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Jul 24, 2005
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WBC elevates Josesito Lopez to #4 in 154 lb ranking for Saul Alvarez fight
August 26th, 2012

By Allan Fox: The World Boxing Council has done something about welterweight Josesito Lopez (30-4, 18 KO’s) not being ranked in the junior middleweight division, and they’ve decided to give him a #4 ranking in the 154 pound division. Lopez can now go into his September 15th fight against WBC junior middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez (40-0-1, 29 KO’s) with a legitimate ranking so that boxing fans can’t say that Alvarez is cherry picking an opponent from a division below him to defend his title against.

However, it would have been a lot nicer had the WBC ranked Lopez in the junior middleweight division before the fight had been made, because by then it just looked like Alvarez and his promoters at Golden Boy Promotion were just looking for another smaller fighter for Alvarez to beat in order to keep him from losing.

We’ve already seen Alvarez face smaller fighters in the past with him taking on welterweight Matthew Hatton last year when Alvarez was fighting for the vacant WBC junior middleweight division. It’s interesting that Hatton was allowed to fight for the vacant WBC 154 pound title when he wasn’t ranked in the division at the time. We’ve also seen Alvarez face guys like Alfonso Gomez and Jose Miguel Cotto in the past. Those guys didn’t have the size to fight Alvarez either and were beaten down.

It’s likely that Lopez will lose his ranking in the junior middleweight division if and when he loses to Alvarez on the 15th of September. Lopez will then resume fighting in either the light welterweight division or the welterweight division where he rightfully belongs.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Arum’s dilemma: To keep Pacquiao safe and winning or put him in the big money fights where he might get whipped
August 25th, 2012

By Chris Williams: Top Rank promoter Bob Arum really has a lot of things that can potentially go wrong for him if he makes the wrong decision when picking out his fighter Manny Pacquiao’s next opponent. If Arum selects a guy strictly because he can bring in the most green stuff for Pacquiao then Arum could be walking his fighter straight into another defeat by putting him risky fight situations against the likes of Miguel Cotto or Juan Manuel Marquez.

On the flip side, Arum can keep the Filipino nice and safe by matching him against one of his Top Rank stable fighters Timothy Bradley, but the downside to that is the fight will bring in less bank for Arum – and for Pacquiao. So, it’s really a dilemma that Arum has – to make the most cash but then have your fighter possibly get beat again – or take the easy fight with less cash but more of a chance of winning. Some promoters might get greedy at this point and just go for the quick clean cash by tossing Pacquiao in with Cotto and Marquez, but then Pacquiao will probably get beat again unless we gets some more of that good controversial decisions that we’ve seen Pacquiao involved with in his three fights with Marquez.

Another controversial decision win for Pacquiao will leave a stink that can be sniffed a million miles away, and I don’t think that would be good for Pacquiao right now. Arum might be better taking the slightly safer fight against Bradley that makes less money. Nothing is safe for the Filipino at this point in his career. He’s starting to get old all of a sudden. But if I were to pick the fight with the lesser risk among the Marquez, Bradley and Cotto options, I’d choose Bradley in a second. He’s become too muscular in moving up in weight and it’s robbed him of his hand speed, and he still doesn’t have any power.

Cotto and Marquez no doubt have noticed that Pacquiao has lost a step and are ready to pounce on him and rip him to pieces on PPV. Will Arum take the bigger money that one of those fighters can bring in but then watch his aging fighter get torn to shreds or will he go for the nice safe fight against the slow as molasses and weak Bradley?
Related:
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Dawson: I wanted the Ward fight at 170 lb catchweight but they said no
Published August 26, 2012 | By eastside | 1 Comment

By Rob Smith: Chad Dawson (31-1, 17 KO’s) said it wasn’t his idea to fight WBA/WBC super middleweight champion Andre Ward (25-0, 13 KO’s) at 168 for their September 8th fight at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. Dawson, 30, was left with no other choice but to come all the way down fro 175 lbs to make the fight at super middleweight after he was refused when he asked for a catchweight of 170 lbs.

Dawson said on 24/7 Road to Ward-Dawson “We wanted to do a catchweight at 170, but they threw it out the window. They said no. We can’t make the fight unless it’s 168 pounds. The weight don’t bother me. The fight in Ward’s backyard don’t bother me. Ward’s a great fighter; I’m a great fighter. I don’t know why I’m the underdog in this fight. I don’t think people look at resumes too close. I beat some big names in the sport.”

I don’t think anyone knows for sure who will win this fight on September 8th. Ward is the better inside fighter and he’s done remarkably well against the top of the class in the super middleweight division in his fights in the Super Six tournament. However, Ward showed some vulnerabilities in his fights against Sakio Bika and Carl Froch that Dawson could take advantage of if he’s smart, and works hard.

Dawson can’t afford to fight at the same leisurely pace that he did in his recent 12 round majority decision win over 47-year-old WBC light heavyweight champion Bernard Hopkins last April. Dawson has to be more consistent than that, and he’s got to let his hands go a lot more. His trainer was practically pleading with him to throw more punches against Hopkins but Dawson couldn’t do it. He made what could have been a lot easier fight into a really difficult one. If Dawson fights like that against Ward then he’ll lose. Ward will get in close and easily outwork him. Dawson can’t afford to pot shot against Ward because it’s going to take a lot of shots to win this fight.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Dirrell wants Abraham rematch
Published August 26, 2012 | By eastside | 11 Comments

By Michael Collins: Andre Dirrell (20-1, 14 KO’s) wants to get a shot at newly crowned WBO super middleweight champion Arthur Abraham’s World Boxing Organization crown to take the title off of him and pay him back for being fouled in their fight in April 2010 in the Super Six tournament. Although Dirrell completely dominated Abraham and won the fight by an 11th round disqualification, Dirrell still wants to get Abraham back in the ring so that he can beat him until the conclusion of the fight.

Dirrell said this on his twitter yesterday after learning about Abraham beating WBO super middleweight champion Robert Stieglitz by a 12 round unanimous decision in Berlin, Germany: “I want that WBO [belt], Abraham!!! Scene 2, Ace 2. I’m gonna act out another ass whopping on you…again! Let me get the mandatory for that WBO after my next fight!!! I bet Abraham won’t fight me!!! Haha. I can’t wait!!!”

I also bet Abraham doesn’t fight Dirrell. There’s really no reason for Abraham to take the fight because in terms of important fights that can make him the most money, a fight against Dirrell would have to be low ranking right about now. Abraham can make better money against fighters like Lucian Bute, Mikkel Kessler, Felix Sturm or Carl Froch. Abraham isn’t going to use up an important fight and risk getting beaten again if he’s not going to get the biggest payday.

His promoters are going to stay away from Dirrell like the plague because he kept Abraham pretty well bottled up last time they fought, and the chances are high that the outcome would be the same if not worse if they fought again. Abraham is older now at 32, and Dirrell is hitting his prime at 28. The only way Dirrell gets a fight against Abraham is if Bute, Kessler, Sturm, Froch and George Groves aren’t available. Even then, Abraham’s promoters will likely put him in an easy title milking fight against one of the bottom ranked WBO contenders rather than taking a risky fight against Dirrell.

Dirrell needs to get busy and start fighting more often if he wants to make a name for himself to where guys like Abraham will want to fight him. As things are right now, Dirrell has missed too much time since 2010 and he’s dropped off the map.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Boxing Interview with Devon Alexander, Randall Bailey & More...
By Media Report (August 25, 2012) Doghouse Boxing
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DEVON ALEXANDER & RANDALL BAILEY

CONFERENCE CALL TRANSCRIPT



Monica Sears

Thank you, everyone. Just wanted to get it quickly turn it over to our fighters for today. First of all I would like to introduce David Itskowitch of Golden Boy Promotions who will give an overview on our upcoming fight, September 8th at Hard Rock.



David Itskowitch

Welcome to the Devon Alexander versus Randall Bailey Conference Call. The fight is a twelve round fight for Bailey's IBF Welterweight World Title. In the co-feature we have another great fight, world title fight, Ajose Olusegun versus Lucas Matthysse, which is a 12 round fight for the vacant WBC Interim Super Lightweight World Title.



The event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions in association with The Great Promotions and DiBella Entertainment with Olusegun versus Matthysse and presented and association with Arano Box Promotions. Our event is sponsored by Corona and AT&T. Saturday, September 8th from the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas live on Showtime beginning at 9:00 Eastern/Pacific with preliminary fights to air on Showtime Extreme beginning at 7:00 p.m. Eastern/Pacific.



Tickets are available now prices very reasonably starting at $25, very reasonable price for two world title fights. They are available through Ticketmaster and through the Hard Rock Hotel Box Office.



Now to say a few words about Randall Bailey, I'd like to introduce our co-promoter, President of DiBella Entertainment, Lou DiBella.



Lou DiBella

Can I just say that the opening fight is a terrific fight with Olusegun and Matthysse fighting for

the vacant WBC 140 pound interim title, and Gary Shaw and I promote this fight, it is going to be great opener. And in the main event I'm really proud to be promoting Randall "KO King" Bailey, likely to be the hardest puncher in boxing. He's got lots of power, The biggest puncher in the entire sport, and Devon I think realizes as good a boxer as he is, as talented as he is that one punch landed silently from Randall Bailey could end any fight.



Randall's punching power at 147 is bigger than his punching power at 140. And he's dangerous

from the beginning of the first round until the last second of the 12th as Mike Jones learned the

hard way, and the fight with Jones was way ahead and too devastating and knocked down

in a devastating knock out late in the fight to put Randall in this position. Made Randall a world

champion again, and he knows that Devon is there to try to take his title and Randall is there to

keep it.



And I want to introduce the biggest puncher in boxing, the most feared puncher in boxing,

Randall "The KO King" Bailey. Randall, do you want to say a few words?



Randall

I just want to say I'm excited about this fight. Can't wait for the fight and I've always

wanted this fight. Even at 140 I wanted to fight but I was never able to get it but I'm happy I'm

able to get it right now.



David

Also wanted to acknowledge before we get to Devon, Kevin Cunningham who

was instrumental not only in Devon's career but in his life. Just want to acknowledge and thank

him for everything. He's Devon's trainer so thank you, Kevin.



Want to introduce now a young man who had a very impressive amateur career, over 300 wins,

turned pro in 2004, won the WBC Super Lightweight World Championship in August 2009 by

stopping Junior Witter. Added the IBF World Title with an 8th round knockout over Juan

Urango, and then went on to defeat Andreas Kotelnik via unanimous decision.



