Saturday, June 25, 2011

Top Of The World, Or Bottom: Devon Alexander Vs. Lucas Matthysse Preview And Prediction

alexander-matthysseRemember when Devon Alexander was near the top of the world? You don't have to think back too far. It wasn't so long ago. Last year, there was a front-page New York Times story about him -- unheard of for a boxer in this day and age -- prior to his bout with Andriy Kotelnik. Things took a downward turn with that fight, when the majority of people who watched the bout believe that Alexander didn't deserve the decision win. But still, he scored a coveted big-money bout against the world's #1 junior welterweight Timothy Bradley, and both men were guaranteed return bouts on HBO, win or lose. Things hit pretty close to rock bottom with that fight. Alexander fought poorly, and reluctantly, in a bout that oddly ended up in the Pontiac Silverdome and sold very few tickets. The ugly bout came to a conclusion with Alexander appearing to beg out of fighting after a head butt, only to seemingly abandon the histrionics moments after the referee signaled that judges should hand in their scorecards.

Saturday comes that HBO return bout for Alexander, and it's no easy bounce-back fight. The original idea was to face Marcos Maidana, but in Lucas Matthysse, Alexander might be going to war with the more dangerous of the two Argentinian power punchers. Maidana struggled with crafty veteran DeMarcus Corley, and arguably didn't deserve the decision win. Matthysse demolished Corley, knocking him down eight times. Some also thought Matthysse beat Zab Judah in a close fight, and between rounds Matthysse complained to his corner about cramping up, so it's reasonable to wonder whether we have yet to see the best of Matthysse.

That Alexander and his team took this difficult opponent -- even if HBO had some role in making sure Alexander was in tough -- speaks to the likelihood that they still believe in Alexander "The Great." Devon has said this will be the first of 20 wins in a row for him. You'd like to believe him, since he could be good for the sport: He's got an interesting story of being one of the few people at his boxing gym to be alive or out of jail; he's a talented black fighter from America; he's a ticketseller in St. Louis, one of the few American ticketsellers out there. But if he doesn't get back to his former glory Saturday night, Matthysse could establish himself as the rising talent in the division.

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Why The Klitschkos Should Not Fight

The moribund heavyweight division could be reignited ?with a master class in gentlemen jabbing,? argues Shaun Assael in a recent ESPN the Magazine article in which he takes the position that heavyweight champion brothers Wladimir and Vitali Klitschko should forsake their previous vows to never fight and go all Civil War for heavyweight supremacy.

civil-war
The great Axl Rose once sang, ?I don?t need your Civil War.? As usual, Axl and I agree.

If gentlemanly jabbing could truly revive the stagnant division and regain public interest, then surely Wladimir would have amassed a Justin Bieber-size following after enacting the phrase for 36 excruciating minutes against Sultan Ibragimov at Madison Square Garden in 2008, a performance which strongly influenced his becoming persona non grata on United States television until this summer.

I don?t believe the Klitschko brothers should fight, but whether or not I think it would be ?ghoulish? or ?gruesome,? the objections to the fight that Assael primarily focuses on, is almost irrelevant given the numerous other reasons for not wanting to see the Battle of the Champion Brothers (I don?t want it to sound too much like I?m bashing on Assael or his article; he takes a pretty difficult position and argues it persuasively and eloquently, I just don?t agree with his position).

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Quick Jabs: Floyd Mayweather -- Yin, Yang; The Fighter Of The Year Race; Marijuana As Boxing Aid; More


I keep posting videos that you might already have seen on the usual logic that if you haven't, you must. There are a number of great moments in the above video, but the best of them is when heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko stares menacingly at David Haye for an uncomfortably long time, and Haye then declares that he has a "hard-on."

This first sentence is for the ladies: What really hurts about a nut shot is that it's in the nuts, if you weren't aware. But for Haye's sake, I hope he rids himself of his stiffie prior to the Klitschko fight. Never before have I myself been hit in a boner. (<---Least likely sentence I ever expected to write.) But in my imagination it is quite painful to one's wood.

(Also, I write more about men's penises in connection with Wladimir Klitschko than I do for any other boxer. This is... odd.) 

Why don't we use that as a jumping-off point [boi-oi-oing] for the rest of a weird Monday edition of Quick Jabs? We'll hit the subjects in the headline, plus review a couple fights from the past weekend, recent TV ratings for Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr. and a few movements among boxers promoters, as well as yet more.

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Kirkland Returns To Ring On Vera vs. Suarez Bill In Texas

Top middleweight contender James Kirkland will return to the ring in his home state of Texas on Friday, June 24 and is determined to make a statement against Dennis Sharpe Jr. in their eight-round middleweight in-arena featured bout on a hard-hitting card taking place at the Dr. Pepper Ballpark in Frisco, Texas.
In the eight round [...]

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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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Video analysis: Is Margarito really getting a Cotto rematch?

Antonio Margarito is slowly being welcomed back into the boxing world. That doesn't mean everyone is greeting him with open arms.

During last week's Miguel Cotto-Ricardo Mayorga fight in Las Vegas, Margarito's picture was flashed on the massive scoreboard at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The crowd didn't exactly greet him with a standing ovation. Quite the opposite. The 7,000-plus showered the disgraced fighter with catcalls.

His California suspension for using loaded gloves during his fight with Shane Mosley is still fresh in the minds of many. It probably didn't help that the Mexican's picture was shown to a large gathering of Puerto Rican fight fans either. Margarito was caught using plaster on his hand wraps versus Mosley, but many people believe he did the same thing in his fight against Cotto too.

Funny enough, less than an hour after Cotto finished off Mayorga, his promoter Bob Arum was introducing Margarito during the postfight press conference and strongly hinting at the fact that he'll be fighting the Puerto Rican next.

Yahoo!'s lead boxing writer Kevin Iole joined us to talk about why Margarito's getting the first crack at Cotto.

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WBA champion Amir Khan lines up unification bout with Zab Judah

? Khan confirms next defence of light-welterweight title
? Briton will face Judah, 33, on 23 July in Las Vegas

Amir Khan has revealed the next defence of his light-welterweight title will be a unification bout with Zab Judah on 23 July.

The WBA champion will put his belt on the line, with Judah bringing his IBF strap to Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas.

Khan wrote on his Twitter page: "July 23rd, WBA/IBF unification fight. KHAN vs JUDAH. Mandalay Bay."

