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June 22, 2021 - The Joe Rogan Experience
01:55:06
JRE MMA Show #112 with Don Frye
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d
don frye
01:02:44
j
joe rogan
47:14
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Speaker Time Text
unidentified
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day!
Joe Rogan Podcast by night!
All day!
joe rogan
Don Fry, it's a goddamn honor and a pleasure.
don frye
Hey, partner, thank you.
You know, like I said earlier, first time, first and only time we met, I insulted you.
joe rogan
I don't remember that.
don frye
It was down there in Alabama, right?
joe rogan
That was the early days, right?
Yeah, number 12. Oh, UFC 12. That was my first one.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
What'd you say?
don frye
Well, we were backstage, and, you know, they introduced us, and I says, you know, do you know who this guy is?
They said, and I says, yeah, he plays that real dumb guy on the news radio show.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
But that's not an insult.
don frye
You look so hurt, then I find out your character is really actually part of who you are.
joe rogan
That's part of the problem.
It's very close to who I am, unfortunately.
don frye
I've been watching you.
You're a smart bastard, man.
I'm impressed.
joe rogan
I have a good memory.
I'm not that smart.
I have a good memory.
don frye
You know what the hell's going on in a lot of stuff.
joe rogan
I know some things.
Some things.
don frye
The Bob Lazar stuff?
That's impressive.
joe rogan
Are you interested in UFOs?
Oh, yeah.
A lot of folks in Arizona are interested in UFOs.
They visit there quite a bit, it seems like.
don frye
Yeah, there's a house that I have.
It was built, I guess, the guy who built it, built it so his wife could watch the UFOs over at the mountain there.
joe rogan
Wow, that's a high-maintenance lady.
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
Well, they all are, aren't they?
joe rogan
But imagine that.
What kind of house do you want, honey?
I want a house where I watch UFOs.
I need an observation deck.
don frye
That's basically it.
It was like a bunker.
unidentified
Was it?
don frye
Yeah.
Half of it's in the ground and then all the block, you know, you got the big 16x8 block and they're all filled with cement.
joe rogan
There's a lot of weird houses like that.
There's a house for sale in Arizona right now.
It used to be Steven Seagal's house.
It might still be his house.
He's selling it, but it's bulletproof.
It's got bulletproof glass.
It's like a compound.
don frye
That guy's a goof.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
He's a silly man.
don frye
He's a fucking goof.
Beyond silly.
joe rogan
He's a silly man.
don frye
I mean, he believes that shit, you know, who he is.
joe rogan
I don't know what he believes and what he's just bullshitting.
It's hard to tell, you know?
don frye
Oh, you can't bullshit that good.
I mean, he's a lousy actor.
He's a lousy actor.
How the hell can you pretend to be that, you know?
joe rogan
I mean, that's his hustle, right?
His hustle is that he's this, like, martial arts guy.
But, you know, he's really good at Aikido.
don frye
I'm sure.
joe rogan
You watch those demonstrations.
don frye
You know, if I get a couple pro wrestlers to be my ookies, you know, they make me look like a million dollars.
joe rogan
That's true.
That is what happens, right?
They're all compliant.
Don, how did you...
When did you...
You started out...
Was like UFC 8?
Was that your first fight?
don frye
No, it was first in UFC. I fought before...
joe rogan
You fought boxing and kickboxing before that, right?
don frye
No kickboxing.
I did boxing.
I think I had eight fights, and I think I was 2-6 or 2-5-1.
I don't know, because...
I fought my first two, Don Frye, and I won those.
And then I had an argument with my trainer, and so we split.
And then, so then I fought under J.R. Frye.
joe rogan
Why'd you change the name?
don frye
Well, that was my name growing up.
I was a junior, so J.R. And that's how I was in, you know, junior high, high school.
And then, you know, when my dad and mom called me, and then I think I changed my name because of contractual, you know.
joe rogan
Oh, you had some deal with the manager?
don frye
Yeah, right.
joe rogan
There's a lot of those sneaky deals, huh?
don frye
Yeah, but that was more with the trainer.
And, you know, I don't know if that was, because they were really good guys.
Art Martori was my money guy who, you know, the two Munos, Mike Munos and his father Al brought me to Art.
Art wrestled at ASU back in the late 60s, and Art...
He's a billionaire, you know, and so he was interested in, I mean, he basically funds ASU Wrestling.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, that's nice.
don frye
Out of his pocket, yeah.
And he's done so much for amateur wrestling in the U.S. I mean, he's like the top dog, because he used to have what's called Sunkist Wrestling Team, and so that was his baby, and he steamrolled that.
Then, like I said, the Munoz brothers, or Mike and his dad, took me to Art.
So let's give it a shot.
After he called, geez, the coach at Okie State, Jose, to double check on me, you know.
joe rogan
So did you started out wrestling?
Did you wrestle as a young boy?
don frye
No, sir.
joe rogan
When did you start wrestling?
don frye
As a freshman in high school.
joe rogan
And then when did you box?
don frye
When I got out of college.
joe rogan
Oh, so most of it was, you know, that's fairly late in life to box, right?
don frye
Oh, yeah.
unidentified
Oh, yeah.
don frye
That's why I was two and six.
joe rogan
So when did you hear about the UFC? I was a fireman, you know.
don frye
I did the boxing and then got out and started doing odd jobs for, you know, a year, year and a half.
And then my wife at that time, we had a couple of horses.
You know, and being a college wrestler, you got a bit of an ego on you.
So I look at, well, hell, I could do that.
So, uh, still going around with a farrier named Stoney Newfang.
And then Stoney got me interested.
Then I, um...
Got tired of that.
Wasn't really making any good money, but you know, for the time, he's giving me five bucks a horse, you know, teach me, you know, pull the shoes, shape the shoe, you know, and all that good stuff.
Well, he did the technical work on the hooves.
And then...
I said, you know, somebody told me about being a fireman, about, you know, working 10 days a month, you know, at a restaurant.
I said, hell, that's a job for me, you know?
10 days a month, I can do that.
joe rogan
You're doing the 24-hour shifts?
Yeah.
You just stay there at the firehouse?
Yeah.
don frye
Yeah, so I got on the phone, called up all the cities in the state of Arizona.
Nobody was hiring.
So I called up Santa Fe, New Mexico.
They said, yeah, we're going to run a test.
And so I went over there and tested and passed the test.
And then I went to my buddy, Jerry Peckinpah.
He's got me into wrestling when I was in high school.
Come over here later, please.
joe rogan
There you go.
There you go.
I'll leave that over there for you.
don frye
Thank you, sir.
Bring your back.
So then I went and stayed at Jerry's house in Santa Fe, and I went through their, I think it was like a six-month or more academy.
joe rogan
In the fire department?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Really?
Six months?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Wow.
don frye
It was a hell of an academy.
It really was.
joe rogan
And so from there, you thought about fighting?
don frye
Mm-hmm.
No, I had already fought.
joe rogan
No, but I mean in the UFC. Oh, no.
don frye
From there, we were there a year, year and a half.
Couldn't afford to live there.
In Santa Fe, you're either real rich or real poor.
This was 30 years ago, so I don't know how it is now.
joe rogan
Probably similar.
don frye
Probably.
Like the whole country now, right?
joe rogan
It's supposed to be nice, though.
Santa Fe.
A lot of friends from there.
don frye
Beautiful.
You've never been?
joe rogan
No, I've never been.
don frye
Oh, you've got to go.
joe rogan
I don't even think I've been to New Mexico except driving through once.
don frye
Really?
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
Where'd you drive through at?
joe rogan
I was a kid.
I don't remember it.
don frye
Obviously, you haven't gotten to see John Jones yet, right?
joe rogan
No, no.
Jackson Winklejohn.
I want to go down there and check out the gym, though.
don frye
How come you haven't?
joe rogan
Just a busy man, Don Fry.
Just a busy man.
There's a lot of places I want to go.
don frye
Yeah?
joe rogan
Never been to North Dakota either.
don frye
I have.
joe rogan
I bet you have.
don frye
Yeah, it's beautiful.
Yeah.
joe rogan
I don't know why I said North Dakota.
don frye
I saw the lights, man.
That was cool.
joe rogan
Oh, the Northern Lights?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Ah, I want to see that.
don frye
Oh, that is so cool, man.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's pretty wild.
don frye
Yeah, I did that.
Shit, after I had my first neck surgery back in 2000, A buddy, me and a couple buddies went and did the Amsterdam thing, you know?
And that was really cool.
Saw the lights up there.
joe rogan
What'd you have done on your neck?
Did you have it fused?
don frye
Yeah, I had broken it doing pro wrestling and worked on it for a year and a half not knowing, you know.
joe rogan
Oh, Jesus.
don frye
Yeah, but I'd lost so much muscle in the right arm, you know.
And so...
They fixed it, and I had a really nice, I can't remember her name, and I'm talking a lot.
I never talk this much.
joe rogan
That's what a podcast is all about.
don frye
Joe, I don't talk this much in a month, man.
joe rogan
Well, we can take breaks.
don frye
Must have got the right combination of pain pills today, in a way.
joe rogan
So, out of all the injuries that you ever got in your fighting career, was the pro wrestling injuries the worst?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, pro wrestling is probably one of the hardest things that a guy can do athletically.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Because those guys do it every fucking night.
All the guys that I've had in here, you know, The Undertaker, Diamond Dallas Page, all these guys, like, every one of them, when they tell you their stories, you go, Jesus Christ, Jake the Snake.
Those guys are so banged up.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
I'm trying to get Ric Flair.
don frye
Oh, I love Rick.
I love Rick.
joe rogan
He's so funny.
don frye
Yeah, he's so funny.
joe rogan
Oh, he's a goddamn legend.
So, when you first heard about the UFC, so you were a firefighter then, or...
don frye
Well, going back to the...
You know, like I said, we were in Santa Fe for a year, year and a half, and then couldn't afford to live there.
And so...
I got on the phone and said, well, shit.
You know, we still had horses and still paying farriers.
So, well, shit, I can do that.
So I found Oklahoma Horseshoeing School in Okie City.
And so I moved my wife back home to my parents' house, you know.
And I went to Oklahoma Horseshoeing School for their 12-week program.
joe rogan
Oh, wow.
don frye
And so I did that and then when I came back to Arizona, Sierra Vista, I hooked up with a guy named...
unidentified
Oh, Jesus.
don frye
Tyler Basinger.
Tyler is a magician.
He's a farrier.
Just a magician.
And he paid me $5 a horse, you know, and fed me lunch.
And, you know, so I was learning how to shoe horses from him, you know, doing an apprenticeship.
Starting my own business.
I got on as a firefighter reserve, you know, in a place called Fry Fire Department.
You know, F-R-Y, no relations.
The old man had an outpost store outside of Fort Huachuca, you know, 150 years ago.
And also a whorehouse, you know.
joe rogan
This is like old-school Western shit.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Wow.
don frye
And so, then I had...
Sometime I worked at a psych facility, too, you know?
joe rogan
A psych facility?
don frye
Psychological, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, psychological facility?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
What'd you do there, like restraining patients?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
And...
joe rogan
What's harder, horseshoeing or restraining patients?
don frye
Horseshoeing, I broke a kid's arm, so, you know, just a headlock.
You know, they...
They did a breakout where, you know, 20 or 30 of them run off, and then you got to herd them back in.
unidentified
Really?
don frye
Well, yeah.
A couple of them act out, and one of the guys had the kid restrained.
He had him from behind, had his arms pinned.
The kid started slamming his head into his face.
So I just walked up to the headlock, and we landed, snapped his arm.
joe rogan
Oh, no.
don frye
Yeah, that kind of...
Kind of put a damper on things.
joe rogan
Was that the end of your restraining patience?
don frye
Yeah, that was the end of that career.
joe rogan
So how does it make its way to the UFC? Do you remember when you found out about the UFC? Yeah, I think that was still a year or two before.
So this is like 92, something like that?
don frye
Yeah, and then I started doing judo, you know, because...
I needed, you know, I needed something to do, you know.
Right.
You know, you're 22, 24 years old.
You know, you used to be a college athlete.
You know, you still walk around with an erection, you know.
joe rogan
Right.
I understand.
don frye
And so I started doing judo and advanced really quickly in that.
And...
Yeah, so then I got on the Bisbee Fire Department in 94. Bisbee, Arizona?
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Shout out to Doug Stanhope.
don frye
He's the king of Bisbee.
