Audio: Dyah Davis, Gato Figueroa & Marc Abrams on the Sunday Sizzler

Dyah Davis, Marc Abrams, Gato Figueroa LIVE!! Weekly Sunday Morning Open Line with 15rounds.com’s Johnny Schulz writer presents: Talking BOXING with JSizzle and New York Dan NYD – A weekly Sunday Morning boxing show covering Boxing from all angles. Alongside and boxing aficionado Danny “NYD” Stasiukiewicz, Marc Abrams.




TITLE FIGHT IN CLEVELAND


Cleveland, OH – “ESPN Friday Night Fights” invades Cleveland, OH on February 19th live from the Wolstein Center on the campus of Cleveland State University. The star studded night of boxing will feature the homecoming of 2008 United States Olympic Team member and undefeated professional Shawn “Showtime” Porter in a twelve round main event against Russell Jordan of Rochester, NY for the NABO Jr. Middleweight Title. Cleveland’s Porter 12-0 (10 KO’s), recently named as one of ESPN’s top 20 prospects in the world today, will bring his exciting all action style to the bout against Jordan 15-6 (10 KO’s) in the Jr. Middleweight clash. The bout will feature an interesting clash of styles as Porter, who stands 5’7″ and is orthodox, will try to impose his will on the taller southpaw Jordan, who stands 6’2″.

Also featured on the ESPN broadcast will be rising Welterweight prospect Lanard Lane 10-0 (7 KO’s) from Houston, TX as he squares off with Martin Tucker 7-4 (3 KO’s) from nearby Toledo, OH in an 8 round Jr. Welterweight clash.

The ESPN broadcast will open up with one of the hardest punching prospects in boxing today as Dominic Wade 5-0 (5 KO’s) goes toe to toe with Omar Bell 6-1 (4 KO’s) of Atlanta, GA in a 6 round Middleweight contest. The heavy fisted Wade, from Largo, MD, will look to keep his knockout streak alive in a bout that promises to be action packed from the opening bell.

This value packed 9 bout card will also feature some of Cleveland and Ohio’s greatest boxing prospects. Cleveland’s Dante Moore 6-0 (4 KO’s) will battle Allentown, PA’s Marvin Rivera 4-4-2 (1 KO) in a 6 round Jr. Middleweight bout. Cleveland’s amateur standout Wilkins Santiago will also be highlighted as he makes his professional debut Columbus, OH’s Troy Nelson in 4 round Middleweight match. Another Cleveland prospect will do battle as Julius Leegrand 2-0 will square off with Toledo’s Eric Ricker in a 4 round battle of Lightweights. Youngstown’s finest will also be on display as Jake Giuriceo 5-0-1 (2 KO’s) will face Elkhart, IN’s Sam Gibson in a 6 round clash of Jr. Welterweights. Also, Youngstown’s Chris Hazimihalis 1-0 (1 KO) will be pitted against Independence, MO’s Steven Cox 1-0 (1 KO) in a rare battle of young undefeated Lightweights. Last but not least on this card will be Shawn Porter’s undefeated United States Olympic teammate Gary Russell Jr. 6-0 (3 KO’s) from Capitol Heights, MD in a 6 round Featherweight bout.

Tickets for ESPN’s Friday Night Fights will go on sale Monday, January 11 at 10 AM and start at just $25. Tickets can be purchased at the Wolstein Center’s box office, through any Ticketmaster outlet, or the Ticketmaster charge-by-phone. For more information, call 216.687.9292.




2010 Crystal Ball part 3


Humberto Soto carries the WBC laurels at 130 but last time out fought up at Lightweight. He hasn’t decided yet if he’s going to 135 full time yet. I suspect he’ll flit back and for until either he gets one of the top guys at Lightweight or can’t make 130 anymore. Nobody except possibly Robert Guerrero is capable of being Soto at Super Featherweight. Guerrero will be impressive in the coming year fighting 3 times one being against Mzonke Fana. Such wins along with Soto abdicating his thrown could see Guerrero becoming top dog here.

Roman Martinez has to defend his WBO crown against mandatory Ricky Burns. That fight is at purse bids currently and while Burns is a good fighter it’s unlikely he’ll unseat Martinez. Juan Carlos Salgado burst into the limelight with a huge KO over Jorge Linares he’ll make his first defense against Takashi Uchiyama. That should let us know where Salgado is. I suspect Salgado will stop Uchiyama and then fight in America & Mexico before the years out. Linares will use 2010 as a rebuilding exercise fighting on a few Golden Boy undercards.

When Chris John came onto the world scene in 2003 he wasn’t very well known but slowly year after year he’s chipped away and got the begrudging respect of his peers and fans alike. The first sign that he maybe more than just a belt holder came in March 06 when he surprised everyone beating Juan Manuel Marquez. Unfortunetely he wasn’t able to capitalise on that, taking nearly 3 years to get a big fight. Then he made his much anticipated American debut when he fought Rocky Juarez only to be awarded a draw, 7 months later righted that wrong again in America. He’ll not fight until April/May as he has been ill with no obvious opponent. Yordan will fight Ponce De Leon in January if Ponce De Leon wins that will be one foe though look for Yordan to go a different way is he’s victorious. Elio “Kid” Rojas went to Japan and performed very well to snare the WBC crown and he’ll be back on the road this time to Mexico where he’ll meet veteran former champ Guty Espades who he should stop. Hopefully Rojas will be busier than most Don King fighters and fight a few times though he may have to be a road warrior to do so. JuanMa Lopez will break down Steve Luevano for an 8th round stoppage. On the same show Cuban Dynamo Yuriorkis Gamboa will fair better with Rogers Mtagwa than Lopez did and score a late KO. Both guys have been on a collision course for months before finally getting down to business in June. That looks like a bombs away fight that will see someone’s star assend even higher. I see it ending inside 5 rounds possibly with both guys hitting the canvas, though i’ll go with Lopez to get the win. After a few months off to recuperate Lopez gets back to action against Mario Santiago after Santiago beat Bernabe Concepcion. Expect a big year from Mikee Garcia who’s currently 18-0(15) at 22 he’s mature for his age physically. He’ll be let off the leash starting against another young gun Joksan Hernandez in January. All being well look for Garcia to be moved onto bigger promotions and into the publics eye in the coming year. He’s well backed with Cameron Dunkin as his manager, Robert Garcia his elder brother as his trainer and promoted by Top Rank.

In 2009 the Super Bantamweight division was pretty packed but over the coarse of the year some of the top dogs have moved up to Featherweight. Israel Vazquez took most of the year off but when he did comeback in October it was up at 126 the same can be said for his dance partner Rafael Marquez who fought in May before being involved in a road accident. When a deal couldn’t be worked out for them to fight in the fall of 09 it was pushed back until 22 May 10. After that fight hopefully with them both making a well deserved fortune they’ll decide to enjoy there money and retire though don’t bank on it a title fight at Featherweight would loom for the winner. JuanMa Lopez looks likely to be next. The vacant title will be contested between Wilfredo Vazquez Jnr who’s father of the same name won world titles in 3 weight classes and the emerging Marvin Sonsona who is jumping from 115 to 122. There are many intangibles in this fight but i’ll take Vazquez who’s gotten better and better in 09 to take the title with a late stoppage, however id Sonsona does win it’ll be his second world title before he’s 20. Look for the winner to stick around a while. Top dog will be Celestino Caballero who owns the WBA & IBF crowns, he’ll turn 34 in 2010 so doesn’t have time to waste. Caballero is the 122 version of Paul Williams at 147 at 5’11’ he’s a tough night for anyone and he’ll continue this trend with 2 defence’s, most likely on the road. It would be interesting to see Caballero tangle with Poonsawat Kratchingdaengym who went to Ireland and demolished Bernard Dunne. The battle hardened WBC holder is Toshiaki Nishioka who may have to face Hozumi Hasegawa if Hasegawa goes through with his wish to move up from Bantamweight. If that happens look for Hasegawa to win the title either via late stoppage or on points then fight the winner of Rendall Munroe-Victor Terrazas which again Hasegawa will win. Hopefully some combination of Caballero, Poonsawat & Hasegawa will happen in 2010. The best of the rest will be Ricardo Cordoba who’ll remain busy, Antonio Escalante who will have a good year but wont be good enough to beat any of the afore mentioned quartet at the top of the division and in Europe Zsolt Bedak will continue to develop.

With Hasegawa moving up to 122 Abner Mares will win the vacant title maybe as soon as the end of January when he may get a chance to fight Simpiwe Vetyeka. He’ll grow with the title and defend on a few big bills and become the first home grown talent Golden Boy has taken from the amateurs to a professional world title. The WBA champion Anselmo Moreno will fight the ridiculous interim champion Nehomar Cermeno in the first half of the year in what looks a 50-50 the winner would have a justifiable claim to be the top man with Hasegawa at 122. Look for Moreno to eke out an close decision in Panama. He’ll follow that with another defence or two. Look for one of them to possibly be against former 115 champion Alexander Munoz. Yonnhy Perez won a barnstormer in October when he took the title from Joseph Agbeko look for Perez to fight twice with one of them a rematch with Agbeko on Showtime. Fernando Montiel didn’t look so good last time out and escaped with a no contest he’ll fight Ciso Morales in February 13, Montiel will be expected to retain his title before fighting the winner of Eric Morel-Gerry Penalosa in the summer. Either should be interesting, i’ll look for Montiel to keep the title again possible fighting Nonito Donaire late in the year. If so, Donaire will win a chess match over the distance. The best of the new breed is 20 year old Californian Chris Avalos 14-0(11) look for him to step upto 10 rounder’s against increasingly tough opposition.




Pacquiao – Clottey looks to be on; Margarito on undercard


According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, the fallout from the failed negotiations between pound for pound kings Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather has likely produced a showdown between Pacquiao and former IBF Welterweight champion Joshua Clottey on March 13th possibly in Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.

“Josh is ecstatic about it,” Clotteys manager,Vinny Scolpino told ESPN.com. “I think we can get this done in a couple of days. He’s coming home [to New York from Ghana] on Monday.”

“It’s the biggest payday he ever made in his life,” Scolpino told ESPN.com. “He should be doing flips. It’s a huge opportunity.”

Todd duBoef, president of Top Rank, which promotes Pacquiao, told Rafael on Friday night the bout would take place at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

DuBoef said he and Top Rank chairman Bob Arum would fly to Dallas on Saturday to meet with Cowboys owner Jerry Jones for a tour of the facility and to finalize the deal before being Jones’ guests at the Cowboys-Philadelphia Eagles playoff game on Saturday night.

DuBoef also said former welterweight titleholder Antonio Margarito would fight on the pay-per-view card in the co-feature if he is relicensed at a hearing later this month or in February. Margarito had his license revoked in California for attempting to load his gloves with an illegal substance before facing Shane Mosley last January. Margarito is eligible to ask for his license back after a year, although there is no guarantee he will get it.

