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Jul 24, 2005
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Tarver Stops Green Down Under

Antonio “Magic Man” Tarver (29-6, 20 KO’s) the former light heavyweight champion scored what some would call an upset over Danny Green (31-3, 27 KO) for the IBO cruiserweight championship via 9th round TKO on Wednesday night in Sydney, Australia.

By all accounts Tarver was in command from the outset of the bout scoring a 2nd round knockdown, and essentially putting Green out on his feet in the 9th before the fight was stopped. After the bout Green told the local reporters in attendance that he “couldn’t do anything right” against Tarver and that the loss has him seriously considering his future in the sport. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Green heard the bell in the 9th after his corner called off the fight and hugged Tarver, appearing to believe that the 12th round had ended. “getting healthy is the main thing for me as I have two kids.”

The fight wasn’t completely one sided as the 42 year old Tarver admitted to being hurt twice during the bout by Green, “he hurt me twice, but I couldn’t show it. If he gets healthy and fit, who knows, maybe I’ll come back.” The win for Tarver is the second recent example of a fighter over 40 years old winning a major sanctioning bodies world championship, following in the foots of Bernard Hopkins recent success in the light heavyweight division.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Acelino Freitas considering a comeback

By Eric Thomas: 36-year-old former two division world champion Acelino Freitas (38-2, 32 KO’s) is considering a comeback later on this year against Brazilian Michael Oliveira, according to fight news. Freitas plans on taking four months to get in shape to take on Oliveira. It seems like a really bad idea for Freitas to be taking this fight because during his career he fought at super featherweight and lightweight.

Oliveira, 21, recently captured the interim WBC Latino middleweight title. Freitas would then be fighting someone four divisions above his last fighting weight. It’s not exactly a move that promises to be a successful one for Freitas.

Freitas hasn’t fought since 2007 when he was stopped in the 8th round by Juan Diaz. Freitas had problems with making weight before that, and had barely beaten Zahir Raheem in a questionable 12 round decision a year earlier in 2006. At one time Freitas held the WBO super featherweight and WBO lightweight titles. However, a 10th round knockout loss to Diego Corrales in 2004 signed the end of Freitas’ good fortunes for the most part. Freitas would win his next three fights after the Corrales loss, including recapturing the World Boxing Organization lightweight title with the win over Raheem. However, the loss to Juaz Diaz was the end of Freitas’ career, as he called it quits at that point.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Khan says he’s ahead of other British fighters

By Scott Gilfoid: I’m sure other British fighters like Carl Froch, David Haye and Darren Barker might not be thrilled to learn that World Boxing Association (WBA) World light welterweight champion Amir Khan (25-1, 17 Ko’s) sees himself ahead of them. In an interview at the BBC, Khan said “Pound for Pound, I’m way ahead of all the other British fighters, and I think they know that.”

Boy, I wonder if Froch, Haye and Barker know that Khan is supposedly better than them? I’m just naming a few, because there’s guys like James DeGale, George Groves and Kevin Mitchell who might have something to say about that as well. I can’t knock a guy that believes in himself, but Khan’s self love is a bit overboard given that he hasn’t really proven himself yet in the light welterweight division.

If Khan had beaten Timothy Bradley, Lucas Matthysse, Breidis Prescott, or even Marcos Maidana, without the referee pulling Maidana off of Khan while whipping him, I could understand Khan being cocky. But he’s only beaten a bunch of weak punchers and the Maidana fight is a real question mark because of the referee constantly interrupting the action while Khan was getting hammered in close.

Khan has an opportunity to prove himself in a small way this Saturday night against IBF light welterweight champion Zab Judah. I’d much prefer to see Khan face Lucas Matthysee, because he got a questionable decision loss against Judah and Devon Alexander. Khan won’t fight Matthysee, though, because he’d see him as having losses against Judah and Alexander and not consider that those were what boxing fans saw as home town decision wins for those fighters.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Tarver: Green hurt me a couple of times, but I didn’t let him know

By Eric Thomas: 42-year-old Antonio Tarver (29-6, 20 KO’s) looked half his age on Wednesday night in stopping IBO cruiserweight champion Danny Green (31-4, 27 KO’s) in the 9th round to claim his 5th world title. It was a great win for Tarver, but what made it even more special was the fact that Green hurt Tarver two times in the fight but Tarver kept it a secret to not give Green any confidence.

