The curious case of Anderson Silva

By Reece Huxley / Roar Rookie

Anderson ‘The Spider’ Silva is arguably the greatest fighter in the history of MMA.

He has defended the middleweight championship ten times, holds many UFC records and has been in some of the most high profile fights of all time.

Few have fought the level of competition The Spider has, while producing some of the most remarkable finishes ever seen across two separate weight divisions.

At UFC 162 back in July 2013, heading into his title defence with Chris Weidman, Anderson Silva was riding a 16 fight win streak and looking to stay undefeated in the UFC. Silva fought well during the early goings, though constantly showboated with his hands by his side. Weidman wound up catching Silva with a left hook, a few punches on the ground, and left the new middleweight champion. It marked one of the sport’s most shocking moments and began a series of events that changed his career.

First it was the rematch with Chris Weidman at UFC 168, where Silva horrifically broke his leg started a full-year process of rehabilitation.

After only a year away, Silva returned at UFC 183 against Nick Diaz and won a unanimous decision in a lacklustre affair. The performance was more impressive considering the gruesome nature of his broken leg only a year prior, and Silva’s career looked back on track.

That momentum came to a screeching halt when he failed a drug test, had the win overturned to a no-contest and was given a one year suspension.

Silva served his time and returned to face top contender Michael Bisping. The former champ fought well in stages though had clearly lost a step, and was on the wrong side of a unanimous decision. Then most recently following Jon Jones’ failed drug test and removal from UFC 200, he saved the day by jumping up a weight class to fight light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier. Despite not being in fighting shape Silva gave a good account of himself but was soundly beaten by Cormier.

With the 41-year-old competing in a division of monsters like Chris Weidman, Luke Rockhold, Jacare Souza, Yoel Romero and Michael Bisping, and not having an official win since October of 2012, the chips are stacked against him regaining the title. Silva’s record in his last five fights now sits at four losses and one no contest.

The interesting thing for him is that these last five fights do all have somewhat of an asterisk next to them, and a case can be made by his admirers to possibly explain his current sixth place ranking in the 185 pound division.

Both of the Chris Weidman fights ended in strange fashion with a shock knockout due to show boating and a broken leg in the rematch. Silva did also defeat Nick Diaz very convincingly before having the win overturned with the doping suspension.

In addition to that, many believe he beat now champion Michael Bisping earlier this year until Bisping was awarded a home decision. Then there’s Silva being the company man that he is, and stepping up to fight Daniel Cormier on just days notice, in a fight nobody seriously thought he would win.

The argument is there that Anderson Silva is still one of the best fighters in the world, and he is, but he has never looked the same after being knocked out by Chris Weidman.

Silva has plenty of fights left on his current deal with the UFC, and with his marketable name and impressive wins under his belt, could we see The Spider produce a Robbie Lawler like redemption story back to the title?

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2016-07-28T03:29:55+00:00

Reece Huxley

Roar Rookie


It felt like Silva could of won at any time if he stopped messing around. Was very frustrating to watch

2016-07-27T22:04:29+00:00

Jerry

Guest


The Bisping decision was correct, IMO. That said, if that knee lands 10 seconds earlier and he has a chance to follow up he'd have got the stoppage. But as it stood, that just gave him the round and Bisping did enough in the other rounds to get the nod. Silva needed to cut out the clowning cause he wasn't landing enough to win on points.

AUTHOR

2016-07-25T06:50:33+00:00

Reece Huxley

Roar Rookie


There's that aspect too. Jon Jones return will be interesting to see if he dominates like he did when he returns from suspension. USADA has definitely changed the UFC

2016-07-25T06:47:16+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


You say this like he got caught using PEDs in the prime of his career -- in reality he got caught using them after his leg break and nothing prior to that, not that it really matters as most of the fighters he fought during his title reign were definitely using PEDs so at worst it was an even contest. Time has definitely slowed him too, it was relatively visible even in the first Weidman fight that Silva was slower than previously.

2016-07-25T05:05:51+00:00

damo

Guest


Or could he be a guy who cheated throughout his career, got caught & from there, being less able to cheat as easily, was unable to compete at the same level ? No doubt Silva has an elite level of skill, but margins are fine in those heady ranks at the top & he looks to be a fighter that age & more stringent expectations have caught up, rendering his previous false success the outlier.

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