If all the great heavyweights aren’t NFL linebackers these days, they’re fighting in Germany.
That means there aren’t many in the dinosaur division, perhaps just a Wladimir Klitschko defeat away from extinction.
Klitschko might be at a crossroads that determines whether he will ever have a chance to move on and into consideration for greatness.
If he can’t dispel lingering questions left by a difficult victory five years ago over powerful Samuel Peter in a rematch on Sept. 11 in Frankfurt, he is in danger of being an oddity in a division that has become a museum piece since Mike Tyson’s self-destructive era.
Klitschko’s trainer, Emanuel Steward, thinks he will ensure further opportunity at securing his place in history with a knockout of Peter, a Nigerian who knocked down Klitschko three times in 2005 before the Ukrainian survived the dramatic for decision.
The technically-proficient Klitschko, likeable and philosophical, has never fulfilled his potential. That’s not exactly his fault. Steward remembers Lennox Lewis.
For years, Lewis was the frustrating face of the could-be, wannabe until he beat Evander Holyfield 1999 and then Tyson in 2002.
Boxing wouldn’t be what it is without bitter rivals, business partners who exchange insults, then punches while enriching each other and ultimately defining one another. What would Ali have been without Joe Frazier and George Foreman?
Klitschko never has had a Frazier or Foreman or Holyfield or even a Tyson. In time, Steward believes he will. In part, there is longevity as the very best in a division with few rivals, much less contenders.
“If you keep winning, something is going to come up,’’ Steward said Wednesday from Klitschko’s training camp in Austria.
Steward looks at David Haye and sees an emerging rival, a potential business partner who can unlock Klitschko’s designs on history.
“Wlad just needs to get some big-name opponents, and I think that will happen,” said Steward., who is nervous about the Peter rematch. “You can only be judged by your performances against the best, and unfortunately, Wlad hasn’t had anything to that degree.
“But the heavyweight division will always spring up a situation. I think if a fight with David Haye takes place, which Wladimir has said he thinks it will, he’ll be considered a great fighter. If you’re the heavyweight champion and you keep winning, eventually something is going to come up.”
So far, I’m not sure I’ve seen much about Haye that says great. Haye is a good talker, which is good for business, In the ring, however, little has yet to emerge that says he can shake Klitschko’s singular hold on the heavyweight division. That said, I hope Haye’s is all that Steward say he is.
At 34, Klitschko has a few years – four or five — left in which to finally fulfill all that he might have in a different era. For the here-and-now, however, there is the immediate task at hand. Beat Samuel Peter, or the heavyweights are one step closer to a spot in a glass case next to that Tyrannosaurus rex exhibition.
A couple of jabs
· Newly-minted Filipino Congressman Manny Pacquiao must be learning how to play politics. After Antonio Margarito was licensed last week for the Nov. 13 fight at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas, Pacquiao was quoted as saying he doesn’t believe Margarito’s repeated claim that he didn’t know former trainer Javier Capetillo tried to load up his gloves during Tapegate before his loss to Shane Mosley in 2009. No matter what Pacquiao believes, the controversy could plant some doubt in Margarito, who might begin to wonder at his ability to punch regardless of whether he knew about the tape job. Pacquiao is trying to plant that seed of doubt
· There is plenty of moral chest-thumping about whether Margarito should have been licensed in Texas after California stood by its revocation of his license. Like so many others, I also believe that Margarito knew that Capitello was trying to turn hands into a loaded weapon. I’ll say it again: If you’ve got a rock in your shoe, you know it. But there has yet to be any evidence that Margarito is lying. There is just a lot of preaching from a very crowded pulpit.