It looked like Tarver was hurt with a right hand to the head in the 4th, and then he seemed to get hurt again from a hard body shot from Green in the 7th. However, Tarver, who was visibly taking deep breaths after getting nailed by the body shot, was able to make it out of the round in one piece and come back in the 8th and 9th to punish Green.

“He hurt me twice, but I didn’t let him know it and I want to think Danny for giving me the opportunity,” Tarver said as quoted by the AFP

Tarver hurt Green in the 9th with a perfectly placed chopping left hand that connected to the jaw of Green and causing him to back up. Tarver then opened up with a salvo of shots, dodging a couple of wild home run shots from Green along the way until the round ended. Green stayed on his feet through it all, but once the round was over, he suddenly staggered and turned around, as if he were disoriented. He then grabbed Tarver to congratulate him on a great round. The fight was then halted after Green got back to his corner. Green could have continued fighting but with Tarver smelling blood, he would have made things very difficult for Green in the 10th to survive.
 
May 13, 2002
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daaamn, for all the bullshit the WBC does they just did a few awesome things. They need to be ordering fights like this more often.




Vanes vs Angulo Eliminator is Ordered By The WBC


The World Boxing Council has ordered the free negotiations period for the Vanes Martirosyan vs. Alfredo Angulo fight to determine the mandatory challenger in the WBC super welterweight division.

Martirosyan, a native of Armenia living in Glendale, California, (30-0-0 / 19 KOs) won the WBC super welterweight Silver Championship with a spectacular knockout against Saul Roman. Angulo, of Mexicali, Baja California (19-1-0 / 16 KOs), defeated Joachim Alcine in his last fight with an impressive first-round knockout.

If there is no agreement in the free negotiations period, a purse offer will be conducted at the WBC Executive Offices in Mexico City on August 19, 2011.




Sillakh vs Henry, Pascal vs Erdei Fights Ordered


The World Boxing Council has ordered a tournament to determine the next mandatory contender in the WBC light heavyweight division: Chris Henry (U.S.) vs. Ismayl Sillakh (U.S.), with the winner of this bout to face the winner of Jean Pascal (Haiti/Canada) vs. Zsolt Erdei (Hungary)
 
May 13, 2002
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That is a great four man LHW tournament.
Henry vs. The Black Russian
Jean Pascal vs. Zsolt Erdei
Winners fight eachother.

My only problem with this is that once again Tavoris Cloud is left without a dance partner. Hopkins and Dawson are fighting. These guys are all tied up. Nobody to fight.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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HBO reportedly still interested in Sergio Martinez-Paul Williams III

By Dan Ambrose: Even with Paul Williams having been knocked completely out cold against Sergio Martinez (47-2-2, 26 KO’s) two fights again and looking very poor in a recent questionable 12 round majority decision over Erislandy Lara on July 9th of this month, HBO is reportedly still interested in showing Sergio Martinez vs. Paul Williams III, according to news from Sportsillustrated.cnn.com.

The third fight between Martinez and Williams hinges on how well Williams does in his next fight whoever that is. Williams won’t be fighting another southpaw that’s for sure. He’s struggled against the southpaw Martinez and Lara in his last two fights and shown to have no clue in either of them how to deal with a straight left hand.

Now, Williams will be going back to fighting orthodox fighters to try for a change of luck. It obviously won’t help him get ready for a third fight with Martinez, but then again Williams won’t get a third fight if he gets battered by southpaw fighters. Williams needs to face someone good enough to where he can change some minds of boxing fans.

Martinez doesn’t think that Williams has anything left, saying to Sports Illustrated “He’s not at the same level he used to be. He looked like he was affected by my knockout. It’s very sad but he’s not the same. I don’t think he is there anymore. I don’t think he has the killer instinct.”

Martinez could be right. Williams doesn’t look to be the same fighter he was going into his second fight with him, and the brutal knockout loss does seem to have taken something away from Williams’ game. But what’s really strange is that HBO would be interested in a third fight between Williams and Martinez. You would think that after how badly Williams fought against Lara and how he was knocked completely out against Martinez last time that HBO would say no to a third fight. Maybe they think it would be a fight that would be good for ratings. I don’t see it as a good fight for boxing fans unless you’re into watching someone get pummeled and knocked out badly.

