Matt Mitrione: If Ortiz Is Still Upset After Confrontation, 'Then We Can Scrap'

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Matt Mitrione is more than willing to fight Tito Ortiz.After making enough jokes at Tito Ortiz's expense, UFC heavyweight Matt Mitrione figured he should at least make an effort to meet the guy in person when he saw him at last week's UFC fighter summit.

As anyone who saw the YouTube video of their confrontation already knows, that introduction didn't go so smoothly.

"I rip on Tito freely all the time, and I have no issues or qualms with ripping on him," Mitrione told Ariel Helwani on Monday's episode of The MMA Hour. "I do it publicly, I do it privately, I do it wherever. But I'd never met him before in person, so I kind of felt like I should at least honestly go and introduce myself to him, so that way he can never be like, 'I've never met that coward and blah, blah, blah.' I wanted to go up to him and be like, 'Hey, I'm Matt. I'm the dude who throws heat on you.'

But as it turns out, Ortiz had either seen Mitrione's cracks about him on 'The Mitrione Minute' segment of The MMA Hour, or had at least heard about them from someone else, because as soon as Mitrione extended his hand in greeting Ortiz rose out of his chair and shoved him, Mitrione said.

"What happened was, he was talking to Roy Nelson when I approached him. He was talking to Roy, he was sitting down, I walked up and extended my hand, said, 'Hey, I'm Matt.' As he stood up he said, 'Yeah, I know who you are,' and he...pushed me. All one movement. I was wearing my flip-flops like I always do because I'm a summer baby. I kicked my flip-flops off, licked my fingers like I did on The Ultimate Fighter, because I guess that's a habit of mine, and I was like alright, let's scrap."

No one threw any actual blows - probably a good thing, since physical violence would have likely been frowned upon in the Red Rock Casino's conference room - but the two engaged in a heated verbal battle that UFC heavyweight Roy Nelson captured on video and subsequently posted on YouTube.

Mitrione insisted that he never intended to get in any such confrontation with Ortiz when he approached him, but wasn't about to back down after he'd been shoved, either.

"I started to square up a little bit, and then he kept saying, like anybody who doesn't really want to fight, they're like 'hit me, hit me then, hit me.' Well, that's stupid. That's why, in the video, I was like, 'Well, you're the one being aggressive. If you want to be aggressive, then let's scrap. ...I came and introduced myself. I didn't come up here to fight you.'"

Ortiz's main complaint, Mitrione said, was the fact that some of Mitrione's jokes had targeted former porn star Jenna Jameson, who is the mother to Ortiz's twin sons. This also rubbed some internet commenters the wrong way, but Mitrione said the real problem is people's inability to distinguish between the private person and the public persona.

"I respect the fact that Tito is married to a woman named Jenna. I respect that. Jenna Jameson is a character. Jenna Massoli is his wife. And I understand that. ...I don't make fun of anybody's wives; I made fun of a public character. And I understand that's his baby mamma, or wife, or whatever she is to him. I understand that, so I can understand where there's feelings and sentiment. ...So all the white knights out there can realize, look, this is a character. Like people in my life didn't get pissed off at individuals [for] saying I was a d-ckhead on the show, because I was a d-ckhead on 'The Ultimate Fighter.' But that was a character I was playing, it wasn't me."

After the two had their confrontation at the summit, Mitrione said he knew he needed to let UFC president Dana White know what had happened before he had the chance to get the wrong idea about the situation.

"Just to show that I am a professional, I sought out Mr. [Lorenzo] Fertitta and Dana after all that stuff. I went to go work out and Dana was there and I approached him and pulled him to the side and I was like, 'I want you to know I'm sorry. I did not intend to disrespect your meetings. I didn't intend for that to happen. I just walked up and introduced myself to him and that's when all that stuff occurred, and I'm a grown-ass man and if Tito wanted to throw hands, then I'm sure as hell going to do that.'"

He and White talked it over, Mitrione said, and then he left the UFC president with one final word on the subject.

"At the end of it I was like, 'Just to let you know, if Tito really wants to run his mouth about this...I will cut down to as close as to 205 as possible, or hopefully you'd let me do 225 as a catchweight, and I will kick his a--.' So all these boys who say I'll never fight him, I told Dana and I told Mr. Fertitta that I wanted to cut weight to whoop his a-- if he would take that fight."

Mitrione, who usually weighs in at around 260 pounds for his fights, would have quite a ways to go to get down to Ortiz's weight. But the former NFL player said he'd already discussed the potential of just such a drastic cut with noted MMA nutritionist Mike Dolce.

For now though, Mitrione has other concerns. He's slated to fight fellow heavyweight Christian Morecraft at a UFC Live event in late June, and so he doesn't have the time or energy to worry too much about Ortiz, he said.

"I'm glad that this happened six weeks ahead of my fight and it's going to die now, because I've got Chris Morecraft ahead of me, and Christian is a big-a-- heavyweight. He's a much bigger heavyweight than I am."

As for Ortiz, Mitrione said that if the former light heavyweight champ still wants to press the issue, he'd be happy to take a catchweight fight and "retire Tito's old a--." But if Ortiz is willing to let bygones be bygones, so is he.

