Monday Fallout: Silva/Le stoppage at UFC 139 wasn’t questionable, but Cung Le’s judgement was

Le took literally the beating of his life this past Saturday night, and it was totally avoidable.

 I’ve read both ire and praise directed towards Joe Rogan after he vehemently criticized the stoppage in the second round of Saturday’s fight between Wanderlei Silva and Cung Le.

 Surely, Rogan has been around long enough to know better than hugging your opponent’s calves with your face on the mat while he pounds the side of your head doesn’t quite qualify as a “takedown attempt” as he insisted.To be fair, though, the original angle did show Le as being deceptively active. It was only when they showed the angle that the referee saw – where Le’s face practically exploded after a knee before collapsing to the canvas – where it was absolutely clear that fight was over and whatever Le was doing was pure reflex. Rogan, to both his detriment and benefit as a color commentator, is first and foremost a fan of the sport. I think his fanboyish obsession with Le – one that he shares with no shortage of fans in the sport – got the better of him. Still, this ignores that having a loose grip on whatever happens to be in front of you is not enough to qualify as intelligently defending yourself, and the fact that when it was stopped, Le’s hands were apart.

 Personally, I think Rogan owes referee Dan Snell an apology for calling him out in public for a bad stoppage and then harping on the point. There have been bad stoppages in MMA – and there always will be – but that wasn’t one of them.

 As for the fight itself, Wanderlei looked like it was 2001. Clearly his return to Chute Box has reinvigorated him physically and mentally, as that was the most focused and on-point I’ve seen him in years. After losing four straight, he got a much-needed win against a legitimately dangerous opponent. I won’t go so far as to say he’s back, but it’s a step in the right direction.

 Le, on the other hand, should not fight at this level if he’s not going to take it seriously. I’m not talking about his waist, either, which too many people harped on. Le’s always had a thicker core. Sure, he had an extra pound or two he didn’t have a few years ago, but the guy is 39 years old. The problem, though, is moments like when he had Silva rocked and primed for a kill in the first round with a spinning backfist, which he followed up by completely wiffing on a stupid wheel kick. It only got more frustrating as the fight went on. Early in the fight, he was able to keep Silva at a distance with devastating front kicks. As the round wore on and especially when he got in trouble in the second round, he resulted to more spinning back kicks, axe kicks, and other gym rat bullshit.

 I mean no disrespect to his love of San Shou and devotion to the form. Okay, maybe I do. See, the thing is, that sort of thing is all well and good when you’re in Strikeforce fighting an aged and broken Frank Shamrock and other hand-picked opponents in-between film shootings. But the UFC is on a whole different level. They’re going to put you in there against guys that can do some real damage, and if you’re not going to take it seriously enough to throw a straight punch when you need to, you’re going to end up without a nose at the end of the fight.

 More than reckless in terms of competition, Le’s choices posed a very real danger to himself in that fight. Maybe he’ll realize that, or maybe he’s still not that serious about MMA and just needed or wanted to pick up a paycheck in front of his home crowd.

 As bad as Saturday night was, just imagine if things had gone as originally planned and Le stepped in there against Vitor Belfort. That fight would have been even harder to watch.

  • Alexandre Matos

    Kevin Marshall, one of the greatest english-spoken MMA writers I’ve ever read.

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