Ultimate Fighting Championship
Miller keeps fighting to be the best
Ultimate Fighting Championship

Miller keeps fighting to be the best

Published May. 2, 2012 1:00 a.m. ET

Somewhere between the bright lights that illuminate superstar athletes and the tranquility of solitude is where you can find Jim Miller. The Sparta Township, N.J., native has spent his entire life outside the fray of the media spotlight, instead choosing a peaceful existence in the quiet wooded hills of north central New Jersey.

As a product of this part of the country, Miller quickly found the motivation inside himself to acquire the skills necessary to complete the tasks at hand. When it came to hunting and fishing, Miller was a natural outdoorsman.

And he was much the same a natural when it came to matters of conflict, where Miller quickly learned to hold his own. That energy eventually transitioned to the wrestling mats. But despite most wrestlers having dreams of someday obtaining Olympic glory, Miller’s mind focused on the one thing that had always made sense to him.

“When it came to dreams, I wanted to be a fighter,” Miller said. “My brothers and I would play 'Bloodsport' together in the basement down on the wrestling mats. Every night, there were wrestling matches between myself and my two brothers. Every once in a while, Dad would get into it, and we were always rolling around. We were always screwing around like that, and it was always in my mind that I wanted to be a fighter. I really didn’t take the steps to become one until later on, but it was always in my mind that I wanted to fight.

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“It was the desire to compete which drove me towards mixed martial arts. I had been out of wrestling for a year or two, and I was bored. I needed that competitive feeling back. It seemed to be a natural progression from wrestling, and I had been a fan of the UFC and Pride. I had watched the pay-per-views, so Dan and I took the step and started training Brazilian jiu-jistu.”

Shortly after the Miller brothers began to train on a regular basis, the urge to push things further continued to pick at them. This eventually led to joining up with trainer Mike Constantino at his AMA Fight Club, and from there the brothers took the regional New Jersey scene by storm.

“I immediately recognized Jim was an unbelievable talent,” Constantino said. “It’s like any other sport where you see an amazing talent — like a basketball player who shoots the ball and just has that touch. Talent was one of the qualities I saw in Jim initially. He also has a tremendous work ethic. I saw he had natural leadership ability and an extremely high fighter IQ. He really understood the game and knew what he needed to do. It was apparent early on that Jim was special.

“Jim always wants to fight the best guys. He’s always told me from Day 1 he wanted to fight the top guys in the world. This is where it differs from other fighters. I’ve handled the careers of a lot of fighters that say, ‘Don’t put me with this guy — he’s too good of a striker,’ or, ‘I’m not ready for this or that guy.’ But since Day 1, Jim and Dan Miller have always looked at me and told me they wanted to fight the best."

Jim Miller dominated the regional circuit, and while success came with nearly every outing, his eyes were always focused on the biggest names in the sport. When he finally received the call every professional fighter waits for, he knew the biggest tests were to come shortly — and he couldn’t have been more excited to find out what he was made of.

“From the time I stepped on the mats, that was my goal,” Miller said. “I wanted to fight the best guys in the world right away. I was a huge fan, and still am a huge fan of BJ Penn. He was the king of the lighter weights at that point, and I wanted to see how I could hang with him. I wanted to see how I could do against him. A couple of fights in, I started to feel like I was picking this sport up and realized I could really make a run at this.

“When I received the call from the UFC, I felt like I had stepped in the door and the real work was about to begin. Earlier in my career, I was working during the day and training at night. I would train once a day, and although I was fighting professionally I wasn’t really a professional fighter. Once I got the call from the UFC and they lined up my first opponent, I quit my job and started training full time. I really dedicated my life to it.”

With impressive performances in his first two outings, Miller made it clear he was where he belonged. For his third bout, the UFC pitted Miller against fellow up-and-comer Gray Maynard, and rather than impose his will as Miller typically had done up to this point, he found himself on the business side of a unanimous decision defeat — his first loss in three years.

“I made some mistakes leading into the fight,” Miller said. “It was a big step up, and Gray is a very talented fighter. He really had my number that night and it just made me realize I have to train a bit smarter. There were some things we changed in the last couple weeks leading up to the fight that, looking back, were mistakes. I learned you don’t make those types of drastic changes with only three or four weeks leading up to the fight. Since then, I’ve learned how to train smarter — and it’s a mistake that I haven’t made since and vow to never make again.”

Over the next few years, Miller steamrolled his way through seven consecutive opponents. It didn’t matter whether the fight was on short notice or if the matchups didn’t make sense rankings wise. The only thing Miller wanted to do was fight, and he did so with near flawless results.

But despite Miller’s ability to knock off the opposition in impressive fashion, there was little attention coming his way. As Frankie Edgar and Maynard began to climb toward the top of the division, it seemed as if Miller’s work was largely being overlooked by the powers that be in the UFC. Regardless, Miller continued to stay focused on the road ahead and refused to alter his approach — believing his work inside the Octagon would eventually shine through.

