RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - JANUARY 13: Vitor Belfort weighs in during the UFC 142 Weigh In at HSBC Arena on January 13, 2012 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)
There's a phrase you are likely going to hear at some point between now and the end of Saturday night's UFC 142 card from Rio. Probably more than once. And it won't be the last time you hear it either. That phrase?
The Old Vitor.
When Vitor Belfort steps in to face Anthony Johnson, a lot of folks will be clamoring for the return of The Old Vitor. And if he wins? "The Old Vitor is back!" It's happened before. A lot. In pretty much every Belfort fight for the past 10 years there has been this lingering spectre hanging over the fight - the spectre of The Old Vitor.
But all of this raises a rather important question. Just who is this guy? Who is The Old Vitor?
It's a valid question, particularly since many new fans may have never seen this Old Vitor in action, only heard tales of him or seen old grainy footage, like the UFC's version of the Yeti. But The Old vitor is very real. He's also been elevated to somewhat of a mythological status that blurs the real story a bit.
When people refer to The Old Vitor, they're likely referencing one thing - his insanely fast hands. Vitor Belfort burst onto the UFC scene way back at UFC 12, defeating his first 3 UFC opponents in less than 3 minutes (if you've never seen any of these fights, here's Belfort vs. Scott Ferrozzo, currently free at UFC.com). And he did it all with blazing hand speed, swarming his opponents and overwhelming them with punches. The most famous example of this came in 1998 when Vitor blitzed Wanderlei Silva at UFC Brazil, knocking out The Axe Murderer in just 44 seconds.
But around 2000, Vitor slowed down, and those blitz KO's were left behind. As a result, any time Vitor has scored a quick KO since then, you hear cries of "The Old Vitor is back!" You heard it against Marvin Eastman in 2003, against Kazuo Takahashi in Pride in 2006, and against both Matt Lindland and Rich Franklin in 2009.
The thing is, that's not the complete picture of The Old Vitor - it's only half the story. The rest of The Old Vitor is characterized by his early loses to Randy Couture and Kazushi Sakuraba. That Old Vitor is a man who, yes, had scary and sudden KO power. But if he didn't get that fast KO - if you pushed him into deep waters - he was likely to fold. The Old Vitor didn't face a lot of adversity, but whenever he did, he could not overcome it.
Since 2007, Vitor has seen a real resurgence in his career. He's 6-1 in that time, with that only loss coming against Anderson Silva, and has shown more consistency than at any time since his very earliest days in the sport. Part of that return has been shedding the image of The Old Vitor. He's no longer as reliant on that fast KO. Against fighters like James Zikic and Terry Martin, he's showed a trait never in his old arsenal - patience. Yes, he still can end your night very quickly, but he now looks for the opening. And if he doesn't get it? If you push him back? He will wait, not give up as he did in the past. He has kept the best of The Old Vitor, while shedding the worst. And that makes him a scary fighter indeed.
Some may be hoping for a return of The Old Vitor against Anthony Johnson tonight. But with The Old Vitor comes a lot of baggage. Me? I'll be looking forward to another strong performance from The New Vitor.
1 recs | 41 comments
it seems the old Vitor has been back for years
with the exception of a couple injuries and and Anderson Silva front kick.
goodbadugly16 - January 14, 2012
As long as he can keep this a striking match
He should be able to get a highlight reel KO , Rumble will not be able to take too many big hits to that big dome of his after being so dehydrated!
egorr10 - January 14, 2012
Every time he wins, he's 'back'
I think eventually…it just becomes a trend of who he is.
It’s not ‘old Vitor can beat EVERYONE, but off Vitor loses sometimes’
More like ‘Vitor can knock out a lot of people, but certain styles and talent levels give him a lot of problems’
Chris Groves - January 14, 2012
Old
as in 34 or wateva he is yes
MegaReem - January 14, 2012
He's got his head on straight.
That’s all that matters. I don’t want the old Vitor- I want a new, improved Vitor. I think that’s what we’re getting.
Body Triangle - January 14, 2012
Well
His opponent has an age and weight advantage over him. Hmm…
Johnsons striking has never been amazing, just brute force and decent combos against non-strikers. Koscheck did decent against him so yea… I think an in shape Vitor smashes him on the feet. Have not seen Vitors takedown D tested in a while and I think we will tonight.
I think the old Vitor comes back tonight. Before yesterday i was on the rumble train but, missing weight and giving 0 fucks gains 0 fans. Where’s your PR manager playboy?!
cager - January 14, 2012
But he was back after the Akiyama fight
Our Bovine Public - January 14, 2012
Didn't he have a lot of old baggage to due with his sister's disappearance?
Loot - January 14, 2012
due to*
Loot - January 14, 2012
I heard that played a big role
I don’t think he was ever able to shake that. People have always questioned his mental strength or heart.
He seems to be in a good place now though.
