Thiago Silva
BornThiago Anderson Ramos da Silva
(1982-11-12) November 12, 1982
São Carlos, São Paulo, Brazil
ResidenceDelray Beach, Florida, United States
Height6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight223 lb (101 kg; 15.9 st)
DivisionMiddleweight
Light Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Reach75 in (190 cm)[1]
StyleKickboxing, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
Fighting out ofBoca Raton, Florida, United States
TeamJaco Hybrid Training Center (Blackzilians)
American Top Team (formerly)
Chute Boxe Academy (formerly)[2]
RankBlack belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu under Jorge Patino
Years active2005–present (MMA)
2017–present (Kickboxing)
Kickboxing record
Total1
Wins1
Losses0
Mixed martial arts record
Total33
Wins21
By knockout15
By submission1
By decision5
Losses9
By knockout4
By submission1
By decision4
No contests3
Other information
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Thiago Silva (born November 12, 1982) is a Brazilian kickboxer and mixed martial artist who competes in the Light Heavyweight division of Eagle FC. A professional competitor since 2005, he has competed for the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), the World Series of Fighting (WSOF), Absolute Championship Berkut (ACB), Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki (KSW) and Pancrase.

Background

Silva is from São Paulo, Brazil and had a difficult upbringing. He grew up in a very poor area and witnessed murders at a young age. To help support himself, he got his first job when he was only nine years old cleaning automobile parts. Silva was athletic, playing soccer and basketball, and attended school, but ran away from home at age 13 due to his allegedly abusive father, never to see his mother or younger brother again. He then lived on his own in the favelas or slums of São Paulo, moving into his friends' homes who would allow him to stay. While working during the day, he would attend school at night, and would eventually graduate high school. The Brazilian favelas are notorious for being drug trafficking hot spots, and many of the neighborhoods are ruled by drug lords, some of whom would seek out Silva to help them and their children train. At age 18, Silva began to train in mixed martial arts and due to his poverty often had to choose between eating and training although his coach let him train for free in exchange for cleaning the facility.[3]

Mixed martial arts career

Early career

Prior to signing with the Ultimate Fighting Championship, Silva fought almost solely in his native country of Brazil. During his first nine professional bouts, he attained a perfect 9–0 record, winning seven of these bouts by KO or TKO and one by submission. Silva also won the Fury FC 2 Grand Prix in 2006 and fought in a Pancrase bout against Tatsuya Mizuno before receiving a UFC contract.

Signing with the Ultimate Fighting Championship

Silva made his UFC debut against former WEC Heavyweight Champion James Irvin at UFC 71. During the first round, Irvin injured his knee after a takedown from Silva and was unable to continue the fight. Silva was awarded the win by TKO. Silva's next fight was against UFC newcomer Tomasz Drwal at UFC 75. Silva won the fight by TKO due to strikes in the second round.

Following his first two wins, Silva made his televised debut as part of the main card of UFC 78 against Houston Alexander. During the bout, he quickly exposed Alexander's ground game, which had been untested in Alexander's first two knockout victories. After reversing position and securing the mount, Silva rained down punches until his opponent was knocked out in the opening round.

Silva was next slated to face Rashad Evans at UFC 84, but Evans was forced to pull out after being asked to fill in for a fight against Chuck Liddell at UFC 88. Instead, Silva squared off against UFC newcomer Antonio Mendes. After being dropped and momentarily stunned by a head kick from Mendes, Silva survived the flurry of strikes from Mendes and managed to take him down, securing the mounted position. From the dominant position, Silva attacked with punches and elbows until Mendes tapped out due to strikes in the opening round.

Originally scheduled to face fellow undefeated Brazilian Lyoto Machida at UFC 89, Silva was forced to withdraw from the fight due to an injured back suffered while training. The fight was later rescheduled and took place at UFC 94. Machida won via one-punch knockout at the end of the opening round, ending Silva's thirteen fight undefeated streak.