The only blemish on his record is a technical decision loss to Timothy Bradley in the unification

fight which came after a head-butt from Bradley Affected Devon's vision. He rebounded from

that fight with a 10 round split decision victory over Lucas Matthysse, and in his last fight went

on to beat Argentinian knockout artist Marcos Maidana proving that he's ready for the big time

at 147 pounds.



Now, he's ready for Bailey, going to face him on neutral territory and will look to win his second

divisional world title, with a record of 23-1 with 13 KOs from St. Louis, Missouri, Devon

Alexander "The Great." Devon?



Devon

Hey, what's going on guys? I just want to say welcome to everybody on the conference call and

I'm excited for this fight. I could become three time world champion on September 8th and I'm

excited about that. I'm jammed. I'm pumped up. I'm sure Randall Bailey's going to come to

fight. I'm ready. I'm 123% ready so I'm just ready to get the fight on so welcome, everybody.



Q

Not much, man. Hey, and Kevin, how you guys doing? This question is for both of you. I'm

one of those guys that wasn't surprised but obviously impressed with your performance against

Maidana because your contention had been for a long time that the weight of making 140 was

the major issue. Having said that, can you talk about the challenge that was posed by Maidana

and segue into the challenge that is posed by Bailey and what you think this challenge will bring

out of you, Kevin, both of you if you could address that?



Devon

Okay. Well, for me like you said the 140 division the weight was getting a bit too much for me.

I'm getting bigger. I was getting older and getting a lot stronger, a lot of muscle, a lot of lean

muscle on my body, and not knowing that it was putting a strain on my body I kept making the

weight and kept making the contract weight like I promised on my contract and that's what I do.

I make the weight and I get in there and fight, but as you saw in the fights I wasn't looking my

best. I wasn't looking 100% so we made the choice to move up to 147 and now I'm stronger.

I'm faster. I'm back to my old self again.



The Bailey fight is going to bring the best out of me because he's a veteran in the game and he

knows what he's doing in there, and he's going to come to fight. He's going to be ready, and

like he said he's got that one punch knockout for the title. That's not my worry. This is boxing

so I'm going to be ready for whatever he brings.



Q

He said that he thought that first off all he has a lot of success against southpaws even though he

lost to Urango. He's dropped him and he's dropped every southpaw he's faced and that he feels

that he softened up Urango for you to have an easy fight.



Devon

Well, I mean that doesn't make sense. I mean for him to say he softened up Urango that means

he should have been able to stop him and continue, you know, knock him out and go ahead and

finish him but he didn't finish him. I finished him so that's kind of like contradicting himself.

Then for-so that's contradicting himself.



As far as him fighting southpaws, Urango's not a pretty talented fighter like me. He's not a

pretty talented southpaw like me. I'm a natural southpaw who's got steels and he thinks in the

ring. Them fighters don't think in the ring, and if he thinks that's what he's going to get on

September the 8th he's in for a rude awakening.



Q

Here's my last question for you, Devon. What did you gain, if anything, from Mike Jones'

performance against Bailey? He was winning the fight and he got caught twice late in the fight.

Is there anything to be gained from that performance and that result?



Devon

Well, it was a sloppy fight. Mike Jones fought sloppy the whole fight, and Bailey was

anticipating throwing a right hand all night so you can't really take anything from the fight other

than always be alert and just follow instincts. For me I don't care about anything that Randall

Bailey's going to do on September 8th. I mean this is boxing. Everybody hits hard. Everybody,

you know, a boxer everybody has two hands, two legs and everything so I don't care. So

September 8th he better be ready.



Q

Randall, when you fought Mike Jones it took you quite a while to land that right hand.

Obviously, it was a combination of you landing the right punch and him, I guess, maybe moving

forward and making a mistake. Is there anything you can do to create more of an opportunity in

this fight rather than having to wait for Devon to come forward or slowdown to land that punch?



Randall

No because Devon is a lot smaller than Mike Jones was and he'll be surprised, know what I'm saying? What they don't understand is if he comes forward in the whole fight, if he moves I'm going to cut him off and we're going to fight. So he can talk about me being ready, he better be ready. I'm ready to go to war. That's what I come for. I'm not coming to the fight for nothing easy. All that boxing shit he think he going to be doing he better fight fool.



Q

So you feel like you can cut off the ring-



Randall

I know I can cut off the ring. I know I can cut him off and when I cut him off he's going to have to fight; most all that skill and all that other nonsense, alright.



Q

As Lem was just asking a little bit about the Mike Jones fight and I wonder when you're in the

ring is it a great sense of confidence knowing that even if you're behind, even if you are in with a

guy that's maybe going to be faster than you or can box circles around you that you have the one

thing that can do the greatest for any fighter, which is to knock anybody out with one punch?

That if you just keep on trucking that maybe you can get the guy out of there which is what you

have done many times, is that like a comfort for you in the ring? Do you always know that it's

there for you in your back pocket?



Randall

Well, I know it's always there but just me being in the ring moving, you know, when I'm

moving in the ring I'm lining these guys up for that punch. It just it took a little longer for Mike

Jones. Even in these other fights see when I move in the ring my right hand is there so they're

worried about the right hand. I'll tell you everybody gets hit with the right hand. What you

going to do when you get with it is all you've got to worry about.



Q

When you see the kind of destruction that punch can do what do you think of it? Because I've

watched you, Randall, for a long time and I've seen you knock a lot of guys out and it seems like

from the moment that the bell rings to start a fight you're looking to land the one right hand to

the moment that the fight ends or you do land the right hand. That you may power with the jab

and you may move a little bit but you're a one-trick pony with the best trick there is, just one

shot.



Randall

Exactly. I've been working on it since I was 16. I hide it very well and when I land it it's

destructive.



Q

Were you at all surprised that you-because it seemed like maybe Mike was-not that he was

dominating by any stretch of the imagination, but probably winning that fight that you guys had

back in June, did you think that you were behind and you needed that knockout or what was your

thoughts as you dropped him for the first time and then knocked him out later?



Randall

No, I knew I was behind. I knew I was behind in the fight. I knew I'd win the fight, but like I

said, he gave me a half a door open and that's all I needed. He left me a half a door and that's all I need to get it in.



Q

How do you then go about to deal with somebody like Devon who is a much faster fighter than

Mike Jones is?



Randall

It doesn't matter how fast Devon is he gets hit. He gets hit with right hands constantly.

Everybody he's fought has hit him with right hands so he's going to come into this fight and I'm

not going to hit him, please. If he had them hit him trust me I'm going to hit him.



Q

Hey, Devon. You hear Randall saying that you get hit with a lot of right hands and that as he

said at some point in the fight he's going to land that right hand. What do you do to make sure

that doesn't happen, like what happened to Mike Jones and many others?



Devon

All I've got to do is follow my game plan. I'm not going to say too much. All I've got to do is

follow my game plan me and my coach has set out. It has worked. Me and my coach game plan

has worked thus far and that's all I got to do. That's all I got to say. He can come in there and

he can take me lightly. He can say all this and that. If he lands he's going-what landed? Try

to land it, that's all you got to do. Just try to land it.



Q

Knowing you for a while and watching you and covering your fights for a long time and, Devon,

to me like you figure-like tell me if I'm right about this, you figure he can try to throw that

right hand all night long but because of the way you box and the quickness you possess and the

game plan that you and Kevin are devising that you're going to be in there basically making him

look like a fool running around trying to nail you and you just going to out box him.



Randall

No.



Devon

That's not all I got in my arsenal. That's not the only thing boxing. Of course, I'm a prepared

boxer. I've got skill and I use my skill to my advantage but that's not all I've got and he'll see

September 8th that's not all I got.



Q

Kevin, I wanted to ask you about what you've been hearing between Randall with the right hand

and Devon with the game plan. Can you talk a little bit about how you go about preparing a guy

to face a fighter that has one very distinct advantage, the right hand, and a very dangerous

weapon? How you go about preparing to take that away from him?



Kevin

Well, that's going to be Randall's problem is all he has is the right hand. That's going to be a

problem in this fight because he's going to need more than one hand and one arm in this fight,

and when he gets in the ring with Devon he's going to find out if he throws the right hand he's

going to pay for it every time he throws it. So he isn't going to be trying to get it off like he

thinks he is.



Q

Hey, Devon, Lem brought it up earlier about the Maidana fight. I mean he was a big knockout guy and you had to watch out for him and you did a good job of staying away. Lessons learned from that or what have you gained from that on going up against another knockout guy?



Devon

Well, you know, Maidana is Maidana. Maidana he's a come forward type of guy. He's a

brawler. He comes at you all night throwing bombs and Randall Bailey is a more

subtle type of fighter so it's going to be different, but I'm versatile. I adjust to my opponent and

so whatever Randall Bailey's going to do I'm going to adjust to that. I can either box or I come

forward and that's what Randall Bailey's not getting in his head. Maidana was different.

Maidana's way different from Maidana but I'm going to adjust to whatever Randall Bailey's

going to do in the ring.



Q

And let's see you've fought all over the world but now you're finally-this is your first fight in

Las Vegas right? Talk about the excitement of finally getting to fight in Las Vegas.



Devon

Well, you know, I think in my opinion every fighter wants to make it to Vegas. I think that's the

fighting capital of the world. You know some of the best fights have came out of Vegas and this

will be my first debut in Vegas so I'm excited about that.



Q

Do you think that the winner of this fight is going to be in a position to possibly challenge Floyd

Mayweather in his return fight?



Devon

In my opinion it's a good start. It's a hell of a statement. Whoever wins this fight is going to be

in a good position, so you can say that but you never know. You just never know in this game

and what Floyd wants to do.



Q

And my next question is for Randall. Randall, I know we spoke and there's been a lot of talk

about the venue of this fight, and it seemed like from the beginning you wanted it in Las Vegas.

Are you happy that it's going to be in Las Vegas number one; and number two, does this make

you feel more-do you think it's more fair judging than your usual venue?



Randall

Yeah. I said Las Vegas from the beginning because I just felt like it's a good enough fight for

Las Vegas, and I didn't feel like I should have to go to his home town when I'm giving him an

opportunity to fight for the title. So hey, I'm cool all the way around.



Q

Thank you very much. Hello, everybody. First question I have is for Devon. Devon, everybody

seems to be talking about this fight as if it's going to be a boxer against a puncher and you as a

southpaw trying to get around Randall's right hand. Do you think that's going to be an accurate

description of this fight, a boxer against a puncher, or do you think it's going to be a little more

complex than that?



