Saturday, June 4, 2011

What happened to ‘JuanMa’? Arum says he was distracted

Juan Manuel Lopez showed some major holes in losing to Orlando Salido via eighth round TKO on Saturday night.

For an unbeaten champ, he's always been easy to hit and has even gone down on occasion, but it was shocking to see Orlando Salido find a home for both his overhand right and left hook so often.

Did he unveil "JuanMa" as an overrated fighter with a shaky chin or was Jim Gray onto something? Gray, the Showtime reporter, asked JuanMa about his marital issues before and after the fight. The former unbeaten champ shrugged off his impending split with wife Barbara de Jesus, but his promoter Bob Arum wasn't willing to.

"The distractions did the job. Look at Miguel Cotto, who has never been better since he left to train outside of Puerto Rico. And he doesn't get out of shape between fights," Arum said.

The veteran promoter said Lopez (30-1, 27 KOs) was massive between this fight and his last win in November over Rafael Marquez.

"That's what happened to this guy….he was overweight. He was like 180 or 190 pounds when he was in the Philippines [for Manny Pacquiao's birthday party in December]. And I know that personal problems affected this boy," Arum said. "Boxing is a serious business and you have to be in great physical condition between fights, you have to have the best life between fights, and when you have training camp for a fight, like Cotto, you should leave the island."

The loss could be good news for boxing fans. Before the fight, JuanMa was talking about leaving the 126-pound division. Now he's got too much work to get done before a jump to 130.

He needs to avenge this loss and then make a superfight against Yuriorkis Gamboa. That could turn into a two or three fight series. If he smokes Gamboa, then it's time for Nonito Donaire. Any way you look at it, the top of the featherweight class should give us tremendous fights for the next few years unless promotional chaos screws it up.

Amazingly, even after getting destroyed by Salido, Lopez says he's sticking with the plan to leave the division.

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Hernandez stops Anchondo in fourth round

Freddy Hernandez remained in the welterweight title hunt with an impressive fourth-round knockout of former junior lightweight titleholder Mike Anchondo on Saturday in Primm, Nev.Anchondo, who had a five-inch height disadvantage, fought aggressively but was too easy to hit and couldn't handle the power in Hernandez's consistent right hand.Hernandez (31-2, 19 knockouts) wobbled Anchondo (30-3, 19 KOs) with a hard right to the chin early in the fourth round and put him down seconds later with barrage of punches. Anchondo got up and was able to hold on for a while but never fully recovered. Referee Robert Byrd ended it at 1:38 with Anchondo taking unanswered punches against the ropes.Hernandez has now had impressive victories in back-to-back fights, having stopped DeMarcus Corley in five rounds in February.The Los Angeles-based Mexican hopes to get a shot at Andre Berto's title, although Berto has been negotiating with Selcuk Aydin for a bout on the Juan Manuel Marquez-Michael Katsidis card on Nov. 27 in Las Vegas.Hernandez, 31, has never fought for a belt.In a preliminary bout, Luis Franco, another Olympian who defected from Cuba last year, defeated Wilton Hilario by a unanimous decision in an eight-round junior lightweight bout.Franco (7-0, 5 KOs) didn't have an easy time against Hilario (12-2-1, 9 KOs), who was warned for repeated head butts and low blows but also never stopped attacking Franco. However, the Cuban withstood the pressure and was always in control.

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Five reasons boxing can return to the mainstream, and the top reason it may not

The buzz created by CBS' involvement in this week's fight promotion has been tremendous. The lead-up to Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley has gotten network exposure that we haven't seen for a fight since the 80's.

Earlier this week, former HBO chief Seth Abraham, said that a massive pay-per-view number, could create competition for its product, unseen in the history of boxing.

Gautham Nagesh from the Atlantic captured the mood of Pacman-Mosley with this list of five reasons why the sport has a chance to explode in the coming years.

5. Globalization American soccer fans are swearing allegiance to Barca and Man U while Chinese teens endlessly imitate Kobe and DWade on the basketball court. The increasingly cosmopolitan nature of sports is a perfect fit for boxing, which has historically marketed itself in ethnic and nationalistic terms.
4. The Latino Fanbase While the absence of an American heavyweight contender to succeed Tyson has sapped much of the sport's mainstream appeal stateside, Mexico remains a hotbed of the sport and home to some of its most beloved champions. Ditto for Puerto Rico and Cuba, albeit on a smaller scale (of course the latter produces amateur champions who must defect to fight professionally similar to baseball).
3. The Internet At once a blessing and a curse for the traditional media, the Internet is a boon for the fighting world and those that follow it.
2. Good Prospects, Great Fights The most basic element for any sport's revival is a compelling cast of characters and a high level of competition, both of which appear to be coming together in not one but several weight classes at the moment.

Nagesh mentions the 126, 140, 147 and 168 as the weight classes that will carry the sport for the next few years. He goes with a fighter as reason No. 1 the sport could be in for a resurgence.

1. Manny Pacquiao Any talk of boxing's ascent must begin and end with the Pacman, who rose from the slums of General Santos City in the Phillipines to become his country's arguably greatest sporting icon and a political leader at just 32 years of age.

Simply stated, Pacquiao has the crossover appeal in and out of the ring to attract sports fans who bailed on the sport year ago and more importantly non-boxing fans, who are drawn to his existence outside the ring.

Nagesh also listed five reasons the sport could continue to shrink in popularity. Much of the list was the same old tune about the sport, but No. 1 might surprise some.

Nagesh said PPV and cable, promoters, lack of American heavyweights and the sanctioning bodies are part of the sports' downfall. His top reason boxing could remain in a malaise is Floyd Mayweather.

Do you agree? I don't.

Believe what you want about Floyd holding out on a Pacquiao fight, but if the sport is that reliant on one fighter (which it's not) then it has no hope regardless of what "Money" does.

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Pascal, Foreman, ‘Father Time’ … no one can stand in Hopkins’ way as he wins the light heavyweight title

Bernard Hopkins says he's fighting until he's 50. Anyone want to tell him he can't?

Jean Pascal, a young, strong 28-year-old former champ tried to and got schooled by the cagey veteran. Hopkins ate a few big shots but for the most part was impossible to hit as he took a unanimous decision victory, 117-111, 116-112 and 115-114, to grab the WBC and IBO light heavyweight titles from Pascal.

The win makes the 46-year-old Hopkins the oldest fighter in the history of boxing to win a major title belt, eclipsing the mark set back in 1994 by another Hall of Famer George Foreman.

Foreman was 45 when he scored a shocking knockout against WBA heavyweight champ Michael Moorer.

"I felt like I'm not 46. I felt like I'm close to 36," Hopkins told HBO's Max Kellerman.

He looked it too. While Hopkins bounced around, moved forward and landed right hand leads whenever he wanted, Pascal (26-2, 17 KOs) tired in the second half of the fight. It was the most aggressive Hopkins (52-5-2, 32 KOs) we've seen in years.

"I know the fans pay to see fights. I've been accused of being boring. I was trying to buy years and time," Hopkins said. "I'm gonna finish strong. I had a plan in my boxing career, to win fights and get to the last bit. Before I leave this game, you're going to see the best fights of Bernard Hopkins' career. I know that's a big order providing what I've done already. I'm promising that every fight until I retire is going to be breathtaking and it's going to be heart beating."

This was unfinished business for the former middleweight king. Hopkins felt he was robbed back in December in Quebec City against Pascal. The fight was scored a majority draw. This time, Hopkins left no doubts.

In true Bernard Hopkins form, he announced that he already has his sights set on two future fights.

"I think the crowd got what they wanted. I think Canada would welcome me back to fight [Montreal native Lucian] Bute. I would love to fight Bute after Chad Dawson and then I will go onto something bigger and better. I will not retire until I get close to 50. That's about 4-5 years from now," Hopkins said with a big smile.

He outlanded Pascal 131 to 70. The Haitian was good on just 19 percent of his punches. Hopkins also landed 80 power punches. He also showed he still has a great chin. Pascal landed an excellent right in the third and another with 90 seconds left in the fight. The shaken Hopkins used his ring savvy to quickly regain his wits and nearly take back the round in both cases.

There are certainly some big fights out there for Pascal. He just needs to work on his conditioning and up his volume. Hopkins was nothing but complimentary after the fight.

"Let me tell you something about Jean Pascal ... he's tough, he's strong. And if this doesn't discourage him, I don't see nobody beating this strong bull from Canada," Hopkins said. "He has a good strong punch. He needs to work on a couple of things. He looked for big shots and I worked on that. I knew if he was successful with the big shots, he would be more active. So I had to disappoint him early. [He needs to take] some of the punching power off of every punch. He's got to set them up."

Pascal said he learned a lot from the two fights with Hopkins and would to see a third fight down the road. That probably can't happen until Hopkins faces both Dawson and Bute. If Hopkins wins both, that would make a third fight possible around the beginning of 2013. Will Hopkins really be fighting when he's 48? Again, who's going to stop him?

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Manny confidential: Training vid shows Pacman has a lighter side

Showtime/CBS rolls out the final episode of "Fight Camp 360" tonight (10 p.m. ET/PT). It'll take us through the final moments of prep before the big Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley fight.

MySpace has some cool behind-the-scenes video of Pacman during training camp. It's almost shocking to see how relaxed Pacquiao is during his workouts, but that's what makes him great. Going into fights with a fearless and light attitude helps him deal with anything thrown his way.

There are three more secret Pacman videos over on MySpace. The final episode of Fight Camp 360 also airs again tomorrow on local CBS affiliates.

You can watch the Pacquiao-Mosley pay-per-view right here on Yahoo! Sports.

