Hardcore Anderson Silva fans are quick to justify their hero’s lackluster performance during the main event of the UFC 97 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Oh yes, Silva is the octagon’s finest artist (this is supposed to be grander that simply being a “martial artist”?) He’s a champion. He knows how to win. How? By making sure he doesn’t lose?
You see, you can do it by avoiding a collision course against your opponent. And that’s precisely what he did last April 18. Oh yes, Silva was just showing his “technical skills” and a “smart fighter” doesn’t just attack and put himself in danger. C’mon. This is UFC, not some freakin’ chess tournament. People go to watch action. Why else would they be offered knockout bonuses? To encourage the fighters to be more aggressive and show more action.
Yes, technical skills count, but this trait is supposed to make the fight more interesting – not boring. If you want technical skill, running away is the best technical skill.
While Leites’ performance sucks, Silva’s was quite a letdown. Silva’s defenders say, the pressure should be on the challenger to force the fight. Normally, yes. However, when things become obvious that Leites does not pose any danger, and that he was not even showing an aggressive campaign at snatching the champion’s belt, Silva should have stepped up his game plan. While he intends to win, he should also not forget that fans would always want a spectacular win. Why else would they pay to watch?
What he did was, “Oh, Leites doesn’t know how to snatch the championship belt on me. Good. I’ll just let the rounds pass by without breaking a sweat – without endangering myself – and i’m still sure of retaining my belt. And I’ll be UFC’s record-holder of the most number of consecutive wins.” Well, that sucks. That smacks of avoidance. As I’ve said, this fight seems to say that you can keep your belt by avoiding contact. No points earned by both dancers – er, fighters, the championship title doesn’t change names.
We expected more from Silva. He IS Anderson Silva in the first place. He even went back to Rio de Janiero to sharpen his BJJ skills, right? When obviously, he wanted a stand-up fight and Leites proves to be less inclined, he should have changed his game plan. But no, he wanted to play it “technical” and safe. You call that a good showing?
Silva’s defenders say casual MMA fans do not understand the technicality of a fight. They insist that Silva did a good showing. Yes of course, and so does a chess player. We seem to forget here that fans (especially the “ignorant” casual fans) didn’t come to see thinking, “technical” competitors; the fans came to see gladiators – in a fight. Again, being highly “technical” is a good trait of a fighter, but it should not get in the way of a good fight. If you want “technical,” run around inside the octagon and avoid contact – that’s what happened to Silva’s kind of “technical” that night in Canada.
If you say it was a good fight “technically,” you’re missing the forest for the trees. MMA thrives on its popularity, and its popularity depends on its being spectacular – it being a spectator sport. As I keep on saying, mixed martial arts is still show business – minus the staged or theatrical nature of fights and further spiced up by antics and dramatics of the players in the world of professional wresting.
And the “casual fans” booed because they’re ignorant? Think again. These new, casual, ignorant fans are the future of MMA. They are the ones we need. We need to get more new, albeit still uninitiated, fans to sustain the growth of this, still young, sport.
We have almost forgotten about that frustrating letdown on Silva’s performance during UFC 90 last year but the first 3 minutes of the main event of UFC 97 at the Bell Center in Canada just gave us an idea of how horribly boring and irritating things are going to be. It was all dancing and tentative strikes all the way till the end. Anderson Silva vs. Thales Leites was horribly frustrating we felt we waz wobbed.
Leites was like someone in heat that at the slightest chance, he flops on his back to the ground, legs raised to expose his bottom. It would have been okay if Silva would oblige, but no. He just stands there, hands akimbo, feasting his eyes on Leites’ exposed derriere. A lot of instances, Silva would bend over gingerly trying to touch his opponent’s splayed legs. It was such a bizarre sight.
And we thought it was the only time we’ll see Anderson Silva in a “ bizarro world” with that dismal performance against Cote in UFC 90 last October.
Now comes UFC 97…what? “Redemption”? Nothing was redeemed here. Silva just sank deeper into his “bizzaro world.” We felt robbed.