"I think that Tito didn't necessarily want to fight me about it, but I think he felt like, as a man, he had to pop up and do something about it. And I respect that. I respect that completely. But if he's not satisfied with what went on, if he's not satisfied with his Twitter monologues or soliloquies or his wife's...then we can scrap. If not, if you're cool with it, then I'm cool with it too."

 

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Matyushenko sits through Fighters Summit, gets married

It's been an excellent spring for UFC light heavyweight Vladimir Matyushenko. First, he knocked out Jason Brilz in a mere 20 seconds at UFC 129. Two weeks later, after sitting through Zuffa's Fighters Summit, he got married.

Cagewriter extends a hearty congratulations to the happy couple, and also encourages the UFC to put on more hybrid events like this. Make UFC 130 a graduation commencement and Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum a birthday party. That means we can have Matt Hamill walk out in a cap and gown, and Alistair Overeem could break out the birthday hat he wore on the MMA Hour. Do it, Dana White! Give us fighters in funny hats!

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Machida ends Couture’s career with real-life ‘Karate Kid’ move

Randy Couture showed some guts taking on a scary fighter in his final MMA tilt. It didn't work out for the 47-year-old legend, but he got to walk out of the Octagon to a huge ovation from the crowd in Toronto and with his head held high. There may never be another fighter like Couture.

Couture took on MMA's great riddle in karate master Lyoto Machida. For six minutes, Machida confused Couture with his movement and counter-striking, then he pulled off an amazing front kick to put the former UFC light heavyweight and heavyweight champion on his back. Couture was out and referee Yves Lavigne jumped on top to save him at 1:05 of the second at UFC 129.

Machida essentially pulled off the crane kick from "The Karate Kid" and, in doing so, knocked out one of Couture's teeth.

"I think I had all my teeth the last time we had this discussion," joked Couture with UFC analyst Joe Rogan. "I felt like I was standing still out there. He's a tremendous athlete."

Couture (19-11, 16-8 UFC) confirmed that he is done. He's made a pretty successful transition to acting. He was a cast member in Sylvester Stallone's blockbuster "The Expendables" and is part of the mix when "The Expendables 2" begins filming in September.

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Machida, nearly overcome by emotion, thanked Couture for the opportunity to fight him.

"It was an honor [to fight him]. It was a dream when I was a child, I would like to fight this guy," Machida said. "He is a hero. This is the hero. Thank you so much."

Machida's amazing boot was the second front-kick knockout in the history of the UFC. The first came less than three months ago at UFC 126 when Machida's teammate Anderson Silva used a similar move to knock out Vitor Belfort.

Machida's kick was a variation of what Silva did. He faked a left kick and leapt into a right kick. Couture never saw it coming. After the fight, Machida thanked both his father and Steven Seagal for teaching him the kick. Silva also thanked the movie star following his fight. Seagal, an 80's and 90's action film star, has been working with some of the fighters from Blackhouse MMA based in Southern California. Many in and out of the game mocked on Seagal for accepting credit following Silva's win, maybe the kidding needs to subside.

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No. 2 star -- Mark Hominick: Yes, Hominick lost to Jose Aldo in a five-round decision. Aldo is clearly the more skilled fighter, but even in a loss, Hominick impressed. In front of 55,000 fellow Canadians, Hominick showed that smaller fighters can get crowds standing and cheering. Even with a hematoma on his head and cheek and a swollen eye, Hominick never quit. For that, he took home a $129,000 Fight of the Night bonus for his efforts, which is a nice bit of cash for a man whose wife is due this week.

No. 3 star -- Vladimir Matyushenko: All of the "this guy is old and still fighting" pre-fight publicity went to Randy Couture, but "The Janitor" turned 40 in January, and took just 20 seconds to knock out Jason Brilz. Not too bad for a guy who has been fighting since 1997.

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Even in front his home country faithful, GSP heard some boos,  jeers and whistling in the final round. Because of a damaged left eye, he struggled at times to engage over the final two rounds. He finished the fight with blood dripping down his face and a swollen eye.

"I wasn't able to see. I think it's scratched inside. I can't see with my left. I just see a blur. It's very bad," St-Pierre said during a conversation with UFC color voice Joe Rogan, as he was blinking and testing the vision out of the left.

St-Pierre, as he often does following decision victories, apologized to the massive crowd.

"His striking was much better than I thought. He closed my eyes," GSP said.

St-Pierre (22-2, 17-2 UFC) said thought he'd dominate in the standup game, "and then put and put him down later in the fight. I couldn't deliver much with this [eye]. I wanted to make a KO or submission."

St-Pierre has won nine straight fights and defended the title six times in a row. A bunch of those wins (six) have come via decision. He's a smart fighter, so he's often unwilling to take the risk required to go for the kill.

Before GSP's eye was damaged late in the third round, Shields looked silly on the feet. The former Strikeforce middleweight champ looked silly and slow. Shields (26-5-1, 1-1 UFC) is a renowned jiu-jitsu practitioner, but he never came close to scoring a takedown. He simply lacked the athleticism to catch St-Pierre.

Nelson Hamilton and Richard Bertrand posted the 48-47 scores, while Doug Crosby called it a blowout at 50-45. The FightMetric numbers tell a different story. Shields actually outlanded St-Piere 96-92, but GSP was much more accurate making good on 36.5 to 22.6 percent. Shields downfall was his inability to get the fight to the ground. He was 0-for-6 on takedown attempts while GSP put him down 2-of-3 times.

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