Why Anderson Silva Deserved Better Than Chris Weidman

Anderson Silva’s web must be a lonely place. For over six years he’s sat there in desolation; a mysterious and misunderstood superstar patiently waiting for that right moment to fly by. Briefly, he ensnared the venomous Chael Sonnen, an…

Anderson Silva’s web must be a lonely place.

For over six years he’s sat there in desolation; a mysterious and misunderstood superstar patiently waiting for that right moment to fly by.

Briefly, he ensnared the venomous Chael Sonnen, and the two shared a spotlight brighter than any the UFC had ever seen. But after Sonnen was vanquished and discarded like the rest, Silva returned to his place of hiding, which for all intents and purposes, may as well be on the moon.

The sport’s greatest fighter is a rarely seen specter. When he does speak, his words are usually nonsensical prose that carry almost no validity. He calls out Cung Le and we laugh. He says his dream fight would be against himself and we scratch our heads.

Like it or not, Silva is a schemer, a jokester, a prankster. Nobody knows why he says what he says or does what he does (there still isn’t a firm truth behind his baffling performance against Demian Maia), but all of his quirks and oddities only add to his legend.

What we do know for sure is that he’s 16-0 in the UFC with a rolodex of spectacular moments. He’s everyone’s favorite arachnoid superhero come to life. His limbs fly and flow with chaotic purpose but pinpoint precision, locking onto opponent’s faces the way a jetfighter locks onto a rogue aircraft.

At this juncture in his MMA career, every time he fights, it’s a spectacle. He’s earned that right with bloodshed and magnificence. Plus, he’s earned a dance partner that is at least somewhat comparable to his splendor.

Which is why it may come as an enormous disappointment to Silva, way up out of reach in his web, that the fly headed toward him is Chris Weidman.

 

 

Weidman isn’t ready, nor worthy

When Weidman made his MMA debut in 2009, Silva had already been UFC champion for three years.

By the time Weidman arrived in the UFC in 2011, Silva had defended his title nine times and was just a month removed from kicking Vitor Belfort’s molars down his throat.

There isn’t just a gap in big fight experience between Silva and Weidman, there’s an endless gorge. Silva is the longest reigning champion in company history, and by any means or measure, Weidman is one of the least experienced title challengers.

There have only been a handful of fighters in the last decade who have received title shots with fewer fights, namely Cain Velasquez (eight fights) and Brock Lesnar (three fights), but those were drastically different circumstances. Heavyweight is—and always has been—the sport’s weakest division, and Lesnar was simply a media typhoon and an incomparable force when it came to sheer drawing power.

Weidman, we can all agree, is not Lesnar. He is undoubtedly a burgeoning talent, an athletic powerhouse with a penchant for submissions and an improving standup game. No one doubts he has tremendous physical tools. There’s a high chance that, at some point in his career, he will be the UFC middleweight champion. The problem is that right now we have no way to know exactly how good he is.

The measuring stick for the middleweight division is not Silva—that would be impossibly unfair. Instead, look to the three men who have beaten just about everyone else in the division since Silva has ruled: Belfort, Yushin Okami and Michael Bisping.

 

Along with the recently defected Sonnen, those three have been the clear next best at middleweight in the last five years. Weidman hasn’t fought any of them.

He does have two wins over top-10 talent; a sloppy, boring affair against Maia that he took on short notice, and a throttling of Mark Munoz.

The Munoz victory, in actuality, is almost the sole reason Weidman was thrown into the title discussion in the first place. To be sure, it was an impressive performance over a very good fighter. But Munoz himself is an unproven commodity, losing to arguably the two best fighters he ever fought in Okami and Matt Hamill.

That Munoz win could turn out to be an illusion or the moment a star was born. It’s impossible to say. When you look at Weidman’s lackluster resume and his extreme dearth of star power, his placement against the sport’s greatest fighter is startling.

 

Silva belongs in a superfight

MMA is infantile in comparison to baseball and basketball and boxing, and thus the present often gets confusingly intertwined with history. It’s often hard to decipher what fighters from the sport’s heyday are lasting legends and what current talents have already accomplished enough to be called one of the best ever.

