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This Is Gonna Hurt: The Life of a Mixed Martial Arts Champion
This Is Gonna Hurt: The Life of a Mixed Martial Arts Champion
This Is Gonna Hurt: The Life of a Mixed Martial Arts Champion
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This Is Gonna Hurt: The Life of a Mixed Martial Arts Champion

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One of the most charismatic, controversial fighters in Ultimate Fighting Championship history, Tito Ortiz recounts his rise to Ultimate Fighting Championship stardom, from growing up as a Huntington Beach bad boy, to becoming a showman in the octagon in front of 20,000 live fans and 4 million television viewers.

He's the ultimate showman in the world's greatest spectator sport—a controversial, charismatic figure who has dominated Ultimate Fighting for more than ten years as one of its most exciting and skillful stars.

But for Tito Ortiz, life very nearly took a different path. Growing up in Huntington Beach, California, Ortiz spent part of his childhood living in motels and in the backs of other people's houses, as his heroin-addicted parents were forced to leave one apartment after another. By the time he was in sixth grade, he had dabbled in almost every drug available, and his early youth involved time in juvenile detention centers, a string of petty crimes, and a stint in a local gang. Then, in high school, Tito discovered wrestling—the perfect match for this tough, streetwise, ambitious kid.

Tito made his mixed martial arts debut at UFC 13 in 1997, winning his first fight in twenty-two seconds. In 2000, he was chosen as a light heavyweight contender in UFC 25 and took the belt, successfully defending it five times in the following three years.

Tito Ortiz pulls no punches as he recounts his journey from Huntington Beach Bad Boy to UFC superstardom—his difficult upbringing, his first marriage and struggles with fidelity, his battles with the UFC, his career highs and lows, and his current happy relationship with former porn star Jenna Jameson. An inspirational story of beating the odds, and an incredible glimpse into just what it takes to win in the world's most brutal arena, This Is Gonna Hurt is raw, frank, funny, and as fearless as its subject.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherGallery Books
Release dateMay 6, 2008
ISBN9781416959212
This Is Gonna Hurt: The Life of a Mixed Martial Arts Champion
Author

Tito Ortiz

Jacob “Tito” Ortiz a.k.a. the “Huntington Beach Bad Boy” is a Mexican American mixed martial arts fighter from Huntington Beach, California. A former Light-Heavyweight UFC champion, Ortiz has been one of the sport’s biggest stars, headlining several pay-per-views, appearing on the covers of various magazines, and being one of the first athletes inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame. Ortiz has also had roles in several feature films, including Cradle 2 the Grave, and on network television in CBS’s Numb3rs.

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This book is about the mixed martial artist Tito Ortiz. Unless you are specifically intertested in Tito as a person Iwould reccommend this book. It is decently written, but I have found several other biography style MMA books more enjoyable. I learned a lot about Tito, but it wasnt my favorite read in this category.

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This Is Gonna Hurt - Tito Ortiz

CHAPTER ONE

What Did You Call My Mother?

Igrew up in Huntington Beach, California.

When you think about that city, certain impressions come to mind. And one of the most popular is surfing in the sixties. White kids surfing. But it wasn’t only white kids, even though that’s what the Beach Boys would have you believe. Believe it or not, Mexicans surfed too. And fished. And hung out at the beach. And drank beer or smoked a joint with friends if there were no parents around.

If you were a Mexican kid growing up in Huntington Beach, this is what you did.

My father was Mexican. My mother was Anglo. They liked the water, too. I remember my parents this way…

My father’s name is Samuel Ortiz. He was born in Santa Ana, California, in 1944. His family was also originally from Santa Ana, although the Ortiz family did come here from Mexico at some point. Names, dates, and places are hard to remember, but my father would tell me stories when I was younger. He was in the army in the sixties. He ran with local gangs a bit when he was growing up, but mostly he hung out with car clubs like the Night Owls, who would cruise around Santa Ana in their tricked-out cars.

My father graduated from high school, but he did not go to college. He started out as a carpenter and worked as a contractor before forming his own company. He was a successful craftsman and a great artist.

JOYCE ROBLES

He made a lot of the family’s clothes. He was a designer, an artist. He was totally outrageous.

My mother’s name is Joyce Robles. Before that she was Joyce Johnson. Before that she was Joyce Simmons. She was born on the island of Hawaii, in Hilo, in 1948.

JOYCE ROBLES

My father was a missionary. We would travel a lot. Some days we would have these tent services. On other days we would stand on street corners, swinging our tamborines. We were doing our Pentacostal thing, just trying to bring in the sinners.

My mother was the oldest of six sisters. Her father, Herman, served in World War II. Her mother, whom I’ve only ever referred to as Grandma, died when I was nine years old.

JOYCE ROBLES

My parents would always say that one day we would go to the mainland. Which meant California. Which meant Long Beach. We moved there in 1965.