Martinez faces Darren Barker on October 1st in his next fight. This should be a fairly competitive fight for six or seven rounds, but it’s going to likely end with Martinez knocking the over-matched Barker out by midpoint in the fight.
Share and Enjoy:
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Sergio Martinez wants Mayweather, Cotto and Chavez Jr but has to settle for Barker

By Eric Thomas: WBC middleweight Diamond champion Sergio Martinez (47-2-2, 26 KO’s) will be defending his obscure Diamond title on October 1st against No.3 ranked World Boxing Council contender Darren Barker )23-0, 14 KO’s) at the Boardwalk Hall, in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Martinez, 36, wanted to fight top guys like Floyd Mayweather Jr, Manny Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto and to a much, much lesser extent Julio Cesar Chavez Jr but none of them showed any interest in taking him on. Instead of getting a big fight, Martinez had to settle for the little known Barker, who American boxing fans aren’t too familiar with.

Martinez is quickly finding out what Paul Williams previously experienced and that’s the top guys don’t really want to fight you if you’re too good or look formidable in any way. Pacquiao, Cotto and Mayweather have shown no interest in fighting the hard hitting Martinez and that’s not likely to change until perhaps Martinez starts to shown signs of slipping the way that Shane Mosley did recently as he turned 39.

Martinez performances against Kelly Pavlik, Sergiy Dzinziruk and Paul Williams have made him into something of a monster in the eyes of many boxing fans, and that hasn’t helped Martinez any. Sometimes it doesn’t pay off to be too good, because other fighters won’t want to risk fighting you and losing badly. But what makes Martinez even more of risk is his power. He’s knocking guys out now and is showing Julian Jackson type power now that he’s sitting down on his punches more.

Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum has no interest in matching Pacquiao with Martinez, and that’s the best fight Martinez could hope for. Even Cotto isn’t interested in facing Martinez. What this all means is that Martinez has to settle for guys like Barker and probably Marco Antonio Rubio instead of facing the other guys. It’s too because Martinez has worked hard to get to where he’s at and yet he’s still not able to get the top fighters to take him on.

There is a chance that Martinez can land a fight against Chavez Jr in the next year, but that’s not the same thing as fighting big stars like Mayweather, Cotto and Pacquiao. Even a fight against Chavez Jr might not happen if his promoter doesn’t bless it, and it’s difficult to seeing Arum agreeing to letting Chavez Jr face a puncher like Martinez.
 
May 13, 2002
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By Eric Thomas: WBC middleweight Diamond champion Sergio Martinez (47-2-2, 26 KO’s) will be defending his obscure Diamond title on October 1st against No.3 ranked World Boxing Council contender Darren Barker )23-0, 14 KO’s) at the Boardwalk Hall, in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Martinez, 36, wanted to fight top guys like Floyd Mayweather Jr, Manny Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto and to a much, much lesser extent Julio Cesar Chavez Jr but none of them showed any interest in taking him on. Instead of getting a big fight, Martinez had to settle for the little known Barker, who American boxing fans aren’t too familiar with.

Martinez is quickly finding out what Paul Williams previously experienced and that’s the top guys don’t really want to fight you if you’re too good or look formidable in any way. Pacquiao, Cotto and Mayweather have shown no interest in fighting the hard hitting Martinez and that’s not likely to change until perhaps Martinez starts to shown signs of slipping the way that Shane Mosley did recently as he turned 39.

Martinez performances against Kelly Pavlik, Sergiy Dzinziruk and Paul Williams have made him into something of a monster in the eyes of many boxing fans, and that hasn’t helped Martinez any. Sometimes it doesn’t pay off to be too good, because other fighters won’t want to risk fighting you and losing badly. But what makes Martinez even more of risk is his power. He’s knocking guys out now and is showing Julian Jackson type power now that he’s sitting down on his punches more.

Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum has no interest in matching Pacquiao with Martinez, and that’s the best fight Martinez could hope for. Even Cotto isn’t interested in facing Martinez. What this all means is that Martinez has to settle for guys like Barker and probably Marco Antonio Rubio instead of facing the other guys. It’s too because Martinez has worked hard to get to where he’s at and yet he’s still not able to get the top fighters to take him on.

