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May 13, 2002
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LMAO, Arthur Abraham's lil bro Alex is a pure genius! Not only did he get arrested for kicking Miranda on the ground, cost Arthur over $100,000 and possible suspension, but he LOST Abrahams IBF belt!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Alex parked the car with the belt in it at a parking lot in Miami, got out of the car to look for someone to help carry their bags, returned to the car and someone broke in and stole all their shit inlcuding the belt! lol. Man I really hope this Alex faggot fights James Kirkland.



That's a German website so the translation is a bit off:

Bad low blow for Arthur Abraham (28) in his farewell from America: Berlin's world championship at the airport of Miami robbed - even the world championship belt is gone!
 
May 13, 2002
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lol @ borat abraham's response:

"At the Miami airport were my brother Alex and I our rental car, wanted a trolley for the luggage. We thought not to theft, it was a guarded parking garage. "

"As we are only a few minutes later came back, the car was broken.The case with the valuable championship belt is gone, my irreplaceable IBF honorary ring, which purchased suits, the newly acquired electrical equipment such as video camera, camera, mobile phone and laptop. "
 
Dec 9, 2005
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lol @ borat abraham's response:

"At the Miami airport were my brother Alex and I our rental car, wanted a trolley for the luggage. We thought not to theft, it was a guarded parking garage. "

"As we are only a few minutes later came back, the car was broken.The case with the valuable championship belt is gone, my irreplaceable IBF honorary ring, which purchased suits, the newly acquired electrical equipment such as video camera, camera, mobile phone and laptop. "
Hahahahaha..

 
Jul 24, 2005
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Paul Williams: Oscar De la Hoya, Shane Mosely and Kelly Pavlik say NO...

24.06.08 - What took 180 Days in the past, Goossen Tutor Promotions and their fighters have established a new timetable..."Around the World in 40 Days." The journey started on June 7 and concludes on July 16. The updated short story follows:



June 7, MOHEGAN SUN, UNCASVILLE, CONNECTICUT, SHOWTIME:
Paul Williams started it all in incredible fashion in recapturing his WBO Welterweight Championship with a first round knockout of then-champion Carlos Quintana. Williams was out to prove his superiority at welterweight and certainly did so with an exclamation point at the end. The "most feared man in boxing" once again demonstrated the reason why.

Williams gives boxing its youth back, to the future.

What's Next:

Attempts to make the following fights have been met with a resounding NO! Oscar De la Hoya; NO...Shane Mosely, NO...Kelly Pavlik, NO... even though Williams has zero problem making 147 pounds, he and his trainer (George Petersen) were enthusiastic on the possibility of fighting Pavlik at 160 pounds and making a big fight for the industry. Discussions with Bob Arum were positive, except after all the substraction of dollars there was no money left for Williams. Williams gives up 13 pounds; gives up height; gives up strength; gives up power...oh and gives up money...the one thing he doesn't give up is his heart...that's why Pavlik/Top Rank said "No Deal"...maybe Paul should pick on someone his own size in the welterweight division...this is a classic example of why we call him the "most feared man in boxing" rather than "the most feared man in the welterweight division"...even the middleweights shy away.

What happened to the real champions like Hagler, Leonard, Hearns, and Duran? They never looked to avoid a big challenge, especially when they had real champions willing to fight right in front of them?

Maybe Bob doesn't want Williams to clear house at Top Rank. Margarito was first; Pavlik was Williams next choice to make his second Top Rank victim; and for the Trifecta its Cotto or bust (if he beats the man that Williams already beat in Margarito). Maybe Bob isn't so crazy after all?


June 20, GEORGE TOWN, GRAND CAYMAN, SHOWTIME:
Sole 2004 Olympic Gold Medalist Andre Ward thoroughly dominating before knocking out 2000 Dominican Olympian Jerson Ravelo for the NABO Super Middleweight Championship. This makes it 6 straight knockouts since moving up to 168 pounds. Although the world championship bout is around the corner, Ward will have at least two more bouts in 2008 looking to step up the competition in each.

