Videos: Michael Bisping & Anderson Silva’s Post-Fight Interviews, Herb Dean Criticized

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z64hUpp7TfU

Michael Bisping won what he deemed was the biggest fight of his career at Saturday’s UFC Fight Night London against Anderson Silva. Bisping took a lot of damage before he was unanimously decided as the win…

michael-bisping-london-

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z64hUpp7TfU

Michael Bisping won what he deemed was the biggest fight of his career at Saturday’s UFC Fight Night London against Anderson Silva. Bisping took a lot of damage before he was unanimously decided as the winner, including the third round when his mouth guard was knocked out. In the above video, Michael Bisping explains in his immediate post-fight interview how much his career was influenced by Anderson Silva.

The two fighters showed the utmost respect to each other after the fight, but backstage at the O2 Arena, Bisping explained that he did not respect referee Herb Dean’s decision not to pause the action to allow Bisping to put his mouth guard back in. You can watch Bisping’s backstage interview where he discusses the mouth guard controversy here:

You can check out the full results from UFC Fight Night 84 here.

For Anderson Silva, Another Bizarre Night in the Cage and Another Loss

On a surface level, Anderson Silva looks the same as he always has. Long and sleek, slick and rangy, the Brazilian still casts a commanding presence in the UFC Octagon. But after Saturday night’s UFC Fight Night 84 performance against Michael Bisping, …

On a surface level, Anderson Silva looks the same as he always has. Long and sleek, slick and rangy, the Brazilian still casts a commanding presence in the UFC Octagon. But after Saturday night’s UFC Fight Night 84 performance against Michael Bisping, it’s clear that the cracks we have seen in his recent career have not been and will never be healed. His chin is compromised, his reflexes have slowed a tick, his activity has lessened. 

In a sport of milliseconds, that can make all the difference. 

Today’s version of Silva is good but far from the all-time great who authored one of the UFC’s legendary win streaks. And in today’s UFC, being good isn’t good enough at the top level. It wasn’t Saturday night, as he tasted defeat for the third time in his last three official bouts (a fourth was declared a no-contest).

That he lost to Bisping, a longtime Top 10 middleweight, can be understood, believed and accepted, if only it were by a routine method. But things rarely go routinely when Silva is involved, so of course some bizarre moments accompanied the action and clouded the aftermath.

This time, there were multiple things to point to: first, a knockout that wasn’t and then a complete lack of urgency to turn up the volume even as it became clear that the fight was a close one that could tilt either way. And…

“Sometimes it’s like in Brazil, total corruption,” he said in Portuguese following the fight in the cage, according to MMA Fighting’s Guilherme Cruz.

Oh, yes, when it comes to Silva events, the bizarre is a regular attendee.

Corruption? No way. According to MMADecisions.com, 16 of 22 polled media sources scored the bout for Bisping with the same 48-47 score that all three judges reached.

It was simply a close fight, and if he looks within, Silva will find his own causes for losing, even if for at least 45 seconds during the bout, it seemed he had snapped his streak.

Instead of talk of triumph, there will be speculation of retirement.

The strange and pivotal moment for Silva came as the third round neared an end. During an exchange, Bisping lost his mouthpiece and pointed it out to the ref. As he did, Silva attacked him. Then, as Bisping broke free from Silva’s muay thai clinch, the Brazilian backed off. Bisping looked for his mouthpiece again, pointing it out to referee Herb Dean, and Silva jumped in with a ferocious flying knee that caught Bisping’s jaw flush and floored him. 

It was a clean strike, if not totally sportsmanlike, and his most vintage moment of the fight, showcasing the killer instinct that drove his lengthy middleweight title reign. In the moment, Silva thought he had just scored a knockout, so as Bisping sat slumped against the cage, Silva promptly walked across the Octagon and jumped atop it to straddle the cage and bask in the adulation of the 16,734 fans at London’s sold-out O2 Arena crowd.

However, unbeknownst to him, the bell had rung to end the round just a tick after the knee had landed, and Dean declined to stop the fight, ruling Bisping was fit to continue. As the arena doctors and cornermen poured into the cage as they customarily do between rounds, confusion reigned. 

Silva’s corner thought the fight was over and celebrated with him, while Bisping’s corner worked to motivate him for a second opportunity.

As all this happened, a commission regulator pleaded with Silva to get off the cage, repeating several times, “the fight’s not over.” Finally, Silva got the message and had to collect himself with no corner instruction and a possible adrenaline dump.

Round 4 started with Bisping still looking a bit wobbly, but Silva never moved in to take advantage of the situation, failing to throw a strike until 30 seconds or so had passed. A low blow a few seconds later gave Bisping additional time to recover, and with that, Silva’s best opportunity of the night slipped away.

It was all part of an uneven performance that saw Bisping significantly outwork him. Silva has never been a volume fighter, but his indifference in countering many of Bisping’s flurries left little doubt who was winning exchanges much of the time. 

Over the course of the fight, Bisping threw 320 strikes to Silva’s 135, according to FightMetric statistics. Overall, Bisping landed 112 strikes to Silva’s 75. 