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Zbik-Chavez Jr. weigh-in

WBC middleweight champion Sebsatian Zbik and the ?Son of the Legend? #1 challenger Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. weigh in for their showdown tonight at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

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Tyson, Chavez eligible to enter Hall of Fame

The International Boxing Hall of Fame has sent to voters ballots for 2010, which includes two sure first-ballot inductees. Mike Tyson and Julio Cesar Chavez, both eligible for the first time, dominated the sport from the 1980s to the mid-2000s.Tyson (50-6, 44 knockouts) riveted the world with his crushing power and self-destructive behavior in and out of the ring. Of course, that includes biting off a portion of Evander Holyfield's ear. He was the youngest-ever heavyweight champion and won versions of the title five times.Chavez (107-6-2, 86 KOs) became Mexico's greatest-ever fighter and a national hero, building a record of 89-0-1 at one point and winning six titles in three weight classes.Another fighter in his first year of eligibility, Kostya Tszyu, has a good chance of being inducted in his first try. The Russia-born Aussie (31-2, 25 KOs) was one of the most-consistent winners of his time, holding at least one of the junior welterweight titles almost continuously from 1995 to 2005.Others on the ballot, for "Moderns" only (last bout no earlier than 1943): Georgie Abrams, Horacio Accavallo, Joey Archer, Jose Becerra, Johnny Bratton, Jimmy Carruthers, Donald Curry, Hiroyuki Ebihara, Tommy Farr, Tiger Jack Fox, Ceferino Garcia, Betulio Gonzalez, Yoko Gushiken, Naseem Hamed, Carlos Hernandez, Rafael Herrera, Al Hostak, Harry Jeffra, Peter Kane , Cocoa Kid, Pone Kingpetch, Santos Laciar, Tippy Larkin, Jose Legra, Miguel "Happy" Lora, Raul "Raton" Macias, Ernesto Marcel, Freddie Mills, Rinty Monaghan, Masao Ohba, Sven Ottke, Ken Overline, Gustave Roth, Lou Salica, Dave Sands, Petey Scalzo, Samuel Serrano, Yoshiro Shirai, Kid Tunero, Wilfredo Vazquez, Myung-Woo Yuh and Hilario Zapata.The inductees will be announced in early December. The induction ceremony is set for June 12 of next year at the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, N.Y.

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Tyson, Chavez eligible to enter Hall of Fame

The International Boxing Hall of Fame has sent to voters ballots for 2010, which includes two sure first-ballot inductees. Mike Tyson and Julio Cesar Chavez, both eligible for the first time, dominated the sport from the 1980s to the mid-2000s.Tyson (50-6, 44 knockouts) riveted the world with his crushing power and self-destructive behavior in and out of the ring. Of course, that includes biting off a portion of Evander Holyfield's ear. He was the youngest-ever heavyweight champion and won versions of the title five times.Chavez (107-6-2, 86 KOs) became Mexico's greatest-ever fighter and a national hero, building a record of 89-0-1 at one point and winning six titles in three weight classes.Another fighter in his first year of eligibility, Kostya Tszyu, has a good chance of being inducted in his first try. The Russia-born Aussie (31-2, 25 KOs) was one of the most-consistent winners of his time, holding at least one of the junior welterweight titles almost continuously from 1995 to 2005.Others on the ballot, for "Moderns" only (last bout no earlier than 1943): Georgie Abrams, Horacio Accavallo, Joey Archer, Jose Becerra, Johnny Bratton, Jimmy Carruthers, Donald Curry, Hiroyuki Ebihara, Tommy Farr, Tiger Jack Fox, Ceferino Garcia, Betulio Gonzalez, Yoko Gushiken, Naseem Hamed, Carlos Hernandez, Rafael Herrera, Al Hostak, Harry Jeffra, Peter Kane , Cocoa Kid, Pone Kingpetch, Santos Laciar, Tippy Larkin, Jose Legra, Miguel "Happy" Lora, Raul "Raton" Macias, Ernesto Marcel, Freddie Mills, Rinty Monaghan, Masao Ohba, Sven Ottke, Ken Overline, Gustave Roth, Lou Salica, Dave Sands, Petey Scalzo, Samuel Serrano, Yoshiro Shirai, Kid Tunero, Wilfredo Vazquez, Myung-Woo Yuh and Hilario Zapata.The inductees will be announced in early December. The induction ceremony is set for June 12 of next year at the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, N.Y.

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Friday, June 3, 2011

Boxing on Television Schedule

Boxing on Television Schedule ? Friday, June 3 ? to Friday June 10 - Broadcasting on: Argentina TyC Sports, Australia Main Event,Hungary DigiSport, Hungary Sport 2, Mexico Cadena 3, Mexico Televisa, United Kingdom SKY, United States ESPN2, United States HBO, United States Showtime and United States TeleFutura

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Ponce de Leon stops Escalante in three

Daniel Ponce de Leon stopped Antonio Escalante with a single right hook at 2:40 of the third round of a scheduled-12 round featherweight bout on the Shane Mosley-Sergio Mora card Saturday at Staples Center.Ponce de Leon (40-2, 33 KOs) outworked Escalante (23-3, 15 KOs) for two-plus rounds but the KO punch came out of nowhere. The two were exchanging punches when Escalante walked into a short hook, which hurt him badly and sent him sprawling.Referee Tony Crebs waved off the fight without counting because Escalante lay semi-conscious on the canvas.The fight was a WBO title eliminator.Ponce de Leon has now won six consecutive fights since Juan Manuel Lopez took his junior featherweight title with a first-round knockout in 2008.

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Near 200-pound Roy Jones KO’d in the tenth in Russia

At age 42, Roy Jones Jr. continues to chip away at his legacy by taking fights around the world and now he appears to be putting his health in serious jeopardy.

Today at the Sport Complex Krylatskoe in Moscow, Russia, Jones faced a top-rated cruiserweight named Denis Lebedev, got knocked out in the final round of the fight and appeared to be unconscious for close to 45 seconds.

Jones (54-8, 40 KOs) laid facedown for roughly 15 seconds until he was turned over. Using smelling salts, ringside officials finally revived Jones after another 30 seconds.

"It was a great shot, I can't take nothing away from him," Jones said. "He was a tough competitor. I really don't know what I'm going to do now. I'm going to think about it."

The 31-year-old Lebedev stunned Jones with a straight left, then an overhand right and uppercut appeared to turn the lights off at the 2:50 mark of the final round.

Jones, the light heavyweight champion from 1997-2003, has now lost three straight fights. Danny Green knocked him out last year and Bernard Hopkins brutalized him over 12 rounds.

After spending most of his career at 175 pounds, Jones fought today at 198.

This was a solid card featuring a former world champ in Nate Campbell and NABF 175 champ Ismayl Sillakh, one of the top light heavyweight prospects in the the world. Fight News posted the results:

Unbeaten Ukrainian NABF light heavyweight champion Ismayl Sillakh (16-0, 13 KOs) won by TKO in the third round over Ugandan Hamza Wandera (12-3-2, 11 KOs). Sillakh seized the initiative and easily beat Wandera. In the third round Ismayl dropped Wandera. He was able to continue but Sillakh's follow up attack prompted referee Steve Smoger to stop the fight.

The former undisputed lightweight champion Nate Campbell (34-8-1, 25 KOs) won an eight round unanimous decision over Sherzod Nazarov (12-5, 10 KOs). The experienced 39-year-old Campbell controlled the fight and won by scores of 79-73, 79-74 and 80-74.

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Mosley Almost Quit Against Pacquiao

"Sugar" Shane Mosley's sweet reputation as a gladiator took a severe hit this week as a video broke indicating that Mosley was demoralized and contemplated quitting against Pacquaio. The video shows Mosley asking his trainer, Nazim Richardson, about stopping the fight and Richardson talking his man into staying in the fight and sticking it out.
Pacman's combination of speed and ferocity is a daunting prospect, so much so that it had already compelled Oscar de la Hoya to quit and virtually shut down opponents like Joshua Clottey and Antonio Margarito. What ...

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Graham Earl ? We?re finally there, Earl-Katsidis II Agreed.

Earlier today Michael Katsidis and his manager Brendon Smith issued a statement saying that an agreement had been reached with Graham Earl and that the ...

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Strength Coach: Johnson Stronger Than Ever

Steve Arintok, strength and conditioning coach for Glen "The Road Warrior" Johnson, says despite dropping down a weight class, the ageless fighter will be stronger than ever when he enters the ring this Saturday

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Martin Murrays Lonsdale Dream May Be Shattered

MARTIN MURRAY fears his hopes of winning a Lonsdale Belt outright will be crushed because of his desire to meet the world?s top middleweights. The ...

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Unbeaten Irish boxer out to prove there?s two Andy Murrays

Cavan ace faces Gavin Rees for the vacant European Lightweight title on Saturday
It could be a huge European weekend for the Andy Murrays ?with the high-profile Tennis star gunning for Grand Slam glory in the French Open, and the quiet unbeaten Irish boxer taking on Gavin Rees for the vacant European Lightweight title in Cardiff [...]

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Thursday, June 2, 2011

Chantelle Cameron: Britain can medal at every weight at the Olympics

In the latest of our London 2012 boxing series, a Q&A with Chantelle Cameron, who this weekend will fight in the EU Championships

Chantelle Cameron from Northampton is the newest member of the Great Britain women's boxing squad after a whirlwind start to her career that has seen her go from novice to potential Olympian in less than 18 months.

An international kickboxer, 20-year-old Chantelle tried boxing to improve her hand speed. She had her first bout in November 2009 and defeated a far more experienced opponent within two rounds. She decided to apply for her boxing card and entered the 2010 National Senior Amateur Boxing Association Championships where she won the 64kg category at her first attempt.

In June 2010, Chantelle announced herself on the international stage by landing a silver medal in the EU Championship in Hungary. She was selected to represent England in the Women's World Amateur Championships in Barbados in September 2010 where she made the quarter finals at 64Kg and caught the eye of Britain's performance director, Rob McCracken. She was rewarded with a place in the GB squad in February 2011 in the 60kg Olympic weight category alongside Natasha Jonas, Ruth Raper and Amanda Coulson (the other Olympic weight categories are 51kg and 75kg).

Most recently, Chantelle defeated Sweden's world championship bronze medallist, Klara Svensson in Haninge, Sweden. Despite her inexperience, Chantelle is one of Britain's most exciting female boxing prospects and has won 20 of her 22 bouts. This weekend she will be joined by fellow Olympic squad members, Nicola Adams, Natasha Jonas and Savannah Marshall at the EU Championships in Poland where she will compete in the 60kg category and hopes to improve on the silver medal she won at last year's event.

When and where did you start boxing and why?