Silva was slated to fight former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Forrest Griffin, but Dana White instead chose to match Griffin against long time UFC Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva. He instead fought Keith Jardine at UFC 102. Early in the fight Silva countered an uppercut by Jardine with a short left hook that dropped Jardine, Silva then followed up with four punches on the ground rendering Jardine unconscious, stopping the fight at 1:35 of the first round.

He next fought Keith Jardine's friend and training partner Rashad Evans in the main event at UFC 108, and lost in a unanimous decision. Evans was able to keep octagon control through aggressive wrestling and takedowns throughout the majority of the fight, though Silva connected with two hooks that dropped Evans and momentarily dazed him in the final round. The judges scored the bout 29–28 for Evans, resulting in Silva's second professional loss.

Silva was scheduled to face Tim Boetsch at UFC 117, but was forced off the card with a back injury[4] and replaced by UFC newcomer Todd Brown.[5]

Silva fought Brandon Vera on January 1, 2011, at UFC 125.[6] He won by unanimous decision (30–26, 30–27, and 30–27) after dominating Vera with ground and pound, including open palm thrusts which resulted in Vera's nose being broken.

UFC 125 drug test

Silva was expected to face the former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Quinton Jackson on May 28, 2011, at UFC 130,[7] although there were rumors that the fight had been canceled due to injury or failed drug tests from his UFC 125 bout. In a statement with Brazilian MMA site Tatame, Thiago denied that he was injured; "Injured? Me? I’m very healthy. That’s not true and looks like the NSAC did two tests, one was positive and the other negative, I'm calm."

Following this statement, Keith Kizer, the commissioner of the NSAC, confirmed that Thiago Silva's samples were still undergoing tests; "That’s not accurate. We have gotten only the first sample back. It could be weeks before we find out the results for the second test." The UFC didn't want to take any chances in waiting for the second test for Silva, so they replaced Silva with Matt Hamill.[8]

On March 29, Kizer released the details surrounding the questions about Silva's UFC 125 drug test. He confirmed that the findings, after two different drug testing facilities analyzed his urine sample, were inconsistent with human urine. This suggests that Silva submitted either an altered or substituted specimen for the sample used in the drug test.[9] The Nevada State Athletic Commission will discuss a temporary suspension at a hearing on April 7 as well as the possibility of ruling his most recent victory a no contest.[9]

On March 30 Silva released a statement admitting using a urine adulterant.

I used a urine adulterant when giving a sample following my fight with Brandon Vera. I did so in an attempt to alter the results of the test and knowingly broke the rules of the Nevada (State) Athletic Commission. This was a terrible decision on my part for which I will be punished. I am prepared to accept this punishment, learn from it and move on. I apologize to the commission, the UFC, Brandon Vera and the MMA fans.

Silva said he doesn't want to make an excuse for his behavior, but he did hope to offer an explanation for his decisions.

"Please do not interpret this as an attempt to justify my actions. I know they were wrong, and I know I made bad decisions... I reinjured my back 45 days before the fight with Brandon Vera. After not fighting for a year, I made the decision to not pull out of the fight. I also decided that the only way I could continue with the fight was to take injections in my back and spine that contained substances prohibited by the Nevada (State) Athletic Commission. I also made the decision to use a product to hide the presence of these substances in a urine test."[10]

After the hearing, the Nevada State Athletic Commission handed Silva a one-year suspension along with changing his previous win over Vera to a no contest, forfeiture of 25 percent of his purse, and $20,000 out of a $55,000 win bonus.[11]

Return post-suspension

Silva had served his one-year suspension on January 1, 2012.[12]

Silva was briefly linked to a rematch against Brandon Vera on May 15, 2012, at UFC on Fuel TV: Korean Zombie vs. Poirier. However, Vera was forced out of the bout with an injury[13] and replaced by Igor Pokrajac.[14] Silva, however, was pulled from this bout on March 6 when it was announced he would replace injured Antônio Rogério Nogueira against Alexander Gustafsson at UFC on Fuel TV 2.[15] On April 14, Silva faced rising prospect Alexander Gustafsson in Gustafsson's hometown of Stockholm, Sweden. Gustafsson used his massive reach, and stayed in the outside and Silva couldn't find his distance, Gustafsson knocked Silva down with an uppercut early in the first round that also caused a relatively large cut on the forehead of the Brazilian. He lost the fight via unanimous decision (30–27, 30–27, and 29–28).