What is not open for discussion is who the best fighter of all time is. Once upon a time, Fedor Emelianenko had a claim to throne. But, Silva’s seemingly endless brilliance in two different weight classes has helped distance “the Spider” in recent years.

Truth is, we’ve never seen anyone like Silva before. I’ve long become weary of the “ballet of violence” metaphor, but it’s so incredibly apt when it comes to Silva, it’s hard not to apply it. He doesn’t move around the octagon as much as he flows – slipping here, sliding there, as punches and kicks sail by harmlessly. He’s a magician; a spindly, glove-wearing arachnid. He doesn’t beat opponents, he routs them. In his last 16 fights, only one has been even remotely close, and it ended in one of the most spectacular submissions in MMA history.

 

Silva is so remarkable and historic in his greatness that it amazes me how many MMA fans dislike him. I suppose hatred comes with the territory of being great; you don’t have to look much further than the Yankees or Lakers or Duke basketball to see what happens when you win too much.

But Silva is of such great importance to MMA that he should be universally beloved at this point. We truly don’t know when we’ll see something like this again, and we should all be cherishing it while we have the chance.

Which is why, above all, it’s a bit preposterous to pit Silva against a young, hungry and yet largely anonymous fighter like Weidman when Silva has so openly campaigned to fight the like of Georges St-Pierre and other superstars.

Though it doesn’t seem like Silva has aged a day since his UFC debut, the truth is, he’ll one day be washed up. Every time he fights from now on should be the biggest moment of the year in MMA, just like how all eyes were on Michael Jordan in his final seasons.

Why then, waste one of Silva’s precious last fights on Weidman? The easiest answer, of course, is that there was no one else left. However, giving someone a title shot simply due to process of elimination seems to be a foolish and empty decision.

The UFC deemed Weidman unfit to fight Silva months ago, which is why it paired him with Tim Boetsch. Just because Bisping, Hector Lombard and Rashad Evans all lost doesn’t suddenly make Weidman more worthy.

As much as some fans hate the idea of a fighter picking his opponents, the simple truth is that it happens all the time—and if anyone deserves the right, it’s Silva. He fought everyone and beat everyone the UFC has ever put in front of him. He’s made them millions and accounts for a large percentage of the promotion’s most enduring moments.

If he wants GSP, shouldn’t he get it? If not him, why not a big name at light heavyweight, or Strikeforce champ Luke Rockhold? Weidman, meanwhile, could have fought Okami or Belfort and the UFC could have had a true number one contender.

Instead, we have a fight pitting the greatest ever against an unproven unknown, which just seems like a grievous mistake.

Silva, tucked away from the world on his lofty perch, has to think so. And come July 7, Weidman might come to regret he ever asked to enter the spider’s dangerous web.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 162: 3 Ways Chris Weidman Can Beat Anderson Silva

Now that we have finally learned that Chris Weidman is the next man fighting Anderson Silva for the title, we are left to wonder just how Weidman can succeed where so many others have failed.Make no mistake about it, this is a fight Weidman can win, bu…

Now that we have finally learned that Chris Weidman is the next man fighting Anderson Silva for the title, we are left to wonder just how Weidman can succeed where so many others have failed.

Make no mistake about it, this is a fight Weidman can win, but it won’t be easy.

First off, he has to apply constant pressure to the champion; much like Chael Sonnen did at UFC 117, because trying to figure out how to beat Silva from the outside isn’t going to get it done.

Silva is a rare fighter; a man equally adept at striking offensively as he is countering an opponent who tries to go toe-to-toe with him. So what does Weidman need to do in order to pull off the upset?

There are three possible ways Weidman can get the job done, but each requires total commitment. Many great fighters have stepped into the cage with the champion, only to seem to forget how to ply the skills that got them there in the first place—as if showing up was good enough.

There has never been a champion in the history of the UFC as great as Silva because he dares to be great, so all measures against him must be equal to the task.

First of all, Weidman needs to limit the weapons of the champion as best he can and that means a relentless takedown attack for all five rounds.