My mother did not go to high school. Things were tight, moneywise, for a family with six kids, so my mother stayed home to take care of her sisters while her parents worked. She did it grudgingly. I remember conversations with my mother where she said that her dad was hard on her when she was growing up.

Maybe that’s why she married her first husband at such a young age.

JOYCE ROBLES

I met Louie Simmons when I was fourteen years old. He was a friend of a friend. By the time I was fifteen we were a couple.

Her first husband’s name was Louie Simmons. I met him once, but I don’t really know much about him. She was with him for eight years and had three kids with him, all boys. Jimmy, Mike, and Marty, each born three years apart.

JOYCE ROBLES

Louie and I got married really young. I was seventeen when I had our first son, Jim. We were very loving in the beginning. But then things got tough. He was always wanting to go out to the nightclubs and act crazy. I wouldn’t go to the nightclubs because I was a good missionary girl. So I stayed home and tried to be Donna Reed. Louie Simmons was a cheater and a half. I left him in late 1971 when our third child, Marty, was eleven months old. We divorced in 1972.

That’s when she found my father.

JOYCE ROBLES

After I divorced Louie, I moved in with my sister Shirley and later moved out with a friend of mine to a place in Huntington Beach. One day I was on an outing with the kids in Newport Beach when I met Tito’s father. He saw my little boys and he knew they didn’t have a daddy with them. But that didn’t seem to bother him. Two months later we went on a date and after that we were like glue. He was a very handsome man. A mixture of Carlos Santana and Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead.

My mom and dad’s courtship was simply a matter of my dad sweeping my mom off her feet. He was a good-looking guy and he was very nice to her. They started going out and one thing led to another and they became a couple.

They began living together in 1974. They were never married on paper—it was like a common-law relationship. They were very loving to each other. My father never cheated on my mother and he never beat her.

In 1974, my father went to prison for eleven months. It went down like this…

He and some of his friends were driving to a rock concert. They had some pills and some dime bags of pot in the car. The police pulled them over, took one look at my father with his wild hair and crazy looks, and thought that the weed belonged to him and that he was a dealer. The weed wasn’t his and he wasn’t dealing, but he was found guilty and did his time.

The first house my parents lived in was this real nice place in Huntington Beach. They stayed there for a while and then they moved to Santa Ana. My mother got pregnant and she had a baby boy. They named him Cesar Sebastian Ortiz. They were ready to stop having children at that point, but Cesar died of SIDS when he was four months old.

JOYCE ROBLES

When Cesar died, we were not thinking about having another child. I was in shock. It was hard to get through the day. For a while I would go to the cemetery where Cesar was buried and it would mess me up for weeks afterward. After a while I just stopped going. All of a sudden I got pregnant again. It was like God had sent me an angel.

If Cesar had lived, I never would have been born. But after Cesar died, my parents wanted to have a kid together so badly that they tried again.

I was born Jacob Christopher Ortiz on January 23, 1975.

My dad was six foot five and my mom was five foot seven, and I was a very big kid. I weighed eleven pounds, eight ounces at birth, and by age one, I weighed forty-five pounds. I wasn’t fat; I was just this husky kid. When my mom held me, I measured from her kneecaps to the top of her head.

My father gave me the nickname of Tito when I was about a year old. Tito translated into tyrant, and it kind of fit because even at age one I was a very bold and bratty kid. But it was apparently mostly in a good way.

My mom would always tell me that everybody always wanted to be around me and talk to me because I constantly gave off this positive kind of energy.

I had a typical relationship with my older brothers. They would beat me up and then turn right around and take care of me. Jim was eleven years older, and he seemed to be the one who would always look out for me. Mike would always tease me and mess with me, and Marty used to beat the shit out of me all the time.

As the youngest, it always seemed like somebody was doing something outrageous to me. Like the time my brother Mike and I were playing on the roof of the house. He thought it would be funny to tie me to the chimney with duct tape and leave me there. I was scared and started screaming. I must have been up there screaming for two hours before my aunt Linda heard me and came to the rescue.

We led a pretty idyllic life. We were living at the beach. My father went to work every day and my mother was a stay-at-home mom, taking care of us kids. As I got older, my brothers and I would spend a lot of days walking down the alleys behind our house to the beach. I used to go swimming and do a little boogie boarding. We would go lay out in the sand and play like regular kids.

Sometimes we’d bring a football and every once in a while one of us would throw the football at somebody’s stuff while they were in the water. When we went to retrieve it, we’d grab people’s wallets so we’d have money to buy stuff.

I was too young to know that what I was doing was a crime. It just seemed like another fun thing to do.

We were always going on family trips. We’d go to Disneyland and places like Casper Park and Lake Elsinore, where we did a lot of camping and fishing. We liked being outdoors. One time we drove up to Pismo Beach, which is up the California coast, in our VW bus; this was when you could still drive your cars on the beach. We went out there and our van got stuck in the sand and we ended up waiting there until late at night when a bunch of bikers came by and helped pull us out. Those were the good times.