The 24-year-old beat Paul McCloskey in April and had been linked with fights against either Timothy Bradley or Erik Morales.

Judah, 33, beat England's Junior Witter in 2000 and was involved in a stormy bout with Kostya Tszyu, which ended up with him throwing a stool. He has also lost to Carlos Baldomir, Floyd Mayweather and Miguel Cotto.


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King Makes Mexican Broadcast Deal With Cadena Tres TV Network

Promoter Don King has been tenaciously promoting his Saturday fight card in St. Charles?that will make Missouri history with three world championships?but he made time to make sure this fight card will be seen in his beloved Mexico by striking a deal with Mexico?s Cadena Tres (?La Television Mas Abierta que Nunca?), which is seen [...]

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Rico Ramos Looking to be the Next Puerto Rican Star; Title Shot Against Akifumi Shimoda July 9th

It was just a couple of months ago on the undercard of the big fight of the year, Pacquiao vs. Mosley, super bantamweights Jorge Arce and Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. stole the show with an exciting 12 round fight.� On July 9th, the rising talents of the 122 lb division will be on display again, as Rico Ramos fights for his first world championship against the tough Akifumi Shimoda.
Born in Pico Rivera, California and of Puerto Rican descent, Rico Ramos will be the first to tell you that where he lives, ...

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Antillon training in Big Bear

Top-rated contender Urbano Antillon(L),Maywood,Ca. soaks in a tub of ice cubes to the amazement of his trainer Abel Sanchez(R), after his workout at The Summit in Big Bear,Ca. for his upcoming "Red-Hot" world Lightweight title fight against undefeated WBA Lightweight champion Brandon "Bam Bam" Rios,Oxnard,Ca. on Saturday, July 9 at The Home Depot Center in Carson,Ca. Top Rank promotes this event which will be telecast live on SHOWTIME Championship Boxing. --- Photo Credit : Chris Farina - Top Rank

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Solis suffered nasty knee injury in wacky first-round loss to Klitschko

So much for the cries of impropriety. After just three minutes of action, heavyweight title challenger Odlanier Solis had to retire from his fight against WBC champ Vitali Klitschko. His doctor says in spite of people claiming something was fishy, Solis suffered a severe knee injury towards the end of the first round.

"I haven't seen a knee torn apart like this in a long time," senior physician Dr. Joern Michael stated after doing an arthroscopy.

The diagnosis included an ACL rupture, articular cartilage damage and meniscal tear in Solis' right knee.

With 19,000 in attendance in Cologne, Germany, a huge build up to the fight and a large audience viewing on EpixHD.com, there was a lot of frustration about the surreal ending to the fight.� Former champ Lennox Lewis thought there had to be a pre-existing injury and said Solis was afraid to pull out before the fight.

According to Solis, his manager and the doctor the injury was suffered during the fight.

"I was just unlucky," says Solis. "I didn't even feel the shot that he landed on me and it certainly did not take me out. I felt that there was something wrong with my leg and I lost my balance. When I went down I knew immediately that there was something wrong. I promise that I will be back soon and even stronger ? if I get a second chance I will win the title."

Solis and his promoter Ahmet Oner want a rematch.

"Vitali knows exactly what it means to lose a fight due to an injury," Oner said. "He has been asking Lennox Lewis for a re-match for years and years and it didn't materialize. We hope that Vitali will not put Solis in a similar situation like he has been in. Solis has earned a second chance."

Solis is now 17-1. It's unlikely the 39-year-old Klitschko will find an opening to face Solis again in the future.

Tip via Fight News

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Video analysis: Canelo vs. Rhodes, then what?

Golden Boy Promotions has a cash cow in young Saul "Canelo" Alvarez, but it's walking a fine line with the 20-year-old Mexican.

Alvarez's popularity guarantees him filling 12,000-15,000 seats against pretty much any opponent, but when does the novelty wear off? It would be nice to see Alvarez in there against better competition.

Yahoo! Sports' lead boxing writer Kevin Iole previews Alvarez's fight against Ryan Rhodes and looks at possible future opponents.

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Antonio Tarver Prepares For War With Danny Green

The countdown begins. With just a month remaining, Antonio ?The Magic Man? Tarver is putting in long hours at the gym in Florida before his July 20 IBO World Cruiserweight Championship showdown with Aussie hero Danny Green at the Entertainment Centre in Sydney, Australia.

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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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Another day, another lawsuit filed against Floyd Mayweather

For his own self-preservation, Floyd Mayweather may want to come running back to the boxing ring. Fighting Manny Pacquiao isn't a safe proposition, but at least the eight week training camp would keep Floyd away from Las Vegas-area security guards and bouncers.

Mayweather, who is already dealing with two security guard-related incidents, now has another one on his plate.

According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Floyd's latest legal tussle involves a Las Vegas bouncer:

[...] Mayweather and his companies are being sued by a bouncer at the Strip nightclub Drai's (Bill's Gamblin' Hall & Saloon) after he was assaulted, the lawsuit said, by the boxer's bodyguard Jan. 2.

In a lawsuit filed last week in Clark County District Court, Clay Gerling alleged that an unknown bodyguard for Mayweather "maliciously assaulted and battered plaintiff, by grabbing the plaintiff, and choking him."

The Las Vegas Sun has more specifics:

The suit said Gerling was working as a security guard and had "carded," or asked for identification from Mayweather and others in his group when an unnamed Mayweather bodyguard grabbed and choked Gerling.

The suit says Gerling suffered injuries to his head and neck that may be permanent as well as "extreme and severe mental anguish."

Mayweather is now fighting a total of four battles around Las Vegas.

1. The boxer last week was charged in Las Vegas Justice Court with two misdemeanor harassment counts after an October confrontation with Southern Highlands security guards over parking issues.

TMZ chronicled the threat:

Mayweather allegedly threatened the guards -- who patrol the boxer's upscale housing community -- after he noticed the citations, claiming, "My homies have guns. If you want me to call them, they'd come over here and take care of you."

This latest incident with his community security guards is on top of an assault charge he's facing.

2. Mayweather faces a misdemeanor battery charge in connection with a Nov. 15 incident involving another guard, Shayne Smith.

[...] A confrontation ensued, and the boxer was verbally abusive and jabbed his finger into Smith's cheek, resulting in redness and discoloration on the left side of Smith's face, police said. A bench trial in that case is set for Sept. 1.