Ward gives boxing its youth back, to the future.

What's Next:

Ward will have at least two more bouts in 2008 looking to fight top 10 world contenders on his way toward a world championship in 2009. Abraham, Kessler, Calzaghe, Taylor, Pavlik are at the top of the list.

In a companion bout underneath Ward, "Fast" Eddie Chambers stopped Raphael Butler in the 6th round while defending his USBA Heavyweight Championship belt. This fight was the next step in vindication for Chambers after letting his world championship opportunity slip away in his last fight. Butler, who was holding his own until getting caught, was testament to the knockout power Chambers has when putting his punches together.

What's Next:

Although revenge is sweet, a fight with the one man that beat him, Alexander Povetkin, is not in the immediate future. Chambers will now look for another world rated fighter in his next bout.


June 21, MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, HBO:
Undefeated heavyweights Cristobal Arreola and Chazz Witherspoon entered the ring at the FedX Forum with Michael Buffer announcing "someone's "O" has to go." After Arreola scored two halacious knockdowns in the third round, the last seconds before the bell at the end of round three, Witherspoon was disqualified when his trainer entered the ring prior to the referee's count was over. It saved Witherspoon further punishment, but "officially" deprived Arreola of his 22nd knockout in his 24 victories. Unofficially, we will continue to view this result as another knockout victory for Arreola.

Wam! Pow! Bam! Oh Sh_ _! No, this is not the cape crusader, just Cristobal Arreola describing what it takes to win. With his after fight interview with Max Kellerman, Arreola unveiled the "Oh Sh_ _ Punch" phrase. When asked about it, Arreola replied, "You pop someone in the mouth and bust their grill and they say Oh Sh_ _. Then you got to question whether to come in or not, and willing to do what it takes to win the fight?" Arreola continued, "I love giving the fans what they want to see, someone that likes to fight. Me, I actually love to fight."

While defending his WBC Continental Americas Championship, Arreola showed power, aggressiveness and excitement not seen since the prime Mike Tyson days. Arreola wants to make history by becoming the first Mexican to ever win the heavyweight world championship.

Arreola gives boxing its youth back, to the future.

What's Next:

Does Sam Peter (#1 on The Nightmares hit list), Ruslan Chagaev, or the Wladimir Klitschko/Tony Thompson winner have a nice ring to it? What about Alexander Povetkin when countries collide? The time is now.

Still to come...


July 12, Hamburg, Germany, HBO: Tony Thompson vs. Wladimir Klitschko.
Triple T (Tony the "Tiger" Thompson) challenges for Wladimir Klitschko's WBO and IBF heavyweight titles at the Color Line Arena in Hamburg, Germany. Thompson brings talent, size, heart and will to become a real threat to take the title from Klitschko. With a victory, along with Williams, Arreola and Ward, the boxing landscape changes dramatically.


July 16, Temecula, California, FSN's Best Damn Sports Show Period: James Toney vs. Hasim Rahman II
This rematch will be televised live on FSN's Best Damn Sports Show Period.

Two veterans looking for that "Last Chance" for a World Championship at the Pechanga Resort & Casino. In this case, winning isn't good enough. The Toney/Rahman winner needs to look impressive in victory. A Toney win, and looking good doing it, would be a remarkable turnaround success story on his march into Boxing's Hall of Fame and into heavyweight history.

Can Thompson and Toney keep the momentum going?

Get ready for both to add to the greatest story ever told, "Around the World in 40 Days."
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Heavyweight coma

By César Pancorvo: This is worse than the weak period in the late 1920s and the early 30s, the interlude between Jack Dempsey and Joe Louis. In the past two years I’ve been writing on how we are starting to see a bright future in the heavyweight division.. I have always been interested in that division and have defended it –or, at least, I tried to see the pros of it instead of easily accepting and assimilating the arguments of the typical haters–, but this last year has been enough to convince me that the division is not getting any better and the future seems adverse.

