Boxing News Thread

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
King Arthur departs for US after referee row is resolved

King Arthur Abraham will travel to the US on Sunday morning after the referee row has been resolved. The former Super Six World Boxing Classic Tournament point leader is set to take on WBA Super-Middleweight Champion Andre Ward in the semi-finals at the Home Depot Center in Carson on May 14. “We are pleased that all issues regarding the judges and the referee have been sorted,” Hall of Fame-Promoter Wilfried Sauerland said. “The Californian Commission and Dan Goossen have finally decided to honour the agreement that the referee will be from neither the US nor Europe. We have also agreed upon the three judges scoring the bout at ringside. This was our condition to let Arthur travel to the US, and since all of our demands have been met, he will now fly to the US on Sunday. I´m not sure why the Commission and Goossen did not stick to something everybody had signed off a long time ago but speaking from experience I know that dealing with Dan can be difficult at times.”

After Luis Pabon (Puerto Rico) was officially confirmed as the referee, Sauerland said the stage is set for an exciting fight. “This infamous referee row just adds to the growing notion that Ward is over-protected by Goossen. The fact that he has been trying to appoint a Californian referee does not make him look like the most confident promoter I have ever seen. But then again I can´t fault him for being scared of Arthur´s punching power. We are glad we have won the first round without even leaving the country but quite frankly I could have done without all the arguing.”


Meanwhile, King Arthur said he was unfazed by the referee discussion. “I do the fighting in the ring and let my mangers Kalle and Wilfried Sauerland take care of the rest,” he said. “I am glad that everything has been sorted and I am grateful their hard work has paid off.”

Abraham is traveling to the US knowing that the odds are against him. “I know that many people consider Ward the favourite - probably the same who considered me the favourite to win the tournament after my first-round KO victory over Taylor. All I can say is that I am looking forward to May 14 and that everything can happen in boxing, especially when you got a lot of punching power.”
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
Larry Holmes: “Today if I was heavyweight champion of the world I think I’d reign for

by Geoffrey Ciani (Interviewed by Jenna J & Geoffrey Ciani) - Last week’s 122nd edition of On the Ropes Boxing Radio (brought to you by CWH Promotions) featured an exclusive interview with former heavyweight champion of the world Larry Holmes (69-6, 44 KOs) whose championship reign included 20 title defenses stretching more than seven years. Holmes spoke about his career and also shared opinions and insight on today’s boxing landscape. Here is a complete transcript of that interview:

JENNA J: It is time for our final guest of this week’s show. He was the first Hall of Famer we’ve ever had “On the Ropes” and he’s returning today. He is the legendary “Easton Assassin” Larry Holmes. How are you doing today Larry?

LARRY HOLMES: Hey Jenna. I’m pretty good. I can’t complain I’m above the ground. (laughs)

JENNA: (laughs) Hey that’s always good. So Larry, what are you up to these days?

HOLMES: You know I’m just doing a lot of real estate, trying to do real estate anyway. The economy is bad. With this recession that we’re in right now nobody is spending and nobody’s buying. So I’m at a standstill and I’m trying to earn money here and there just by making different appearances and stuff like that. Meanwhile I’m just laying back and waiting for somebody to ring my phone.

JENNA: Alright now Larry, you’re a guy who goes in and out of the gym. Have any opportunities for you to train fighters ever arisen?

HOLMES: Yeah there are opportunities for me to do that, but like I don’t want to do it because I’ve done that before. While I was fighting I was managing and training fighters and I had a couple of fighters with a lot of potential but what happened is they wanted to go out and do their thing and whatever. I know boxing so if they don’t listen to me they’re not going to go anywhere. I’m not going to spend my money and waste my time with somebody that is not going to listen. A lot of times these fighters were not listening because they always wanted to listen to somebody else who had never done it. So that’s why I got my gym now and my brother is now using the gym and he’s training fighters. I don’t know how well he’s doing or whatever, but the kids he has helping are a bunch of amateurs. That’s all good but you know what? The bills are still coming in and we have to pay for the lights and the electric and the people who come in and clean it and work it. So I don’t know how long that gym is going to be there.

JENNA: Larry do you follow boxing as much today as you used to?

HOLMES: No I don’t do it because these guys are starting to recycle fighters like Pacquiao and Mosley and Mayweather and whatever. Those are the names that people recognize that could be making good money, but they’re talking crazy. Like I understand that Mayweather is trying to talk to the man who built the Dallas football stadium and how he wants $100 million for a fight with Pacquiao. Pacquiao wants $100 million if he gets past Mosley. Mosley wants $100 million and these guys are just talking right out of their hat. They’re not really talking seriously because if they were they’d have to be more reasonable on how much money they should get and how much money it’s worth. To me those fights with Pacquiao and Mayweather are not worth $100 million!