The most serious charge Mayweather's facing is one involving the mother of his children.

3. Mayweather also faces a July 29 preliminary hearing on felony charges, including coercion, grand larceny and robbery, in connection with a Sept. 9 incident with his three children and their mother, Josie Harris. Mayweather is free on $31,000 bail in that case.

Top Rank Promotions and Bob Arum made it clear on Saturday that Mayweather isn't even in the discussion for a Pacquiao fight in 2011. TRP is targeting Juan Manuel Marquez or Timothy Bradley for a November fight in Las Vegas.

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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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Thursday, June 23, 2011

McGuinness Headlining at Home in Canada Friday Night At the Fights

North American Boxing Association(?NABA?) �Lightweight Champion Logan Cotton McGuinness makes his second title defense this weekend at home in the 10-round main event against veteran Daniel ?Canerito? Ruiz on the ?Friday Night At The Fights? card at Hershey Centre in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
The ?Friday Night At the Fights? show is presented by United Boxing Promotions, in association with McGuiness? promoter, Hennessy Sports, and Groupe Yvon Michel.
World Boxing Association (?WBA?) No. 11 rated McGuinness (14-0-1, 7 KOs) captured his NABA belt and ...

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Haye buoyed by Calzaghe visit in final week of training

WBA world heavyweight champion David Haye was handed a priceless pre-fight boost on Tuesday night, when former world super-middleweight champion Joe Calzaghe visited the fighter's Vauxhall gymnasium and watched 'The Hayemaker' train for the best part of two hours.
The 30-year-old Haye meets IBF, WBO and IBO world heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko on July 2nd at [...]

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Video analysis: Canelo vs. Rhodes, then what?

Golden Boy Promotions has a cash cow in young Saul "Canelo" Alvarez, but it's walking a fine line with the 20-year-old Mexican.

Alvarez's popularity guarantees him filling 12,000-15,000 seats against pretty much any opponent, but when does the novelty wear off? It would be nice to see Alvarez in there against better competition.

Yahoo! Sports' lead boxing writer Kevin Iole previews Alvarez's fight against Ryan Rhodes and looks at possible future opponents.

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Earl Puzzled Over Katsidis Rematch Ruling

Over the past few days there have been some highly misleading statements circulating in the media regarding the reason why the planned August 13th rematch between Graham Earl and Michael Katsidis was shelved.
Notable scribes around the world have been attributing the failure of Earl-Katsidis II to materialise being either Graham Earl pulling out or the [...]

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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.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Fight Report: Summer Smash ? Choi World Class, Moment of Madness For Hamilton plus more

By Gianluca (Rio) Di Caro
On Saturday night close to fourteen hundred hardy souls braved the rain and packed the York Hall to capacity, stormy weather wasn?t going to stop them being ringside, at Spencer Fearon?s Hard Knock Boxing promotions ?Summer Smash? event, to watch former World Champs Choi Tseveenpurev (WBU/WBF) and Jackson Asiku (IBO) battle [...]

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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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Why is it so difficult to get big fights made?