One-and-a-half years ago. I did kickboxing for nine years and competed in it for two. I started boxing as part of my training programme to try and improve my hand speed and pretty quickly realised I preferred boxing so decided to stuck with it.

Is there a history of boxing in your family?

My granddad boxed when he was in the army.

What other sports are you good at and were you ever tempted to stick with them rather than boxing?

I was good at most sports but never had the urge to push myself or compete until I tried kickboxing and then boxing.

Who has been the biggest influence in your career?

My mum and dad for the support they have given me.

What is the toughest part of your sport and how do you cope with that?

The fact you just cannot eat what you want. I don't have a big problem making the weight but I do miss being able to have something like a Chinese takeaway whenever I fancy it.

Describe your typical diet

We are fortunate in the GB squad as we have a full-time nutritionist from the English Institute of Sport who works with us. He monitors our diet and provides advice and education on what we can eat and what we need to do to stay within our weight range, particularly at tournaments when we need to make the weight every day. On a normal day I will have cereal and fruit for breakfast, pasta for lunch and some chicken and salad in the evening. I'm not that keen on the salad, but I love chicken!

Who are your main rivals from other countries?

Russia and China are both strong and have strength in depth. That said, the best female boxer in the world at my weight is Katie Taylor from Ireland.

How would you describe your boxing style?

I am an attacking boxer. I like to impose myself and get on top of my opponents.

You have only been on the Olympic programme for three months; what have been the biggest changes from your previous training routine?

I have learnt loads. It is great to be part of a structured, organised elite programme. The coaches are top class and I have also benefitted from having daily access to the sports science and medical team from provided by the EIS. They work with us every day and have particularly helped me to improve my strength and conditioning. The hardest part of being part of the programme is being away from home, but I can't complain as it is a brilliant opportunity to be a full-time athlete.

How have you improved since joining the Olympic programme?

My technique has got better and the coaches are teaching me the importance of using my head and thinking my way through a bout. My overall fitness and conditioning has also improved.

What has the last 18 months been like to go from a novice boxer to an Olympic hopeful?

It has gone so fast I am not sure I have taken it in. One minute I was having my first bout, three months later I was the English champion and three months after that, I made the last eight at the world championships. I just want to keep improving and who knows what might happen?

Who are the jokers in the squad?

Nicola Adams is very funny. Savannah Marshall doesn't say much but when she speaks it is usually worth the wait!

What do you do to relax away from training?

Hang out with friends and shopping.

What music do you listen to?

All sorts ? except classic rock! At the moment I am listening to Rhianna, Vybz Kartel and Gyptian.

Favourite boxers:

Floyd Mayweather is a great talent. I think Mike Tyson was the last truly great heavyweight and Sugar Ray Leonard was pure class.

Who is the most promising amateur boxer in the country?

Nicola Adams is the best female boxer. From the guys, I would probably pick Khalid Yafai.

How many medals do you think Britain can win at the 2012 Olympics?

As many as possible. We have some great boxers. On our day, we have the potential to win a medal at every weight.


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Weekend Review: Tyson, Chavez and Tszyu Hall bound

<object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Ka-5v2DFyvs?fs=1&hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Ka-5v2DFyvs?fs=1&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object><b>BEST HALL OF FAME CLASS</b><b>2011:</b> Mike Tyson, Julio Chavez and Kostya Tszyu are eligible for the first time to be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame, it was announced last week. Tyson and Chavez are locks to go in on the first ballot; Tszyu also probably will get in on his first try. Tyson isn't among the best heavyweights of all time, at least not the Top 10, but was the dominating figure of his era because of his considerable success and fearsome persona in and out of the ring. He deserves first-ballot induction. Chavez was the greatest fighter ever produced in a boxing-crazy country, Mexico. He went unbeaten the first 14 years of his career (if you believe existing records) and connected with his people like no one before or after him. He is arguably in the Top 20 all time pound for pound. And Tszyu, a complete fighter, held a major title for 10 of his final 11 years as a pro. The newest class will be announced in December and be inducted on June 12.<b>MOST OVERRATED</b><b>Tyson:</b> Allow me to reiterate: Tyson was the dominant fighter of his era and deserves to enter the Hall of Fame on the first ballot. That said, he wasn't as good as many people believe. "Iron Mike" never beat a great heavyweight in that fighter's prime, one important test of greatness. He stopped Larry Holmes when Holmes was 38. The closest thing he had to a defining victory was his first-round KO of Michael Spinks, who was a natural light heavyweight. Beyond that, he never beat an exceptional opponent. And his legendary run after he become the youngest to win the heavyweight title was over when he was only 23, when Buster Douglas stopped him. He won two titles after he left prison, for which he deserves credit, but he was never the same after his aura of invincibility was lifted. Tyson was definitely one of the better heavyweights, arguably in the Top 15. He just wasn't in the class of the greatest ever.<b>BEST DECISION</b><b>Moving forward with Super Six:</b> Ken Hershman of Showtime couldn't give up on the Super Six World Boxing Classic after the defection of Andre Dirrell, the third of the original six fighters to pull out of the competition. One, there were signed contracts that presumably precluded him from doing so. Two, he owed to the three remaining participants to continue. And, three, we still have some great fights that will do good television ratings coming up. No true boxing fan will want to miss Arthur Abraham vs. Carl Froch, Glen Johnson vs. Allan Green and Andre Ward vs. fill-in-the-blank or what comes after that. The real question is whether anyone should stage a similar round-robin tournament. The answer is no.<b>BEST DECISION II?</b><b>Dirrell pulling out:</b> Leon Lawson, the uncle and co-trainer of Dirrell, said his nephew has suffered from dizziness and headaches since a recent sparring session and was told by a neurologist who examined him that he should refrain from boxing until three months after he's symptom free. Hence his decision to pull out of the tournament. The assumption is that this relates to the punch Dirrell took from Arthur Abraham while he on one knee, which led to Abraham's disqualification. If Lawson's story is true, then Dirrell would be stupid to fight right now. If it's not, there isn't much we can do about it. Faked injuries to get out of fights will always be a part of boxing. For the record: I don't believe Dirrell faked the original injury stemming from the punch, as some believe. The more-recent claim? I just don't know.<b>BIGGEST WINNER</b><b>Danny Garcia:</b> The 22-year-old prospect from Philadelphia performed like a mature fighter in his victory over veteran Mike Arnaoutis on Saturday in Philadephia, Garcia's biggest test to date. He fought patiently in the opening rounds, waiting for openings. Then, when Araoutis lowered his right with seconds to go in the third round, BAM! ... a left hook put the one-time contender down and he never fully recovered. Garcia ended it in the next round, becoming only the second after Victor Ortiz to KO Arnaoutis. Garcia might not have the speed and explosiveness of some young prospects - Ortiz, for example - but he is a good boxer with good power. He should win at least one major title and continue to build a fan base in Philly.<b>BIGGEST LOSER</b><b>Mike Arnaoutis:</b> Garcia put Arnaoutis down with a perfect left hook to the chin in the final seconds of the third round. The Greece-born resident of New York was able to get up but, as he made his way to the corner, he fell down again. Arnaoutis' corner or the referee would've been justified to stop the fight at that point but he came out for the fourth, during which another hook ended it. Arnaoutis, once a contender, has now lost five of his last six fights. Only very good fighters have beaten him. Still, that kind of slide and the brutal nature of his loss on Saturday are signs that enough is enough.<b>MOST SURPRISING</b><b>Wonjongkam-Chokchai:</b> Pongsaklek Wonjongkam's flyweight title defense against relative unknown Suriyan Por Chokchai on Saturday in Thailand seemed like a mismatch on paper. Wonjongkam is a future Hall of Famer and Chokchai had only 19 fights going into the fight. However, the result might indicate that the 33-year-old champion is slowing down and Chokchai has ability. The challenger reportedly kept Wonjongkam's aggression in check by counterpunching effectively, although he lost a close unanimous decision. Wonjongkam (77-3-1, 41 KOs) ran his record in title fights (not including interim belts) to a remarkable 21-1. Chokchai (14-5-1, 4 KOs) failed in his first bid for a major strap but scored points with his performance.<b>BEST BROTHER</b><b>Rigoberto Alvarez:</b> Saul "Canelo" Alvarez is becoming a star in his native Mexico but his older brother, 32-year-old Rigoberto, also is finding success. The elder Alvarez, who has fought as heavy as 172 pounds, moved down to junior middleweight and defeated Nobuhiro Ishida by a split decision on Saturday in Mexico to win one of those ridiculous "regular" titles and establish himself as a legitimate factor at 154 pounds. The rugged-looking fighter (26-2, 19 knockouts) was stopped by Marco Antonio Rubio in what had been a close fight at middleweight in January, his biggest fight to that point. "Canelo" also fights at 154 but don't expect a brother vs. brother fight; it never happens. Does Rigoberto also have the red hair that makes Saul stand out? Rigoberto has <i>no</i> hair; his head is shaven.<b>BEST FAREWELL</b><b>Gerry Penalosa:</b> The two-time titleholder from the Philippines stopped Yodsaenkeng Kietmangmee on Saturday in Zamboanga City in what was billed as a farewell fight. Penalosa, who turned pro in 1989, probably would've been a Hall of Fame candidate had he won some controversial decisions that didn't go his way, including a split-decision setback against Eric Morel in February. As it is, he'll be remembered as one of the toughest fighters pound-for-pound in his era. I'll never forget his fight against Juan Manuel Lopez last year, the only time he was stopped. He took dozens of powerful punches that would've destroyed a lesser man but he never left his feet, losing only when his corner threw in the towel. I've never seen a fighter with a better chin. And he was always a gentleman, as his fight on Saturday indicates. A portion of the proceeds will go to his injured compatriot Z Gorres. Penalosa will be sorely missed.<b>BEST QUOTE</b><b>Promoter Lou DiBella, on the troubled Super Six tournament:</b> "We have a very unpredictable sport. The old expression 'sh-- happens' ... well, more sh-- happens in boxing. It seems like nothing ever stays the course. But as an attempt, I think that it was a good idea. I liked it as it was unfolding; I thought that it was, frankly, unfolding pretty well, and the third round, the semis, the finals, were really set up very well. And that's why I think the critics and the naysayers are f--king idiots. The sport is fading, and it needs creative concepts. They're not all going to work out as planned. But we have to shake some sh-- up."<a href="mailto:ringtveditor@yahoo.com">Michael Rosenthal can be reached at RingTVeditor@yahoo.com</a>

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James DeGale needs to delete George�Groves defeat from the script

? Frank Warren calls for rematch for super-middleweight title
? 'What James needed to do was be more emphatic'

James DeGale has been billed as "Hollywood" since he turned professional but after George Groves took his British super-middleweight crown that script requires a major rewrite.