During the last months of 2007, we were ad portas of a season full of heavyweight fights that I thought would bring favourable conclusions for the state of this cancerous division: Klitschko-Ibragimov, Chagaev-Skelton, Peter-Maskaev, Povetkin-Chambers, etc. Klitschko-Ibragimov was significant but unexciting, Chagaev-Skelton was no better (and it wasn’t significant or important), Peter-Maskaev was a good but it came one year later (the infaust WBC mess); only Povetkin-Chambers was productive and brought us something constructive –the arrival of Sasha to the top echelon of the division, whatever that means in this miserable era.

The Lineal title has been vacant since early 2004, and the last successful title defence of the Lineal title was done in 2003. Wladimir Klitschko was the first one to unify, but that hasn’t been enough, many do not recognize him as the Champ. Some people want him to unify all four alphabet belts…Maybe those fans won’t have a real Champ until 2018.

The present of the division is terrible, and the future doesn’t seem inspiring. Who are the top dogs? Klitschko, clearly, is the primus inter pares since he beat Chris Byrd in 2006. Sam Peter, who was supposed to fight Audley Harrison or Matt Skelton, isn’t a particularly impressive fighter, but there could be some fireworks in his fight against Vitali Klitschko. Ruslan Chagaev is rematching Nikolay Valuev, and Alexander Povetkin is waiting for his title shot against Klitschko.

What else do we have in this pathetic division? David Haye and Odlanier Solis. And then…Andrew Golota? Impossible, no matter how much they overrate him. Chris Arreola? Denis Boytsov? Kevin Johnson? The future of the heavyweights seems just as depressing as the present, or maybe even worse. I really hope we never sit at the table and start talking about the “good times” of Vitali Klitschko, John Ruiz, Chris Byrd, or the “era” of Wladimir Klitschko, Samuel Peter and Nikolay Valuev.

What are the main problems? Apart from the general problems that are ruining boxing as a sport (too much alphabet titles and too much PPVs) there is lack of talent (Klitschko and Povetkin are the only really talented fighters in the Top10, and Klitschko is eclipsing that talent with bad strategies) and lack of important fights (the #1 heavyweight hasn’t faced the #2 since Lewis beat Holyfield in 1999).

It is sad because a quality fighter like Wladimir Klitschko would deserve a better era to demonstrate how much he can resist and accomplish
 
May 13, 2002
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so it looks like my dream of seeing Sergio Mora killed on live TV is about to come true.

Sergio Mora vs Kelly Pavlik. LOL, seriously. Then pavlik vs abraham in early 09


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Pavlik, who will also fight in the fall before a likely unification bout with Arthur Abraham in early 2009, may bide his time by defending against Sergio Mora, the first-season winner of "The Contender" who claimed a junior middleweight belt by upsetting Vernon Forrest on June 7.

[...]

"I think it's an attractive fight," Arum told ESPN.com. "Mora is better known than anyone else available because of 'The Contender' series and he just won a title at 154, but I have always known him to be a 160-pound guy."

Indeed, Mora moved down in weight for the shot at Forrest.

Arum said the fight would take place either Sept. 27 at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, N.J., where Pavlik has fought two of his last three bouts, or Oct. 18 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Because Pavlik does not have a contract with any television network, Arum said the broadcaster of a proposed Pavlik-Mora bout was unsettled.

http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/boxing/news/story?id=3459185
 
Aug 31, 2003
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that sounds like a bad joke, didn't kessler send someone to the hospital this weekend? Kelly will turn Mora retarded.
I haven't seen the Kessler fight yet but Sartison was undefeated before this fight. Not every step up in competition turns out that way.

That being said Sergio Mora is much better than Rubio, who he was rumored to face and better than Gary Lockett. I still think Pavlik will blow his face off but I don't think it's a worse fight than the guy Pavlik just fought or was rumored to fight.
 