JENNA: It’s interesting you bring that up. I mean Larry you’ve been in boxing for so many years. What do you think of the business of boxing, and everything that surrounds getting these fights together, with the promoters, and all the money that goes around to make these fights happen, and all the things that happen behind the scenes?

HOLMES: Yeah a lot of money goes out and a lot of people still like boxing especially in the lighter weight classes. That seems to be what’s happening today with the lower weights. People are paying a lot of money for that and a lot of the fighters are not seeing it. But again a lot of fighters are saying it, but what they got to do is save it and try to hold on to it and try not try to spend it. That’s what a lot of fighters are doing and that’s the shame of it because I’ll tell you, it’s hard to come back when you lost. When you lose something it’s hard to get it back and I’m talking about your dollars. You got to try and hold onto it because that’s all you got for the rest of your life. Jobs are not as easy to come by any more. Businesses are not as easy to run. I mean we’re just in a hard place right now and people got to watch what they do.

JENNA: Do you at all wish you fought in today’s era? With all of the money going around in boxing, that you would be around for these kinds of paydays that the fighters are requesting?

HOLMES: I would have loved to have been around here for these type fighters, but these guys are really not fighting anybody, they’re not really dedicating themselves, and they’re not disciplined. So I think I would have had a cakewalk. I reigned as heavyweight champion for seven and a half years. Today if I was heavyweight champion of the world I think I’d reign for more than 7 years, I’d probably reign for 10-15 years! But these guys are not dedicated.

JENNA: Touching a little bit on your career it’s actually an anniversary of sorts. It’s twenty-five years ago this month where you had your second fight with Michael Spinks in a very controversial bout. Can you tell us what you remember from that fight, the decision, and the aftermath?

HOLMES: Well yeah I remember it. I remember it very well. That was a fight that stopped me from doing a lot of things because there was so much jealousy out there and so many people that did not want me to be heavyweight champion or for me to break the record of Rocky Marciano. I had all that stuff going against me and I was trying to be Larry Holmes, myself, and not worry about records or anything else and not worry about what people would say after the fight was over. I was kind of concerned about that, but you know what? I don’t have any regrets. I thought I won the fight. He thought he won the fight or maybe he knew he didn’t win the fight, but nevertheless I’m still going to go on. I know what happened to me with Michael Spinks in both of those fights and nobody can tell me any different. That’s why I’m happy! That’s why I can go on with my head up and say that I’m one of the greatest heavyweight fighters of all time in spite of what records they might try and say I have.

JENNA: Larry out of those two fights with Michael Spinks which one do you think was the more controversial one?

HOLMES: The first one was more controversy, well both of them were filled with controversy because what happened is the first fight in my opinion in my mind at that time, it could have been a draw. I thought I won the fight. I didn’t do enough to really convince them that I really won it. Then the second fight there was no doubt—no doubt!—that I won that one. But they didn’t give it to me. That’s the game they played, and they played it and they did a good job of doing it. They were trying to prevent me from being a part of history and maybe they’re doing it in this life, but in another life they would not have been able to do it because God is the judge of all the judges so I don’t worry about that and I leave it all in his hands.

JENNA: Alright well Larry, when people talk about you and your career they say you’re one of the most underrated heavyweight champions that we’ve ever had. I mean how do you view your own legacy?

HOLMES: The same thing, they say it right. I’m the most underrated champion that we’ve ever had because they didn’t want me to be heavyweight champion of the world and they didn’t want to give me my just dues. They wanted to talk about me not having it and me being against me in the beginning. So they wanted to talk about me. But like you said I’m the most underrated heavyweight champion of the world and that’s the way they want it. Now they want to talk about what I’ve done and everything else, but they should have been talking about what I had done and what I went through while I was going through it. Don’t wait until then to talk about how great I was. That’s what they’re doing! They’re talking about how great I was but they should have been saying this when I was champion fighting. They should have been paying me like I was the greatest. They were not doing it. I took whatever I could take to get in the rankings as one of the heavyweight champions. I took whatever they gave me. It’s just about taking it, but I knew I was heavyweight champion of the world. For seven and a half years I was heavyweight champion of the world.

JENNA: Larry you mentioned that you wish you were respected more when you were heavyweight champion, but how do you feel about the way people hold you in such high regard today?