DeGale might look at Amir Khan to discover how redemption is found after the most desperate of nights. The Bolton man returned from an opening-round demolition by Breidis Prescott in August 2008 to become a world champion within a year. The 25-year-old Londoner's career stands at a similar crossroads: he could buckle or this may be his Khan moment.

David Haye, who was in Groves's corner on Saturday night, also recovered from being stopped by Carl Thompson as a cruiserweight to become the WBA heavyweight champion. And DeGale was unrepentant after a display that was too tentative. "It felt like I didn't lose properly like that," he said. Amir Khan, David Haye both got knocked out.. It feels like [Groves] has nicked the title off me and I'm the champion. So hopefully we'll get the rematch. That's what I want, straight away, as soon as."

Scorecards of 115-115, 115-114, 115-114 in favour of Groves, after 12 riveting rounds, illustrate how close it was and support the suggestion he may have been fortunate.

DeGale, however, was always in peril of failing to convince the judges that his cautious approach of stepping continually forward, while unloading only sporadically, was the performance of a champion emphatically defending a title.

Frank Warren, DeGale's promoter, was clear that this was what cost his man. "He gave that fight to him. There were rounds there where there wasn't a lot of action and judges can go either way in that situation.

"I thought James won the fight by one or two rounds. But although he was walking him down, he wasn't throwing enough shots. What James needed to do was be more emphatic. If he'd stepped his work-rate up a bit he would have got the decision, and may even have stopped him."

A subdued DeGale came close to conceding Warren's point when admitting he did not get going until the closing rounds. "I just didn't want to make a mistake," he said. "I hit him with the cleanest shots when I hurt him in the ninth. I think the last four rounds I won easy; the second half of the fight was easy."

DeGale did accept he had been fooled by Groves's pre-fight claims that he would ensure it was a war. Instead the 23-year-old from Hammersmith, who added the British title to his Commonwealth belt, consistentlyrefused to engage. "I thought he had come to fight," DeGale said. Groves did, but in an astute manner, and his ability to find a way to the win was reminiscent of Joe Calzaghe, who retired unbeaten and as arguably the greatest post-war fighter from these shores.

For DeGale, a rematch would offer immediate succour. Warren said: "The [British Boxing] Board of Control should order it. It's a natural rematch so I don't see why they shouldn't do it."

Whether this happens is in Groves's hands. In a stinging reference to the defeat he also handed DeGale five years ago, when they were amateurs, he said: "How many times do I have to beat this man? Does he want a best-of-five?"

"He has no titles, he's just come off a loss, I'm pretty sure I can find a better opponent than James DeGale. Possibly I can see it happening a few years down the line, when we've both got different versions of the world title." For Groves this path is now clearer while DeGale must come through this "gut-check" to prove he can still be a true champion.

Nathan Cleverly made a first defence of the WBO light-heavyweight title by stopping Aleksy Kuziemski in four rounds. "Let's get the big fights on," said Cleverly, who is unbeaten and seems likely to fight in his native Wales next time out. Hours later Bernard Hopkins, 46, defeated Jean Pascal on points in Montreal to become the oldest world champion ever.


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Pacquiao in Baguio City: Training camp begins

<font size="1" color="#000000">Manny Pacquiao, here hitting the speed bag, is in the mountain town of Baguio City -- away from the pressures of Manila -- preparing for his fight against Antonio Margarito. Photo / Ted Lerner</font><i>RING correspondent Ted Lerner is in Baguio City, a mountain town in the Philippines, as Manny Pacquiao opens training camp for his Nov. 13 fight against Antonio Margarito. This is the first in a series.</i>BAGUIO CITY, Philippines -- Manny Pacquiao came here ostensibly because he wanted to engage in several weeks of high altitude training for his fight against Antonio Margarito on Nov. 13 at Cowboys Stadium. But after only a few minutes in this busy, but pleasant mountain town 1,500 meters above sea level, you realize that perhaps the main reason he is here for the second time to make camp is that it affords him a rare chance to relax.Compared with sprawling, teeming and oppressively hot Manila, a six-hour drive south of here, Baguio is a laid back haven. This hilly town at the gateway to the Cordillera Mountains is covered with sweet-smelling pine trees. The weather is ideal. In the daytime it is slightly warm and never oppressive. At night a faint chill fills the air. The locals are friendly and polite and noticeably non-intrusive.One gets a good idea of why Pacquiao is here by visiting Cooyeesan Plaza, a modern but non-descript rectangular commercial complex just a few minutes outside the center of town. Except for the bright red pickup truck emblazoned with "Team Pacquiao" in the parking lot outside, there's nothing here to indicate that the world's most exciting and very arguably best boxer is anywhere near the place. No banners welcoming the champ. No big crowds trying to get his autograph.The building houses a variety of establishments. On the ground floor facing the street there's a supermarket, a hardware store and a beauty salon. Inside there's a dance school, a small college, several small canteens and restaurants. On the second floor sits the modern Shape up Gym. In the back of the weight room is a door leading into the bright and clean boxing gym. This is home to Team Pacquiao for the next month.Pacquiao and his entourage are staying in the 129-room hotel on the third floor. The hotel isn't fancy. Giving it three stars would be a bit of a stretch. The whole setup, though, seems to fit Pacquiao's personality to "T." He might be a high-flying, all-action superstar, but at heart he is really a simple kid from the province. Here he has everything he needs. There's even a basketball court on the fourth floor. And Pacquiao can just take the stairs down to the gym.Thursday was to be Pacquiao's first day of sparring. The previous week he had been training in Manila, several miles from the Philippines House of Representatives. Just after lunch every day, Pacquiao would show up at the Elorde Gym in Quezon City, part of Metro Manila, and train for several hours. He would then quickly shower, don his suit, dodge the massive crowds that had gathered on the streets outside, and head straight to the Congress for the 4pm session.Pacquiao had a productive week in Manila. Under huge banners and murals documenting the legendary life and career of Hall of Famer Gabriel "Flash" Elorde, Pacquiao plowed through his daily workout. On the mitts with trainer Freddie Roach, he showed blinding speed and footwork, and frightful power. The Manila media and others, including plenty of local celebrities who crowded into the gym to watch, marveled at how, despite a layoff of several months, Pacquiao hadn't seemed to have lost a step.After one impressive 10 round session on the mitts, a confident Roach revealed some of the game plan he and his fighter have in store for Margarito."We're working on some angles a little bit," he said. "I want him to go deeper on the angles so Margarito doesn't have a target in front of him and give him [Margarito] a little more room so he'll follow us because he has the tendency to follow his opponents. Once he picks his foot up, we'll drill him. The first four rounds he's going to be trying to walk us down. We'll set traps for him and walk him into combinations. I love this style of fighter for Manny Pacquiao." Roach said that he's also preparing for the possibility that Margarito will counter Pacquiao's game plan with a different tactic. "I do think he'll move in this fight a little bit," Roach said. "That's why I'm bringing a mover in [as a sparring partner]. I'm anticipating him coming forward, but they might try and throw a wrench in this and not come to us at all. I'm trying to cover all our bases. It's not a problem. One thing about Margarito is that he can move backwards but he's not good at it. It'll be a mistake if he does that, I feel."After a week of fighting the traffic and thick, smoggy air in Manila, Roach was elated to get up to Baguio this past Sunday. He loves the clean, cool air here and has even chosen to enjoy it to the fullest by staying at a nearby resort, Camp John Hay, inside a log cabin. After several days of going through the basics, Roach was anxious to get to the meat of the training and wanted to start the first sparring at exactly 2pm. As the clock hit 2, everyone sat around the quiet gym chatting and waiting for the Man; Roach, conditioning coach Alex Ariza, Pacquiao's childhood friend and assistant trainer Buboy Fernandez, sparring partners Glen Tapia and Michael Medina, about a dozen of Pacquiao's confidants and hangers on, and a few local media. The atmosphere here was a stark contrast to that in Manila. Just past 2:30, a smiling Pacquiao walked into the gym. Roach insisted that everyone but the team had to leave for the sparring session. The few members of the media on hand could come back in after about 30 minutes, when the sparring was over. We could watch Manny shadow box, hit the speed bag, do his stretching, Roach said. But the sparring would be private. "We have some things to go over," Roach said. Fernandez then shouted out that we all had to leave. As Roach had said, 30 minutes later the doors were thrown open. Pacquiao hammered the speed ball as about a dozen reporters and others watched. Tapia had worked all four rounds and, as he undid his hand wraps, looked pleased with himself."It was a great experience," the 20-year-old from New Jersey said. "He's the greatest. He's not like fighting an average lefty. It's like fighting a lefty and righty mixed together in one. He gives you angles, he'll pop you then spin you, then he's on the other side. He's very fast. His footwork is great. He'll hit you then he's all of a sudden on the other side, then he hits you again and he's on the other side this time."I just tried to go in there and put pressure on him. That's what Freddie wanted me to do. It's the first day of camp so we can't really tell. He's going to get much better." Roach seemed generally happy with the sparring, but said Pacquiao got clocked several times."It was better than I expected," Roach told me, referring to the sparring. "He made some bad moves, he made some good moves. That's part of the first day. I wanted to see how the sparring partners worked out. Glen was perfect. He fought just like Margarito does. Very strong and very aggressive. I picked the right guy. It was a good first day. Manny's timing was off a little bit. He hasn't boxed since the Clottey fight. I'm happy with it. I saw a couple of mistakes. Manny got hit a couple of times when he shouldn't have. And that's my job tomorrow. We'll work it out on the mitts. That's my job to show him how to defend against that. "He knows the mistakes he made. He's getting his feet wet, he's getting back into it. It takes time. That's why my training camps are eight weeks long. We've got seven weeks to go. We're ahead of schedule. But the best part about today is that Tapia fights just like Margarito. He's like a clone of him. He comes forward, he's sloppy, he comes wide with his punches, he's heavy handed and he's rugged. He hit Manny right in the balls today by accident. That's going to happen. It was an accident, but it can happen."I asked Roach if that meant that he thought Margarito was a dirty fighter."Margarito's not dirty," he said. "I don't believe in a dirty fight, because it is a fight. I'd say he's physical. He does whatever it takes to win. I was a physical fighter too. Head butts, elbows, a little low blows here and there. It's all part of the game. Manny won't get dirty, but he knows how to handle it. He knows how to keep himself out of those positions. My rule is if a guy hits you low, you hit him back low. Manny won't do it. He will not foul a fighter. He's too respectful a fighter for me sometimes, but that's just his nature. "We have a plan A, a plan B, and sometimes a plan C. If we don't do it here in the gym, we'll never do it in the fight. We cover all our bases in the gym. He understands the game plan and he follows it completely, but sometimes when a fighter gets hit and gets angry, he will exchange. But that's something I like. That's in his heart. That's what makes Manny Pacqiuao, Manny Pacquiao."It's that massive heart and a work rate that exceeds anything he's ever seen. It never fails to amaze Roach."That protection I wear doesn't work that well," he said. "He beat the shit out of me yesterday. He hurt me with more shots than usual. And the other day he knocked me down right in my ass. First time in my life. He uses his whole body weight, from his legs. He's got so much explosion. He's so quick and snappy, he just like ... wham! He actually explodes on you. And that's one thing he's always had. But now he knows how to use it effectively. It's something we work on every day, but that power of his, I can't take credit for that. He was born with it. He could always knock you out with one punch. I've tried to get him to hone that power in a more productive way."For the next month in this quaint city, far away from the maddening crowds in Manila, the two will gradually hone that incredible power and speed with some of the most-extreme training Roach has ever been a part of. "It's intense and continuous," Roach said of Pacquiao's workouts. "He does an hour and a half in the morning with the runs. Then we do three and a half in the afternoon. He doesn't rest. We've done an hour on the mitts and he ignores the bell, he works right through it. Actually, if he needs a day off from training camp, I'm going to let him go. The hardest to do is to get him to take a day off. "Sometimes I'm afraid he's going to burn himself out and overdo it. I tell him to take a day off and I'll catch him running 10 miles. It'll be a blessing if he takes a day off. I welcome that. I don't have confidence without reason. His work ethic is it."