Waiting for the bigger fights to get made these days is a lot like finding someone to bum a cigarette off: It takes a lot longer than it used to and when it finally happens, so much time has passed the anticipation has worn off. Mayweather-Pacquiao didn't happen and might not ever happen. It took forever to get Amir Khan-Marcos Maidana done. Paul Williams-Sergio Martinez reportedly is done, finally, though we'll believe it when we see it. Tim Bradley-Devon Alexander was on, then off, now maybe on again, and who the hell knows what's going on with Andre Dirrell-Andre Ward. Boxing is clearly in one of its down cycles and it sure would help if we could get a bunch of big fights made and done quickly to put the zing back in the game. Call it a boxing bail-out. But the bail-out isn't coming. Not quickly enough, anyway. It's a fight just to put a decent fight together. What the heck is going on?Industry insiders point to many things, none of them surprising: disharmony and an unwillingness among the game's power brokers to work together for the good of the sport; an acute disloyalty bred by a shrinking economy; fighters who think they're worth more than they are, and, as much as anything, business as usual in the fight game. "There are promoters working against promoters; there are managers working against some promoters, managers working only with some promoters. And you have to blame the networks, too," promoter Lou DiBella told RingTV.com.DiBella never has been shy about expressing his frustration with the fight game's byzantine and unregulated business model. He sees a business being held back by favoritism, disloyalty and lack of vision. "The industry is a completely unfair playing field but what nobody wants to pay attention to is we're heading straight downhill," DiBella said. "The majority of managers and fighters are not adjusting to the new marketplace. And it's resulting in a tremendous amount of disloyalty."Also, right now, more than at any other time I've seen, promoters are trying to pilfer other promoters' fighters and getting involved before a contract is up. That's because desperation makes for bad behavior."DiBella specifically cited what he feels is special treatment afforded some promoters by the networks, and also the practice of certain promoters to keep all of their bigger fights in-house; that is, making matches between fighters under contract to the same promoter. Many have made the case that both Top Rank and Golden Boy Promotions hurt the sport with this practice. Cameron Dunkin, who manages or co-manages Tim Bradley, Kelly Pavlik, Nonito Donaire, Sergio Mora and James Kirkland, among others, says he doesn't blame any promoter for going in-house with big fights."If I've got Kelly Pavlik and he's a draw, and he's doing a $2.3 million gate in Atlantic City (N.J.), why should I be forced to fight Paul Williams, who doesn't draw a $230 gate, and split the money?" Dunkin said. "So now you take a kid like that, and you do someone in-house that is willing to fight him, that doesn't want everything, and just loves the opportunity but makes a nice payday and gets a shot at him but it's in-house and it's easy to do. I don't blame Top Rank. I don't blame Golden Boy. They're easy fights to make. "And you've got someone who comes in from the outside and has not built an attraction -- Lou DiBella, Dan Goossen -- who don't have an A-side guy. They want to knock off your A-side guy but their guy can't sell 20 tickets and they want half the money. Why would you want to waste your time? I know the fans want to see great fights and everything, but there's another side to this."Dunkin said there's nothing unusual about what we're seeing now; it's boxing as usual. The only difference between the game now and when he started in it 24 years ago is then you had three big promoters -- Main Events, Top Rank and Don King. Today there are many more players in the game and that complicates things. Mike Criscio, who manages Alfredo Angulo and prospect Chris Avalos, among others, says he has seen some changes in the six or seven years he's been in the business and they involve fighters' expectations."A lot of these kids don't realize HBO and Showtime aren't paying money they used to pay these guys," Criscio said. "The fighters think there's endless money out there and there's not. They've cut back."This makes sense. Everything contracts in a struggling economy, including the fight game. Everyone holds onto as much as they can. These aren't the days of unlimited spending. But Criscio said there's something else at work too. "Some of these guys say they're going to fight but don't really want to fight these guys, they want to fight another one or two fights before they fight that guy to see what happens," Criscio said. "Some of these guys don't really have the balls. I've seen a big change in the last six or seven years. Seven years ago there were guys coming out fighting everybody. It was easy to get the fights made I wanted. Now people are shying away."It's not like it was few years ago when guys would say, 'I'll fight anyone put in front of me.'" Some would cite as proof of this the fact Khan-Maidana didn't get signed until after Maidana struggled with shopworn but tricky DeMarcus Corley in Argentina. Dunkin said fighters are never the problem. "I've managed well over 150 guys, and I've never had one fighter that was afraid of anything," Dunkin said. "There might be a guy who's more nervous than another guy, a little more edgy, but he still gets in there and fights his ass off. To me that's not a coward or someone who's afraid, or he wouldn't be doing this s---."He cited the Bradley-Alexander fight as a case study of a situation in which fans might think one fighter is afraid of another when in reality business decisions rule the day. "Do I want to see the fight? Yeah I want to see it happen!" Dunkin said. "But does Bradley want to sign a long-term deal with [promoter Gary Shaw] when he's a few months away from being out of his contract? He's willing to fight, he's even willing to do a rematch with [Alexander] within such a time period, so there will be two fights. But he's not going to re-sign a long-term agreement in order to fight him. He won't, so (Shaw) pulls the fight from us. The fight doesn't happen. That's not Tim Bradley's fault." Perhaps because his promotional company is not at the top of the food chain, DiBella sees the need for a top-down change for the entire industry. "All of the entities together have to assess the marketplace and there has to be business rationality," DiBella said. "And there has to be an even playing field. And there has to be a concept that there must be strategic moves that have to be made for the sport to have its big events that people care about. And that fights have to lead to fights. And that companies have to work together -- if only for the sport to survive."But this is the way boxing works. Always has, more or less, always will. Be patient. Sooner or later, the big fights will come. <b>Some random observations from last week:</b>From all indications, fight writers are absolutely giddy at the prospect of Floyd Mayweather Jr. getting jail time for allegedly punching around his baby momma and making off with her iPhone. It's become a favorite angle to calculate the number of years he might get if convicted on all 4,369 counts. The latest estimate is something like 148 consecutive life terms, though with good behavior he could get out a little sooner. That will teach him for not fighting Manny Pacquiao. ...Saul Alvarez has to be wondering how much longer his red hair and freckles will be the crutch on which lazy media types lean their tired leads. Based on how long we talked about Kassim Ouma's upbringing and David Reid's droopy eyelid, I'd say it's not ending anytime soon. Get used to it, Opie. ...I don't know whether I underestimated Daniel Ponce de Leon or over-estimated Antonio Escalante, but I'm pretty sure one of Escalante's molars landed in my backyard Saturday night. ...Vivian Harris never did have the greatest jaw in the world, but he's apparently made a career decision that mandates that he flop to the canvas whenever he is touched on or around the chin. I'm no expert, but I'm thinking that might be an impediment to achieving his long-range goals in this business. ... Jim Lampley, Larry Merchant and Harold Lederman must have decided in the opening moments of Saturday night's main event, or maybe even before, that they detest Sergio Mora at least as much as they adore Shane Mosley, and went from there. There's no other way to explain their entirely one-sided call of the fight on the PPV broadcast. For what it's worth, I scored the fight 115-114 for Mosley, but a draw or a one or two-point win for Mora is perfectly reasonable and not the atrocity our friends at HBO saw. Lampley and Merchant have been the best in the business for a good long while. It is an understatement to say this was not their best night. <i>Bill Dettloff, THE RING magazine's Senior Writer, is working on a biography of Ezzard Charles. <a href="mailto:dettloff@ptd.net">Bill can be contacted at dettloff@ptd.net</a></i>

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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Pascal, Foreman, &#8216;Father Time&#8217; &#8230; no one can stand in Hopkins&#8217; 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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Macklin Hits Germany Ahead Of Sturm WBA Title Challenge

Matthew Macklin's trainer Joe Gallagher wants his charge to go from double M to triple M over the remainder of this week as Saturday nights World title showdown with Felix Sturm in Germany's draws ever closer.
Gallagher want's Macklin to adopt Marvelous Marvin Hagler's mantra of "Mean, Moody, Magnificent" as he bids to upset [...]

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Solis suffered nasty knee injury in wacky first-round loss to Klitschko

So much for the cries of impropriety. After just three minutes of action, heavyweight title challenger Odlanier Solis had to retire from his fight against WBC champ Vitali Klitschko. His doctor says in spite of people claiming something was fishy, Solis suffered a severe knee injury towards the end of the first round.

"I haven't seen a knee torn apart like this in a long time," senior physician Dr. Joern Michael stated after doing an arthroscopy.

The diagnosis included an ACL rupture, articular cartilage damage and meniscal tear in Solis' right knee.

With 19,000 in attendance in Cologne, Germany, a huge build up to the fight and a large audience viewing on EpixHD.com, there was a lot of frustration about the surreal ending to the fight.� Former champ Lennox Lewis thought there had to be a pre-existing injury and said Solis was afraid to pull out before the fight.

According to Solis, his manager and the doctor the injury was suffered during the fight.

"I was just unlucky," says Solis. "I didn't even feel the shot that he landed on me and it certainly did not take me out. I felt that there was something wrong with my leg and I lost my balance. When I went down I knew immediately that there was something wrong. I promise that I will be back soon and even stronger ? if I get a second chance I will win the title."

Solis and his promoter Ahmet Oner want a rematch.

"Vitali knows exactly what it means to lose a fight due to an injury," Oner said. "He has been asking Lennox Lewis for a re-match for years and years and it didn't materialize. We hope that Vitali will not put Solis in a similar situation like he has been in. Solis has earned a second chance."