Photo by Chris Farina / Top Rank




Garden State Round Up: Wolak-Arvin at the Mecca of Boxing; Harris-Matthysse in Vegas; Zambrano, Zegarra to fight in Peru;

Popular junior middleweight Pawel “Raging Bull” Wolak of Wallington will look to move further up the ranks when he takes Baltimorean Ishmail “The Arsenal” Arvin January 23 at Madison Square Garden. Known for his all-action style, Wolak, 25-1 (17 KO’s), demolished former title challenger Carlos Nascimento last time out, and is fighting at MSG for the third time in four fights.

Arvin, 15-1-4 (7 KO’s), has been out of the ring since August 2008 when he controversially defeated once promising prospect Anthony Thompson. Arvin was decked twice and thoroughly dominated, but an accidental headbutt incorrectly ruled a punch busted up Thompson and shockingly gave Arvin a TKO victory. Arvin has only two other fights since 2007 – both ending in a draw – but will not be taken lightly.

“Arvin is no walk over”, said Wolak’s Assistant Trainer Aroz “Terrific” Gist. “He is going to be the toughest guy Pawel fought (outside of) Ishe Smith.”

Even though Wolak hasn’t necessarily altered his style since his lone defeat against Smith, Gist is far from concerned.

“Pawel’s defense has got a lot better we have worked a ton on moving his head and he hasn’t cut during his last three fights”. “Pawel goes only in one direction and he is going to be ready since there is no easy sparring in my gym”!

According to Gist, Wolak’s training partners include former world champion Kendall Holt, rising contender Henry Crawford, hot prospect Jeremy Bryan and gritty veteran Ossie Duran.

Wolak-Arvin is part of the untelevised portion of the HBO double header featuring Juan Manuel Lopez and Yuriorkis Gamboa in separate bouts.

Harris looking to get back on track vs unbeaten Matthysse January 30

The last two plus years simply haven’t gone Vivian Harris’ way.

The Guyanese native was on the wrong end of a 2007 knockout against Junior Witter, a bout where he had difficulty adjusting to his unconventional opponent’s style from the get go.

The former WBA Junior Welterweight champion’s return bout came 13 months later just minutes from his Carlstadt residence and was expected to be a tune up. Harris’ supposed tune up fight turned out to be a dog fight, as he was decked twice and almost stopped the opening round against 7-4-1 Octavio Narvaez before scoring a TKO in the sixth. Even with the victory against Narvaez, it was widely believed that the man once considered gem of the 140 lb division was all but finished.

Harris’ most recent fight vs Noe Bolanos last August on ESPN ended in a scary no contest. Harris got off to a slow start and was looking to outbox the durable Bolanos, but was victimized by a vicious clash of heads. The ill-effects of the hard headbutt caused him to collapse and he was rushed out of the ring on a stretcher.

Harris was assumed by many to be done for good after the frightening fight with Bolanos not helping his already slumping stock. But like most former champions, he was not so quick to hang em’ up.

Harris, 29-3-2 (19 KO’s), returns to the ring January 30 to face 25-0 Lucas Matthysse on the off-TV undercard of the Andre Berto-Shane Mosley welterweight title unification in Las Vegas. Matthyse, the brother of fringe contender Walter, has an impressive 23 knockouts, but has manufactured it against inferior opposition.

“Matthysse is a puncher, so is Vivian, but (the difference is) Vivian has skills”, said Gist, who also serves as Harris’ assistant trainer. “Vivian fought all the top guys and this is a big step up for Matthysse. Vivian has looked very in the gym and he is out there to prove that at 31 years old, he is still a threat in the division.”

Harris meets Matthyse at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino over ten rounds. The bout will not be televised.

Zambrano and Zegarra return home February 25

Featherweight Carlos “Mina” Zambrano and junior welterweight Juan “JZ” Zegarra of North Bergen are set to fight in their native Peru February 25.

Zambrano, 9-0 (3 KO’s), will fight an opponent to be announced in an eight rounder, while Zegarra risks his perfect 4-0 record against TBA over six rounds. According to manager Nelson Fernandez, their opponents are likely to come from Colombia.

Zambrano and Zegarra, two of the most storied amateurs in their nation’s history, will fight at Coliseo Nino Heroe Manuel Bonilla in Lima. Fernandez said a sell out crowd is expected.

For more New Jersey boxing news, go to www.gardenstatefightscene.com




Karmazin comes from behind to stop Miranda to earn Middleweight title shot


Former IBF Jr. Middleweight champion pulled a rabbit out of his has as he came back from being knocked down and rocked on several occasions to come back to stop Dionisio Miranda in round ten of their scheduled twelve round IBF Middleweight elimination bout at the Glendale Auditorium in Glendale, California.

The first couple rounds were fought evenly until Miranda rocked Karmazin with a huge right hand that had the former champion in serious trouble in round three. Karmazin showed his veteran grit by being able to box and hold on until he gained his senses to survive the round. In round four, the two combatants clashed heads and a cut developed around the left eye of Miranda.

Karmazin got back in the fight as he boxed well and put some nice combination’s together to pull close on the cards. In round nine, Miranda landed a huge right that was followed up by a lesser right that sent Karmazin to the canvas. Miranda had over two minutes to finish the fight but Karmazin ducked and held and took some decent body shots and got out of the round.

In round ten, Karmazin landed a big right of his own and stunningly put Miranda on his back. Karmazin showed the experience that Miranda couldn’t as he was able to land some hard shots and drop Miranda for a second time that forced referee James Jen-Kin to stop the fight at 2:37.

With the win, Karmazin, 158 1/2 lbs of St. Petersburg, Russia will now stand to face IBF Middleweight champion Sebastian Sylvester as he notched his fortieth victory against three losses and one draw with twenty-six knockouts. Miranda, 155 1/2 lbs of Barranquilla, Colombia is now 20-5-2.

Anatoliy Dudchenko scored three knockdown en route to an easy six round unanimous decision over Isaac Atencio in a Light Heavyweight bout.

Dudchenko scored knockdowns on right hands in both rounds one and two and again dropped that over matched Atencio again in round five with a left.

All cards read 60-51.

Dudchenko, 175 3/4 lbs is now 7-2. Atencio, 174 1/2 lbs of Denver, CO is now 2-2-1.

Heavyweight Andrey Fedosov stopped faded journeyman Lionel Butler in round two of a scheduled eight round bout.

The two exchanged some solid shots in round one. In round two, Fedosov dropped Butler with a short right hand. Seconds later Fedosov rocked Butler with another right on the inside he than followed up with a another right hand that sent Butler to the canvas for a second time that forced referee Lou Moret to stop the bout at 2:37 of round two.

Fedosov, 223 lbs of St. Petersburg, Russia is now 21-1 with seventeen knockouts. Butler, 276 3/4 lbs of Valencia, CA is now 32-16-1.




Holt – Coleman IBF Jr. Welterweight eliminator on February 20th?

Sources have told 15rounds.com that a proposed bout between former WBO Jr. Welterweight champion, Kendall Holt and Tim Coleman is close to being finalized for February 20th.

Holt, 25-3 of Paterson, New Jersey hasnt fought since dropping his belt to Tomothy Bradley last April and will look to get in position to fight for his second world title.

Coleman of Baltimore, Maryland has a record of 17-1-1 with four knockouts is coming off his best win of his career when he scored a controversial split decision over Mike Arnaoutis on December 3rd in New York City.

The winner would be a mandatory challenger for champion Juan Urango, who has been rumored to be fighting a unification bout with WBC champion Devon Alexander on March 6th.

No venue was mentioned for the fight.




WEEKEND PREVIEW


Each week, we will be providing a brief overview of the weekend boxing, kind of like a viewers guide so the fans can see what to look for as they sit on their couch (or even a seat at the arena) and down their favorite cold beverage.

The first weekend of the New Year doesn’t provide much but it’s a start and we need to start thawing out after about a month of very little activity.

ESPN 2 Friday Night Fights kicks off the season with a IBF Middleweight Elimination bout between former Jr. Middleweight champion Roman Karmazin and Dionso Miranda.

ROMAN KARMAZIN (39-3-1, 25 KO’s) vs DIONSIO MIRANDA (20-4-2, 18 KO’S)-12 ROUNDS—IBF MIDDLEWEIGHT ELIMINATION BOUT—10PM EASTERN TIME—ESPN 2 WILL TELEVISE

The first televised bout of the New Year has some significance as Karmazin will look to get back into the title picture in his new division, that being 160 lbs.

Karmazin was considered one of the top Jr. Middleweights in the world after he won the IBF crown with a very impressive two knockdown performance when he scored a unanimous decision over Kassim Ouma in 2005.

The only thing that great performance got Karmazin was a year layoff as he got stuck in promoter Don King’s long list of fighters who seem to disappear once they receive some sort of accolade (see Devon Alexander, Steve Cunningham just to name two off the bat).

Karmazin started slowly in his first defense against Cory Spinks and dropped a debatable majority decision in that fight in St. Louis. (My ringside score card actually gave the nod to Karmazin, but unfortunately for Karmazin my card was of no help to him that night).

Since then he has gone 5-1 with four knockouts with that one defeat a knockout loss to Alex Bunema on the Roy Jones – Felix Trinidad undercard in January, 2008. In that bout, Karmazin was dominating until he seemingly ran out of gas and got caught in the tenth round as was knocked out in what was considered a big upset at the time.

Since that fight, Karmazin has been perfect at middleweight; going 3-0 with two knockouts and capturing the NABF title with a decision over Bronco McKart and once defense over shop worn Antwun Echols.

Just looking at Miranda’s record, he seems like a typical South/Central American puncher who racked up a bunch of knockouts fighting no-hopers at home in Colombia.

When he came to America, he gave a good account of himself, giving undefeated prospect Peter “Kid Chocolate” Quillin all that he wanted and even rocking the New Yorker on several occasions before Quillin held on for a unanimous decision in 2008.

Miranda then went up to Canada and scored a solid majority decision victory over home standing Sebastian DeMers just two months later.

Miranda has been in this position once before as on February 27, 2009 he had the opportunity to fight in an IBF Elimination bout when he was brutally stopped in two rounds by then Giovanni Lorenzo
Miranda went back to Colombia to get healthy and feasted on an opponent who sported a record of 2-19.

I like Karmazin in this bout as though he is 37 years old (ten years older then Miranda) as he has stayed busy against warm bodies and he hasn’t been in many wars so I believe he still has something left. Miranda defiantly has a punchers chance and he showed in the fights with Quillin DeMers that he can be a decent boxer.

It’s Karmazin’s class that wins out here as he scores a unanimous decision that will put him in line for Sebastian Sylvester’s IBF Middleweight crown

The Orchard Celebrates the Release of Mojo Nixon’s Latest Album. go to site amazon promotional code free shipping

Health & Beauty Close-Up November 1, 2009 In support and celebration of the release of Mojo Nixon’s latest album “Whiskey Rebellion,” The Orchard, a full service media company specializing in the distribution of music and video entertainment, on October 6 announced that Mojo’s entire catalog would be available to download at no cost, exclusively from Amazon MP3.