Yeah.
unidentified
That's what I hear.
don frye
I met him one time.
unidentified
Did you?
don frye
Yeah, at the airport.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
don frye
Yeah, he says, you're a firefighter.
I used to be.
Shit, this was probably 15, 18 years ago.
joe rogan
Oh, wow.
don frye
And...
Yeah, where the hell are we now?
joe rogan
So you were talking about when you first heard about the UFC. Yeah, in 92 I got on with the Bisbee Fire.
don frye
And then we were sitting there watching something on TV and saw Dan, clip of Dan.
joe rogan
Dan Severn?
don frye
Uh-huh.
And then he was doing some kind of bodyguard work with that gal who works with...
I'm bad at names sometimes.
That's okay.
I had a stroke a few years ago.
joe rogan
You did?
don frye
Hemorrhagic stroke, yeah, after surgery.
unidentified
Oh, shit.
don frye
So I get lost sometimes.
Fuck me.
You can edit this.
joe rogan
Yeah, it doesn't matter anyway.
So Dan was doing bodyguard work?
don frye
Yeah, for Robin from...
Who's a radio guy in New York City?
joe rogan
Robin Quivers?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Howard Stern?
don frye
Right, right.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
No shit!
don frye
In his gray t-shirt, yeah.
unidentified
Wow.
don frye
Everybody's in suits, and Dan's in his gray t-shirt.
And so, you know, then we saw Dan fight, and I called him up.
I said, fuck.
You know, I said, Dan, this is Don Fry.
Remember me?
He goes, yeah.
What are you doing, Don?
I said, playing fireman, playing horseshoe, you know.
I said, this UFC stuff, can you get me in on it?
And he says, yeah.
So he ended up getting me some fights, probably about five or six fights, you know, around the country.
And, you know, the check's still in the mail.
Was this pre-UFC? Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, so you fought MMA before the UFC? Oh, it was warehouse fighting.
unidentified
MMA, it was NHP. Right, NHP is what they called it back then.
joe rogan
Yeah, no holds barred.
Right.
So you wear shoes, you do whatever you want.
Was it bare knuckle?
don frye
Yeah, you do whatever you want.
Yeah.
joe rogan
In your day, and even in the UFC 8, you were still allowed to fight bare knuckle.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
But I wore gloves because I hit hard.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
You know?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Smart.
don frye
And gloves aren't made to protect your face.
unidentified
Right.
don frye
They're made to protect my hands.
joe rogan
Who's the first guy to wear gloves in the UFC? Tank.
Was it Tank?
Yeah.
Smart.
Smart move.
don frye
He hits hard.
unidentified
He hits hard.
Yeah.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Holy shit, I remember your fight with Tank.
What a fucking fight that was.
My God.
don frye
And it didn't make top ten of the one-round fights.
joe rogan
Oh, I have no idea why it doesn't.
Well, it's because there's so many great fights.
It's arbitrary who makes top ten, but I think it should have been in there.
That was a classic.
don frye
Nobody knows.
Nobody knows anything about UFC 100 and be a war.
joe rogan
Oh, I do.
Well, you do, Joe.
don frye
You're a student.
And you were there.
joe rogan
I was there.
don frye
But the new fans...
joe rogan
Yeah, they should go back because that's the history of the sport.
I always tell people we knew more about martial arts after four years of the UFC than had been done in 400 years.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
We knew more.
We knew what worked and what didn't work.
We saw...
So many different things.
By the time 97 rolled around, they had figured out, first of all, they realized wrestling is the most important thing.
don frye
It's like a street fight, two and a half hours every day.
It really is.
joe rogan
It is, yeah.
And it's just the ability to take a guy down.
If you look at, somebody posted it.
It might have been Adam Hunter on his page.
I think it was, on his Instagram page.
He posted the amount of champions per discipline.
You know, it showed like jujitsu, kickboxing, all the different, and then wrestling.
It's number one.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
Number one out of all the different disciplines.
That's the most important discipline.
don frye
Well, it's the hardest thing to do.
Yep.
I mean, you're doing it every day in high school, every day in college, and there's no excuses, you know?
joe rogan
And the most mentally tough, too.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Because, first of all, they're cutting weight.
They're cutting weight the day of the event.
They're competing dehydrated and exhausted.
And wrestlers, amongst all athletes that I've ever met, take pride in being miserable.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
They really do.
Yeah, here it is.
It is Adam.
Adam Hunter put it up there.
Look at that.
28 professional champions from wrestling.
The second place is Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
The third place is boxing and then kickboxing.
Below that, Muay Thai.
And then two Taekwondo and one karate.
It's amazing.
don frye
Alright, but the Jiu-Jitsu...
How many of those champions were in the first few years?
Right, right.
As soon as we figured it out.
joe rogan
Well, now everybody does everything.
But I still think that base is the most important base.
The wrestling base.
Because a dominant wrestler, a guy like a Daniel Cormier, a guy like a John Jones, a guy who's an elite wrestler, they have that advantage over everybody.
If shit gets weird, they can take the guy down at any time.
Or if they just decide to impose their will, they can take the guy down.
Or if you want to take them down because they're striking, they're outstriking you, you can't because they're wrestling so good.
It's such a giant advantage.
don frye
Sprawl and snap your head into the mat.
joe rogan
But you were one of the first guys to enter the UFC that looked like real polished skills.
When you came out, guns blazing, you won your first fight by first round knockout.
And I remember watching on TV, I'm like, that motherfucker can fight.
Like, cause you're seeing people that, a lot of times you're seeing folks that probably shouldn't have been there.
Like, there was, back in the day, like, you remember the early days there was guys that were like, they trained in ninjitsu and they were practicing like karate chopping people on the top of the heads and all kinds of wacky shit.
don frye
Shit you never heard of, right?
joe rogan
But when I saw you, I was like, okay, that guy's an actual fighter.
And when you see the way you were throwing punches, and your wrestling ability, and you were a good size, too.
You weren't too big, you weren't too small.
You probably weighed like, what, 210, something like that?
don frye
Yeah, I was 05, 205, but I said 210, because...
Sound better?
Well, I knew I was going to gain weight through that year, you know, because...
joe rogan
That was the plan?
don frye
Yeah, I was a fireman, and I was shooing horses in Arizona.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
You know, you're working six, seven days a week.
And I knew as soon as I gave it up, you know, 10 pounds was going to come on real fast.
joe rogan
Right, right.
And everybody was chasing...
That was when Mark Coleman in UFC 12 was when Mark Coleman became the champion when he beat Dan Severn.
And Mark was 265 pounds.
don frye
He was a monster.
joe rogan
He was a fucking gorilla.
Like, people forget.
He had everybody gaining weight.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Everybody gained weight when they saw the hammer.
They're like, fuck!
don frye
I ain't got no choice.
joe rogan
Yeah, you had to.
They shot that power double.
And that was the headbutt days, too.
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
When Mark would get on top of you and get control of you and start smashing his head into your face, those were quick nights.
don frye
It wasn't fun, yeah.
joe rogan
No.
don frye
Because Dan started that, and then I did it, and then Mark did it.
Yep.
You know, and somehow Mark became the grandfather of it, so I guess I'm a great-grandfather and Dan's great-great-grandfather.
joe rogan
Of ground and pound.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
It was a real wake-up call for a lot of people.
But so was the jiu-jitsu, right?
When Hoist Gracie tapped Dan Severin, that was a wake-up call for a lot of people.
Like, how the fuck is he doing that?
Off his back?
don frye
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
With his legs?
don frye
That was...
The Gracies, they changed martial arts the world over.
Yeah.
joe rogan
I think they're the most important family in the history of all martial arts.
don frye
Yeah.
I mean, that was their plan, you know?
It was a great plan.
The whole thing, what was brilliant about it, it was like...
A paid infomercial.
joe rogan
Yeah, it was.
don frye
A you paid for.
joe rogan
Yep.
don frye
You know?
unidentified
Right, right.
don frye
You paid $20, you know.
You laugh at it now.
Back then, $20 was a lot of money.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
But, you know, you paid $20 to sit there and watch an infomercial.
But it was brilliant.
Brilliant.
So exciting.
joe rogan
When you had your first fight, you had your first fight in the UFC, once it was over, once you won, were you like, okay, this is what I'm doing now?
don frye
Yeah.
Yeah.
I won that, and I'm like...
You know, I love this.
This is fun.
Back to being competitive, you know.
Because my athletic career was like this, you know.
It really was.
joe rogan
Ups and downs?
don frye
Yeah.
You know, I'd get burnt out and walk away, you know.
And I got a real short attention span, I guess, you know.
joe rogan
But when you saw what the UFC was, where you could take guys down or you could stand up with them, strike, it was such a unique thing.
Did that just appeal to you?
don frye
Yeah, because I wasn't afraid to get punched in the face.
Right.
That helps.
Yeah, it does.
joe rogan
For sure.
don frye
Because there's a lot of wrestlers, they go in there and bam, you get hit in the bridge of the nose, it changes your opinion real fast and everything, don't it?
joe rogan
Yeah, your eyes water up.
It's an uncomfortable feeling.
Now, did you think at that point in time that this was going to be a real sport?
Because a lot of people weren't sure if it was going to last back then.
Like UFC 8, when you entered, it was still kind of crazy.
When I came around, it was UFC 12, and they were banned from pay-per-view on everything except DirecTV.
DirecTV was the only people that had them on.
You couldn't get it on cable anymore because boxing was in cahoots with John McCain and Budweiser and all that stuff.
don frye
That guy's dirty.
Was he dirty?
Yeah, he's dirty.
joe rogan
He's gone now, rest in peace.
don frye
You know, he was a paid boxing advisor to Don King.
You know, the guy didn't know what the fuck.
He didn't know.
You know, so when this came around, it was beating boxing, like you said.
And so Don King said, hey, put the boots to this, you know.
Yep, that's what happened.
I mean, his wife, you know, was the head of Henley Distributing, you know.
Henley Beer, Budweiser Beer, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, that makes sense.
But I knew he did something with Budweiser and that had a big impact on...
don frye
We married Budweiser, yeah.
joe rogan
That had a big impact on how the UFC was...
whether or not it was legal because they started banning it from everywhere.
don frye
Yeah, that was the big joke is after the fights you can go to the hospital...
Or you can go to the after party.
But number three is you can go to jail, too.
We didn't know.
We didn't know if we were going to come out and get slapped in cuffs and hauled away.
Or they're going to let us finish the event and then arrest everybody.
joe rogan
Do you remember when Dan fought Ken Shamrock?
I think it was in Denver.
And they told him they couldn't punch in the face and close fists?
There was some kind of crazy law where they couldn't punch...
don frye
No, that was Detroit.
joe rogan
Was it Detroit?
don frye
Yes, sir.
joe rogan
Was it Michigan?
don frye
Oh, okay.
joe rogan
And everybody was going, what the fuck is going on?
Like, they were told before the event that they can't punch with closed fists.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
There was so many crazy rules like that.
The first event I did was supposed to be in New York.
It was supposed to be, I think it was supposed to be in Albany.
Albany or Buffalo?
I think Albany.
Was it Buffalo?
don frye
Maybe Albany.
joe rogan
But it was upstate New York somewhere, and then it got moved last minute to Dothan, Alabama, and that's where I met you.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, that was UFC 12. That's when Vitor made his debut, fought Trey Tellegman, and that was when Mark Coleman fought Dan.
There was a lot of great fights on the card.
don frye
You know, Trey Tellegman was tough.
Fuck yeah.
To be missing a breast, you know?
joe rogan
Yeah, missing one peck, built like a tank.
don frye
A breast, yeah.
unidentified
A breast.
don frye
Sorry, Dre.
joe rogan
He fought Scott Ferrozo, too.
That was a tournament that night.
Vitor won the tournament, 19 years old.
don frye
Yeah, amazing.
joe rogan
Lightning bolt, that guy was.
don frye
He was amazing.
joe rogan
You believe he's going to fight Oscar De La Hoya?
don frye
Really?
joe rogan
Yeah, he's going to have a boxing match September 11th with Oscar De La Hoya.
You've got to think, that guy was fighting, I mean, well, so was Oscar.
I mean, Oscar was a world champion in 97. And here it is, 97, and Vitor makes his octagon debut.
unidentified
Was he born?
joe rogan
What's that?
don frye
Was he even born in 97?
unidentified
Oscar?
don frye
Oscar's in his 40s.
