Kirkland seeks spark from former trainer
By Dan Rafael
In the wake of his shocking loss last month, middleweight James Kirkland has reunited with trainer Ann Wolfe, who helped take him to the brink of stardom before they had a falling out.
They have been working together for the past few days in their hometown of Austin, Texas, Kirkland's co-manager Cameron Dunkin told ESPN.com.
"He's back with Ann, and we're hoping James will fight again this summer," Dunkin said.
Kirkland's intense training regimen with Wolfe, a former female champion, was well-chronicled as they rose. But just as Kirkland was on the brink of a junior middleweight title shot in 2009, he was convicted on gun charges -- made more serious because he previously had been convicted of robbery, a felony, and therefore wasn't permitted to possess a firearm -- and went to prison for 18 months.
When Kirkland was released early this year, he left Austin and relocated to Las Vegas to work with Kenny Adams, a top trainer who is close to Dunkin.
After two years out of action, Kirkland returned to the ring with Adams in his corner. He won two fights by quick knockout in March, setting the stage for a showcase on the April 9 Marcos Maidana-Erik Morales HBO PPV card.
Kirkland, now at middleweight, was facing unheralded Nobuhiro Ishida of Japan. A win would have propelled Kirkland into a likely fall fight on HBO against middleweight champion Sergio Martinez. But Ishida -- not known for his power -- flipped the script, dropping Kirkland (27-1, 24 KOs) three times for a first-round knockout in a candidate for upset of the year. The loss led to Kirkland's trainer change.
“
It's always been on our mind if he could go back with Ann. It was James' idea. He decided he wanted to do it, and Ann was nice enough to take him back and not hold grudges. Frankly, they acted like adults, which we could use more of in boxing.
” -- Cameron Dunkin, James Kirkland's co-manager, on the reunion of Kirkland and his former trainer Ann Wolfe
"I love Kenny, everyone knows that, but it just didn't work," Dunkin said. "James didn't do well, and he wasn't happy. He wanted to change trainers, and this came along because [co-manager] Michael Miller has been talking to James about going back to Ann. We agree he should be back with Ann, and she said she would take him back."
Dunkin said Kirkland, 27, and Wolfe cleared the air and that the fighter has been training with her and getting along.
"He's left Las Vegas and is back in Austin with Ann and seems very happy," said Dunkin, noting that Kirkland's children are in Austin. "Miller and I are very happy about that. Kenny knows it wasn't working. He said, 'Look, I know it didn't work. I couldn't control him, and it just didn't work, and it's better that he moves on.'
"It's always been on our mind if he could go back with Ann. It was James' idea. He decided he wanted to do it, and Ann was nice enough to take him back and not hold grudges. Frankly, they acted like adults, which we could use more of in boxing."
Eric Gomez, Kirkland's matchmaker at Golden Boy Promotions, said the company backed Kirkland's decision to return to Wolfe.
"With Ann Wolfe, you had a winning combination," Gomez said. "You can have the best trainer in the world, but if there's no chemistry there, sometimes the fighter won't perform at his best. With James and Ann, there was chemistry. They understood each other. She taught him a lot. If it's not broke, why fix it? For whatever reason, he felt he needed a change and we respected that, and then everything went wrong the night he fought Ishida.
"No one is to blame. You can't blame Kenny. But I think it's a good thing [James and Ann are] getting back together. It's a familiar voice in the corner, and if she knows how to get the best out of him -- which, obviously she did -- then you kind of have to go back to what made him successful."
Gomez said Golden Boy has been talking to promoter Don King's office about a possible match between Kirkland and former two-division titlist Ricardo Mayorga, perhaps on the same card as Showtime's bantamweight tournament final between King-promoted titlist Joseph Agbeko and Golden Boy's Abner Mares. Agbeko-Mares was supposed to be fought April 23, but Agbeko withdrew the week of the fight because of sciatica. Gomez said King's office informed Golden Boy that Agbeko would be available to fight by late July or August. Kirkland-Mayorga, however, could be too expensive of a fight to be on the same card.
