It was in this city in March 2014 that Woodley went from prospect to contender in the space of seven minutes against former interim champion Carlos Condit.
“I was this young, hungry fighter,” recalled Woodley. “I called (UFC President) Dana (White) and said, ‘Man I want to fight Carlos.’ And nobody wanted to fight Carlos Condit at that time. It was a shot in the dark and I didn’t think Carlos would take it. At the time he was the number one welterweight, and he said yeah. So I said this is my time to shine.”
Condit was coming off a Fight of the Night win over Martin Kampmann and was in the mix for another crack at the 170-pound crown. Woodley was 2-2 after a 10-0 start to his MMA career, and while he was fresh from a blistering knockout of Josh Koscheck, he was at that delicate point in his career where he could either soar forward or fall behind. And Condit was a truth machine who was going to find out which way the Missouri native was going to go.
It was full speed ahead for “The Chosen One.” The final result will say that Woodley won in the second round when Condit couldn’t continue due to a knee injury, but up until the end, it was the hungry underdog pushing the pace and taking the lead.
Two warriors chasing greatness. #UFC228: @TWooodley vs @DarrenTill2 | SATURDAY | Live on PPV pic.twitter.com/scpndrdp8C
— UFC (@ufc) September 6, 2018
In the four-plus years since that fight, Woodley has gone 5-1-1, winning the welterweight title and successfully defending it three times. This weekend, he returns to Dallas to face Till, a fighter who reminds him of how he was before the Condit bout. And how he is once again.
“It’s full circle now,” Woodley said. “Now I’m hunted and now it’s the young fighter that wants to fight me. And I remember that hunger, and that’s something you cannot underestimate. You cannot underestimate a young, hungry fighter that honestly and truly wants it, that has nothing to lose. That’s a very dangerous fighter, on top of the power, the size and abilities that he has. So I’m really focused.
“I’m really tuned in and I’m really digging deep and finding that old Tyron that was a pitbull that would have fought anybody, anytime, anywhere.”
That’s a scary prospect for Till or anyone at 170 pounds to be facing, because when Woodley is dropping bombs and slamming opponents, it’s a reminder why he’s the king of the division and someone who hasn’t tasted defeat since 2014. And after a year on the sidelines due to injury, he’s hungrier than ever to not just beat Till, but to get closer to his ultimate destination.
“My goal is to be the greatest of all-time, the greatest welterweight that’s ever fought in the UFC and that ever graced the Octagon,” he said. “And if I take my eyes off of that and start thinking about investing, about other businesses, about movies and these other things, then it will take my eyes off (that goal). And I’m so close to really solidifying myself as the greatest of all-time that I have to check myself sometimes.”
It’s part of a champion’s learning process, something that doesn’t get addressed too often once a fighter reaches the pinnacle of the sport. Woodley has had some twists and turns since taking the belt from Robbie Lawler, in 2016, but as his fourth title defense approaches, he’s still standing, still reigning and defending, and he’s figured it all out.
“It’s a lot more responsibility, a lot more pressure to deliver and a lot more pressure to maintain that world title status because life as a champion and life as a contender or challenger is a lot different,” Woodley said. “I’ve lived on both sides. I would prefer to stay as the champion and continue to live life the way I’ve been able to experience it.”
That means turning down some opportunities in favor of training, sacrificing time with friends and family, and keeping that hunger that Liverpool’s Till is bringing into the Octagon at American Airlines Center.
“The only way I’m gonna be able to dust this young buck off is the fact that I did my homework,” said Woodley. “He (Till) don’t have the experience I have, he hasn’t been in there with the killers I’ve been in there with. He’s got some good fights and some good victories, but he doesn’t have the resume. I do respect him and I do take him serious, and I understand how that hunger and that drive and ability to go out there with nothing to lose is very dangerous. But if you look at it, he’s not gonna outstrike me, he’s not gonna outwrestle me, he’s not gonna outgrind me and he don’t know how to do these fives like I do. I do these in my sleep now. And at the end of the day, he’s not gonna want it more than me.”
Sounds like the 2014 version of Tyron Woodley is back. But as focused as the champion is, he’s still willing to give some advice to the challenger. Or is it a warning?
“Everybody thinks they want some, but they don’t really want none,” he said. “When they lock that cage and I hit you, even if I don’t land it on your face, if I hit your glove, and you feel the heat that’s coming, and I press you and I slam you down and you want to get up so bad but you can’t, that’s when anxiety kicks in. Those are things he’s never experienced.”
Woodley doesn’t smile, doesn’t smirk, doesn’t mean mug. He just knows.