HOLMES: I love it. I think it’s great that they’re giving me my recognition. You know I think it’s well overdue and I’m going to sit back and enjoy it. That’s what I want to do. I’m going to sit back and enjoy it. I’m not going to hate anybody. I’m not going to go crazy if somebody says somebody is greater than me. I’m just going to enjoy what they give me and if they don’t give me anything, it’s okay too.

JENNA: Alright well Larry, we’re also joined on the line by my Co-Host Geoff.

GEOFFREY CIANI: Hi Larry. It’s a great pleasure to have you back on the show champ.

HOLMES: Thanks a lot, Geoff. I appreciate it.

CIANI: Larry I wanted to ask you, everybody pretty much universally views your jab as the greatest asset you brought into the ring with you. What do you consider to be your second best asset you brought in?

HOLMES: My determination because I always trying to prove that just as good as the next person. It was not that I was better than the next one or greater than the next person. It’s just that I was probably a little smarter than the next person because I knew what to do and how to do it and I was doing it. So I would say I was one of the next great guys out there because I knew how to fight! I could fight! There was no little boy in me. I could fight and they didn’t want to understand that so therefore they didn’t give me that due. But I had a lot of weapons and my last jab probably was the best out there.

CIANI: Now Larry, early in your career you had a lot of sparring sessions with some big name fighters at the time, guys like Ali, Frazier, Shavers, and Young. I’m curious which one of those guys sparring gave the most valuable learning experience in the early portions of your career?

HOLMES: Well you know being around Muhammad Ali for the years that I had been around him, watching him gave me the most experience that I ever would have. I’m not just talking about in the ring boxing him. I’m talking outside of the ring. By having me and letting me travel with him to different places and fighting on the under cards I learned a great deal about Muhammad Ali. You can’t buy the experience that I had. You can’t buy it. Ali was a great man and I tried to emulate and copy him and that was another one of my problems. I wanted to be like him and a lot of people were saying I was a copycat and I needed to get my own style. I said whatever worked for me that’s what I’m going to do. Ali’s style worked for me. That’s what I did and I did change it a little bit here and a little bit there. Same thing with Joe Louis, I copied him, I copied Frazier, I copied everybody. Whatever helped me at the time that’s what I went for.

CIANI: You mentioned how he helped you outside the ring just as much as inside the ring, but while you two were sparring together, when you first started working with him can you tell us a little bit about what those sessions were like and what was it like the first time you got the best of him?

HOLMES: Well I’ll tell you what, it was always a little bit of competition with Ali and I because first of all, when I started with him he wanted to show me that he’s the boss which I already knew because the guy was paying me. So I knew I was going to go out there and work with him and not try to hurt him and hope that I don’t get hurt because I wanted to keep my job. We went through a lot of years like that, blow to blow, getting a little quicker than him, taking a few shots that I didn’t have to take. I learned how to do that. That’s why I was able to keep my job for four years. But when it came down to me just getting ready to fight Muhammad, I said hey man this is it I quit. I’m going on my own. I’m going to make my own way in the heavyweight division and therefore I quit and three years later I was heavyweight champion of the world.

CIANI: Okay, now in those three years before you became heavyweight champion, which fight before your fight with Norton would that you would define as the fight that was most important for you to your career at that point?

HOLMES: Earnie Shavers. Earnie Shavers was the first fight. It was an elimination fight for the WBC belt heavyweight championship of the world and the winner would have to fight the winner of Kenny Norton and Jimmy Young. Kenny Norton won the title and then I won over Earnie Shavers and then they had to fight the top guy from the elimination and that happened to be me because I beat Earnie Shavers. As I said that was a great moment for me that day.

CIANI: You mentioned determination earlier as being probably the second best asset you brought into the ring with you and that was something on display in the fight where you did win the heavyweight championship. Can you take us through that whole fight from the moment it was signed until the moment your hand was raised in victory?

HOLMES: Hey listen, getting ready to fight Kenny Norton for the heavyweight championship of the world was one of the greatest things. Except one day six days prior to the fight I pulled a muscle in my arm, and once I pulled that muscle in my arm I almost thought I was out of the picture. But with me praying and overcoming it with ice and heat and working it and massaging it, I was able to do it. I was able to overcome that problem. I went out there not thinking that I’m going to be as good as I was. With the pressure that he put on me, when the pressure was on me, I was able to overcome that and I went on and won the heavyweight championship.

JENNA: Alright Larry, to change things up a little bit, you mentioned earlier about fighters like Mayweather and Pacquiao. I’m just curious what do you think about those superstars today? I mean besides for asking for the money they are what do you think about the stars of today’s game?

