The first round of Silva-Sonnen II looked eerily similar to the previous five rounds that the two men had spent in the Octagon: the champion on his back getting battered while looking for a submission, the challenger pushing the pace.
Then the second round happened, and it didn’t look anything like the previous six.
Sonnen couldn’t score a takedown, his striking looked sloppy and he got beat senseless. The fight was stopped and Anderson Silva cleared the final hurdle on his way to securing himself as the greatest mixed martial artist of all time.
Objectively, there were a lot of things that went right for Anderson Silva.
He was far more active on his back in the first round than he was in the first fight, ensuring that Sonnen had to work to pass guard and also clogging up a lot of the offense that was coming once he did.
On his feet, he looked as he always does—mobile, hard to hit and lethal on counters. He’d also clearly put in time on his takedown defense, as once he decided he wasn’t going to the ground anymore, it was hopeless for Sonnen to even try.
Which led to the big moment in the fight, the ultimate thing that went right for the champion: Chael Sonnen’s failed spinning elbow. Ill-conceived, ill-timed and ill-executed, a brief moment of frustration from the challenger left him spinning to the canvas in a heap, where Silva quickly pounced and finished the fight.
Sonnen is not a bad striker. In fact, for a man lauded for his wrestling, he’s learned how to box in a manner that perfectly suits his overall game. But he’s not a guy who can go out there and throw spinning elbows at the best ever and expect them to land.
Particularly not when they’re thrown from the wrong range and with the wrong footwork.
Once that missed, it was academic. You absolutely do not get the chance to make two mistakes against Anderson Silva.
So yes, the champion did look better at UFC 148. He’d lost the first round, but took little damage in doing so and looked to be feeling out the challenger in the way he’s become known to over the years. But make no mistake, the biggest thing that went right for Silva was an error in judgement by Sonnen, one that gave him the chance he needed to pounce and finish the fight.
Then again, that’s what the great ones do—they make you pay. Silva proved his greatness on Saturday night by making Sonnen pay the greatest price of all.