JOYCE ROBLES

The holidays were always special. I remember one year Tito’s father spent weeks fixing up the backyard for Halloween. One year the entire family piled into the car and went to this place where there was this old broken-down coffin. We grabbed the coffin for our Halloween party while the kids looked out for the police. There was a very welcoming attitude in our house. All the neighborhood kids hung out there. Tito’s father made the kids a tree house. He was always good to my children. But for him, Tito was like his magic child. He truly loved him.

Even though they were not his biological kids, my father took in my mother’s children and basically treated them as his own. And for the most part, my half brothers treated him with respect. There were the arguments, but for the most part things were settled peacefully. Except for the time my brother Mike, who was always a little crazy anyway, got mad at my father and tried to set him on fire.

My dad had gotten into it with Mike for some reason. When it was over my dad went to bed. But Mike was still pissed. So he snuck into my dad’s bedroom, splashed some lighter fluid on him, and threw a lit match at him. My dad jumped up and put the fire out before he was seriously burned. Mike got a serious whipping for pulling that stunt.

At one time or another we all acted out and got punished. I remember getting whipped with a belt once because I stole some money from one of my father’s friends. Whenever we would get a whipping, it wasn’t about abuse, it was about us learning. And I definitely learned not to steal money from my dad’s friends.

Dad and I used to go hunting quite a bit, and he would let me shoot guns even though I was still a tiny kid. I remember one day we were out hunting and my dad let me fire a twelve-gauge shotgun. I fired and the kickback from the shotgun knocked me on my ass and I started crying. My mom was pissed off when she found out.

Why in the hell did you let him shoot a shotgun? she yelled at my dad.

But I got into plenty of trouble on my own. I was kind of a smart-ass even at a young age. There was the day that I almost set the backyard on fire. A bunch of cut grass had dried and had been piling up for a couple of weeks. I stacked up all the grass and started flicking lit matches at it. The pile caught fire just about the time my mom came home. She yelled at me and gave me the Wait until your father gets home speech. My dad came home and I got a good ass-whipping.

Sometimes it seemed like we got hit a lot. But my parents never really beat us.

We would get a whipping if we got out of line, but it was never anything serious. It was more of a serious scolding than anything else. I remember my mom slapping me in the head a couple of times when I was younger. While I’m not in favor of physical abuse of any kind, I do believe that a good whipping once in a while helps keep a kid in line. So I believe my parents were right in what they were doing.

I started preschool at age five at Eader Elementary, which was at the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Magnolia in Huntington Beach. My parents were kind of into the hippie thing back then, so haircuts were not a big priority. Consequently I had hair down to my ass on that first day of school.

The other kids jumped on that and began making fun of me. They would say things like, There was a little girl and his name was Jacob. I remember coming home crying and telling my mom. She said, Well, I guess we’ll just have to cut your hair. So they did and I ended up with a Mohawk. That worked out pretty well for the weekend, but by the time I went back to school the next week, my head was completely shaved.

And then I was teased for being bald. Kids can be pretty cruel even at that young age. But for the most part I got along pretty well with everyone. I was a leader in school, probably due to a combination of my size and attitude. I wasn’t afraid of anything, and if I told somebody to do something, they usually did it. Sometimes there would be problems with the other kids. One day I was playing on the playground slide and one of the kids called my mom a bitch.

What did you say? I remember saying.

I said your mother is a bitch, he answered.

Well, I got real mad and pushed the kid off the swing he was on and made him cry. I got in trouble for that. The teacher wanted to know what happened, but I wouldn’t tell on the guy. There was a code even at that young age that you did not snitch on anybody.

I told the teacher that he was talking about my mom, but I wouldn’t tell anybody what he said. My mom got called to the school to pick me up and she wanted to know what happened. I said, This guy called you a fucking bitch. She told me to watch my mouth. I cussed a lot back then and the teachers would always wash my mouth out with soap.

Then there were the drugs.

My parents smoked pot. It was part of that seventies hippie thing that was going on at the time. My dad and mom grew up in the sixties and they always used drugs. They were real stoners. In fact, there was an issue ofTime magazine in the 1970s that covered this big outdoor California rock festival called the US Festival. And if you look real closely at one of the pictures, you can see my dad with his big Afro and he sure looked like he was having a good time.

They would smoke with their friends at parties and after work. It wasn’t an addiction so much as a lifestyle; it wasn’t hurting their day-to-day lives. Dad would always get high, but he was able to go off to work each day and do his job. Mom was always good about getting us up and making sure our clothes were clean, we were fed, and our needs were taken care of. We would always see them smoking. It didn’t mean a whole lot to me at the time. It was just something my parents and their friends did, and it always seemed to make them mellow.

JOYCE ROBLES

Sam and I were hippies. Stone hippies. Marijuana was a very big part of our lifestyle. It was all about the herb. The kids had things to do so they weren’t sitting around watching us smoke all day. When Tito was real young, a

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