There is a chance that Martinez can land a fight against Chavez Jr in the next year, but that’s not the same thing as fighting big stars like Mayweather, Cotto and Pacquiao. Even a fight against Chavez Jr might not happen if his promoter doesn’t bless it, and it’s difficult to seeing Arum agreeing to letting Chavez Jr face a puncher like Martinez.
Martinez isn't going to get pacquiao because Pac typically weighs in around 144 pounds and rehydrates a couple pounds. He fights at welterewight. Martinez is the 160 pound champion and rehydrates 15-20 pounds. So kill that noise.

He isn't "left with Darren Barker", Barker is a joke. Dmitry Pirog, who owns a belt and is a legit middlweight has been calling him out. Additionally Peter "Kid Chocolate" Quillin is down to fight. Additionally there is Gennady Golovkin. Or you could even take a tough opponent like Ishe Smith. All people his own size. So I'm sorry if he wants to pretend there is no one to fight because he can't land fights with guys who are 5'6 145 pounds but there are much better options than some joke named Darren Barker.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Martinez isn't going to get pacquiao because Pac typically weighs in around 144 pounds and rehydrates a couple pounds. He fights at welterewight. Martinez is the 160 pound champion and rehydrates 15-20 pounds. So kill that noise.

He isn't "left with Darren Barker", Barker is a joke. Dmitry Pirog, who owns a belt and is a legit middlweight has been calling him out. Additionally Peter "Kid Chocolate" Quillin is down to fight. Additionally there is Gennady Golovkin. Or you could even take a tough opponent like Ishe Smith. All people his own size. So I'm sorry if he wants to pretend there is no one to fight because he can't land fights with guys who are 5'6 145 pounds but there are much better options than some joke named Darren Barker.
agreed martinez wants a super fight it is going to have to be against a super middle.ideally he should wipe out bute and then fight the winner of the super six.nobody below middleweight will fight sergio and there is no middleweights worth fighting.barker is a good fighter at european level but will get destroyed by martinez.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Peter Quillin: “If an opportunity with Sergio Martinez doesn’t come then other opport

by Geoffrey Ciani (Exclusive Interview by Jenna J & Geoffrey Ciani) - This week’s 134th edition of On the Ropes Boxing Radio (brought to you by CWH Promotions) featured an exclusive interview with undefeated middleweight contender Peter “Kid Chocolate” Quillin (24-0, 18 KOs) who is scheduled to face Jason LeHoullier (21-5-1, 8 KOs) this Saturday night. Quillin spoke about his upcoming fight and also shared opinions on a variety of other topics, including Khan-Judah, Sergio Martinez, Andy Lee, Pacquiao-Marquez III, and more! Here is what Kid Chocolate had to say:

Regarding how he feels in preparations for his July 23 matchup against Jason LeHoullier:

“I’m feeling great, I’m feeling ready, I’m feeling fit, I feel like I smell good, and when I head out to leave the gym I’m going to still smell good!”

On what he expects from his opponent Jason LeHoullier:

“You know, what more can you say about him having the heart of a true fighter and stepping in there on only a week and a half notice to fight a top ten contender out there. I give a lot of credit to the guy and I’m not overlooking him. I want everybody to know that I’m taking this guy as seriously as I would take Tarvis Simms or any other opponent that was out there for me to fight. I’m just looking to go out there and perform at a high level.”

His views on what it will take to score a knockout victory against Jason LeHoullier:

“Sometimes that challenge is kind of hard because nobody just lets you knock them out. I’m going to just try my hardest to win and win in a big fashion and look spectacular. With that being said, I can only do so much with what Jason LeHoullier will allow me to do. So I’m just looking, like I said, to perform at a high level. If it’s beating him up for ten rounds, then I’m going to beat him up for ten rounds! If it’s stopping and getting him out of there then that will happen, I shouldn’t have to force that to come. It’s going to be automatic. Of course I was watching the fight with Chavez and he knocked him out, which was a huge knockout. That was a huge mistake he made, and he had to pay for it tremendously by getting knocked out in the first round. I have twenty-four fights and the majority of those fights, which I believe fifteen or sixteen fights ended in two rounds or less. So everybody knows I do have the knockout power to get him out of there. It’s just all about how the fight takes place and what direction it’s going to go in.”