HOLMES: I think it’s great! Anytime you can accomplish something and get the PR and the publicity behind it where people are looking, and wondering, and talking about it. I think it’s great. I don’t envy those guys. They should cherish the moment because this doesn’t happen each and every day. I just hope they wake up, especially Mayweather, and smell the coffee. Because it’s not every day somebody is going to come offer you $25 million to go out there and get your butt beat or beat somebody up. So therefore he should cherish that moment. I’m happy to see those guys doing it because fighters go through a lot and at the end of the day they don’t have a lot because of promoters, and trainers, and managers, and what not. So I’m hoping that Pacquiao and Mayweather will come out okay. I think they will.

JENNA: Now Pacquiao is a guy who was champion at 112 pounds and now he’s a belt holder at 147. What do you think about him as a fighter and what he’s accomplished being a champion in eight weight classes?

HOLMES: Well I think he covers a lot being a champion, but the hardest thing for him was to move up in weight. You know as long as he moves up in weight and eats the right foods and not tries to burn it off every night that he goes into the gym then I think he’ll be fine, because he can really carry the weight because he has the height. He’s almost about as Mayweather I understand so he’ll be fine. I don’t really see too much of a problem with that and not only that he’s a likeable guy. I think he’s the Governor or something in his country or whatever it is. He holds an office somewhere over there in the Philippines. I think the guy is pretty smart. One thing I don’t like about Pacquiao is I think he trains too hard! You know you can leave it on the field if you train too hard and you don’t want to do that. You want to go in there and you want to have it all the way through that fight.

JENNA: People out there and everyone in the boxing world really want to see a fight between Mayweather and Pacquiao. We talked about it before and how much money Mayweather has been wanting for it, but what do you think it truly is? Do you think it’s about the money or do you think maybe it’s a case of Mayweather not wanting to fight Pacquiao?

HOLMES: Well I’ll tell you what, I don’t know. I don’t think Mayweather really wants to fight Pacquiao because if somebody offered me $25 million I’m an old man and I’d come out of retirement and fight anybody because that is a lot of money to turn down. Pacquiao gets $25 million. They should go ahead and fight, the same as Mayweather and Mayweather is the one who turned it down. I wouldn’t do that if I was him.

JENNA: Well Larry you’re no stranger to a super fight. You had a big fight in the early 80s with Gerry Cooney. How do you draw the comparison between the big super fights today and the big super fight you had back in 1982?

HOLMES: Well the fights today and the fights from yesterday back in that day were quite different. A lot more money was given, fighters were more determined, and they hit much harder. So when I fought Gerry Cooney it was a good fight, a hard fight, and a fight that he wanted and I wanted so we didn’t really care too much about the money. $10 million is a lot of money and we took it and those guys would not have taken it.

JENNA: Gerry doesn’t seem to get too much credit for what he accomplished during his career because he lost his only title shot against you. I’m wondering how you feel about the way people view Gerry Cooney’s career?

HOLMES: Well you know I would tell Gerry to tell everyone that doesn’t like him and talks stuff about him to go to hell, because Gerry Cooney was a nice guy. He is a nice guy! He’s still my friend and we still talk. Gerry fought his butt off and he just happened to be fighting a guy who was a little bit better than him. If it was anybody else outside of me I felt that he would have been heavyweight champion of the world. A lot of people do put him down and I hear it and I tell it just like I’m telling you. Don’t put Gerry down because Gerry fought and he fought hard and he could have been a heavyweight champion of the world if he wouldn’t have fought me on that day. We all have our good days and bad days you know, and that was my good day and that was Gerry’s bad day. So people should not talk about it and they should give him the credit that he deserves because he was a hell of a fighter!

JENNA: Larry are you at all disappointed that you didn’t get more credit after you beat Gerry Cooney in the 80s?

HOLMES: Well you forget I’m black. They ain’t never going to give a black man the credit that he deserves, especially if he beats a white guy. They’re not going to give me the credit, but I didn’t care about the credit. You know I just cared about me not getting hurt, me not hurting anybody, and me putting money in my pockets so I can put it in the bank. That’s all I worried about and that’s what I fought for. Everybody said I boxed because I liked boxing and I liked getting punched in the face. No, I didn’t like boxing and I didn’t like getting punched in the face. I liked making money and that’s what made me.

CIANI: Which one of your championship performances was the one you were proudest of?

HOLMES: June 9, 1978 when I fought Kenny Norton in Las Vegas. That was the proudest for me because at that time nobody was thinking about Larry Holmes. A lot of people back here in the hometown said, “He ain’t nothing! He can’t fight! Kenny Norton is going to kill him! He can’t fight! He can’t beat anybody!” And that was one of the proudest days of my life, when I proved to everybody who said I couldn’t do it wrong. They were wrong and I showed them that I can do it and I did it.