Vitor?
Vitor.
joe rogan
Vitor's 19 then.
Yeah.
So Oscar's a little older than Vitor, I believe.
I believe Oscar's like 48 or something like that.
It's crazy seeing these guys still getting after it.
After all these years.
don frye
I'd like to.
joe rogan
You'd like to?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
If your body would hold up?
don frye
I'm gonna go down there to Columbia and do the bio-accelerator, you know, and the plan on that is do that and hopefully, you know, make a comeback.
Really?
Shit, shit, you know.
joe rogan
I love it.
don frye
Shit, yeah, I mean, I'd love to fight Ngannou.
joe rogan
Ngannou?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Really?
don frye
Yeah, he's amazing, yeah.
joe rogan
Wouldn't it be better to fight someone your age?
unidentified
Why?
don frye
They don't have the belt, do they?
joe rogan
No, so you'd want to fight someone with the belt, even at your age.
That's why you're Don Fry.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Because you think like that.
don frye
If I can get my back fixed up, I'm there, baby.
joe rogan
What's going on with your back right now?
don frye
Hell, I've had...
Probably five or six major back surgeries, and then probably related, 15 to 20 related, you know, because infections and things like that.
Jesus.
And the infections tried to get me a couple of times.
Staff, MRSA? Yeah, staff.
Scary shit.
One time I had it inside the spinal cord.
Or twice, actually, twice.
Is this your back?
Yeah.
joe rogan
Jesus Christ, Don, that looks like a rollercoaster ride.
How many discs do you have fused?
don frye
I don't know if it's 11 discs or 11 vertebrae.
joe rogan
How many vertebrae does a human have?
don frye
20-some.
joe rogan
So you got half of them are fused.
Wow.
Give me some pictures.
Let me see these.
Look at that lower left.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Look at that lower left one over your back.
Holy fuck, Don.
don frye
Yeah, it's gonna put a zipper on it.
joe rogan
Jesus Christ.
That is crazy.
So they just went in and did the whole back all at once.
That's some wooly shit.
don frye
No, what happened is...
joe rogan
Whoa!
So that's the infection.
don frye
Yeah.
That was after the infection.
Yeah, they're draining it and they had to leave it open for a week so that the plastic surgeon could figure out how to connect it because I was out of connective tissue.
It was all scar tissue.
So he left it open for a week.
He had to cut it, pull, cut it, pull, cut it, pull.
unidentified
Wow, that is wild.
joe rogan
So, is this mostly from pro wrestling, or is it from everything?
don frye
I would say everything.
I mean, you know, as a fireman, as a horseshoer, you know?
joe rogan
Jamie, go back to three pictures.
The one that shows the neck and the back.
That one.
Look at that.
So, you've got a few that are just hanging in there, and then you've got your neck fused.
That is goddamn wild.
don frye
Well, that goes all the way down the crack of my ass.
My ass crack goes from my balls up to my shoulder blades.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Wow, that is crazy.
So it's just all scar tissue in there and bolts and screws and plates and...
don frye
Yeah, so if I can go down there to Columbia and get, you know, the stem cell...
joe rogan
You might have to live there for a few years.
Just have them shoot you up every day.
don frye
Who knows?
joe rogan
I'm a big fan of stem cells.
They can do some wild shit down there.
I know a lot of guys have gone to that bioaccelerator thing, that facility down there, and had a really good result.
don frye
Yeah, I'm excited about it.
Look at me, I'm giddy.
I can hardly sit still.
joe rogan
Have you had any stem cells before?
don frye
No sir.
joe rogan
They can do amazing stuff, but that's a lot going on there.
don frye
Yeah, they're going to do my shoulders too, because I have partial replacements in my shoulders.
joe rogan
What do you got going on there?
Like resurfaced?
don frye
No, I just wore them out.
joe rogan
You said partial replacements?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Did they resurface the shoulders?
Is that what they did?
don frye
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Just, you know, cut the end off, you know, and then stuck the one thing and just with the knob and the other side is all natural bone.
joe rogan
Right, yeah.
don frye
Because they said if they do a full replacement, You can't use them.
They're no good.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
You can't put stress on them?
don frye
Yeah, so I said, to hell with that.
I want to do something.
joe rogan
Right.
Are you able to work out now?
don frye
Not yet.
I just had this done.
This right one was done in 17, I think.
December 17. This one just got done last December.
joe rogan
When did you get your first surgery after fighting?
How many years in were you?
don frye
After fighting?
joe rogan
You mean during fighting, during your career?
don frye
Oh, during fighting.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
Hell.
joe rogan
Because everybody's had a surgery.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
I've never met a single fighter.
Maybe I have and I forgot.
But most fighters that I know have had something blowout.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
You know?
don frye
Well, let's see.
I think in 2001 was when they did my neck.
joe rogan
So that was the first one?
don frye
Yeah.
Because I did that from pro wrestling to war.
You know, because...
I did the UFC in 96, and then in 97 I was hired by Antonio Inoki and Masa Saito to do New Japan Pro Wrestling.
And Brad Reagans, he's a cousin of Brock Lesnar, second cousin.
So he called up Jeff, you know, because Brad took fourth in the Olympics in 76 in Greco-Roman.
And then he was on the team in 80. And he was going to be the gold medal winner.
He had beaten the gold medal winner in 76, but they were doing the point system then.
So he got screwed out of them.
joe rogan
What's the point system?
don frye
You get so many points for advancing, so many points for a pin, so many points for a point win.
joe rogan
So they changed it?
don frye
Yeah, so they went back to the normal.
I mean, amateur wrestling fucks around so much with the rules, and so does judo.
joe rogan
Have you paid attention to the PFL at all?
don frye
No, I have not.
joe rogan
I was watching that today.
I was watching it in the gym while I was working out.
It's interesting.
They have real good fighters over there.
Some real good fighters.
But they have some wacky thing that they do where you get a certain amount of points for a submission, a certain amount of points for a knockout, and then you move ahead.
But it's like you're scoring.
And they call it the playoffs.
And then you're moving towards this eventual million-dollar tournament that they put together.
Yeah.
don frye
That's how they were doing it with judo and with amateur wrestling.
joe rogan
Yeah, but their thing is weird.
The way they have it set up, like if you win, but if you win in the first round, you get extra points.
If you miss weight, you lose a point.
It's hard to follow.
Even for someone like me who's a big fan of the sport, I can't follow their system.
I'm like, you've got great fighters, but you're confusing the shit out of people with this wacky system.
don frye
Yeah.
Well, you miss weight, your ass will be gone.
joe rogan
I think that's a good call.
I think you should not be able to fight or I think there should be some major penalty because a lot of these guys are choosing to miss weight.
They're choosing to miss weight.
They're like, I don't want to do this, fuck it.
But you could, but you know it's going to drain you.
And so they choose to come in a pound or two heavy and then they feel a lot better the next day.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
Because, you know, you know better than anybody.
don frye
They have a better chance of winning, too.
joe rogan
Yeah, a better chance of winning because they're not as drained.
A lot of these guys are cutting.
I wish there was no weight cutting.
That's what I really wish.
I wish you got down to a healthy weight and you fought at whatever weight you're at and they just figured out what the weight classes could be to make it so that there's more options, make it every 10 pounds.
Something like that, like boxing has it, but I think with MMA, I think the weight classes are too wide.
You know, you got 85 and then you got 205. That's crazy.
That's 20 pounds.
To have two weight classes separated by 20 pounds is just fucking nuts to me.
I think it should be...
I would love it if it was 5 pounds, but I think 10 pounds is fine.
10 pounds is workable.
You could adjust your diet, adjust your training habits, do a little extra running, whatever you gotta do.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
But more than that...
don frye
But then you get into what happened in pro boxing.
You end up having 80 champions, you know?
joe rogan
That's what the argument against it is, right?
But the thing about pro boxing is, you know, you have all these different organizations.
You got the WBC, WBA, IBO, you know, all that shit.
With the UFC, if they just kept it in the UFC, just with the UFC and made all these different weight classes, one every 10 pounds, I think is very doable.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
It'd be a lot more opportunities for guys to go up in weight or down in weight and fight, you know, have champion versus champion fights.
Like when Israel Adesanya fought Jabovic.
You know, you got your middleweight champion fighting your light heavyweight champion.
The size difference is so big.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
It's a giant size difference.
don frye
Well, that's why they need a super heavyweight.
Yeah.
joe rogan
I think so, too.
Yeah.
don frye
I mean, why cut it off at 285?
joe rogan
265. Yeah, it's crazy.
don frye
It's ridiculous.
joe rogan
It is ridiculous.
don frye
You have so many good fighters that are heavier.
I mean...
joe rogan
Rulon Gardner.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Like, Rulon Gardner is like a 300-pounder.
don frye
Oh, Erickson.
Tom Erickson.
joe rogan
Yeah, Tom Erickson.
Yeah, he was like a 300-pounder, right?
He was.
When in his prime, people forgot about Tom Erickson.
don frye
He was frightening.
joe rogan
Shit, he was terrifying.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Elite wrestler who could knock you the fuck out, and he was huge.
And he moved like a cat.
In his prime, Tom Erickson was one of the scariest specimens to ever compete in MMA. He was a fucking gigantic man who moved so good.
don frye
But he's another one that doesn't like getting punched in the face, though.
joe rogan
Eh, who does?
don frye
I kind of enjoy it.
joe rogan
Well, you're an unusual guy, Don Frye.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
So when you first fought and you decided, okay, this is what I'm going to do.
When the UFC was taken off, you stayed in the UFC for a few years and then went over to Pride.
When did you find out about Pride?
don frye
No, I stayed in the UFC one year.
unidentified
Only one year?
don frye
Yeah, in 96. And then I went to pro wrestling.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
So all your fights in the UFC were only one year?
don frye
One year.
joe rogan
Wow, no shit.
don frye
Yeah.
And none of them went the distance.
joe rogan
That's incredible.
And then from New Japan Pro Wrestling, so how'd you find out about that?
don frye
Then I went to Pride.
joe rogan
Did they contact you from the UFC? Yes, sir.
don frye
They contacted me.
Yes, sir.
Because...
God bless Ken Shamrock, you know, he had the deal.
joe rogan
Right, he had a connection over there.
don frye
Well, no, they signed...
They offered him a deal to go over there and be a bad guy American shooter style, you know.
And so he took that contract, rented WWE, and showed them, and they matched it or bettered it, you know.
And then that left New Japan Pro Wrestling hanging.
So that's when Masa Saito called Brad Reagans, Brad Reagans called Jeff Blatnick, What a great guy Jeff Black was.
joe rogan
He gave me some great advice when I first started working for the UFC. Just such a sweetheart of a guy.
How did he pass?
don frye
Was it a heart?
joe rogan
Was it a heart attack?
don frye
I think so.
joe rogan
Sweetheart of a guy, though.
don frye
He was a good guy.
joe rogan
Really good guy.
And an elite wrestler, too.
And just fantastic.
don frye
Gold medal.
joe rogan
Yeah.
And fantastic doing commentary because of that experience.
don frye
He was, like you, he was a student of the sport.
Yeah, he was.
He got hired and studied it and, you know, he was amazing.
joe rogan
Yeah, he was an amazing guy.
And when, so, you go over to New Japan Pro Wrestling and that's when you were getting most of your injuries, you think?
don frye
Yes, sir.
Because I was trying to be Ric Flair and Terry Funk, you know.
And they didn't want that, you know.
They wanted more of a Bruiser Brody type thing, you know.
joe rogan
He wanted you the badass American cowboy.
Right.
don frye
And not to take the bumps, you know?
I ended up taking bumps that I shouldn't have taken.
joe rogan
That's the thing about pro wrestling, right?
People think, oh, it's fake.
Listen, those slams are not fake.
You're really getting slammed, you know?
Those picking guys up over your head, slamming them down, them picking you up, all the different collisions that you guys would have with each other night after night after night.
And is their circuit over there similar to the circuit here?
Would you do a lot of different shows or are they mostly televised?
How'd they do it over there?
don frye
Yeah, he did a lot of dark matches, you know.
Absolutely.
I mean, that's how they keep the money coming in.
joe rogan
Right.
They do arenas, just like they do in America.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
Yeah, people don't know, if you're not a fan of pro wrestling, those guys are working hundreds of nights a week, or a year, rather.