Solis is now 17-1. It's unlikely the 39-year-old Klitschko will find an opening to face Solis again in the future.

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European Light Heavy Champ Gutknecht Defends July 16th

European Light Heavyweight Champion Eduard Gutknecht (21-1, 9 KOs) will make a first defence of his title on July 16 when he takes on Lorenzo Di Giacomo (41-4-1, 19 KOs) in Munich. Gutknecht joined Team Sauerland at the beginning of the year and clinched the European title with an eighth-round TKO victory over Danny McIntosh last month.
?I have big plans for the future,? Gutknecht said. ?I have worked hard to become European champion. By successfully defending my title in Munich, I want to ...

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Alvarez takes another step toward stardom

LOS ANGELES -- Victor Ortiz scored an impressive knockout of Vivian Harris, putting the veteran down four times in less than three rounds, on Saturday at Staples Center. Daniel Ponce de Leon looked positively scary in his KO of Antonio Escalante. And Shane Mosley's listless performance in his draw with Sergio Mora was further evidence that he is in decline.Saul "Canelo" Alvarez was the talk of this card, though.Alvarez (34-0-1, 26 knockouts) was nothing short of sensational, becoming the first to knock out Carlos Baldomir since very early in the Argentine's career as 13,591 mostly Mexican and Mexican-American fans roared their approval.And it wasn't just the result, which wasn't terribly surprising given Baldomir's age (39) and the fact he has lost whatever hand speed he once had. It was <i>how</i> Alvarez did it.The 20-year-old from Guadalajara demonstrated maturity beyond his years, patiently outboxing a clever, awkward opponent with far more experience than he has. He displayed a world-class jab to set up powerful, well-timed rights.Baldomir (45-13-6, 14 KOs), reputed to have one of the best chins in boxing, took many of Alvarez's best shots early in the fight but gradually broke down as his baby-faced foe landed more and more telling blows.Then Alvarez gave the crowd exactly what it wanted - a thrilling finish in the third round. He landed one hellacious shot ... then another ... then another and Baldomir started to wilt. Finally, a straight left put the Argentine on his face and ended the fight two seconds before the end of the round as the crowd erupted."I'm very happy, I'm full of emotions to be the first to knock out Baldomir in a big fight," he said through a translator.Again, we shouldn't read too much into a victory over a faded opponent who was never particularly good to begin with. Baldomir was a good test, though, a tough, veteran fighter who was desperately trying to hang on as a contender. And he aced the test.It's becoming more and more obvious that he'll be the next Mexican star, among fans both south of the border and in the United States. He's good looking, he's well-spoken, he's humble, he mixes well with the masses ... and it is becoming more and more clear that he's very talented.Of course, he must continue to win. And one person with considerable knowledge of boxing is fairly certain he will."He hits really hard," Baldomir said through a translator. "I was surprised by his power. No one has hit me like he did. He's definitely going to be a real champion. He's the real deal."<a href="mailto:ringtveditor@yahoo.com">Michael Rosenthal can be reached at RingTVeditor@yahoo.com</a>

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Jackie Kallen: Building a professional boxer is a tricky process

By Jackie Kallen Building a professional boxer is a tricky process. As a manager, you have to make the right moves at the right time ...

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Ariza integral part of Pacquiao&#039;s formula for success