Epix remains in the boxing business
Epix, the fledgling premium cable network that entered the boxing business by securing American TV rights to heavyweight titleholder Vitali Klitschko's first-round knockout of Odlanier Solis on March 19, will remain in the boxing business.
Epix announced it has picked up U.S. rights to promoter Frank Warren's May 21 card at London's O2 Arena featuring light heavyweight titlist Jürgen Brahmer's defense against Nathan Cleverly and the super middleweight showdown between rival prospects James DeGale, a 2008 British Olympic gold medalist, and George Groves.
Originally, Epix planned to air the bouts on delay on June 18. However, it received such a strong reaction to the plan that it decided Thursday to air the fights live at 4 p.m. ET on May 21 on the network, as well as for free on EpixHD.com, with no sign-up necessary. (Registrations for the free viewing of Klitschko-Solis crashed the site.) Epix, which also will air the card on a jumbo screen in New York's Times Square (as it did with Klitschko-Solis), will use the British telecast for the live airing.
The card will be replayed June 25 as a lead-in for Epix's planned live coverage of middleweight titlist Felix Sturm's defense against England's Matthew Macklin from Cologne, Germany. There are also plans in the works for an August show on Epix from a location in the United States.
"With so much attention being focused on the light heavyweight division lately, Epix is very happy to be able to present this exciting world title fight," Epix president and CEO Mark Greenberg said.
Warren was pumped to get in on the ground floor with the new network.
"It's fantastic to be working with the new kids on the block, Epix, for the first time, and it's a great show to start off with," said Warren, who worked often with Greenberg when the latter was a Showtime executive. "I've worked with Mark Greenberg in the early days at Showtime, and I'm delighted to be working with him again. The show at the O2 is set to be a great night showcasing the best talent in British boxing. DeGale against Groves is the biggest domestic showdown since the Nigel Benn-Chris Eubank epics in the '90s and is heating up to be a dynamite fight.
"Cleverly is the rising young star, and he faces a big test against Brahmer, who is a tough and experienced champion, and a win for him will put him in the frame for big fights against top Americans Chad Dawson and Tavoris Cloud. It will give the boxers a great opportunity to showcase their talent and establish themselves in the U.S. early in their careers."
Kessler returns
[+] EnlargeMikkel Kessler and Mehdi Bouadla
AP Photo/Lars PoulsenMikkel Kessler is counting on continued success in his native Denmark when he makes his return from an eye injury against Mehdi Bouadla in June.
In April 2010, Mikkel Kessler won a super middleweight belt via decision from Carl Froch in a brutal fight in Showtime's Super Six World Boxing Classic. In August -- a month before his next tournament bout, against Allan Green -- Kessler dropped out because of an eye injury.
Now Kessler (43-2, 32 KOs), who was stripped of his belt, is set to return. Kessler's comeback will take place in his native Denmark on June 4 against France's Mehdi Bouadla (22-3, 10 KOs).
Showtime will air Kessler's return fight on same-day tape along with the live Super Six semifinal match between Froch and Glen Johnson from Atlantic City, N.J.
"I am excited to be back," said Kessler, whose only defeats came by decision to Joe Calzaghe in 2007 and to Andre Ward in the first round of the tournament in November 2009. "I knew I had to take a rest to let my eye heal, and I am happy that everything went according to plan. I am 100 percent fit and I can't wait to get inside the ring again. I have really been missing it. The comeback at Parken [Stadium in Copenhagen], with my home fans supporting me, will be great.
"Bouadla is a tough guy, and he will certainly give me a hard fight on June 4. I have never lost a fight in Denmark, and this will be no different. Nobody can beat me when my Viking fans are supporting me."
Said Bouadla: "I have a lot of respect for Mikkel Kessler, but to be honest, he comes off a long break and he cannot keep up with me. I will be very happy to be the first one to beat Kessler at home and end his comeback before it even started. This is my chance for glory. ... I will be remembered as the fighter who punched Kessler into retirement."
There is talk that if Kessler wins, a major fall fight could be made with Canadian titlist Lucian Bute, who signed a multifight contract with Showtime late last year.