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Barrios dominates Alcorro

Former junior lightweight titleholder Jorge Barrios rebounded from inactivity stemming from his part in a fatal automobile accident by out-classing journeyman Wilson Alcorro over 10 rounds on Friday in his native Argentina.Barrios (50-4-1, 35 KOs) hadn't fought since last November due to legal issues stemming a January car crash that caused the death of a 20-year-old pregnant woman. The 34-year-old veteran, who was eventually absolved of any wrong doing in the accident, did not appear rusty as he out-boxed and out-worked Alcorro (26-13-3, 17 KOs) in a Telefutura and HBO Plus-televised main event in Corrientes.In the co-featured bout, Argentine welterweight veteran Hector David Saldivia (38-2, 28 KOs) knocked out Brazilian prospect Jailton De Jesus Souza (12-2, 10 KOs) in the third round of their scheduled 10-round bout.

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Lionel Rose obituary

Australian boxer and the first Aborigine to win a world title

The boxer Lionel Rose, who has died aged 62 after a long illness, was the first Aboriginal Australian to win a world title. He never forgot the welcome he received when he returned to Melbourne after defeating the Japanese champion Fighting Harada in Tokyo to win the undisputed world bantamweight title in February 1968. An estimated 250,000 people lined the streets to honour their new 19-year-old champion.

Scarcely believing the crowds that had gathered, Rose recalled: "I got the shock of my life, and that's a memory that will never disappear from my mind. There had only been 10 there to see us off." Seemingly, the whole country now had a hero who had sprung from the poverty typically faced by the Aboriginal population, which had long suffered discrimination and had not been allowed to vote in the whole of Australia until the 1960s.

Another leading Aboriginal athlete, the 2000 Sydney Olympics 400m champion, Cathy Freeman, said after his death that Rose had "created a path for indigenous athletes to walk proudly", while the Australian prime minister, Julia Gillard, spoke of him as "an Australian champion in every sense of the word and an inspiration to us all".

The oldest of nine children, Rose was born and raised in the Aborigine settlement of Jackson's Track, close to the small town of Warragul, Victoria. His father, Roy, had been a fighter eking out a living on the tent-show circuit, similar to the fairground boxing booths that once prospered in Britain, taking on all-comers at big agricultural shows.

Roy Rose was determined that his son should learn to fight. In those early days, the boy would have rags tied round his hands to serve as makeshift gloves, while the ring would be an area marked out by chicken wire tied between trees. He had his first gloves at 10 years old, and just five years later had shown such aptitude for the sport that he was Australia's amateur flyweight champion. Roy Rose died shortly before his son won that title.

Rose turned professional in 1964 after being passed over by the selectors for Australia's boxing team for the Tokyo Olympic Games. His progress to the summit of the sport was as rapid as it was remarkable.

Two defences of his World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association belts in 1968 saw Rose honoured as Australian of the Year and appointed MBE. While preparing for the second of those contests, in California, Rose met Elvis Presley, who sneaked into his gym to watch the young champion train. The astonished Rose said: "I told him I was in awe of him, and he said he was in awe of me!"

Rose always loved music and was able to sing and play the guitar. An appearance on a television variety progamme in 1969 led a prominent Australian songwriter and producer to urge Rose to make records. He recorded an album, while a single, I Thank You, topped the Australian country charts for some 32 weeks.

In March 1969, Rose had his toughest title defence to date when he faced the outstanding Liverpudlian Alan Rudkin. The judges made Rose the winner by majority decision, earning him the dubious reward of a fight in the US against the formidable Mexican Rub�n Olivares. Rose was knocked out in the fifth round, and his days as a world champion were over.

Two years later, no longer able to make bantamweight, Rose failed in an attempt to win the world lightweight title against Yoshiaki Numata of Japan, losing a points decision before announcing his retirement from boxing.

After an ill-fated comeback, he retired for good in 1976 with 42 wins and 11 defeats. His popularity never lessened but, like many fighters, he had problems away from the ring. He tried to work as a musician, and owned a cafe, but suffered prolonged periods of alcoholism.

In 1991, a television miniseries based on his life and a biography appeared, both entitled Rose Against the Odds. In 2005 he was honoured with a postage stamp bearing an image of his gloves.

Rose suffered a stroke in 2007 that affected his mobility and speech, and had been in poor health for several months before his death. He is survived by a son, Michael, from his marriage to Jenny, which ended in divorce.

? Lionel Edmund Rose, boxer, born 21 June 1948; died 8 May 2011


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Kessler Looking to Put on a Great Show; Bouadla Ready to Rise to the Occasion

Team Bouadla is convinced that the 14-month layoff has made WBC Super Middleweight World Champion Emeritus Mikkel Kessler rusty. On Saturday night, the Viking Warrior (43-2, 32 KOs) returns to the ring for the first time since his epic points victory over then-WBC Champion Carl Froch, taking on WBO #5 ...

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Blackwell Out To Do More Than Survive

Nick ?Bang Bang? Blackwell is ready for the toughest night of his life in Wigan later this month ? and plans another to celebrate winning the British middleweight championship.
Blackwell and St Helens powerhouse Martin Murray collide for the vacant belt at Wigan's Robin Park Arena on Saturday June 18 in what promises to be [...]

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Weekend Review: The return of Kirkland