<font size="1" color="#000000">Alex Ariza's new-school nutritional and conditioning methods have meshed well with Freddie Roach's old-school boxing training philosophy. Manny Pacquiao's amazing rise from junior lightweight to welterweight over the past two years is proof of Ariza and Roach's successful teamwork. Photo / Ted Lerner</font>BAGUIO CITY, Philippines -- Old school, old school and new school. When the history of the great Manny Pacquiao is finally written in stone decades down the road, those three ingredients must surely make up the foundation of any narrative when trying to explain the hows and whys of this once in a many generation fighting machine. It's the first two ingredients in this explosive mix, though, that are the most obvious. The third is not, and is, in fact, relatively unknown, and, lately quite often misunderstood.The first old school is Pacquiao himself. Pacquiao's willingness to always fight the best out there, his insatiable training habits, his all action style, and his fearlessness against all challengers make him a boxing purist's dream come true. Then there's the second old school, Pacquiao's trainer of nine years, Freddie Roach. Roach didn't have a spectacular career as a fighter, but he did ply his craft under the ultimate old-school boxing trainer, the legendary Eddie Futch. As a trainer himself, Roach has become to boxing what Phil Jackson has to basketball, a sort of Zen Master, quietly imparting his down to earth knowledge and psychology of the sweet science to mold raw talents into consistent winners. Ironically, it's the third ingredient on the list, Pacquiao's strength and conditioning coach Alex Ariza, who has in the last two years helped to turn much of boxing, which is decidedly an old-school sport, on its head, and challenged nearly every notion of how to approach the sport. In clear complicity with these two old-school legends, Ariza, who joined Roach three years ago and helped Pacquiao for his fight with David Diaz, has been responsible for taking what was already an incredible fighter and doing things with him that were never thought possible; Pacquiao's almost unheard of ability to move up in weight and still maintain (perhaps even increase) his already awesome speed and power. It's an unusual phenomenon that has people everywhere shaking their heads in wonderment, with some claiming that nobody can so easily go up in weight and do the things that Pacquiao has done. Legitimately, anyway. It's led to accusations that surely Pacquiao must be on steroids or other illegal performance-enhancing drugs."It's a compliment," said Ariza of the lingering PED claims, while watching Pacquiao shadow box on the second day of camp at the Shape Up Gym in Baguio. "We're doing such a good job, people just can't understand it. They think it has to be something else. It HAS to be. People think overnight he (Pacquiao) turned into this relentless monster. But it took him two years to get to this point. The truth is that it's just hard work, and we have a great team." Hard work it is, indeed, with a punishing training regime that leaves any and all onlookers in awe. But behind the seemingly endless hours of old school physical toil that are hallmarks of Pacquiao's workouts, lies a modern and very scientific program designed to develop and maximize Pacman's unique gifts. But the question still remains: how do you take a guy who as a fighter is a natural 140 pounder, and whose walking around weight is 146-148 pounds, and turn him into a perfectly tuned fighting machine ready to do battle with much bigger men such as Oscar De La Hoya, Miguel Cotto, Joshua Clottey, and now Antonio Margarito? The way not to do it, Ariza says, is to go old school."We saw with Kelly Pavlik when he tried to move up in weight," he said. "He lost everything. He went flat, he couldn't move, he couldn't get up. Science has to play a role in a sport that has an old-school mentality. That's why Freddie Roach is such an exceptional trainer. Even though he's got old-school teachings, he pulls in the outside-the-box stuff, the more scientific comprehensive ways of training. He knows that just running five miles a day is not going to cut it, especially being such an offensive trainer that he is. You have to have that high intensity, that high level of efficiency to be able to carry out his kind of game plan. "We're building a body that normally doesn't carry that kind of muscle on it. Putting on six pounds on a guy like Manny Pacquiao is like putting on 20 pounds on a normal person. That's why when he takes his shirt off at the weigh in and he looks so ripped, people think he's on steroids." Forget about the intrigues of what may or may not be inside Pacquiao's water bottle. Ariza says; "It's just a mixture of over the counter herbal supplements that will serve Pacquiao without any side effects such as crashing or jitters or upsetting his stomach, because he has a very sensitive stomach."My job is to take him where he's never been before. Where am I going to be able to build muscles that he's never used before, and it doesn't hold us back? It's going to be functional, it's going to compliment everything else that we're doing. We have to start building muscles that he's never used before. Functional muscles of course. "The regime created by Ariza to build that muscle and maintain the speed and power involves two parts. The first is what he refers to as "core training," a phrase which has become a bit of buzzword in the last few years in the world of exercise and nutritional training, but is seldom heard in boxing. The "core" may sound like it means just abdominals, but it goes much deeper than that. The "core" is the whole area between the shoulders and the pelvis. The idea behind strengthening the "core" is that this area provides the foundation for all other areas of the body to function at its highest levels. Core training thus builds the muscles to produce explosive, powerful movements with mean and lean efficiency, and less likelihood of injury.To accomplish this, twice a week, Ariza has Pacquiao doing punishing isometrics, where he has to hold a certain position for an extended period of time. In addition he has Pacquaio performing plyometrics, grueling drills involving quick bursts of energy, such as sprints on the track, high intensity cone and ladder drills, even swimming. "We're focusing on faster-twitch muscle fibers," Ariza says, "getting them to fire, feet complimenting the hands, hands complimenting the feet, balance, coordination. "The exercises are often mind numbingly repetitious and painful beyond imagination. Ever the warrior, Pacquaio says he doesn't mind core training, but Ariza said that in reality, he actually hates them."You see this is something that Manny has been doing since he was five years old," Ariza said referring to traditional boxing drills such as hitting the mitts, sparring and running. "His muscles are accustomed to being able to push and drive and drive and drive. What I would like to see is that kind of determination and intensity when we're doing the hard stuff, things that he's never done before; the track, the swimming pool, the speed drills, the foot drills, things that aren't easy, things that he hasn't been doing since he's five years old. It's one thing when you say, 'Oh I did 17 rounds on the mitts.' Well you should be able to do that. You've been doing that since you were five, asking for another round. I want to see him ask me for another drill, ask me for another lap, ask for me another sprint, ask me for something."The second part of Ariza's training module involves extremely high caloric intake. He has Pacquiao consuming over 7000 calories of food per day, alternating between high protein solid foods and then liquid protein shakes. Pacquiao is forced to eat at least every two hours, whether he's hungry or not. Contrary to the myth that Pacquiao enjoys fighting at higher weights because he can eat all he wants, Ariza says the constant consumption of food actually gets to the fighter, even if he's eating his favorite Filipino dishes."Manny tells me, 'You know when I grew up, I never ate. Now I'm eating all the time and I'm miserable.'" However, Ariza says Pacquiao soldiers on through the pain and tears, especially when the stakes are huge."Our best camp ever I believe was the Cotto fight because I honestly believe that Manny had a little bit of fear of Miguel. His height, his strength, his power. Manny took him a lot more serious. He was up at five o'clock in the morning. He was listening to me when it came to the drills and the speed work and the swimming. He didn't want to leave any rock unturned. He wanted every advantage he could get. And his conditioning showed in the Cotto fight. He took Cotto's best beating and then when we got past the sixth round, well now we're gonna see who really, really did the work. Manny just never stopped. "****Ariza, 35, was born in Colombia and migrated to New York at 13 years old with his single mom and two older siblings. After a few years in New York the family headed to Southern California. Ariza eventually graduated from San Diego State University with a degree in Exercise and Nutritional Science. Although he had never boxed, Ariza felt his future lay in boxing, a sport where modern training techniques are often looked at with suspicion."Boxing offered me a forum," he said, "a niche, where I could apply my own theories, my own concepts, my own way of what I thought was more important, recovery vs. muscle failure. I thought boxing was that place where I could have that opportunity. It's the hardest sport in the world and they didn't have science and conditioning coaches. On the flip side of that, if you don't have a trainer, if Freddie wasn't here, this thing would have never worked. "Indeed Ariza originally ran into this traditional stubbornness to try new things in his first forays into boxing. He worked with Diego Corales and Erik Morales in the late 1990's, and then with Angel Manfredy in the early 2000's. However, he clashed with several trainers and others in the camps, who resented the outsider with the new ideas. The bad vibes led Ariza to take some time off from the sport in 2003. He had a friend who was a stunt man in Hollywood, and he got into doing stunt driving in the movies. Ariza appeared in several movies as a stunt double, one time substituting as the never-can-die masked murderer in the not so noteworthy film, "Slaughterhouse Massacre." He then moved to Vegas where he operated a vending machine business. Then, in 2007, came the fortuitous call from his stunt man friend, who just so happened to train at Roach's Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, Calif. He told Ariza that Roach was looking for a new strength and conditioning coach. Ariza called up Roach and introduced himself. Roach initially said he wasn't sure if he was going to hire another conditioning coach, and that he should call back in a couple of weeks. Ariza followed up a few weeks later and Roach invited him out to L.A. to put a name to the face. Roach picks up the story."Justin Fortune (Roach's previous conditioning coach) left my organization and opened up his own place. I didn't have a strength coach. I got about a hundred resumes from people from all over the world that wanted to work for me. He showed up at my door and said, 'I want the job.' I said, 'What's your background?' He told me. I checked him out a little bit. OK, I says, 'Manny Pacquiao is not going to fight for another eight months to a year. I want you to work with all my other fighters for free and see what kind of job you do.' Well, he showed up every day." Ariza first worked with some MMA fighters who trained with Roach, including Adrei Arlovski, Tito Ortiz and George St. Pierre."Everyone one of them showed improvement," Roach said. "Not everyone made it of course. Sometimes he didn't get along with a certain personality, that happens in life. He wasn't 100% with everybody, but that's natural too." In the spring of 2008, Roach was satisfied to the point where he now felt comfortable handing off his prized ward to Ariza. Ariza recalls that the first thing Freddie said to him before he began working with Pacquiao was a bit of old-school advice."Freddie told me, 'Don't f___ up his speed,'" Ariza said laughing. The rest, as the saying goes, is boxing history."Alex makes sure Manny's on weight all the time," Roach said. "He keeps the weight on him during camps. Because Manny does get a little too light. Manny is naturally a 140 pounder. It's just that the competition is at higher weight classes. One thing about Alex is that he doesn't do any other sport. He does boxing and boxing only. He doesn't do football. He doesn't cross train with the football programs with the weights like most strength coaches want to do. I mean why would you want to lift weights when the main asset of your guy is speed? Why would you want to slow him down? We have a good program. It's worked. It's proven with Manny Pacquiao, now with Amir Kahn, (Julio) Chavez Jr. They're all in the same exact program. Of course everyone has different needs. Whatever the points they need worked, we push that particular point harder."This begs the question: Could Pacquiao have done what he has done, going up in weight, maintaining his speed and power, without the services of Ariza?"I don't think so," Roach said. "If the weight gain was just eating more food with no one directing him, it would be counterproductive. We'd have a little heavier guy, but maybe not as solid. Manny's naturally 140 pounds, but he'll come in for the fight at 150 pounds ripped. The diet that they're on, and the foods that they eat, of course there's a little give and take also. Alex has a few problems with Manny because Manny has a Philippine diet, and he's used to that. And that's what he's been working with his whole life. If you take rice away from Manny Pacquiao he can't work out. There's probably better foods out there for energy but his staple food is rice. So there's always give and take. Alex has been a big part of it. Between my top guys, well, I can't do my job without him."Ariza doesn't oversee his program alone. He gets regular advice and assistance on administering Pacquiao's regime from Teri Tom, a dietician at UCLA, and Aundrea Macias, a kinesiology expert at San Diego State. "Aundrea does all my research analysis. We analyze all the exercises, risk vs. reward. I run it by her and she tells me what's best. Manny's not in his twenties anymore, and we have to be careful what we do. The margin of error that we have at this level is zero. It's got to be perfect. At the end of the day, I'm going to have to answer for it. I'm the one who takes care of the weight, I'm the one who takes care of the conditioning, and that's why Freddie has me here. I can't be a quarter of a pound off. When they step on that scale at that certain day, at that certain time, they need to be that certain weight or you're fired. " Although Ariza clearly eschews old-style training techniques, including even jogging in the morning, Roach has taught him that the best mix is to grab a bit of the old and a bit of the new, if mainly for the fact that much of the old-school techniques are ingrained in the psychology of most fighters and, thus, have value in their familiarity. "My trainer Eddie Futch wouldn't let anyone do that," Roach said of modern training science. "And I still believe that nothing takes the place of pounding that pavement. But I'm open minded. When you see guys flipping tires and doing these crazy exercises that hurt their backs, you know, we live in a world with a lot of technology that perfectly do those exercises for you. I'm old school in training, like we work our ass off in here, but to the new stuff I'm a little bit acceptable because I find that if you do too much of the old school stuff you have a tendency to burn out. I'm very open to suggestion, but only if it makes sense to me. If it doesn't make sense to me, I'm not going to do it."Says Ariza; "Freddie likes to say, 'Just because it's the right thing to do, it might not be the best.' So for now, six weeks out from fighting the biggest man Pacquiao has ever fought, Ariza continues the never ending balancing act, mixing his new school, with Roach's and Pacquiao's old school. As it all unfolds he never fails to realize just how fortunate he is to be able to ply his unique trade for the best in the business."Sometimes it's surreal," Ariza said. "Sometimes I'll be standing up there at the Wild Card and I'm standing next to Freddie Roach. It's like a struggling actor coming to Hollywood and next thing you know you're working for Martin Scorcese. He gave me a shot and I made it. Fortunately when I got Manny he wasn't as big as he is now. We had time to develop a relationship without there being so much distraction. It just so happened that it exploded after a year, then we started getting so busy. "Freddie's probably the only trainer out there who would let somebody in like me and have that level of responsibility. He knows and trusts me. He knows what I do, he knows whatever I argue for is the best thing for Manny. I don't think I'd get as far if I didn't have his support."

