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Aug 31, 2003
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yeah he's a big puncher. That might be all he is though, I'm not sure to be honest. Like I said he was moving up the rankings, reached #10 then just a few days ago lost to a guy named Rafal Jackiewicz, who is 31-8-1. Fight was in Poland...
I got a few Bonsu fights .. if you want to peep any let me know I'll throw them up on megaupload. That being said I don't see how coming off a loss to an eliminator is doubtful. They have ridiculous eliminators with one person who doesn't deserve it and another who doesn't deserve to be there. In this case neither really deserves an eliminator shot.

Also Bonsu shouldn't have the Sugar nickname .. doesn't really fit his style.
 
May 13, 2002
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No he definitely shouldn't have the Sugar nickname. What the hell does he need a nickname for in the first place anyways? His fucking first name, Jackson, is really a last name, his middle name is fuckin "Osei" and his god damn last name is Bonsu!!!! No nickname required with a name like that!
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Felix Trinidad: "Two Fights in 2009 and Then I'm Done"

By Mark Vester

Felix "Tito" Trinidad (42-3, 35KOs) is looking to possibly return to more times in 2009 before calling it a career. Trinidad recently took a trip to Panama to attend the WBA's annual festival against drugs.

Trinidad wants the first opponent to be Bernard Hopkins, who faces Kelly Pavlik on October 18 in Atlantic City. Since his 2001 knockout loss to Bernard, the Puerto Rican star has been on a mission to get the chance for revenge. Trinidad has fought once since 2005, losing a twelve-round decision to Roy Jones Jr. in January.

"I'll possibly have two more fights in 2009," Trinidad told El Nuevo Dia. "I want to fight Hopkins, but he wont give me a rematch because he is afraid of me."

"It wanted to fight with him, but me not the revenge wants to give because is afraid me", affirmed. Hopkins defeated to Trinity in the 2001.

The second fight would be a rematch with Oscar De La Hoya. The De La Hoya rematch will probably never happen. Trinidad last fought at 170 and can't squeeze down in weight any lower than 164, while De La Hoya refuses to fight above 154. Also, Trinidad wants a 50-50 split and that won't happen either
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Telefutura Picks Up The Slack in Slow Boxing Week

By Jake Donovan

In a relatively thin boxing week, Telefutura couldn’t have picked a better time to feature one of its best cards of the year this weekend, which airs live from Buffalo Bill’s Star Arena in Primm, Nevada (Friday, 8PM ET/PT).

Both the main event and co-feature go against form, with neither slot offering a perceived foregone conclusion. The evening’s headlining act has Almazbek Raiymkulov continuing to rebuild toward lightweight contention, as he takes on former junior lightweight titlist and potential spoiler Javier Jauregui.

The chief support offers one of the game’s brightest prospects in undefeated junior middleweight Vanes Martirosyan. The 2004 US Olympian takes on fellow unbeaten Michael Medina in a ten-round bout.

On paper, it would appear that Jauregui is in far greater need of a win than anyone else on the show. But the truth of the matter is, he enters this weekend with little to lose – primarily because he’s expected to lose among the court of public opinion.

That is, of course, if Raiymkulov decides to live up to his potential.

Having represented his native Kyrgyzstan in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, Raiymkulov (26-1-1, 15KO) entered the pro game with a lot of promise. It tends to go with the territory when you’re backed by one the sport’s biggest promoters (Top Rank) and managers (2007 Manager of the Year Cameron Dunkin).

He lived up to it for a time, seeming to have hit his stride in 2005, when his bouts regularly received airtime. However, the exposure produced very mixed results.

The year began with his being hailed as one of the game’s more promising talents. Showtime echoed such sentiments after his 5th round knockout of Koba Gogoladze, informing Raiymkulov’s team that their fighter was too good to reappear on the Shobox level.

Translation: title contention was within reach.

Unfortunately, his career never turned the corner.

Joel Casamayor lost two of his last three prior to his June ’05 meet with Raiymkulov on HBO, but proved to have plenty of fight left in him. By night’s end, the Kyrgyzstan boxer would suffer the first knockdown and non-win of his pro career, settling for a split decision draw.

It was a verdict for which he would’ve gladly settled four months later, when he found himself on the wrong end of one of the year’s biggest upsets. Nate Campbell was on the slide and accepted the fight on less than one month’s notice, but still turned in what would rate at the time as the best performance of his career, dominating Raiymkulov every step of the way before forcing a stoppage late in the 10th and final round of the pay-per-view co-feature.

The road back to respectability has been a slow one for Raiymkulov. He’s since won six straight, albeit against unspectacular competition.