Silva was expected to face former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion and former Chute Boxe Academy fighter, Maurício Rua on July 21, 2012, at UFC 149.[16] However, Silva was forced out of the bout with an injury.[17]

Silva faced undefeated Bulgarian wrestler Stanislav Nedkov on November 10, 2012, at UFC on Fuel TV 6.[18] Silva won the fight via an arm-triangle choke submission. His performance earned him his first "Submission of the Night" bonus. On November 21, 2012, it was announced that Silva had failed his post fight drug test, testing positive for marijuana metabolites. Silva was subsequently suspended for 6 months, retroactive to November 10, 2012. His win over Nedkov was changed to a No Contest.[19]

Silva next faced debuting former Strikeforce Light Heavyweight Champion, Rafael Cavalcante on June 8, 2013, at UFC on Fuel TV 10.[20] He won the fight via knockout in the first round. The fight also earned him his first "Knockout of the Night" and "Fight of the Night" bonus.

Silva faced Matt Hamill on October 9, 2013, at UFC Fight Night 29.[21] He won the fight via unanimous decision (30–27, 30–27, and 29–27).

Silva was briefly linked to a bout with Ovince St. Preux on January 15, 2014, at UFC Fight Night 35.[22] However, Silva was quickly removed from the bout for undisclosed reasons.[23] The bout with St. Preux was rescheduled for March 15 at UFC 171.[24] The bout was scrapped again on February 7 after Silva was released from his contract following his arrest the previous night.[25]

Gym hold-up incident

On February 6, 2014, in Oakland Park, Florida, Silva allegedly threatened Pablo Popovitch at his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Center, and his estranged wife Thaysa Kamiji, who was in a relationship with Popovitch. The day before, Kamiji called police on Silva for violating a temporary protection order. He was charged with aggravated battery and non-violently resisting an officer; the charges were later lessened to aggravated assaults by a Broward County judge, who also deemed Silva a flight risk and denied him bond.[26] Following the arrest, UFC President Dana White said Silva will "never fight in the UFC again". The UFC formally released him later that day.[27]

On September 4, 2014, a Florida judge dropped all criminal charges against Silva.[28]

The next day after the criminal charges were dropped on September 4, Silva was re-signed by the UFC. However, on September 19, citing "new video and audio evidence," the UFC released him.[29]

Post-UFC career

In his first fight since his UFC release, Silva was expected to face Mike Hayes at Fight Time 20 on August 29, 2014.[30][31] However, Silva sustained a knee injury and the bout was cancelled.[32]

UFC return

On September 5, 2014, it was announced that Silva had re-signed with the promotion.[33] However, his return was short lived, as on September 19, the UFC released a statement on their website announcing that Silva's contract had been terminated due to new audio and video evidence that had been received that day.[29]

World Series of Fighting

On January 15, 2015, it was announced that Silva had signed with the WSOF promotion. He entered a four-man tournament for the light heavyweight title.[34]

Silva was originally expected to face Ronny Markes in the semifinals of the tournament, on March 28, 2015, at WSOF 19.[35] Silva's opponent was later changed from Markes to be a rematch against Matt Hamill.[36] However, the day of the event Hamill fell ill and was replaced on short notice by Teddy Holder.[37] A heavy favorite to win, Silva lost the fight via TKO in the first round.