Since this announcement, The Orchard reported that the promotion has led to more than one million downloads of Mojo’s music. The downloads were available at amazon.com/mojo until October 28th.

“The successful execution of this promotion has generated tremendous awareness for Mojo,” said Brad Navin, EVP and General Manager of The Orchard. “This is a showcase of how The Orchard, as a nimble and forward-thinking company, has the ability to orchestrate trendsetting promotions for our clients. The success of this promotion will be measured by its long-term benefits, not the short-term risks, and our expectation is that it will generate sales momentum.” Mojo Nixon’s current catalog includes 11 albums and 144 tracks. The downloads for this music during the two weeks of the Amazon promotional period amounted to a 23,000 percent increase from paid downloads across all digital retail networks in the United States during the first half of 2009. go to website amazon promotional code free shipping

Mojo Nixon is currently a full-time on-air personality on Sirius XM Satellite radio hosting a daily music show on the Outlaw Country channel, a weekly political talk show on the Raw Dog Comedy Channel and a weekly racing show on the NASCAR channel.

((Comments on this story may be sent to health@closeupmedia.com))




After the Pacquiao-Mayweather talks fail, boxing looks for survival and sees Viloria


Relief might be best thing about the apparent end Wednesday of the Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather negotiations. Maybe, we won’t have to hear about them, any of them, for at least a while.

If interest is measured by hits that rank daily stories on internet sites, readership of blow-by-blow accounts of the talks was crashing faster than Arizona real estate anyway. It looked as if a potential pay-per-view audience or two full of casual fans got sick of the dizzy on-again, off-again silliness and had moved on sometime before the legal suits and mediators arrived like ambulances too late to an accident. No telling when those fans will be back, if ever.

Meanwhile, the battered game also has to move on and sustain itself until another opportunity can be squandered. Despite the doom-and-gloom, it can. It always has. Resiliency was really the story of 2009. Alexis Arguello, Vernon Forrest and Arturo Gatti died. Oscar De La Hoya retired amid predictions that the business was finally finished. Still, there was a resurrection in November with talk of the good old days before and after Pacquiao’s victory over Miguel Cotto

Now, that boxing begins a New Year in the same old place – which is to say nowhere at all, it is also back with a chance to do what it always does. It survives. That well-practiced habit could resume with anyone. From here to Kelly Pavlik, Brian Viloria looks as if he is a good beginning. Viloria (26-2, 15 KOs) is in the right place, right time, against Colombian Carlos Tamara (20-4, 14 KOs) in Manila Saturday (January 23rd), Friday (January 22nd) in the United States. He also has been on a path that personifies the dependable resiliency in a craft so fragile, yet so durable.

Not so long ago, Viloria also thought he was done.

“It took a lot of soul-searching,’’ said Viloria, who will defend the International Boxing Federation’s junior-flyweight title on Solar Entertainment, a Filipino-based company, in a pay-per-view card scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. Friday in Los Angeles (10 p.m. in New York).

Viloria’s soul began to become conflicted after he put Ruben Contreras in critical condition with a head injury in 2005 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center.

“I don’t want to say that it was just one event,’’ said Viloria, who visited Contreras at the hospital and saw him later at ringside for one of his subsequent bouts. “There were a lot of things happening within my life.’’

So many that Viloria didn’t recognize himself, or at least the fighter who seemed to be on the express elevator to ring riches and renown not long after the 2000 Games in Sydney. But boxing isn’t supposed to be easy. Real conflict, in a ring and within the soul, never is. Know that, and you’ll understand that unbeaten might be just another way of saying untested. Viloria is neither. He has been beaten, first by Omar Romero in 2006 and then by Edgar Sosa in 2007, and then tested by his own doubts.

“To be great, I think you just have to battle with yourself a lot more,’’ said Viloria, a Filipino-American who grew up near Pearl Harbor on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. “I think it is more of an issue with yourself than it is an opponent. With those fights, I found myself as more of an enemy, an obstacle to conquer, than my opponent.

“I know my talents, my abilities. It was me, battling me.’’

It is battle that never quite ends. But Viloria understands it now more than ever, first because of some long talks with friends and family in Hawaii and in Los Angeles with manager Gary Gittelsohn.

“To be frank, I was pushing him to make a decision to go in a different direction,’’ said Gittelsohn, who calls Viloria “a Renaissance Man,’’ for his many interests, which includes everything from broadcasting to music. “I knew he had God-given skills as a fighter. But we know this business and we know that economic opportunities for a 108-pound fighter, even a world champ, are limited. So, if you don’t bank it early and fast and efficiently, I didn’t want this kid just knocking around. There are too many of those stories in this sport.’’

The heart-to-heart, Gittelsohn said, came at a time when Viloria had been dismissed, “written off..” During a nine-month hiatus after the Sosa loss, however, Viloria said he just felt incomplete.

“I felt like I needed some closure, some things that I still had to do as a fighter,’’ he said.

But that meant a tough price. Gittelsohn told Viloria that he had to start over. In January of 2008, he did in a scheduled eight-rounder in an outdoor ring on grounds in Alameda, Calif., that usually were occupied by shoppers at a swap meet. The booths were closed. Had they been open, Viloria could have bought an umbrella, if not a boat. He could have used one, maybe both. It rained enough to fill a spit bucket.

“He had to be carried to the ring so he wouldn’t get his shoes soaked,’’ Gittelsohn said. “It was surreal.’’

By then, however, Viloria was ready for any kind of storm.

“Gary warned me that I had to take a step back, that it wasn’t going to be easy,’’ said Viloria, who won a decision over Jose Garcia Bernal. “He told me I had to get out of the comfort zone. Sure enough, I walked out into the pouring rain. It was 45, 50 degrees in January. But I just said: ‘OK, if this is what I have to do. I’ll do it.’

“I just threw all of my accomplishments and ego out of the window and went back to Square One.’’

The rain fell like a baptism, washing away the doubts and leaving only the commitment that Viloria always knew was there. Since then, he has won seven straight fights, including perhaps his finest victory, a knockout of Ulises Solis. The 11th-round stoppage last April resurrected the possibility that maybe Viloria could be the next Michael Carbajal, the former junior-flyweight champion from Phoenix and a Hall of Famer who is the biggest American name in the history of boxing’s little guys.

“Carbajal is the first big name in my weight class,’’ said Viloria, who worked as a ringside analyst for Solar during Pacquiao’s victory over Cotto. “When I think of Michael, I think of really big shoes to fill.’’

Carbajal emerged because he had rival, a business partner, in Chiquita Gonzalez. Gonzalez, a popular junior-flyweight from Mexico City fighter, won two narrow decisions in rematches of a trilogy that started in 1993 with a dramatic knockout delivered by Carbajal, who was the first in the lightest weight classes to collect a $1 million purse.

Viloria still has to win in Manila next weekend. If he does, Gittelsohn foresees a similar rivalry with Puerto Rican Ivan Calderon. There already were preliminary discussions last June after Calderon suffered a cut in head butt that led to a draw with Rodel Mayol on the undercard of Cotto’s victory over Joshua Clottey in New York.

With damage left in the wake of the failed Pacquiao-Mayweather negotiations, the Carbajal parallel is intriguing on another level. Carbajal has often been called a pioneer, because he created opportunities for fighters in forgotten weight classes. More significant, he awakened promoters to an untapped market. Carbajal’s emergence, unlikely as it was timely, coincided with ex-heavyweight champ Mike Tyson’s 3-year prison sentence on a 1992 rape conviction.

Boxing then, like now, was reeling. But it survived and eventually recreated itself with fans and fighters once ignored. That story is more than just familiar. It might be repeating itself in Viloria’s resiliency.




Q&A With Denis Douglin


Morganville’s Denis Douglin is one of New Jersey’s hottest prospects. Known as “Da Momma’s Boy”, he is currently 6-0 with 3 KOs and is getting ready for a fight on February 6th on Main Events’ “Heavy Artillery” card at the Prudential Center in Newark, NJ. His mother and trainer, Saphya, is always pushing Douglin to the max, so I think it’s safe to expect big things from the 21-year-old southpaw in 2010 and beyond.

Justin Caggiano: I figure I should start from the beginning; what was it that first got you interested and started in boxing and training? Was it your mother being a trainer and just being around it or something else?

Denis Douglin: My mother, at the time, was a trainer and a boxer. She used to box and did a little amateur boxing so she was always in the gym. I hated boxing so I never used to go but I got into a school fight and got beat up. She figured she had to teach me to defend myself so she brought me to the gym. Like I said, I hated boxing, didn’t want to box at all but I’m really competitive. There were other little kids in there and I just wanted to beat them up and that got me training seriously and I took it from there.

JC: Did you watch boxing at all when you were younger?

DD: Not really. My parents used to watch boxing all the time and I’d go in and sit down for a little while and watch it a bit. For the most part though, no, not when I was younger.

JC: What about these days? Are there any guys that really stand out as some of your favorites?

DD: Yeah, definitely. Mayweather, of course, is one. Andre Berto, Shane Mosley; I can’t wait to see (Berto and Mosley) fight. There’s a bunch of others, too. Danny Jacobs, who’s coming up now. So yeah, there are a lot of guys these days that I like to watch.

JC: When you were 16 you won the New York Golden Gloves, making you the youngest ever win at Madison Square Garden. What was that like?

DD: It was an overwhelming experience. They told me I was actually the youngest person by about a week, I think. And it was just a great experience. I was nervous but I love a crowd so I enjoyed it. I’m a crowd pleaser!

JC: What do you think are some of your favorite moments from your time as an amateur boxer?

DD: Definitely the national trips: going to national tournaments and being out there with a lot of other young fighters. It was great getting to fight every day. It was all just a fun experience getting to just hang out with no school or anything.

JC: You went on to continue with an impressive amateur career until it was cut short by a car accident that took you out of competition for a year. Did you ever contemplate hanging up the gloves or did it just make you more motivated to get back in the ring?

DD: It made me more driven. I think I needed that break because I was going hard in the gym all the time and that break gave me a chance to do things that other kids were doing. I was able to focus more on schoolwork and I got a job for a little while so that was cool. I never wanted to quit boxing, though. As soon as I was able to get back in the gym I was back in the gym.

JC: In 2008, you and your mother were inducted into the New Jersey Boxing Hall of Fame as the Amateur Boxer and Coach of the year. What was it like for “Da Momma’s Boy” to be inducted with his mom?

DD: It was a great feeling. I think more than anything I was just happy that my mother won the award because I know it’s hard for a female trainer to be established in this type of business. For people to recognize that she’s a great trainer, that was what really had me excited. Of course, I was happy to win the award for Amateur Boxer of the Year, but her winning coach really set everything off.