<object width="640" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/akW8GQ9fQek?fs=1&hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/akW8GQ9fQek?fs=1&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="385"></embed></object><b>MOST EXCITING</b><b>Return of James Kirkland:</b> The former junior middleweight contender from Texas was released last week after spending 18 months in prison for gun possession. Kirkland (25-0, 22 KOs) has a reckless fighting style that probably will translate into a short run on top but he'll be incredibly fun to watch as long as he's around. The time he spent away from boxing might take some toll on him but he remained in good shape and is only 26, meaning he'll probably bounce back well. He's scheduled to fight in December, possibly on the Amir Khan-Marcos Maidana card on Dec. 11 in Las Vegas. He'll probably fight for a 154-pound title sometime next year.<b>MOST INSPIRED</b><b>Glen Johnson in Super Six:</b> Showtime could've found a body in the super middleweight division to replace the injured Mikkel Kessler as the opponent for Allan Green in the Super Six World Boxing Classic but came up with a gem from among the light heavyweights. First, Johnson adds some cache to the 168-pound tournament because of his name recognition. And, second, he's a pro's pro. He'll come in shape and ready to fight on Nov. 6 in Las Vegas even at 41, as he proved in a competitive fight against Tavoris Cloud in August. Will he have any trouble making weight? He insists he won't. He pointed out at has weighed as low at 172 for a light heavyweight (175-pound limit) fight. And, finally, Johnson has given so much to the sport. He deserves at least one more big fight.<b>MOST STUNNING</b><b>Lee beats Kratingaenggym:</b> Ryol Li Lee (17-1-1, 8 knockouts) has been regarded as a good junior featherweight but he didn't appear to have the ability or experience to hang with a fighter like Poonsawat Kratingaenggym. Surprise, surprise. Lee, who has fought exclusively in his native country of Japan, counter-punched his way to a shocking unanimous decision over the highly regarded Thai fighter on Saturday in Tokyo to establish himself as a major player in the lighter weight divisions. Kratingaenggym was THE RING's No. 1-rated junior featherweight and had won 17 consecutive fights dating back to 2006. Lee obviously will enter the ratings.<b>BEST UNDERCARD</b><b>Chavez Jr.-Gomez card:</b> The Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Alfonso Gomez fight on Dec. 4 in Anaheim, Calif., on pay-per-view TV, is mildly interesting as we wait for Chavez to fight a big-name opponent. However, the undercard is terrific, which follows a sudden and appreciated trend. Nonito Donaire, who has been seeking a big fight, faces former bantamweight titleholder Wladimir Sidorenko. Humberto Soto takes on Urbano Antillon for Soto's lightweight title. And Brandon Rios, coming off his spectacular victory over Anthony Peterson, faces journeyman Noe Bolanos in a can't-miss action fight. The supporting fights alone will be worth the price of pay per view.<b>WORST OPPONENT?</b><b>Dereck Chisora:</b> Chisora, the British Commonwealth heavyweight titleholder, reportedly could be the next opponent for world champion Wladimir Klitschko. The pickings are slim in the division, so almost any opponent would be suspect, but Chisora? The Zimbabwe-born Londoner has fought only 14 times, meaning he has little experience, and he's short (6-1 ; 187cm) by heavyweight standards. That's not a combination you want against one of the Ukrainian giants. This has disaster written all over it. The Klitschkos, who promote themselves, save money by fighting opponents who are grateful for any payday and the chance to fight for a championship but don't build their fan base beating up unworthy challengers.<b>MOST REFRESHING</b><b>New-and-improved Zab Judah:</b> Judah, who never seemed to have his act together, seems to have recognized the error of his ways and is heading in the right direction. Consider his comments on a recent conference call: Life is about growing up. As you get older, you mature. At this point of my life, I'm doing everything by the book, I'm doing everything I was asked to do in the past and I'm walking the right path in my life. I've pretty much seen it all." Are you listening Floyd? Judah also seems to have resurrected himself at 140 pounds. He faces slugger Lucas Matthysse on Nov. 6 in Newark, N.J. If he wins, he would make a legitimate opponent for one of the up-and-coming junior welterweights.<b>WORST MOVE</b><b>Oscar De La Hoya's comments:</b> De La Hoya, president of Golden Boy Promotions, recently got just a bit carried away when he spoke to an editor from Broadcasting and Cable. A snippet: "The Don Kings and Bob Arums have had a choke hold on this sport for the last 40 years. ... Now, we have to think outside the box. We have to think like the NBA and MLB and have one commission and one major promoter [Golden Boy, of course] in the sport. We need to sign all the talent and get all the TV dates." There's nothing wrong with have such grandiose ambitions, as ridiculous as they are. It's just not a good idea to actually say them out loud, though. This is one that De La Hoya probably wishes he could take back.<b>BEST MOVE</b><b>GBP signs Malignaggi:</b> Golden Boy has announced that it will stage fight cards at the new Barclays Center in Brooklyn when it opens in 2012. So who does the promotional firm sign to help sell the new venture? Brooklyn's own Paulie Malignaggi, who bought out his contract with Lou DiBella. Malignaggi, coming off a bad beating against Amir Khan in May, probably has peaked but he has enough to left at 29 to headline a few cards at Barclays and, with his adroit verbal skills, perhaps help promote them when he's not fighting. <b>BEST QUOTE</b><b>Yonnhy Perez, on who he would like to fight in the final of the bantamweight tournament - friend Abner Mares or well-known Vic Darchinyan - if he beats Joseph Agbeko:</b> "This is a weird situation. In my heart, as a friend, I want Abner to win. In reality, I also want Darchinyan to win ... but I don't want Abner to lose. I'll just wait and see."<a href="mailto:ringtveditor@yahoo.com">Michael Rosenthal can be reached at RingTVeditor@yahoo.com</a>

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Dougie&#039;s Friday mailbag