Other Organizations

With his contract in WSOF which allows him to fight for other organizations, Silva fought Marcus Sursa in the Gladiator MMA organization, despite winning the first round of the fight he lost in the second round after a controversial stoppage, after those two losses he bounced back by winning in Russia against Stav Economou by a unanimous decision.

Silva got scheduled to fight the veteran Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou in Brazil for the Fight2night organization. After dropping Sokoudjou in the first round, he was able to TKO his opponent at the third round, securing his second consecutive victory.[38]

Absolute Championship Berkut

Silva faced Jared Torgeson on January 13, 2017, at ACB 51.[39] He won the fight by unanimous decision to become the Absolute Championship Berkut Light Heavyweight champion.

Silva faced Batraz Agnaev on July 23, 2017, to defend the Absolute Championship Berkut Light Heavyweight Belt. for the first time. However, he lost the fight via TKO in the second round.

Silva faced Daniel Toledo at ACB 74 on November 18, 2017. He won the fight via TKO in the second round.

Silva fought in ACB 82: São Paulo where he dropped to Middleweight for the first time in his career against Mikhail "Barrera" Kolobegov. He lost the fight by controversial split decision.

Silva was scheduled to face Chris Camozzi on June 16, 2018, at ACB 88 in Brisbane, Australia.[40] However, the fight got canceled two days before the event due to Silva's visa complications.[41]

KSW

Silva fought James McSweeney at KSW 45 at heavyweight on October 6, 2018, as McSweeney's original opponent Michal Andryszak pulled out of the fight citing an injury.[42] Thiago won the fight by unanimous decision.

After a submission loss against Ivan Shtyrkov at Russian Cagefight Championship, Silva face Martin Zawada at KSW 49 on May 18, 2019.[43] He lost the fight via unanimous decision and his opponent was awarded a "Performance of the Night" award.

Eagle Fighting Championship

After three years away from MMA competition, Silva returned to face Héctor Lombard on May 20, 2022, at Eagle FC 48.[44] The bout ended in a No Contest in the second round after Silva dropped Lombard with a punch and then hit him with an accidental illegal knee that rendered him unable to continue.[45]

Kickboxing career

Glory

Silva made his debut for the Glory organisation on December 1, 2017, in the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York at Glory 48 against John King, who is also an MMA fighter.[46] He won the fight via unanimous decision.[47]

