Gauging Greatness: Is Demetrious Johnson Really Anderson Silva’s Equal?

I bought my first Bill James Baseball Abstract in 1986, just another source of information to fuel my nascent fantasy baseball obsession. I mention this seemingly unrelated nugget of personal information to establish, right off the bat, that I’m not so…

I bought my first Bill James Baseball Abstract in 1986, just another source of information to fuel my nascent fantasy baseball obsession. I mention this seemingly unrelated nugget of personal information to establish, right off the bat, that I’m not some Luddite opposed to modern metrics. I enjoy them all, from WARP to Win Shares, and recognize that more information is often a good thing.

In combat sports, however, statistics are bunk.

Harsh? Maybe. But anyone who has watched a boxing prospect, inflated record built on tomato cans, flail around helplessly the first time he encounters real competition knows all wins aren’t created equal. Neither are punches—but a Mike Tyson uppercut and Nick Diaz slap both count the same according to the folks at CompuBox or Fight Metric.

Our intuition and our eyeballs tell us otherwise.

Simply counting strikes can never sufficiently tell the story of a fight. Not when one good one can erase everything that came before it. For all the complexity of modern martial arts, a fight is a simple thing, one often judged from the gut. Did one man hurt his opponent more than he got hurt?

That’s the essence of fighting—and you don’t need a spreadsheet to figure it out.

It’s worth keeping this in mind as we head into UFC 216, advertised as a historic night for flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson. His fight with Ray Borg, assuming he wins, will mark Johnson’s 11th defense of his championship. It’s the most in the promotion’s history, and it will put him ahead of Anderson Silva, the greatest MMA fighter of all time, in the UFC’s non-existent record book.

We are told this matters. It does not.

For Johnson, of course, it matters a great deal. In lieu of the accolades, love and money that usually land in the lap of dominant cage fighters, he’s seized on “history” as his great prize for a career in the cage. As our own Chad Dundas pointed out, it’s a feat he’s had his eye on for quite some time:

“This milestone obviously means a lot to Johnson.

“The men’s flyweight champion has been citing it as a motivating factor since at least before his second win over John Dodson two years and four fights ago. Beating Borg this weekend will give Johnson 11 straight defenses, moving him out of a tie with Silva and into uncharted waters of historic dominance for a UFC titlist.”

“I hope I can get to 20,” Johnson told ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto. “I’m on pace to get two or three fights per year, and I think I’ve got five or six years left in me. Maybe I’ll get to something like 18 and walk away from the sport—retire as champion. I think 15 to 18 title defenses is something that would be in the record books forever.”

Twenty or 200, in many ways it doesn’t matter. Fighters, divisions, eras—none are created equal. A winning streak means exactly as much as the names on it. And, unfortunately, most of the names on Johnson’s list could sit down next to fans at UFC 216 and go unremarked. His will be a record built on a very shaky foundation.

That’s not to say Johnson isn’t an extraordinary fighter. He’s amazing, one of the most complete fighters to ever step in a cage. He’s typically better than his foes at every aspect of the fight game, dominating at distance and controlling the clinch. His wrestling is stellar. So are his submissions and his defense.

Despite internet consensus, he also hits hard and makes opponents pay for every mistake. He’s aggressive enough that his fights rarely stall out in any one position, forcing scrambles where, as you might imagine at this point, he is always a step ahead of the opposition. 

Johnson is a fighter who deserves his reputation. But he’s not Anderson Silva.

Silva, still fighting at the age of 42, is more than just a cage fighter. He’s an artist, a Bruce Lee movie brought to life.

In his madcap antics we found a collective joy. Yes, there was pain too—the long, seemingly endless moments of inaction when he couldn’t make an opponent come to him, the rounds he appeared to be considering the deeper meanings of life and not the business in front of him, the arrogance on display as he dropped his hands and gave lesser men a chance at glory.

But the joy, both his own at his handiwork and ours in watching him, was mesmerizing. MMA isn’t a collection of names on a list. It’s a series of moments, seared into our hearts. And no one gave us more moments than Silva. 