CIANI: Larry I’m wondering if you can tell us and the fans out there a little bit about your decision behind when y ou dropped the WBC belt and accepted to become the first IBF heavyweight champion of the world?

HOLMES: Well I’ll tell you I was stuck between a rock and a hard place because that’s what I wanted to do. I wanted to fight anybody and everybody, but I wanted to get the most money that I could get when I fought them. A lot of times I was not able to do that but then everybody was saying take this, take that, and I took what I could take.

CIANI: Earlier Jenna spoke about your anniversary, your fights with Spinks. I’m wondering if you could tell us a little bit about your fight with Mike Tyson and generally what your thoughts were on Tyson as a champion following you?

HOLMES: Well first of all let me just say this, when I fought Mike Tyson I didn’t fight Mike Tyson. I wasn’t even ready. I was two years off for Mike Tyson. I wasn’t out there training. I was singing and hanging out. I wasn’t really into fighting Mike Tyson. I had quit. Don King came to me and offered me $3.5 million. I said I might as well take the fight. I took the fight on short notice. They only gave me two months to get ready for the fight and then I fell short. Mike Tyson beat me, and after that I quit and went back to the things I was doing with the band and whatever. Then I told people how it was. Mike Tyson is going to be a great fighter but his mind is not going to be there to be a great fighter because he’s going to do anything and everything that he wants to do. I told people in five years or whatever he would be in jail, and everything I predicted and said about Mike Tyson came true. I mean I like Mike Tyson. I think he’s a good guy. I just think he needs to think about what he’s going to do before he does it.

CIANI: Now Larry, we recently had Buster Douglas on the program here for an interview. What were your thoughts at the time when Buster beat Tyson and were you surprised by the results in that fight?

HOLMES: No, I wasn’t surprised because Buster Douglas is a boxer. He used his jab and stayed on the outside. Mike Tyson never adjusted. He never fought anybody who was going to hit him back and when Buster Douglas hit him back I wasn’t surprised. Everybody else was.

CIANI: The last guy who was considered a great heavyweight champion was Lennox Lewis, and a lot of times people say, “Lennox Lewis had the best jab since Larry Holmes”.

HOLMES: No, Lennox Lewis doesn’t have no jab! I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to cut you off, but Lennox Lewis don’t have no jab. He ain’t never had a jab. He got Emanuel Steward and Emanuel Steward was trying to teach him how to jab. He don’t have no jab! Lennox Lewis don’t have no jab, he has no heart, but if he gets started on you he’s got the biggest heart in the world and he’s going to kill you. But I have seen the dog come out of Lennox Lewis a couple of times when he fought, and I don’t think he had it. And he never had the jab! So don’t even put him in there and talk about his jab because he ain’t never had a jab.

CIANI: So how do you think you at your best would have matched up against a prime Lewis?

HOLMES: Listen man, I don’t go that way. If I went the way I would tell you and people would be mad at me because there is nobody in boxing history that would have beaten me if I was in my prime at the same time as them. I don’t feel that anybody could beat me. Then that’s everybody’s opinion. When you say you could beat Joe Louis, or Marciano, or Dempsey or anybody else. Oh no you couldn’t! You could beat Ali. Oh no you couldn’t! So I don’t even get in that. I always say to everybody if you ask me who the greatest fighter of all time is I’m going to say me! Larry Holmes! If you ask to take me out of the picture, yeah I can take me out of the picture and say maybe Muhammad Ali, maybe Joe Louis, maybe Rocky Marciano, maybe Dempsey. I can say that! But when you ask me the question I’m going to say Larry Holmes and that’s the way I’ve always done that.

JENNA: Well Larry we just have a few more questions before we let you off the line, and I mentioned earlier at the beginning of the show it was an anniversary of sorts and it’s also another anniversary this month. Twenty years ago this month you made your comeback to boxing and I’m just curious why did you decide to come back and what were your expectations?

HOLMES: I had seen that no one was out there who could really fight and I thought if these guys are fighting like that I can go back and win the heavyweight championship of the world and make money while I’m doing it. That’s why I made my decision to make a comeback to do that. The only one thing about it where I fell short, I never thought I was going to suffer a detached retina in my training going back to the fight when I got in the ring with Evander Holyfield. When I fought Evander Holyfield I just had gotten out of the fight with Ray Mercer and before that fight with Ray Mercer I had suffered a detached retina, but I closed my eyes and I beat Ray Mercer anyway. Then I went in the hospital and got an operation right after that, but my eye was not really ready for me to go in and fight. But it was kind of hard to turn down $10 million or $12 million to fight a guy that I thought didn’t have anything. So I went in there with Ray Mercer and I came out with a split decision and then I thought I may as well quit again because I had a problem with my eye. People kept talking to me and talking to me. You can come back and do this. You had a problem with your eye. So I came back and I just came back to do one thing, make the money and then get a record number up to 75 fights.