Diaz, Holt at a crossroads
When former two-time lightweight titlist Julio Diaz (38-6, 27 KOs) and former junior welterweight titlist Kendall Holt (26-4, 14 KOs) meet in the main event of this week's "Friday Night Fights" (ESPN2, 9 ET) at the Chumash Casino in Santa Ynez, Calif., they will be fighting to remain near the top level of boxing.
Holt won his most recent fight on Jan. 29 on the Timothy Bradley Jr.-Devon Alexander undercard after back-to-back defeats (including losing his title to Bradley).
"It's an honor to face another former world champion," Holt said. "Julio Diaz is a gritty veteran, so I don't see him backing up. I don't see him trying to take it easy on me in there. I think he's going to come full steam ahead. It's going to be a great fight as long as he lasts."
Diaz, who also fought on the Bradley-Alexander undercard, has won two in a row since losing back-to-back fights and wants to keep the momentum going.
"It's a dangerous fight. I know Kendall Holt is coming very prepared to get back into his position, but I am going to be ready for him," Diaz said. "You can expect to see an explosive Julio Diaz back in the ring. It won't go to decision. I am a very dangerous fighter when I am ready. I have more knockouts than he has total [wins], and the public is labeling him the strong fighter and they are disregarding my knockout ratio. It doesn't bother me, I have always been the underdog, and that is what gives me the drive that I have. I have prepared to finish him off."
Jones on 'Top Rank Live'
Welterweight Mike Jones (24-0, 18 KOs), who headlines a June 25 "Top Rank Live" card (Fox Deportes) in his hometown of Philadelphia, will face journeyman Raul Munoz (22-13-1, 16 KOs).
If Jones wins (which is expected), he would return in September to fight on HBO on the undercard of featherweight titlist Yuriorkis Gamboa's next defense. "Mike Jones needs to stay busy," co-promoter Russell Peltz said. "He cannot fall into the habit of waiting for HBO or Showtime or pay-per-view fights. That's the problem with many of today's fighters: They won't fight unless they can make a score. The old-timers fought to pay their bills and to learn their craft. Experience is the key here, and Mike needs it."
Jones' past two fights, both wins against Jesus Soto Karass, were on big stages. He fought the first fight with Soto Karass on HBO PPV on the Manny Pacquiao-Antonio Margarito undercard, then won the rematch in February on HBO on the Nonito Donaire-Fernando Montiel undercard.
"I'm looking forward to fighting in Philadelphia again," Jones said. "I didn't realize it's been more than two years. Fighting in Atlantic City is close, but it's not Philadelphia. Texas and Nevada were good trips, too, but it will be nice to be back home."
Quick hits
[+] EnlargeTimothy Bradley
AP Photo/Mark AveryTimothy Bradley Jr. elected not to put his junior welterweight strap on the line against Amir Khan.
• Junior welterweight titlist Timothy Bradley Jr. plans to pass on an offer to unify titles against Amir Khan on HBO on July 23, Bradley's co-manager Cameron Dunkin told ESPN.com. Bradley is unhappy with his $1.3 minimum offer to fight Khan and is waiting for his contract with promoter Gary Shaw to expire in late June. Dunkin said he met with Bradley late last week in Las Vegas at the Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley fight to talk to him about it.
"We had a good meeting," Dunkin said. "He's taking a little time and gonna rest. I said, 'What do you want to do with the Khan fight?' He said, 'I'm not gonna be pushed right now. I'm gonna rest and talk stuff over with my family.' His wife is having a baby this summer, so there is a lot going on with his life."
Khan, meanwhile, will fight somebody else on July 23 on HBO. Golden Boy is talking to a variety of potential opponents, including titlist Zab Judah and lightweight contender Robert Guerrero.
• Lightweight titlist Brandon Rios' defense against Urbano Antillon on July 9 (Showtime) will take place at the Home Depot Center in Carson, Calif., Top Rank promoter Bob Arum said. Former welterweight titlist Kermit Cintron (32-3-1, 28 KOs) could open the telecast in a junior middleweight fight, Top Rank vice president Carl Moretti said. Cintron hasn't fought since last May at the Home Depot Center, where he lost a four-round technical decision to Paul Williams after falling out of the ring and electing not to continue.