The one place where the effectiveness of Silva’s best game—striking—is going to be diminished is on the ground with Silva on his back, and that is where Weidman needs to take this fight as often as possible.

Yes, he may eat some serious strikes on the way in (perhaps even suffering a KO from a well-placed counter-knee) or get some elbows from the clinch, but we know—nearly to a certainty—that he’s going to be in far more danger if he tries to engage Silva in a striking contest for any extended period of time.

If he can get take Silva down repeatedly and keep him down, he can employ the same basic plan Chael Sonnen did, but with greater effect and earn a decision victory that may not be pretty but gives him the title.   

Another way Weidman can win is by taking risks and attacking Silva from the top—looking for the stoppage aggressively—whenever he takes the champion down.

This is risky, as it gives Silva room to either pull Weidman into his guard or escape to the feet, but it does allow Weidman a chance to secure a sooner victory via KO/TKO thanks to his heavy-handed ground-and-pound.

No matter what many people may think, Silva can be knocked out just like any other man and Weidman is a very strong fighter who knows how to use that strength on the ground.

One of the main virtues for going after the stoppage instead of trying to grind out a decision victory is that it lessens the amount of time Silva will have to end the bout himself. He’s proven to be the kind of champion that is dangerous in any fight, at any time, and if Weidman could get him out of there, well sooner is better than later.

And lastly, if somehow Silva manages to thwart every takedown attempt, Weidman is going to be forced to stand and exchange, which is a possibility he needs to be ready for.

Should that happen, Weidman still has heavy hands that could land given that Silva has shown a tendency to “clown” about if he feels he has an opponent who must stand with him.

That means when Weidman throws, he can’t be tentative like so many others have been. Everyone else before him seems to see Silva standing still, arms at his sides, as if it is a mirage and thus they throw tentative strikes that lack their full authority.

If Silva does that with Weidman, the challenger must throw with all his might, and throw often.

Very few fighters have gone after Silva with the intent to throw heavy leather for every second of every round. In all of his bouts in the UFC, the champion has not had anyone pressure him like that, probably because of how destructive he looked against Chris Leben in his debut.

But this is a title fight, and if Weidman cannot secure the takedowns, then he should be ready to throw everything that he can at the champion and let the chips fall where they may.

When at all possible, he should cut off the cage—far easier said than done, to be sure—and get inside Silva’s long range and work heavy punches to the body, uppercuts and then hooks.

Yes, he will have to fight like mad to combat Silva’s Thai clinch, but if he wants the title badly enough, he should be ready to expend as much energy as needed to dish out more damage than he takes and take as much damage as he must.

As incredible as Silva is, he is still getting older, day-by-day, and given how infrequently he fights, his defensive timing may slip enough for Weidman to land, especially if the challenger is really ready and has enough gas in the tank to throw over 100 meaningful punches per round.

There is a saying in the South that speaks to the idea that sometimes you fight the fight where you find it and other times you fight it where it finds you.

For Weidman, he must do both and fight like the younger, hungrier man, constantly putting pressure on Silva and never for a second forgetting that showing up is only half the battle.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

GSP Chooses Weidman over Silva at UFC 162: True Prediction or Wishful Thinking?

UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre has a prediction for the UFC 162 main event—and it’s probably going to turn some heads. “My friend Chris Weidman, when I see him in training, I believe he’s going to beat Ande…

UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre has a prediction for the UFC 162 main event—and it’s probably going to turn some heads. 

“My friend Chris Weidman, when I see him in training, I believe he’s going to beat Anderson Silva,” GSP told Sportsnet. “I believe it’s a bad matchup for Anderson Silva. It’s very bad.”

The champion went on to explain that he not only believes in his training partner’s ability to win the fight, but that he doesn’t really think it’s even going to be a very close fight.

“Not only is he going to beat, I believe he’s going to finish Anderson Silva,” St-Pierre said. “I believe it’s not going to be too long, that fight. People will be shocked.”