There was the front kick to the face of the fearsome Vitor Belfort, the slow-motion dismantling of former light heavyweight champion Forrest Griffin and the last-second submission against Chael Sonnen, who had likely won every second of their first fight until his glorious demise.

These are things that no one who saw them will ever forget, martial mastery on the grandest stage possible, against the very best opposition in the world. Belfort was the face of the company in Brazil. Rich Franklin was trotted out for every mainstream appearance, one of the UFC’s hand-picked ambassadors to evangelize for an entire sport. Griffin was a beloved everyman. Those wins mean more than beating up 100 Borgs on a pay-per-view undercard.

Sure, on paper, the two mens‘ title reigns are strikingly similar. Devoid of context, looking only at the numbers, Johnson’s competition was even slightly better. Silva mixed in four fights at light heavyweight and finished more of his opponents than Johnson did. Then again, Johnson has never looked as vulnerable as Silva did, never dropped his hands and his focus and been knocked cold by a hungry young foe.

As you can see, parsing the record is a tricky business. Luckily, none of it matters. The stats can say any number of things depending on how you read them.

Numbers lie. Perhaps memories do too—but they do so in a much more satisfying way.

Silva has transcended the discussion in many ways, his legend so great that questioning his status is like doubting Spiderman or Goku. He exists on a plane beyond mere athletics, a human cartoon who actually once walked the planet, a fighter capable of the impossible.

Johnson is a lot of things—a charming man, a devoted husband, a gamer and a delightful fighter. His streak of success is notable, his position at the top of the MMA pound-for-pound list well deserved. But he’s not Anderson Silva. And no phony history can change that.

            

Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.

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Kevin Lee on Weight Cut: ‘I’m Just Not a B*tch About it’

Kevin Lee has a tough weight cut ahead of him, but that doesn’t mean he’s complaining about it. This Saturday night (Oct. 7), Lee will take on Tony Ferguson inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada at UFC 216. The two will do battle for the interim Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight title. Speaking […]

Kevin Lee has a tough weight cut ahead of him, but that doesn’t mean he’s complaining about it. This Saturday night (Oct. 7), Lee will take on Tony Ferguson inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada at UFC 216. The two will do battle for the interim Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) lightweight title. Speaking […]

UFC 216 Embedded (Ep. 3): Fighters Attend Media Luncheon Day

The third episode of UFC 216 Embedded has rolled out. Episode three showcases the media luncheon day. Before that, Demetrious Johnson makes a stop at a radio station for an interview. His opponent Ray Borg is surprised with well wishes on a flight to Las Vegas. Tony Ferguson, Kevin Lee, Fabricio Werdum, and Derrick Lewis […]

The third episode of UFC 216 Embedded has rolled out. Episode three showcases the media luncheon day. Before that, Demetrious Johnson makes a stop at a radio station for an interview. His opponent Ray Borg is surprised with well wishes on a flight to Las Vegas. Tony Ferguson, Kevin Lee, Fabricio Werdum, and Derrick Lewis […]

Derrick Lewis Admits He’s Not Focused Ahead Of Fabricio Werdum Fight

After suffering a fourth-round TKO loss to Mark Hunt last June, Derrick Lewis will look to get back to his winning ways this weekend (Oct. 7, 2017) when he takes on former heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum on the main card of UFC 216. Although the fight is a pivotal one for “The Black Beast”, his […]

The post Derrick Lewis Admits He’s Not Focused Ahead Of Fabricio Werdum Fight appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

After suffering a fourth-round TKO loss to Mark Hunt last June, Derrick Lewis will look to get back to his winning ways this weekend (Oct. 7, 2017) when he takes on former heavyweight champion Fabricio Werdum on the main card of UFC 216.

Although the fight is a pivotal one for “The Black Beast”, his mind has been on other things leading up to the bout. A native of Houston, Lewis saw firsthand the damage done to the city by Hurricane Harvey, and he also offered his services to those who needed it most.

With that being said, Lewis recently admitted that he’s ‘not focused’ ahead of his fight with Werdum:

“Not at all,” Lewis told MMAFighting.com when asked if the disaster served as extra motivation for him. “It was really emotional. It was really taxing on your body and your mind. It’s kind of hard to think about fighting whenever there’s people that lost everything. I’m out here trying to fight somebody that didn’t even do anything to me for some money. There’s people out there that lost their job and all of that. It’s just kind of hard.