JC: Now a little under a year ago you made your pro debut against Roberto Irizarry and you earned a TKO victory in less than 2 minutes, trapping him in and corner and hitting him with a huge flurry of punches. What was going on in your head going into that fight, it being your debut?

DD: I was nervous and I was scared. I’m not even going to lie to you, when I went into the back and I saw everybody warming up I was like, “Wow, there’s no headgear back here so I better not get hit in the face.” But, once I started walking to the ring and the lights hit me and I saw the audience, I felt at home. I just went in the ring and let my hands go.

JC: What was it like after that fight, knowing you won your first pro match?

DD: It was great. I ran out to my family and I was greeted like I just won a world title. It was a great feeling; I loved it.

JC: Was it the game plan to make a good first impression by showing dominance in the ring in that match or did you just exploit his mistakes and let it happen?

DD: Actually, I really didn’t have a game plan going into my first fight. My mother wanted me to go in and feel him out the first round and just work from there. When I went in there though, I hurt him and my natural instinct is just attack and keep attacking. I saw he was hurt and I just kept punching.

JC: Now probably your toughest and biggest fight thus far was against Lamar Harris on the undercard of Adamek/Gunn at the Prudential Center and it was a pretty close fight. How did you prepare for that fight and what was your strategy against what was surely not an ideal opponent that early in your career?

DD: Well, we trained for that fight the same way we train for every fight. I worked out hard for two or three hours a day. I ran two times a day. I was ready for the fight. I got the opponent at the last minute and they told me he was a tough fighter. Actually, they gave me the fight the day before the actual show happened so I wasn’t really prepared to fight him specifically but I was ready for anybody. It really didn’t make a difference to me. He was tough but I thought I handled myself pretty well.

JC: Your last fight was all the way back in September which is a pretty long layoff. Is there a reason for that?

DD: It’s just been a string of misunderstandings. I had a couple of fights lined up but opponents pulled out. Then, I had another fight lined up and something happened with the medicals. It’s just been a bunch of various mishaps. I’m still in the gym, though. I never left the gym. So, it’s been a layoff fight-wise but not in the gym and my training so I’m ready.

JC: With an impressive record starting to pile up, have you been contacted or signed with any promoters as of yet?

DD: A few promoters have contacted us but we haven’t signed anything yet. We’re just lying back, seeing what people are offering me and what they think I’m worth. I think I’m worth a lot so I’m trying to see what everybody else thinks.

JC: Have you been invited to any training camps with any big name fighters yet?

DD: Yes, I actually got invited to the Miguel Cotto camp when he was getting ready for Pacquiao. I ended up staying in New Jersey though. (I did work with) Yuri Foreman before his fight with Daniel Santos. I decided to do that instead because it was at home so I would still be able to workout at my own gym and I like Yuri so it seemed like the right decision for me.

JC: Let’s move on to your upcoming fight on the undercard of Adamek/Estrada. Do you have an opponent signed yet for the fight?

DD: No, they’re still looking. Finding an opponent seems to always be a problem for me. I’m confident Main Events will get me an opponent, though. They’re really good with that stuff so I’m not worried about that.

JC: Are you just training as usual for the fight? Are you doing anything different or working on anything in particular?

DD: We stepped up the training a lot because I’m moving up to six rounds AND moving down in weight. I’ve been working out three times a day: 5 o’clock in the morning, 3 o’clock in the afternoon, and 7 o’clock at night. We’re getting ready.

JC: Do you think it will be a struggle going from four rounds to six?

DD: No, not at all. I’ve been sparring eight to ten rounds and I feel fine so six rounds shouldn’t really be a problem.

JC: Are you excited to go back to the Prudential Center? I mean, it has to be a different feeling with the big, rabid crowd.

DD: Oh definitely, it’s a great venue. I love fighting in the Prudential Center. I’m more than ready and extra excited and I can’t wait for it to get here.

JC: Finally, what do you see for yourself in 2010 and what are you hoping to accomplish before the year is out?

DD: I want to be a big prospect. I want to be ESPN’s prospect of the year. That’s what I’m going for. Also, I would like to get a good ten fights in this year hopefully and I just want to become a household name. I want everybody to know “Da Momma’s Boy”.

Thanks for taking the time to join me for this interview Denis. Anything you’d like to say in closing?

DD: I just want to say thank you to the fans that I have now and hopefully I’ll be getting a lot more this year. Just look out for me.

for more info on New Jersey Boxing click www.gardenstatefightscene.com




Mega-fight canceled: Why boxing set itself back twenty years

So Floyd Mayweather is going to fight Manny Pacquiao? Awesome. Finally, there is a fight that the sports world and beyond could really get into.

As a displaced boxing fan, I was extremely excited by the prospects of the match-up. The two best boxers in the world were going to fight. In a world where people love to argue the merits of each expert’s “pound-for-pound lists”, the public unanimously views Pacquiao and Mayweather as the numbers one and two fighters respectively.

Their ranking at the top is no longer opinion. It is fact.

Plus, Mayweather is the unquestioned star of HBO’s 24/7 series. Seeing weeks of build-up for the fight would make the anticipation grow to levels never before seen. Every sports fan in America (and beyond) would have to be excited for the fight.

The match-up would have been the biggest fight since Mike Tyson defeated Michael Spinks on June 27, 1988. Boxing had a chance to deliver the biggest fight of the past three decades.

Then, we learned far too much about drug testing.

Immediately, the cynic in me thought one of two things was happening. The first was that Mayweather and Pacquiao were just trying to build interest in the fight. To really be arguing about drug testing is just illogical.

The second was that this fight truly has no chance of happening. One of the fighters does not want to face the other. Or maybe neither of them wants to fight. I do not care who the culprit is. To me, that does not matter. As a fan, the only thing I cared about was the fact the biggest fight boxing has to offer would not get made.

Unfortunately for the entire sports world, the second scenario was correct. The biggest fight boxing can make will not take place.

We can debate for hours why the fight will not happen. We can blame Mayweather for requesting blood tests. We can blame Pacquiao for refusing to take them. We can blame Bob Arum, Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Sr., or Richard Schaefer for allowing this to spiral out of control.

None of that really matters. The fight is over.

In a few months, Pacquiao will be facing Yuri Foreman, and Mayweather will be taking on Paulie Malignaggi. Both are completely useless match-ups to the sport. No one outside of the hardcore fans will really care about the results.

After finally being excited about a boxing match then having it ripped away, I hope both boxers lose. If Mayweather and Pacquiao both win, the bickering will all start over. Maybe next time, we’d have to hear about the size of the gloves or the location of the fight or some detail that never should make it to the public.

Instead of gaining boatloads of new fans, boxing turned them away as they were banging on the cabin door. Well done. Maybe the NFL can counter and cancel the Super Bowl. That would never happen.

Boxing just set itself back twenty-one years. At least we can still fondly think back to the excitement and anticipation of when Mike Tyson stood in the ring with Michael Spinks.

The fight did not deliver, but at least the sport did.




Pavlik – Martinez in the works


Negotiations are moving ahead to make a Kelly Pavlik-Sergio Martinez fight this May. While they are still at the early stages it seems as though Martinez hot off a disputed loss to Paul Williams could challenge Pavlik for his WBC/WBO Middleweight crown.

It appears as though it would happen in Atlantic City where Pavlik is extremely popular and Martinez fought last time out.

Martinez agent Sampson Lewkowicz told 15rounds.com that “It’s and Exciting fight that people want to see” He also added that they had an offer to fight the rematch with Paul Williams but preferred to get his man a straight title shot. He also said he is requesting WBC approved judges.

So finally it appears that things are getting back to normal in the Boxing world after being held hostage regarding the on off on and finally off negotiations between Floyd Mayweather & Manny Pacquiao.

Photo by Chris Farina of Top Rank




MAYWEATHER – PACQUIAO IS OFF!!!


According to various reports, the much anticipated bout between Pound for Pound King’s Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather will NOT happen on March 13th after a last ditch mediation session on Tuesday provided no resolution to save the bout.

The two camps met for nine hours in Santa Monica, California on Tuesday with a compromise on the table for which Pacquiao would undergo a drug testing procedure twenty-four days before the fight where Team Mayweather wanted the tests during fight week.

Bob Arum, Pacquiao’s promoter was quoted in various reports that the fight cant happen and he will now look for Pacquiao to attempt to win a a title in an eighth weight division as he will look to take on WBA Super Welterweight champion Yuri Foreman on either March 13th or March 20th.

Mayweather nor his representatives were available for comment




JONES DEFENDS NABA TITLE AGAINST BRUSELES ON FEB. 27 AT BALLY’S ATLANTIC CITY; FOX SPORTS NET WILL TELEVISE

Atlantic City, NJ—Unbeaten Mike Jones, of Philadelphia, PA, makes the fourth defense of his North American Boxing Association (NABA) welterweight title when he faces Henry Bruseles, of Gurabo, Puerto Rico, in the scheduled 10-round main event Saturday evening, Feb. 27, at Bally’s Atlantic City. First fight 8.30 p.m.

The Jones-Bruseles fight will be part of a two-hour portion of the show which will be televised live by Fox Sports Espanol, Fox Sports Net (FSN) and its regional sports network affiliates, beginning at 10 p.m. This card, part of the Top Rank Live series on Fox Sports Espanol on Saturdays, three times a month.

Jones, 26, is considered one of the hottest prospects in boxing. His 19-0 record includes 16 knockouts and he is rated highly—No. 8 by the World Boxing Association (WBA), No. 11 by the International Boxing Federation (IBF), No. 16 by the World Boxing Council (WBC).

He won the vacant NABA title when he K0d Juliano Ramos, a Brazilian living in Boca Raton, FL, on Aug. 29, 2008, at the New Alhambra in Philadelphia.

Though injuries to himself and to several opponents made 2009 a hard year for Jones, he still managed to defend his title three times, knocking out Dairo Esalas at the Blue Horizon in Philadelphia, outpointing Lenin Arroyo at Bally’s and knocking out Raul Pinzon at Bally’s.

Other victims include Germaine Sanders, Gilbert Venegas and Luciano Perez.
Though Jones appears to have found a home at Bally’s—this will be his third straight fight there—he also has boxed in Las Vegas, NV, Spokane, WA, Niagara Falls, NY, Allegany, NY, and Reading, PA.

Bruseles, 28, represents Jones’ toughest opposition so far.

A pro since 1999, Bruseles has a 28-3-1 record, 15 K0s. He has won his last seven fights and he has wins over Wilfredo Negron, Ener Julio, Arturo Urena, Cesar Bazan, Robert Frankel, Ben Tackie and Mario Ramos.

Bruseles has not lost since Jan. 22, 2005, when Floyd Mayweather, Jr., stopped him in eight rounds in Miami, FL. That was the only time Bruseles has been stopped.

