UFC 148 Silva-Sonnen II: The Aftermath

By E. Spencer Kyte / Roar Guru

Make no mistake about it: Anderson Silva is the greatest fighter in MMA history. When you can amass a 15-fight winning streak that includes 10 consecutive title defenses, it doesn’t matter that there have been stretches in your UFC career where you’ve fought some unspectacular competition.

And yes, I know I argued otherwise last week. My good friend Sam Brown executed a great rope-a-dope strategy, drawing me into a debate, and then hitting me with the “Argue against Silva as The GOAT” side of things. Well played, Sir Samuel. Well played.

Here’s what cemented it for me last night: after spending 99% of the opening round on his back with Sonnen looking to advance positions, find a submission, and offering tepid offense, Silva calmly walked back to the corner, listened to their instructions, and capitalised on the first opening that was presented to him in the fight to earn the finish.

Those are the types of things that separates the very good from the great, and when Silva pounced the instant Sonnen slipped to the ground, I knew it was the beginning of the end.

This shouldn’t be too much of a “hang your head” moment for Chael Sonnen and he shouldn’t be getting a ton of grief from fight fans and critics either.

He did a tremendous job selling both halves of his feud with Silva, pushed him harder than anyone had in the past the first time around, and drew the best out of “The Spider” in the rematch as well.

Like everyone before him in the UFC – and the two guys between the first fight and this one – Sonnen came up short against the best fighter to ever grace the cage. No shame in that, at least not as far as I’m concerned.

Tito Ortiz deserved a much better ending to his illustrious career than the one he was afforded on Saturday night by Forrest Griffin.

After going shot-for-shot for the third time together, Griffin fled the cage. Once he came back and was announced as the winner, he took over the post-fight interviewing duties from Joe Rogan.

In the end, instead of having a memorable send-off where one of the pioneers of the UFC was allowed to bask in the applause of the audience one last time, we got a horribly awkward moment that no amount of apologies can make up from the next day.

– Wasn’t overly impressed with Cung Le, but have to give the 40-year-old props for collecting the win at UFC 148. He did a solid job of fighting a more tactical contest against Patrick Cote, throwing fewer spinning, energy-expending strikes early, allowing him to have the gas to sweep the scorecards in the end.

I’m hesitant to see what comes next for Le, and expect to see him on the upcoming UFC event in Macau, though I don’t want to see him pushed too far up the ladder because of this win.

Demian Maia at welterweight could be very interesting. I know the fight only lasted 40 seconds and it ended with a fluke injury, but I can’t remember anyone taking Dong Hyun Kim’s back and getting him to the ground like that in his UFC career. It’s no easy task, and Maia did it in a matter of seconds, landing in perfect position to transition into mount. Colour me intrigued.

– Everyone outside of Cody McKenzie’s inner circle knew his match-up with Chad Mendes was a huge mismatch, and the former featherweight title contender proved why Saturday. Mendes folded McKenzie over with a thunderous body shot right out of the gate, earning the stoppage in just 31 seconds.

It was the kind of performance Mendes needed here, and should remind everyone that forgot over the last six months that the Team Alpha Male standout is a force to be reckoned with in the 145-pound ranks.

– People are ripping the Mike Easton-Ivan Menjivar fight like it was the worst fight in UFC history. It wasn’t anything special, but you’d think that these two decide just stand on opposite sides of the cage from each other for the entire 15 minutes the way some people are talking.

Menjivar was trying to counter, Easton was trying to close the distance, and it just turned into an awkward, underwhelming contest. That shouldn’t mean these two get banished from the main card for eternity or branded as boring. It was one not-so-stellar fight. Ease up.

>Preliminary Card Quick Hitters

– Watching Melvin Guillard tempt fate by hanging out in out in the guard of Fabricio Camoes late in the first round had me yelling at the television. He made it out okay, and earned a much needed win, but Guillard still has little mental lapses that make you wonder if he’s every going to put it all together and make a real run at the lightweight title.

– Really not sure about the decision in the Khabib Nurmagomedov-Gleison Tibau fight. I had Tibau 30-27 on my at-home scorecard as he was the more effective striker of the two, scored a couple brief takedowns, and shut down much of the offense offered by the young Russian prospect.

Unfortunately, the judges scored in favour of the guy who kept coming forward winging wild punches, regardless of the fact that very few of them connected. Allow me to be the 1,367,948 person to say this: We need better judges.

Costa Philippou shouldn’t have been allowed to continue after Riki Fukuda inadvertently poked him in the eye late in the third round. When you can’t see, you can’t fight, period.

The doctor shouldn’t be asking, “Can you see? Do you want to continue?” as every fighter in the history of fighting will say, “Yes” to both questions even though the first answer is likely a lie. Stand three feet in front of him, tell him to cover his “good eye,” and see if he can tell you how many fingers you’re holding up when you’re standing roughly where his opponent will likely be trying to attack him from. If he can, great, let’s keep going. If not, we’re done here.

– Getting really tired of listening to guys with bad takedown defense or defensive wrestling skills bitch about getting dominated by wrestlers. John Alessio, a guy I know and like a great deal, was chirping at Shane Roller in the closing minute of their fight while wearing Roller like a backpack, asking the former All-American wrestler if he wanted to fight him or lay on him. It’s tiring. This isn’t boxing or kickboxing.

Stop complaining, stop getting taken down, and learn how to get yourself back to where you want to be if you don’t want to have a wrestling riding you for 15 minutes.