Beyond the numbers, Bisping proved he was there to stay early as he won Round 1 on activity and then punctuated it late by wobbling Silva with a hook. 

Then in the second, Bisping took it one step further, dropping Silva with a left hand and swarming with ground strikes. 

While Rounds 3-5 were much more competitive and Silva always seemed on the brink of closing the show, he mostly chose to fight in bursts. It was impossible to watch those last 15 minutes without feeling like Bisping was in constant danger, but it was also impossible to watch and wonder why Silva wasn’t putting together more combinations and increasing the pressure.

Occasionally, we see older fighters struggle to pull the trigger. Perhaps that was happening in certain moments; perhaps Silva was content with sniping rather than spraying fire. Only he knows the true reason.

For Bisping, we know exactly what it was. It was a performance that summed up his career, a fighter who wanted to win so desperately that he could not possibly lose a battle of wills. 

“It’s about how much you want it,” he said in the post-fight press conference. “I wanted this fight; this was everything to me. It was that that got me through those [dangerous] moments.”

It was everything to Bisping, who has scratched and clawed to reach the middleweight Top 10 and stay there for nearly a decade. It was everything to him because he has won so many times without ever measuring himself against the very best the sport has to offer.

After so many years of having to face that kind of intensity, maybe Silva can no longer rise to meet it in the same way. He wouldn’t be the first champion to suffer that fate, and at his age (he will turn 41 in April), we should come to realize that this might sadly become the norm for him if he chooses to continue. We can laud him for what he’s done and praise him for still trying, but we must ultimately accept that even legends don’t leave the cage gracefully. 

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Video: Did Anderson Silva Knock Out Michael Bisping?

Anderson Silva lost a unanimous decision to Michael Bisping in the main event of today’s (Sat., February 27, 2016) UFC Fight Night 84 from the O2 Arena in London, England, but it wasn’t without a huge dose of controversy in the bloody back-and-forth war. ‘The Spider’ appeared to have ‘The Count’ badly hurt in the later rounds

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Anderson Silva lost a unanimous decision to Michael Bisping in the main event of today’s (Sat., February 27, 2016) UFC Fight Night 84 from the O2 Arena in London, England, but it wasn’t without a huge dose of controversy in the bloody back-and-forth war.

‘The Spider’ appeared to have ‘The Count’ badly hurt in the later rounds after Bisping held the edge in the first two, and many believed the Brit was knocked out by a massive flying knee when he was trying to alert Herb Dean that his mouthpiece had fallen out. But Dean allowed the fight to go on, and ‘The Count’ ended up edging the former champ 48-47 on all of the judges’ cards.

And there are still many people who feel that the fight should have been stopped after that fateful third round. Watch the controversial finish to the frame courtesy of the UFC and decide for yourself:

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Poll: Who Do You Think Won Michael Bisping vs. Anderson Silva?

There was a mix of high-level action, controversy, and blood when Michael Bisping met longtime former middleweight champion Anderson Silva in the main event of today’s (Sat., February 27, 2016) UFC Fight Night 84 from ‘The Count’s’ backyard from London, England. Bisping scored a unanimous decision when the dust had settled, but he didn’t do

The post Poll: Who Do You Think Won Michael Bisping vs. Anderson Silva? appeared first on LowKick MMA.

There was a mix of high-level action, controversy, and blood when Michael Bisping met longtime former middleweight champion Anderson Silva in the main event of today’s (Sat., February 27, 2016) UFC Fight Night 84 from ‘The Count’s’ backyard from London, England.

Bisping scored a unanimous decision when the dust had settled, but he didn’t do it without looking perhaps the most beaten and bruised he ever has in his long UFC career. Although the brash Brit clearly held the advantage in the first two rounds, ‘The Spider’ turned it on with a ton of huge strikes in the mid-to-late rounds, even seemingly knocking Bisping out with a pinpoint flying knee as the bell sounded on the third round.

But the hometown man won nonetheless, and much of the questionable score could have been up to the fact that Silva failed to engage for much o the fight as he looked for the perfect opportunity to counter. When he did land, however, the results were devastating, and many, including UFC President Dana White, thought he did enough to take the victory.

This one’s going to be talked about for a while. Who do you think should have won the bloody brawl?

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Michael Bisping Defeats Anderson Silva In Bloody War

The main event of UFC Fight Night 84 saw a mixed martial arts (MMA) legend and one of the most recognized MMA fighters in the world meet inside the Octagon. Former Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) middleweight title holder Anderson Silva (33-7, 1 NC) fought Michael Bisping (28-7) in the O2 Arena in London, England. “The

The post Michael Bisping Defeats Anderson Silva In Bloody War appeared first on LowKick MMA.

The main event of UFC Fight Night 84 saw a mixed martial arts (MMA) legend and one of the most recognized MMA fighters in the world meet inside the Octagon. Former Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) middleweight title holder Anderson Silva (33-7, 1 NC) fought Michael Bisping (28-7) in the O2 Arena in London, England.

“The Count” walked out of the O2 Arena with the biggest win of his career.

