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UFC 134: Silva defends title in Rio

RIO DE JANEIRO — After another dominant victory, Anderson Silva went celebrating around the octagon. His opponent went straight to the hospital.

The 36-year-old Brazilian beat Yushin Okami by knockout with 2:04 left in the second round, winning his 15th straight fight and successfully defending his middleweight title at UFC 134 on Saturday.

Silva sent Okami to the ground with a right-handed shot to the jaw, then pounded him with strikes to the head to force the fight to be stopped.

After several hits to the head, it took awhile for Okami to get up. He was able to walk out of the octagon, but organizers said he had to be taken to a local hospital for precautionary reasons and would undergo a series of tests.

Silva’s opponents have been getting beaten up like Okami did more often than not recently. Silva, touted as the best pound-for-pound fighter in mixed martial arts, improved to 29-4 (14-0 in UFC), while Okami fell to 27-6 (10-3).

Silva’s last loss had been against Okami in 2006, when the Brazilian dominated but was disqualified after an illegal kick. Silva has defended his title a record nine times and is the longest-reigning champion in UFC history.

“I’m so happy,” Silva said. “I’ve trained so hard for this.

“It was awesome to do this here in Brazil, in front of the Brazilian fans,” he said.

The Ultimate Fighting Championship made a much-anticipated return to Brazil, the country where MMA came to life in the early 1990s. There hadn’t been a UFC event in Brazil since 1998, when the sport was not nearly as popular as it is now.

Some of the celebrities at the event Saturday included retired soccer star Ronaldo, whose sports marketing agency manages Silva’s career.

The fans constantly chanted during the fights, and even some soccer-stadium songs made their way into the fights.

UFC president Dana White has already said he plans to return to Brazil soon and increase the number of events in the country of 190 million people. There is even talk of a possible fight at a soccer stadium, which could attract a crowd of nearly 100,000 fans.

“We might be here every weekend now,” White said jokingly afterward. “This event was successful even before it even happened.

“I’ve been doing events all over the world over the years and Brazil wins for the loudest crowd ever. The place was packed from the first fight. It was incredible.”

Silva, a striker known as “The Spider,” struggled to get to Okami in the first of five scheduled rounds, but he came out attacking in the second and took control of the fight.

Silva landed a right-handed shot with 4:17 left to send Okami to the ground for the first time. The Japanese fighter recovered, but not after the second charge by Silva in front of more than 15,000 fans at a packed HSBC Arena.

The 30-year-old Okami had won six of his last seven fights.

Okami wasn’t the only one to lose to a Brazilian on Saturday, as local fighters won four of the five fights on the main card.

In the light heavyweight division, Brazilian Mauricio “Shogun” Rua knocked out American Forrest Griffin in the first round with a series of strikes to the head. Rua had lost to Griffin in his UFC debut in 2007, and the crowd celebrated the victory by chanting, “Shogun is back, Shogun is back.”

Home-crowd favorite Minotauro Nogueira defeated American heavyweight Brendan Schaub by knockout despite not having fought for 18 months because of a series of injuries, giving Brazil its first win of the night in the main card. The emotional victory gave the 35-year-old Nogueira a 37-6-1 record.

Bulgaria’s Stanislav Nedkov made his UFC debut by defeating Brazil’s Luiz Cane by knockout in a light heavyweight fight to improve to 12-0, and Brazil’s Edson Barboza reached 9-0 by beating England’s Ross Pearson with a split decision in the lightweight division.

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