His views on comments made by head trainer Freddie Roach that “Quillin is ready for Sergio Martinez right now”:

“Of course! He should. A hard-working trainer sees a hard-working fighter, and what do you think he’s going to say? I think so. I think I was ready for these big opportunities when I was calling out Paul Williams and Kelly Pavlik. But guess what? Nobody ever heard of that because I wasn’t in the place where I’m at right now. Now that I’m with a higher profile trainer, anything he says people are going to lash out right away. I work very hard. To be a six year pro, why else do people fight? If you are going to go out there and earn a living off of this you have to get the best and biggest opportunities out there and that’s what I shoot for. I’m not saying I don’t want to fight Sergio right now and that I need a few more fights. He’s considered the best out there. When Floyd Mayweather had only ten fights he called Oscar De La Hoya out. People were saying who does this guy think he is calling Oscar De La Hoya out. It’s a guy who shoots for the stars! It’s a guy that believes in himself that much that he believes he can fight guys like that. That’s what you have to do. As soon as you start putting doubts in your mind, that’s when you become a loser.

This guy Sergio has been sounding off on me and everything, and it’s been taking away from what’s important and what’s important is July 23. I have to fight and win this fight because you’re only as good as your last fight. So I have to be able to create a moment in this fight that people can remember and keep my name in the chitter-chatter. Hopefully in the future me and Sergio Martinez can tangle up if he’s not too old to do so. You don’t see a lot of the other promoters sounding off and coming to the defense of their fighters like Lou DiBella is as far as saying that he wants to fight Pacquiao. Pacquiao is a smaller guy! You’re calling out smaller guys than you. Fight some guys your own size! You want big opportunities? There are a lot of big opportunities out there. If you feel like you’re the best then go up to super middleweight if there are no fights at 160 pounds that you can fight. That’s the only chance of redeeming and showing that you’re the best fighter in the world. He’s fighting a guy who’s 23-0 with only 14 knockouts. That just shows you right there.

I don’t care who you beat in the past. Like I said you’re only as good as your last fight. You have to create great moments against great guys. That’s how you get included with the names of the greats like Sugar Ray Leonard and all of these other guys like that. Sometimes timing is not on everybody’s side in some cases. Maybe that’s what happened to Sergio is that timing hasn’t always been on his side. He hasn’t had the best of luck with fights, stepping up there with guys pulling out, and coming out and fighting Paul Williams. Why would Paul Williams and Sergio fight? Only because Paul beat him in a little bit of a controversial type of victory he pulled out. But Sergio had the belt so now he would be a more credible name to beat to get a belt. It’s gibberish how Jose Sulaiman will come out and defend Sergio Martinez. From what I believe he’s just the President of the WBC so why not just play both sides of the fence and stay even because you have to stay neutral. I have to honestly say that I want to become bigger than those belts. I want to become bigger than the boxing world will allow me to because that’s what’s going to keep my name out there, not the belts. That’s not what makes Kid Chocolate. What makes Kid Chocolate is that whenever they tell me that I have a challenge I want to step up and that’s what I want to do.

I’m sorry I’m talking out of so much frustration, but there is just a lot that’s built up since the last time we got to speak. Last time it was me and Andy Lee speaking out. When you call out a bigger name and they act like you never call out other names, it’s because people are not fans of boxing like they say they are. They don’t follow these websites like they say they do. It’s been on record that I called Andy Lee out. Have I not? And guess what! Emanuel Steward said that Andy Lee says I’m not in his plans! They are moving forward and want to go towards bigger opportunities. I can’t knock him for that. I was just speaking on my opinion that I would love to fight Andy Lee! Why not? You know what I’m saying. It would be great for boxing and that’s what it is, but people don’t catch on to that part. They catch on only when a guy will say I want to fight Sergio Martinez. The only reason why I would say that is I’m shooting to be the best. You always hear guys that say they want to become the middleweight champion and they want to become the richest boxer in the business. If I wasn’t in the gym working as hard as I do then guess what? Then I would be just like every other boxer who says I want this and I want that, and I don’t put in the work and the effort. I definitely do that part! I’m primed, I’m ready, and I’m more focused than I’ve ever been in my whole career! I’ve got experience, I became a seasoned pro, and I’m very strong. I’m glad that I work with the trainers I work with: Brad Bose, Michael Villa as well has been helping me out, Eric Brown, along with Freddie Roach you know what I’m saying. I’ve got a power squad that’s putting all their efforts into me because they believe in me. So why not sit at the table and break bread with each other, so that’s what we’re working towards.