They're working, you know, Dallas Page was telling me that he, you know, sometimes did 200 plus shows a year.
don frye
Some guys do 300, you know.
joe rogan
It's incredible.
If you stop and think about that.
don frye
365 days in a year.
That's crazy.
Yeah, you're getting whacked, you know.
joe rogan
Most of them.
Yeah, you're working more days than you're not working.
Right.
don frye
And the travel.
joe rogan
Yeah, and the travel.
So you're exhausted all the time, you're jet-lagged, and you're getting slammed.
don frye
Yeah, and you gotta stay in shape, and you gotta eat, you know.
It's a work.
It's a real, you know, it's a real living thing.
joe rogan
You know, when you went over there, did you have to go to pro wrestling school?
Did they train you how to do it?
don frye
Brad Reagans trained me.
He did?
Yeah, yes sir.
And Brad, you know, phenomenal.
He's a phenomenal athlete, you know.
And like I said, he took fourth in the 76 Olympics in Montreal when he should have won.
And then he would have won the 80 Olympics, you know.
And then he ended up, he got out, you know, and he trained Jeff Blatnick, you know, because they were tight.
And since Brad stepped away, you know, All the concentration was on Jeff.
joe rogan
And how did you go from New Japan Pro Wrestling to Pride?
don frye
Ego.
Ego?
Yeah.
I saw Mark Coleman win, you know.
I said, that's nonsense.
That should be me.
Stupid.
joe rogan
So what year was that?
unidentified
What year was your first Pride fight?
don frye
Well, partner, first, 01. 01?
Yeah, it was...
joe rogan
That was the glory days.
don frye
Yeah, it was two weeks after 9-11.
I think it was either 23rd or 28th.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
Wow.
don frye
And I went in there, you know, with...
I told my parents, find me a flag, you know, give it to the guys when they come over.
And my mother-in-law made those shorts for me.
unidentified
Oh, really?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
All right.
don frye
Yeah, so, you know, the nicest...
You know, I'm going in with the national anthem.
joe rogan
Nice.
don frye
Oh, it was amazing.
You know, walking at the flag, having a national anthem, it was cool.
joe rogan
Look at you there.
Don Fry, 20 years ago.
Isn't that wild?
don frye
Yeah, it's...
Jeez.
Jeez.
Is it...
What year is this?
joe rogan
That fight in the lower corner, that Takayama fight, that was one of the craziest fucking moments in the history of mixed martial arts when you and Takayama were just slamming each other in the head over and over and over again.
don frye
God bless him, man.
joe rogan
Jesus Christ, that fight.
See if you can just pull up that exchange, because in all the history of the sport, that is one of the most iconic exchanges of any two, because you couldn't believe it was happening, and you couldn't believe you guys kept doing it.
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
Well, you should know where I was at.
joe rogan
I mean, this fight was so fucking bananas.
I mean, you just walk towards each other, and this fucking exchange is like a movie exchange.
In the tie-up, you're both hitting each other with right hands.
don frye
And it's actual speed.
joe rogan
What in the fuck is that?
How the hell did you guys do that?
don frye
Well, if you go back, you see I slip.
So I grab him, you know, because I slipped.
I had to grab his neck to keep from falling.
And so he just stayed there and I stayed there.
joe rogan
Just nuts.
I mean, I've never seen anything like that before or since.
While that was happening, and you just slamming right hands into each other like that, what was going through your head?
don frye
I was like, what the hell's keeping this guy up?
joe rogan
He was probably thinking the same thing about you.
don frye
But I hit hard, Joe.
I hit hard.
Yeah, you do.
joe rogan
Yeah.
You hit him with some fucking haymakers.
don frye
Oh, man.
And I couldn't believe he was taking them.
And I was like, he scared the hell out of me.
joe rogan
Was that one of those 80,000 seat shows?
One of those gigantic ones they did?
don frye
Yeah.
I think it was only 45. Small show.
joe rogan
A medium show.
Because they did some Saitama Super Arena shows where it was just insanity.
don frye
We did Tokyo Dome.
I did Antonio Inoki's retirement match.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
don frye
Tokyo Dome, $70,000.
So they sold that out, and then they sold 5,000 standing tickets, you know?
Wow.
They got permission from the fire department to do that.
So I did that, and then they did the National Soccer Arena, you know, for probably K-1 New Year's Eve.
unidentified
Oh, wow.
Wow.
don frye
That's when Jerome Labano knocked me on my ass.
joe rogan
Yeah, you had that one kickboxing fight against him.
That's a crazy deal to take, to take a kickboxing fight against one of the great kickboxers of all time.
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Was that an ego deal, too?
don frye
Yeah, ego.
Well, the thing is, the deal was we were supposed to do an MMA fight, yeah.
joe rogan
And then he backed out of that.
don frye
I don't know what happened, but there's a lot of things that happened, Joe, that I'm finding out now, you know, 20 years later, that, you know, the two scumbags that were my agent at the time.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, so they made some backdoor deals?
don frye
Mm-hmm, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, sorry to hear that.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's the sport, right?
don frye
Yeah, that's...
joe rogan
Prize fighting.
There's always going to be scumbags.
don frye
Prize fighting is full of shit.
joe rogan
I'm watching the Kings documentary on Showtime.
Have you seen it?
don frye
No, I just found out about it yesterday.
joe rogan
It's fucking amazing.
It's amazing.
It's so good.
It's all about Roberta Duran, Sugar Ray Lennon, Thomas Hearns, and Marvin Hagler.
It's fucking incredible.
It's incredible.
It's so good.
And it makes you remember, like, man, those days were wild.
don frye
Well, they had the one Once We Were Kings, you know, about the heavyweight guys.
joe rogan
Yeah, this is just about those four guys in the matches that they had with each other.
don frye
Well, the Once We Were Kings were about Ali, Foreman, Frazier, Norton, and Holmes.
Those were some animals there.
joe rogan
Yeah, my God.
unidentified
Some amazing fights.
don frye
I loved Hagler.
joe rogan
Oh my god, he's my favorite.
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
I loved Hagler.
It broke my heart when I finally freaking passed.
Yeah, that was a rough one.
I couldn't believe that, man.
joe rogan
That was a rough one.
That made me real sad.
He was, when I was a kid, he was my idol.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Because he was just like this guy that didn't have any hype behind him.
A hardworking guy from Brockton, Massachusetts.
Just blue collar.
Just always outworked everybody.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
And just...
Wouldn't stop.
And then when he got to the pinnacle, when he knocked out Thomas Hearns, that fight was just like, that was the fight that made him.
And people really understood what kind of greatness that man had in him.
I mean, people knew how good he was before that, but you had to see him against another superstar and see him just wade right into the fire to see what, you know, Thomas Hearns was a murderous puncher.
don frye
Oh, he's a monster.
joe rogan
Murderous puncher.
And to see Marvin Hagler just take it and keep coming forward.
And it was a fight.
It was barely a boxing match.
don frye
It was a fight.
joe rogan
I mean, they made it a war.
don frye
They had that on their hat, right?
joe rogan
Yep.
That was Hagler.
Yeah, he put war on everything.
He was something special.
He was an inspiration in Massachusetts.
Everybody.
don frye
I still question...
joe rogan
The Leonard decision?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, I thought he won that fight.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, I thought he won that fight.
But I did love the fact that he retired.
He said, that's it.
I'm done.
Fuck this sport.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
I'm going to Italy and make martial arts movies.
don frye
How'd he do?
He took good.
joe rogan
They were terrible.
Terrible movies, but he made a lot of money.
You know, he was a superstar over there.
don frye
Weren't any worse than dipshit, huh?
joe rogan
Oh, they were worse, believe it or not.
don frye
Really?
joe rogan
Yeah, they were crazy bad.
But they were comically bad.
They were like, you know, like you'd punch people, they'd go flying through the air, that kind of shit.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
You've never seen?
don frye
No.
joe rogan
Jamie's found some clips.
They were hilarious movies.
But he decided he didn't want to fight anymore and went out at the very top of his game, which is kind of incredible.
There's only a few guys that have ever done that.
Andre Ward did that.
He did that.
Only a few guys ever just went out.
don frye
The guy from UFC... George St. Pierre?
No.
joe rogan
Khabib.
Khabib.
Yeah.
Khabib did it.
Yeah.
I mean, Khabib and...
I mean, very few guys have ever gotten to the point where Khabib is and decided...
I mean, he's in his early 30s.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
This is Marvin Hagler here.
don frye
So look at this.
Are they shooting the arrows at the airplane?
unidentified
I don't know what he was doing, but these are terrible movies.
don frye
Indigo, huh?
Indigo.
joe rogan
Indigo.
don frye
Oh, Indigo.
joe rogan
There's just these silly movies.
don frye
I think he's shooting at the roof.
joe rogan
Yeah, I don't know what he's doing.
It's just crazy.
They're just Italian movies.
But he was a huge star over there.
I guess he learned Italian.
See, he punches that guy.
unidentified
Wow!
don frye
That's a hell of a hook.
joe rogan
Look at this.
don frye
Uppercut.
Jeez, that's great.
joe rogan
But someone has to do something like that on the early days of Pride.
They really do.
Because Pride was something special.
Because for us...
The fans that were watching it at home, all the fans, it wasn't known.
It wasn't like everybody, like the UFC today, say if Francis Ngannou's fighting or if Stylebender's fighting, everybody knows.
It's big.
It's a huge sport, you know?
You find out the event's coming this weekend.
Hundreds of thousands, if not a million, pay-per-view buys.
It's a big deal.
But back then, Pride was...
No one knew over here.
Only the martial arts fans knew.
It wasn't a big deal.
But we knew that we were seeing something special.
don frye
Well, it was like a Super Bowl every three months.
It was.
I'll tell you what, Joe.
It was...
You know, people say, you know, the Noguera brothers came over here and got whooped.
They say Mirko came over and got whooped.
We were busted up, man.
You get in top shape every three months to fight, you know, a top guy.
You get busted up and it's hard.
It's so hard on the body to do something like that.
joe rogan
Yeah, everybody who came over to America had already been past their prime in pride.
don frye
They had already had a career.
joe rogan
Yeah, a full career.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Like, think of Noguera's wars, the wars that he had, the war with Fedor, with Crow Cop, with, I mean, so many guys.
don frye
Big Bob.
Bob Sapp!
joe rogan
Bob was 375 pounds and pile-drived him.
don frye
I love Bob, man.
He's a good guy.
joe rogan
Apparently, Minotaur's neck was fucked up for the rest of his life after that fight.
Yeah.
don frye
I can see that.
joe rogan
Of course.
don frye
God dang.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, Bob was 375 with a six-pack, which, what in the fuck was he taking?
don frye
Oh, he, you know what, 5% body fat?
He was so big.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
He was so big, it seemed like a boss character in a video game.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Like the final guy that you had to beat.
unidentified
Ha ha!
joe rogan
You know?
I mean Bob was just gigantic.
And he had some skills.
don frye
Yeah, and he's the funniest guy.
unidentified
Was he?
don frye
Oh my god, he's so funny.
You know?
And then, somebody told me not to say that to you.
joe rogan
That he was funny?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Bob's funny?
Well, his character was hilarious.
He put the cape on and everything.
And they loved him in Japan, boy.
They loved him over there.
He was a huge superstar over there, right?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
But I think that time, that period of time from like 2001 to whenever it was that Pride went away, was it like 2006 or something like that?
don frye
Yeah.
Was it 10 years or 8 years?
joe rogan
Look at him and Overeem.
don frye
Look at Overeem, yeah.
Horse meat.
joe rogan
Did they fight?
unidentified
I don't know.
don frye
It says Versus behind them.
joe rogan
Oh, it is an art wrestling match.
Well, Uberim is back.
He's going back to glory.
So they're going to let him get back on the secret sauce.
We're going to see Alistair Overeem.
Yeah, good.
That's what I say.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Listen, test all the fighters you have to test.
But when a guy's been saucy all throughout the best parts of his career, and then you make him come over here and be natural.
I mean, we got a chance to see him against Brock Lesnar when he was saucy.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
You know?
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
When he was 265, jacked.
Built like a superhero.
But then, you know, all these pesky USADA tests.
don frye
You know what?
If every athlete on the planet would tell you something to kiss their fucking ass, you know, they'd go away.
They should go away.
They have too much power.
You know, to bang on somebody's door at 5 o'clock in the morning.
joe rogan
How about when they were about to fight?