<b>OSCAR'S EVIL PLAN FOR WORLD DOMINATION</b>Doug,Read a pretty good article from your old boss Steve Kim over on Maxboxing.com re: Oscar De La Hoya's grand plan in conjunction with HBO which would for all intents and purposes would give Golden Boy a monopoly on the sport. A part of me will always find Oscar and his main crony Richard Schaefer completely dis-ingenious and utterly self serving. Actually I'm not entirely sure why Oscar speaks at all anymore, but I digress. You know what? Who cares? At least Golden Boy isn't telling me to go F-myself like Bottom-Line Bob Arum, right? As fans we should be worried about one thing, that the best fights possible are made. One thing I have noticed about the UFC is the top guys from their promotion pretty much always fight each other eventually, with something like 85% of that sport's talent residing in Dana White's promotion. He essentially controls MMA. While originally vehemently opposed to Golden Boy & HBO pulling the same end around, I'm now of the opinion that this wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing for boxing. I am so sick and tired of trying to figure out if we will ever see fighter A and fighter B in the ring together because they are both under separate promotional banners. Golden Boy is already in bed with HBO. If you're a free agent you already know signing with Golden Boy could get you coveted high-profile dates and tons of cash. Steve Kim made a lot of great points about why it shouldn't work and he was correct in asserting that Golden Boy doesn't cultivate any homegrown stars of their own, instead they steal away established talent that other promoters and handlers have developed, but who cares? I just want to see the best fights.By the way, the day this story breaks, RingTV.com prints a small little blurb about Paulie Walnuts signing with Golden Boy? LOL, trying to sneak that one by us fans were you? LOL... I'm laughing, but crying on the inside. I thought Amir Khan's one sided beatdown of "The Magic Man' would at least be the end of Paulie popping up on World Championship Boxing or B.A.D. Obviously, I was dead wrong. I can already see his being announced as the B-side for Victor Ortiz's next fight. -- Tom G.<b>Well, probably not Ortiz's <I>next</I> fight. Malignaggi is supposed to fight at welterweight now and Ortiz is still a junior welterweight, where the best fights can be made for him. But who knows? If Paulie can find new life at 147 pounds and he hangs around long enough, he might be in position to face Ortiz when the youngster eventually goes up in weight (which I fully expect him to do).If he does fight Ortiz one day watch HBO's commentators commend him for doing the exact same things they condemned Sergio Mora for doing vs. Shane Mosley.Regarding all the fuss over De La Hoya's comments in a recent article in <a href="http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/457694-Oscar_De_La_Hoya_s_New_Fight.php">Broadcasting & Cable magazine</a> (and to be truthful there isn't much fuss outside of some American promoters, a few boxing writers and really, <I>really</I> hardcore message board fans who obsess over boxing's industry news more than the actual sport), all I can say is chill out, folks. Oscar says a lot of things, and they don't always come true. He's a very wealthy former fighter with a lot of influence at the helm of a well-funded and well-connected promotional company, but last time I checked, he's not a god. His name ain't Oscar Deity La Hoya. He can't snap his fingers and make anything happen. Yeah, he said he wanted GBP to "sign all the talent and get all the TV dates," but no one promoter can do that in a market as big as the U.S., I don't care how powerful they are. It's impossible, unless all the other promoters just sit on their hands and let it happen. Honestly, I think all he wants to do is what all promoters should want to for their companies and that's to build towards the future and be as organized as they can be for the betterment of the sport. Obviously, it didn't come out like that. LOL. He said "My plan is not to take over boxing" but then he stated "a lot of times promoters are the ones in the way" (of making the big fights everyone wants to see) and went on to say "in a way, yes, we do want to take over. Well, we don't want to take control of boxing, but we want to do the right thing for the sport."Yadda, yadda, yadda. I can't believe any longtime fight fan or boxing writer would pay <I>that</I> close attention to what De La Hoya says. I mean, come on, does anyone really think HBO is ever going to do "bi-weekly" fights, as Oscar suggested? The network doesn't have the budget, programming time, or the interest to do that much boxing. But I guess people are free to read into the GBP President's ramblings however they want. Hey, if they want look at GBP as the "Evil Empire" ran by De La Vader and Sith-Lord Schaefer, so be it. And if the major American boxing promoters truly feel threatened perhaps Obi-Bob Kenobi, Luke Shaw-walker, Princess Duva, Dan Solo, Lou-bacca and R2-Don-2 should ban together into a "New Republic." Seriously, all Star Wars jokes aside, if the other promoters work together to develop key fighters in major markets in the U.S. and build towards good fights no one promotional company can "monopolize" the sport. Imagine if Arum and Goossen co-promoted fights in Oakland co-headlined by Andrew Ward and Nonito Donaire. Bay Area fans would pack the Oracle Arena on a consistent basis to see those two fight and I can't imagine HBO or Showtime ignoring those shows if Ward and Donaire were in with decent opposition. But let's say for argument's sake that the two major subscription cable networks would ignore such shows (under the influence of the Dark Side of the Force, of course). Arum and Goossen could do small PPV shows, or how about this for a novel idea: How about doing a deal with ESPN. No they wouldn't get the big licensing fees they want but perhaps they could work something out with the basic cable network that ensured that the sports-coverage powerhouse would promote the shows on their TV, radio, internet and magazine arms. The promoters might lose money in the short run, but they would also build a substantial TV audience that could support a future major PPV show with both Ward and Donaire in with worthy challengers (say Ward vs. Kelly Pavlik and Donaire vs. Fernando Montiel).The same thing can be done in other major U.S. markets, such as Chicago (where any of the major promoters could work with local 8 Count Productions), Detroit, St. Louis, Miami, the entire North East and the New England area, and pretty much anywhere in Texas. Why can't DiBella and Joe DeGuardia (I couldn't think of a Star Wars name for him -- how about C-3P-Joe?) team up for at least semi-regular shows and the occasional big one in the NYC area? I know Delvin Rodriguez is coming off a loss, but I still think the Dominican vet would make for a decent East Coast showdown with WBC belt holder Andre Berto.If promoters (and major managers) worked together more often (with or without the "Evil Empire"), De La Vader wouldn't have anything to complain about to non-boxing publications. Fans wouldn't have anything to complain about either, come to think of it. And if U.S. promoters can't work together they shouldn't fault Oscar for wanting to "take over." Somebody's gotta make something happen in the sport if common sense falls by the wayside.Now that I've said that, Tommy, my fellow comic-book collector pal, I have to take issue with that tired line you had to regurgitate: "Golden Boy doesn't cultivate any homegrown stars of their own, instead they steal away established talent that other promoters and handlers have developed."This is such garbage. Apart from one year (in 2001 when he was basically promoted by Univision), De La Hoya was a Top Rank fighter through 2004. GBP didn't really branch out on its own by signing up talent and doing their own regular major shows until 2005. Now you tell me how many championship fighters Top Rank, Main Events, Don King or anyone else have developed from scratch in just five years? Hell, it took Top Rank seven years to get Kelly Pavlik to the middleweight title. How long have they promoted Brandon Rios? (Hint: more than five years.) Does he have a world title yet? It took Top Rank <I>seven</I> years to get Steven Luevano, who they dropped like a hot potato after he lost to JuanMa Lopez, <I>one</I> featherweight belt. Now, it took Lopez less than four years to win his first major belt, but don't give Top Rank all the credit for developing the budding Puerto Rican star. His local promoters, PR Best Promotions, deserve credit for his activity and fast rise. Top Rank did not develop the star of their stable, Manny Pacquiao. They did not develop Nonito Donaire or the Peterson brothers, either.How come nobody ever says Top Rank "stole" Donaire from Gary Shaw or the Peterson brothers from Brian Young's Prize Fight Boxing? (And by the way, how's Top Rank doing with those three talents? Are those three better off with Top Rank than they were with their original promoters?)I guess you can say GBP "stole" Victor Ortiz from Top Rank if you want, but the bottom line is, the kid wanted out from Arum & Co. and broke his contract by declaring bankruptcy. (Not a cool thing but not unheard of in boxing.) He was presented to GBP as a free agent by Shelly Finkel and co-manager Rolando Arellano (who bought out Vic's managerial contract from his original manager Cameron Dunkin). Arum has publicly stated that he doesn't hold it against GBP but rather Finkel and Arellano. (And a deal was worked out, sort of like the Pacquiao pact, that gives a percentage of what GBP makes from Ortiz to Top Rank.)I'm not saying that GBP doesn't do grimy s__t like any other promoter, but I <I>am </I>saying that there is clear bias in how many boxing writers portray the L.A.-based company. When a prospect or star of Golden Boy's stable loses or struggles in a fight, every one takes a dump on the company's matchmakers for making a "stupid" fight (see Mosley vs. Mora, Ortiz vs. Maidana, Jacobs vs. Pirog). But when Top Rank's stars get their asses handed to them -- see Kelly Pavlik (vs. B-Hop and Sergio Martinez) or Margarito (vs. Mosley) -- nobody blames their matchmakers. The shortcomings of Top Rank fighters are instead placed primarily on the shoulders of the fighters and their trainers (where they belong). OK, now I'm rambling on and on, De La Vader style. Thanks for getting me started on all this bulls__t. Can you please email me about a freakin' upcoming fight next time, Tom? LOL.By the way, what do you think of this idea for a special four-round attraction that could open up a future <I>Fight Night Club</I> card: De La Hoya vs. Kim.You could call it the "Battle of Dougie's Bosses"! I know Kim has no formal boxing background but he's in the gym all the time, he's a lot bigger than Oscar and I'm betting that Freddie Roach would gladly train him for the exhibition and give the Korean Hammer same gameplan that worked so well for Pacquiao. I would be proud to call the action from ringside. I won't say who I'd be rooting for.</b><b>GLEN JOHNSON IN THE SUPER 6</b>Doug,What do you think of Glen Johnson's entering the Super 6? I'm concerned about the weight. He looked drawn in the Tavoris Cloud bout to me. Your thoughts? -- Bakari, Jersey City, NJ<b>Like you, I have mixed feelings. I'm glad The Road Warrior is getting the opportunity, but I'm worried that making 168 pounds will dangerously sap his energy when he fights. The fact that he blew up to around 190 pounds on fight night against Cloud (and fought sluggishly over the second half of the bout) doesn't fill me with confidence that he belongs at super middleweight. In fact, I think Green needs to be fighting at 175 pounds. He claims that he had to over-train to make the super middleweight limit for the Andre Ward fight, which is why he fought in such lackluster fashion (and I may be the only person on earth who believes my fellow comic-book collector).To me, this matchup makes more sense at light heavyweight, not just because it's probably healthier for both combatants but because it would probably be a better fight at 175. </b><b>QUESTIONS</b>Sup' Doug? Same old same old here, lots of rumors speculation this week hoping you can help clear up the B.S. from the facts1) Is it true that Glen Johnson will drop to 168 to compete in Showtime super six tournament? How will his entry affect the course of the tournament? What will his boxing schedule be and more importantly how will the point system work for him if he has come in this late?2) I hear the Devon Alexander will be stripped of his IBF title and that Kaizer Mabuza will face the winner of Zab Judah vs Mathysse for the title? (By the way Kaizer is a beast for those who don't know much about him).3) Who is most likely to be Wladdy's next victim at the end of the year?4) Hopkins vs Pascal is gonna be Showtime PPV? Is this the first time Showtime has done a PPV match and how much will they charge?Take care Dougie, by the way Mayweather has truly let me down. Between beating his baby momma and not fighting Pacquiao he has lost a fan in me. I always knew the man had tremendous skill and athleticism, he and Pacquiao will go down in history as the fight that should have happened but never did. Peace! -- Roland<b>Yeah, it's too bad about Floyd. He had an opportunity this year to really solidify his legacy but, as he has in the past, he found a way to pull himself off the board. I actually feel sorry for his fans.Anyway, life and boxing go on. I'll answer your questions in order:1) It's true. Gentleman Glen is in the Super Six, with zero points. If he's to have any impact whatsoever on the tournament (i.e. break into the semifinals), he'll have to knockout Allan Green when they fight in the co-feature to the Lopez-Marquez showdown on Nov. 6.2) "Easy come, easy go," is the motto all fighters should have when it comes to winning alphabet titles. The winner Judah-Matthysse (good fight) vs. Mabuza sounds like a fun scrap, but the real 140-pound champ of the world will be the winner of Alexander-Bradley, which will hopefully be finalized by the end of this month.3) I've heard talk of British prospect Derek Chisora, veteran David Tua, and young Russian contender Denis Boytsov for Wlad Klitschko's scheduled Dec. 11 title defense. Of those three I think Boytsov is the most worthy (but barely). I've heard Team Klitschko is interested in Tomasz Adamek, but he's got a fight scheduled in December and I don't think his people believe he's ready to challenge for the title. 4) Yep, Pascal-Hopkins (notice, I put the champ's name first) will be a Showtime PPV event (perhaps with Librado Andrade in a co-featured bout). It's definitely not the network's first PPV show. All those classic Mike Tyson- and Julio Cesar Chavez-headlined PPV shows that Don King promoted in the 1990s were produced and distributed by Showtime (through their pay-per-view arm SET). However, it is the network's first PPV in a few years (I think the Corrales-Castillo rematch in October of 2005 was the last one).</b><b>P4P CRITERIA</b>Nice new feature on the P4P players.I think a good way to rank fighters is a hybrid of what you mentioned on that article, but with an added twist:Assuming two fighters weighed the same and were fighting, if somebody had kidnapped one of your loved ones and the only way they're going to give her back is if you pick the right fighter, who do you pick? I know this is dramatic, but it helps to diffuse bias. In this scenario, I can't fathom anyone picking Adamek over Andre Ward. I know Ward hasn't had a chance to stockpile many accomplishments yet, but he's the clearly superior fighter. It's nice that Adamek has several nice wins on his resume, but your daughter is kidnapped... who are you picking?Andre Ward every day of the week.With this added wrinkle to the criteria, it changes things a bit. Here's mine, for what it's worth:1. Pacquiao2. Mayweather3. Ward4. Marquez5. Wonjongkam6. Wladimir K7. Montiel8. Williams9. Martinez10. AbrahamAsk yourself, in the kidnap scenario: assuming they weigh the same, who wins in a fight of Arthur Abraham vs. Timothy Bradley? Your child's life is on the line, so forget all that b.s. about Bradley's work rate and dedication. He's outgunned, and Abraham KO's him.See what I mean? BTW, if you're basing this on accomplishments and quality wins, Bernard Hopkins is no lower than number 3... so we know there is much more to it than that.Thanks for all your work. (PS - How great is November going to be?!?) -- Danny<b>November is going to freakin' awesome and very busy for Yours Truly, but I'm not complaining. My P4P rankings <I>are</I> pretty much based on accomplishment and quality wins, and thus, Hard Nard is off the list. Anyone who thinks B-Hop's decision over a shopworn Roy Jones Jr. was <I>quality</I> should have his head examined. He didn't look so hot out-pointing Enrique Ornelas, either.Anyway, I would go with different fighters than you did if my P4P list based on the "kidnap" scenario. I'm not certain Ward would beat Adamek if they both weighed the same. I've never seen Ward fight a guy with Adamek's strengths and style. Just because he out-pointed a one-dimensional puncher in Edison Miranda and dominated boxers like Mikkel Kessler and Allan Green doesn't mean he'd shutdown Adamek. Maybe he would, but I wouldn't want to bet my daughter's life on that assumption. I wouldn't bet her life that Abraham knocks out Bradley, either. I can see Timmy's lateral movement giving King Arthur problems. The Armenian punisher doesn't remind anyone of Julio Cesar Chavez when it comes to cutting the ring off on his opponents. It's too hard to say who should rank above who based on how we <I>think</I> they might fare against each other in a pound-for-pound sense. For all we know Ivan Calderon is unbeatable if weight is taken out of the equation. I can't say for sure that Manny Pacquiao or Floyd Mayweather could overwhelm or outbox the Iron Boy if they all weighed the same. I've never seen Pac or Money fight a ring general with Calderon's style. Maybe if Floyd had fought a really mobile southpaw like Joel Casamayor or Cory Spinks and did well, I'd rank him over Calderon, but I have no idea how he'd handle that kind of lefty. I'm trying to think of any slick southpaw Pacquiao has been in with and I'm drawing a blank. The only lefty that come to mind is David Diaz and he's the opposite of slick.</b><b>TOP 5 KNOCKOUTS OF 2010</b>Hi Doug,Hope all is well. The KO of Enzo Mac by Alex Frenkel was chilling. To me it was almost too disturbing to be glorified by naming it KO of the year. But holy cow, that was the KO of the Year! Since you are doing top 5 lists for your next couple of mail bags, what are your top 5 KO's so far this year (my apologies if you have already done this list). Mine would be: 1. Frenkel KO of Enzo 2. Ray Beltran of David Torres 3. Danny Green of Paul Briggs* 4. De Leon of Escalante 5. Pirog of Jacobs** *For comedic value**Because it was so unexpected and because I met Pirog while he was dressed up like he had just stepped off the set of a 1980's teen movie at the press event for the Marquez-Diaz II card at Fortune Gym a couple of days before the fight. Later. -- Joe Friedman<b>Hey Joe! I have done my Top Five knockouts of 2005, but I'll do the list again because I left off Pirog-Jacobs. (I try to do these Top Five lists off the top of my head because it's more fun that way. Research = work. F___ that.)1. Pirog TKO 5 Jacobs (a legit outta-nowhere one-punch KO, even though the Golden Child popped up as soon as the ref waved it off)2. Frankel KO 7 Maccarinelli (Damn! That was brutal; time for Big Mac to hang 'em up)3. Karmazin KO 10 Miranda (for sheer drama)4. Ponce-DeLeon KO 3 Escalante (perfect right hook)5. Montiel KO 3 Concepcion (perfect right cross)</b><b>MORE TOP FIVES</b>Hello Doug,Here are some more top 5's: Top 5 boxers with the best footwork in the game todayTop 5 jabs in the game todayTop 5 users of feinting in the game today Thanks. -- Chezney, UK<b>Footwork: Calderon, Mayweather, Montiel, Martinez and Hopkins.Jabs: Mayweather, the Klitschko brothers, Ward, and Khan.Use of feints: Mayweather, Hopkins, Ward, Donaire, and Mora (with his feet)</b><b>TOP FIVE RIVALRIES</b>Hey Dougie,Yes these are fun! Top 5 rivalries? -- Choppa B, Sydney, Australia<b>I'll give you the top 5 of my lifetime and the top 5 I've covered.Of my lifetime (I was born in 1970): Ali-Frazier, Leonard-Hearns, Brown-Trice (that's right!), Holyfield-Bowe and Benn-Eubank.That I've covered: Vazquez-Marquez, Barrera-Morales, Gatti-Ward, Pacquiao-Marquez and Morales-Pacquiao.</b><b>FIVE TERRY NORRIS P4P MATCHUPS</b>I'm hitting you up to talk about Terry Norris (there's nothing else worth talking about in my opinion). He is one of my favorite dudes, period! He was a beautiful practitioner of the Sweet Science as well as a beast when he had to dig off in an opponent's ass. He was vulnerable too, which always made his fights interesting. What are your favorite Terry Norris moments and who do you take in these P4P match-ups?1. Norris vs Toney - I think Norris had the speed and the legs to beat Toney if he didn't get caught with a Mike Nunn special.2. Norris vs Ricardo Lopez - again, we are talking in a P4P sense. A 154lb Lopez would be too much for Norris over the long haul IMO. Late KO for Lopez.3. Norris vs Wladimir Klitschko - Klitschko is proving himself to be a historically good heavyweight but that's because there is no one like Terrible Terry Norris at 200+ lbs. I see Terry giving him a boxing lesson. It would take more than an excellent jab and holding on the inside to negate Terry's speed, power and legs.4. Terry Norris vs Felix Trinidad - I see Terry doing to Trinidad the same thing that Anthony Stephens did to him for about nine rounds. Then things would get interesting. Once Terry slowed down just a little Tito would start to catch him and since The Terrible one didn't have the greatest chin I see Tito finishing him off in the last round.5. Terry Norris vs Floyd Mayweather - You knew this was coming right? Floyd has never fought anyone as gifted when in their prime as Terry Norris. If these two guys were the same size the only things that separate them is Floyd's pure defensive prowess and better stamina and Terry's better punching power along with his killer instinct. This would be a good one and a tough one to figure IMO. Floyd isn't a big puncher but his speed and accurate punches would probably wobble Terry a couple of times but if Terry caught Floyd like Mosely did (and he would) it would be over. Terry didn't let you off the hook when he had you hurt, ever! Hell, if you hurt HIM he didn't let you off the hook. I'm going with Norris in this one. What do you think? p.s. Tell Jesse in Fort Worth I said whassup! -- Fleetwood<b>Whassup Jesse, from me and Fleet.Norris is hands down my favorite fighter of the early 1990s. "Terrible Terry moments" that have stuck in my head after all these years are his early-round knockouts of Joe Gatti and Maurice Blocker. There was such ferocity in the manner in which he tore into them after initially rocking both men. I loved watching that man fight.I agree with all the scenarios in all five of your mythical pound-for-pound matchups with Norris. Great minds think alike, brotha.</b> <b>TOP FIVE FANTASY FIGHTS</b>Hey Doug,I know fantasy fights are overrated but I'd like to know, what is your TOP 5 Fantasy Fights? -- Jacob<b>I've already done this one, however, here are five matchups I really wanted to see as a fan, all of which could have happened, but failed to come off for various reasons: Duran vs. Pryor at 140 pounds (assuming Hands of Stone could make junior welter around 1980 and '81 when the Hawk came into his own), Bowe vs. Tyson, Lewis and Mercer; and Pacquiao vs. Valero at 140 pounds.</b>