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Weekend Preview: Garcia vs. Arnaoutis

<b>FRIDAY</b> <b>DANNY GARCIA VS. MIKE ARNAOUTIS</b><b>Rounds / weight class:</b> 10 rounds / junior welterweights<b>Location:</b> Philadelphia<b>Television:</b> Telefutura<b>The backdrop:</b> Garcia (18-0, 12 KOs) is an exciting young prospect from Philadelphia, who will be fighting at home for third time in five fights. Golden Boy Promotions, his promoter, obviously hopes to make him a significant attraction in Philly. He struggled to win a split decision over capable Ashley Theophane in February, raising questions about his future, but he responded by scoring knockouts in his next two fights. This will be his toughest test. Arnaoutis (22-6-2, 10 KOs) has lost four of his past five fights - all to good fighters - but is still competitive and has experience. Only Victor Ortiz was able to stop him.<b>Also fighting:</b> Anthony Flores vs. Arash Usmanee, 8 rounds, junior lightweights<b>Rating the card:</b> C+. Garcia, an aggressive boxer-puncher, is fun to watch. And it will be interesting to see how he does in a legitimate test.<b>Also Friday:</b> Pongsaklek Wonjongkam defends his flyweight title against Suriyan Por Chockchai in Thailand. Wonjongkam (76-3-1, 40 KOs) took the title from Koki Kameda in March. This is his second defense. Chockchai (14-4-1, 4 KOs) has won six consecutive fights but hasn't faced anyone near Wonjongkam's ability.