If an opportunity with Sergio Martinez doesn’t come then other opportunities will. But right now it’s July 23 against Jason. Jason, I’m focused on you. If you come to do what I’m doing to you, then we’re going to put a very entertaining one on for the fans, and that’s all I ever ask is that a fighter will just come in and try to beat me and try to get me out of there. That way it helps me to be a better fighter and we put on a great show for boxing fans.”

His views on recent setbacks suffered by David Lemieux and Fernando Guerrero and whether he is at all worried he may suffer a similar setback should he take too big a step up in class too quickly:

“Well listen, like I said I’m a six year pro. David Lemieux was on a railroad car going 300 miles per hour. He was speaking very high on himself. I don’t know how hard he was working in the gym, but he’s been a pro not as long as I have. I had injuries and sat out but I’m still gaining the experiences being in the sport and having six years underneath my belt. This is a time when I fought Jesse Brinkley it was after he was a big challenger for Lucian Bute. He fought him. I was never a challenger for a belt, so he had everything riding and the momentum with him and everything like that. So a lot of people said this was the biggest fight of Peter’s career, and a lot of boxing insiders were like this is the biggest fight Peter ever had to date. Me going in there and stopping him in three rounds and hurting him in the first round closed a lot of miles right there.

But you know what? You cannot make everybody happy in boxing. There are always going to be doubters, there are always going to be negative energy, and there are always going to be people telling you that you cannot do it. My job is not to always prove those doubters wrong. My job is to just go out there and earn my living, be a happy boxer like I am, be serious about this sport, and go out there and create those opportunities for myself. I fight for my family, I fight for my friends that want to see me do well, and I fight for my pets that I have that I have to take care of. That’s what I fight for. I fight to be the best. I want to be cut from the same clothe. Now I may be speaking a little bit beyond my britches but when you read about Sugar Ray Leonard, Roberto Duran, Hagler—those are the guys that I look up to! Those are the guys that I want to be compared to because those guys they have a lot more riding for them in addition to being good fighters. They have countries backing them and they used to sell out arenas. That’s who I look up to when I think about all those doubters. I don’t think about what people say about me or what they write about me, because that’s not what drives me. If anything it makes me even more dangerous and stronger.”

On what he believes was the key improvement for him during his nice run these last three fights:

“Of course my work ethic, only because leading up to my fight with Fernando I had fourteen rounds of sparring for that whole camp. So I didn’t have enough sparring. It was really rough for me to get sparring. I was paying people. Now that I’m on the west coast I got all the sparring that I need. Freddie I need sparring, we’re fighting a lefty, and they get it right away. Eric Brown is working in the trenches with me, so every day I go to the gym. After I get out of this interview with you guys I’m heading straight to the gym and I’m putting in that hard work. I think for me that was the biggest difference in my game that I didn’t have before—having the sparring and all the other tools that you would need to prepare for fights.”

Regarding his decision to make the move out to the west coast:

“Well my manager sat down with me like this. He said I’m your manager. I turned a couple of opportunities down training with certain trainers and I was very unhappy. I was very stagnated in New York. I built up a lot of popularity but people want to see you do better. They don’t want to see you keep grinding to become a club fighter. That’s not what I believe I was. I wasn’t a club fighter. I did well in club fights, but I don’t want to be known as a club fighter. I want to be known as a potential superstar in the sport. I am a boxing standout. I stand out from all the rest, but I just needed a little bit more to further my game. When I came to the Wild Card, originally it was supposed to be that the trainer I was working with would work along, but he wasn’t really interested in that. So I had to do what I had to do for myself to further myself to get myself where I was going to be at. Then being with Cedric Kushner, he was a good guy. I’m not going to degrade him and say anything bad about him. I just needed bigger opportunities that at the time he wasn’t able to provide for me. So moving away from New York was going to get me away from a lot of the f*cking headaches that I had, which is having 100 people ask me when I was fighting again, or I’m fighting but the fight is canceled. I was getting tired of that. Moving there with Freddie, I had seen that it smelled like a gym. I didn’t feel comfortable being there because that isn’t what I was used to, but guess what? That’s what helped me become better and I like putting myself in those positions where I have to challenge myself to be able to be a guy to stand out from the rest.”