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Sturm vs. Macklin To be Shown Live on Epix in the United States

Epix Continues its Foray Into Boxing June 25th:
Live world championship boxing returns to EPIX with the World Boxing Association (WBA) middleweight title fight between defending champion Felix Sturm and top-rated contender� Matthew ?Mack the Knife? Macklin, televised live to the U.S. from the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany, Saturday, June 25, exclusively on EPIX the multiplatform premium entertainment service.
EpixHD.com, will stream the fight live as part of a free two-week trial offer.� The live broadcast and the live stream on EPIX ...

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Chantelle Cameron: Britain can medal at every weight at the Olympics

In the latest of our London 2012 boxing series, a Q&A with Chantelle Cameron, who this weekend will fight in the EU Championships

Chantelle Cameron from Northampton is the newest member of the Great Britain women's boxing squad after a whirlwind start to her career that has seen her go from novice to potential Olympian in less than 18 months.

An international kickboxer, 20-year-old Chantelle tried boxing to improve her hand speed. She had her first bout in November 2009 and defeated a far more experienced opponent within two rounds. She decided to apply for her boxing card and entered the 2010 National Senior Amateur Boxing Association Championships where she won the 64kg category at her first attempt.

In June 2010, Chantelle announced herself on the international stage by landing a silver medal in the EU Championship in Hungary. She was selected to represent England in the Women's World Amateur Championships in Barbados in September 2010 where she made the quarter finals at 64Kg and caught the eye of Britain's performance director, Rob McCracken. She was rewarded with a place in the GB squad in February 2011 in the 60kg Olympic weight category alongside Natasha Jonas, Ruth Raper and Amanda Coulson (the other Olympic weight categories are 51kg and 75kg).

Most recently, Chantelle defeated Sweden's world championship bronze medallist, Klara Svensson in Haninge, Sweden. Despite her inexperience, Chantelle is one of Britain's most exciting female boxing prospects and has won 20 of her 22 bouts. This weekend she will be joined by fellow Olympic squad members, Nicola Adams, Natasha Jonas and Savannah Marshall at the EU Championships in Poland where she will compete in the 60kg category and hopes to improve on the silver medal she won at last year's event.

When and where did you start boxing and why?

One-and-a-half years ago. I did kickboxing for nine years and competed in it for two. I started boxing as part of my training programme to try and improve my hand speed and pretty quickly realised I preferred boxing so decided to stuck with it.

Is there a history of boxing in your family?

My granddad boxed when he was in the army.

What other sports are you good at and were you ever tempted to stick with them rather than boxing?

I was good at most sports but never had the urge to push myself or compete until I tried kickboxing and then boxing.

Who has been the biggest influence in your career?

My mum and dad for the support they have given me.

What is the toughest part of your sport and how do you cope with that?

The fact you just cannot eat what you want. I don't have a big problem making the weight but I do miss being able to have something like a Chinese takeaway whenever I fancy it.

Describe your typical diet

We are fortunate in the GB squad as we have a full-time nutritionist from the English Institute of Sport who works with us. He monitors our diet and provides advice and education on what we can eat and what we need to do to stay within our weight range, particularly at tournaments when we need to make the weight every day. On a normal day I will have cereal and fruit for breakfast, pasta for lunch and some chicken and salad in the evening. I'm not that keen on the salad, but I love chicken!

Who are your main rivals from other countries?

Russia and China are both strong and have strength in depth. That said, the best female boxer in the world at my weight is Katie Taylor from Ireland.

How would you describe your boxing style?

I am an attacking boxer. I like to impose myself and get on top of my opponents.

You have only been on the Olympic programme for three months; what have been the biggest changes from your previous training routine?

I have learnt loads. It is great to be part of a structured, organised elite programme. The coaches are top class and I have also benefitted from having daily access to the sports science and medical team from provided by the EIS. They work with us every day and have particularly helped me to improve my strength and conditioning. The hardest part of being part of the programme is being away from home, but I can't complain as it is a brilliant opportunity to be a full-time athlete.

How have you improved since joining the Olympic programme?

My technique has got better and the coaches are teaching me the importance of using my head and thinking my way through a bout. My overall fitness and conditioning has also improved.

What has the last 18 months been like to go from a novice boxer to an Olympic hopeful?

It has gone so fast I am not sure I have taken it in. One minute I was having my first bout, three months later I was the English champion and three months after that, I made the last eight at the world championships. I just want to keep improving and who knows what might happen?

Who are the jokers in the squad?

Nicola Adams is very funny. Savannah Marshall doesn't say much but when she speaks it is usually worth the wait!

What do you do to relax away from training?

Hang out with friends and shopping.

What music do you listen to?

All sorts ? except classic rock! At the moment I am listening to Rhianna, Vybz Kartel and Gyptian.

Favourite boxers:

Floyd Mayweather is a great talent. I think Mike Tyson was the last truly great heavyweight and Sugar Ray Leonard was pure class.

Who is the most promising amateur boxer in the country?

Nicola Adams is the best female boxer. From the guys, I would probably pick Khalid Yafai.

How many medals do you think Britain can win at the 2012 Olympics?

As many as possible. We have some great boxers. On our day, we have the potential to win a medal at every weight.


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