Championships and accomplishments

Mixed martial arts

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu

  • State and Brazilian BJJ Tournaments Winner
  • Black Belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
33 matches 21 wins 9 losses
By knockout 15 4
By submission 1 1
By decision 5 4
No contests 3
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
NC 21–9 (3) Héctor Lombard No Contest (illegal knee) Eagle FC 47 May 20, 2022 2 1:44 Miami, Florida, United States Return to Light Heavyweight.
Loss 21–9 (2) Martin Zawada Decision (unanimous) KSW 49: Soldić vs. Kaszubowski May 18, 2019 3 5:00 Gdańsk, Poland Catchweight (209 lb) bout.
Loss 21–8 (2) Ivan Shtyrkov Submission (armbar) Russian Cagefighting Championship 5 December 15, 2018 1 2:20 Ekaterinburg, Russia
Win 21–7 (2) James McSweeney Decision (unanimous) KSW 45: The Return to Wembley October 6, 2018 3 5:00 Wembley, England Heavyweight bout.
Loss 20–7 (2) Mikhail Kolobegov Decision (split) ACB 82: Silva vs. Kolobegov March 9, 2018 3 5:00 São Paulo, Brazil Middleweight bout.
Win 20–6 (2) Daniel Toledo TKO (punches) ACB 74: Aguev vs. Townsend November 18, 2017 2 4:29 Vienna, Austria
Loss 19–6 (2) Batraz Agnaev TKO (punches) ACB 65: Silva vs. Agnaev July 22, 2017 2 3:34 Sheffield, England Lost the ACB Light Heavyweight Championship.
Win 19–5 (2) Jared Torgeson Decision (unanimous) ACB 51: Silva vs. Torgeson January 13, 2017 5 5:00 Irvine, California, United States Won the Vacant ACB Light Heavyweight Championship.
Win 18–5 (2) Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou TKO (punches) F2N: Fight2Night November 4, 2016 3 2:37 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Win 17–5 (2) Stav Economou Decision (unanimous) WFCA 17: Grand Prix Akhmat April 9, 2016 3 5:00 Grozny, Russia Heavyweight bout.
Loss 16–5 (2) Marcus Sursa TKO (punches) Gladiator MMA November 21, 2015 2 2:00 St. Charles, Missouri, United States
Loss 16–4 (2) Teddy Holder TKO (punches) WSOF 19 March 28, 2015 1 2:00 Phoenix, Arizona, United States WSOF Light Heavyweight Championship Tournament Semifinal.
Win 16–3 (2) Matt Hamill Decision (unanimous) UFC Fight Night: Maia vs. Shields October 9, 2013 3 5:00 Barueri, Brazil Catchweight (208 lbs); Silva missed weight.
Win 15–3 (2) Rafael Cavalcante KO (punches) UFC on Fuel TV: Nogueira vs. Werdum June 8, 2013 1 4:29 Fortaleza, Brazil Knockout of the Night. Fight of the Night.
NC 14–3 (2) Stanislav Nedkov NC (overturned) UFC on Fuel TV: Franklin vs. Le November 10, 2012 3 1:45 Macau, SAR, China Originally submission (arm-triangle choke) win; Submission of the Night; result overturned after Silva failed drug test.
Loss 14–3 (1) Alexander Gustafsson Decision (unanimous) UFC on Fuel TV: Gustafsson vs. Silva April 14, 2012 3 5:00 Stockholm, Sweden
NC 14–2 (1) Brandon Vera NC (overturned) UFC 125 January 1, 2011 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Originally unanimous decision win; result overturned after Silva falsified his urine sample.
Loss 14–2 Rashad Evans Decision (unanimous) UFC 108: Evans vs. Silva January 2, 2010 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 14–1 Keith Jardine KO (punches) UFC 102: Couture vs. Nogueira August 29, 2009 1 1:35 Portland, Oregon, United States
Loss 13–1 Lyoto Machida KO (punches) UFC 94: St-Pierre vs. Penn 2 January 31, 2009 1 4:59 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 13–0 Antonio Mendes TKO (submission to punches) UFC 84: Ill Will May 24, 2008 1 2:24 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 12–0 Houston Alexander KO (punches) UFC 78: Validation November 17, 2007 1 3:25 Newark, New Jersey, United States
Win 11–0 Tomasz Drwal TKO (punches) UFC 75: Champion vs. Champion September 8, 2007 2 4:23 London, England
Win 10–0 James Irvin TKO (knee injury) UFC 71: Liddell vs. Jackson May 26, 2007 1 1:06 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 9–0 Tatsuya Mizuno KO (soccer kick) Pancrase: Rising 2 February 28, 2007 1 4:29 Tokyo, Japan
Win 8–0 Vitor Vianna TKO (arm injury) Fury FC 2: Final Combat November 30, 2006 1 1:50 São Paulo, Brazil Won the Fury FC 2 Grand Prix.
Win 7–0 Claudio Godoi KO (punches) Fury FC 2: Final Combat November 30, 2006 1 2:06 São Paulo, Brazil
Win 6–0 Dino Pezao TKO (punches) Show Fight 5 November 9, 2006 1 4:34 São Paulo, Brazil
Win 5–0 Dave Dalgliesh Submission (heel hook) Fury Fighting Championship 1 September 27, 2006 1 1:05 São Paulo, Brazil
Win 4–0 Claudio Godoi Decision (unanimous) Show Fight 4 April 6, 2006 3 5:00 São Paulo, Brazil
Win 3–0 Rodrigo Gripp de Sousa TKO (doctor stoppage) Shooto: Brazil 9 December 3, 2005 2 1:14 São Paulo, Brazil
Win 2–0 Flavio Polones KO (punch) Arena Combat Cup 2 November 5, 2005 1 3:39 São Paulo, Brazil
Win 1–0 Rubens Xavier TKO (head kick and punches) Predador FC 1 September 10, 2005 2 4:17 São Paulo, Brazil