When someone whose reputation is being peddled as one of the world’s best MMA fighters; one who is not only a martial artist but maybe the finest artist inside the octagon; one with eight consecutive wins (the highest record in the history of MMA); one who is hitting accuracy rate is touted at an astounding 80% while the rest of MMA gladiators only have an average 35% hitting accuracy, you would always expect nothing less than an explosive display of skill and power. But no, we waz wobbed.
A couple of months back, we remember him through a translator saying, “What’s important to me is to step into the octagon and give the public and the world a good performance.” What good performance was he talking about?
After the fight, when asked by Joe Rogan how he felt about the crowd’s boos, he said, “unless you’re here inside the octagon, you wouldn’t know what’s happening,” or something to that effect. He also said, sometimes even though you want a good fight, things just don’t go your way – or something to that effect. But Silva, YOU are one of the world’s finest fighters. You are supposed to have a lot of techniques in your mojo to force an attack against Leites.
We understand you want to keep a standup fight but when Leites have repeatedly flopped his back to invite you on the mat repeatedly, and it was obvious that he would not do it with you otherwise than by rubbing body parts on the ground, you should have obliged. You trained specifically for this in Rio, right?
But you didn’t. We, the spectators who paid a total of $ 4.9 million on tickets, and the several other millions of fans around the world who watched this game on TV felt we waz wobbed.
Anderson Silva now has the impressive top record of 9 consecutive undefeated matches. This does not mean anything to the fans. Mixed martial arts is a spectator sports. The fans wouldn’t mind if a fighter wins or losses as much as they would mind a lousy performance. They watch to see a fight. Mixed martial arts is about the fight, the skills, the action, the drama. Who wins or losses is just the anti-climax of the event.
The days seem to roll slowly. Barely three weeks on the countdown and we’ll see how Anderson Silva’s trip to the Carnival paradise Rio de Janeiro turns out during the April 18 UFC 97 “Redemption” at the Bell Center in Montreal. Besides perhaps learning a couple of samba steps or looking for that Girl from Ipanema, or lounging at the Copacabana, “The Spider” actually hied off to Rio for an octane-fed top-level jiu-jitsu training with BJJ legends Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza and Andre Galvao.
Galvao studied and tries to imitate Leites’ fight style and uses this during Silva’s fight trainings.
While Silva (23-4-0) is known for his primary skills of Muay Thai and Brazilial Jiu-jitsu, his top-level jiu-jitsu training in Brazil speaks a lot about what he thinks about his BJJ skilled opponent in Thales Leites (14-1-0). “Thales is a new kids who’s just starting out, but he’s already proven that he deserves this opportunity,” Silva declared. “He’s a dangerous opponent, just like all the others I’ve faced. He has this opportunity to fight for the title because he impressed the promoters enough to get this chance.”
The 27-year-old Leites (14-1) has never been finished in 15 career fights and has enjoyed a relatively stealth rise up the middleweight ladder.
Other fighters that makes us want to time-travel to April 18 are Cheick Kongo (13-4-1) who will clash against Dutch kickboxing hero Antoni Hardonk. Former World Extreme Cagefighting light heavyweight champion Steve Cantwell (7-1) also highlights this card with a showdown with world-ranked Luis Arthur Cane.
Here are more reasons for the excitement:
Chuck Liddel vs. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua
Brian Stann vs. Krzysztof Soszynski
Cheick Kongo vs. Antoni Hardonk
Luis Arthur Cane vs. Steve Cantwell
Denis Kang vs. Xavier Foupa-Pokam
Jason MacDonald vs. Nate Quarry
Ed Herman vs. David Loiseau
Eliot Marshall vs. Mike Ciesnolevicz
Mark Bocek vs. David Bielkheden
T.J. Grant vs. Ryo Chonan
Sam Stout vs. Matt Wiman
On a side note, we just can’t help but wonder how the so-called previously unrecognized regulations of Regie des Alcools, des courses et des jeux (RACJ), the government agency that oversees combat sports in Quebec, would affect the over-all outcome of the fights. This so-called previously unrecognized regulations for the sport is the prohibition of elbow and knee strikes. The RACJ regulations, which were actually intended for “mixed boxing” in the 1990’s also asked referees to intervene whenever a fighter is knocked down. We hope this will not result to a watered-down scuffle at the octagon.
More reason for us to shiver in anticipation.