Tickets for the seven-bout card, promoted by Top Rank, Inc. in association with Peltz Boxing Promotions, Inc., are priced at $75 and $50. They are on sale at the offices of Peltz Boxing
(215-765-0922), all Ticketmaster outlets (1-800-745-3000), or online at www.Ticketmaster.com and www.peltzboxing.com.




First day of Mayweather – Pacquiao mediation has no resolution


According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, the first day of a mediation process to hopefully resolve the differences between the camps of Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather lasted nine hours on Tuesday but did not produce a resolution for the proposed March 13th mega-fight to go forward.

Top Rank’s Bob Arum and Todd duBoef, along with their legal team, Golden Boy’s Richard Schaefer, Oscar De La Hoya, their legal team, and Mayweather manager Al Haymon spent the day with mediator Daniel Weinstein at offices in Santa Monica, Calif., hoping to pave the way for potentially the richest fight in boxing history.

“Mediation is still ongoing,” one of Top Rank’s lawyers told ESPN Deportes’ Jaime Mota.

Weinstein has placed a gag order on all parties.

It is unclear if the talks will resume on Wednesday.

They had agreed to everything in the deal except for the method of drug testing for the boxers.

Although the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which would oversee the bout, requires only urine testing, Mayweather has insisted on random blood testing. Both sides have already agreed to unlimited random urine testing.

Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs), who didn’t want any blood testing, agreed to take three blood tests: one during the week of the kickoff news conference, which would take place next week if they can make a deal, one random test to be conducted no later than 30 days before the fight and a final test in his dressing room after the fight. Mayweather (40-0, 25 KOs) would be subject to the same testing procedures.

Besides Weinstein trying to mediate a resolution to the drug testing issue, there is also the matter of the defamation lawsuit Pacquiao filed last week in Nevada U.S. District Court against Mayweather Jr., Schaefer, De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Sr., Roger Mayweather and Mayweather Promotions.

Pacquiao alleges that they made false and defamatory statements and sullied his reputation by accusing him of taking performance-enhancing drugs. Pacquiao denies he has ever used PEDs and has never failed a drug test.

At issue is also Golden Boy’s continued involvement in Pacquaio’s contract. With Golden Boy representing Mayweather and allegedly accusing Pacquiao of using performance enhancing drugs, Arum believes it has diminished Pacquiao and that Golden Boy should no longer be entitled to share in the money his bouts generate, especially when it also is making money off Mayweather.

If the mediation fails, Arum has repeatedly said he will match Pacquiao with junior middleweight titlist Yuri Foreman, whom he also promotes, on March 20 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas so Pacquiao could attempt to win a title in a record-extending eighth weight division.

Mayweather could still fight on March 13 at the MGM Grand and potentially face former junior welterweight titlist Paulie Malignaggi.




Pacquiao – Mayweather: Mediation or surgery


Today in a room in a Santa Monica, California, boxing will be going under for its own form of major surgery.

The kind of surgery isn’t for a bum knee or a damaged elbow. It could be an operation to fix and resurrect any number of things inside the body of boxing.

Due to Doctor/Patient confidentiality we will call the patient “FMMP”.

FMMP is a potential larger than life event that could bring an influx of new fans to the sport. FMMP was set to debut on the Las Vegas strip on March 13th until some infections got in the way, hence the reason for this surgery.

Enter the honorable former judge Daniel Weinstein who will act as the lead surgeon. Helping him out in the board, I mean operating room will be represent eves from promotional giants, Top Rank and Golden Boy Promotions as well as well as the inner circles of FM & MP.

What is the potential prognosis if this procedure succeeds or fails?

If Weinstein is successful, the sport of boxing will get what it’s been longing for a fight that its been yearning for since at least De La Hoya – Trinidad or Chavez – Whitaker and that fight was almost twenty years ago.

This is a fight that has been brewing for the better part of two years and this is all that boxing and even the non-boxing fans want to see.

After the news has been all over boxing and sports news services that a deal was reached in principle that the fight was closer to fruition then not, the infection, arose that the camp of FM wanted a more stringent drug testing procedure on MP started to fester in the body, of this patient.

Now if Weinstein can get this infection straightened out, the sport has a chance to be healthier than it’s been in a decade as a fight will be made that EVERYONE wants to witness.

Sure we know that this is a big money event that everyone involved from the fighters, promoters, casinos and right on the down the line will line their pockets with a bushel of cash but to have boxing back on center stage will be worth whatever we have had to endure over the last few weeks as we read about proposals and counter proposals about drug testing and drawing blood.

The potential of an unsuccessful surgery I don’t want to say will be catastrophic for the business but it would certainly be another bruise on the body that is boxing.

Many hardcore and even the very casual fan wants to see the bout between Mayweather and Pacquiao and lets home that the former Judge Weinstein can perform a magical procedure to help save this fight.

Photo Chris Farina/Top Rank




2010 Crystal Ball Part 2


The top man at Middleweight may not have had the best of years but now Kelly Pavlik’s healthy again hopefully he’ll engage in some big fights and bring excitement back to the Middleweights which have been derelict over the past few years. With Paul Williams having to sit out much of the first half of the year look for Sergio Martinez to take advantage of the situation and fight Pavlik in Atlantic City in April/May. Martinez has skills in abundance and his speed of foot could also cause Pavlik problems, however “The Ghost” is tough, gritty with a huge heart who’ll keep going until the last and pull off a hard fought decision win. Paul Williams will get back into action over the summer possibly against someone like John Duddy or Peter Manfredo either should give Williams the opportunity to put on an impressive performance setting the stage for a highly anticipated fall fight with Pavlik. When all the smoke has cleared Pavlik will have scored a late impressive stoppage in give and take battle. WBA Kingpin Felix Sturm will have several problems getting free of his contract with Universum so wont be very active. Even so it’s difficult to see Sturm losing as he’ll likely have home advantage and probably won’t be matched with any of the top dogs. Fellow German IBF ruler Sebastian Sylvester will make his first defence against the very average Pablo Navascues of Spain. Sylvester shouldn’t have any problem keeping hold of his title in that fight setting up a May/June fight with his mandatory challenger. That will be Roman Karmazin who will best Dionisio Miranda in early January. Karmazin is skilled and tough but at 37 passed his best so Sylvester who will likely also have home advantage, again getting the win. European champ Matthew Macklin has a tough fight with Dmitriy Pirog in February the winner of that will be well positioned to fight Sylvester before the end of 2010. The best of the rest will see Daniel Jacobs become a top 10 ranked contender on the verge of a world title fight. French transplant Hassan N’Dam N’Jikam will also have a good year. Gennady Golovkin will be hoping to fight Sturm but that may largely depend on if Sturm can free himself of his Universum contract. If the fight happens Golovkin is good enough to win it. Matt Korobov will also be busy and start to face better opposition placing him on the fringes of the world scene.

With Sergio Martinez fighting up at 160 leaving him to vacate the WBC title which will see Kermit Cintron paired with Ryan Rhodes. Both guys carry a good story coming in, Cintron will be the better guy scoring a unanimous decision. Don’t be surprised to see Cintron hold onto the title through out the year. Yuri Foreman is on standby to square off with Manny Pacquiao encase Pac-Man’s fight with Floyd Mayweather doesn’t come off. Eventually he’ll settle for a spot on the undercard fighting Japanese WBA Interim champion Nobihiro Ishida. Ishida shouldn’t provide too much of a challenge with Foreman posting an easy points win. Its possible Foreman will be matched with Miguel Cotto over the summer. Foreman has the style and size advantage to give Cotto fits if it happens. Another option could be Joachim Alcine who is popular in Monteal. As time goes by Cory Spinks is slowly morphing from cagey mover into a more stationary boxer which is good for us but not so good for him. Spinks probably due to Don King not keeping his fighters too active will keep the title in 2010 with only Vanes Martirosyan in the top 15 of the IBF posing any threat. With Sergei Dzindziruk not having fought at all in the last calendar year he may have to vacate which will see Alfredo Angulo promoted to full champion. If this happens Angulo backed by Gary Shaw will become a staple in the HBO cards taking part in at least two fights. He’ll be matched carefully against tough fighters and not cagey runners. The best of the up and comers is Martirosyan who’ll outpoint teak tough Kassim Ouma in mid January from there the Freddy Roach trained prospect will continue to develop having a busy year marking him out as the top contender in the division. Shawn Porter came to prominence late in 09 he’ll continue to develop and may even drop down to 147.

The world awaits on what will happen in the soap opera that is the tediously long and drawn out negotiations between Floyd Mayweather Jnr & Manny Pacquiao. Hopefully soon enough they will sort out the Blood tests and put pen on a deal that will see both men earn more than they’ve ever earnt before. Hopefully the fight will then live up to the drama that has ensued in the build up if it does we’re all in for a treat. It pits the skills of Mayweather verses the power of Pacquiao plus many many other intriguing intangibles. When all is said and done and the dust has settled Mayweather will prevail via unanimous decision looking every bit the star he believes himself to be. The only real threat then on the horizon would be Shane Mosley who’ll roll back the years once again and dominate the young skilled but not quite ready Andre Berto. After much posturing they’ll square off in Las Vegas in another huge fight. Again Mayweather will back up his talk and win a competitive but clear cut decision. Antonio Margarito may re-emerge but struggle to get a big fight because of previous history. Cotto after several months off will put himself back in the picture with a couple of wins. Among the possible opponent’s for Cotto if elects to stay at 147 could be Jesus Soto Karass & Jose Luis Castillo. Joshua Clottey will continue to struggle to gets fights and not manage to get any of the big guys in the ring. If he can get a fight with the ordinary Jan Zeveck he could once again be the IBF champion. Zaveck will not get through the year as IBF champion in such a talented weight class. The younger guys coming through should provide enough action to again make the 147 hot top to bottom whereas in 2009 this was only the case for the top 5 or so guys. Selcuk Aydin has the power and attitude to take him to the top, it may get him a European title or even the IBF crown if he gets the chance. The often underappreciated Mike Jones will break out as a top 10 contender. Young guys like Saul Alvarez & Kell Brook could also supplant there credentials with successful years that could leave them with in striking distance of the best.