• Super middleweight titlist Carl Froch of England has cut ties with promoter Mick Hennessy and signed with Barry and Eddie Hearn's Matchroom Sport. According to Matchroom, Froch has signed a five-fight promotional deal. Froch, who will face Glen Johnson in the semifinals of the Super Six World Boxing Classic on June 4 in Atlantic City, N.J., did not want to discuss the Hennessy situation, saying it was because of impending litigation. However, it seems as though Hennessy likely would be paid through the Super Six tournament because he is cited as Froch's promoter on the tournament contract.
"I'm so excited to be working with Matchroom," Froch said. "When you are fighting at your peak, it's about raising your profile and securing TV time, and that's where I am. When you sit down with Barry and Eddie, you can tell they have the power and the resources to maximize your potential, so I'm really excited about the rest of my career." One of Froch's issues with Hennessy was the promoter's inability to get Froch's fights on Sky, England's biggest boxing outlet. The fighter's upcoming Super Six bout, his first without Hennessy, will be carried by Sky.
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• Promoter Lou DiBella is working on a deal that would see mandatory welterweight title challenger Randall Bailey (41-7, 36 KOs) step aside and allow former titlist Andre Berto to challenge titleholder Jan Zaveck (31-1, 18 KOs) of Slovenia in the early fall. (DiBella promotes Bailey and Berto.) Selling Zaveck-Bailey to an American network is difficult, meaning Bailey likely would have to go to Zaveck's native Slovenia for a small purse to get his shot. But Bailey can step aside, take an interim bout and then get a more lucrative shot at the winner of the proposed Zaveck-Berto fight, which would take place in the U.S. and raise Zaveck's profile. Berto (27-1, 21 KOs) lost his version of the 147-pound title via decision to Victor Ortiz last month in a candidate for fight of the year.
• Top Rank picked up a rare date on Showtime's "ShoBox" series (likely part of its deal with the network for Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley) and will put on a card July 15 at the Texas Station casino in Las Vegas. Headlining will be hometown junior lightweight Diego Magdaleno (19-0, 7 KOs), who drew a crowd and was very impressive in his third-round destruction of Gilberto Sanchez Leon on ESPN2's "Friday Night Fights" last week in Las Vegas. Junior lightweight Casey Ramos (13-0, 4 KOs) will appear in the co-feature. Neither opponent has been signed yet.
• Junior bantamweight titlist Cristian Mijares (41-6-2, 18 KOs) of Mexico was due to face San Antonio's Raul Martinez in a mandatory defense on Saturday. However, Martinez suffered a gash on the bridge of his nose in a training session and was forced to withdraw from the fight. So Mijares instead will make the first defense of the 115-pound belt he won via decision against Juan Alberto Rosas in December when he faces late substitute Carlos Rueda (16-4-1, 13 KOs) of Nicaragua. They will meet in Mijares' hometown of Durango, Mexico. As part of its agreement to sanction the bout, the IBF ordered that the winner must fight Martinez in his next fight.
• Joel "Love Child" Julio (36-4, 31 KOs), who is moving back to the welterweight division, has a new opponent for his main event on the May 20 edition of "Friday Night Fights" (ESPN2, 9 ET). Julio will face Anges Adjaho (17-5, 9 KOs), his third scheduled opponent. Julio was originally due to face Antwone Smith, but Smith withdrew because of an elbow injury a couple of weeks ago. Then promoter Main Events thought it had a deal done for Julio, a former ESPN.com prospect of the year, to face Willie Nelson, but Nelson had a knee injury and would not have been ready, leaving Adjaho to get the call. Julio will face Adjaho at the Prudential Center's AmeriHealth Pavilion in Newark, N.J. Also on the card: welterweight prospect and 2008 U.S. Olympian Sadam Ali (12-0, 7 KOs), who faces John Revish (10-3-2, 8 KOs).
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• Junior lightweight titlist Ricky Burns (31-2, 8 KOs) of Scotland had hoped for a summer unification bout with fellow titleholder Mzonke Fana of South Africa, but nothing came of that hope. Instead, Burns will make his third defense against an opponent to be determined on July 16 in Liverpool, England, promoter Frank Warren announced. "Burns is one of only four world champions that Britain can boast of at the moment and the only one you can watch on these shores," Warren said, "and he is every bit as exciting as [David] Haye, Froch and Khan, all who are having their next fights abroad."
