McGee's journey into and out of drug addiction is well known by this  point, but his path to success in MMA isn't as much. It was a years-long  grind of small competitions to get to the big one.
 
Before he ever appeared on "The Ultimate Fighter 11" and put together an  impressive come-from-behind victory in the tournament finale, the  reality-show champion could be seen in amateur and professional boxing  matches, jiu-jitsu tournaments and open wrestling tournaments – anything  he could find, basically, to get better at fighting.
 
Around were guys such as Jeremy Horn, who earned his combat education in  much the same way, fighting as often as he could around the country.  There was Josh Burkman, a standout wrestler and fighter on the local  circuit. Then there was McGee, who was still putting it all together but  loving every moment of the process.
 
"Man, fighting has been on my mind since I was 5 years old," he told MMAjunkie.com Radio (
MMAjunkie.com Radio | MMAjunkie.com).
 
McGee worked as a plumber by day and fantasized about getting into the  gym at night. He wrestled high schoolers and sparred amateur boxers who  showed up to train. He followed "The Encyclopedia of Modern  Bodybuilding" for his strength regimen. He smoked cigarettes.
 
And he fought – a lot. He estimates he took about 4,000 hours' worth of  beatings. But it made him a better fighter. He quit smoking when he  fought Horn in December 2007, and, well, you know about the drugs.
 
McGee (13-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC) now enjoys a three-fight win streak in the UFC  after winning "TUF 11." Constantinos Philippou (9-2 MMA, 2-1 UFC) is  his next opponent, and the two middleweights meet on the main card of  UFC on FX 2, which takes place March 2 at Sydney's Allphones Arena and  airs live on FX. A seven-bout preliminary-card airs on FUEL TV.
 
This past week, McGee said he put in 20 hours at the gym. But the  training now is nothing like what it used to be. And instead of training  with whomever shows up, he has a team. John Hackleman and former "TUF  11" coach Chuck Liddell are in his Rolodex.
 
Prior to his appearance on the reality-show finale, his coach had left  the gym for five weeks. He couldn't advertise the fact that he was on  the finale, being that he was under a non-disclosure agreement with  Spike TV, and so he couldn't exactly ask for help the obvious way.  Thankfully, Liddell came to the rescue.
 
"[Liddell] dropped me into the camp and allowed me to train under John  while he was getting ready for his fight," McGee said. "He was fighting  Rich Franklin the week before. I called him because at the time I didn't  have a coach. I asked him, 'What do you think about John training me?'  He said 'hold on' and hung up the phone. (Then) he called me back and  said, 'I booked you a flight. You're leaving tomorrow from Salt Lake  (City). Bring your gear. I'll have somebody pick you up.'"
 
McGee won't ever be a Division I All-American, but if he continues on his current path, he could be a UFC champion.
 
"I know every single fight is really important, but no matter what, I'll  always be the season 11 'Ultimate Fighter' champion, and that's a cool  thing." he said. "I only won one tournament in high school in wrestling.
 
"I was getting ready for this. I didn't have the coaches behind me that I  thought I needed, and I didn't know, so I started preparing by myself.  But I got to the point where I was like, 'Man, I can't be (training like  this).'"