A champion in his own right, St-Pierre certainly knows a good thing when he sees it. But is his assertion that the longtime pound-for-pound king of the sport gets finished an actual prediction or is it more of a case of wishful thinking?

Weidman has never been beaten in his MMA career and at 9-0 certainly presents a combination of skills that could cause problems for “The Spider.” But we’ve heard this all before. Many, many times before.

There’s a reason that Anderson Silva is considered the greatest MMA fighter on the planet today and that most would agree he is the best to ever compete in the sport. Just when everyone seems to think he has a weakness, he comes out with an emphatic, crushing victory over the top contender who is supposed to give him the biggest challenge of his career.

Silva is nearing the seven-year mark as an unbeaten fighter. And it has been over eight years since something that one of his opponents did actually ended in Silva losing. 

So GSP can’t actually believe that this is going to be such an easy fight for Weidman, can he?

Perhaps St-Pierre is just hoping that someone will finally knock Silva off the top of the mountain. After all, Silva losing would likely push St-Pierre up to the No. 2 or even No. 1 ranking on the Official UFC Pound-for-Pound list. 

Not only that, but similar to Manny Pacquiao’s loss in the boxing ring in 2012, an Anderson Silva loss would finally put to rest any discussion of a “superfight” with Anderson Silva. 

For St-Pierre, that weight being lifted off of his shoulders would be a massive relief. Certainly no one would expect him to move up to 185 to fight anyone else, so GSP could simply continue to focus on dominating at 170 without fear of persecution from unruly MMA fans.

And hey, it’s hard to blame him if he’s really hoping for a Silva loss. It’s good to be king. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

GSP Chooses Weidman over Silva at UFC 162: True Prediction or Wishful Thinking?

UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre has a prediction for the UFC 162 main event—and it’s probably going to turn some heads. “My friend Chris Weidman, when I see him in training, I believe he’s going to beat Anderson Silva…

UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre has a prediction for the UFC 162 main event—and it’s probably going to turn some heads. 

“My friend Chris Weidman, when I see him in training, I believe he’s going to beat Anderson Silva,” GSP told Sportsnet. “I believe it’s a bad matchup for Anderson Silva. It’s very bad.”

A champion in his own right, St-Pierre certainly knows a good thing when he sees it. But is his assertion that the long-time pound-for-pound king of the sport gets finished an actual prediction or is it more of a case of wishful thinking?

The champion went on to explain that he not only believes in his training partner’s ability to win the fight, but that he doesn’t really think it’s even going to be a very close fight.

“Not only is he going to beat, I believe he’s going to finish Anderson Silva,” St-Pierre said. “I believe it’s not going to be too long, that fight. People will be shocked.”

Weidman has never been beaten in his MMA career, and at 9-0 certainly presents a combination of skills that could cause problems for “The Spider.” But we’ve heard this all before. Many, many times before.

There’s a reason that Anderson Silva is considered the greatest MMA fighter on the planet today and that most would agree he is the best to ever compete in the sport. Just when everyone seems to think he has a weakness, he comes out with an emphatic, crushing victory over the top contender who is supposed to give him the biggest challenge of his career.

Silva is nearing the seven year mark as an unbeaten fighter. And it has been over eight years since something that one of his opponents did actually ended in Silva losing. 

So GSP can’t actually believe that this is going to be such an easy fight for Weidman, can he?

Perhaps St-Pierre is just hoping that someone will finally knock Silva off the top of the mountain. After all, Silva losing would likely push St-Pierre up to the No. 2 or even No. 1 ranking on the Official UFC Pound-for-Pound list. 

Not only that, but similar to Manny Pacquiao’s loss in the boxing ring, an Anderson Silva loss would finally put to rest any discussion of a “superfight” between these two UFC champions. 

For St-Pierre, that weight being lifted off of his shoulders would be a massive relief. Certainly no one would expect him to move up to 185 to fight anyone else, so GSP could simply continue to focus on dominating at 170 without fear of persecution from unruly MMA fans—assuming, of course, that he leaves his UFC 158 bout against Nick Diaz with the title. 