Like, fight day, they did it to Alexander Volkanovski.
don frye
Really?
joe rogan
Wasn't it him?
It was him, yeah.
Literally fight day.
These motherfuckers wake him up at 6 o'clock in the morning and tell him to take a piss.
don frye
I'd unleash the dogs.
joe rogan
That is insanity.
It's insanity that they would even think that would be okay.
And it's a huge disadvantage if they don't test his opponent.
They should test him at the same time.
First of all, they should leave him the fuck alone.
It's crazy that they did that.
don frye
I mean, the psychological fuck that is, you know?
joe rogan
I mean, he was like, are you fucking kidding me?
Are they really here?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
You know, he couldn't believe it.
I mean, he's just trying to stay calm and get ready for a fight.
When you were fighting in pride, did they test it all?
don frye
Sure they tested, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, but they didn't give a fuck.
don frye
We don't know what happened.
They spilled it on the way to the toilet.
joe rogan
Ensign told me that they had in the contract, in all capital letters, we do not test for steroids.
don frye
Oh, yeah?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
He said they were like, letting you know.
don frye
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
Well, it was like...
UFC 9. When McCarthy came in and said, you can't punch, you know, close fist.
Or you will be fined somewhere, sometime, some amount down the road, you know?
joe rogan
Right.
don frye
So, go ahead, basically, is what he said.
joe rogan
Oh, is that what he said?
Oh, okay.
don frye
You will be fined eventually somewhere, some amount, you know?
joe rogan
Oh, so it was one of those deals.
don frye
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, I mean, we're going to enforce this stupid rule, you know, that, you know.
joe rogan
What was it like working in pride?
don frye
I liked it until...
Until I found out that I had been robbed a couple of times and they were supposed to have paid your taxes.
And then I went and did the last show as a favor.
I took a tremendous cut, and, you know, then the next day I go in to get paid, and President of Pride's not there.
I said, fuck, something's up.
And they said, you know, uh-huh.
I'm not going to say his name because it's still questionable, everything.
So he said, he's not here, he's on the phone.
I go, oh crap.
He says, Don's on yesterday, Japanese IRS. Come to our office looking for you.
He said, they're downstairs right now waiting on you.
joe rogan
Oh boy.
don frye
Yeah, so I had to go down there and pay my way out of Japan.
joe rogan
Oh Jesus Christ.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Wow.
don frye
Wow.
joe rogan
Yeah, there was a lot of weird shenanigans with money over there, right?
That was why Bob Sapp wound up leaving, right?
They told him they wanted him to fight and he didn't have a contract.
And the day of the fight, there's still no contract.
It's like, look, if I don't have a contract, I'm not going out there.
And then they effectively kind of blackballed him and he never really reached those same heights again.
They stopped promoting him, stopped, you know...
don frye
Well, some asswipe over there made the announcement that the Yakuza was involved with Pride.
You know, like that's a shocker.
I mean, Yakuza's involved with everything.
joe rogan
And that killed the business over there, right?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Was that like the media did that or a journalist did that or something?
don frye
Yeah, a journalist, yeah.
joe rogan
But everybody knew anyway, right?
don frye
Right, right.
But you're not supposed to...
joe rogan
Publicly announce it because then advertisers don't want to be involved in it.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
Yeah.
And is that what killed the business over there?
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
Yeah, it destroyed it.
joe rogan
So how many years did it run for in its heyday?
don frye
I don't know.
I did the last one.
I don't know if it was eight or nine.
Do you know?
joe rogan
We'll find out.
So it was like a good solid seven or eight years.
don frye
No, it's more than that.
I'm sorry.
joe rogan
Was it?
don frye
I'm thinking about myself here.
Imagine that.
Yeah, because I came in at number 19, right?
joe rogan
Was it?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
19 or 21. I remember the first one was Hickson.
Hickson fought the very first one.
And it was Hickson versus Takata, right?
Wasn't that number one?
I believe so.
I think that was.
Because I think the way they launched Pride, I do remember that Hickson was the first one.
Because the way they launched Pride was by having pro wrestling stars compete in MMA. Right.
And that was one of the big attractions to Pride.
Because pro wrestling in Japan back then was gigantic, right?
don frye
Oh, yeah.
Well, the UWF. Remember the UWF? Yeah.
That was like the first creation of Pride, I guess.
I don't know.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Yeah.
don frye
Well, you know, they had their guys shooting on each other sometimes.
joe rogan
Sometimes.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
And sometimes not.
What that means, for people that don't understand what that means, some of the fights were a work, meaning, like, you knew who was going to win, you'd worked it out in advance, and some of the fights just turned out to be real fights.
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
joe rogan
And that was a thing that would happen sometimes in Japan with pro wrestling, right?
unidentified
Right, right.
joe rogan
It would just decide that, and sometimes the opponent didn't know.
don frye
Right, right.
joe rogan
And the guy would go out and start throwing haymakers at them and kick them and take them down, stomp them, and you're like, whoa!
don frye
Well, it happened here, too.
I mean, you had Gene LaBelle.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
don frye
You know, who was...
The muscle for his parents, you know?
Yeah.
You know, and then Roddy Piper was the muscle for a while.
joe rogan
Yeah, yeah.
Well, it's a lot of guys who were in pro wrestling were legit combat sports athletes.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
And some of them were just pro wrestlers.
They just got into it just as entertainers.
So there was a wide variety.
And over in Japan, Takata was kind of, you know, he was a huge superstar over there.
But Hickson would not agree to anything other than a real fight.
So when you watch that fight, it's very clear.
But some of the fights weren't, right?
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
And you kind of had to look at it with a discerning eye.
Like you'd see a guy get caught in a heel hook, and you're like, hmm.
Like, that looks a little fishy.
Like...
don frye
Well, I remember after Ken Shamrock and I fought, I went to a WWE show here in Tucson, and the Undertaker, he asked me if that was a work.
He says, because you both end up in a heel hook.
I'm like, oh fuck yeah, we both ended up being a heel hook.
He had my foot and that was the only thing I grabbed.
That was a shoot, buddy.
joe rogan
It looked real.
don frye
Oh, believe me, it was real.
joe rogan
Well, Ken was one of the very first guys to really master heel hooks and use those in the UFC early on.
Remember?
don frye
Yeah.
My God.
Well, he, you know, had a hairline fracture on both my freaking ankles.
Did he really?
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you should have seen them.
You know, my ex-wife and I, we would usually go from Japan to L.A., you know, but that time we stopped in Hawaii, and my ankles were this big, you know.
Just going, if I didn't went the whole way, you know, I could barely walk off that plane.
Wow.
Yeah, it was a little painful.
joe rogan
Yeah, I can only imagine.
Yeah.
How many fights did you have over there in Pride?
don frye
Not a lot.
Not a lot.
What, six or...
joe rogan
Six or seven?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Something along those lines.
Who do you think was your toughest fight over there?
don frye
Oh, jeez.
Takeyama would have to be my toughest fight.
I mean, it wasn't the prettiest thing.
joe rogan
But it was the most iconic.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
You know, I mean, it wore me out, you know?
joe rogan
I can only imagine.
don frye
I mean, physically and psychologically, I mean, you just, you just, you go, what the hell is going on here?
joe rogan
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
It was kind of frightening, you know?
joe rogan
You said something to me once, I'll never forget this, about the Ken Shamrock fight.
You said that if you want to be honest, both of you left a little bit of yourself in that ring and you were never the same afterwards.
don frye
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Never work.
joe rogan
Yeah.
There's some of those fights that you think back, and you think back how you were before the fight and how you were after the fight, and they were just so crazy.
So much violence, and it's just...
don frye
Well, just the preparation, too.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
I mean, the psychological preparation sometimes is harder than the physical preparation.
Yeah.
joe rogan
How so?
don frye
You've just got to...
You have to separate yourself not only from your family, you know, your wife and your kids and your friends, but the whole world.
You know, I mean, I completely understand what it's like to come out of prison, you know?
I mean, prison, not jail, but prison for a long time.
Because you...
Like I said, not to be redundant, but I am, but you completely separate yourself from everything.
Everything.
joe rogan
When you would prepare for these fights, where were you training at the time?
don frye
There in Tucson, a couple of times I had to leave, you know, for the second Mark Coleman fight, you know, I went over and...
I had Frank Shamrock, you know, training.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
Yeah, and we couldn't train.
I was so beat up, you know, at that point in my career.
You know, we'd get up, you know, go have breakfast, go get a massage, go to the chiropractor, you know, go get stretched, go to that.
There was just hardly anything.
Any fighting.
Just watch the fight on TV. Mostly just trying to keep your body healthy.
Yeah, just to show up.
joe rogan
Wow.
So what kind of physical training were you able to do when you were that banged up?
don frye
Not much.
Like I said, we would just do stretching and just technique.
Basically just technique.
joe rogan
Really?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
What'd you do for conditioning?
don frye
Hell, Joe, I don't even remember anymore.
unidentified
Really?
don frye
For that fight, yeah.
joe rogan
Because Shamrock, Frank in particular, was always a stickler for conditioning.
He was always an amazing cardio.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, that was one of his big weapons, is he would put a pace on guys.
That's what he did to Tito.
That's what he did to John Loeber in the rematch.
Just put a pace on guys they couldn't keep up with.
don frye
Oh, Frank was amazing.
joe rogan
People forgot about Frank.
don frye
He was a beast.
He was an amazing athlete.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Remember when he armbarred Kevin Jackson?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Won the title?
No, he was a monster.
don frye
Yeah, that's one of the things that I use as an example.
He was a gold medalist in the hardest discipline.
joe rogan
And Frank caught him, what, 30 seconds in the first round?
don frye
Yeah, it was beautiful.
Just beautiful.
And Jackson's a stud.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
Real stud.
Amazing wrestler.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
Have you ever worked out with him?
joe rogan
No.
No.
don frye
Stronger than a fucking ox.
joe rogan
Oh, I could only imagine.
I mean, all those elite wrestlers, the kind of strength those guys have.
Remember when Royce Alger came over to the UFC? Ensign.
Ensign arm-barred him.
Yeah.
don frye
Fast, too.
joe rogan
Yeah, same thing.
Caught him in an arm bar.
But so many wrestlers, they just didn't understand what they were getting into.
don frye
No.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Yeah.
don frye
That's the thing.
They leave those arms out there, and boom, they're snatched real fast.
joe rogan
So when you were training with Frank, how did you hook up with Frank?
How did that take place, and where were you guys training?
don frye
We were at his house.
joe rogan
Was he in California at the time?
don frye
Yes, sir.
joe rogan
So you went up there and just trained with him?
don frye
Yes, sir.
joe rogan
Did you camp with him?
don frye
Because I, you know, my...
I like my career going up and down.
My marriage had a lot of that.
So, you know, I needed to get the hell out of town, you know, because...
I get it.
Yeah, things weren't going good.
And, um...
joe rogan
So how did you make that connection with Frank?
unidentified
Hell...
don frye
Trying to figure that one out.
unidentified
Um...
don frye
If that was the second Coleman fight, so that was after...
Ken, right?
But, you know, I don't know how the hell that happened.
joe rogan
But he...
don frye
I called him.
I called him.
joe rogan
You called him.
You need some help.
Yeah.
don frye
And he get out.
I think because I had fought the French guy, the first French guy, New Year's Eve.
joe rogan
First French guy, not LeBana.
don frye
No.
joe rogan
Who was the other French guy?
French guy.
don frye
M&A? Huh?
No, he was a kickboxer.
And I boogered his eye up real bad, you know.
joe rogan
Who was that?
I'm trying to remember.
don frye
I think it was Inoki.
I think it was an Inoki show.
joe rogan
Nah, that's...
It wasn't Dynamite, right?
don frye
Yeah, it was a Dynamite show, right?
joe rogan
Well, that's Nakao.
Nakao, Acobono.
don frye
No, it was a white guy.
joe rogan
All the way...
don frye
Cyril.
joe rogan
Oh, Cyril Abidi.
Oh, that's right.
And you got him with a rear naked choke.
don frye
Yeah, Noki Bumbaya.
Man.
joe rogan
So, back then, when you trained with Frank, the Lion's Den was probably the first real mixed martial arts team, where they were, like, really prepared.
Them and Miletic Fighting Systems, right?
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
Pat Miletic's place in the Lion's Den.
They were two of the very first guys that were really putting together a real, legit MMA team, where they had, like, real, like, for the time, scientific training, real technique training.