Another talent laden division is the Light Welterweight’s. The numero uno is Tim Bradley who had a great 09 that run should continue this year with him again struggling to get the Big name that he craves to bring him big money. With Bradley fighting on Showtime and most of the other champions fighting on HBO it’ll be interesting to see who Bradley gets in his next fight. On 6 March Devon Alexander & Juan Urango will look to unify there WBC & IBF titles in a fight that has a lot of promise. Alexander will be getting back into action after 7 months off since he beat Junior Witter, this fight will give him the chance to really push himself out there. I look for him to post a dominant decision win before fighting Victor Ortiz over the summer. Look for Ortiz to get a win in the first half of the year to set up that fight with fellow young gun Alexander. Amir Khan will fight Marcos Maidana possibly on the same card as Alexander-Urango. That could eventually be a prelude to a future match up between two of the very best at 140. Khan will use his speed to befuddle Maidana on his way to getting a points win. At some point a fight between Khan & Paul Malignaggi could very well happen though that may not be until the fall with Khan squeezing in a defence in Britain. The ever popular Ricky Hatton will make his comeback possibly on 1 May as co-main event with Juan Manuel Marquez. The double header will help set up a fight with Marquez for later in 2010. Kendall Holt will beat Tim Coleman in an IBF eliminator but he’ll lose if he steps up to fight Alexander. When neither Malignaggi nor Holt can get a title shot they may elect to fight over the summer in a fight that will help the winner get a title opportunity. It would also be a pretty big fight in New York or New Jersey. Another fight that may interest Malignaggi would be Dimitri Salita if Salita can get a few wins under his belt. That would be a pretty big fight in New York. Ireland’s Paul McCloskey broke out last year and is now the European champion. Expect him to continue his development and gain a few more defence’s that should enable him to improve his rankings in the alphabet organisation’s top 10. Nate Campbell who has signed with Golden Boy should get a big fight but likely wont be able to win it. Lucas Matthysse will get the best win of his career stopping shop worn Vivian Harris on the Mosley-Berto card. That may get him a shot at Bradley later in the year. Noteworthy guys coming through are Philadelphia’s Danny Garcia who was very impressive on the Hopkins-Ornelas card & Britain’s Frankie Gavin who appears headed for the big time.

After losing to Floyd Mayweather, Juan Manuel Marquez will drop back to a more natural 135 on 1 May when he will fight in a co feature with Ricky Hatton. He’ll face either Juan Diaz or Michael Katsidis both have styles that suit Marquez who’ll be favoured to beat either. Edwin Valero fought twice last year against ho hum opposition and will be hoping for a bigger year…he’ll have one too. Starting on 6 February he’ll defend his title against Interim holder Antonio De Marco. De Marco’s a good fighter but he looks made to order for Valero with his come forward style. He may start off ok, but will get caught and when that starts happening the whole fight will change. Valero will take De Marco out by the mid rounds. Valero will be back in action over the summer and he’ll get a license to fight in America where he’ll meet David Diaz. Diaz is teak tough but will also fall into the same trap as De Marco and get stopped in 9. By the end of the year Valero-Marquez will be talked about as well as a move up to 140 for Valero. Another possible opponent’s for Valero could be Urbano Antillon & Humberto Soto. Ali Funeka will finally get his big break when he claims the vacant IBF crown when he stops Rolando Reyes in ten. Funeka is promoted by Gary Shaw who look’s after his charges. I expect Funeka to thrive with the title and be active with a couple of defence’s. It wouldn’t be too much of a surprise if the 6’1 South African stepped up to 140 late in the year to fight Bradley. If Katsidis doesn’t get the opportunity to face Marquez on 1 May look for him to possibly feature on the undercard against Jorge Barrios for the vacant WBO title. It would be a war from start to finish with both guys bleeding and hitting the canvas. At the end Katsidis will take the title and improve his status and see him get on another big card before the year is through. Anthony Peterson will come into his own and be a threat to anyone by the end of the year, he’ll get chances to show his talent on Top Rank cards. Another talented young guy Luis Ramos will get more chances on bigger Golden Boy Promotions.




IBO responds to Mundine situation

Anthony Mundine’s decision to forego a quest for the International Boxing Organization’s junior middleweight title next week in Australia is his own – and not based on undue influence or conflict from the IBO – according to its president, Ed Levine.

Mundine had been scheduled to meet Robert Medley for the IBO’s vacant 154-pound championship on Jan. 11 in Sydney, but the fight – if held at all – will no longer be for the IBO belt and is more likely to be fought at middleweight, Levine said.

A Jan. 6 report in the Sydney Morning Herald cited Mundine’s displeasure with the IBO stemming from review of his May defeat of Daniel Geale for the organization’s 160-pound title – which Mundine relinquished upon requesting sanction for the 154-pound bout with Medley.

Levine, however, said it’s more likely Mundine’s decision is based on other factors.

“Our opinion is that Mundine’s current failure to honor his contractual obligations to the IBO and Medley are purely based on his inability to make the weight and/or his reluctance to accept two international officials and the costs attendant to putting on a world title fight,” Levine said.

Mundine defeated Geale by split decision to win the IBO middleweight belt. According to Levine, an appeal to the IBO from Geale’s management resulted in a review of the bout by three “senior IBO judges,” which then resulted in a narrow split decision opinion in Geale’s favor.

Some reports, including the Sydney Morning Herald’s, erroneously indicated that a unanimous decision in Geale’s direction after the review would have mandated the original decision be overturned.

“That is total nonsense and completely incorrect. The IBO would never overturn an official result,” Levine said. “What was said by the IBO is that if the three appeals judges ‘unanimously and clearly by a wide margin’ scored the bout for Geale, title recognition could be withdrawn or an immediate rematch ordered.

“A mere close unanimous re-scoring of the contest would have led to Geale being made a mandatory fight for Mundine. Effectively, the close re-scoring getting a narrow split decision to Geale resulted in the same decision, a mandatory position for Geale but not in an immediate and direct rematch. Mundine was given the opportunity for an intervening optional defense.”

Levine said fights will be scheduled soon to fill the vacancies at 154 and 160 pounds.




NAPA OUT TO REGAIN EURO CROWN

IAN NAPA has been handed a chance to regain the European bantamweight title.

The slick Hackney boxer (19-7) has been nominated to face Frenchman Jerome Arnould for the vacant title, which is likely to take place in March or April.

Napa, 31, will still press ahead with his British title defence against Jamie McDonnell at Brentwood Centre on Friday January 22 despite his date against the former world title challenger.

Promoter Frank Maloney said: “The pressure is on now for Ian, because a loss to McDonnell and the EBU will withdraw their nomination.

“The fight against McDonnell is all or nothing for Ian, but if he has prepared right McDonnell cannot beat him.”

Arnould, 24, is on a eight fight winning streak and unbeaten since being knocked out in the seventh round of a WBA bantamweight title challenge Wladimir Sidorenko in June 2007.

Napa lost the European title ten months ago when he was shocked by Arnould’s countryman, Malik Bouziane.

Top of the bill is Ian Napa’s (19-7) British bantamweight title defence against Jamie McDonnell (12-2-1)

On the same bill Cheshunt’s cocky Ashley Sexton (8-0) faces fellow extrovert Usman Ahmed (6-2-1) in a clash for the vacant English flyweight championship.

On the comeback trail is former British super-featherweight champion Carl Johanneson (27-4) who boxes for the first time since his defeat to Kevin Mitchell in March 2008.

Maloney’s heavyweight Larry Olubamiwo (6-1) moves up a notch when he boxes Irish puncher Scott Belshaw (10-3).

Tickets for this top class show, priced £80 and £35 are available on line www.frankmaloney.com or 0871 226 1508




Alvarez-Camacho; Mussachio to appear February 6

Sources notified 15rounds.com that Atlantic City based welterweight Shamone “The Truth” Alvarez will meet hard hitting Texan Alexis Camacho Saturday, February 6 at the Tropicana Hotel & Casino.

Alvarez, 20-2 (11 KO’s), makes his first start since losing a razor thin decision to Delvin Rodriguez in March. The volume punching Alvarez most recently outpointed 1996 US Olympian Terrance Cauthen in November 2008, but also dropped a competitive decision to future titleholder Joshua Clottey back in ’07.

The hard hitting Camacho brings a record of 17-2 with 16 KO’s, but like his counterpart, fell short on the scorecards in two of his last three fights and is in need of a victory. Camacho, who most recently dropped a decision to upset specialist Carlos Molina, has been working hard with one of New Jersey’s very best to prepare for February 6.

“This is not going to be an easy fight, but I am very confident that I will be walking away as the winner”, Camacho told 15rounds. “I have been working with Lou Duva for a few months now, and he has really improved my game. I want to face the top welterweights in the world, but first and foremost I must get by Shamone.”

Alvarez, a perfect 12-0 when fighting in his hometown of Atlantic City, recognizes the importance of getting back in the winners circle.

“I am really looking forward to this fight. Anytime you have the opportunity to fight in front of your hometown fans is great. I want to get myself back into title contention and a win over Camacho points me in that direction.”

The card is being promoted by Joe Deguardia’s Star Boxing. Also slated to appear in a six round light heavyweight contest is Wildwood’s Chuck Mussachio against the ever famous TBA.

For more New Jersey boxing news, go to www.gardenstatefightscene.com




Pacquiao – Mayweather to go to mediation tomorrow


According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, the saga between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather will take another turn on Tuesday as the sides will head to mediation in Santa Monica, California.

“We’re going into mediation,” Top Rank chairman Bob Arum, Pacquiao’s promoter, told ESPN.com. “This guy (mediator, Daniel Weinstein) was successful resolving our nutty problem before and hopefully he can be successful this time. He’s a guy who is a big fight fan and loves the sport, and I found him last time to be a delight to deal with. Everybody did.”

At the time of the previous mediation, the companies had several ongoing lawsuits, including the one at the center of the bad blood: ownership of the promotional rights to Pacquiao, who had signed contracts with both companies before eventually pledging his loyalty to Top Rank.

When the disputes were settled in June 2007, Arum and Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer both credited Weinstein’s steady hand for getting them to reach an accord. Under the global settlement, Top Rank retained Pacquiao’s promotional rights with Golden Boy receiving a percentage of Top Rank’s profit from his future bouts.

The hope is that Weinstein can once again help the sides see their way through what has become an increasingly nasty battle in an effort to finalize the bout between welterweight titlist Pacquiao and Mayweather, the two best pound-for-pound fighters in the world, in a fight many believe will break the pay-per-view record of 2.44 million buys. Mayweather’s 2007 fight with Golden Boy president Oscar De La Hoya set the record.

Top Rank and Golden Boy have agreed on all points on the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight except for one: The protocol for drug testing.

One issue sure to be discussed in front of the mediator is the impact of the defamation lawsuit Pacquiao filed last week in Nevada U.S. District Court against Mayweather Jr., Schaefer, De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Sr., Roger Mayweather and Mayweather Promotions.

In the suit, Pacquiao alleges they made false and defamatory statements and sullied his reputation by accusing him of taking performance-enhancing drugs. Pacquiao denies he has ever used PEDs and has never failed a drug test.

If mediation fails, and the fight does not get made, Arum said he will match Pacquiao with junior middleweight titlist Yuri Foreman, whom he also promotes, on March 20 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas so Pacquiao could attempt to win a title in a record eighth weight division.

Mayweather could still fight on March 13 at the MGM and potentially face former junior welterweight titlist Paulie Malignaggi.