Devon

It's going to be a little more complex than that because I'm not just coming in the ring just to run

around and get hit. That's a misconception people got of me. This is boxing. You've got to try

to hurt the guy and I'm definitely not going to be just running around. I'm going to put some

hurt on Randall Bailey and he's going to feel it.



Q

Was there anything that you learned from the Maidana fight? Even though he's a different kind

of fighter than Randall Bailey but he's known as somebody who is more of a slugger and you

dominated that fight, was there anything that you got from that fight in terms of technique or

competence that you could apply in this fight?



Devon

Definitely. Definitely. You guys definitely-whoever saw the fight definitely saw my power.

My power's there and I'm not doing nothing but getting more power and I'm steady learning. I

watched the fight at least about six or seven times and I'm always perfecting my craft. I'm

always seeing what I can do better and in the Maidana fight I saw that I could have easily

stepped to him and be smart about it and possibly stopped him. It's a learning lesson and I'll

take advantage of it next time.



Q

Okay. And for Randall, have you seen the fight that Devon had with Maidana and is there

anything that you saw in that fight that you could use to your advantage?



Randall

Yes. I saw a lot of hitting and holding and that's not going to happen with me. I don't play the

hugging game. When he's trying to hold I'll be punching.



Q

You talked earlier about cutting off the ring. If he's going to want to say circle away from your

right hand what are you going to do because a lot of people feel he will have the speed

advantage?



Randall

He does a lot and the ring isn't but so big and he's not a big guy so I'm definitely going to get to

him.



Q

What do you think has been key to this resurgence in your career because you know at your age

a lot of fighters are pretty much finished or retired or just about finished and your reaching new

heights? I mean the Mike Jones fight was obviously the most recent example. What have you

done to keep yourself at the top of your game by being a veteran?



Randall

Well, I've never really abused my body. I never train light so no problem because I'm always

training hard in the gym, you know. I'm always just laying around. I'm .... I'm just a laid back

kind of guy. I never really get too excited about too many things, but I'm just laid back. I don't

really party a lot. I got to a couple of fights here and there and most of the time I'm just at home

chilling.



Q

Hi. Thanks for taking my call. A couple questions for both fighters. If I could start with

Randall Bailey; Randall, obviously many people consider you to be the best single punch

knockout artist in boxing today. Is that something that you feel you were born with or is that a

skill that had to be developed like any other skill in boxing?



Randall

I think the power I was born with but like I said I've been throwing my right hand since I was

like 15, 16 years old, and I mean diligently practicing on it since then. It's like whenever I felt

you're going to get hit with it. I don't care what you do; you're going to get hit with it. It's just

what you're going to do after you get hit with it.



Q

The one punch knockout artist in boxing seems to be something of a lost art today. Why do you

think that is, Randall?



Randall

Because a lot of guys don't have it. Well, other than Mike Tyson I'm pretty much alone out here

with that talent, you know able to do it.



Q

Is there anybody out there that even has similar one punch power to you out there in boxing

today?



Randall

Oh, I haven't seen it if it is.



Q

Thanks. A couple questions for Devon. Devon, is there anything that you do in terms of

preparation either mentally or physically differently for a fight against someone who is obviously

known for that one punch knockout power?



Devon

Of course. I get ready for each fight different. I don't get ready for a fight the same never. Each

fight has a specific game plan so of course I'm preparing differently for Randall Bailey, and me

and my coach, like I said, got a game plan. I trust in the game plan 100% and all I got to do is

implement that and we're going to be ready.



Q

What did you think of Tim Bradley's performance against Manny Pacquiao and do you think he

deserved the win?



Devon

It was a, you know, all right performance against Tim Bradley but in my opinion I thought

Pacquiao edged it out just a little bit, but for me going back and watching the fight again, you

know, Bradley kept keeping the pace going and I thought Pacquiao slowed down. So you go

watch it again you know you kind of say, "Hmm, it was closer than what I thought." But I had

Pacquiao slightly to win it.



Q

If you bet Bailey do you want to fight Tim Bradley again in a rematch at welterweight or do

you have your sights set elsewhere?



Devon

Well, you know, first I'm focused on the September 8 and then after that I definitely

would love that rematch with Bradley but the best situation that is for me. My coach is good at

that. He's good at figuring out the best opponent for me, and we'll just have to see when we

cross that road. It could be soon.



Q

One more question, Devon. Do you have any regrets about your reaction to the clash of heads in

the 10th round against Bradley and not being able to continue after the head-butt?



Devon

Yes. It's a learning lesson for me too. It's just boxing. This is boxing and you're going to have

circumstances that you've got to get through when you're inside them four corners. And as I'm

getting older-I just turned 25. I'm getting older and I'm still learning and I definitely have

regrets on not continuing but we have to take those risks. What are you going to do? So I lived to see another day. I'm back on top at 147 and here it come back full circle and I'll be ready for it again.



Monica

All right, everyone, thank you for joining today's call. I appreciate everyone taking the time out,

especially both fighters from camp. We will be sending around updates of upcoming events for

the media and looking forward to September 8th at Hard Rock and live on Showtime. Thanks,

everyone.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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BRYAN VERA: "IT FELT GREAT TO GET THAT FIGHT BEHIND ME...HE'S JUST A SORE LOSER"
By Percy Crawford | August 27, 2012

"It felt great to get that fight behind me. He still thought he won, but fighters always think like that. After the fight, he said he wants to fight again, but there is no point... he's crazy. He's just a sore loser and can't take it. He can't expect to win going in there and not throwing no punches just doing that awkward defense he does," stated middleweight Bryan Vera, who talked about his future plans after defeating former champion Sergio Mora for a second time. Check it out!

PC: Congratulations on getting your second win over Sergio Mora. How do you feel about the performance?

BV: Thank you, man. We did good. The main thing was to just put pressure on him again, man. I didn't do a lot of things that I think Ronnie [Shields] wanted me to do, but we are a work in progress still, man, you know what I mean? Sergio'S awkward as hell, man. he does a lot of weird movements and things that throw people off, but as long as you stay busy on him, you can outwork him, you know what I'm talkin' bout?

PC: Yeah, for sure. You knew the key going in was going to be pressure. You say you didn't do everything that Ronnie wanted you to do, but do you feel the game plan came together well?

BV: Yeah, I did. We worked on a lot of head movement and throwing a lot of punches and throwing a lot of straight shots and just outworking him. We knew we were going to be stronger than him and that's all it was. When he watched it on TV, he was a little bit more impressed with it, but live, it looked like I was getting off balance a lot and not staying sideways and kind of squaring up.

PC: Are you relieved to have this fight behind you? I know this is a rematch he kind of wanted. Are you done with Sergio Mora now?

BV: It felt great to get that fight behind me. He still thought he won, but fighters always think like that. After the fight, he said he wants to fight again, but there is no point, you know?

PC: Nah, you're up 2-0; no need for a rubbermatch.

BV: Yeah man, he's crazy. He's just a sore loser and can't take it. He can't expect to win going in there and not throwing no punches just doing that awkward defense he does.

PC: You caught him with some nice shots. Do you ever think you hurt him at any point during the fight?

BV: I think it was like the 7th or 8th round, I know I hurt him at the end of the round with a right hand and he kind of walked it off a little bit, but I know I had him hurt. It's just the bell rung and he was able to recover from it. But I think the main shot I hurt him with other than that; it was just land shots and stay busy.

PC: OJ McClintock keeps your conditioning right and you almost pride yourself on it now. He faded towards the end. Did you feel if you could get him late into the fight that he would fade?

BV: Yeah! Like I said, I knew we would be bigger and stronger, so I felt I could impose my will and my strength on him. Yeah, he did fade a little bit at the end. I don't know what he was doing. When you do all of that moving around and defending and all that kind of stuff, that will wear anybody out. He definitely faded at the end and we stayed busy and on top of him. If I wasn't gonna knock him out, I was definitely gonna outpoint him and outwork him.

PC: Do you feel you faced the same Sergio Mora as the first fight or do you think he switched it up on you a little bit and tried new things?

BV: I think he was more defensive this time. I think the first time, he tried to stay in there and fight a little more. This time, he fought more in spurts. He does the defensive thing and try to throw late combinations to steal the round, but we were outworking him so much that he couldn't do that. The little combinations he was throwing wasn't working.

PC: I know it doesn't bother you, but no rest for the weary. You will be fighting in Austin here soon. Tell us about it?

BV: Yeah! OJ and my manager Dave got together and they wanted to get me in Austin. I couldn't even tell you how long it's been since I fought there. It will be like my homecoming party. We still gotta get ready. We don't know when we gonna fight yet, but I will be getting back to Ronnie in a couple of weeks and start working. They got a new gym they opened up over there and I'm excited about it.

PC: You like quick turnarounds and staying busy, so that works out perfect for you.

BV: Yeah, I don't like layoffs. I told them we can fight in Austin and then do it again in a couple of months. I always jump into a big fight right after a win, so it will be good to kind of take a tune-up type of fight, although you gotta treat it like a championship fight. I'm excited to fight and I'm excited about it all, man.

PC: Well definitely keep me posted when you get an opponent. Congrats on the Mora win again. Is there anything you want to say in closing?

BV: Yeah man, just let everybody know that they can follow me on Twitter @BVWarrior. I might go out to Cali and see King Mo, so I gotta give him a little shout out; that's my man. And thanks to my whole team man, Team Vera!
 
Jul 24, 2005
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PAUL SPADAFORA: "FLOYD IS BASICALLY THE SAME FIGHTER...HE CAN DANCE BETTER THAN ANYBODY IN THE GAME"
By Ben Thompson |
"With Floyd, I feel that it would be a little different, and this is why I feel that. I've never been one of these guys to get hit with 2 or 3 shots at a time. Let's face it, he ain't throwing combinations like that. I mean, I feel that I have enough ability to make him miss, frustrate him, and that's going to be my prayer...I think that Floyd is basically the same fighter, but obviously a lot better because of the experience, because of the fights he's been in, and the guys he's beat. Floyd's a great fighter. He can dance better than anybody in the game; anybody in the game. To me, that sparring session was just a sparring session," stated undefeated former lightweight champion Paul Spadafora, who shared his thoughts on the infamous sparring session he had with undefeated pound-for-pound champion Floyd Mayweather years ago and how he thinks a real fight with him would pan out if they faced each other today. Check it out!

BT: Obviously the ultimate goal for you or anyone around the welterweight division is a big fight with Floyd Mayweather or Manny Pacquiao. Hypothetically, if both of those fights were ever presented to you, which one would you prefer to have?

