UFC 97 REDEMPTION Anderson Silva Vs. Thales Leites ?

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.

Who will win UFC 97 Anderson Silva Vs. Thales Leites

  • Anderson Silva Via KO

    Votes: 9 39.1%
  • Anderson Silva Via TKO

    Votes: 9 39.1%
  • Anderson Silva Via Submission

    Votes: 2 8.7%
  • Anderson Silva Via Decision

    Votes: 1 4.3%
  • Thales Leites Via KO

    Votes: 1 4.3%
  • Thales Leites Via TKO

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Thales Leites Via Submission

    Votes: 1 4.3%
  • Thales Leites Via Decision

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    23
  • Poll closed .
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
0
40
#1
UFC 97 REDEMPTION
Apr-18-2009 7pm PT/10pm ET
PPV Live
Centre Bell, Canada
5 round Middleweight Title match
Anderson Silva Vs. Thales Leites

Anderson "The Spider" Silva
6'2"
185
23-4-0
Association: Team Nogueira
Strengths: Phenomenal Striker Very Well Rounded
Last 3 wins: Patrick Cote, James Irvin, Dan Henderson
Last 3 Losses: Yushin Okami, Ryo Chonan, Daiju Takase

Thales Leites
6'1"
185
14-1-0
Association: Nova Uniao
Strengths: World class ground game
Last 3 wins: Drew McFedries, Nate Marquardt, Ryan Jensen
Only Loss: Martin Kampmann
 
Mar 18, 2003
5,362
194
0
43
#3
I picked Silva by KO but I think it's going to be TKO.

I'm going to watch this mainly for the Liddell-Shogun fight. Otherwise I wouldn't bother with this one.

Can someone answer me a question. It is quite obvious to me that mathing St-Pierre and Anderson Silva would be one of the most exciting fights. Maybe at a catchweight of 175-180. Is there a reason that this is not even being considered? The only reason I can think of is that it may destroy the legitimacy of a division. Since they are pretty far ahead in their respective classes. As of right now, if I could match any two fighters.. I think it would be the two of them.
 
Feb 12, 2004
7,488
886
0
38
#4
Probably because it would be extremely hard to get Anderson Silva down under 185. From what I hear he cuts down from 220+. GSP would have to come up the same way BJ did. Dana has talked about this fight a lot tho and I wouldn't be surprised to see it happen sometime at the end of the year or beginning of next year.
 

B-Buzz

lenbiasyayo
Oct 21, 2002
9,673
4,429
0
39
bhibago
last.fm
#6
If they both win their next fights I could see it happening, GSP's cleared out the WW's and Maia's the only guy left to fight Anderson.

And it could end up being a really good card, depends on what they end up showing. I want to see Hardonk vs. Kongo, Banha Cane vs. Cantwell and Stann vs. Krzysztof
 
May 17, 2004
2,574
2
0
40
#7
If they both win their next fights I could see it happening, GSP's cleared out the WW's and Maia's the only guy left to fight Anderson.

And it could end up being a really good card, depends on what they end up showing. I want to see Hardonk vs. Kongo, Banha Cane vs. Cantwell and Stann vs. Krzysztof
gsp hasnt cleared out the welterweight divison. as champ hes beaten only jon fitch and bj penn. theres still plenty of fighters out there including carlos condit.
 

B-Buzz

lenbiasyayo
Oct 21, 2002
9,673
4,429
0
39
bhibago
last.fm
#8
Ya that's true, I just can't think of anyone right now who could challenge. Kos and Karo recently fucked themselves, it's too soon for Fitch to get a rematch, GSP already killed Hughes and Serra, Hazelett and Rumble aren't ready yet, Marcus Davis would get killed. All I can think of is Swick so maybe the winner of him vs. Saunders will get a shot, but GSP would kill both of them too. Plus I think Kampmann's gonna take Condit's head off.
 
Feb 12, 2004
7,488
886
0
38
#13
Anderson Silva said:
After my contract with the UFC ends and end my career in MMA, I intend to have a boxing match with Roy Jones. That’s something that’s already been arranged, it’s all practically a done deal. Now I just have to wait and see.
Anderson is so busy thinking about the boxing fight with RJJ that I feel his head isn't in MMA anymore. Stupid if you ask me! Who gives a shit how you do in boxing???


http://www.graciemag.com/news/144/ARTICLE/13696/2009-03-24.html
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
0
40
#14
Silva Primes for Leites, Talks GSP & Fedor

Middleweight champion Anderson Silva will defend his crown for the fifth time when he collides with countryman Thales Leites in the featured bout at UFC 97 “Redemption” on April 18 at the Bell Centre in Montreal.

