The fight took place at UFC 97 on Apr xviii, 2009. After an exchange of shots from both fighters, Liddell was floored by a punch from Rua in the offset circular and was defeated via TKO subsequently Rua landed several unanswered punches. After the fight, White declared that Liddell is retired from fighting. White said, "I care near him. I care about his health, and information technology'southward over, human. It'due south over". White went further, saying, "At the end of the twenty-four hour period, I care about these guys. I don't want to encounter anybody stick around too long. You're never going to see Chuck Liddell on the canvas again".

Ortiz meanwhile attempted to rebound from his loss to Liddell and faced off against Rashad Evans at UFC 73. In a tour that was going his way, Ortiz was docked a point in the second round for repeatedly grabbing the fence. As a result, the fight was alleged a draw. Over the adjacent year, Ortiz exchanged in a heated verbal warfare with Dana White. Ortiz claimed that UFC fighters were underpaid and criticized White for trying to employ the UFC to promote himself. White himself went on to publicly attack Ortiz by calling Ortiz "jackass" and claiming him to be "not a real fighter" in several media outlets. Ortiz then fought the undefeated Lyoto Machida at UFC 84. Despite locking in a near fight-catastrophe triangle choke, Ortiz was unable to keep up with Machida's pace and was picked apart past his punches, kicks, and takedowns en road to a lopsided unanimous decision. The fight concluded Ortiz's stay with the promotion as he chose non to re-sign, citing his frustration with UFC president Dana White as a major factor in the determination. Later leaving the UFC, Ortiz was approached by multiple promotions, including the now defunct EliteXC, Affliction and the American Fight League. However, a clause in his old UFC contract forbade him from signing with or fighting for any other organisation until approximately April–June 2009. Until his return to the UFC, Ortiz was considered the biggest free agent on the market. On July 17, 2009, both Ortiz and Dana White stated that the pair had made amends and Ortiz re-signed with the UFC a calendar week afterwards. Originally scheduled to face UFC Hall of Famer Mark Coleman, Ortiz instead took on Forrest Griffin in the main event at UFC 106. Whilst Ortiz was able to secure takedowns in the offset and second rounds, Griffin showed considerable comeback in his striking and kept the fight standing throughout the 3rd, leading to the split decision victory.

The Ultimate Fighter and cancelled third fight [edit]

During The Ultimate Fighter: Heavyweights Finale, Dana White announced that Chuck Liddell would be coaching against vehement rival Tito Ortiz on the 11th season of The Ultimate Fighter, with the two of them fighting each other on June 12, 2010, at UFC 115. White claimed that the two nevertheless hated each other and figured fans would want to encounter third bout anyhow. In the time leading upwards to the show, Ortiz was criticized for disclosing information in regards to Liddell's alcohol bug. This upset Liddell, who stated he considered the third fight with Ortiz a tuneup fight only now claimed he was training hard to kill him.

However, in March, it was rumored that Ortiz was pulling out for every bit even so unknown reasons and Ortiz would exist replaced by former UFC middleweight champion Rich Franklin. This was and so denied by UFC president Dana White. On April seven, 2010, White confirmed that Liddell vs. Ortiz 3 would be the master event for the card; nonetheless, on April 12, 2010, the main event was changed to Liddell vs. Rich Franklin.

Backwash [edit]

At UFC 115, Liddell suffered his third consecutive knockout loss when he was defeated by Franklin in the offset round by knockout. Post-obit the tour, Dana White declared that Liddell would never fight in the UFC once again. Despite his desire to continue fighting, Liddell decided to end his fighting career and appear his retirement on December 29, 2010 at the UFC 125 press conference and stated he would be taking the position of the UFC Vice President of Business Development. Liddell was visibly emotional at the announcement, acknowledging his retirement and an end to his fighting with words of farewell: "Most of all I want to thank my fans and my family. I love this sport and I'm excited to get to this new stage in my life and go along promoting the best sport in the globe, the sport I love... now that I'm retired".

Ortiz meanwhile returned to the octagon for the start time since his cervix surgery on October 23, 2011 at UFC 121 against his Ultimate Fighter Flavour three pupil Matt Hamill. Ortiz lost the bout by unanimous decision in a lopsided fight, making it his quaternary loss in five fights and 3rd consecutive. Dana White hinted after the issue at Ortiz'due south possible release past stating: "Nosotros all know what happens to guys when they lose four fights in the UFC". Despite this, White granted Ortiz ane final take a chance to compete in the 205 pound partitioning. He was scheduled to face up Antônio Rogério Nogueira in the main event at UFC Fight Night 24 but was forced out of the bout after receiving a cutting above his eye during training that required stitches. Ortiz made his render at UFC 132 where he faced The Ultimate Fighter Season eight winner Ryan Bader. Coming in as heavy underdog with his UFC career on the line, Ortiz secured his first victory since 2006 past submitting Bader at 1:56 of the start round and saved his UFC career. Ortiz then attempted to reenter the acme x of the UFC Light Heavyweight Partition by stepping in for an injured Phil Davis to face number one contender Rashad Evans in the main result at UFC 133. Despite securing what might have been a fight-ending guillotine choke, Ortiz was heavily dominated by Evans and was defeated past technical knockout in the 2nd circular. According to Dana White, the loss yet would not affect Ortiz's career in the UFC. Afterwards dropping back-to-back losses to Antônio Rogério Nogueira at UFC 140 and Forrest Griffin at UFC 148, Ortiz retired from fighting after 15 years competing for the UFC. Prior to his bout at UFC 148, Ortiz became the ninth inductee into the UFC Hall of Fame.

Today, many sports and media analysts credit the Liddell and Ortiz rivalry with bringing the sport of mixed martial arts into the mainstream of American sports and entertainment.

On September 26, 2019, ESPN announced that as the inaugural special about mixed martial arts on 30 for xxx will be covering the trilogy and feud. The episode will air on October 15, 2019.[1]

Third bout [edit]

Oscar De La Hoya'south Gilded Boy Promotions made a one-off into the mixed martial arts market during 2018, with a November 24, 2018 at The Forum presented by Hunt in Inglewood, California. The outcome was headlined by the 3rd fight between Chuck Liddell and Tito Ortiz in a hexagonal cage.[two] Ortiz earned his kickoff win in the trilogy, winning by knockout in the offset round.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Jay Pettry (September 26, 2019). "Chuck Liddell, Tito Ortiz Featured in Outset MMA '30 for thirty' Special". sherdog.com.
  2. ^ "Gilt Boy submits new lineup for Liddell vs. Ortiz 3 upshot". MMAjunkie.com. Retrieved November 21, 2018.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Liddell_vs._Tito_Ortiz

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