PS: This is just me being a fighter and me trying to keep it real with myself. That Manny Pacquiao pace doesn't suit me as well as a boxing pace. Pacquiao's going to stay busy. Bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bop. It's like, damn, he needs to chill the fuck out. I'm trying to put him on the pimp game and relax him, and he's going to be bop, bop, bop, bop. You know, I'm going to have to really have my boxing game up. Like Pernell says, I'm really going to have to box. With Floyd, I feel that it would be a little different, and this is why I feel that. I've never been one of these guys to get hit with 2 or 3 shots at a time. Let's face it, he ain't throwing combinations like that. I mean, I feel that I have enough ability to make him miss, frustrate him, and that's going to be my prayer, because ain't no one going to go out there and box with Floyd. Who's gonna do that?

I feel that I have to get him frustrated. I'm white, he ain't gonna like when he starts missing me, he might get salty as hell, and then if shit gets in his mind, next thing you know, there goes a round for me, there goes a round for me. Now next thing you know, he's mad as fuck, and then the fight's over. That's my prayer. That's my way of beating him, you know what I'm saying. I'm gonna keep it real, if the dude says, "Listen, check this out, I'm going to go out here and box this white motherfucker to death," I'm going to have some trouble; real trouble. I'd rather fight Pacquiao. But I feel that, on the strength he's going to be like, "I'm going to go disrespect this dude. I'm going to run through him," I feel that that's impossible.

BT: Obviously you've been in the ring with Floyd before. Everybody knows about the infamous sparring session you had with him. What were your thoughts when that video started surfacing out there, and when you look back at that, how much do you think Floyd has changed since then? When you see Floyd fight now, do you notice anything different in his abilities now compared to back then?

PS: I think that Floyd is basically the same fighter, but obviously a lot better because of the experience, because of the fights he's been in, and the guys he's beat. Floyd's a great fighter. He can dance better than anybody in the game; anybody in the game. To me, that sparring session was just a sparring session. Let me tell you something, I spar with these kids, sometimes I come in here on a bad day, spar with somebody who's 5-0, and this motherfucker will get down on you. I don't take...I'm a real dude; that sparring ain't nothing. I was like, I couldn't believe the next day, they had that shit out there and people were all like blah, blah, blah, blah. I was kind of embarrassed for myself. That, to me, is like real corny what they did with the sparring session.

BT: Well look man, I hear you taking care of business in the gym and I don't want to hold you up any longer. We're definitely gonna get you on the site a lot more though. Before I let you go, is there anything else you want to say in closing?

PS: All I want to do Ben, listen, on everything I love, man, on everything, on my son, all I want to do before I leave this earth is fight the best in the world. I don't want no one to say, "Well Paul didn't fight this guy. He was protected." It ain't me. I didn't protect myself. I want to fight whoever they say is the best and I want to see if I can beat them. The money thing, I swear on everything I love, yeah, it's great to get a big payday like that, but if Jesus comes down here today and says, "Okay Paul, you're going to fight Humberto Toledo and you're going to make 50 thousand dollars, and then you're going to fight Floyd Mayweather and you're going to make 1 million dollars, but this is going to be your last fight and then it's over," I promise you I'm going to fight the Mayweather fight. Any of these guys.
 
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Nevada commission will be bussy
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By Dan Rafael | ESPN.com

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The boxing schedule really cooled off during the hot summer, but there are a number of significant cards coming in the fall, which is why the Nevada State Athletic Commission is going to be quite busy.

The agenda for the monthly commission meeting on Friday in Las Vegas is packed, as there are several items the panel must deal with ahead of a loaded schedule that begins in the coming weeks. There are also several MMA items on the agenda, which is about as heavy as any I have seen.

Here's a look at some of the notable boxing items:

• Middleweight champ Sergio Martinez, former junior middleweight titlist Joachim Alcine and former flyweight titlist Eric Morel all have passed their 35th birthdays, which is the cutoff age in Nevada at which a fighter needs to seek special commission permission for a license. Fighters under 35 can be issued a license administratively so long as they pay the $25 fee and have their medical paperwork in order. But after a fighter hits 35, additional medical testing is required and the license must be approved by the full commission.

All three are likely to be licensed without issue. Martinez, of course, will headline the Sept. 15 HBO PPV card against titleholder Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. at the Thomas & Mack Center. Alcine will face middleweight contender Matthew Macklin on the undercard. Morel is due to challenge bantamweight titlist Leo Santa Cruz on the competing Showtime quadrupleheader (headlined by junior middleweight titlist Saul "Canelo" Alvarez against Josesito Lopez) down the street at the MGM Grand.

• Every time there is a boxing card held in Nevada, the promoters of the event must formally request the date from the commission. Several of those items are on the agenda. Golden Boy will officially request Sept. 8 for a Showtime card at the Hard Rock in Las Vegas. Welterweight titlist Randall Bailey will defend against Devon Alexander in the main event, with Ajose Olusegun facing Lucas Matthysse for a vacant interim junior welterweight title in the co-feature.

Lou DiBella, who promotes Martinez, is requesting Sept. 15 to co-promote the Martinez-Chavez card with Top Rank, while Dan Goossen, Lopez's co-promoter, is requesting Sept. 15 to co-promote the MGM Grand show.

• Top Rank will formally seek to reserve Nov. 10 at the MGM Grand for an HBO PPV show. That was supposed to be the card on which Manny Pacquiao would make his return, although his opponent isn't yet set and Pacquiao's fight likely will move to Dec. 1 instead.

• Commission meetings are also where referees and judges for major fights are assigned. A slew of them will be assigned at Friday's meeting, including those for Bailey-Alexander, Olusegun-Matthysse, Alvarez-Lopez, the featherweight title bout between Jhonny Gonzalez and challenger Daniel Ponce De Leon (part of the Sept. 15 MGM show), Santa Cruz-Morel, Martinez-Chavez and the vacant junior lightweight title bout between Miguel Beltran Jr. and Roman Martinez, who will fight on the Sept. 15 Thomas & Mack card.

• One item not on the agenda that was expected to be is a hearing for junior welterweight titlist Lamont Peterson, who was supposed to seek a license and an opportunity to explain his positive drug test (for synthetic testosterone), which forced his rematch against Amir Khan to be canceled. It had been scheduled to take place May 19 in Las Vegas.

Peterson's camp had insisted it would seek a license in Nevada but has continually put off the hearing.

"I never heard back from Peterson's attorney, Pete Bernhard, who told me he would call me last week but did not," commission executive director Keith Kizer said.
 
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Rumour Mill: Freddie Roach Wants Pac-Man Vs. Khan?
Published August 27, 2012 | By eastside | 3 Comments

By James Slater – Whilst scanning the web for the latest boxing news, I came across an intriguing little ‘story’ (well, maybe not so little – at least the story won’t be if it turns out to be true!) that suggests ace-trainer Freddie Roach now wants to see his star pupils, Manny Pacquiao and Amir Khan, fight one another soon.

According to the piece on The Moment (as picked up by Opposing Views), Roach “Is pushing for the boxer (Khan) to step up from the light-welterweight division to take on Manny Pacquiao. Roach now wants Khan to move up to 147-pounds where he can take on stable-mate and good friend Pacquiao.”

Of course, this ‘story’ could turn out to be no real story at all, and just a load of baloney, but boxing is a weird sport at times and, with both Pac-Man and “King Khan” coming off defeats (albeit a robbery in the eyes of millions in Manny’s case), maybe the fight could happen. It sure would prove to be a shock if Team-Pacquiao’s forthcoming next opponent announcement told the world he will indeed be fighting Khan.

The experts tell us it will either be Juan Manuel Marquez (fourth fight) Miguel Cotto (second fight) or, the outside bet, Tim Bradley (second fight) for Pac-Man next. How would the fans take it if it were announced that Khan will indeed take the biggest fight of his career and get it on with the man he knows so well? Call me crazy, but I think the fight would sell. No, the pay-per-view numbers would not be anything too special, but I think this particular match-up would intrigue enough fans to make money. Ask a fellow fan, and he or she will likely tell you he or she is bored at the idea of a Pacquiao-Bradley II, some fans will tell you the same about a fourth instalment of Pacquiao-Marquez or a second slice of Pacquiao-Cotto.

You can slate the idea of Pacquiao-Khan all you want, but no way would this fight – either the notion of it or the action in the actual ring should it really happen – inspire yawns. Okay, Khan would have a great chance of being KO’d, maybe even brutally (unless his “good friend” Pac-Man elected to take it easy on him and “carry” him a few rounds), but the fight would be thrilling while it lasted. Khan is super-fast, he can punch and he has never been short on guts. Also, Khan feels he will be stronger, perhaps sturdier in the chin department, up at 147. And is Pacquiao on the slide as some, quite a few fans, seem to think he is?

People went crazy with indignation when Pacquiao’s hugely unlikely fight with Oscar De La Hoya was first talked about as a possibility. Fans will no doubt have a similar reaction if there is any substance to the Pacquiao-Khan shootout, but sometimes the crazy-looking fights make sense in the end.

November 10th or December 1st in Las Vegas: Pacquiao-Khan? You’d tune in, wouldn’t you!
 
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SERGIO MARTINEZ RECEIVES THREATS; CANCELS MEDIA WORKOUT
By Press Release | August 27, 2012

Threats and an incident of vandalism over the weekend at the Oxnard-based training camp of two-division world champion SERGIO MARTÍNEZ (49-2-2, 28 KOs), of Argentina, has forced the cancellation of Martinez's Media Day Workout, scheduled for Tuesday, August 28 in Ventura, Calif. Martínez is deep in training for his upcoming challenge of undefeated World Boxing Council (WBC) middleweight champion and Son of the Legend, JULIO CÉSAR CHÁVEZ, JR. (46-0-1, 32 KOs), of México.

"This past weekend Sergio received threats from an unknown source and the car in front of his home was vandalized," said Lou DiBella, Martínez's promoter. "Unfortunately, until we have a security team in place, we are going to have to suspend any and all public and media appearances for Sergio, including the upcoming media day scheduled for tomorrow in Oxnard. We apologize for the inconvenience to the media and fans that have planned on attending tomorrow's event."
 
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CHAD DAWSON: "ANDRE WARD IS NOT A BIG PUNCHER...DON'T RULE OUT THE KNOCKOUT"
By Ben Thompson | August 28, 2012

"Andre Ward is not a big puncher at all. I mean, at the end of the day, he has to do something to make me not think that I can overpower him, and I don't think he has the punching power to do that, you know. I mean, this is boxing and anything can happen. Any punch can end it for anybody, but I really don't think he has the punching power to keep me on the outside and to not make me want to jump on the inside and not mix it up with him...Don't rule out the knockout because the knockout can come. Andre Ward has been down, I've been down before, but I don't think I've ever been as bad as he's been hurt," stated WBC light heavyweight champion Chad Dawson, who talked about his highly-anticipated September 8th showdown with super middleweight king Andre Ward. Check it out!