A contrarian’s dry-eyed look at the (possible) collapse of Pacquiao-Mayweather

“This one storm is going to change the face of our planet. When this storm is over, we’ll be in a new ice age. My God.” – Professor Jack Hall, “The Day After Tomorrow”

Thank heavens the hyperbolic professor didn’t have an internet connection and an interest in boxing these last 40 days. Who knows how many worlds he might have seen ending? But then, if he’d had those things there’s an outside chance his carrying on might have been ridiculous enough for us to snicker, find our equilibrium and realize that – much as in the poorly scripted case above – the end of the world is not nigh.

Nor is the end of boxing. Nor – mercilessly enough – is the end of negotiations for Manny Pacquiao to fight Floyd Mayweather and determine the mythical pound-for-pound titlist of 2010. Soft deadlines have passed. Hard deadlines have come and gone. New Year’s Day is in the books. Both sides are unwilling to budge. And with March 13 looming but 68 days from here, there’s not nearly enough time to fill Cowboys Stadium!

Get a hold of yourself. This fight was never going anywhere but Las Vegas. With MGM Grand the settled site for Pacquiao-Mayweather, there are no tickets to sell; attracting pay-per-viewers is the only point of the promotion. That means HBO’s “24/7” program is the de facto promoter and the ultimate deadline needn’t come before Feb. 1.

That could be the last word in optimism if optimism were warranted. It isn’t.

Anyone reading this column cares enough about our sport to cast a wary eye at outsiders who assure us boxing’s future relies on this fight coming off. I know, I know. We finally had the New York Times and Wall Street Journal’s validation. Well, so long as this fight looked doable, it behooved us all to agree this was the most important happening of the millennium. Now that Pacquiao-Mayweather in Texas has gone the way of Pacquiao-Valero in Macao, though, ask yourself: How does this fight affect me?

Manny Pacquiao is considered the world’s best fighter. Floyd Mayweather is considered the world’s second-best fighter. If they were to fight, those positions would likely switch. How is that good for boxing?

Pacquiao is a charismatic action fighter who’s created a market for prizefighting in the Philippines and made it popular as ever throughout Asia. Mayweather is a foul-mouthed defensive specialist whose fights lose more fans than they gain. Pacquiao is good for boxing. Mayweather is good for Mayweather.

Mayweather is also too smart by half, this time. He’s devised a strategy of implying Pacquiao has been cheating, without exactly saying it. He didn’t want fair play; he wanted another psychological advantage over another opponent. He knew Pacquiao would consider the blood testing intrusive. He knew in Pacquiao’s mind it would be “Money May” himself reaching in those veins and doing God knows what with the blood.

Hey, as an American immune to superstition, I’m with Mayweather on the testing. I’d probably agree to the testing even if I did have something to hide – betting on the testers’ incompetence. But most Filipinos would refuse blood tests even if they had nothing to hide.

If the fight’s off because neither side flinches on blood tests, Pacquiao remains the world’s best fighter. Mayweather holds down the two spot. Works for me.

But let’s hope it doesn’t work for Mayweather. Let’s hope being a runner-up enkindles him enough to declare war on the welterweight division, demand the head of whoever wins the upcoming match between Shane Mosley and Andre Berto, and then issue beatings to Joshua Clottey, Miguel Cotto and Luis Collazo.

Wait, stop laughing.

A more likely scenario of course is that Mayweather will pursue dwindling-money fights with old guys and b-level talents until he, too, becomes an old guy. If that happens, Mayweather’s ultimate legacy will look like this: Top 10 talent, Top 100 resume.

Oh, no it won’t! I’ll remind the world till the day I die that Pacquiao ducked him by refusing blood tests!

No, you won’t. Someday you’ll be married with kids and a full-time job and no more than an hour of every week for message boards. Then, only Mayweather’s record of actual fights will matter, and some youngster half your age will say: “Not one prime hall-of-famer on that 50-0 record.”

Based on their past exploits, we can assume Pacquiao really wants this fight, Mayweather sort of wants this fight, Golden Boy Promotions really wants this fight, and Top Rank sort of wants this fight. Though they share similar levels of enthusiasm, Mayweather is wrong and Top Rank is right – coincidentally, for the same reason:

If anyone can solve Manny Pacquiao, it’s Floyd Mayweather.

Pacquiao and his millions of fans don’t know this. Mayweather and his dozens of fans do. And so, one assumes, do a few people in Top Rank – the company that developed Mayweather before it developed Pacquiao. Top Rank won’t jeopardize the Pacman party till it gets plenty more concessions at the negotiating table.

If Pacquiao-Mayweather does happen, though, it will be an event. The New York Times will be there. The undercard will be unwatchable. The fight itself will be dull. Mayweather will hold the sport of boxing hostage – whupping the daylights out of the Matty Hattons of the world – for five more years. And we’ll all be $100 million richer.

No we won’t. Yet, that’s the final reason why many seem to think they have a vested interest in this fight happening: Because it will make a lot of money. Money for whom? In prizefighting the money distributes like the talent on a super-fight’s marquee: 90 percent in the top 10 percent.

So, dry your eyes. And remember, less money in boxing, not more, is what made 2009 so much better than 2008.

Bart Barry can be reached via Twitter.com/bartbarry




Weights from Cleveland

Nicolai Firtha 247 – Joseph Rabotte 350
Eric Stevens 168 – John Stallings 167
Mike Moore 160.5 – Anthony Watson TBA
Omari Braxton 206 – John Fields 195 ½
Jason Freeman 221 – Alexis Cruz Medina 259 ½
Randy Campbell 181 ½ – Daniel Shull 180

Polish president encourages Internet use in commencement address

AP Worldstream May 20, 2003 | COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press Writer 00-00-0000 Dateline: ENGLEWOOD, Colorado Students and professors of an online university gathered around a small screen Tuesday to watch Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski give a commencement speech via Web cast.

Kwasniewski urged them to use their technology skills to educate others about the Internet.

He told several students and professors from Jones International University that the online school was a tool for the future. “I hope soon to have the possibility to be able to join the global community,” he said, adding, “Technology should be an important ingredient. It may be and should be a tool for social development.” Eighty-six graduates from five countries were expected to tune into the commencement around the world via the Web cast for Jones International, an online school where students log in to take classes and can earn undergraduate or master’s degrees. site jones international university website jones international university

Kwasniewski was chosen to speak in part because of his effort to modernize Poland’s communication system. He promoted Internet for Polish Schools, a program to provide computer equipment and Internet access to schools in rural communities in Poland.

He taped his speech from his palace in Poland last week and it was aired with other speeches by professors Wednesday. Kwasniewski said he hoped that one day his country would have the expertise to offer the same kind of online programs as Jones International.

Three students were at the school’s headquarters to watch the commencement, Diane Miller, 35, traveled to Colorado from Tennessee to meet some of her professors face to face.

“I think it is pretty impressive to have the president of Poland speak especially because it solidifies the importance of this university internationally,” she said.

Jones International University, founded in 1993 by cable magnate Glenn Jones, has about 2,000 students in 70 countries.

___ On the Net:

COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press Writer




Crystal Ball for 2010 –Part I


The Heavyweight’s have largely been dominated by The Klitschko’s through out the later part of this decade. I don’t see much change in that this year with Wladimir beating his WBO mandatory Eddie Chambers in March by eighth round stoppage then closing out the year fighting his IBF mandatory Alexander Povetkin who may have a few moment along the way before being stopped in the tenth. Big brother Vitali wont fight until the summer when he’ll take on either Odlanier Solis who’ll win an eliminator against Ray Austin or Tomasz Adamek if he gets past Jason Estrada in February & Chris Arreola in late April. Either way he wont lose. That will set the platform for Vitali to face David Haye who’ll force the stoppage against John Ruiz. After all the jostling for position Vitali will stop Haye who may give the big man trouble early with movement in the 5 with a big KO. Sam Peter to continue rebuilding on Top Rank shows and have a good year. The most noteworthy guy coming through is Russian Denis Boytsov. At just 23 boasting a pristine 26-0(21) he looks to have a bright future which could see him win the European title before the end of the year. The fast rising Bulgarian Kubrat Pulev could also have a good year. He’s fighting once a month at the moment but already beating decent guys with his next appearance due late in January against the vastly more experienced Oleg Platov.

With Tomasz Adamek abdicating his thrown as the top man at Cruiserweight the other will jostle for position. Steve Cunningham will regain his IBF crown when he turns back Matt Godfrey on points in the first quarter of the year. The Philadelphia product has never been the most active of guys and may only fight once more in that calendar year and that may be a road trip North to Canada to fight Troy Ross or even further a field to Europe. Marco Huck looks the future of the division at 25. He managed to win the WBO title in 09 look for him to defend it three times this year all at home one likely foe is Grigory Drozd. It’ll be interesting to see if Zsolt Erdei elects to stay at Cruiserweight i don’t think he will. Leaving Krzysztof Wlodarczyk to beat Herbie Hide for the vacant WBC title. Look for Wlodarczyk to defend at home in Poland before possibly having to go to Germany for a defence where Cuban Juan pablo Hernandez may be dangerous. Guillermo Jones finally got over the hump in 08 when he won won the WBA title after 3 previous shots at various world titles. However he hasn’t capitalised on that having not fought since September 08, time seems to be running out for Jones who turns 38 in May. He’ll either be stripped of at some point have to fight Alexander Alexeev. Either way Alexeev will win come good on his promise to win.

When Danny Green stopped Roy Jones a few weeks back he changed the landscape of the division dramatically. First off we we wont get to see Jones square off with long time rival Bernard Hopkins in a rematch that has been 16 years in the making. That means that Hopkins will have to find a new dance partner. One possible is Danny green who’d love the fight. If the money’s right it’ll happen, just don’t bank on Hopkins going the way of RJJ. Hopkins will be far more studious and out fox Green if it comes off. One fight that it wont set up is Hopkins against Chad Dawson who will instead have to sit out until June when Jean Pascal’s shoulder will hopefully of healed. Dawson will go to Canada and regain his old WBC title with a hard fought points win. With a lack of opportunity’s Dawson will then make a routine defence at home in Connecticut against Chris Henry. It looks as though there will be rematch in the first quarter between WBA kingpin Gabriel Campillo & Beibut Shumenov. This time Shumenov will prevail. Look for him to take his new title back to Kazahkstan and make a few lucrative defences. In 2008 Tavoris Cloud entered the ranks of a contender with a drubbing of former champion Julio Cesar Gonzalez then after a full year without a fight he fought for the vacant IBF crown when he outpointed Clintonm Woods. Since that fight in August he hasn’t fight and has nothing in the works. Hopefully he’ll get back to work and capitalise on being a champion with a couple of defence’s. One could be against Glen Johnson if he gets past Yusef Mack. Jurgen Braehmer became WBO champion when Zsolt Erdei moved upto Cruiserweight. It’s possible that Erdei could comeback to 175 and that fight would be pretty big in Germany. If it happens it’ll pit Braehmer’s power against Erdei’s clever boxing i’d look for Erdei to be a little to clever for Braehmer and take a points win. However if it doesn’t come off there isn’t to much in the WBO rankings to suggest Braehmer will lose. Just outside the world scene Nathan Cleverly of Wales is going the old fashioned way of British, Commonwealth and in January he’ll travel to Italy where he’ll look to add the European title. If all goes according to plan he’ll stay at theat level turning back a few challengers whilst maturing ready for the world stage.

