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UFC: Because you’ve been a champ for so long, how have you evolved in your preparation because you’ve been in these fights before?

TW: When you think about the fights, first it starts off learning how to deal with all the extra interviews and all the people yelling and all the things that comes with being a champion, and then it’s actually the five rounds. Learning how to properly fight the five rounds. You can’t fight it like a 3-round fight. I’m not saying that you ease up, but there are times where you’ve got explode. There’s moments you got to win. You got to recognize that you have to sway the judges in certain parts of the fights, and you got to make sure each area, each 30 second burst, that you’re on top of the scramble, that you win the exchange. So knowing that, and also knowing how to compound, like I set traps for fighters, so I do a move or two, and I see how they respond, then I come back to it later, and I might have set a trap in round one for round three. I might’ve set a trap in round two for round four in round five. I may put it all together, and then also just have to wear an opponent. Certain things you could do early in the fight, they just kind of wear on, and so if you make it to the last round, you look to be the more fresh opponent. And I think that’s where my coaching staff and myself have really done a great job at and this training camp, we got some tricks us up our sleeve.

UFC: When did you really learn to implement those tactics in fights?

TW: It’s been over years. A teammate of mine, Thiago Alves, told me, he said, I kicked him in the leg, and at the time he’s probably the most vicious leg kicker in the game. And I was like, ‘Damn why’d I kick you in the leg? Because now you’re going kick me.’ He said, ‘I’m going to kick you in the leg anyway,’ so you can’t not throw a combination because a person is going to fire back. He said any time somebody starts a sentence, you finish the sentence and hit it with exclamation point. So if they do a combination, you defend it, then you fire back, and you put an exclamation point whether it’s a takedown, whether it’s a hard shot, whether it’s a leg kick, and then you go back into your rhythm. Judges remember that and also just knowing how to breathe properly, when to explode, how to get your opponents to the canvas and make it very hard. I want him to work hard. I want him to work hard to get up from the bottom. I want him to work hard and try to take me down. I want him to swing and miss, and then I want to hit him in spots on his body that’s just going to wear on him. Hit him in his body, hit him in his leg, feint, and feint and make him think I’m taking a shot, throw the punch. Make him think I’m going to throw the punch, take the shot. Once you have all that s*** going on in a fight, it becomes frustrating. He’s never been in a fight like that. On Saturday, you’ll see.

UFC: What do you have to do to prove you’re the best welterweight ever?

TW: I’ve reached a different dimension in this fight game. It was the opponent, fighting Carlos Condit, fighting Rory McDonald, fighting Jake Shields, and Robbie Lawler, and Koscheck, and Dong Hyun Kim, and all these people that are specialist in judo, specialists in karate, specialists in jujitsu, specialists in brawling, freestyle fighter, national champion wrestler. So I’ve been against all these guys and what I found out is you’ve got to be accepting and willing to just know to you’re the best, and the sooner you can come to grips with that, ‘I’m the best, I’m the best welterweight in the world.“ Now you can relax a bit and you can actually start thinking about the game plan and training yourself because all it is, is repetition and training. And then when you go out there build that with some good conditioning, build that with great coaching that knows how to say certain words to get you going. And then on top of that just throw a little swag on it and a little power to put the exclamation point in and you got the fight in the bag.

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