Bisping threw out a head kick early, but Silva slipped out of the way. “The Count” landed a right hand and Silva responded with a kick to the body. “The Spider” evaded another head kick. Silva took an aggressive approach and missed a hook. Silva slipped two kicks from Bisping. “The Count” landed a left hand that had Silva off balance to end the round.

Bisping pressured Silva against the fence and kept throwing strikes as Silva tried baiting him in. “The Spider” connected with a jab. “The Count” remained patient as Silva tried to play mind games. Silva landed a leg kick. Bisping dropped Silva with a right hand and rained down punches. He remained in top control to end the round.

The third round began and Bisping continued to push the pace. Silva caught a kick and Bisping was on his back briefly. Silva threw a head kick. “The Count” found the mark for a jab. Silva landed a knee to the body. Silva stalked his opponent and dropped him with a flying knee as the horn in round three sounded. Bisping took his eyes off his opponent and was focused on his mouth piece on the canvas, which caused him to get dropped by the knee.

Silva and his corner thought the fight was over, but referee Herb Dean did not call the fight. Due to the confusion, Bisping was not able to get a cutman to work on his eye.

Round four was underway and Bisping swung at Silva, who was against the fence. “The Count” was nailed with a kick to the groin and time was called. Bisping threw a barrage of punches with Silva’s back against the fence. “The Spider” stuck in a jab. Silva landed a kick to the body. Silva continued to put his back against the fence. Silva was accidentally poked in the eye and once again time was called. Silva landed an inside elbow and a left hand had Bisping wobbled a bit. A superman punch found the mark for Silva to end the round.

A high kick from Silva was partially blocked at the start of the final round. Bisping’s face was a bloody mess at this point, but he still kept fighting. Silva found a home for the high kick. Herb Dean called for time and the doctor checked Bisping. The fight resumed quickly. A front kick from Silva rocked “The Count.” Silva landed two knees and an inside kick.

The score totals revealed that all three judges gave Bisping three rounds and the fight.

Final Result: Michael Bisping def. Anderson Silva via unanimous decision (48-47, 48-47, 48-47)

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UFC Fight Night 84 Results – Anderson Silva vs. Michael Bisping

MMANews.com will again set the standard for live coverage of a UFC event as we provide live results of the UFC Fight Night 84 event this afternoon from London, England.

We will be providing quick-match results coverage of the preliminary card, which…

silva-bisping

MMANews.com will again set the standard for live coverage of a UFC event as we provide live results of the UFC Fight Night 84 event this afternoon from London, England.

We will be providing quick-match results coverage of the preliminary card, which leads right into our detailed, round-by-round coverage of the entire main card headlined by Anderson Silva vs. Michael Bisping.

Below is the scheduled lineup for today’s show …

PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 12:45 PM ET/9:45 AM PT)

LIGHTWEIGHTS- DAVID TEYMUR (3-1, 0-0 UFC) VS. MARTIN SVENSSON (14-5, 0-0 UFC)
LIGHTWEIGHTS- TEEMU PACKALEN (7-1, 0-1 UFC) VS. THIBAULT GOUTI (11-0, 0-0 UFC)
HEAVYWEIGHTS- DANIEL OMIELANCZUK (17-5-1 1 NC, 2-2 UFC) VS. JARJIS DANHO (6-0 1 NC, 0-0 UFC)
LIGHTWEIGHTS- NORMAN PARKE (21-4-1, 5-2-1 UFC) VS. RUSTAM KHABILOV (17-3, 3-2 UFC)
MIDDLEWEIGHTS- BRAD SCOTT (10-3, 2-2 UFC) VS. KRZYSZTOF JOTKO (16-1, 3-1 UFC)
FEATHERWEIGHTS- ARNOLD ALLEN (10-1, 1-0 UFC) VS. YAOTZIN MEZA (21-10 1 NC, 2-3 1 NC UFC)
MIDDLEWEIGHTS- SCOTT ASKHAM (13-2, 1-2 UFC) VS. CHRIS DEMPSEY (11-3, 1-2 UFC)
BANTAMWEIGHTS- DAVEY GRANT (9-2, 0-1 UFC) VS. MARLON VERA (7-2-1, 1-1 UFC)
FEATHERWEIGHTS- MIKE WILKINSON (9-1, 2-1 UFC) VS. MAKWAN AMIRKHANI (12-2, 2-0 UFC)

MAIN CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 4 PM ET/1 PM PT)

BANTAMWEIGHTS- (#15) FRANCISCO RIVERA (11-5 1 NC, 4-4 1 NC UFC) VS. BRAD PICKETT (24-11, 4-6 UFC)
WELTERWEIGHTS- TOM BREESE (9-0, 2-0 UFC) VS. KEITA NAKAMURA (31-6-2 1 NC, 1-3 UFC)
MIDDLEWEIGHTS- (#9) GEGARD MOUSASI (37-6-2, 4-3 UFC) VS. (#10) THALES LEITES (25-5, 10-4 UFC)
MIDDLEWEIGHTS- (#5) ANDERSON SILVA (33-6 1 NC, 16-2 1 NC) VS. (#7) MICHAEL BISPING (27-7, 17-7 UFC)