BT: What's going on, Chad?

CD: Ben, how you doing man?

BT: I'm doing good. How you doing, bro?

CD: I'm doing great!

BT: No doubt. Chad, you're coming off the biggest win of your career, a victory over Bernard Hopkins, plus you've got wins over the likes of Tomasz Adamek, Glen Johnson, and Antonio Tarver. So why call out Andre Ward?

CD: You know, that's just boxing. When I called Andre Ward out on HBO after I beat Bernard, you know, I did it for boxing. Everything I'm doing, I'm doing for boxing. I want to show fighters that the best need to fight the best, you know? 168 and 175 is pretty much the same class. I mean, I'm fighting at a 7-pound heavier weight class than he's fighting at, but I can make 168. I could make 168 for the last 3 years and I've always known that. I'm just doing this because I want to prove a point, and at the same time, I want to make history. There's never been a fighter to win a title at a higher weight class and go down a weight class and win another world title, so I'm looking forward to that. Like I said, I'm just doing it for boxing.

BT: I know you're fighting him at 168, but was that the plan to begin with or were you actually hoping to face him at a catchweight?

CD: 168 is no problem. I don't think people remember maybe a year ago or 2 years ago, when somebody fell out of the Super Six tournament, I had the option to join the tournament, but I turned it down because I didn't want to give up my title at light heavyweight. 168 has always been in the back of my mind. People don't realize, when I fought from 160 to 168, you know, that's when I was knocking guys out. I was dominating at that weight. I walk around at 182 or 180 pounds. For me to get into camp and fight at light heavyweight, there's no struggle and no strain. I make the weight easy. I eat what I want; burgers, cake, mashed potatoes, everything, you know? The only thing I have to do different this camp is diet. I'm not able to eat the foods that I was eating when I was fighting at light heavyweight. I'm not able to relax and chill and just put weight on and go in the gym and just burn it off. You know, this fight, I really have to watch my diet and watch how I eat; from 4 meals a day to more meals, you know, keep my metabolism running and everything. I mean, everything is going great. Everything is going according to plan. I'm 175 pounds right now. I'm lean, I'm cut, I'm muscular. I'm just looking good and it's fun. I'm having fun doing it.

BT: Obviously you've fought at 168 before. Have you noticed any difference in getting back to that weight, like do you feel faster at the lower weight than you do at 175?

CD: I mean, everything is coming back to me; everything. The hand speed, the different variety of combinations, you know, the foot work; everything is coming back. It's like I'm a child again, you know, playing around in the gym and just doing the things that I knew I was capable of doing. The weight loss is doing wonders for me, you know, going down to my natural weight, 168 pounds.

BT: A lot of people like to compare Ward's style to that of Bernard Hopkins, where he likes to get inside and rough guys up. Do you think the fact that you've already had two camps preparing for that type of fight was beneficial in helping you prepare for what Ward will bring to the ring on September 8th?

CD: Yeah, definitely, definitely. The fact that he likes to get inside and likes to rough guys up, he uses his head like Bernard, you know, he tucks his head down and he throws at the chest, he does a lot of things like Bernard, but I'm not going to say that he and Bernard are the same fighter because he's much, much younger than Bernard. He'll be able to pull the trigger faster than Bernard, so I have to be on my A game. I have to be focused the whole 12 rounds, you know. I can't slip up and lay back. I can't let him rest when he wants to rest and I'm not going to be able to rest when I want to rest. I have to be 100% and I have to be aware of everything that's going on in that ring for 12 rounds.

BT: I don't consider Ward to be a dirty fighter, but there's been a couple of guys he's faced who have complained and said that he can get pretty rough on the inside. Is there any concern about dirty tactics coming into play?

CD: Nah, no concerns. Like I said, I've been in the ring with Bernard and if I can make it through that, I can make it through anything else.

BT: (Laughing) Good point. Ward's been with one trainer, Virgil Hunter, his whole career, whereas you've been able to work with a few top-notch trainers. Do you think that's an advantage, having worked with and being able to learn different things from the likes of Floyd Mayweather Sr., Eddie Mustafa Muhammad, and John Scully?

CD: I mean, the fact that I've worked with so many different styles, I was able to pick up something from all those guys. Eddie Mustafa Muhammad, I think I learned the most from him. He's a great trainer, great guy, and I still have a lot of respect for him. He's just a great trainer. Floyd Sr., I had a chance to work with him for a couple of fights. John Scully, you know, I worked with Scully early in my career and now we're back together. Dan Birmingham, I mean, I've worked with Hall of Fame trainers and I picked up a lot from all those guys. I think that does say a lot about my pedigree and what I've learned from these guys. Some people knock it, but I don't knock it because I look at it like this, if you're with a trainer and you don't feel like that trainer can do anymore for you or take you to the next level, then you gotta move on. You gotta do what's right for your career. The moves I've made were not to damage my career, they were just to make my career better and to better myself as a man and as a fighter. At the end of the day, I've got 4 kids and a wife that I gotta take care of, and if I didn't make those moves, I don't know where I would be at right now.

BT: Obviously you're being viewed as the bigger and stronger guy, but at the same time, you're coming down to what you said earlier was your natural weight. Do you think your size and strength is going to be that significant where it will actually play a factor in the fight?

CD: Absolutely. Yeah, I do. I think they think that they're physically stronger than me and they think they're going to go in there and muscle me and bully me, but it's not going to happen. I mean, fighting at light heavyweight, I've sparred with heavyweights, I've sparred with cruiserweights; I've been in the ring with big guys and Andre Ward is a weight class below me. And the second thing is Andre Ward is not a big puncher at all. I mean, at the end of the day, he has to do something to make me not think that I can overpower him, and I don't think he has the punching power to do that, you know. I mean, this is boxing and anything can happen. Any punch can end it for anybody, but I really don't think he has the punching power to keep me on the outside and to not make me want to jump on the inside and not mix it up with him. At the end of the day, just like I have to deal with the things that he does well, he's going to have to deal with the things that I do well, and deal with my size and my reach advantage, so it's going to be a good fight.

BT: When all is said and done and assuming everything goes well for you, where are you hoping this fight puts you in the grand scheme of things?

CD: Hopefully, it puts me right behind Floyd Mayweather as the pound-for-pound king; behind Floyd or Manny Pacquiao. I mean, I just hope this can be the launching of my career, you know. I remember when Floyd first came onto the scene, not when he came up the ranks, but when people started recognizing that this guys is one of the pound-for-pound best fighters in the world, I think it was right around the same time I think he was about 29 or 30 years old when he started getting the big paydays. I feel like, you know, I'm at the point in my career; I've beaten big names, I've fought everybody they put in front of me, and I've never turned down a fight. I've done everything that my promoters, the boxing fans, and everybody has asked of me; I've done it. I feel like now is my time to come out and let everybody know who I am. This is a big fight and there's a lot at stake for me and Andre Ward, so that's the reason it makes for a great fight because at the end of the day, we're both going to leave everything in the ring on the 8th. We know that the winner of this fight is going to go to the top.

BT: No doubt my man. Well Chad, I know you're busy and I don't want to keep you. You got any final predictions before the 8th gets here? Is Nick Cannon gonna mess up while announcing or anything?

CD: (Laughing) Nah man, Chad Dawson all day. Don't rule out the knockout because the knockout can come. Andre Ward has been down, I've been down before, but I don't think I've ever been as bad as he's been hurt. You look at the times he's been down and look at the times I've been down, he's definitely been hurt worse than what I've been hurt. Chad Dawson all day!
 
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Carl Froch to face Yusaf Mack on November 17th in Nottingham
Published August 28, 2012 | By eastside | 1 Comment

By Michael Collins: IBF super middleweight champion Carl Froch (29-2, 21 KO’s) will be taking on a soft opponent for his next fight against recent Tavoris Cloud knockout victim light heavyweight Yusaf Mack (31-4-2, 17 KO’s) in a scheduled 12 round bout on November 17th at the Capital FM Arena in Nottingham, UK. The fight doesn’t really make a lot of sense because Mack has already been knocked out by Glen Johnson in 2010, a fighter that Froch already beat in the Super Six tournament. It just looks like a mismatch.

Mack, 6’1″, will have to drop down from light heavyweight to make the fight with the 35-year-old Froch and you can imagine that Mack will be weakened from the process of making weight. It’s already a mismatch going in but when you add to that Mack having to take off weight to get down to the 168 lb limit then you’re really talking mismatch.

Froch’s promoter Eddie Hearn from Matchroom Sport did his best to try and hype Mack as an opponent, saying to Sky Sports News “He’s got nothing to lose coming here to face me and I know he’ll put it all on the line to take the title from me so I’ll be fully prepared for everything he’s got and I’ll be hitting him with all my best.”

“Nothing left to lose” sounds like code to me to mean Mack only has a puncher’s chance in this fight. In other words, this is a mismatch.

Mack can punch a little, but he has problems taking big shots as we saw in his losses to Johnson, Cloud, Librado Andrade and Alexandro Berrio. All were knockout losses for Mack. The Berrio fight was interesting in that Berrio kissed Mack on the head moments before Mack hit the canvas. I’ve never seen that before or since.

Froch fans feel that he has an easy title defense like this coming after having battled hard in the Super Six tournament and recently beating IBF super middleweight champion Lucian Bute last May. I don’t see it that way. I think all fighters should follow the path of someone like Floyd Mayweather Jr, who always looks for the biggest fight possible with every bout. He doesn’t take stay busy fights or title milking bouts because he’s looking out for the boxing public who pay to see his fights. That’s how all fighters should be, especially when they hold major world titles like Froch. Who wants to pay to see a mismatch?
 
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Evander Holyfield: Is “The Real Deal” About To Call Time On His Legendary Career?
Published August 27, 2012 | By eastside | 49 Comments

By James Slater - Over the weekend, a number of boxing web sites ran with the story of WBC heavyweight king Vitali Klitschko basically ruled out a fight living legend Evander Holyfield (I read the story on Examiner.com).

Fans will not in any way have been shocked by this statement by Klitschko, as he and his younger brother are class acts, neither one wanting to either hurt or humiliate the once-great Holyfield, nor get arrested for murder. Speaking very much for his brother as well no doubt, Klitschko has made it clear: there is no big fight left out there for the 49-year-old former four-time ruler.

