The Tap Podcast
The Tap #56 Fighter Focus: Anderson Silva Impoverished communities tend to produce some of the most resilient human beings. Theres something about a tough upbringing in harsh conditions that makes people work harder, push their limits and try to prove the world wrong. Boxers like Mike Tyson, Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquio came from places of economic struggle where future prospects were bleak at best. It was dismal conditions like these that gave rise to possibly the greatest P4P MMA fighter on earth. The spider! Andersons early career: Watch here Andersons UFC Career: Watch here Show Notes: Anderson Silva was the second child of four born into a poverty stricken family in Sao Palo Brazil. It was this hardship that drove his parents to send him and his older brother to live with his aunt and uncle in Curitiba when he was just four years old. His aunt and uncle found themselves supporting 5 children in total on a police officers meagre salary. Times were tough all around but growing up in a rough area its essential to learn your was around a scrap early and while martial arts was more of an elite activity in Brazil, Anderson wasted no time in figuring out how to learn it. He began watching the not so poor neighbour kids practicing jiu jitsu and eventually started practicing with them. While it wasn’t official or organized it was better than nothing. Silva clearly had a talent for the fighting arts early on and this added to the petrie dish in which great champions are born. All he needed now was opportunity. This came in the way of his family scraping together enough money to send him to TKD lessons at the age of 12. He bounced between there and capoeira before finding his passion in Muay Thai when he was 16. During the next five years he supported his training with some less glamours regular jobs. He found himself working at McDonalds and as a file clerk, which is a common trend among great people who crawl their way out of less fortunate circumstances. People who are successful will usually do whatever it takes to make their dream work or support their passion. Anderson made his professional debut in June of 1997 and while he claims he lost his first bout to Fabricio Marango, it was never recorded. He then chalked up a pair of wins in the brutal world of professional Vale Tudo in Brazil. He recorded his first loss to Luiz Azeredo in 2000 but proceeded to go on a 9 fight win streak between 2000 and 2003 with wins both in Brazil as well as Japan. He competed in Shooto, winning the middleweight title as well as Japan’s premier MMA show PRIDE Fighting Championship. During his early career he was training with the Chute Box Academy which was home to some of Brazils best and most feared martial artists. Impressed with his raw talent, they continued to showcase his skills all over the world until a pay dispute caused a Silva to leave under bitter circumstances. This affected his career as chute box had a lot of pull in the MMA world and the asked pride to not offer Anderson any more fights. It wasn't all bad though, while he was training there he had honed his skills and developed a solid ground game as well as fame in the world of martial arts with many recognizing him as one of the most feared strikers in the game. As always, when one door closes another opens and the open door came from Antonio Nogueira otherwise known as Big Nog. Antonio trained Silva and improved his ground game immensely, awarding him his BJJ black belt in 2005. He also used his status in the martial arts world to undo the career damage that chute box did and got Anderson back on the radar of the major promotions. After jumping around some other promotions, Silva finally made his UFC debut in 2006 with a stunning knockout of Chris Leben which stated a win streak spanning 16 fights, 1 championship belt, 10 title defences, two weight divisions over 7 years! This reign, in what was at the time the biggest MMA promotion on earth saw Silva fight the best in the world and win in spectacular fashion almost every time. His style became a thing of legend with his hands down, evasive stance and pin point striking accuracy. He was so good that he was even able to taunt his opponents during his fights which drew a lot of controversy and dislike from some MMA fans but its important to remember that martial arts is more than just physical. As Most seasoned competitors can tell you its equally psychological. This is one of the main reasons for this style of taunting, its psychological warfare. Getting in your opponents head can put them off their game. Most people think of McGregor when it comes to smack talk and taunting but before Conor... There was Anderson. This taunting eventually led to the end of his title reign when Chris Weidman managed to catch him on the chin during one of his taunts knocking him out and during their rematch Silva suffered a grizzly leg break that left him out of action for over a year. By the time he made his return he had crossed that 40 year old threshold that usually spells the end for most fighters careers. Heck 35 usually spells the end for most fighters but none the less he fought on for six more fights, winning two of those but after a recent knee injury during his bout with Jared Cannonier, it looks as though its time for silva to focus less on fighting and more on sharing his knowledge and grooming the next generation of athlete for the world stage. Silva embodies what it is to be a true mixed martial artist. He took the elements that worked for him from Muay Thai, TKD, Boxing, BJJ & Wing Chun just to name a few and created his own fighting style that took him on a 22 year long professional career that has left him with a legacy of being one of the greatest mixed martial artists of all time.
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