Silva (23-4) realizes Leites presents many dangers, and he has enlisted the assistance of Brazilian jiu-jitsu superstars Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza and Andre Galvao, among others, as he prepares for his latest test inside the Octagon.

Based out of the Nova Uniao camp, the 27-year-old Leites (14-1) has never been finished in 15 career fights and has enjoyed a relatively stealth rise up the middleweight ladder.

“Thales is a new kid who’s just starting out, but he’s already proven that he deserves this opportunity,” Silva told Sherdog.com in an exclusive video interview. “He’s a dangerous opponent, just like all the others I’ve faced. He has this opportunity to fight for the title because he impressed the promoters enough to get this chance. The only thing I can say for sure is that, no matter who wins, the belt will stay in Brazil.”

Currently tied with hall of famer Royce Gracie and welterweight contender Jon Fitch for the most consecutive UFC victories (eight), Silva last appeared in October when he retained his belt with a bittersweet technical knockout against Patrick Cote. The match ended prematurely when Cote went down with a non-contact knee injury in the third round and could not continue.

Recently, talk has swirled regarding Silva’s plans to retire once he fulfills his current contract with the UFC. He remains elusive on the topic.

“I’m still focused on MMA, until my contract ends,” Silva said. “I have four more fights after Thales.”
http://www.sherdog.com/news/news/silva-primes-for-leites-talks-gsp-amp-fedor-16688
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
0
40
#15
Jacaré comments on Anderson’s trainings

Anderson Silva will face, for the first time, a Brazilian fighter in the UFC octagon. For the fight against Thales Leites, in UFC 97, the champion called what’s best in terms of ground fight: the Jiu-Jitsu world champions Ronaldo “Jacaré” Souza and André Galvão. And for Jacaré, who'll be back at Dream 9, Anderson is with the ground game ready for the bout.

"Anderson is training well and is strong in all MMA fundaments. Anderson is a phenomenon standing, but if anyone thinks that will take Anderson down and submit, is completely wrong. He’s a talent on the ground, has black belt level", says Jacaré, betting on his friend’s Jiu-Jitsu. "Anderson is intelligent and good on MMA, he can surprise any opponent. But, for this fight, I think he will make a game that he is better".
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
0
40
#16
After odd win over Cote, Anderson Silva has something to prove at UFC 97

An hour or so after Anderson Silva (23-4 MMA, 8-0 UFC) had reeled off his ninth-consecutive mixed martial arts victory at UFC 90 in Rosemont, Ill., UFC president Dana White was surrounded by reporters demanding an explanation about what had just happened in the middleweight title match.

Silva had won his record-tying eighth UFC bout in a row and had just made his fourth successful title defense by stopping Patrick Cote in the third round at the Rosemont Horizon.

The grilling that White was enduring, however, wasn't because Cote had injured his knee and would later require surgery.

It was more because Silva, the man who had been so devastating in his previous UFC fights, suddenly seemed passive and tentative and even, at times, playful.

White was as perplexed at Silva's lack of aggression as the fans, who lustily booed the ending.

"I think I'm living in an alternate universe," White said that night. "That was bizarro world."

Ever the promoter, White then grinned devilishly. He was thinking ahead, to the next time Silva was in the cage.

"I'll tell you this: I wouldn't want to be the next dude to fight him, because he's not happy," White said.

That honor falls to Brazilian jiu-jitsu specialist Thales Leites (14-1 MMA, 5-1 UFC), whose most notable victory to this point was a hotly disputed decision over Nate Marquardt at UFC 85. Leites is among the handful of finest jiu-jitsu fighters, but he's light years from Silva's league in the standup gams. The two will meet for Silva's middleweight belt on Saturday night in the main event of UFC 97 in front of more than 22,000 fans at the sold-out Bell Centre in Montreal.

Silva is taking Leites' ground game very seriously, so much so that he brought in renowned ground specialist Ronaldo "Jacare" Souza to train with him.

"The Spider" isn't a braggart and isn't the sort to make outlandish predictions. But it's obvious that he's aware of the criticism he received following the Cote fight and that he intends to make a statement and, in essence, set the world straight.

"I wasn't very happy with the way that the fight ended," said Silva, who said he felt a kick he delivered in the second round is what wound up injuring Cote. "I felt that my performance was good in the fight. I felt that I showed – I executed everything that we did in training. But unfortunately, when he got that kick in the second round and in the third round his knee popped, the fight didn't necessarily end the way the world and myself would have expected.

"I was definitely aiming to finish him in another way. But that's just the way the fight goes sometimes."