Holyfield has said himself that he will not take a meaningless non-title fight “just for the sake of fighting,” and we must now hold him to his word. With a Klitschko fight now as dead in the water for him as can be, Evander surely has nowhere to turn but towards the exit door.

In truth, the future Hall of Famer who last fought in May of last year (a win: a 10th-round TKO over fellow veteran Brian Nielsen) should have called it quits a number of years ago, say after his close points loss to the huge Nikolay Valuev (this December 2008 fight being “The Real Deal’s” last good showing).

But, unable to walk away while there was at least a little hope of a shot at a Klitschko being there for him, Evander has stuck around. Now, surely, he will call a press conference and announce how he is content with all he achieved, as an amateur, as a cruiserweight (the best ever) and as a heavyweight. With more belts in his collection that most fighters could ever dream of winning, Holyfield, 44-10-2(29) can certainly walk way with his head held extremely high.

Maybe his career will have gone out not with a bang but with a whimper if he walks away now, but Holyfield has his health, his dignity and he has his respect. We all know how a fight between he and one of the Klitschkos would have turned out had it happened in 2010, 2011 or here in 2012: badly, very badly for the Atlanta immortal. We also know that had the peak Evander, say the one from around 1992 though 1997, met either brother, we’d have had a sensational, extremely hard-fought battle on our hands.

Fans may have forgotten due to his sticking around whilst having diminished skills, but in his prime, Holyfield was something truly special. Arguably America’s last great heavyweight, “The Warrior” lit up two weight divisions is a seriously magical way.

Facing a who’s who of the cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions during his best days, Evander damn near beat them all. Simply put, he has nothing more to prove other than he is still that smart guy who showed real class when being unfairly DQ’d at the 1984 Olympics. To do this, Evander simply has to announce his retirement.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Virgil Hunter: “Andre has something you can’t put in a fighter”
By John J. Raspanti, Doghouse Boxing (Aug 28, 2012) Doghouse Boxing
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Virgil Hill
By John J. Raspanti, DoghouseBoxing. Virgil Hunter is aware of the challenge his fighter, super middleweight champion Andre Ward faces on September 8 at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Ca.

The opponent that night will be Chad Dawson, the reigning light heavyweight champion of the world.

“I’ve always admired his skill,” said Hunter during an interview in downtown Oakland. “He’s is a helluva a fighter. I knew one day that they (Ward and Dawson) would fight. I didn’t think it would be this soon.”

The match-up is something of a surprise. Dawson will be dropping down to the 168-pound division, a weight that Ward has dominated for the last two and a half years.

Ward (25-0, 13 KOs) captured the WBA super middleweight title when he defeated Mikkel Kessler at the Oracle Arena in the fall of 2009. Two years later, Ward defeated Carl Froch, which earned him the WBC belt, in addition to the Showtime Super Six World Boxing Classic Cup.

Sandwiched between the Kessler and Froch fights were victories over Allan Green, Sakio Bika, and Arthur Abraham. Hunter has heard some complaints regarding Dawson’s decision to come down in weight to face Ward.

“It’s no picnic for Andre to make one hundred sixty-eight pound either." said Hunter. "Right now you have different people already tarnishing a victory, if we win, by saying that it could be a weight-draining situation."

During the press conference last month, announcing the fight, Hunter, and Dawson’s promoter ,Gary Shaw, debated the merits of who is the best qualified to do the talking for a particular fight,- the fighter, or the promoter. Hunter called out to Dawson to speak for himself in what some felt was an attempt to aggravate the champion.

Hunter readily disagrees.

“I wasn’t trying to get under Chad’s skin,” said Hunter. “I was serious about what I said. I worked with California gangs for thirty years, and the obstacles that face minorities in this world. It (the moment during the press conference) suggested the epitome of, ‘Yasser boss'.

“I wasn’t angry, I was disappointed. Chad owe’s it to his sons. He don’t need anybody to speak for him. Gary Shaw is going to be eating off Chad Dawson for the next twenty years.”

It’s obvious that Hunter not only likes Dawson the fighter, but the man as well. So, what does last year's "Trainer of the Year" see as Dawson’s strengths as a boxer?

“Dawson is a great fighter, there’s no doubt about it,” Hunter said, without hesitation. “He throws beautiful combinations. He’s got good legs, he has an understanding of the game. I can’t take anything from him. Who can?

“He’s had only one setback for whatever reason that was. You have to give him his due.”

Dawson (31-1, 17 KOs) defeated legendary Bernard Hopkins to become the WBC light heavyweight champion last April. He first won the championship in 2007 by hammering Tomasz Adamek. Dawson added the IBF title by easily defeating Antonio Tarver a year later. Dawson is a long and rangy southpaw. He’s a an inch taller than Ward and will have a reach advantage of five inches.

Is Hunter worried about his fighter tangling with an unorthodox lefty?

“I think if it’s even situation. I don’t think it’s that difficult,” Hunter said. "But, if you let him (the southpaw) have his way it could be a problem. I think what’s more difficult is getting the right guys in to prepare.”

Preparing a fighter through sparring is one, if not the most important aspect of his Hunter's training camp. Many trainers work on strategy in camp and watch endless hours of tape. Hunter feels that studying tape is an overrated exercise.

“The main thing is to make sure you cover all the bases, all the area’s that need to be utilized,” said Hunter. "I think strategy is overrated. I know there a lot of coaches who look at tape after tape after tape. It’s easy to look at tape in victory and say 'I studied the tape and we got the victory'.

"All of that is an ego mechanism for the coach. If he comes out victorious, then he can kind of pull it over the media’s eyes and project himself as this great tape studier, this great strategy guy, but the fact is when you’ve got talent in both corners, it’s not about tape, it’s about what’s going to go in the moment.

“So, I think it’s exaggerated and it sounds good, but you know you never hear about tape when that person loses,” Hunter said. ”When Pacquiao wins you hear, ‘I studied the tape.I saw the weakness'. If he loses, you don’t hear anything about the tape. The coach can manipulate the media. You never hear, 'What did you miss? You said you studied the tape for hour after hour after hour, and you lost'. Tape watching is overrated. You have to be able to call a fight in the moment.”

Hunter has been with Ward for twenty years. Is there a secret to the continuing rise of Andre Ward the fighter?

“I’ve said from the beginning that Andre’s strengths are he beats superstars,” said Hunter. “Andre has something that you can put in a fighter, it has to be in him. That’s what will emerge September 8 against a force like Chad Dawson.”

The former standout basketball player also recognizes the bond between Dawson and his trainer, John “Iceman” Scully.

“They seem to click. Chad is comfortable with him,” Hunter said. “He’s happy with him. I think Scully is very leery of the strength coordinator,” he added.

Does the veteran trainer see something special in Andre Ward?

“He’s always been underestimated,” Hunter said. “He’s always been looked at from the outside as someone who’s easy to beat. He’s never been that guy. I think that’s what they don’t understand about him. When it becomes a reality, they realize they made a bad call.”

Hunter expects Ward to be explosive in September. The thinking is that the undefeated champion will rise to meet Dawson and then, topple him. Hunter is reluctant to make a prediction.

“I can’t predicate anything, until round one,” said Hunter. “We fought the last fight with a broken hand seven days out. We knew the hand was broke. We had to adjust. You can’t predicate a fight before it happens. Once it starts I’ll be able to read the fight and he will too.”

Goossen Tutor Promotions and Gary Shaw Productions are promoting the Andre Ward vs. Chad Dawson fight in association with Antonio Leonard Productions and SOG Promotions.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Chad Dawson may win us over yet


By Brian Campbell | ESPN.com

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Chad DawsonAl Bello/Getty ImagesChad Dawson's career has been messy and unfulfilling. Will an Andre Ward fight mark a new start?
Sometimes there's just no nice way to sugarcoat the truth.

For all of light heavyweight champion Chad Dawson's considerable talent, it's hard to shake the feeling that he's about as insufferable a figure as there is in boxing today.

Armed with a public persona that's equal parts whiny, brooding and defensive (with an in-ring style to match), Dawson has trudged through a prime as unremarkable as anyone could imagine for a 30-year-old American champion with a 31-1 record.

He has been a hard sell to fans who rightfully believe Dawson's safety-first style is what's increasingly wrong with the sport. It's also hard to imagine that there has been a fighter as talented who looks so painfully uninterested in the performance aspect of his craft or the maximizing of his skills.

Most observers have long given up on the day when Dawson wakes up and realizes just how good he really is. That's what made his recent decision to willingly move down seven pounds to challenge super middleweight champion Andre Ward all the more puzzling -- and equally fantastic.

Has the prodigal son of boxing's pound-for-pound elite finally come full circle after years of us selling him short?

Although that question remains to be seen, Dawson's willingness to move down and challenge the best -- setting up a rare matchup between lineal champions -- is a positive trend that we can only hope becomes contagious. It's also a sign that he's moving his career in the right direction.

It wasn't so long ago that Dawson was almost universally lauded as an exciting prospect with a bright future, but soon something changed in his demeanor.

Dawson survived an all-action slugfest in his first meeting with Glen Johnson, in 2008. Despite showing a ton of heart in claiming a disputed victory, he never again displayed the same hunger and willingness to do more than the bare minimum to win, evidenced in uninspiring wins against Antonio Tarver (twice) and in a rematch with Johnson. Despite being an unbeaten champion, Dawson drifted into boxing purgatory as a high-risk/low-reward opponent with a sour attitude and limited marketing potential.

He continued to unsuccessfully lure Bernard Hopkins into the kind of marquee fight that would elevate his name, eventually landing the bout years later only by accepting step-aside money to allow for Hopkins' immediate rematch with Jean Pascal. And the ensuing fights with Hopkins couldn't have been more disastrous for Dawson, from the debacle ending of their first bout (a pay-per-view, no less) to his childish behavior in the aftermath. Dawson received little credit for winning the excruciatingly bland rematch, seeming reluctant to attack the 47-year-old Hopkins when he had him in trouble.

That's what made Dawson's decision to make the Ward fight so pleasantly surprising. Dawson publicly offered a drop to super middleweight without the aid of a catchweight -- in a fight that will be held in Ward's Oakland, Calif., hometown -- and enters as the underdog despite advantages in height and reach.

Finally, Dawson finds himself in a rare win-win situation. A victory would be the biggest of his career, catapulting him up the P4P rankings. Meanwhile, a respectable loss still leaves him as the champion at 175 pounds, in line for potential paydays in both divisions.