“I think I flew under the radar because I’m a bit quiet and I just come in and fight,” Miller said. “It’s just who I am and I don’t like the idea of changing who I am to please people. I don’t like giving that impression to other people. In life you should just be yourself and be happy with it. If someone might not like you for who you are, then they don’t mean anything and you shouldn’t worry about it. It’s the kind of attitude I’ve always had. If someone isn’t interested in me because of the person I am, then it doesn’t matter.

“Really as a fighter, the only thing that matters is what happens inside the Octagon. I’ve had the respect of other fighters for a while now, and that is what matters to me. That is what means something to me, and these guys are the experts and the ones stepping in there and fighting, making the same sacrifices I make — and they were holding me in high regard.

That made me know I was still doing it right, even though I wasn’t in the headlines every week. I still knew I was doing it right and doing it the way I should be doing it. Now it’s kind of funny because people want to know who Jim Miller is. It’s really funny the way things have kind of panned out.”

With seven consecutive victories under his belt and talk of a long-awaited title shot hovering, Miller squared off with former WEC lightweight champion Benson Henderson last August in Milwaukee. From the onset of the bout, Miller appeared to be at a disadvantage as Henderson’s size and durability overwhelmed him in every round. When the final bell sounded, Henderson had the unanimous decision victory and Miller’s streak had come to an end.

“The Ben fight was a weird one,” Miller said. “It was the first time, immediately after the fight, where I came into the back and was actually satisfied with it because I was completely spent. I had no energy left. I ended up throwing up in the back because I was so exhausted and then I had to go to the hospital to get a CT scan because I threw up. I knew why I vomited and was content with the effort I put in.

“A day and a half later, I found out I was sick and everything started coming out. I was hard on myself because I should’ve known. I should’ve known something was wrong. I should’ve been smarter because I’m a professional, and this is my job. I should have caught it and was upset with myself that I didn’t pay enough attention to my body to recognize what was going on. I made the changes I needed to make. I train a lot smarter than I did then and I feel great because of it. I feel refreshed, eager to get in to train and I’m doing a better job of learning and evolving as a fighter.”

Where some fighters allow a loss to get under their skin and push them into reevaluating everything about their training and preparation, Miller found it best to jump right back into action. Rather than take a lesser name to rebuild his confidence, he sought out the one fighter no one wanted to face in Melvin Guillard. The two fighters collided in Nashville as the main event of the first UFC on FX event, and staring down the barrel of one of the division’s most powerful strikers had Miller amped up to find out what he was made of.

“I was excited to fight Melvin,” Miller said. “I was excited to fight a top guy, and he was right up there with me when I was on my run. We were both knocking on the door of a title shot and the title picture just got jammed up. He was one of those guys who were in limbo waiting, and what happened to Melvin happened to me. He had a bad night against a tough opponent and you can only fight so many times before you lose one. It happens to everybody. I knew going in Melvin was still a top guy, and I also knew no one else wanted to fight him."

The first-round submission victory over Guillard launched Miller back toward the top of the heap in the competitive lightweight division. Where the weight class was previously jammed up with the Edgar vs. Maynard title fiasco, the ladder was now clear for Miller to make his climb. As he reclaimed his position as a contender in waiting, another fighter on the rise in former TUF winner Nate Diaz was also making waves — and the UFC fittingly paired them up as the main event for Saturday's UFC on FOX card in Miller's home state of New Jersey.

“I feel great about the matchup,” Miller said. “He’s a tough guy, and it’s another situation where I’m excited to get in there and fight him. He is a dangerous opponent, tough for anybody in this weight class, and I’m fired up just to step into the Octagon against him. With being at the top of the division, I’m not going anywhere. I know what I’m capable of and I know when I’m at my best I can not only beat these top guys, but put them away. This is where I belong, and I’m looking to fight these top guys and get the toughest fights I can.

“I see wrestling being one advantage. I’m comfortable anywhere, and that seems to have been the downfall for some of these guys — that they are tentative to go to the ground with him. They are not fighting as complete fighters. I fight with reckless abandon, too, and while the ground is a dangerous place to be with Diaz, as long as I’m being the aggressor then I’ll get after him and beat him up."

For a fighter who has managed to keep his personal life and professional life separate, the days of Miller getting by in the shadows may be coming to an end. A victory over Diaz likely would result in a long-awaited title shot, which will put a long-pursued goal within reach. But even then, what truly matters to Miller isn’t a title belt, it is being remembered as a man who gave his very best each and every time out.

“What’s really important is the attitude I approach it with,” Miller said. “Being a champion is for me. That is what I want to do. That’s what I know I’m capable of doing, and I won’t be satisfied until I accomplish that. As far as being remembered — I just want to be remembered as somebody who went out there each and every time and fought hard. A guy who wasn’t afraid of anyone, stepped up for every fight they put in front of him and put 100 percent effort into it.”

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