Silva had insisted that his cautious, tentative style in the Cote fight was nothing out of the ordinary. There have been some experts who have agreed with him and who have said he was fighting the way he normally fights. An opening for him to strike never really materialized, and so Silva laid back patiently waiting for it to materialize, the thinking goes.

The problem with that is that Silva has set such a high standard in his wins over foes such as Rich Franklin, Chris Leben and James Irvin, that anything less seems substandard. Boxing fans wouldn't have been content with Mike Tyson as a counter puncher and defensive wizard and MMA fans aren't going to be satisfied with an overly cautious Silva.

Though Silva owns a black belt in jiu-jitsu, don't think for a minute that he has much interest in fighting on the ground with someone of Leites' caliber. The minute the fight becomes a grappling match, the bout swings in Leites' favor.

Silva, whom White insists is the world's pound-for-pound best fighter, said he wants to be remembered in all-time terms. To do that, he's going to have to get back to his old devastating self. He became No. 1 in the Yahoo! Sports poll of the world's best fighters in January 2008 and held the top spot alone for 13 months. He's been tied with Fedor Emelianenko over the last three months.

"Contrary to what people think, I was very, very motivated for that Patrick Cote fight," Silva said. "You know, my motivation is to be one of the best mixed martial arts fighters of all-time. And as far as Thales, I'm very motivated for this fight because everyone is always mentioning that I'm the best pound-for-pound here or there or one of the best fighters in the world. Having that type of label on me makes me very motivated."

A motivated Silva is usually a very dangerous Silva. Try as he might to downplay, he was clearly stung by the criticism he received after his win over Cote. And, as White said, someone is going to pay.

His challenge is to keep the fight standing and not overextend himself, where Leites can take him down and put the fight where he feels most comfortable.

The very reason that so many speak of Silva as the best fighter in the world is because he is able to impose his will and essentially script the fights.

Somehow, I get the impression that the script for this one is going to seem like a horror show to Leites.
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
0
40
#17
LATER IS LATER, LEITES FOCUSED ONLY ON THE FIGHT

Title fights are viewed as the pinnacle of the sport, and the peak of the career for many athletes fighting in MMA today. But this Saturday night when Thales Leites steps into the Octagon, he will not only be fighting for the UFC middleweight championship; he will be competing against the man many argue is the best fighter on the planet today in Anderson Silva.

Leites understands the pressures of going into a match against a fighter the caliber of Silva, but he truly believes this is the chance of a lifetime that he's been waiting for.

"The fight of my life. It's everything I was waiting for, for a long time," Leites told MMAWeekly.com in an exclusive interview. "Since my beginning when I started training MMA, I was thinking about this day."

The prospect of fighting Anderson Silva can be intimidating when you look at the long list of great competitors he's left in the wake of his destruction, but while Leites respects Silva, he does not fear him.

"I don't know how the other fighters feel. I just know that Anderson, he is one of the best pound for pound fighters in the world, and I have a lot of respect for him. But I trust me, and my team trusts me. I want to fight the best fighters, and I will be out there to do my best," Leites said.

"He can beat me, and I can beat him, but I will be there 100-percent and be ready for everything."

Picking the right strategy going into a title fight can be crucial for success, and it's no secret that the champion is one of the most dangerous fighters ever when it comes to striking. His fellow Brazilian understands what Silva brings to the fight, but he's confident that the work he's doing will pay off.

"For this fight I'm doing special training for the stand-up and takedowns, you know to be ready for everything," commented Leites. "Anderson is one of the most complete fighters. He's an excellent stand-up fighter, he knows takedowns, and he knows the ground game too. That's why I have to be ready for everything."

Understanding that his biggest advantage could be on the ground because of his extensive Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu background, Leites is quick to point out that anything can, and sometimes does happen.

"I've been training all my life for jiu-jitsu, I think there's my big chance on the ground, but anything can happen," he stated. "When (Gabriel) Gonzaga fought against (Mirko) Cro Cop, nobody expected he could knock him out. I'm not talking like it could happen with me that way, but nobody knows. I will be ready to fight stand-up, I will be there to fight in any situation."

To prepare for this fight, Leites worked with his home camp in Brazil, but also made a special trip to the United States to work with the team at Arizona Combat Sports to help him get ready for this monumental fight.

"It's excellent training here," Leites said about Arizona Combat Sports. "It's my fourth time here. I like training with the guys, very good sparring; they have excellent Thai guys. They have excellent wrestling guys like (Ryan) Bader and C.B. (Dollaway) and there is a teacher here, (Aaron) Simpson, he helps me a lot, showing me some good positions to do takedowns. It makes me grow my wrestling. I'm feeling great."

With the training all but over, and fight time just days away, what would Leites say when asked what it would mean to be the UFC middleweight champion?