May 13, 2002
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I heard that Sartison collapsed moreso due to exhaustion and dehydration then a beating from Kessler.

And I agree with naner, Mora is better then Rubio plus Mora is in fact a champion. I really want to see Abraham vs pavlik, but if pavlik is going with mora for now maybe Abraham can fight Winky Wright?? I don't see too many other choices for Abraham, Felix Sturm turned down Abrahams offer so that is off the table. It's gotta be Winky!


And that's fuckin crazy that Paul Williams would have fought Pavlik!
 
Aug 31, 2003
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Raul Marquez is more than likely going to push for his mandatory fight against Abraham after winning the eliminator against Lorenzo. He's not young and this is probably the last chance he'll get. I wouldn't doubt that's a big reason for Abraham not being able to fight Pavlik yet.

.. also I'm watching the Kessler fight now and after round 2 this doesn't seem like a mismatch at all. Sartison nearly put Kessler on his ass in the first round with a nasty right hand. I'll upload the fight for anyone that wants to peep.
 
Aug 31, 2003
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Winky needs to fight Anthony Mundine .. the only guy who for some reason has been consistent on calling out Winky in interviews and after his most recent fight with Soliman. Mundine is HUGE in Australia, a ranked fighter and would be a nice payday if it's in Mundine's hometown considering, which is everything Winky's been asking for.

It'll get him in the ring and if he beats Mundine it'll keep him relevant. Winky is doing himself no favors by staying inactive for so long. Not many people were jumping for a chance to get at Winky when he was active and at the top of the game, it's not going to change now.
 
May 13, 2002
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Winky needs to fight Anthony Mundine .. the only guy who for some reason has been consistent on calling out Winky in interviews and after his most recent fight with Soliman. Mundine is HUGE in Australia, a ranked fighter and would be a nice payday if it's in Mundine's hometown considering, which is everything Winky's been asking for.

It'll get him in the ring and if he beats Mundine it'll keep him relevant. Winky is doing himself no favors by staying inactive for so long. Not many people were jumping for a chance to get at Winky when he was active and at the top of the game, it's not going to change now.
Mundine is such a douchebag, lol. Winky would whoop his ass. I agree though, Winky needs to be active and he should take that fight if he cant land abraham.

Here is an anti-mundine gif I made a while ago:
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Andy Lee gearing up for Limerick return

Each morning as Andy Lee steps out to begin his roadwork he peers up at the highest peaks of the Austrian Alps. The fresh, clean mountain air is the perfect setting for clearing his thoughts as he begins his daily run up the picturesque foothills of the imposing mountain range. With each step he leaves behind the memories of the first defeat of his professional career but looming large in the foreground is the imposing figure of Willie “The Gladiator” Gibbs – the power punching American who will stand across the ring from Lee in his native Limerick on July 19th on the next Ladbrokes.com Fight Night.

Now well into a 6 week training camp in Austria where he’s training alongside and sparring with World Heavyweight Champion Wladimir Klitschko Lee’s only focus is on next month’s date at the University Sports Arena in his native city..

“It’s beautiful out here,” said Lee. “The scenery is fabulous and the facilities are terrific. It’s great going running in the mornings with the Alps as a backdrop and the fresh mountain air but ultimately I’m here on business.”

As well as getting some ring time with Klitschko Lee ha also imported some top class sparring as he bids to return to winning ways following his shock defeat to Brian Vera in March.

“I’ve been sparring with one of the top German middleweights who recently fought for the European title and we‘ve had some really good spars. That’s helped me to shed the ring rust that accumulated since the Vera fight and can really feel my timing and sharpness improving every day.”

Not for the first time in his career Lee finds himself sharing a training camp with Klitschko, courtesy of the fact that both men are coached by Hall of Fame trainer Emanuel Steward. Klitschko is preparing for the next defence of his title against American Tony Thompson in Hamburg on July 5th and Lee says he’s benefiting from the experience.

