Skip to main content
/themes/custom/ufc/assets/img/default-hero.jpg

Making Tony Ferguson

 

Tony Ferguson was born in 1984, turned pro as a mixed martial artist in 2008, but he was made in 2012.

With a 14-2 pro record, an Ultimate Fighter season 13 title and three UFC wins, he was on the fast track to big things in the Octagon when he was selected to compete on the UFC on FOX card in East Rutherford, New Jersey on May 5, 2012.

Ferguson wasn’t on the FOX main card, but a bout in the featured FUEL TV prelim spot wasn’t a bad thing, and with a victory, he was likely to move into those coveted main cards.

Who would that victory come against though? His original opponent, Dennis Hallman, withdrew from the bout due to injury. Replacement foe Thiago Tavares followed suit. Eventually, it was Michael Johnson who got the call to face “El Cucuy,” and while “The Menace” had a spotty 2-2 UFC record at the time, none of that really mattered to Ferguson.

“When I was little, I used to go up and look at the tournament brackets and wonder who I was gonna wrestle next, and my dad says ‘why are you gonna do that? You’re gonna take yourself out of the game. Instead of worrying about what everybody else is doing, worry about what you’re doing.’ So that’s what I did,” Ferguson said before the fight.

 

It’s what Ferguson had been doing since he was a child. Whether in football, wrestling or baseball, he was a grinder, a California kid with a Midwestern mindset developed in Muskegon, Michigan.

“My parents moved me out to Michigan for a reason and that was probably the biggest blessing in the world,” Ferguson said in 2015. “They threw me in sports and I had wonderful coaches that were always there pushing me. The jobs I had were the same thing, pushing and grinding, and if there was rain, sleet, snow, hail, tornadoes, it didn’t matter; you had to go to work. I embrace that.”

It was clear early on that Ferguson’s talent met his work ethic, and the accolades built up, from high school to college and into mixed martial arts.

“I was a wrestler since I was like six years old, so when I got into high school and I got into college, you were never saving yourself,” he said. “We always wrestled all the way up until the weigh-ins, and sometimes you would have up to eight matches in a week. Wrestlers are used to that; we’re used to grinding it out and going after it. Fighting is a little bit different. You get some bumps and bruises and scrapes and black eyes, and this is real, so you try to prepare as much as you can and not BS it. But I don’t hold anything back or try to reserve myself for the fight that’s next. Worry about right now and other things would follow.”

So a change of opponent for a pivotal MMA bout wasn’t an issue. Getting kicked in the arm and breaking it in the first round against Johnson was. He could have quit, and given the severity of the injury – which required a metal plate to be inserted in his arm until he recovered – maybe he should have, but Ferguson isn’t built that way. He bit down on his mouthpiece, let the adrenalin of the moment mask the pain as much as it could, and he went three rounds. The decision went Johnson’s way, but it didn’t deter Ferguson from his path.

“I took that loss to Michael Johnson kind of hard and I knew I had to do something about it because I was close to that radar for the top ten and I know where I belong,” he said. “I know that I belong up there.”

So in true Midwest fashion, Ferguson went about his business of healing up and once cleared to compete again, he hasn’t stopped winning. On Saturday, April 16, Ferguson - now ranked fourth in the world at 155 pounds – could earn himself a title shot if he extends his current winning streak to eight with a victory over unbeaten Khabib Nurmagomedov. It’s been a long road to this point, but the 32-year-old Ferguson will tell you that it’s been worth every struggle along the way.

“It’s like any other story you hear from any other fighter that’s successful,” he said. “It wasn’t easy. But I’m here now.”