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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Bantamweights relishing opportunity presented by Showtime&#039;s latest tournament

<object width='640' height='480'><param name='movie' value='http://images.ringtv.com/7.0.2/swf/video.swf?sa=1&si=7&i=299'></param><param name='wmode' value='transparent'></param><embed src='http://images.ringtv.com/7.0.2/swf/video.swf?sa=1&si=7&i=299' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' wmode='transparent' width='640' height='480'></embed></object>LOS ANGELES -- Showtime's second tournament, this one at bantamweight, was meant to be another six-man, quasi-round-robin competition like the Super Six World Boxing Classic. It ended up being a four-man, single-elimination competition, though, when Nonito Donaire and Fernando Montiel refused to take part.Don't be too disappointed. This one, just like the 168-pound competition, is compelling but will provide quicker gratification.Vic Darchinyan will face Abner Mares, and Yonnhy Perez will take Joseph Agbeko on the same card Dec. 11 in Irapuato, Mexico in the semifinals with the winners (and losers) to meet early next year.That's four important 118-pound fights in a span of a few months."I'm really excited," Mares said at a news conference Thursday to promote the event. "We're making history. This is a great tournament for the smaller guys -- two guaranteed fights that won't be easy in a row. I think that's exciting."One fascinating element to the tournament is that the fighters already are intertwined.Perez (20-0-1, 14 knockouts) already has beaten Agbeko (27-2, 22 KOs), the Colombian outpointing the Ghanaian last October to win a bantamweight belt, and drew with Mares (20-0-1, 13 KOs) in May.Meanwhile, Agbeko outpointed Darchinyan (35-2-1, 27 KOs) in July of last year in Darchinyan's only fight at 118 pounds.Thus, the tournament could provide second opportunities for all four fighters.That fact isn't lost on Perez, who is taking nothing for granted even though he beat Agbeko fairly soundly in their first meeting."I still need to prepare myself 100 percent," he said through a translator. "I know every fight is different, even against the same fighter. I know I beat him convincingly but every fight is different."Agbeko is a strong guy, a good fighter."Of course, the winner of the tournament will emerge as one of the leading figures among the lighter-weight fighters even without Donaire and Montiel in the field.However, none of the four has as much to gain as Mares. The 2004 Mexican Olympian, who lives in Montebello, Calif., has hit the jackpot in terms of the opportunity presented to him.He opens the competition against the biggest name in the field in his native country with the prospect of getting a rematch against Perez, who Mares is convinced he beat. Also, as the youngest fighter in the competition, the soon-to-be 25-year-old has a tremendous platform on which to establish himself.Now all he has to do it win."It couldn't be scripted better," said Richard Schaefer, Mares' promoter. "Abner faces Vic Darchinyan, which is fantastic for him. He's the younger, bigger guy and he's fighting in Mexico. This will really give him a chance to make a name for himself there. It's the perfect situation."Like I've said, though, we work hard to get these guys opportunities. Now it's up to Abner to deliver."Mares was the perfect diplomat, saying the four all have an equal chance of winning the tournament.And he gave Darchinyan due respect, acknowledging that the four-time titleholder at flyweight and junior bantamweight has considerable power and more experience than he has.Mares also is very confident, though. He watched Agbeko break down Darchinyan and sees himself in a similar position."I'm not going to say what's going to happen," he said. "I have a plan, though. I'm a boxer. And Darchinyan doesn't like opponents who are constantly moving away from his punches. That's an advantage I have."He has tremendous power and more experience but I have the youth and more than anything the hunger to win this tournament."Darchinyan too has an important opportunity.The Armenia-born Aussie utterly flopped in his only fight at bantamweight, raising questions about whether he has the physical strength to campaign against top 118-pounders.He insists he does. He said he felt very strong against Agbeko and actually outweighed the African by five pounds on fight night. He was weak mentally, he said."I haven't really told this to the media but he disrespected me and I couldn't handle it," said Darchinyan, referring to his meeting with Agbeko at a news conference before their fight. "I was burning inside. He upset me by putting his (fist) on my jaw. I told him to take away his hand but he didn't. I was ready to punch him there. I didn't sleep for two, three days after that I was so upset. So in the fight I tried to knock him out in the first round. You can't do that in boxing. You have to be patient."So what happened was I missed all my punches. I was jumping in from three meters away trying to hit him. I was just out of control."And against Mares?"I proved I can stay calm against Rodrigo Guerrero [in March]," he said. "I wasn't happy that he was holding me but I stayed calm. I used my experience. I'm still going to go for the knockout against Mares] but I'm not going to be stupid."Perez is ahead of the curve because he beat the man [Agbeko] who beat the man [Darchinyan].His motivation against Agbeko is to repeat his performance so he can get to the second round, where things could get interesting. He would receive either a rematch with Mares, who also happens to be a close friend, or fights Darchinyan.He said he prefers the latter for the same reason Mares is excited to fight Darchinyan -- the name recognition. Also, Perez said, "It would something new."So does that mean he wants Darchinyan to win? Not necessarily."This is a weird situation," Perez said with a smile. "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."Agbeko has an opportunity to gain instant gratification.The former titleholder cited a head butt in the 10th round as one reason he lost against Perez, although in reality he was too far behind on points to rally if he couldn't score a knockout.Agbeko also said he didn't train as hard or as long as he should have, implying that he was feeling good about himself after beating Darchinyan and might've taken Perez for granted.Not this time."I'm very, very excited," Agbeko said. "I wasn't prepared the first time. He's physically very strong in all his fights. I've seen many of them. I will be very strong, too. And I'll be smarter this time too."It's always good to get another chance."The biggest winner so far is Ken Hershman, executive vice president and general manager of Showtime Sports, who has held the Super Six tournament together in spite of numerous problems.The fact he intended for this to be another six-man tournament is a testament to his faith in the product. And, just as he was before the start of the Super Six, he is brimming with excitement over this competition."The lesson I learned from [Super Six] is that it's a great concept," he said. "It's going to come to an end on schedule, or close to it. I think it's a powerful way to structure boxing. We couldn't get six fighters for this one or we would've done it again in that format. We had problems but, like a marriage, you work through them and everyone benefits in the end."...I think it's good to be able to showcase a different format this time. It'll conclude much more quickly, with the end result coming in just two fights. And these are can't-miss fights. All four of these guys are fearless. This going to be good."

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