ironworks
09-25-2014, 10:50 PM
Few fighters in history will end up having as complex a legacy as Wanderlei Cesar da Silva, who announced his retirement on Friday in a videotaped interview that came across a bitter attack on the UFC and, four days later, may have shut the door on a return.
The Nevada Athletic Commission’s indefinite suspension of Silva, which was outright categorized that he would never be allowed to be licensed in the state again, looks to have been an administrative end to his career, at least in the UFC, and likely the United States.
The UFC has never defied -- and probably never will defy -- the NAC by using a suspended fighter outside the U.S. It's just now how Zuffa operates, especially since CEO Lorenzo Fertitta, along with major executives Marc Ratner and Kirk Hendrick, have backgrounds with the commission prior to their days with the UFC. Commissions in the U.S. and Canada respect suspensions from other commissions.
By releasing the video, Silva, who at first looked to be a sure-fire Hall of Famer, may have prevented himself from getting into the only major Hall of Fame the sport has. Well, at least until there's a reconciliation. But even then, the close of his career being a lifetime ban for running from a drug test is probably the worst ending possible to a career, and it raises obvious questions. And the funny thing is, a year earlier, he could have had a perfect ending.
For a guy who never once said it was time to step away for the usual reasons of age catching up with him, instead claiming he was leaving because he had no stage to get the proper respect, the decision to retire came across as rash and hasty. But after the commission hearing, his retirement was almost a moot point. Fighters constantly reconsider retirement announcements, but now any second thoughts can be removed from the equation.
The question becomes, what does he do now? Does the UFC release him and allow him to fight overseas with another organization? Because there are plenty of places, Japan in particular, with no commission regulation. Or, if he is released from his UFC contract, does he take rumored pro wrestling offers from Japan -- rumors that started circulating about a week before his retirement -- to reprise his legendary rivalry with Kazushi Sakuraba on the entertainment stage?
Silva has done little but talk about future fights, particularly with Chael Sonnen, for the past year. Even when Sonnen retired, and his own future as far as being licensed was called into question, Silva appeared in denial, and continued to promote the idea of the fight. Until Friday, he never spoke about retirement. On the flip-side, one could argue that even if this was the biggest black eye ending of a genuine legend in the history of MMA, perhaps the timing was for the best.
At 38, his best days are long behind him, even though he can still compete at a decent level. His ring style and training style -- basically competing in wars and preparing by training like it was a war -- were obviously no good for longevity. Yet, because of his name and the excitement level he brought, he spent seven years in the UFC when he was already past his peak.
Silva’s 18-year career spanned the gamut of brutal Vale Tudo fights in Brazil -- where no gloves were used, and things like head butts, stomps and soccer kicks were permissible -- to all-out wars behind closed doors at the Chute Boxe Academy in Curitiba. His career included some of the most memorable and important fights in MMA history.
He helped take the Pride Fighting Championships and MMA in Japan in general to new levels of popularity. For years Silva was half of the ultimate forbidden fruit bout of the time -- a dream match against the UFC's Chuck Liddell. The fight nearly happened a few times when both were the respective 205-pound champions of their organizations. And even though it took place after each had lost their title, when it finally did take place at UFC 79, it lived up to all expectations.
But the wars took their toll. Silva was only 31 when he debuted in the UFC against Liddell on Dec. 29, 2007. And even then, he was not the same fighter he had been a few years earlier. Still, he showed signs of the explosiveness and ferocity that made him one of the most popular fighters in history right up until his last fight.
His name was big enough that had his fight with Sonnen not been derailed by both fighter's issues with drug testing, it would have likely been the UFC’s biggest fight of 2014 that didn’t involve a championship belt.
After spending all year talking about wanting to fight Sonnen, in the retirement video Silva admitted for the first time that he really didn’t want to -- or at least didn’t want to until the end of the year. He blamed the UFC for pressuring him into taking the fight, at first in May, and when he turned down that date, next in July. He said his training didn’t go the way he wanted, and he wouldn’t have been at 100 percent. He even turned down the UFC’s offer to increase his purse to get him to fight on the July show. He claimed if they were willing to pay him more to fight in July, they should have offered more money to him from the start, saying they don’t pay the fighters enough.
"They told me I had to fight on that date and offered me a bunch of money," Silva said in his retirement video. "They would pay me extra to fight on that date. So I asked myself, if they had the money, why didn’t they offer it to me before? They always hold on to the money. So they always underpay the athletes. But they do have the money."
At his hearing, his lawyer Ross Goodman noted Silva had never signed a contract for the Sonnen fight, even though he appeared on a stage to promote the July 3 fight the day before he fled the drug test.
Silva started pushing for the Sonnen fight in 2013, with words at first, and later a taped confrontation. That set up a coaching stint on The Ultimate Fighter in Brazil opposite Sonnen, designed to promote their fight after the show had aired this past spring. He claimed he told UFC he wouldn’t be ready to fight until the end of 2014.
