Thursday, December 29, 2011

One loud critic

I read recently that Wanderlei Silva "silenced the critics" with his 2nd round TKO over Cung Le.

To really evaluate that statement, one has to understand exactly what most of the critics were saying about Wanderlei and whether or not his win over Le countered those statements. Personally, I don't think he even came close.

The first thing the critics were saying is that Wanderlei Silva is more than a few fights past his prime. Its often said that the trajectory of a career can change in a single fight. The fight that marked the downward slope of Silva's career was his Pride Heavyweight Grand Prix showdown with Mirko "Cro-Cop" Filipovic.

For the ones that have only seen him in the UFC, Cro-Cop was the baddest of the bad in Pride. Everyone talks about his left high-kick, but he had the whole package when he fought in Japan. He had fast hands, good combinations, as well as great footwork that he used to SET UP his devastating finish. By the time he hit the UFC he relied too much on his one-shot weapon and opponents took advantage of his limited arsenal. When Silva collided with Cro-Cop he was at the top of his game and was coming up from 205 to challenge the best in the division.

Cro-Cop didn't just beat him, he DEMOLISHED him. Cro-Cop gave him the kind of beating that ends careers. He dominated him on the feet, landed some nice ground and pound, then turned out his lights with his signature head kick. Silva's face looked like hamburger at the end of the fight.

He was never the same: since that vicious loss he has gone 3-5, equaling the number of losses he had in his entire CAREER before the Cro-Cop fight. In Pride he was a devastating, brutalizing machine that destroyed the best in the division. Rampage, Ricardo Arona, a PRIME Sakuraba (3 times), Guy Metzger, and Dan Henderson all fell before his whirlwind attack. He didn't just win, he took guys apart.

The fighter that defeated Cung Le was a shadow of the Pride powerhouse. What he showed is that he still has tremendous finishing instincts. He took a bad beating during that fight before finding his way inside and finishing Le. He seemed hesitant and unsure of his timing. The bombs-away style Silva has always employed requires speed and confidence, two things Silva lacked in the Le fight. If you saw Silva in his prime, there is no doubt in your mind that his best days are behind him.

The second things the critics have said, those who really care about Silva as a fighter and as a human being, is that his health is in serious jeopardy. Of his 11 losses 6 have been by KO/TKO, 4 of those have been in the Cro-Cop fight and beyond. Silva never had a great chin, he was rocked in victories over Rampage, Sakuraba, Shungo Oyama, Dan Henderson, and Guy Metzger, and only Rampage and Henderson are known as power punchers. In his KO losses he has been absolutely devastated. All of his KO losses (other than his first, which was via cut) left him stretched out on the mat. Silva is the kind of fighter that goes out on his shield, and its been happening more and more frequently.

One horrific KO can cause permanent damage, 5 can leave you a stuttering wreck. No one who loves the sport and recognizes what Wanderlei has done for it wants to see him end up that way. The win over Le won't repair his damaged neurons, or make his chin any stronger.

Winning that fight was probably the worst thing that could have happened to him. He is now scheduled to fight Vitor Belfort after they finish coaching their respective teams on The Ultimate Fighter. I wrote about the Belfort-Silva rematch in my "Top Fights of All Time That Never Happened" blog. What I wrote about was that considering the wars Silva has been through and the inconsistency of Belforts performances, this rematch was unlikely. The only thing that has changed has been the consistency of Belfort. He has looked faster and stronger at 185, going 4-1 and dispatching ALL of his victims by KO.

The problem is that Silva still has name recognition and can put asses in seats. The Belfort/Silva rematch has a certain historical appeal to the older fans who remember their 1st encounter, but this fight should have happened 10 years ago, and those 10 years have been significantly harder on Silva.

Cung Le is not a top-10 middleweight. Chris Leben, who flattened Silva in his previous fight, is not a top-10 middleweight. Vitor Belfort IS a top-10 middleweight with serious KO power. This fight only makes sense to those blinded by a light that has long-since faded. Silva has serious heart and I know he'll put everything into his fight with Belfort. I can only hope that, win or lose, he chooses to make this fight his last and the critics can be unanimous in their praise of one of the greatest MMA fighters of all time...

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