And real preparing guys for things.
don frye
Well, you know, like you said, they had a team.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
I had a group of guys, you know.
I had a first group of non-white guys.
Yeah.
All my guys are Mexican except for a couple of white boys.
joe rogan
Arizona.
don frye
Yeah.
They're tough, tough guys.
One guy was a former sniper in the SEALs.
Another couple of guys were former Marines.
joe rogan
And what discipline would those guys have martial arts wise?
don frye
Basically, judo and wrestling.
Judo and wrestling.
But boxing, too.
So, same thing I had.
joe rogan
So, when you would prepare for a fight back then, did you have a head trainer?
don frye
Steve Owen was my head trainer.
joe rogan
And he would prepare your camps and the whole deal?
don frye
Yeah.
Steve is amazing.
We call him the evil Yoda.
He is.
He was a great fighter.
A judo guy.
Several times national judo champion.
A couple times world.
I mean, just amazing.
And he can look at a fight, five minutes of a fight, and boom, have the game plan drawn up.
joe rogan
So he was one of the first guys that was in your camp?
don frye
He was my judo sensei.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
don frye
My first judo sensei was a guy...
Fuck me, no.
unidentified
Torres...
don frye
What the...
Jeez, I feel like an asshole.
I never remember my sensei's name.
joe rogan
It happens.
don frye
What the fuck is his name?
Kiyoki.
Kiyoki Torres.
Or George Torres, but he goes by Kiyoki.
He lives in Hawaii now.
But Kiyoki was my first...
He ran...
A kid's, um, judo club down there on Fort Wachuca.
And, um, so I started going there on Saturday mornings, and Steve would come down, you know, he would work, he'd up at Tucson, it'd be Monday, Tuesday, Thursday nights, and then he'd come down Saturday morning for the kids, you know, but The rest is up in Tucson, so I would drive up there, you know.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday night, I'd go up there and train and jump in the truck and drive home, you know.
Get home at midnight, 1 o'clock in the morning, you know.
I would always feed my guys, you know.
After we worked out, I'd take them out for dinner, you know.
A couple of beers for me, you know?
joe rogan
Even in training?
don frye
Yeah.
Oh, hell yeah.
joe rogan
Up until, like, the fight?
don frye
Oh, the night before, yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Really?
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
So you and Cowboy Cerrone.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Cowboy still does that.
He keeps drinking.
don frye
Yeah.
One of the worst...
I lost to a fucking idiot I shouldn't have lost to because my...
My wife at the time decided I was drinking too much and taking too many pills.
So her and a couple of guys took my booze and my pills the night before the fight.
And I was just circling through withdrawals during the fucking fight.
No!
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That was something someone told me the other day that I could not believe.
They were telling me, and I don't want to name any names, but big time fighters, particularly kickboxers, that fought on heroin.
don frye
Really?
joe rogan
That fought on pills.
That fought on opiates.
don frye
Yeah, I did that.
That's when my career went to shit.
joe rogan
Yeah.
And it was just because of all the pain that you were in, right?
I mean, you said that by the time the Cyril Abidi fight, you were already banged up to the point where you could barely train.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
But you think about how long your career went after that.
It's crazy.
I mean, you know.
don frye
That was a Coleman fight.
Yeah, it was so fucked up.
I met Frank.
Frank had trained Cyril for a fight me, and then I called Frank to train me for the Coleman fight.
joe rogan
But you had a lot of fights even after that.
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, it's kind of crazy.
You rolled that motherfucker till the wheels fell off.
don frye
Yeah.
And the frame fell off, man.
joe rogan
The frame, yeah.
don frye
You've seen the frame.
joe rogan
Exactly, they had to redo your frame.
don frye
Yeah, frame of restoration, yeah.
joe rogan
Right down to the bare chassis.
So when you, your last fight was what, 2011?
Somewhere around there?
don frye
Yes, sir.
It was five months after my fifth back surgery.
Wow.
joe rogan
Five months after your fifth back surgery, you had a fight.
don frye
Yeah, stupid.
Fucking stupid.
joe rogan
But you still want to do it right now.
The thing about guys like you, it's like you never lose the itch.
It's your body just fails you.
And the tougher the guy, the more the body starts to fall apart because you're willing to train through pain.
You look at guys like, I mean, Cain Velasquez is a great example.
One of the greatest of all times, but his body just couldn't hang in there.
His knees blew out, his back blew out, his neck blew out, his shoulders blew out.
He had all these surgeries and eventually just stopped being the guy that everybody knew was Kane, you know?
His body just wouldn't do what his mind could do.
don frye
Yeah, you lose.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
You learn that in amateur wrestling, though.
You learn to keep going.
I think I first broke my neck when I was in college and didn't know it.
I thought I'd fucked up my shoulder.
joe rogan
Because it was shooting down your shoulder?
don frye
Yeah.
And so...
What happened was Dan Severn's little baby brother Rod and I, we were roommates, and we went down to my parents' house for Thanksgiving or something.
Anyways, we were out on those fucking three-wheelers.
joe rogan
Oh, no.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's how you did it?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, no.
don frye
Drinking and going over and, you know, last jump of the day.
unidentified
Oh, no.
don frye
Ended up being the last jump.
You know, we've been there for a couple hours, gone through a few cases of beer, and the truck pulls up.
And they get out, you know, look at the little sissies, you know, because they had the shoulder pads, the knee pads, the gloves, you know, all that, and, you know, laughing at them.
And so then I go off, jump, front tire first, boom, boom, boom.
joe rogan
Oh, no.
don frye
Yeah, so I thought I tore up my shoulder, but 20 years later, when they...
Did my neck.
I said, when did you break your first time you broke your neck, you know?
joe rogan
And you didn't know.
You'd ever broken your neck.
don frye
No, I didn't know.
But I wrestled, you know.
I kept, that was in 88, 87. 86, 87. And then...
I sat out a year in amateur wrestling because of the injury.
joe rogan
Because of your neck?
don frye
Yeah.
Wow.
I thought it was the shoulder, but it was the neck.
And then I rehabbed it, you know, because they redid the shoulder.
They cut off the end of my clavicle bone back then.
It was how they would solve shit.
joe rogan
What did they do?
don frye
Cut off the end of my clavicle bone.
joe rogan
They cut off the end of it?
don frye
Yeah.
Really?
Because it was just destroyed, so you just lob it off and throw it away.
Wow!
Really?
Holy shit.
joe rogan
That's early 90s surgeries?
don frye
Yeah, yeah.
Fuck.
80s.
At the end of the 80s.
unidentified
Kurt Angle wrestled in the Olympics with a broken neck, didn't he?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
He won the gold medal with a broken neck.
Crazy.
Yeah.
There's no one tougher than wrestlers.
don frye
Yeah.
I know I... Fuck.
They cut...
They fixed the shoulder...
Cut off the...
It was the right shoulder, I think.
Yeah, it was the right shoulder.
And, um...
So they put me...
Bobby Douglas put me on a medical scholarship...
So it would open up a scholarship for the team, which is what needed to be done.
So then I rehabbed it through '87, and then partway through '88, I went up and, you know, working out with the team and all that, but I went up to the working out with the team and all that, but I went up to the Las Vegas Southwestern Regional Qualifying And I won that in Greco and Freestyle.
And then I went to, which qualified you for the national finals, you know.
And so then I went up there for the Greco and got my ass handed to me.
You know, I thought, you know, you get lucky every once in a while and you think you're good at it.
But they went and let me go to the freestyle.
You know, they said, pick one or the other.
And like a dumbass, I picked the wrong one, you know.
But I ended up taking fifth.
I think I took fifth that year.
Fifth or sixth in the national freestyle tournament, you know.
Must have been six, because they took the first five.
And always a bridesmaid, you know?
unidentified
Right.
don frye
But yeah, Art Martori was a money guy back then for the Olympic team, almost.
Art's a great guy.
joe rogan
So with all the injuries, when did you first start taking pain medication?
don frye
Oh, fuck.
You know, the first time was in 96, you know.
Um...
joe rogan
So this was during the UFC days?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Because that was...
UFC 8 was what?
Was that 96?
don frye
Yeah, that was February 96. And then...
unidentified
Crap, Joe.
don frye
What the hell?
joe rogan
Do you remember when you started fighting on them?
don frye
No, that was a fucking mistake when that was...
Well, what happened, I did...
I heard something in the UFC. I broke my hand, right?
Or Coleman.
Coleman beat the hell out of me.
Remember when Coleman beat the hell out of me in UFC 10?
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
And so then they...
You know, he broke my ocular, I think it is, or occipital, I don't know.
And then something else happened.
Anyways, then I fought...
Mark Hall was my first fight that night.
And then...
I was offered a fight against him in Japan in November, right before, you know, November 96. And Bob Meyerowitz found out that I was going to do that and that Dan was going to do that, you know.
And he was pissed because of the opportunity of ruining the Ultimate Ultimate 2. Right.
And I says, come on, Bob.
It's Mark Hall.
You know, come on.
joe rogan
Mark Hall was undersized, right?
don frye
Yes.
Smaller guy.
joe rogan
Tough guy.
don frye
Buck 85. Fucking idiot.
Was he?
Yeah, he's an idiot.
joe rogan
I didn't know.
don frye
Fucking idiot.
joe rogan
I don't know him at all.
don frye
You'd want to slap him upside the head if you did.
The fucking guy's going around saying that, you know, he took a dive.
joe rogan
Oh, did he?
don frye
Yeah, against me at the ultimate ultimate, you know?
Second round.
You know, fuck him.
joe rogan
Oh.
don frye
I already beat him twice.
You know, he would be the last person in there wanting to take a dive.
You know, but...
So I beat Gary Goodridge, you know, in the first round, ultimate, ultimate.
And a buddy of mine, Dave Nortz, he had gone with me for the fire department.
He was a paramedic, okay?
So he hits me up with a line, you know.
We put two bags, two or three bags, after the Goodridge fight.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
don frye
Yeah.
Which, boom, you know.
joe rogan
Fired you right back up.
don frye
Probably right back fresh as a daisy, you know.
And so then I beat Hall, boom, you know, fast.
I mean, Tank knocks out his guy.
God damn, he's dead.
He broke his neck.
You hear all these Alabama guys.
joe rogan
Was that Steve Nomark?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That was a crazy KO. That was a wild one.
Tank could fucking crack.
don frye
Oh, man.
It was like one of those puppets.
Somebody just cut the strings.
We could just fold it back on ourselves.
joe rogan
That was one of the great KOs of those days.
don frye
That was amazing.
joe rogan
It was.
don frye
I didn't see it.
joe rogan
And then it was you and Tank in the finals?
don frye
Yep, Tank and I in the finals.
joe rogan
Yeah, and you got his back.
It was a crazy war, then you got his back and finished him.
don frye
Well, fuck.
I mean, stupid-ass me.
I walk out, lumber out there, and step sideways, heel, heel.
What happens when you stay on your heels, Joe?
joe rogan
You get knocked backwards.
don frye
You get knocked on your ass, you know.
You shouldn't be.
And stupid ass, I don't know what the hell I was thinking, you know, heel, heel.
But as soon as that second heel landed, he hit me, you know, with a jab.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Hard jab, though.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That motherfucker.
Everything he did was hard.
don frye
Damn right.
joe rogan
You want to talk about a guy who could drink?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
I made a mistake of drinking with him one night.
Him and his buddies at the bar.
Tank put him away.
I remember one time I was there for, I forget which event it was, but there was a giant brawl that broke out right after I went to bed.
I left everybody.
Everybody was downstairs in the after-fight area, hanging out, drinking.
And it was getting late, so I was like, well, I'm going to go to bed.
So I went upstairs to go to bed, and then I heard, like, you just missed it.
Apparently, Valid Ishmael and Tank got into a brawl, and there was just chairs flying and all kinds of crazy shit, and I missed it by like 20 minutes.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
Fucking Brazilians here, they'd fight at the drop of a hat.
I remember over here in Pride having breakfast, you know, a couple of times they almost got right next to my table.
Guys, I'm fucking eating here, you know?
joe rogan
Start brawling.
Well, there were so many brawls back then, right?
Charles Crazy Horse Bennett and Vandley Silva brawled backstage.
Yeah.
Legendary fights backstage.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Someone should do a documentary on Pride.
They really should.
Because it was just a fucking crazy time in martial arts history.