JENNA: You mentioned Ray Mercer before. When you fought him he was undefeated. He was 18-0 and people weren’t giving you much of a chance. Do you consider beating him like winning the championship again because he was the linear WBO champion when you beat him?

HOLMES: (laughs) Yeah, they never gave me the belt, but I didn’t care about that. Yeah, I considered myself as being a part of the champion, but they didn’t give me that respect or whatever. I didn’t really care. I really didn’t care. I had done it because the world had me a five to one underdog. I was going to lose. I could not win. I had reporters come to me and say don’t get hurt. I said, “I’m not going to get hurt, I’m going to kick his ass!” Excuse my language. Beep that one out! (laughs)

JENNA & CIANI: (laughs)

HOLMES: I’m sorry. Beep that one out, but that’s what it was. I told everybody what I was going to do and I even told Ray Mercer what I was going to do.

JENNA: Well you got one final shot at it against Oliver McCall in ’95 for the WBC belt. Do you believe you won that fight with him?

HOLMES: I don’t know if I won it or not. I really didn’t care. When I went into the fight I broke my hand like six weeks before the fight. My right hand was broke but I went in there and fought him anyway. I couldn’t even use my right hand, but it was a close fight. If he won, he won. If he didn’t, he didn’t. I don’t know. I don’t really care about it. It’s a fight I never really thought of and people never mention about that guy. So it was okay. Nobody even knows Oliver McCall. So it didn’t matter to me. I got paid and I was building a building and that’s all I wanted it for at that time.

JENNA: Now Larry when people look back in the history books how do you think they should remember Larry Holmes?

HOLMES: I don’t know. Every time somebody asks me that I come up with something different. I want to be remembered as a guy who did it my way. I did it my way. I got out there and went through it and played the game or whatever I did and became the champion, and I did it without getting hurt and I’m alright! I don’t have any sicknesses like a lot of them fighters have, like Muhammad Ali has, and Joe Frazier, and Kenny Norton. A lot of those guys can’t walk, they can’t talk, and I’m not like that. I think I got my faculties. I think I’m pretty well and these guys are not. So I escaped. Ali has been like this for a long time. He can’t even talk.

JENNA: Well Larry, I have one final question. You have a lot of fans around the world, a lot of people who supported you during your career, and there have been fans after it. Is there anything you want to say to those people?

HOLMES: I would like to say to all my fans who have watched me box or seen me box, I never got into boxing to try to hurt anybody. I got into boxing to try and make some money and I hope I did enough to please people. I wish all the fighters out there the best and I wish they’d all keep their noses clean because it’s hard out there today. It was hard when I was fighting too, but keep your nose clean and work hard at what you want.

JENNA: Alright well Larry, it’s been fantastic having a chance to once again interview you. For all the fans listening out there you can go to www.larryholmes.com to catch up with Larry. Larry, thank you again for your time. We wish you all the best!

HOLMES: Okay! Thanks guys. Bye!

CIANI: Thanks Larry!
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
39-year-old Nate Campbell to fight on Jones-Lebedev undercard in Russia on 5/21

By Dan Ambrose: Former IBF/WBA/WBO lightweight champion Nate Campbell (33-8-1, 25 KO’s) is quickly heading towards journeyman status with three straight losses in his last three fights as he limps into his next bout on the undercard of the Denis Lebedev vs. Roy Jones Jr. bout at the Sport Complex Krylatskoe in Moscow, Russia. At time in his career, Campbell was arguably the best fighter in the lightweight division with wins over guys like Juan Diaz and Ali Funeka.

However, his fortunes have turned for the worse since moving up in weight to the light welterweight division in 2009. Campbell isn’t the same fighter he was at lightweight and has been struggling ever since he moved up, losing three fights with one bout ending in a no contest against Timothy Bradley. Campbell has come close to looking good in none of the fights and is getting beaten soundly now rather than giving his opponents any kinds of problems. It’s unclear who he’ll be facing on the Jones-Lebedev undercard.