• Hernan "Tyson" Marquez (30-2, 23 KOs), who claimed a flyweight title April 2 with an 11th-round knockout of Panama's Luis Concepcion in Panama in a spectacular fight of the year candidate, will make his first defense July 2 in Hermosillo, Mexico, against an opponent to be determined, promoter Fernando Beltran announced. "The celebrating is over, and now it is time to prepare twice as hard because I will not allow anybody to deprive me of this title," said Marquez, who has resumed training. "There is no doubt that dreams can be achieved, and it's only a matter of believing in yourself and in God. You have to be consistent in what you do and learn. Now I'm champion. I want to come out and give a great show."
• British welterweight contender Kell Brook (23-0, 16 KOs) will fight in his hometown of Sheffield on June 25 against the most notable opponent of his career -- former junior welterweight titlist Lovemore N'dou (48-12-2, 31 KOs) of Australia, Matchroom Sport announced. "N'dou has been in with top, top names and never been stopped," Brook said. "He's a tough and game champion. It's a great motivation for me, as I want to be the first to stop him. It's in Sheffield, with my home fans roaring me on, and I'm running past the venue every day thinking, 'On June 25, I'm going to have a sellout show in there and I'm going to put on the best performance of my life.'"
• Matchroom Sport has announced the field for the 19th edition of its "Prizefighter" series. The June 7 one-night tournament in London will feature eight junior welterweights competing in three-round bouts from the quarterfinals to a final. Included in the field are former titleholder Junior Witter and Colin Lynes, who fought once before in 2005, when Witter defended his European title by beating Lynes. Also in the field: former British champion Kevin McIntyre, John Wayne Hibbert, Bobby Gladman, Yassine El Maachi, Peter McDonagh and Nathan Graham. The draw for the opening-round bouts is to be determined.
• A bad back has forced featherweight prospect Gary Russell, a 2008 U.S. Olympian, off Friday's night's "ShoBox" card (Showtime) in Primm, Nev. ... Interim bantamweight titlist Hugo Ruiz (27-1, 24 KOs) defends his belt against Francisco Arce (31-6-2, 20 KOs) in Los Mochis, Mexico -- the hometown of both men -- on Saturday night's edition of "Top Rank Live" (Fox Deportes, 11 ET). ... Former two-time heavyweight champion Hasim Rahman (49-7-2, 40 KOs) will go for his 50th professional victory June 11 at the DeSoto Civic Center in Southaven, Miss., when he faces Willie Herring (12-9-3, 3 KOs) in what figures to be an easy victory. Also on the card: blue-chip middleweight prospect Dominic Wade (11-0, 8 KOs) against Juan Astorga (15-6-1, 10 KOs). ... Sean Gibbons, matchmaker for Fernando Beltran's Zanfer Promotions, told ESPN.com that a planned May 28 fight for Giovani Segura, who vacated the junior flyweight title and is moving up to flyweight, has been scrapped. ... Gibbons also said that featherweight titlist Orlando Salido (35-11-2, 23 KOs), coming off an eighth-round knockout and major upset of Juan Manuel Lopez on April 16 in Puerto Rico, will return home to Ciudad Obregon, Mexico, for a title defense before a likely rematch with Lopez. The Lopez camp wants the rematch on Aug. 20, but Gibbons said that although Salido is happy to give Lopez a rematch, it will be on his own schedule, not Lopez's.
Quotables
"He signed the contract -- again. I will not believe the fight will happen until I see David Haye in the corner across from me. Thank God he's coming into the ring first." -- Heavyweight champ Wladimir Klitschko, on his July 2 unification fight with Haye, who previously had signed but pulled out two years ago
"He pretends that he won the fight. He's always complaining. He's always whining. I won the fight. It was a close fight, but I am not a whiner. You can never call a close fight a robbery. The judges said it was a draw. I took my pill and swallowed it." -- Light heavyweight champ Jean Pascal, on Bernard Hopkins, whom he drew with in December and faces in a rematch May 21 (HBO)