And it was also a time when Fedor was in his prime.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
And I think it's arguable that Fedor in his prime was the greatest heavyweight of all time.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
In my mind, it's hard to say.
Fabricio Verdun beat both him and Kane, right?
But I think he caught Fedor when Fedor was battle-worn and was pretty deep into his career.
And also there was testing over in America.
There wasn't testing in Japan.
And then the same thing with Kane.
When Fabricio caught Kane, Kane had already gone through...
It had been a pretty long, extensive career.
But it's arguable that when he fought Krokop, when he fought Noguera, when he fought all those guys over there, it was arguable that Fedor was the greatest.
don frye
Well, Fedor was the greatest.
There's no reason to even fucking talk about it, you know?
I mean, it's simple.
If you ever watched the man fight live, it was something you'll never forget, you know?
I mean, those things over there, they were events.
They weren't just a fight, you know, you go to, you know, on a Saturday night, hey, let's go watch the fight, you know.
They were fucking events.
Like I said, Super Bowl every three months.
The women would get dressed up, the men would, you know, I mean, you plan your whole fucking week around it, you know.
They'd go and have their dinner, steak dinner, you know, not beer on the back of the pickup, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was a big deal.
joe rogan
Yeah.
It was a big deal.
We used to get up in the morning and watch them because they were live from Japan.
So they'd be on here, like, I forget what it was.
don frye
Five in the morning?
joe rogan
Something crazy like that, yeah.
And we would watch them live.
don frye
Yeah, you never went to a Pride?
joe rogan
No.
They offered me a gig commentating at one point.
Yeah, they came to meet me in...
I forget where it was.
One of the UFC events, back when I was doing the interviews.
And they offered me a gig to commentate in Pride.
And I was like...
don frye
Oh, man.
joe rogan
Yeah, fucked up.
I should have done it at least once.
don frye
Who owned the UFC, Bob?
joe rogan
That was Bob.
Bob did back in the day, yeah.
don frye
Bob was such a good guy, but he did not like you going anywhere or doing anything else, you know.
He he was a good man, but he was solid one on loyalty, you know And he felt you know that you're betraying him.
unidentified
Mmm.
joe rogan
Yeah, which is probably probably the truth at the time You know well there was so much competition and there was only I mean I The UFC was the big thing in America, but Pride was way bigger than the UFC back then in terms of size.
It wasn't even close.
The UFC was doing small places in comparison to what Pride was doing.
don frye
Well, it was that fucking McCain.
joe rogan
Yep, yep, yeah.
don frye
He was choking him out.
joe rogan
And then when Zufa bought the UFC, when the Fertittas and Dana White came along, then they had the business plan, and then they had the money.
And even then, I mean, they were real close to bailing.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
At one point in time, they were $40 million in debt.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Which is just nuts.
don frye
Crazy.
joe rogan
That was right when the Ultimate Fighter came along.
And they had actually talked to Dana on the phone and said, let's try to sell it.
And Dana was going to sell it.
They were going to start putting out offers and try to see, you know, who wanted to buy the UFC. And then, I guess, Fertitta changed his mind.
I guess they just decided, listen, we'll wait.
We'll wait.
We'll wait it out.
And then they did the Ultimate Fighter, and then, boom, it takes off.
But apparently, they were literally at the...
They were thinking about putting out the offers, and he actually made the phone call and decided to, Lorenzo did, to Dana.
And Dana was ready to sell it.
And then they changed their mind last minute, and then boom!
Look what it is now.
It's kind of wild because if they sold it, who the fuck knows what would have happened?
I would have quit for sure.
I would have stopped doing commentary.
They probably would have, you know, they would have had to have somebody that had a lot of media savvy that knew how to market the company.
And try to rebrand it or something.
And they probably would have sold it, and they probably would have lost a lot of money, too.
Because before The Ultimate Fighter in 2005, it wasn't really worth that much money.
No.
But then when The Ultimate Fighter happened, and Stefan Bonner and Forrest Griffin fought live on TV, and they had that crazy fucking brawl, and then it became popular.
That one fight made the sport.
It's wild.
In a lot of ways.
That was a defining moment.
Didn't make the sport, but it was a defining moment for the sport in America.
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
But meanwhile, in Japan, at the same time, they were doing the Saitama Super Arena.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Huge events.
Gigantic, spectacular crowds.
50,000, 60,000 people.
It was wild.
don frye
Oh, man.
joe rogan
The walk-ins and that crazy pride lady that would introduce everybody.
Her introductions were legendary.
Yeah.
don frye
Oh, fucking funny.
The first time I fought, she called me Dan.
Did she?
joe rogan
That's funny.
don frye
Can I get a cup of coffee?
joe rogan
Yeah, yeah, sure.
don frye
Water.
Oh, fuck.
joe rogan
What do you want?
don frye
Coffee.
joe rogan
Here we go.
don frye
I didn't know that.
I'm sorry, gentlemen.
joe rogan
No worries.
unidentified
No worries.
don frye
Thank you.
Thank you.
I didn't know.
Is this my water here?
Yeah.
Thank you.
joe rogan
When you think back, I mean, what a crazy life you've lived.
I mean, you lived like a movie life.
don frye
Yeah, nobody would believe it.
joe rogan
It wouldn't believe it.
It wasn't a movie.
It'd be a crazy, spectacular movie.
For you to go from being a guy who's shooing horses and working in a fire department, all of a sudden you decide, ah, I could do that, and you take a fight.
The next thing you know, well, I guess I'm fighting now.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
All the way to Japan to kickboxing Jerome LeBanner and fighting in these giant arenas and doing New Japan Pro Wrestling.
It's a crazy life you've lived, Don Frye.
don frye
It was a fun one.
It was a fun one.
Half the time I'm done, you know?
I got my bulldog, Quinn, and if it wasn't for her, I'd have died and went, you know?
She's the only reason I'm here now.
joe rogan
Your bulldog?
don frye
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah, my kids are grown, you know?
They don't have time for me, you know?
They're good girls.
Beautiful, smart, you know?
But, you know, they're 20-21.
joe rogan
They have their life.
Yeah.
When you think back on all the damage that it did to your body, if you had to go back and do it all again, would you do it again?
don frye
Bitch, you sweet ass.
joe rogan
I knew you were going to say that.
I knew you were going to say that.
don frye
When I do it now, Columbia works out for me.
joe rogan
Yeah, right?
When you see the fighters today and you know that you're a gigantic part of the evolution of the sport, I mean, you're a pioneer.
You were there in the early days.
When you see what it's like now, it's got to be pretty crazy to see and know that you were a vital part of the beginning of this thing.
don frye
You know, I really don't understand what you're saying about being a vital part.
joe rogan
You were one of the legends, man!
If you go back and look at the legends of the sport, Don Frye, you're one of the legends, man.
Whether you believe it or not.
You're one of the fucking OGs.
When I told my friends that I was having you on the podcast today, people were like, oh shit!
They were so excited.
People were pumped.
People fucking love you, man.
They love you because you are you.
You are 100% authentic.
You wear your heart on your sleeve.
You don't bullshit.
You're a fucking real man.
You're the real deal, Don Frye.
don frye
Thanks.
Thanks, partner.
joe rogan
There's not a lot of people like you.
don frye
Probably a good call.
joe rogan
I mean, think about it.
What you've done in your life, there's not a lot of humans that would have followed your path.
Very few people.
don frye
No, they go for the easy route.
I'm not very smart enough to take the easy route.
joe rogan
How many of those fights do you think you fought when you were on the pain pills?
don frye
Oh, shit, Joe.
Um...
After Shamrock.
Everyone.
joe rogan
All of them, huh?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
You just had to?
don frye
Yeah, I had no choice, you know.
Yeah, my body was so beat up.
And then, you know, being a dumbass, you think, okay, I live on these things.
I train on these things, you know.
I can fight on these things.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
That's stupid.
joe rogan
I think there was a lot of people doing that, though.
That's what my friend was telling me the other night.
He was telling me, look, man, you don't know, but I'm telling you, a lot of those guys were fighting on heroin.
They were fighting on opiates.
don frye
I never did the heroin.
joe rogan
But opiates, pain pills, it's the same thing.
You know, it's opiates.
don frye
Yeah, I did that.
What was that shit Kerr was on?
joe rogan
Oxycontin?
don frye
No.
joe rogan
Percocets?
don frye
The injectable.
joe rogan
Oh, injectable.
Oh, I don't know what that is.
From the smashing machine?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That movie was a wake-up call for a lot of people, huh?
don frye
Yeah.
I never saw the thing.
unidentified
It's crazy.
don frye
I saw bits and pieces, but...
joe rogan
It's a crazy fucking documentary.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
And they caught him.
You know, that wasn't the purpose of that film.
The purpose of that film, when they started making that documentary, was when Mark Kerr was in his prime, and what a fucking specimen that guy was, right?
don frye
Right.
joe rogan
And they wanted to document this guy who was this fucking elite super athlete wrestler who was the Smashing Machine.
That's what they nicknamed him over there, and he was just killing everybody.
And during the process of filming it, they realized, like, wow, this guy's addicted to pain medication.
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
joe rogan
And he was real open about it.
And he showed them everything.
And then you got to see...
They caught him during the filming right when the wheels were falling off.
So it was just complete dumb luck that that documentary became sort of a cautionary tale.
don frye
Yeah, I know that back then around that time...
Some Hollywood producer came out to the house and he wanted to do one of those shows, you know?
But I was just, my body was starting to fall apart so bad.
And I'm like, I don't know how much longer I'm going to be able to keep this going.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
And I, you know, the kids, kids were little, you know, one or two or less than that.
And I didn't want, I didn't want these people in my house.
joe rogan
Right.
don frye
You know, because, you know, I just had the kids.
And then, like you said, the wheels were falling off, man.
And And I knew things were about to go to shit, you know, but I didn't want to tell anybody that.
joe rogan
Right.
Did anybody know other than your trainers?
don frye
Yeah.
Did your wife know?
I don't know.
I don't know.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Were you thinking you weren't going to be able to do this much longer?
Were you trying to figure out something else to do with your life?
don frye
Of course.
Of course.
joe rogan
It's hard for fighters, especially when you're making that much money, right?
don frye
Yeah.
And that's all you know.
joe rogan
Right.
don frye
I mean, all I've known is physical.
You know, fireman, horseshoer, you know, or farrier, you know, fighter.
Everything was physical and, you know, you're about to lose it all.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
And you know you're about to lose it all.
joe rogan
Right.
That's the untold story of fighters before and after their careers.
During camps, all you see is the fights.
Everybody sees the fights and the fights are amazing.
But most people have no idea the kind of pain and injury guys are going through just with almost every camp.
don frye
Yeah.
Just...
Shit, Joe.
You know, I wake up at six in the morning now, and it takes me six hours to get beyond the kitchen, you know?
joe rogan
Does it?
don frye
Yeah, you know.
I'm getting better.
I've been outside a couple of times, you know, before noon.
joe rogan
Wow.
And what kind of medications do they have you on to deal with all this stuff?
don frye
Now I'm on morphine.
Hydromorphone and morphine.
It's not enough, but I don't want to go.
I haven't had a drink since...
September of 2016. Really?
Yeah, yeah.
And I ain't gonna lie to you, I'd like to have one.
joe rogan
So what was the problem with the drinking with the pills?
don frye
Well, you know, that's what my ex-wife claimed.
But yeah, shit, I didn't think it was that bad, but you know...
joe rogan
You're a fucking animal, though.
don frye
I don't remember what happened, you know?
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
When you get to taking the pills and the alcohol...
You're not always knowing what you're saying.
Right.
I insulted a lot of people, you know?
But it wasn't my words.
It was words that I didn't create.
I was like repeating shit I had heard, you know?
joe rogan
Right.
don frye
Because you're just out of it.
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
And, yeah, it wasn't something that was...
You know, I don't hate anybody.
Right.
But, you know, when you're peeled up and you're drunk, you spew a lot of hatred.
unidentified
Right.
joe rogan
Especially when you're constantly in pain, too.
don frye
Yeah.
Oh, fuck, you're miserable.
Just being a miserable prick.
joe rogan
Are you constantly in pain right now?
don frye
No, just 90% of the time.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
So not constantly.
don frye
No, no, there's a good 10% there, yeah.
joe rogan
So even sitting here, like this thing that you have on your chest, is this like a back support?
don frye
Yeah, it's supposed to be with my belly, yeah.
joe rogan
What does that thing do?