In a vacuum, his best win among the streak came last June, eking out a split decision against Miguel Huerta. Once you dig deeper than the line result and watch the fight itself (a terrific battle, for what it’s worth), you’ll find that the win warrants an asterisk, as many believed Huerta got severely shafted in their Versus-televised bout.

It’s because of that fight that more than a few people regard Jauregui (53-15-2, 36KO) as a very live underdog in tonight’s bout.

The former lightweight titlist had a much easier go of things in his own bout with Huerta earlier this year, which aired on Telefutura. Jauregui outworked the fringe contender en route to a unanimous decision and his second straight upset, having knocked out previously unbeaten Adrian Mora six months prior.

There wouldn’t be a hat trick, as Jauregui was brought back down to reality in a virtual shutout loss to unbeaten lightweight contender Anthony Peterson. The loss put Jauregui at 6-5 since beating the late Leavander Johnson for a vacant alphabet title five years ago. He won the belt in dominating fashion, pummeling Johnson before the referee mercifully stopped the onslaught seconds into the 11th round.

The title win was instant redemption for Jauregui after a long and arduous journey in the pro ranks. He was only 14 years old when he began punching for pay, having already racked up 23 pro fights before his 18th birthday.

Matched tough, the losses piled up over time for the Mexican, though there were plenty of upsets along the way. Before Jose Luis Castillo became a world champion, he suffered two stoppage losses at the hands of his countryman, though it was Jauregui’s domination of Alex Trujillo on ESPN2 late in 2002 that caught everyone’s attention.

It was that win that unexpectedly put Jauregui within reach of a major title. Two fights – and two knockouts – later, his dreams were realized, though they were short-lived; he lost the belt in his very next fight, an oddly scored majority decision in a bout Julio Diaz appeared to have won in convincing fashion.

The upset win over Huerta earlier this year breathed new life into Jauregui’s fading career. While another title shot appears to be a longshot, a win over Ralymkulov would put the 35-year old well in position to receive one more signature payday. It would also destroy any remaining chances of Raiymkulov ever living up to his early-career promise.

One career that remains in full swing is that of Vanes Martirosyan (20-0, 13KO). The transplanted Armenian, now making his home in Glendale, California, gets an upgrade in competition as he faces unbeaten Mexican slugger Michael Medina.

Fans have been high on Martirosyan for quite some time, but have also been calling for more rapid developments in his career. The junior middleweight became a fixture in Top Rank’s Versus Fight Night series before their contract expired earlier this year.

As a result, Martirosyan debuts on the Solo Boxeo circuit. The closest he’s previously come was fighting on the non-televised portion of a few Telefutura shows, including the network’s first card of 2008, where Vanes decisioned Clarence Taylor for his 18th pro win.

Two more wins have followed, both airing on Versus including a shutout over former title challenger Angel Hernandez this past June. A win tonight will allow the Armenian boxer to advance to a November 1 Top Rank PPV appearance, which will give him five fights in 2008 as he rapidly approaches contender status.

In stark contrast, tonight will mark the first fight of 2008 for his opponent, Michael Medina (18-0-2, 14KO). He only received this assignment after agreeing three weeks ago to fill in for Elco Garcia, who was placed on indefinite suspension by the Southern Ute boxing commission, despite having pitched a shutout in his most recent performance.

As much of a mystery is what the 22-year old Medina brings to the table.

The closest he comes to boasting a meaningful win is a split decision nod over welterweight journeyman Bernardo Guereca last June in Arizona. Martirosyan appeared on the same card, scoring a far more convincing 7th round knockout over Alberto Mercedes moments before the Telefutura cameras began rolling.

The win over Guereca was Medina’s lone fight outside of the US, with the rest of his pro fights taking place in his native Mexico. His last bout came nine months ago, scoring a 7th round stoppage of Christian Solano for his 13th straight win.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Ngoudjo vs. Urango For IBF 140 Title, Malignaggi Vacates

Montréal- After dropping a controversial decision in his first attempt at a world title, Montreal's Hermann Ngoudjo (17-2-0, 9 KO's) will get a second crack at boxing glory, this time against former world champion Juan Urango (20-1-1, 16 KO's), for the now vacant IBF Junior Welterweight (140 lbs.) championship.

In an official letter sent to Groupe Yvon Michel (GYM), and Urango's promoter, Seminole Warriors Boxing, the IBF confirmed that Paul Malignaggi (25-1-0, 5 KO's would not be able to grant Ngoudjo, his mandatory challenger, a rematch, and that he therefore will be vacating his belt.

