Chael Sonnen file photo: Dave Mandel | Sherdog.com
If Sonnen had kept his composure for just two more minutes Saturday, he would’ve been able to forget about the qualifiers and show off a belt. Instead, he fell victim to his regular vice: blissful misunderstanding of submission defense. He became so preoccupied delivering the last of CompuStrike’s 289 counted total blows to Silva’s head that he didn’t notice Silva’s long legs wrapping a noose around his neck. Two seconds of distraction amounts to fifty years of regret.
Sonnen will get plenty of notices for his performance, and he should; Silva will get plenty of flak for his, and it’s a shame. Sonnen had the ability and attitude to completely shut down Anderson, forcing him to find a way other than strikes to end the fight in his favor. Anderson took that and ran with it. It was more impressive than if Silva had blown him out in the opening minutes because Sonnen was able to display exactly how formidable a threat he was. It’s a win with context.
Sonnen lost as respectably as you can. But it’s still a loss. He had an advantage for 23 minutes and couldn’t finish the fight. When Silva had the advantage for ten seconds, he could. Who’s the better fighter?
Next for Silva: Vitor Belfort, a radically different style match-up that promises to put more of Silva’s beautiful striking on display.
Next for Sonnen: A fight with Wanderlei Silva to line up a post-Belfort opponent.
Next for Roy Nelson: He showed a chin but not much else against Junior dos Santos; slipping into gatekeeper status.
Next for Jon Fitch: Flipping a coin with Josh Koscheck to see who trains outside of AKA for their inevitable fight.
Next for Matt Hughes: A three-match with Dennis Hallman, who beat Ben Saunders on Saturday’s undercard. (Hallman beat Hughes by submission -- twice -- early in their careers.)
New Questions: UFC 117
Has Silva’s stock gone up -- or down?
Silva has a remarkable UFC achievement: 12 consecutive victories with nine finishes, including demolitions of highly durable fighters Dan Henderson, Nate Marquardt, and a 205-pound Forrest Griffin. But in the what-have-you-done-lately climate of MMA, his struggle against Sonnen Saturday puts him back in the mere-mortal category: Sonnen put him through the tumble-dry cycle for nearly five rounds before getting submitted.
A win is a win, and Silva snagged it. But his problems with a wrestler undistracted by striking or unprepared with triangle defense could become an issue if he ever faces Georges St. Pierre or Jake Shields.
What about Sonnen’s?
We didn’t learn a lot we didn’t already know about Sonnen: his wrestling is superior, but his submission defense is a low wall to jump. There’s value in dominating the consensus best fighter for 23 minutes, but not a whole lot in becoming a statistic in Silva’s record victory stretch.
Sonnen promised to beat Silva up, and he did more or less exactly that, delivering more damage than Silva may have ever absorbed before. For a fighter used to escaping from fights largely unmarked, that might be worth bragging about. How much mileage that gets him as time goes on is another story entirely.
Does Alves need to head to 185 pounds?
Thiago Alves, who missed weight by a half-pound on Friday, is perhaps the most densely-built welterweight in the division. While he clearly believes being so muscular is an advantage, it doesn’t seem to be doing him many favors: he was fined 20 percent of his purse and looked flat against Fitch, the likely result of a tortured and depleted body. Dana White recommended Alves move to 185 pounds, but the solution probably isn’t to keep eating: it’s to drop some of the muscle in order to make the weight cut more humane. Bowling-ball shoulders are impressive, but this isn’t Mr. Olympia.
Does dos Santos deserve a title opportunity?
Not soon enough. Dos Santos, 25, has reeled off a perfect 6-0 UFC record and failed to finish only Nelson. While that would appear to give him a confidence boost against either Brock Lesnar or Cain Velasquez, dos Santos has never faced a wrestler as aggressive or capable as either of them. He’s earned it, but it may not take long in the cage before he realizes he doesn’t want it.
Etc.
Dana White was noncommittal during the post-fight press conference on whether Sonnen would be given an immediate rematch with Silva: Belfort is in a position to challenge for the title, and it may be best to make that fight while Belfort is still on the map…Both Silva and Hughes got an additional $60,000 for Submission of the Night since both were equally compelling: Silva pulled a win out late, while Hughes submitted a master jiu-jitsu artist in Ricardo Almeida. (Though, to be fair, Hughes needed to scramble his brains with strikes first.) Stefan Struve got Knockout of the Night…Hughes told journalists he plans on taking off the fall to hunt and return sometime in 2011…Dana White told MMAJunkie.com he might not necessarily grant Jon Fitch a title shot following his win over a swollen Alves. Fitch deserves it, but the real issue is St. Pierre getting stuck with rematches over fighters he’s already bowled over. Time to start eating, Georges.