Maybe we have sold Dawson short all along, despite the fighter himself giving us plenty of reasons to disbelieve our eyes. Or maybe this is merely a case of an underachiever coming of age before the window of his prime passes him by.

By showing the boldness to move down in weight to secure a fight against an opponent on the verge of true stardom -- an undefeated champion and undisputed top-five pound-for-pounder, no less -- Dawson proved he is willing to go all-in on maximizing his true potential. Now it's up to him to produce a performance that's equally inspiring.
 
Mar 25, 2005
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SERGIO MARTINEZ RECEIVES THREATS; CANCELS MEDIA WORKOUT
By Press Release | August 27, 2012

Threats and an incident of vandalism over the weekend at the Oxnard-based training camp of two-division world champion SERGIO MARTÍNEZ (49-2-2, 28 KOs), of Argentina, has forced the cancellation of Martinez's Media Day Workout, scheduled for Tuesday, August 28 in Ventura, Calif. Martínez is deep in training for his upcoming challenge of undefeated World Boxing Council (WBC) middleweight champion and Son of the Legend, JULIO CÉSAR CHÁVEZ, JR. (46-0-1, 32 KOs), of México.

"This past weekend Sergio received threats from an unknown source and the car in front of his home was vandalized," said Lou DiBella, Martínez's promoter. "Unfortunately, until we have a security team in place, we are going to have to suspend any and all public and media appearances for Sergio, including the upcoming media day scheduled for tomorrow in Oxnard. We apologize for the inconvenience to the media and fans that have planned on attending tomorrow's event."
FUCKIN BEAN BAGS ALWAYS FUCKIN SHIT UP....
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Interview with Malignaggi; talks Cano, Hatton, More!
August 28th, 2012

By Dan Henderson: Today I had the chance to speak with WBA welterweight world champion Paulie Malignaggi, we spoke about his upcoming fight with Pablo César Cano and his respect for Ricky Hatton. We also spoke about why he is known as the Twitter king.

Henderson – Hello Paulie, thanks for taking the time out to speak to me. It’s been nearly a year since we last spoke and in the last year you’ve stepped up in weight and now your the WBA welterweight champion, How does it feel to be a two weight world champion?

Malignaggi – Feels great, feels even better the way it all played out. Me going to Ukraine and winning the way I did. Words can’t explain how I feel. One of the best feelings ever.

Henderson – You first defence will be against Pablo César Cano, how confident are you going into the fight?

Malignaggi – I always go into every fight thinking I am going to win this fight is nothing different. Cano is a great fighter and is coming to prove he is a contender, but I will be on my A game and show everyone I belong here.

Henderson – Have you started training camp? If so how is coming along?

Malignaggi – Yes been training. Training is going great as usual, *knock on wood*.

Henderson – If you win the fight, who would you like to fight next?

Malignaggi – I hope to get that rematch with Hatton, the rumor is he is coming back and would like to face me, so if this is true, sign me up. He is a great fighter and respect him but def need to revenge that loss.

Henderson – There has been many rumours regarding a Ricky Hatton comeback, I know you’d take that fight as it would make everyone involved a nice amount of money but would you advise Ricky to come out of retirement?

Malignaggi – Ricky is a true legend, he knows in his heart if he can go on or not. If he doesn’t and stays retired I respect that, if he does come back and wants to fight then I applaud him and hopefully we can get that rematch in.

Henderson – Your known as the ‘Twitter king’, how did that come around?

Malignaggi – Honestly, my cousin nico aka @nolosworld from Chicago gave me the nick name “Twitter King” #TK. He knows the whole story on the twitter king craze LOL. I love it and live by it!

Henderson – Thanks again Paulie and hopefully speak to you after you fight against Cano.

Malignaggi – Sounds good thank you!
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Tavoris Cloud must fight mandatory challenger Karo Murat before facing Jean Pascal
Published August 28, 2012 | By eastside | 6 Comments

By Michael Collins: Former WBC light heavyweight champion Jean Pascal’s hand injury wiped out an excellent fight between him and IBF light heavyweight champion Tavroris Cloud (24-0, 19 KO’s) that was supposed to have taken place on August 11th. With Pascal injured, the IBF is ordering Cloud to defend his International Boxing Federation title against his mandatory challenger 28-year-old Karo Murat (25-1-1, 15 KO’s) before the end of the year.

A Murat-Cloud fight is an ugly to contemplate, as Murat couldn’t even beat Nathan Cleverly, losing to him by a 10th round TKO in September 2010. Last year, Murat fought to a very controversial 12 round draw against Gabriel Campillo in October in Germany. I had Murat losing the fight by six rounds. It was a very odd decision.

Cloud will destroy Murat without any problems and move on to bigger and better things.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Maybe if we treat Boxing like a real sport...
by Paul Magno


Believe it or not, boxing is a sport. And, yeah, there are still some of us who insist on treating it like a full-fledged sport and not as a series of randomly put-together exhibitions.

What this means is that I demand logic in terms of matchmaking and title structure, but who the hell am I, anyway? Who the hell are any of us?

Because nobody with any power or influence treats boxing like a real sport, we get situations where top fighters are simply not compelled to risk very much and the sport’s best match-ups get buried, even when there’s a clear and logical path to making them happen.

Well, to be fair, many of the bigger fights eventually do get made, but not when they make sense and not when they could actually benefit the sport as anything other than one single payday on one single evening.

For active participants, not a single fighter wants to be seen as a “ducker” or “cherry picker” and nobody begins a career with the idea that they’ll someday be zig-zagging through soft touches en route to a paper title.

Things just work out that way sometimes. And, given boxing’s non-existent centralized power and the con men who have seized control in the void, it’s logical that most every top fighter, at one point or another, will be accused of ducking and dodging.
Case in point is the junior middleweight division.

The 154 lb. class is bursting at the seams with talent and stands as a powder keg ready to explode, if only someone cared to toss a match at it.

Saul Alvarez, who our top ranked junior middleweight, sits in the top spot, almost by default. In a boxing world run like a real sport, Carlos Molina would be the division’s #1 fighter because, presumably, a boxing that cares about boxing would’ve prevented his screwy DQ against James Kirkland and a truly questionable draw against Erislandy Lara. Of course, a case could also be made that boxing, cared for like it mattered, would’ve forced Alvarez vs. Cotto as well as Martirosyan, Trout vs. anybody to keep Molina out of the top spot.

You just never know what’s going to happen when good fights are made and a real, competitive sports narrative is encouraged. And when the game is rigged and each promoter/manager is allowed to cheat the sport with the help of any of four corrupt sanctioning bodies and a salad tossing media?

Well, we get four or five champs, all with semi-legitimate claims at top dog status, but without a real chance at proving their claims even if they wanted to. Then, it all comes down to which line of crap you’re willing to buy.

It’s like saying that the Yankees, White Sox, Rangers, Giants, and Reds are all at the top and now it’s the fan’s decision as to which team they want to endorse and which version of the World Series they want to support.

In boxing, most long-time fans have a general idea as to who the top guy is in each division, so this may be a non-issue for them. But what about the new fan wanting to dig into the sport?

From the outside looking in, boxing looks like an HBO Real Sex orgy, full of hairy, fat elderly swingers humping one another– kinda interesting at first, but when you look closer, man, this is not where you want to be.

It always amazes me how some fans and media can actually support this chaos and actively deride and discredit attempts to establish something as fundamental as a fair and universally accepted ranking system.

Some website somewhere (the name escapes me at the moment) featured an article recently, asking the question of whether fans actually care at all about rankings.
Good Lord.

Can you imagine MLB or NFL fans saying that standings don’t matter? Imagine the chaos if playoff positioning and world championship games were 100% determined by market value and backstage politics.

Well, you really don’t have to imagine what a sport without structure looks like– just take a gander at boxing where, more often than not, the fans are hustled through the mess like dupes through a 1930′s carnival freak show and the business model is more pusher/junkie than businessman/customer.

So, what would a real rankings system do for the sport?

Unless backed by some sort of power, the rankings would mostly be symbolic. But they would make it so that if a guy like Devon Alexander becomes a number one contender in one of the alphabet leagues, just because he signs with Golden Boy, a singular focus would be placed on the act. Think of it as a flashlight in a dark Brooklyn sewer drain, forcing the rats to scurry about.

At this point, that’s really the best we can hope for when it comes to reform in boxing– Put all the sleaze out into the open and keep shining a light on it until the crooks and carpetbaggers begin to feel an economic pinch from their dirty work.

The idea is to keep the shady decisions from being made in sanctioning body boardrooms then gradually sold to the fans via complicit media until the hustle and con at the root of the story is buried so deeply that only bomb-throwing ne’er-do-wells (like yours truly) are up in arms.

The chaos that governs the sport now only benefits the sleaziest of the sleazy figures at the top of the food chain. A real structure would force real matchmaking. You better believe that this is the reason why everyone with any actual power is against (or ambivalent about) real and fair rankings.

But don’t count on the boxing writers to put together fair rankings or do any of the heavy lifting for real reform either because, frankly, most of them are in somebody’s pocket, have been in somebody’s pocket, or aspire to be in somebody’s pocket.

Can we trust the decision of a scribe who goes on sightseeing junkets with Top Rank brass to fairly asses a Top Rank fighter? How about the fact that most big shot scribes are making their money because promoters and managers are sponsoring their sites?

What’s the answer, then?

It all has to be market based. Pissed off fans and self-sacrificing fighters will be the only impetus for change. If the fighters won’t fight and the fans won’t follow, the cheese for the big rats will disappear. Then, as the emaciated vermin start to fall away, some decent people have a chance at stepping in.

But the fans actually have to want a more activist role. Most just want to be customers and drift in and out when it’s time for the fights. So, unless there’s a change in this attitude, boxing will get what it deserves.

For those who care, there is a long fight ahead and I don’t even think most of us have the stomach for such a battle.

Personally, I have no answers other than to keep shining a light on the bull shit and throwing bombs at the crooks. As we’ve recently been told by members of the boxing media establishment, we’re nobody here at our own businesses and nobody cares about the reform-minded things we write. So, I’ll leave all the activism in the hands of the big shots and self-congratulating experts. I’m sure they’ll get to all the solutions, once they polish off that last doughnut at the media buffet table.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Saul Alvarez - Oh, the Possibilities…
By Jason Gonzalez Doghouse Boxing (Photo © German Villasenor)
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Saul Alvarez
Nearly four months removed from his most significant victory to date, rising Mexican star Saul “El Canelo” Alvarez returns to the squared circle since defeating future surefire Hall-of-Famer “Sugar” Shane Mosley. As it looks now, the 22-year-old Alvarez appears to be on course to collide head-on with the pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather Jr. But before Alvarez, now 40-0-1 (29), can strike gold, there is an important matter of business he must first attend to. Standing in Alvarez's way is Mexican-American Josesito Lopez, who, like Alvarez, is recently coming off a colossal win.

