Exactly and their excuse was that Weidman wasn't enough of a big name.
As the saying goes,” It was his fight to lose”. By that it means, he just acted reckless and lost the fight and not because his opponent was better than him. So my question goes like this, is this the case of Anderson Silva vs Chris Weidman and that it was Silva’s fight to lose since he started leaving this hands down clowning around and being reckless or did Chris expose his weaknesses?
That little backfist I think is a giveaway that was a drilled tactic he'd be working on, I don't think you'd do something like that on the fly.
Silva lost every minute of every round before he got finished. He was acting stupid because he was frustrated and thought he could goad Weidman into a slugfest and pick him off with a counter shot.As the saying goes,” It was his fight to lose”. By that it means, he just acted reckless and lost the fight and not because his opponent was better than him. So my question goes like this, is this the case of Anderson Silva vs Chris Weidman and that it was Silva’s fight to lose since he started leaving this hands down clowning around and being reckless or did Chris expose his weaknesses?
It looks so sloppy and spontaneous to me, though. If he did drill it, anticipate, and plan this, he deserves all the credit in the world. If he didn't, Silva is more to blame for his fuckery.
The flick threw Anderson’s timing off, causing him to lean into the punch that knocked him out. Don’t know if Weidman drilled it or not, but it worked perfectly.It seems a bit of a strange thing to just throw in at random to me though, especially someone like Weidman who I wouldnt otherwise call a very spontaneous fighter, besides that ill fated spinning kick vs Rockhold I can't think if too many unexpected moments from him, he's typically more of a game planner.
It works really well though I think, Silva is expecting left/rights and it allows Weidman to double up on the rights fast and get him off balance.
Really I don't see some horrible mistake by Silva there personally, I just see him taking a bit of a risk to try and get Weidman to become sloppy to counter and Chris having planned well for it.
It seems a bit of a strange thing to just throw in at random to me though, especially someone like Weidman who I wouldnt otherwise call a very spontaneous fighter, besides that ill fated spinning kick vs Rockhold I can't think if too many unexpected moments from him, he's typically more of a game planner.
It works really well though I think, Silva is expecting left/rights and it allows Weidman to double up on the rights fast and get him off balance.
Really I don't see some horrible mistake by Silva there personally, I just see him taking a bit of a risk to try and get Weidman to become sloppy to counter and Chris having planned well for it.
The flick threw Anderson’s timing off, causing him to lean into the punch that knocked him out. Don’t know if Weidman drilled it or not, but it worked perfectly.
It looks to be thrown spontaneously, out of frustration. The excessive clowning he did was prior to the last sequence. Closed eyes shimmy, gyrating shakey shit, and all that. I've wanted someone to ask The Chris if it was planned or not for years now.
Definitely worked. The question, for me, is whether or not it was planned/practiced/drilled. I don't think it was.