Kickboxing record

Professional kickboxing record
1 win (0 KOs), 0 loss, 0 draw
DateResultOpponentEventLocationMethodRoundTimeRecord
2017-12-01WinUnited States John KingGlory 48: New YorkNew York City, New YorkDecision (unanimous)33:001–0

See also

References

  1. "Fighter Profile - FIGHT! Magazine". Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  2. "Thiago Silva Leaves ATT, Joins Blackzilians". mmafrenzy.com. 2012-07-30.
  3. Okamoto, Brett (December 31, 2010). "Silva adept at overcoming obstacles". ESPN. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  4. "Thiago Silva injured again, replacement search underway for UFC 117 slot". mmajunkie.com. 2010-07-27. Archived from the original on 2011-03-03.
  5. "UFC newcomer Todd Brown replaces Thiago Silva at UFC 117, meets Tim Boetsch". mmajunkie.com. 2010-07-27. Archived from the original on 2010-07-30.
  6. "Thiago Silva vs. Brandon Vera targeted for UFC 125 in January". mmajunkie.com. 2010-09-07. Archived from the original on 2010-09-11.
  7. "Quinton "Rampage" Jackson vs. Thiago Silva targeted for UFC 130". mmajunkie.com. Archived from the original on 2011-01-10. Retrieved 2011-01-07.
  8. "Matt Hamill replaces Thiago Silva, faces "Rampage" Jackson at UFC 130". mmajunkie.com. February 11, 2011.
  9. 1 2 "Thiago Silva's UFC 125 Drug Test Results Indicate Non-Human Sample". MMAWeekly.com. March 29, 2011.
  10. "UFC's Thiago Silva admits use of "urine adulterant," will accept NSAC punishment | MMAjunkie.com". Archived from the original on 2011-04-01. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
  11. Okamoto, Brett (April 7, 2011). "Thiago Silva suspended 1 year". ESPN. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  12. "UFC's Thiago Silva serves term of one-year NSAC license revocation". January 2, 2012. Archived from the original on July 11, 2012.
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  14. "Source: Thiago Silva back in UFC in May". espn.go.com.com. 8 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-08.
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  23. Staff (2013-11-21). "Thiago Silva scratches from UFC Fight Night 35 co-main opposite Ovince St. Preux". mmajunkie.com. Retrieved 2013-11-21.
  24. Tom Ngo (2013-12-07). "Thiago Silva vs. Ovince St. Preux Re-Booked for UFC 171". 5thround.com. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
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  26. ""Thiago Silva arrest unfairly gives UFC bad name", by Jeff Wagenheim, Sports Illustrated". Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  27. Staff (2014-02-07). "UFC terminates Thiago Silva's contract". mmajunkie.com. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  28. "Judge drops criminal charges against Silva". 4 September 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  29. 1 2 "UFC Statement on Thiago Silva". Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  30. Mookie Alexander (2014-06-29). "Ex-UFC fighter Thiago Silva set to return to MMA on August 29th". bloodyelbow.com. Retrieved 2014-06-29.
  31. Guilherme Cruz (2014-07-01). "UFC veteran Thiago Silva headlines Fight Time 20 against Mike Hayes". mmafighting.com. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
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  39. medialead.ru. "2017: The first events - ACB 51, ACB 52".
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  46. "GLORY 48 New York Additions Include UFC Veteran Thiago Silva and Middleweight Qualifier Tournament Entrants".
  47. "Glory Kickboxing – Thiago Silva commences kickboxing career with a win".
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