Alvarez and Lopez will do battle in the main event of the “Knockout Kings” card taking place September 15 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. Showtime will televise the 12-round championship bout. This past June, Lopez, now 28, moved seven pounds north of the junior welterweight division to face “Vicious” Victor Ortiz. Lopez, a legitimate 140-pound fighter, was replacing then-suspended ex-welterweight champion Andre Berto. In the contest, Lopez put forth a dazzling display of elbow grease that made fight fans feel compelled to congratulate him on the principle of temerity alone. Lopez's showing of courage paid dividends when Ortiz deemed he could no longer continue after sustaining what had been confirmed as a terribly fractured jaw. Now fighting 14 pounds above his natural weight, Lopez could be regarded as being too small for Alvarez. The Mexican Independence Day extravaganza starring Alvarez and Lopez, though worthy of attention, could prove to be a mismatch. In the long run, could hinder Alvarez's growth as a professional.

“No! Not at all,” disagreed Alvarez, the WBC junior middleweight champion. “There is an advantage to everything in life. Every fight that we make is progress and it’s one step closer to realizing our dream of being the best in the world. Josesito [Lopez] is there for a reason. He wants to win just like I do. I am preparing myself to the best of my ability, so that there aren't any surprises on September 15. I am really excited about the fight and I can't wait till fight time.”

After a series of opponents were scratched and proposed fights fell through, this ended with Alvarez having an invitation to the grand festival on the third Saturday in September without a dance partner helping him partake in the art of war. Initially, Paul Williams was scheduled for the slot. All of this changed when Williams was involved in a horrific motorcycle accident that left him paralyzed from the waist down. In came James Kirkland, who was rehabbing his shoulder at the time and believed he would be healthy by fight time, thus making him available to accept the fight. However, a damaging dispute revolving around money caused an Alvarez-Kirkland scrap to fizzle out. Miguel Cotto's name was thrown out there as a possible opponent for Alvarez but this was no more than wishful thinking. Time-wise, it didn't make any sense. Cotto had just fought in May, against Mayweather no less, therefore that was just propaganda. What happened next was interesting. The playmakers at Golden Boy Promotions sat down and put their thinking caps on as they attempted to tackle this complex equation. It was a no-brainer; they all agreed that Ortiz was the best viable foe to challenge for Alvarez's title. But before that could be done, Ortiz had to get by Lopez first before he could punch his ticket to join the fiesta on September 15.

Although Ortiz may have been ahead on all three of the judges' scorecards the night of June 23, extenuating circumstances (a broken mandibular bone) forced him to surrender at the end of the ninth round of their fight. Lopez would stand alone, earning the right to roll with the “Big Dawgs.” As for Alvarez, it left him preparing for four different challengers who fail to resemble each other in any way, shape or form. 90% of the time, these scenarios end in postponement.

“I wasn't worried,” recalled Alvarez. “Thank God there was more than enough time to look for an opponent to face on September 15. At no point was I ever worried about not fighting or losing the date. All the credit in the world to Josesito. He earned the privilege to fight and I am looking forward to the challenge.”

Inquiring minds want to know; did the changes alter Alvarez's training?

“The changes haven't altered nor affected anything whatsoever,” said Alvarez, who has defended his strap four times. “As I've mentioned before, there was a lot time to train. There was sufficient time to spar with a lot of different opponents. There was time to change our sparring around if we needed to for whoever it was that we were going to face.”

Alvarez channeled pinpoint determination that was easily captured, even over the telephone. To some degree, Alvarez, is a lot like New York Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter. Alvarez is cordial to his rival and is politically correct in ways that only someone like Jeter, known for habitually saying the right thing at the right time, knows how to employ. It’s truly a testament to Alvarez's maturity but besides being wise beyond his years, you also get the impression that Alvarez believes his fists will do the talking on fight night. The results will only prove one thing: his mission was to defeat Lopez. However, there two potential distracters on the horizon that could easily weigh heavy on the mind of anyone, particularly a young guy in the limelight like Alvarez.

Fully knowing the physical and emotional involvement when fighting, Alvarez's promoter, Oscar De la Hoya, much to the surprise of everyone else, revealed he will be awarding a $100,000 bonus to any fighter (on the card) that can score the best knockout of the evening. So on top of thinking about a win, De la Hoya just gave his fighter something else to ponder albeit its foolishness. Alvarez could very well find himself in an “Amir Khan situation” and Lopez is just the kind of fighter capable of scoring a huge upset. And there you go; the Mayweather fight is out the window faster than you can snap your fingers.

“That will not serve as a distraction to either me or my team,” said Alvarez regarding the monetary incentive. “I am not thinking about that because when you do go out looking for a knockout, it backfires. I am just going to fight my fight. If the knockout comes, it comes. If it doesn't, well, that's okay too. What's important is to get the victory.”

It’s no surprise that a fighter with the competitive spirit of Alvarez has expressed that he wants to be the best fighter in the world. And straight out of Alvarez's mouth, he has stated that at any given moment, he is ready to face any of the elite fighters in the game today. At the same time, while Alvarez and Lopez engage in fistic fury, two of the best middleweights in the world will be duking it out for supremacy at 160 pounds. That's right, folks; just five minutes away at the Thomas and Mack Center, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and Sergio Martinez look to unleash guerrilla warfare on each other. As potential adversaries in the near future, you would be inclined to think that Alvarez wants to outdo his rivals by getting a leg up on the competition. If nothing else, it could serve as bargaining chip when negotiating a deal for a fight against either charge. Is Alvarez feeling stressed about performing better than the candidates on his hit list?

“That fight means nothing to me,” Alvarez would tell Maxboxing. “I have my own responsibilities and obligations to attend to the night of September 15. I am committed to fighting Josesito the same way Martinez and Chavez Jr. are committed to fighting each other. That said, it isn't a distraction.”

To reiterate, Alvarez is just 22. Barring injury and a commitment to his craft and discipline, the marquee match-ups are always going to be accessible for him to pick. However, the same can't be said for some of the guys on Alvarez's radar. With the exception of Chavez Jr., now 26, how long is a guy like a Mayweather or a Martinez going to hang around? Both are pushing 40. Now Cotto is a little younger but he is still in his mid 30's. How soon in the foreseeable future does Alvarez see these big match-ups materializing?

“I don't like to talk about the future,” he insisted. “I am solely focusing on my fight right now. As I've mentioned before, I have an obligation to Josesito Lopez but I am always ready to fight the best in the world such as the Mayweathers and Cottos.”

Mayweather-Alvarez? Truly a mega-fight that would garner a lot of attention. It’s the quintessential “passing of the torch” type of scrap, in which the heir to the throne becomes appointed. And just imagine how magnified the event would be if both Mayweather Jr. and Alvarez locked horns on Cinco de Mayo (May 5).

“As far as I am concerned, we can do the fight now,” Alvarez said regarding a clash with Mayweather Jr. “We are ready for him tonight. We flew to Los Angeles [GBP headquarters] to sign for the fight. But you know, Mayweather said one thing and we said another. But for now, Mayweather gets preference because he is the best fighter pound-for-pound. But rest assured that when the fight happens, I will be the happiest person in the world.”

There are some skeptics who would view a bout with Mayweather Jr. as being non-competitive, due to Alvarez being matched so carefully throughout the course of his career, while at the same time looking for an ideal weight class to fight in. Both Mayweather, Jr. and Cotto are at 154, Martinez and Chavez Jr. are at 160. Is a move up to middleweight, a part of the plan, in attempt to launch a preemptive strike against his counterparts looking to rain on his Mexican Independence Day parade?

“I am very comfortable fighting at 154,” said Alvarez, who has fought as low as a 139 pounds. “I feel very strong; this is my ideal weight. For those that have followed my career would agree that I am progressing rather well. I have learned so much in just a short amount of time. I feel that have to learn to box just a little bit more but overall, there isn't anything that I would change.”

“Knockout Kings” featuring Alvarez vs. Lopez begins at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Showtime will air a documentary that goes beyond the ring and into the lives of Alvarez and the unlikely, upstart challenger Lopez, in anticipation of the fight, beginning Wednesday, September 5th at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

Jay Gon's Tidbits

- Alvarez told Maxboxing that he has not been in contact with Paul Williams. However, Williams will be his guest and will watch from ringside the night of the 15th.

- Alvarez's favorite sport besides boxing is auto racing. Alvarez cited NASCAR and Formula One as his favorites.

- Alvarez is learning how to speak English. He admitted to taking classes but is in the process of looking for a tutor who will come to his house as well as travel the road with him. Alvarez informed us that when he is not in class, he is utilizing his Rosetta Stone program. Alvarez's English is truly a work in progress.

- Alvarez acknowledged that he is handling his success and all of the perks that come with fame well, specifically the ladies. “It is all under control,” he said. “Thank God , we have all been coming along just fine. Fame has been treating us fine and well.”

- Alvarez told us that currently, he doesn't own any pets. Alvarez admits that a pet is a life and you have to attend to it. With his hectic schedule, he does not have the time to care for pets. However, Alvarez is a big animal guy and revealed to us that in the near future, he plans to get a dog. How cool would it be to see Alvarez with a St. Bernard? Also, if more people had his attitude, there wouldn't be as many neglected and abandoned pets as there are in the world.

- Alvarez loves banda music. Per Wikipedia, bandas play a wide variety of songs, including rancheras, corridos, cumbias, baladas and boleros. Bandas are most widely known for their rancheras but they also play modern Mexican pop, rock and cumbias. Most banda music is very clearly a dialect of polka music. Alvarez also loves singer and guitarist John Sebastian and vocalist Vicente Fernandez.

- Alvarez has a very distinct look. You don't see many Mexicans with red hair, white skin and freckles. When asked if he has Spanish [from Spain] or Irish ancestry in his blood, he says, “I have no clue. A lot of people ask me that question. I mean, anything is possible. It could be but I would have to ask my parents. I have yet to ask them.”

- Alvarez is elated to be fighting on Mexican Independence Day. “It is with great pride and honor that I will represent my country. I am just so thrilled to be fighting on September 15th. It is an honor that many have yet to achieve. I promise to do the best that I can to win. We will win. This one is for Mexico!”

- Last but not least, Alvarez's draw came against Jorge Juarez in his fifth professional fight (a four-rounder) six years ago.