Like a weightlifting belt?
don frye
Yeah, a heavy-duty belt.
It's nice.
I mean, it's this big in the back, you know?
It looks like Ric Flair's championship belt, you know?
joe rogan
And just to keep everything together?
don frye
Yeah, support it, you know, give it strength, yeah.
joe rogan
But even with all the pills, you're still in pain.
don frye
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
So what do the pills do?
don frye
Knock the edge off.
They talk the edge off so that you can get going.
You know, fuck Joe.
Um...
Like I said, first surgery was May 2010. You know, things went really bad in 08, you know, when my father passed away.
I could only walk 40 steps.
It would take me half an hour to get out to the barn to feed the horses.
I'd go 40 steps, sit down.
40 steps, sit down.
joe rogan
The crazy thing is, how many times did you fight after that?
You fought at least twice after that.
don frye
Yeah.
Fuck.
I fought.
I don't know.
You got the card.
joe rogan
You got the record?
You fought when you had been in that condition.
That's really crazy.
don frye
Really stupid.
joe rogan
Well, you're a wild motherfucker, man.
I would expect nothing less.
What are you doing with yourself these days?
don frye
You gotta feed the family.
joe rogan
I understand.
I understand.
Your toxic masculinity shirt?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Dan and Don's toxic masculinity?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Is that you and...
don frye
Mr. Severin.
joe rogan
Severin?
What are you guys doing with that?
Yeah.
What is this shirt?
don frye
Uh...
We have a podcast.
joe rogan
Do you really?
don frye
Yes, sir.
joe rogan
What's it on?
It's on everything?
Apple, all that jazz?
don frye
Partner beats the hell out of me, huh?
joe rogan
There it is.
Dan and Don's Toxic Masculinity Podcast.
How is Dan doing?
don frye
Dan's doing great.
Dan's amazing, man.
joe rogan
He's got some wild stories, too.
I want to get him in here as well.
don frye
You got to.
I mean, because he was there at the beginning.
joe rogan
The very beginning, yeah.
don frye
You got to get him.
joe rogan
He was UFC 2, right, wasn't he?
don frye
No, I think 4. 4 or 5. I came in 8. I think that was...
Alright, this thing started in 93, but actually 94, because there's only one event in 93. Right.
You know.
joe rogan
And that one is hard.
It was hard to find back in the day.
I think there's something going on with the rights to it.
So the first one I saw was in 94. I watched a videotape of it.
I got it from a videotape store.
Back in the days when you have like Blockbuster video and shit like that.
unidentified
Yeah.
don frye
I still got a couple of VHS tapes.
joe rogan
Do you?
don frye
Yeah.
I don't know if...
I think I might have one or two that's not even opened yet.
Wow.
joe rogan
They're probably worth a lot of money.
don frye
You think so?
joe rogan
Yeah, fucking eBay.
Those are classics now.
If they're not even opened?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
I bet you could eBay the shit out of them, especially if you sign it.
don frye
I got...
I got a couple of my t-shirts.
You know, original t-shirts.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
And then I've got a couple of the programs.
joe rogan
Oh, wow.
don frye
You know, yeah.
I'll have to find one.
I'll send it to you.
Yeah, please do.
What was funny was the program from Ultimate Ultimate 2. You know, I mean, back then it was...
Like, on paper, you know?
Eight and a half by 11 paper.
And they just take down the Xerox machine, you know?
And then staple it up and hand it out.
And that was it.
unidentified
Wow.
don frye
Yeah, it was fucking funny.
But, um...
Going back to Ultimate Ultimate 2. See, I didn't want to fight Mark Kerr or Mark Hall, you know, because I had already beaten twice and I knew there would be bullshit involved.
I just knew there would be bullshit involved.
joe rogan
How so?
don frye
Because we had the same manager, you know?
And I guess, why fighting three times in a fucking row?
I wanted to fight, there's a black guy whose name was Ty Bowden.
joe rogan
Ty Bowden.
don frye
Yeah, I don't know if that was really Ty Bo, but Ty Bowden, you know?
I don't know if that's his real name or not, but he had a, for his photo, he had a karate gi guy with his head cut out and taped on.
They're glued on.
I said, I want to fight that guy.
And they're like, no, you can't.
You already beat a black guy if you beat two black people who live crazy.
I'm like, come on!
joe rogan
Who said that?
Your manager?
don frye
No, I don't know who said that.
Oh, that's hilarious.
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's hilarious.
don frye
It's one of those stupid fucking things that you believe now, but not 20 years ago.
joe rogan
I wish someone was filming all those events back then.
unidentified
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Because they were in these weird little rickety arenas.
And it was so strange back then.
I remember the first one I did, which was in Dothan.
I remember even being there while it was happening, I'm like, the fact that I'm even here, this is the craziest thing ever.
You had to fly in in propeller planes, you had to do one of these weird towns where they let it happen because it was mostly illegal in most of the states in the country.
don frye
Well, look what happened to Kevin Randleman.
Yeah.
He slipped on a pipe.
joe rogan
Yeah, and fell and banged his head.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
I mean, how dirty is an arena have to be that you fall on pipes?
joe rogan
Yeah, he slipped on a pipe and fell and banged the back of his head off the ground and couldn't fight.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
I think he knocked himself out, unfortunately.
Yeah.
don frye
And you know how hard it was to knock out Ramon?
joe rogan
Yeah, right?
don frye
I think he was...
The most athletic competitor ever began in the UFC. He was a tremendous athlete.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Tremendous.
He was so fast.
Remember when he knocked out Krokop in Pride?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Nobody saw that coming.
unidentified
No.
joe rogan
I mean, Krokop was one of the most elite strikers of all time.
And Randleman was such a powerful wrestler that he was worried about the shot.
He faked the shot and came in with a left hook.
don frye
Yeah.
Yeah.
Randleman was an amazing athlete.
joe rogan
Amazing.
don frye
Like I said, I think he was the...
joe rogan
The greatest athlete to ever be in the UFC. Do you ever see the holes, the staph infections that guy had?
don frye
Yeah, but I don't remember.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
They were crazy.
He took photos of them and put them online.
He had holes in his armpit area where you could see all the muscle tissue.
It was wide open.
don frye
Oh, jeez.
joe rogan
So nasty.
The staph had gotten through his skin and left these big abscesses.
I'm taking three four-inch holes.
Like, Jamie, see if you can find it, because it's one of the most fucked up things.
You have to see it.
A lot of folks don't know how bad staph infections can get.
I always show them Kevin Randeman's injuries.
Look at that.
Look at that hole.
don frye
Jeez.
joe rogan
Look how bad that is.
Crazy, right?
don frye
Hard to believe.
Did they ever close up?
joe rogan
Yeah, they closed up, but, I mean, he died young.
I mean, it had to contribute.
don frye
Yeah, look at his knee.
Is that his knee over there in the bottom?
joe rogan
Somebody else's knee.
don frye
I had somebody else's knee?
joe rogan
Yeah.
don frye
Okay.
joe rogan
Another horrible staph infection.
Staph is some scary fucking shit.
don frye
It is nasty.
unidentified
It is.
don frye
I had that.
Yeah.
Like I said, jeez.
I don't know which surgery it was, but I... The back.
Yeah.
And...
Jeez, what the hell?
I know that it had gotten in the surgeon that did my first replacement.
He was from South Korea.
He was a Harvard graduate, you know, put himself through college, you know, going to Harvard.
And he said he almost vomited.
Yeah.
unidentified
Wow.
don frye
You know, during the surgery.
Jesus Christ.
And then that was in 10 or 11. No, that was 12 or 13. And then the one that was in my spinal cord the second time, that was in 17 or 18, you know, in Tucson.
joe rogan
That's one of the biggest problems with surgeries, right?
Those infections?
don frye
Yeah.
And they were like, yeah, we got you just in time.
You know what's fucked up about the whole thing was that they had put me in...
The first doctor didn't believe it.
They couldn't find anything, you know?
So they put me in an old folks' home, you know, where you go to die, basically.
unidentified
Really?
don frye
Yeah.
And, um...
Fuck.
unidentified
And...
don frye
I would wake up at 4 o'clock in the morning just screaming because the pain medication would wear off.
And...
I'd wake up screaming, you know, so I need some pain medication.
And they go, you're not due for another two hours.
Turn off the light, close the door, go down the hall.
Oh my God.
And I'd be screaming.
And I'd call up my buddy Jeff.
You've got to get me out of here.
You've got to get me out of here.
I finally got hold of the fire department.
They came down to get me.
I'm screaming, this is the infection in my spinal cord.
And I'm like, yeah, fuck.
And the guy's like, you don't quit cussing.
I'm going to decline to take you.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
don frye
I'm like, what?
I look at this captain.
I said, you're kidding me, right?
And he says, no.
I says, well, the fire department, we put up with all kinds of fucking custody and all that.
He says, things have changed, man.
Jesus.
Yeah.
I mean, and I was this close to buying the farm.
Wow.
Yeah.
joe rogan
So the doctor just missed the infection.
Yeah.
And so then they finally get you in.
don frye
They got in there, and they said, my spinal cord was all lumpy and swollen and all that.
And then they just kind of poked it, and all the stuff come out.
joe rogan
Oh, Jesus.
don frye
So this jackass fucking paramedic, you know, didn't want to take me because I was cussing.
joe rogan
That's hilarious.
don frye
Yeah.
Yeah.
joe rogan
What a life you've had, Don Frye.
What a life.
don frye
If I had the money, I'd get a lawyer to go after him.
Or whoop his ass.
Just give me five minutes in the ring with me, that's all.
joe rogan
So how often are you doing this podcast with Dan now?
don frye
Excuse me, sir.
That, it's gone down to...
I think it's been three weeks now.
We were supposed to do it every week.
And then Dan went back to...
Michigan.
Dan owns an island.
He does?
Yeah, one of the lakes there, you know, so he went back there to redo his cabin.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, that's cool.
So he's got a small island that you have to row your boat out to?
don frye
Yeah, a little one-acre place, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
don frye
Oh, that's cool.
joe rogan
A one-acre island.
don frye
Yeah, that's sweet.
joe rogan
That's pretty badass.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's nice.
don frye
Yeah, I'm envious of him, but I'm happy for him.
joe rogan
That guy had how many MMA fights?
don frye
He must have had 100. He's had over 100, yeah.
joe rogan
Crazy.
don frye
And the thing is, he's got him and there's three guys had over 100 fights.
joe rogan
Jeremy Horn.
don frye
Yeah, him and Jeremy have winning records.
Which is pretty crazy.
Yeah, the other guy does that.
joe rogan
Shannon McCannon.
don frye
Yeah.
joe rogan
Right, yeah.
don frye
I don't want to say his name.
joe rogan
Yeah, I only said one part of it.
don frye
Yeah.
unidentified
Ha ha ha ha!
joe rogan
Well, listen, Don, we got some barbecue for you.
I'm tired of talking to me, am I? No, you're great, man.
But I know you've got to be hungry.
I know you eat every hour.
don frye
Yeah, shit.
joe rogan
It's been a pleasure, sir.
I really appreciate it.
don frye
I'm sorry.
joe rogan
You're awesome, man.
don frye
Rich.
I wanted to bring Rich because, you know, when we go to a fight, I get tunnel vision, you know?
So I only...
You know, concentrate on 25-30% of what's going on.
You know, Rich is taking care of the other 70%, you know, Rich or Steve or somebody, you know.
So you're missing 70% of the story.
joe rogan
No, listen, what I got was gold.
What I got was gold.
don frye
I'm telling you, though, Rich has got some good shit.
joe rogan
Yeah, well, I'll talk to him sometime, too.
don frye
You're going to have to.
You're going to have to come out to my house, man.
joe rogan
All right, I would love to.
Yeah?
Which part of Arizona are you at?
don frye
Tucson.
joe rogan
Next time I'm in Tucson, I'll come out.
I do gigs out there sometimes.
don frye
Yeah, I'm in North Tucson, only like an hour away from Phoenix.
joe rogan
Okay.
don frye
Mesa.
joe rogan
I'll make that happen.
don frye
Tempe, yeah.
joe rogan
All right.
don frye
That'd be great.
joe rogan
Don, you're the fucking man.
Thank you, brother.
don frye
Thank you.
joe rogan
Appreciate you very much, man.
don frye
Thank you.
joe rogan
Thank you.
Always a pleasure.
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