Follow The Roar’s UFC Expert E. Spencer Kyte on Twitter (@spencerkyte).

The Crowd Says:

2012-07-09T19:10:34+00:00

Jerry

Guest


Well, he only wore the t-shirts after wins, so he's not really had much of a chance in the last few years. He wore on the 3rd time he beat Shamrock, so it's only the Bader fight that he actually refrained from doing it. Though he still did the grave digger celebration. Yeah, he's been a very important part of UFC history hence his UFC hall of fame inclusion (though until they put Frank Shamrock in there, that will be a bit of a joke). But he's made a career out of acting like a prize jerk towards his opponents pre and post fight (I can excuse pre-fight antics as hype, but not post fight) so it's almost appropriate that he gets punked in his final post fight interview.

AUTHOR

2012-07-09T17:00:55+00:00

E. Spencer Kyte

Roar Guru


Yes, how I miss Fedor Emelianenko fighting Hong Man Choi or Zuluzinho, and watching professional wrestlers get wrecked by actual MMA fighters. There were certainly some great fights and great moments during Pride's run at the top, but let's not pretend like all the fights were spectacular — there were A LOT of freak show match-ups, strange bookings, and questionable results.

AUTHOR

2012-07-09T16:57:27+00:00

E. Spencer Kyte

Roar Guru


When's the last time he wore one of those t-shirts? The guy carried the company for a number of years when no one was watching, is one of the biggest stars ever to emerge from the UFC, and you want to deny him a nice send-off because he wore some dick-ish t-shirts a nearly a decade ago? Dang!

2012-07-09T06:43:15+00:00

turbodewd

Guest


Very subjective. Doesnt matter either way. UFC is hot at the moment. Gaining in popularity quite nicely.

2012-07-09T06:36:49+00:00

GrecoRoman

Roar Guru


...and the quality of the fights in the UFC are such that nostalgia for the good old days of Pride can't be suppressed.

AUTHOR

2012-07-09T06:10:43+00:00

E. Spencer Kyte

Roar Guru


Pride died a long time ago.

2012-07-09T05:51:52+00:00

GrecoRoman

Roar Guru


The UFC 148 fights, even Silva vs Sonnen II, shows why Pride > UFC.

2012-07-09T03:14:06+00:00

turbodewd

Guest


Sonnen unnecessarily went into frantic/panic mode when he wasnt able to take Silva down in the 2nd round. He just needed to focus and be patient. He still may not have won but would have at least made it a more respectable effort. Silva was all class after the bout, Sonnen was not the best loser. He gave the bare minimum credit to Silva. Now for Munoz v Sonnen or Silva!

2012-07-09T01:57:30+00:00

Jerry

Guest


Hey, I wouldn't have done what Forrest did but I'm not gonna waste any time worrying about whether a guy who pretends to bury his beaten opponents and wears T-shirts that say things like "I Just F*cked Your Ass", "Gay Mezger Is My Bitch" or "Punishing Him Into Retirement" gets a nice send off.

2012-07-09T01:29:31+00:00

Bill Larkin

Guest


It's illegal to knee an opponent in the head when on the floor (or even with a hand on the floor), but Silva clearly didn't do this, so all above board.

2012-07-09T01:24:06+00:00

stam

Roar Rookie


Did silva knee sonnen on the ground? Is this a legal move?

AUTHOR

2012-07-09T00:29:31+00:00

E. Spencer Kyte

Roar Guru


You son could very well be right, Bill. Anderson looked far more poised this time around with Sonnen in top position, and didn't take much - if any - damage during the round. It certainly has to be hard to get to your best position and not be able to do much of anything, just like dominating 23 minutes last time out and still coming away with the loss. Tito - and Forrest - showed again that they've lost a step, and that's fine; Father Time beats everyone eventually. Ultimately, this show was built around Silva and Sonnen, and Silva put on a tremendous performance... AGAIN. Thanks for the comment.

2012-07-09T00:28:48+00:00

marku hunto

Guest


Hector Lombard vs Silva bring that title to Aus

AUTHOR

2012-07-09T00:26:01+00:00

E. Spencer Kyte

Roar Guru


Regardless of Tito's past, you let the man have his moment, period.

2012-07-08T23:31:20+00:00

JazzyJase

Roar Pro


Silva is a beast, i really thought Sonnen may have done it. Congratulations to Forrest, a win for the good guy Cody McKenzie can go back to the drawing board and add something other than a guillotine ot his repotoire

2012-07-08T23:23:57+00:00

Bill Larkin

Guest


My son, who I watched the PPV with, was convinced that Silva stayed on his back the whole first round deliberately to show Sonnen that he couldn't hurt him. When the second round started he said "Sonnen's scared" and it looked like he was, which might explain the seemingly desperate, turning strike he tried when he fell. It's a good thing that Ortiz is retiring. As good as he was, against good opposition you just can't get away with standing still, getting hit in the head a million times and trying to land hay makers. And I agree with you about the Khabib Nurmagomedov-Gleison Tibau fight. A lousey decision. I was underwhelmed with the undercard, but Silva's performance made up for it. A true legend.

2012-07-08T22:22:30+00:00

Jerry

Guest


Tito has shown so little class with post fight antics, and just in general, that it's hard to feel sorry for him. Also, Forrest is a much better post fight interviewer than Tito was.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEMpMdhUnno

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