Presumably, it will be someone that is beatable because there isn’t a lot of time to find someone at this point. Campbell was beaten by Danny Garcia in a lopsided 10 round decision loss in April. Before that, Campbell lost to journeyman Walter Estrada by an eight round split decision and the fight before that, Victor Ortiz dominated Campbell in a 10 round decision win. Campbell really needs to do whatever he can to try and get back down to lightweight because it’s pretty clear that light welterweight isn’t the right weight class for him. Perhaps he could get a dietician or a personal trainer to help him get back down to 135 the safe way so that he doesn’t drain himself trying to make weight.
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
Golden Boy offering Saul Alvarez to Juan Manuuel Marquez

By Chris Williams: In an effort to keep WBA/WBO lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez on board, Golden Boy Promotions is reportedly hoping to see if he’d be interested in facing WBC junior middleweight champion Saul Alvarez instead of taking a third fight with Manny Pacquiao according to boxing news from examiner.com. Marquez’s contract with Golden Boy recently ran out.

Golden Boy can match any contract offer that Top Rank makes to Marquez, however. Top Rank offered Marquez $5 million to face Pacquiao after his fight with Shane Mosley next week. Marquez hasn’t said whether or not he’ll take the fight with Pacquiao, but most people think he will. It’s kind of silly for them to think that a fight with Alvarez would be something that could compete with a potential third fight with Pacquiao. It’s kind of a no-brainer that a fight with Pacquiao is the better deal rather than taking on a younger, much bigger and far less popular fighter like Alvarez.

Alvarez is coming off of a lopsided 12 round unanimous decision win over Britain’s Matthew Hatton to capture the vacant WBC junior middleweight title. It was strange that Alvarez was allowed to fight a welterweight like Hatton for the vacant WBC junior middleweight title. It was about as weird as Pacquiao fighting Antonio Margarito for the vacant WBC junior middleweight title last year. At the time of the fight, Pacquiao had never fought at junior middleweight while Margarito had fought only once at that weight class in the past six years. Despite the lack of experience from both of them, they were able to leap frog over other top contenders in the junior middleweight division to fight for the title at a catchweight of 150 pounds rather than the full weight.
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
Arreola looks thin for 5/14 bout against Aguilera

By Eric Thomas: Heavyweight contender Chris Arreola (30-2, 26 Ko’s) has finally got his weight under control and looks to have taken off a lot of weight heading into his May 14th bout against Nagy Aguilera (16-5, 11 KO’s) at the Home Depot Center, in Carson, California.

Arreola, who was at his best fighting in the 230s, suddenly ballooned up in weight to 258 in 2009 for his bout against Israel Carlos Garcia. Since that time, Arreola has consistently scaled in the 250s all the way up to 263. The weight has clearly had a negative effect on his career, as he’s now lost two out of his last five bouts.

His last defeat was against Tomasz Adamek in April 2010, losing by a 12 round decision. Arreola looked to have taken off weight too quickly for that fight and even though he was at 250, which sadly was a good weight for him compared what he had been coming before that, he was still too fat. Now, judging by recent photos of Arreola, he seems to have gotten control over his eating and looks to be in good shape.

Arreola came into his last fight weighing 249 against a badly over-matched Joey Abell. Arreola wasted little time in taking Abell out with a flurry of shots in a quick 1st round knockout.

Having taken off a lot of weight seemed to have really helped Arreola, because he looked to be a lot faster than he was in his other bouts where he tipped the scale in the mid-250s. He now looks even lighter than 249, and it makes you wonder if Arreola might be going a bit overboard in taking off weight.

He actually looks too thin for him, and appears to have taken off muscle as well as fat. It probably won’t much difference because he’s only fighting Aguilera, someone that he should be able to easily knockout no matter what kind of condition he comes into the fight.

However, against better opposition, Arreola can’t afford to come in weight drained from taking off too much weight in a fat farm. He’s got to take off weight the smart way by slowly taking it off and not going overboard with dieting and/or aerobic exercises.
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
Pavlik begins his experiment at super middleweight this Saturday against Lopez

By Dan Ambrose: Former WBC/WBO middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik (36-2, 32 KO’s) starts his experiment at super middleweight this Saturday night fighting on the undercard of Manny Pacquiao – Shane Mosley against Alfonso Lopez (21-0, 16 Ko’s) in what Pavlik hopes will be an impressive performance.

His promoter Bob Arum has picked a slugger out for him to look good against in his first bout at 168. Pavlik won’t have to deal with anyone that will show him any kind of movement and make Pavlik use his feel to change directions. That will come later when Pavlik is put in with the quality fighters at super middleweight.

Pavlik is moving up in weight because of his difficulties at making the 160 limit for middleweight. He seems to have out-grown the division and has problems getting down to the weight without draining himself in the process.