And hey, it’s hard to blame him if he really is simply hoping for a Silva loss. Why put added pressure on yourself to move up? It’s good to be king and St-Pierre would be just that.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

GSP: Chris Weidman Will Finish Anderson Silva at UFC 162

UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre thinks Chris Weidman will be the one to stop middleweight kingpin Anderson Silva’s reign of dominance inside the Octagon. In a brief interview with Sportsnet, GSP said he thinks “The All-American” will n…

UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre thinks Chris Weidman will be the one to stop middleweight kingpin Anderson Silva‘s reign of dominance inside the Octagon. 

In a brief interview with Sportsnet, GSP said he thinks “The All-American” will not only beat Silva, but will also finish him. 

“My friend Chris Weidman, when I see him in training, I believe he’s going to beat Anderson Silva,” GSP recently told Sportsnet. “I believe it’s a bad matchup for Anderson Silva. It’s very bad. Not only is he going to beat, I believe he’s going to finish Anderson Silva,” GSP explained. “I believe it’s not going to be too long, that fight. People will be shocked.”

After months of back-and-forth with the champion, the UFC finally granted Weidman his shot at “The Spider” on Wednesday, booking the title fight for UFC 162.

The event is set for July 6 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

While St-Pierre is a member of Tristar Gym in Montreal and Weidman is a member of Team Serra-Longo in New York, they sometimes train together at Renzo Gracie’s jiu-jitsu school in New York. 

Although he picked Weidman to pull off the massive upset, he admits that his friend’s recent shoulder surgery could be a factor in this matchup. 

“Anderson Silva is smart because Chris Weidman, he come back from an injury, a long layoff, so it’s the time to fight him right now,” St-Pierre said. “It’s going to be the best time to fight Chris Weidman right now, so Chris needs to be sure he needs to get very well-prepared for this fight.”

Weidman‘s wrestling and jiu-jitsu prowess may present problems for Silva, but the champion boasts a perfect 16-0 record inside the Octagon and has already defended his strap a UFC-record 10 times. 

Given those facts, it’s no surprise that oddsmakers have roughly deemed the challenger a 3-to-1 underdog for the fight

Weidman is 9-0 as a professional mixed martial artist, with his last win being a definitive knockout over Mark Munoz at UFC on Fuel 4 in July. 

Meanwhile, St-Pierre looks to make it eight successful title defenses in a row when he fights former Strikeforce champ Nick Diaz at UFC 158 this Saturday.

Is it possible that “Rush” is right and Weidman is poised to take the title from Silva, or will the rising star just be another fighter added to “The Spider’s” highlight reel of knockouts?

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Chris Weidman Has a Very Good Chance to Beat Anderson Silva at UFC 162

Chris Weidman is undoubtedly the deserving top contender for Anderson Silva’s middleweight title. Has been since last July, actually, when he knocked out Mark Munoz and derailed the Filipino’s hopes to face Silva, a training partner and friend.The only…

Chris Weidman is undoubtedly the deserving top contender for Anderson Silva‘s middleweight title. Has been since last July, actually, when he knocked out Mark Munoz and derailed the Filipino’s hopes to face Silva, a training partner and friend.

The only problem? Silva didn’t want the fight. He didn’t believe Weidman had a big enough name, and after a UFC career filled with excellence, Silva seems more interested in pursuing the fights that will make him the most amount of money.

You can’t blame him, really. He’s not a young man any more, and he has a limited time remaining in which to capitalize on his standing as the greatest fighter of all time and make as much money as he possibly can.

And so Silva wanted to fight Georges St-Pierre. He even traveled to Montreal to watch St-Pierre face Carlos Condit last year, in the hopes of drumming up interest in a long-awaited superfight.

Only thing is, St-Pierre didn’t really want to fight Silva, or at least he didn’t want to move up to middleweight. He preferred to stay at welterweight and face new challengers, and so the dream of one superfight was all but dead.

And still, Silva didn’t want to face Weidman. He was more interested in Michael Bisping or Hector Lombard or Alan Belcher. But as fate would have it, all three of those fighters lost in their next bouts, leaving Weidman as the only man standing as a potential challenger for Silva.

