UFC Fight Night 29 Notebook: Close Encounters
Erick “Indio” Silva has yet to post consecutive wins in the UFC.
| Photo: Marcelo Alonso/Sherdog.com
If Erick Silva wants a more substantial piece of the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s welterweight pie, he will have to go through a brutish battle-tested South Korean to get it.
Long lauded as one of the sport’s more promising young fighters, Silva will challenge Dong Hyun Kim in the UFC Fight Night 29 “Maia vs. Shields” co-main event on Wednesday at the Jose Correa Arena in Barueri, Brazil. Only two men -- Carlos Condit and Demian Maia -- have defeated Kim in a career that spans nearly a decade, and both have prominent seats at the 170-pound table in the UFC.
Advertisement
“I think every fighter must have self-commitment, self-commitment to improve every day,” Silva said in a pre-fight interview with UFC.com. “I have that. I know that I have a lot to grow, and I try to always evolve through training. By training harder every day, the athlete naturally evolves psychologically. We evolve with time. We evolve with each fight. I’ve learned a lot from each of my fights.”
Ahead of his showdown with Kim, Silva has spent time training
alongside former Strikeforce
champions Rafael
Cavalcante and Ronaldo
Souza, along with UFC mainstays Antonio
Rodrigo
Nogueira, Antonio
Rogerio Nogueira and Paulo
Thiago.
“I have many big names always helping me out,” Silva said.
Kim has compiled an 8-2 mark since arriving in the UFC in May 2008. A notorious grinder with a well-honed clinch and top game, the 31-year-old judoka last fought at UFC on Fuel TV 8 in March, when he captured a unanimous verdict over Afghan striker Siyar Bahadurzada at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. Adept at dragging opponents into deep waters, Kim is 10-0-1 in fights that reach the judges. Silva welcomes the test.
“I train, rest, eat and train again,” he said. “I think whoever has a goal needs to make sacrifices. I am chasing after my goal and my dreams. I’m always focused.”
Bantamweight Brouhaha
Photo:
Jeff Sherwood/Sherdog.com
Dillashaw is 4-1 in the UFC.
Dillashaw will lock horns with Atlanta-based Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt Raphael Assuncao in a featured bantamweight scrap at UFC Fight Night 29. The 29-year-old Team Alpha Male standout has rattled off four consecutive victories, three of them finishes, since his knockout loss to John Dodson at “The Ultimate Fighter 14” Finale in December 2011. Dillashaw has not fought since he tore through Hugo Viana in a little more than four minutes at UFC on Fox 7 in April.
Assuncao represents a significant increase in degree of difficulty.
“Raphael is a great opponent for me,” Dillashaw said. “He’s been in MMA for a long time and has built a good name for himself, which is perfect for my climb towards that title once I beat him. We have both been on a winning streak, but it’s time for me to end his.”
This & That
UFC Fight Night 29 will be the 11th Ultimate Fighting Championship event held in Brazil ... Fabio Maldonado’s significant striking accuracy (63.5 percent) trails only former middleweight champion and pound-for-pound great Anderson Silva (67.5) on the UFC’s all-time list, according to FightMetric figures ... Jake Shields holds victories over former champions in the Pride Fighting Championships (Dan Henderson), UFC (Dave Menne), World Extreme Cagefighting (Condit and Mike Pyle) and EliteXC (Robbie Lawler) organizations ... Rousimar Palhares has delivered half of his 14 wins -- six heel hooks and an ankle lock -- by leg lock-induced submission ... Promotional newcomers Yan Cabral, Alan Patrick Silva Alves and Garrett Whiteley are a combined 27-0 ... Born on May 27, 1981, flyweight Chris Cariaso shares a birthday with former United States Secretary of State and 1973 Nobel Prize winner Henry Kissinger, rapper Andre 3000, legendary golfer Sam Snead and beloved “Lord of the Rings” actor Christopher Lee ... Thirteen of Jackson’s Mixed Martial Arts representative Igor Araujo’s 17 finishes have come inside one round ... Matt Hamill was a three-time NCAA wrestling champion at the Rochester Institute of Technology, a Div. III institution in Henrietta, N.Y.
Related Articles