His views on the upcoming junior welterweight unification bout between Amir Khan and Zab Judah:

“Well you know you got an experienced lion versus a young lion. From the media they’re getting a lot of media attention for what Amir would like to accomplish in his game as far as what he is doing for boxing. Zab Judah of course, he’s got his point of view for what he wants for boxing. I think it’s more personal than anything. These guys want to prove where they really stand in boxing and I think that could be dangerous for the both of them. I’m kind of like 50-50 on the fight right now. I never count Zab out ever. Amir has yet to prove himself against top level opponents and having top level opponents on his resume. So it should be a good fight and I’ll tell you who wins when they get into the ring.”

His views on newly crowned WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Junior and whether he feels he earned his championship:

“Well Freddie said there were certain fighters that he would get a middleweight champion, and guess what? It happened for Julio Cesar Chavez. I have to honestly say with 40 fights, I don’t care if he fought bums the whole time. He fought some good opposition. If people don’t feel like he got better than I don’t know what they’re on because with 40 fights you should be able to get a little bit better. As far as what I think about him, I think he’s a good guy and I think he’s a champion. That’s what it is and that’s all I really can say, and the reason for that being that he works in the same stable with the same trainer. Freddie told me the same thing as far as getting me a strap. That’s yet to be seen so that’s why we’re working hard. Of course I can’t really say a lot about me wanting to fight Chavez Junior. Like I would tell you all any time I would fight anybody. I would fight my own mother if I have to. I just don’t want to cause a conflict of interest for anybody unless it came to the table with a lot of money and somebody couldn’t say no, and everybody could come to the table and agree upon something and then that’s what it would be. As far as right now, I’m just eyeing July 23 against Jason, create a moment, and hopefully move towards bigger opportunities. One more comment off that, let me remind you that Jose Sulaiman is the one right now in the middle of all that and he’s milking the gain for what it’s worth. There is no hate in that. Chavez is holding his belt. You know what I’m saying? Maybe they’re trying to set up a mega fight between Sergio and him. Who knows?”

On whether he believes Juan Manuel Marquez can be competitive in his upcoming third fight against Manny Pacquiao:

“Well at a higher weight or at the weight they’re fighting at I really can’t say. That’s the kind of fight that you really don’t know what could happen. I mean if we’re riding off of momentum and who’s been doing the better fighting I’m going to go with Pacquiao, of course. There is bad blood between them having two fights already and being close fights. It could be like that all over again, so that’s the reason we want to see this fight. We want to match the performances up. Floyd Mayweather beat Marquez, right? We want to match Manny Pacquiao’s performance against that, and hopefully they make the fight between Pac-Man and Floyd Mayweather. Where I stand on the fight, that’s what can happen but I’m going to ride with Pacquiao only because of his momentum and who he’s been fighting.”

On whether he believes a title fight is next in the event he beats Jason LeHoullier:

“I see that in the near future, yes. I see that in either my next fight or my next fight after that fight. I’m not sure, but I’m looking to stay busy so after this fight I’m looking to fight if all goes well before the end of the year.”

On whether he has any messages for all the Kid Chocolate fans and the listeners of “On the Ropes”:

“First of all I want to thank you guys, Geoff and Jenna, for just giving me a call and giving the latest and greatest to all my fans. One thing is that everybody who has been following is keeping me in a good area and a good situation with positive energy. I also always want to thank the people who send me negative comments, because sometimes those guys speak out of not knowing and it’s okay, because I’m going to teach them what the game is all really about. I want to thank them for sending me those negative letters because it strengthens my armor and it’s keeping me strong to go out there and perform well, and that’s all that counts at the end of the day. Thank you guys! I want to thank you with all my heart.”
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Team-Khan Suspicious Of Team-Judah’s Alleged Panama Lewis Connection

let the drama begin lol


By James Slater: The name Panama Lewis will surely be instantly recognizable to most fight fans. Banned from the sport of boxing for life back in 1983 for intentionally removing the padding from the gloves of his fighter, Luis Resto before Resto’s fight with the up-and-coming Billy Collins Junior, Lewis saw to it that his charge badly beat up Collins.

The damage done to the loser was horrific, with both eyes banged shut, and later, as a result of the trauma the beating caused him, Collins crashed his car (some say in a suicide attempt) and died. One of the darkest days in modern day boxing, the whole shoddy affair was later documented in an award winning documentary.