“It’s great to see how the heavyweight champion of the world goes about his business. He’s exceptionally dedicated and focused and he’s a great influence to have around. I’ve done some sparring with him and it benefits both of us. It helps him with his speed and helps me with my strength and conditioning and of course it’s a great experience sharing the ring with the heavyweight champion of the world.”

Lee turned 24 earlier this month but the birthday celebrations are well and truly on hold until after his clash with Gibbs. In fact the Castleconnell man admits much of the last few months were spent mulling over his defeat to Vera.

“Initially it was very difficult, it still is but those first few weeks were very, very tough. I came back home to Limerick and shut myself away. I had great support from my family and people back home in Limerick and I had a couple of good conversations with Damian McCann who’s been a great help all through my career and Brian Peters.

“My confidence was badly shaken but ultimately I still believe I can go on to achieve all my goals. People say to me ‘well at least you don’t have that weight of expectation on your shoulders now’ but I still have the same expectations of myself that I’ve always had. Other people’s expectations might have changed but not mine.”

Although he admits watching reruns of the Vera fight have been difficult the Athens Olympian says he has learned from the defeat.

“I’ve had a lot of sleepless nights thinking the fight through and wondering where it all went wrong. I’ve pinpointed the reasons behind it and I’m working hard in and out of the ring to address them.

“I suppose complacency was a major factor, things were moving very quickly for me at that point and there were fights lined up beyond the Vera fight and I got caught up in that and started looking beyond him.

“With the reputation and build up I was getting and with the fight being live on ESPN across the States it was a big stage for both of us and it was only natural that he was going to come in and try and spoil all that for me. He was very hungry and determined and it was his world title fight.

“I was just treating it as another fight but he saw it as his big chance and fair play to him he took it. He was very determined and had prepared excellently and that’s one of the many lessons I’ve taken from it. You can’t overlook anyone and you have to be at your best every time you step between those ropes.”

With the benefit of hindsight Lee also accepts that he fought the wrong fight tactically against Vera. “I suppose there was a macho element involved because when he got through with some good shots I wanted to get in my reply straight away so that led me into a brawl and what has always stood to me in my career has been my boxing skills but that went out the window when the crowd started cheering and I got drawn into his fight. That was a valuable lesson.”

Lee is adamant however that he’s not going to fall back on making excuses for the defeat. “No excuses, full stop. I’ve no one to blame but myself, it’s my career and the buck stops with me so there’s no point in looking around for scapegoats or coming up with excuses.”

Now having dealt with the physical and psychological scars from the Vera defeat Lee is happy to move on and take what he’s hoping is a calculated risk in fighting the highly rated Gibbs.

“A win over Gibbs will probably put me ahead of where I’d have been even if I’d beaten Brian Vera so I’m in no doubt that Gibbs will be treating this fight against me the very same as Vera did. He sees this as his big chance to get back on top. His only defeats have been to top guys in America so he’s a very dangerous fighter and his record shows that he can punch too.”

Indeed with 16 of Gibbs 20 wins having come via knockout many believe that Lee was deserving of an easier nights work as he attempted to bounce back from a defeat. Lee though dismisses that notion.

“I could have taken an easier opponent but I don’t think that would have been right. Limerick people know their sport and I wouldn’t expect them to turn up and pay good money to see me have an easy night. They pay good money to see a good fight, and I think myself and Gibbs will certainly give them their money’s worth.

“It’s a good card because Paul Mcloskey’s in a tough fight as well and then you have guys like Stephen Haughian, John O’Donnell and Jamie Power coming through on the undercard so I think it should be a great night for Limerick and I’m really looking forward to it now.”

Lee’s professional ambitions have seen him leave Limerick for Detroit where he linked up with Emanuel Steward but he admits his thoughts are never far from home.