However, Pavlik may end up struggling even worse at super middleweight due to many fighters there are at this weight with exceptional boxing skills and hand speed. Pavlik was exposed at middleweight in fights against Bernard Hopkins and Sergio Martinez. Those guys used a lot of fast combinations and in and out attacks to rip Pavlik apart and dominate him.

Pavlik will have to face similar fighters at super middleweight and prove that he can beat them or else his stay at this weight will be a bitter one filled with failure. We’ve seen recently how Arthur Abraham, a former middleweight champion like Pavlik, couldn’t cut it at super middleweight.

There’s talk of Abraham moving back down in weight to the middleweight division after the Super Six tournament is over for him. Like Pavlik, Abraham had problems making the 160 pound middleweight division and moved up in weight to have more room.

Pavlik says he feels stronger at super middleweight and is supposedly throwing more combinations that he ever did before. We’ll see about that. Pavlik will get a chance to shine against Lopez but he’s going to have to show that he can move around the ring against fighters that have boxing ability. Beating Lopez won’t prove anything other than that Pavlik can beat weaker opposition that is picked for him to look good against
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
45
Mayweather to fight in Cowboys stadium by end of summer, says Roger

By Eric Thomas: Roger Mayweather, the uncle and trainer for unbeaten Floyd Mayweather Jr, says Floyd will be back in action by the end of the summer in a fight that will be taking place at the Cowboy Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Roger says they will sell out the huge stadium, which seats 100,000 fans. Roger doesn’t say who Floyd will be fighting but Victor Ortiz and Miguel Cotto’s names have been mentioned as possible opponents. This would be a good chance for Mayweather to show how well he can draw in the stadium compared to Manny Pacquiao, who twice fought there but was only able to bring in just 40,000 each time out.

According to the examiner.com, Mayweather has a deal with the owner of the Cowboys stadium Jerry Jones to fight there. Roger says this bout would be a tune-up for a mega fight against Pacquiao.

Even if Floyd does fight in the summer, he still likely have to take another tune-up bout if he wanted to stay sharp because Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum has already made an offer to Juan Manuel Marquez to have him fight Pacquiao next. That fight will likely be Pacquiao’s last bout of the year.

Mayweather has been sidelined recently due to a string of legal woes. However, Roger says that he still plans on getting into the ring by summer to get people interested in the Pacquiao fight for later.
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
^^lol golden boy just doesn't give a fuck about Marquez do they? feed him to a 154 pound fighter, really? smh
_____________________________
_____________________________


New Pound 4 Pound ratings: Floyd officially dropped.


1. Manny Pacquiao
2. Sergio Martinez
3. Nonito Donaire
4. Juan Manuel Marquez
5. Pongsaklek Wonjongkam
6. Wladimir Klitschko
7. Timothy Bradley
8. Andre Ward
9. Giovani Segura
10. Miguel Cotto
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
I like the thought of gamboa being top 10 but he probably just doesn't have the resume to be there just yet, I'm sure he's top 20 though.

Cotto is up there cuz he's fought everyone and only lost to pac & margarito.

There are quite a few guys you can make the case for being at 10 though, it's all personal perception.

Bernard Hopkins, Vitali, Carl Froch, Bute, and Khan you could all make a strong case for.

One good thing is if Floyd's tune up fight this summer or late this year (which was confirmed today via roger mayweather as being TRUE) happens to be against Cotto , at least he can say he's a top 10 guy pound 4 pound.
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
Very good rebound fight for Berto which could get him a title.


Berto-Zaveck in the works

Sources confirmed that discussions have been made to have IBF welterweight Jan Zaveck (31-1, 18 KOs) defend his title against former WBC champion Andre Berto (27-1, 21 KOs).

No site or exact date has been decided though July or August could be a possibility.


 
Feb 3, 2006
3,426
855
113
43
Mayweather will beat the brakes off Cotto or Margarito. Mayweathers last 4 fights have been against P4P top 10 fighters ODLH, Hatton, Marquez, and Mosley. Berto would be a very smart man if takes this fight with Zaveck for a title.
 
May 13, 2002
49,944
47,801
113
44
Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
cotto is just a rumor but I think it's very unlikely.

According to Roger, Floyd is really coming back and wants to fight in Dallas Cowboys stadium with "Jim Jones" (lol he meant to say Jerry Jones).

If that's true 100% his opponent will be Mexican. That leads me to believe it's Victor Ortiz
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
13,165
970
113
47
The main diffference between Floyd and Manny is, Floyd fight or beats opponents coming off of wins and Pacquiao beats opponents coming off of losses...

So if/when we do see Floyd we can pretty much bet that he's going to be fighting against someone coming off of a win.