On can understand, then, the concern members of Amir Khan’s team have had recently, when whispers were heard saying Lewis has been seen working with Zab Judah ahead of this Saturday night’s light-welterweight unification clash in Las Vegas. Asif Vali, Khan’s manager, spoke to The Telegraph about the alleged Team Judah-Panama Lewis connection.

“We’ve heard that this man has been around their camp,” Vali said this week. “We are talking to The Nevada State Athletic Commission to make sure that, if this is true, he is not involved. He has no license and if he turns up on Saturday he won’t be allowed anywhere near the locker room or Judah’s corner. We have to protect Amir.”

Lewis, who has always protested his innocence regarding the Resto-Collins affair, will surely not attempt to get involved in any way on fight night - no way would he get away with that! But the concern in Khan’s camp is simply the fact that Lewis may have been working with Zab in some way. Just what, if anything, has the disgraced former trainer been doing? And why would a sportsman like Judah want a known cheat anywhere near him?

This whole thing may prove to be nothing more than a rumor, of course, but where do these rumors start?

Meanwhile, Khan is feeling extremely confident ahead of the big fight, primarily due to the way he has been handling himself in sparring.

“Freddie has to tell me to calm down in training,” Khan said. “In sparring when I get hit with a clean shot by big guys who are 154-pounds, I get straight back at them. I have proved I have probably got one of the best chins in boxing. Manny’s [Pacquiao] hit me with a clean back hand, his hardest shot, and I walked straight onto it and still stood there.”

Khan will really impress fans if he is able to take Judah’s best shots, when it’s for real!
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Khan: I feel more love in America than in the UK

By Scott Gilfoid: For some reason, WBA light welterweight champion Amir Khan says he feels more love in the United States than he does from his own country Britain. I wonder why that is? Khan left his own country to to pick an American trainer Freddie Roach shortly after being knocked out by Breidis Prescott in 2008.

Since then, Khan has been invincible, beating every opponent – with the help of Roach – put in front of him. At the same time Khan is finding love among the appreciative Americans. He fits here, because he’s accepted as one and not criticized for this or that.

“I definitely feel more appreciated here than in the UK,” Khan said to eatsleepsport.com “At this moment in time, I’m getting more love in America from boxing fans.”

That’s so sad. Khan has to come to the U.S to really get appreciated for his skills.

Khan faces IBF light welterweight champion Zab Judah on Saturday in the United States, and while I don’t personally see Khan winning that fight, he’s got a lot of Americans that think he can and are giving him a ton of support without reservations.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Khan to make $1 million, Judah $500,000 for Saturday’s fight

By Dan Ambrose: Photo Credit Joe Comporeale – WBA light welterweight champion Amir Khan (25-1, 17 KO’s) will be making decent money on Saturday night against IBF light welterweight champion Zab Judah (41-6, 28 KO’s) with a payday of $1,072,500, according to boxing news from Dan Rafael.

This, of course, doesn’t even count the UK money that Khan will be receiving for the bout. It will be shown on Primetime Pay-Per-View in the UK, and Khan could make a lot more than that if his numbers for his fight against the less than popular Paul McCloskey are any indication.

Judah, 33, will be making $500,000, which is good money for him given that he hasn’t really done much in terms of big fights since his bout with Miguel Cotto four years ago in 2007. Judah, a one time big star of the sport, fell off after that fight and hasn’t had any big time bouts until now. Judah won’t be sharing in any of Khan’s UK money, and that’s something he’s obviously not pleased about.

However, if he beats Khan on Saturday night, the chances are high that Judah will get a fight in 2012 against either Floyd Mayweather Jr or Manny Pacquiao. All Judah would have to do is make sure he wins one more fight in 2011 against a likely soft opponent and Judah would be in a good position to get a big money bout against Pacquiao or Mayweather.

Khan wants the Mayweather fight himself and he’d be fit to be tied if Judah wins, but Khan is young enough to rebuild and still get big fights in the future. He may or may not still get a Mayweather bout if he loses to Judah, but Khan is young enough to where he can get fights against other stars and future stars later on down the road.

damn Half a million is not alot of money for a guy like Zab, or for any other figher. after the deductions that come off that purse to pay for the promoter, trainer, manager, cornermen, nutritionist, coaches and of course income tax. Zab would be lucky to take home 10 percent of that $500,000.