MeatballHero - January 14, 2012
His heart and mental strength were questioned even before that happened. Of course, that was a horrible tragedy for him and his family.
king of the dogs - January 14, 2012
That was an absolutely terrible thing, and it hurt him in the ring for awhile. But the early Couture/Saku loses were long before her disappearance.
Fraser Coffeen - January 14, 2012
I just watched the Ferrozzo fight.
Who was the Belfort Hater in the booth? “What did this guy do, win the olympics?” when Vitor was celebrating with his corner. And when the other commentator asked “could we have seen a passing of the torch?”, the dude just said “no”. Anybody recognize the voice?
Magaca - January 14, 2012
Was it Tank?
Pretty sure his fight with Belfort was at the next UFC.
VenusBlue - January 14, 2012
Yeah it was good ole Tank Abbott.
thievesdont - January 14, 2012
Thanks.
Magaca - January 14, 2012
It was Satan.
He has it in for Vitor but Vitor stands with Jesus and will prevail!
UncleMax - January 14, 2012 via Android app
pics of satan in the booth or GTFO
Magaca - January 14, 2012
LOL
You have there.
UncleMax - January 14, 2012 via Android app
Vitor is one of those guys that everyone will always love to rip on, no matter what he does. I think he beats everyone in the top 10 not named Anderson Silva or Chael Sonnen
savik - January 14, 2012
Yeah i agree.
Not many guys that i would pick against him.
Magaca - January 14, 2012
which is why the ufc risked building him up prior to fighting anderson?
UncleMax - January 14, 2012 via Android app
So your logic is that in all the fights that Vitor is favoured to win, he has 0% chance of losing?
Magaca - January 14, 2012
Anderson was in desperate need of new challengers. I’d rather have seen Silva/Belfort than Silva/Maia 2
savik - January 14, 2012
People always love to say that he’s not mentally strong enough to overcome adversity, but most forget that this is a guy who’s had some huge difficulties in his personal life like his sister being kidnapped. The hate against him is pretty ridiculous at times
savik - January 14, 2012
The only part of Belfort worth hating are his Jesus rants.
God those are annoying.
Magaca - January 14, 2012
Or hilarious
“"Pretty soon people are going to be doing silly things. Pretty soon they are going to be doing porno with the neighbor.”
http://www.cagepotato.com/vitor-belfort-turns-interview-into-sermon-on-the-evils-of-internet-porn/
I do feel that way about a lot of fighters though. Bendo, Jones and Marquardt off the top of my head. I actively root for them to catch beatings based on that fact alone.
ihateemo - January 14, 2012
Me too. Sometimes i feel bad about it.
Magaca - January 14, 2012
Just someone being religious doesn’t bother me. But what gets to me are the ones who thank God for their wins but not for their losses. Loved it when the religious guy from TUF lost his second fight after going on about how God was going to help him win.
Andre - January 14, 2012
kidnapped AND murdered.
Body Triangle - January 14, 2012
Did they ever find her?
I seem to remember her being…“disappeared.”
Andy Davis - January 14, 2012
No, they did not. At some point in the last few years she was declared dead and I believe they apprehended someone who confessed to murdering her. Though, last time I looked into the story, the body had still never been recovered. Just a terrible, terrible story.
Fraser Coffeen - January 14, 2012
He’s high up on my list of all time favorite fighters.
Fraser Coffeen - January 14, 2012
JU JITZU!
Our Bovine Public - January 14, 2012
Dana just posted his second blog
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2mcjR3TsK4s
Its pretty good as it shows Dana telling Vitor that rumble wasnt going to make weight and initially Vitor says he doesn’t want to have to make the weight before Dolce convinces him
Our Bovine Public - January 14, 2012
Basically
Vitor is Vitor. He’s always been good for a round of blitzkrieg, if that doesn’t work we’ll see if he’s mentally stronger than he has been in the past.
taptomyarmbar - January 14, 2012
I think he’s shown that mental toughness against Martin and Zikic – his only fights to go past one round since 2006. He is more mentally focused now if you ask me.
Fraser Coffeen - January 14, 2012
But he was on top through those fights, I’m interested to see what happens if a fight starts going against him in a longer fight. If Rumble gets him down for instance we’ll see.
I really hope he doesn’t lose tonight.
taptomyarmbar - January 14, 2012
Vitor is back
This narrative is so trite at this point. Vitor is a talented fighter that has been more or less prepared to dominate throughout his career, but I am not on board with the notion he is a fundamentally different fighter from the “Old Vitor”.
Vitor is a bonafide knockout artist that struggles when put on his back despite his BJJ creds, and he hasn’t gone anywhere
Robert V-U - January 14, 2012
I long ago dismissed those BJJ creds as having any relevance. I’m struggling to think of a single time he used them, outside of that super shady Joe Charles fight.
Fraser Coffeen - January 14, 2012
He has a respectable ADCC record
Albeit a decade ago.
VenusBlue - January 14, 2012
You must Login with your SB Nation account and be a member of Bloody Elbow to post a comment.