“In my head — I’m not gonna lie to you — I’m not focused.”

Despite the fact that he may not be completely focused, Lewis expects to perform well. Physically, he’s said that he’s in great shape, and once he eats a punch, he feels as if his ‘mind will eventually come around’:

“I’m not worrying about that at all,” he said. “I’m gonna go out there and still fight as hard as I can, as long as my body is feeling good. My mind eventually will come around if I get punched in the face. Then it’ll come around for sure. But right now, I’m not really worried about fighting.”

Do you expect Lewis to take out Werdum, or do these comments lead you to doubt “The Black Beast”?

The post Derrick Lewis Admits He’s Not Focused Ahead Of Fabricio Werdum Fight appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Tony Ferguson Reveals Why Conor McGregor Will “Have To” Fight Him

No. 2-ranked lightweight contender Tony Ferguson is riding an incredible nine-fight win streak, but he hasn’t competed since November 2016. This weekend, however, he’ll headline UFC 216 in Las Vegas, Nevada against rising contender Kevin Lee in an interim title bout. In the lead-up to the fight, Ferguson and Lee have often gone back-and-forth in […]

The post Tony Ferguson Reveals Why Conor McGregor Will “Have To” Fight Him appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

No. 2-ranked lightweight contender Tony Ferguson is riding an incredible nine-fight win streak, but he hasn’t competed since November 2016. This weekend, however, he’ll headline UFC 216 in Las Vegas, Nevada against rising contender Kevin Lee in an interim title bout.

In the lead-up to the fight, Ferguson and Lee have often gone back-and-forth in the media, and “El Cucuy” recently labeled Lee as ‘fake’:

“I’m not fake, and I see this guy as fake,” Ferguson told MMAjunkie at today’s UFC 216 media day. “He’s trying to be something that he’s not. I know where you come from. I lived in the suburbs (of Michigan), too. Trust me, I know. We have people around the block. I don’t have to be fake. I’m probably one of the most real guys.”

Although Conor McGregor’s future is uncertain, the winner of UFC 216’s main event could take on the “Notorious” one next in a title unification bout. Ferguson said that McGregor ‘never spoken’ his name, but that the Irishman is ‘going to have to fight’ him:

“I don’t like red panties. I like blue panties,” Ferguson said. “He’s got to defend or vacate. He’s going to have to fight me. There’s no insider information. He’s never spoken my name. I’m one of the most ruthless vatos out there. This guy, he doesn’t want a part of me. I’m not aiming at him. I don’t give two (expletives).

“I don’t want to fight someone who doesn’t want to fight me or compete against some of the best. When you’re saying, ‘I’ll fight anybody, anytime.’ You’re (expletive) full of (expletive). For me, I’ve been fighting anybody, any time, any weight – straight up.”

Coming off of a loss to Floyd Mayweather in their Aug. 26 boxing match, it would make sense for McGregor, the undisputed UFC lightweight champion, to take on an interim champion, but there have been rumors indicating that he could take on Nate Diaz in a trilogy match in his return to the Octagon.

Do you feel as if McGregor should take on the winner of Ferguson vs. Lee?

The post Tony Ferguson Reveals Why Conor McGregor Will “Have To” Fight Him appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Ray Borg Says Resilience Will be Difference Maker at UFC 216

Ray Borg believes he has the answer to Demetrious Johnson’s dominant reign at flyweight. This Saturday night (Oct. 7), Borg will look to play spoiler. Johnson is just one successful title defense away from breaking Anderson Silva’s record. The title bout will serve as UFC 216’s co-main event. Speaking to MMAJunkie.com, Borg explained how he […]

Ray Borg believes he has the answer to Demetrious Johnson’s dominant reign at flyweight. This Saturday night (Oct. 7), Borg will look to play spoiler. Johnson is just one successful title defense away from breaking Anderson Silva’s record. The title bout will serve as UFC 216’s co-main event. Speaking to MMAJunkie.com, Borg explained how he […]