Weidman had his own story wrinkled on the way to Silva. A shoulder injury forced him out of a planned December bout with Tim Boetsch, and then, Hurricane Sandy all but destroyed his home, leaving Weidman to pick up the pieces and rebuild.

That process is nearly finished, as Weidman told MMAFighting.com (per Mike Chiappetta) on Friday, and now comes the moment he says he’s been planning for since the moment he began training mixed martial arts: a championship fight with Silva.

The bout is set for July 6 at UFC 162. It takes place during the UFC’s 2013 version of “International Fight Week,” a weeklong celebration of all things UFC designed to bring tourists to Las Vegas. They’ll have a UFC Fan Expo, concerts and more. It’s the biggest event on the UFC’s yearly calendar, and Weidman will face Silva in the main event. 

For all he went through to get here, Weidman now believes that he’s getting his opportunity at the perfect time:

Without a doubt, it feels like fate. When I got injured, I was down, but I did feel like something better was going to happen out of this. I thought I was going to get an even bigger fight than the Boetsch fight. I didn’t have my hopes up too much that it would be Anderson, but I knew there was a chance it could be. Everybody who could have had a shot lost. Things went my way. I’m grateful and humble for the opportunity.

The betting lines for Silva vs. Weidman were released on Friday, and they’re surprising. They’re also an indication of just much credit oddsmakers are giving Weidman. He opened up as a +165 underdog, with Silva occupying -215 on the other end. That number means that Weidman isn’t even a 2-to-1 underdog, a number that is unprecedented for a Silva opponent.

For an example of what I’m talking about, here are the opening lines for Silva’s last five title fights:

Silva (-235) vs. Sonnen (+175)
Silva (-425) vs. Okami (+325)
Silva  (-325) vs. Belfort (+250)
Silva (-450) vs. Sonnen (+300)
Silva (-425) vs. Maia (+325)

As you can see, only Sonnen was given a halfway decent line against Silva, and that came on the heels of Sonnen utterly dominating Silva until being submitted with a triangle choke at the very end of their first fight.

And despite the fact that Sonnen had already displayed a measure of success against Silva, Weidman is still being given a better chance by oddsmakers to score the upset and defeat the pound-for-pound king.

For his part, Weidman isn’t looking to just go in the cage and have a good showing for himself; he’s looking for the finish.

I’m very motivated to make the most of this opportunity and not just be another title contender. Every other time I’ve had a full training camp, I’ve had a finish. And I plan on continuing that. I’m going against the greatest of all-time, but that’s not going to change my confidence of what I’m going to do in there. I’m very excited.

Weidman is 9-0 in his MMA career, with five of those wins coming in the UFC. But more importantly, he has the kind of wrestling-based offense that many say is the foundation of any blueprint to beating Silva. Sonnen showed it could be done in his first crack at Silva, and he would’ve scored a shocking win if not for a mental lapse at the end of the fight. 

I don’t know if Weidman has better submission defense than Sonnen. I know he’s not as good in the wrestling department, but very few in mixed martial arts are as good at wrestling as Sonnen. But I do know that Weidman’s wrestling game is good enough to put the champion on his back, so long as he can first avoid being knocked out.

I understand that this isn’t the fight everyone wanted to see. We all wanted Silva vs. St-Pierre or Silva vs. Jon Jones, and some of us wanted Silva vs. Nick Diaz. But those fights aren’t happening any time soon, and that means that the title shot needs to go to the most deserving candidate. 

Weidman won’t sell a tenth of the pay-per-views that Silva fights with St-Pierre or Jones would. This is a prizefighting business, with the ultimate goal being to make as much money as humanly possible with main events that intrigue casual fans enough that they’ll open their wallets and pay you for the right to see a fight. 

But sometimes you have to reward athletic endeavors, too. And there’s no question that, based on what he’s done in his career thus far and on the standing of the rest of the middleweight division, Weidman is the most deserving contender. 

Does that mean he’ll win? I don’t know.

But I’d sure like to see him try. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com