“The people of Limerick have always been a great support to me, but even more so when I was down after the Vera defeat. They really helped to lift me when I was back home. Everyone I met in the street never said a bad word to me or tried to put me down. People told me that they were still proud of me and that I would be back. It meant an awful lot to me to hear that and that's why I love my city.

“Limerick is the best sporting city in Ireland with the best supporters in Ireland and I hope to bring big time boxing to Limerick and to make Limerick the boxing capital of Ireland."

The 8 fight card in Limerick is packed with talent. The chief support contest will feature the undefeated and highly rated Paul McCloskey as he takes on English Champion Nigel Wright.

Also in action is welterweight prospect Stephen Haughian from Lurgan, Galway’s John O’Donnell, former Lee opponent, Jason McKay, Limerick’s own Jamie Power, Castlebar puncher Keith Cresham and the pro debut of Canadian – Irishman Logan McGuinne
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Give Joe Calzaghe a Break

25.06.08 - By James Barlow: A lot has been written about Joe Calzaghe’s decision to fight Roy Jones Junior. It will most probably be Calzaghe’s last fight in a long and illustrious career. The Italian Dragon or Pride of Wales has fought 45 times. Defending a version of the Super Middleweight title in 23 bouts Calzaghe recently moved up and captured the linear light heavy weight title on his debut at the weight. Calzaghe has held the W.B.A, W.B.O, W.B.C and I.B.F belts at one time or another unifying the division and being declared the Ring Magazines champion. At the time of writing this article Boxrec.com ranks Calzaghe as the pound for pound best in boxing today after the retirement of Floyd Mayweather Junior..

Yet a number of writers on various sites on the internet in articles are calling Calzaghe for taking the Jones Jr fight over a fight with middleweight rising start Kelly Pavlik. There’s no doubt that at this stage in his career a fight with Pavlik would pose a much harder test and bigger risk than the aging, faded former pound for pound great Jones Jr. However comments that Calzaghe is running scared are a joke. On two occasions in recent years Calzaghe has took on and beat the supposed ‘next big thing’ in Jeff ‘Left Hook’ Lacey and the ‘Viking Warrior’ Mikkel Kessler. I think some writers have very short memories. I can remember nobody giving Calzaghe a chance against Lacey prior to Calzaghe taking him to school and completely embarrassing him. ‘The next Tyson’ was a statement that was banded around about Lacey before getting his battering. Some learnt their lesson from this and Calzaghe did start slight favorite against the very capable Kessler. But once again Calzaghe prevailed using his speed and experience to outpoint the Danish superstar. Lacey seems to have lost his way but Kessler will go on to better things. I think in years to come maybe when Kessler gets another shot and reigns as world champion we’ll appreciate how impressive Calzaghe’s win over him was. I don’t think there would be much to choose from in a fight between Kessler and Pavlik.

Calzaghe has fought 4 reigning champions and 4 former world champions putting his career on the line in each of these fights. In all of these fights he stepped up to the plate and come out the other side still unbeaten and champion of the world. He is now 36 and you have to question how much more he has left in the tank. You don’t know a fighter has lost it until it is exposed in the ring. With names like Eubank, Hopkins, Kessler and Lacey on his resume I really don’t see what major difference Pavlik’s would make. He’d earn less money than he would against Jones Jr and get less exposure. Yet the way some people are speaking you would think that Calzaghe’s career is a sham unless he fights Pavlik. I think people should give him a break. He has given enough to the sport since turning pro 15 years ago to be able to pick up a big pay day, in front of a big crowd against an all time great in his last fight. Jones Jr and Hopkins now need him more than he needs them. They avoided him for years and so did the pay days they would have brought with them. Now they need him to prove they still have it at the very top, and you can’t blame Calzaghe for taking what he should have been given years ago. I could understand it more if Calzaghe was saying he was not retiring any time soon and blatantly avoided Pavlik for years but he has public stated this will be his last fight. Pavlik has just come too late.