The Nevada Athletic Commission’s indefinite suspension of Silva, which was outright categorized that he would never be allowed to be licensed in the state again, looks to have been an administrative end to his career, at least in the UFC, and likely the United States.
The UFC has never defied -- and probably never will defy -- the NAC by using a suspended fighter outside the U.S. It's just now how Zuffa operates, especially since CEO Lorenzo Fertitta, along with major executives Marc Ratner and Kirk Hendrick, have backgrounds with the commission prior to their days with the UFC. Commissions in the U.S. and Canada respect suspensions from other commissions.
By releasing the video, Silva, who at first looked to be a sure-fire Hall of Famer, may have prevented himself from getting into the only major Hall of Fame the sport has. Well, at least until there's a reconciliation. But even then, the close of his career being a lifetime ban for running from a drug test is probably the worst ending possible to a career, and it raises obvious questions. And the funny thing is, a year earlier, he could have had a perfect ending.
For a guy who never once said it was time to step away for the usual reasons of age catching up with him, instead claiming he was leaving because he had no stage to get the proper respect, the decision to retire came across as rash and hasty. But after the commission hearing, his retirement was almost a moot point. Fighters constantly reconsider retirement announcements, but now any second thoughts can be removed from the equation.
The question becomes, what does he do now? Does the UFC release him and allow him to fight overseas with another organization? Because there are plenty of places, Japan in particular, with no commission regulation. Or, if he is released from his UFC contract, does he take rumored pro wrestling offers from Japan -- rumors that started circulating about a week before his retirement -- to reprise his legendary rivalry with Kazushi Sakuraba on the entertainment stage?
Silva has done little but talk about future fights, particularly with Chael Sonnen, for the past year. Even when Sonnen retired, and his own future as far as being licensed was called into question, Silva appeared in denial, and continued to promote the idea of the fight. Until Friday, he never spoke about retirement. On the flip-side, one could argue that even if this was the biggest black eye ending of a genuine legend in the history of MMA, perhaps the timing was for the best.
At 38, his best days are long behind him, even though he can still compete at a decent level. His ring style and training style -- basically competing in wars and preparing by training like it was a war -- were obviously no good for longevity. Yet, because of his name and the excitement level he brought, he spent seven years in the UFC when he was already past his peak.
Silva’s 18-year career spanned the gamut of brutal Vale Tudo fights in Brazil -- where no gloves were used, and things like head butts, stomps and soccer kicks were permissible -- to all-out wars behind closed doors at the Chute Boxe Academy in Curitiba. His career included some of the most memorable and important fights in MMA history.
He helped take the Pride Fighting Championships and MMA in Japan in general to new levels of popularity. For years Silva was half of the ultimate forbidden fruit bout of the time -- a dream match against the UFC's Chuck Liddell. The fight nearly happened a few times when both were the respective 205-pound champions of their organizations. And even though it took place after each had lost their title, when it finally did take place at UFC 79, it lived up to all expectations.
But the wars took their toll. Silva was only 31 when he debuted in the UFC against Liddell on Dec. 29, 2007. And even then, he was not the same fighter he had been a few years earlier. Still, he showed signs of the explosiveness and ferocity that made him one of the most popular fighters in history right up until his last fight.
His name was big enough that had his fight with Sonnen not been derailed by both fighter's issues with drug testing, it would have likely been the UFC’s biggest fight of 2014 that didn’t involve a championship belt.
After spending all year talking about wanting to fight Sonnen, in the retirement video Silva admitted for the first time that he really didn’t want to -- or at least didn’t want to until the end of the year. He blamed the UFC for pressuring him into taking the fight, at first in May, and when he turned down that date, next in July. He said his training didn’t go the way he wanted, and he wouldn’t have been at 100 percent. He even turned down the UFC’s offer to increase his purse to get him to fight on the July show. He claimed if they were willing to pay him more to fight in July, they should have offered more money to him from the start, saying they don’t pay the fighters enough.
"They told me I had to fight on that date and offered me a bunch of money," Silva said in his retirement video. "They would pay me extra to fight on that date. So I asked myself, if they had the money, why didn’t they offer it to me before? They always hold on to the money. So they always underpay the athletes. But they do have the money."
At his hearing, his lawyer Ross Goodman noted Silva had never signed a contract for the Sonnen fight, even though he appeared on a stage to promote the July 3 fight the day before he fled the drug test.
Silva started pushing for the Sonnen fight in 2013, with words at first, and later a taped confrontation. That set up a coaching stint on The Ultimate Fighter in Brazil opposite Sonnen, designed to promote their fight after the show had aired this past spring. He claimed he told UFC he wouldn’t be ready to fight until the end of 2014.