"I don't want to think about it now. I prefer just to think about before the fight, and the fight time. Later is later for me. I just want to focus 100-percent to my fight," he said. "The most important fight of my life and I don't want to think about later, how this can change my life. My focus is just to the fight."
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
0
40
#19
Thales Leites seeking to justify opportunity of lifetime at UFC 97

The late Admiral James Stockdale once said during a 1992 vice presidential debate with Al Gore and Dan Quayle: "Who am I? Why am I here?"

It's kind of the same question Thales Leites (14-1 MMA, 5-1 UFC) has been answering lately as well. The UFC is the top mixed martial arts promoter in the world, but Leites has an even more anonymous profile than H. Ross Perot's first running mate.

Leites is answering that question a lot these days, though not because he's an unaccomplished fighter. He's won five in a row in UFC competition, a pretty significant achievement given that the promotional record is eight.

The problem for Leites is that his opponent at UFC 97 on Saturday at the Bell Centre in Montreal is Anderson Silva (23-4 MMA, 8-0 UFC). Silva is not only the UFC's middleweight champion and not only the co-holder of the UFC record with eight straight wins. He's also the man regarded by many as the best fighter in the world.

Silva isn't simply squeaking out wins – as Leites did in his biggest fight, a disputed split-decision win over Nate Marquardt at UFC 85 in London. Silva is sending his opponents to the hospital with all manner of ailments.

Leites may be a virtual unknown as UFC fighters go, and he may be a huge underdog. But he knows that underdogs have won before.

Matt Serra once knocked out Georges St. Pierre to win the UFC's welterweight title. Keith Jardine defeated Chuck Liddell in a light heavyweight fight in which many in the media were wondering why the UFC was feeding Liddell such easy opposition.

Leites is getting much the same treatment these days as Serra and Jardine were. Silva, though, knows as well as anyone how dangerous Leites can be.

"He's very well-rounded and he's very good on the ground," Silva said.

Leites' one advantage in the fight will be his Brazilian jiu-jitsu superiority over Silva. Though Silva is a black belt, Leites is among the finest Brazilian jiu-jitsu specialists in the sport. He earned a black belt under Welton Ribeiro in just four years.

UFC president Dana White has frequently referred to Silva as a "stone-cold killer" as a way of paying homage to his lethal striking ability. Leites, though, is as proficient at the grappling arts as Silva is on his feet.

And that's ultimately his chance to deny Silva a shot at history. A Silva win would mark his ninth straight in UFC action – which would break a tie with Jon Fitch and Royce Grace for the most ever. It would also be his fifth successful title defense, which would also be a record.

Leites has developed great respect for his fellow Brazilian's accomplishments, but he gives a very clear feeling that while he's respectful, he's hardly intimidated.

"This is going to be a very explosive fight," Leites said. "I'm an Anderson fan because he looks for the knockout every single time. And I like looking for the submission every single time, so this will be a very interesting fight."

Perhaps, but Leites is still dogged by the question of how he got the fight instead of others perceived to be ahead of him. He seems to be behind men such as Yushin Okami, Dan Henderson, Demian Maia and Michael Bisping in the pecking order, perplexing some who wonder what he did to leapfrog them.

The win over Marquardt clearly carried a lot of weight, but he only took a split decision despite the fact that Marquardt was docked two points in the fight. Silva, who watched Leites submit Drew McFedries in little more than 90 seconds in UFC 90, has no doubt that Leites is deserving of the shot.

"Thales Leites has obviously shown through his performance and (proven) to the world that he deserves the title shot," Silva said. "Thales Leites is a very tough fighter."

Leites is used to hearing the doubts. He's 14-1 in his MMA career and is 5-1 in the UFC, but he still has to fight for respect.

When he was 8-0, he was pitted against highly respected striker Jose Landi-Jons, who has wins over Pat Miletich and former UFC champion Matt Hughes. Not many gave Leites a chance, but Leites won by arm triangle in just 2:40.

Nobody is predicting he'll have such an easy time with Silva – not even Leites. But Leites is convinced he belongs, and that he's going to win.

"Anderson Silva is a great fighter and everyone knows that," Leites said. "And everyone has seen him for so long and they're so familiar with him, maybe that is why [they don’t give me a chance]. They don't know me so well, so I have to make my point in this fight. And I truly believe that the way I've prepared and the way I've trained – I've sacrificed a lot, for three or four months – that it will pay off [on Saturday]."

It will pay off if he's somehow able to turn it into a grappling contest. This, though, is an MMA fight and not a grappling contest.

And it seems pretty clear that after the fight, we'll be asking at least one of the questions that Admiral Stockdale posed at the debate in 1992: Why was he here?