I can’t help think that the same writers who are making negative comments about Calzaghe would be the same writers who were Calzaghe to beat Pavlik would come out and say he needs to beat Arthur Abraham before he retires to really prove himself. Pavlik is the future of boxing. There are plenty of big fights out there for him. The middleweight and super middle weight divisions are particularly strong at the minute. The likes of Abraham, Miranda, Froch, Kessler, Bute, Inkin and Taylor will fill the void left by Calzaghe, Jones Jr and Hopkins. Let’s enjoy the Calzaghe Jones Junior fight. Lets make the most of Calzaghe while we can and I’ll debate who was batter, Calzaghe or Pavlik with those critics in 10 years time when Pavlik is the longest reigning world champion retiring unbeaten.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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The World Boxing League Making Strides

By Raymond Markarian: Compared to boxing, the mainstream sports have it made. We seat in marvel at the fantastic fights men like Pacquiao, Marquez, Pavlik or Cotto provide for us but tend to forget about the vulnerability of the sweet science. Mainstream sports such as the MLB, NFL, and the NBA have their faults but the inefficiencies as a league are less visible. Those leagues have schedules; set rules, players with annual salaries, coaches, and team owners all working beneath one letterhead..

Structure is another reason why these leagues are successful. For instance, basketball fans that enjoy the NBA finals know that the games will end in June and begin again in November. The NBA schedule has been established that way for years.

Boxing fans do not have the same luxury of a timetable. A boxing world without promoters like Don King, Golden Boy, and Top Rank could create absolute scheduling chaos. Heck, most of the time, we don’t even know how a fight gets created. Who fights who in October, November, or December? Sadly, no one knows for sure.

It’s scary imagining a boxing world without promoters. Where would we turn to for big fights? Who would create the match ups, find the venue, sign the television contracts, and build interest?

Ironically, a boxing league similar to the mainstream format in major American team sports is in the final stages of development. The World Boxing League is an organization founded by former promoter, turned entrepreneur Phil Penston.

Penston had a realization to create the boxing league ten years ago at a Julio Cesar Chavez event he co-promoted with Don King. Penston said “I am sitting there next to Don King and Jose Sulaiman, the WBC President, and I say to myself, gee, it is really going to be hard making a living as a promoter when guys like Bob Arum, Don King, and all of these sanctioning bodies control the sport.”

Instead of competing with the likes of Don King, Top Rank, Golden Boy Promotions, and others, Penston, league commissioner Jim Thomas, and a group of investors decided to take another route.

Their vision was simple, to begin a boxing league for the world to enjoy. But credibility was of essence. How could the WBL prosper without essential guidelines and foundation? Or better yet, what would make fighters want to join the league? And how could the fan benefit?

The solution the WBL came up with was shorter fights, five round bouts to be exact, a 16 week regular season, and six weight divisions. Since the year 2000, the WBL development team also created a blueprint to provide fighters with annual salaries, health benefits, steady work, retirement planning, and investment advice. Furthermore, none of the money the boxers earn will be taken from promoters, managers, or trainers.


According to Penston, who is now the President of the WBL, many of the television companies that showcase boxing are already paying attention.

“We are in the process of selling teams” said Penston. “We have spoken with television stations about the league and they are very interested in our product. Jim and I have been traveling across the nation, up to Canada, and down to Mexico. And we have been talking to sports teams, casinos, and high networking individuals. We also got in touch with the boxing commissions, and acquired the necessary sponsorship.”

Every event will have six fights representing each weight division. All referees, judges, and trainers will be employed by the league and there will be a very simplistic scoring methodology that awards five points for a knockout, four points for a TKO, three points for a unanimous decision victory, all the way down to zero for a loss.

The teams with the most accumulated point totals at the end of the season will compete in a playoff awarding an eventual champion. Once a national champion is crowned, the WBL will have the best fighters from the entire world face off in a world cup like tournament to see who the best fighter in the world is in their respective weight class.

The World Cup participants will be determined by how many points they acquire for their respective teams.