The IBF has set an October 18th deadline for GYM and Seminole Warriors Boxing to reach an agreement, or it will order a purse bid to determine the details of this intriguing world title bout.

This past January, in Atlantic City, in his first world title fight, Ngoudjo gave the defending champion Malignaggi all he could handle, and then some, seemingly doing enough to bring the title to Montreal, only to be denied by the judges in a controversial unanimous decision setback.

Undeterred by the bitter defeat to Malignaggi, Ngoudjo quickly earned a second crack at the IBF crown, outpointing former WBA champion Souleymane M'Baye (36-3-1, 21 KO's) over 12 rounds in an IBF title eliminator, on June 6, 2008, at Montreal's Uniprix Stadium.

While Ngoudjo, a master boxer, who isn't affraid to mix things up, had to deal with the elusive Malignaggi in January, his second title opportunity will pose a different set of challenges altogether when he faces the rock-fisted Urango, considered by many to be one of the hardest hitters in the sport.

Urango is best known for dropping his world title to the aforementioned Ricky Hatton in January of 2007, in Las Vegas, but it was the showstopping power he flashed en route to gaining the title that put Urango on the boxing map.
Like Ngoudjo, Urnago had to win his way back into title contention, and he did just that this past April, destroying veteran Carlos Wilfredo Vilches (53-8-2, 31 KO's) in the fourth round to earn the IBF's #2 ranking at junior welterweight.

Ngoudjo, who became a naturualized Canadian this past spring, is eagerly looking forward to another shot at the IBF belt :

''After my win over M'Baye, I knew Malignaggi would never get in the same ring as me again He'd just assume avoid me,'' Ngoudjo said.

''Urango is a very dangerous hitter, and it's going to be a real challenge, but my days of being a contender are over, and it's time for me to take the next step.''

Many feel Ngoudjo already has, with his last four fights coming against either reigning or former world champions, nothcing two wins, and two disputed loses against the likes of Jose Luis Castillo (56-9-1, 48 KO's), Randall Bailey (37-6-0, 34 KO's), Malignaggi, and M'Baye .

According to GYM President Yvon Michel, Ngoudjo was willing to wait to face the winner of Malignaggi-Hatton, but neither fighter would guarantee Ngoudjo a shot at the title.

''We were willing to be paitient and step asside to let Malignaggi defend his belt against Hatton, but we would have to be guaranteed an immediate fight against the winner, We never received that guarantee, so we pushed the IBF to call a purse bid, which forced Malignaggi to vacate his title,'' Michel said.

''In the end though, Herman has already proven himself to be an elite fighter. His last four fights have all been against either reigning or former world champions, and he's 2-2 with both loses coming on very controversial decisions. He's fought the cream of the crop at junior welterweight. He has the experience, and the maturity, and he's shown that he's one of the best 140 lb. fighters in the wor
 
Nov 1, 2005
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telefutura's always had good fights...thats where i first seen chris arreola and now he's on ring mags. top ten heavyweight list...steven luevano fought there a long time ago as well.whoever's into up n coming latino fighters need to tune in.
 
Nov 1, 2005
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telefutura's always had good fights...thats where i first seen chris arreola and now he's on ring mags. top ten heavyweight list...steven luevano fought there a long time ago as well.whoever's into up n coming latino fighters need to tune in.
 
Aug 31, 2003
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telefutura's always had good fights...thats where i first seen chris arreola and now he's on ring mags. top ten heavyweight list...steven luevano fought there a long time ago as well.whoever's into up n coming latino fighters need to tune in.
Yea they have a lot of good up and comers on there period .. not just hispanic fighters. Kelly Pavlik had a dope fight against Zuniga on a Telefutura show before he hit HBO. This card they got tomorrow should be dope though with Kid Diamond and I really want to see Vanes fight.

.. also off topic but I saw the post earlier and don't feel like looking for it .. If David Haye fights Eddie Chambers, he'll lose. That is all.
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
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Tito is smoking crack, bhop destroyed him and he's afraid of him? lmao get the hell out of here
He just wants another big pay day... why would Hopkins be scared of a washed up Tito when he "clearly" dominated every round of their first fight? Tito is trippin'... I think he's talking like that so he could get another big fat payday.

Oh yeah, I'll be online tonight 206 on the Madden, get at ya boy mayne.
 
May 13, 2002
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yeah that was over in Wales so it was a huge Calzaghe love fest. The ref obviously was biased as fuck. I mean I'm not sayin Manfredo was going to win or anything, but still that was just retarded! He threw like 40 "punches" and landed about 2 (both being partially blocked at that).

That's his style though, here is his mastery against bhop:


I'm sure compubox credit him for 6 landed punches here too, lol