“We want the fights to be action packed for the fans” says Penston. “But we won’t be going after the Holyfield vs. Tyson or De la Hoya vs. Mayweather type of events. The sports league graveyard is littered with leagues that came out of the gate trying to compete with the more mature leagues, such as the USFL battling the NFL, for example. The USFL held the market pretty well and certainly competed for the Steve Young, Herschel Walker, and Jim Kelly’s of the world and were really building an audience.

“But they tried to hard to compete with the more mature league and failed miserably. We think that our boxers are going to come from the 10th to 15th best boxer in the division on down. That represents about 98% of the boxers in the world. You and I both know that there are about five to fifteen boxers that get paid out there and the rest are not getting nearly the money the superstars get.”

The WBL goal is not to surpass the already well established game of boxing as we know it. However, they are merely here to bring a different element to the sport. The league already has the backing of boxing greats Angelo Dundee and Lennox Lewis, and is rapidly moving towards a targeted March of 2009 start date.

Entertainment is vital to their angle to build interest. The WBL plans to have an interactive type atmosphere similar to any other team sporting event. Penston says “When you go to an NBA game or Arena Football, there is just so much there for the fan. There is a great deal of interaction and energy. During timeouts they have contests, or shows at halftime. In boxing, nothing happens in between bouts. You know, if you have a scheduled ten rounder and it ends in the second round, there is 45 minutes of dead time. There is no music no lights, or pyrotechnics, there is just nothing there for the fan.”

During the bouts, the WBL fighters will wear specially made boxing gloves that measure the speed and impact of every punch thrown. They will also be fighting under an opening scoring format to enhance the sense of urgency.

This concept of the WBL can work; creating a boxing league is a fresh idea, an adjustment from the normalcy in the sport. However, revolutionizing the way the die hard fans enjoy watching boxing is a difficult task. Many people take pleasure in watching a Bernard Hopkins type methodical approach to the game. The old 15 round fights and now 12 round fights are a big part of boxing history. The WBL will showcase five round fights.

Therefore such classic 12 round bouts like the third Rafael Marquez vs. Israel Vazquez battle, or Trinidad vs. Vargas would be obsolete. On the other hand, a long uneventful scrap like Wladimir Klitschko vs. Sultan Ibragimov or any notable non action Cory Spinks fight would be a no show. Instead the WBL approach is to have Pavlik vs. Taylor I, or Mike Tyson type slugfests in the ring. So who is to say that fight fans will turn their backs on the standard and the embrace the WBL.

Penston responds by saying “We are not trying to replace the current format. I believe the marketplace will dictate how well this league performs. At the end of the day, the hard core fans and older sports fan that love the sport, they want change. The fans don’t want to see fighters take rounds off; they want to see the action and excitement. That is why we came up with the five round format. What we really want to do is start out with an Arena Football type of league then eventually grow to the size of the NFL, MLB or NBA. You know, boxing is the second most participated sport in the world behind soccer. In Europe it’s huge, in Asia, it’s huge. That is why we think the WBL can be successful.”

“I also believe this; if boxing has a very similar structure to other sports leagues and you’re a 14 year old Ray Lewis, you’re a good athlete. And you say I could make a right and go into baseball, I could make a left, and go into football, or I could go straight ahead and make good money in boxing. Then, we are going to get some really good athletes in the sport. Ali was a great athlete, he looked so good in the ring, Leonard was a great athlete, and he looked so good in the ring, now we have guys like Butterbean fighting. I mean, there is nothing there for the fan. I think in the end, we will get the better athletes.”

Maybe the WBL cannot change the boxing winds overnight. But a league with proper structure has the ability to bring a breath of fresh air to an otherwise helter skelter boxing world.

“Boxing deserves more respect than its getting. We all want things to go back to the way there were, during the glory days of boxing” says Penston. “The WBL gives it opportunity to bring boxing back to where it once was, on the world stage. If you run it like a business and put it in your hip pocket, we might be able to have something here