Future fights for many of the top guys at 168 are largely mapped out for 2010 thanks to the Super 6. Which goes into stage two and kicks off when Andre Dirrell will host Arthur Abraham in California in March. It figures to be an interesting fight with Dirrell’s speed putting him and early lead before Abraham comes tearing back even rocking Direll late though Dirrell will hold and get the victory. Then on 17 April Mikkel Kessler will outpoint Carl Froch in Denmark and Andre Ward will score a tenth round stoppage over Jermain Taylor. Also possibly on the same date arguably the best 168er in the world Lucian Bute will fight though across the airwaves on HBO. It was rumoured that possible foes would be WBO Kingpin Robert Stieglitz in a unification or possibly Edison Miranda who was due to meet Stieglitz until he fell ill. Either way it wont matter to Bute who’ll score another impressive stoppage. It has also been rumoured that Sakio Bika may face Allen Green in an elimination fight to decide who would go into the Super 6 if someone pulled out. I look for Green to out box the rugged Bika and campaign for his shot at a place in the Super 6. The final phase of the super Six will take place before the end of the year. It will see Ward face countryman Dirrell in what could be a modern day Jones-Hopkins. With Ward eking out a close chess match. Froch to fight Abraham both coming off loses it’ll be close early. Froch using his speed advantage while Abraham will pick his moments ultimately late on Abraham will enjoy the more success and win a close points decision. Taylor will decide to sit out the final round with Allen Green stepping in to face Kessler. Green will have his moments but Kessler will prevail by unanimous decision. The best two up and comers are Olympic gold medallist James Degale and his compatriot George Groves. Both did well in 09 and will do even better in this year.




Briggs tests positive for banned sunstance

According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, former two-time heavyweight title holder, Shannon Briggs tested positive for a banned substance following his first round knockout over Marcus McGee on December 3rd in New York City.

The bout was changed to a no contest. Briggs was also suspended for 90 days by the New York State Athletic Commission, according to Ivaylo Gotzev, Briggs’ manager.

Gotzev declined to identify the substance that Briggs tested positive for but told ESPN.com on Saturday night that the test result came about because of medication he takes for asthma, which he has battled for years.

“Shannon is on enough medication to kill a horse because of his asthma,” Gotzev said. “All the medications he takes, other people couldn’t even get out of bed. But he’s out there running and training and fighting. He’s not a steroid user or a drug user. He’s using medication. We’re consulting with his physicians and seeing how we can make the proper adjustments so this doesn’t happen again.

“Maybe he needs to stay off certain medications before fights. I don’t know. I’m not the doctor. But Shannon is on a number of medications due to his asthma. He had something found by the commission, and we’ve dealt with that.”

“Shannon is a fighter, so whatever comes our way we’ll be ready, be it MMA or boxing,” Gotzev said. “If it makes sense, why not give MMA a try? I don’t think [UFC heavyweight champion] Brock Lesnar gets past Shannon’s jab.”

“I have sat down with [Chris Arreola’s promoter] Dan Goossen and if he’s not lying through his teeth, he’s said several times on several occasions that he’s looking at Shannon as a possible opponent for Cris.




15Rounds’ 2009 and Decade Awards!


Fighter of the Year: Manny Pacquiao

Pacquiao’s 2009 was one for the ages. With dominant victories over Ring Magazine Junior Welterweight champion Ricky Hatton (who was previously unbeaten at 140 lbs) and WBO Welterweight kingpin Miguel Cotto (considered by many an undefeated fighter due to the Antonio Margarito hand wraps controversy), Pacquiao was a unanimous pick for Fighter of the Year.

Fight of the year: Juan Manuel Marquez TKO9 Juan Diaz

Marquez-Diaz was a sensational action bout from start to finish. The two mixed it up from the opening bell, with the naturally bigger Diaz getting the better of the exchanges early on. Marquez, who refused to back down, continued to slug it out with Diaz before turning the tides in fashion. The technically proficient Marquez badly cut Diaz in round 8 and dropped him hard with a two punch combo in round nine. Marquez then tagged the badly hurt Diaz with a vicious uppercut, leaving him flat on his back, forcing Referee Rafael Ramos to halt the most exciting fight of 2009.

Hottest Division: Welterweight

With the inclusion of Pacquiao, the hottest division got hotter. The sport’s biggest fight in recent memory will occur at 147-pounds when Pacquiao eventually meets Floyd Mayweather Jr. Though they are one and two on the pound-for-pound list, neither will be able to claim they are the clear welterweight king until they beat Shane Mosley. The ranks 4-7 at 1-4-7 are as good as in any other division, with Miguel Cotto, Joshua Clottey, Andre Berto and Luis Collazo competing in a ridiculously stacked weight class.

Weakest division: Heavyweight

Just about enough has been said about the dearth of talent at heavyweight. No one can argue that the brothers Klitschko, Wladimir and Vitali, are not a highly talented duo. But the drop-off after them is unlike anything we have seen in decades. Not only is the top ten a limited lot, but there are scarcely any prospects to get excited about. Once upon a time, not that long ago, the World Heavyweight champion was the most recognizable man in the United States, if not the world, and the most prestigious position in all of sports.

Prospect of the Year: Fernando Guerrero

Guerrero (17-0, 14 KOs) has the look of a future champion and made great strides in 2009. There are several criteria for choosing a Prospect of the Year, and Guerrero seemed to get check marks for each one. Guerrero kept a busy schedule, as a prospect should, fighting five times, scoring three knockouts and winning two decisions. Guerrero took a step-up in competition, winning a majority decision over fringe contender Ossie Duran and stopping tough journeyman Brian Norman, who had gone ten full with Jean Pascal.

Guerrero has the benefit of fighting at the high-profile middleweight class, which is ripe with opportunities for rapid advancement. The former amateur star is still young at 23-years-old, and has a fight of some significance scheduled in 2010 against former prospect Jesus Gonzales. Lastly, what gives Guerrero a huge edge over every other U.S. based prospect, is his massive drawing power in his hometown of Salisbury, Maryland, where he has fought in front of 8,000 people.

Worst Decision of the Year: Ali Funeka D12 Joan Guzman

For the better part of twelve rounds, Funeka hammered the unbeaten Guzman. Guzman, a quick and slick Dominican, was bloodied and rocked on a number of occasions by his taller opponent. Funeka had everything going his way. From a strong jab and big power punches, the South African clearly had the fight in control, winning at the absolute worst 8 of the 12 rounds (the score Joseph Pasquale had of 116-112).

The vacant IBF Lightweight title appeared to be his. This was until Alan Davis and Benoit Roussel unexplainably scored the contest 114-114, disgustingly robbing Funeka of the title. This created a major out roar in the boxing community and further solidified why judges should be required to do post fight interviews.

Promoter of the year: Top Rank

The promoter of the year’s biggest fight, Pacquiao-Cotto, and the co-promoter perhaps the second biggest fight, Pacquiao-Hatton, Top Rank earns the nod as best promotional firm of 2009. In addition to those two mega events, Top Rank continues to develop their prospects into champions and stars better than any one in the business. The latest example of which is Juan Manuel Lopez, who has achieved superstardom in Puerto Rico and may be en route to his second world title January 23.

Fight you’d most like to see in 2010: Manny Pacquiao vs Floyd Mayweather

This appeared to be a given until issues over pre fight drug testing at least temporarily derailed the fight. Pacquiao and Mayweather are unquestionably the top two fighters in the sport. Each brings a style that the other hasn’t faced. With both topping 1,000,000 pay per view buys for a fight in 2009, they are obviously box office kings as well.

Pacquiao and Mayweather appear ready to take on different opponents in their next bout, but an overwhelming public demand makes the fight all the more likely for later in 2010.

Knockout of the Year: Manny Pacquiao KO2 Ricky Hatton

There were not that many people outside of England picking Hatton to beat Pacquiao this past May, but could anyone have expected the brutal one-sidedness in which Pac man would end the fight? The left hand Pacquiao landed to put Hatton down in a heap at the end of round two was picture perfect.

Fighter of the Decade: Manny Pacquiao

Pacquiao nabbed titles in a record six divisions over the last ten years (super bantamweight, featherweight, junior lightweight, lightweight, junior welterweight and welterweight). Pacquiao’s sensational decade included knockout victories over Marco Antonio Barrera (who he would later defeat by decision), Erik Morales (twice), Miguel Cotto, Oscar De La Hoya and Ricky Hatton; all multi division world champions that were ranked on the pound for pound list during their careers. Pacquiao also owns a points victory over the great Juan Manuel Marquez, and stopped once-beaten David Diaz among other notable victories. A simply sensational run by one of the best fighters in the last quarter century.

Authors note: Pacquiao’s victories over Barrera in their first fight and Ricky Hatton were for the Ring Magazine title, which is globally recognized as the legitimate championship belt in each weight division.

Fight of the Decade: Diego Corrales TKO10 Jose Luis Castillo

On May, 7 2005, Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo battered each other over the duration of an unforgettable fight. Both neglected any kind of defense in this phone booth battle, willingly using their faces as a line of defense. In the opening thirty seconds of round ten, Castillo dropped Corrales hard with a left hook. The dazed Corrales was down just seconds later and his night appeared to be all but over. This was until, the unthinkable happened.

After a brief break and a point deduction for spitting out his mouth piece, trainer Joe Goosen famously quipped Corrales “you have to f****ng get inside on him now. And did he ever. Castillo swarmed Corrales in an attempt to finish the fight, but was rocked by a two punch combo, springing the latter back to life. Corrales then stunned Castillo via a hard left hook and stopped him with a vicious combination (which had Castillo out on his feet) him thirty seconds later. Corrales tragically passed away exactly two years after the fight, but will forever be linked to the most miraculous comeback in one of the greatest slugfests of all time.

Division of the Decade: Welterweight

The 147 lb division, our best of 2009, had a number of terrific pugilists make a mark in it. The list of fighters making major waves at 147 include Floyd Mayweather, Shane Mosley, Miguel Cotto, Manny Pacquiao (since the Cotto bout lifted him to an even higher level), Vernon Forrest, Paul Williams, Zab Judah, Joshua Clottey, and current rising star Andre Berto among others. Though featherweight was a very close second, welterweight division had too many top tier fighters to ignore.

Worst Decision of the Decade: Courtney Burton SD10 Emmanuel Augustus

Discounting significance, but just based on sheer disgustingness, Courtney Burton’s 2004 decision over Emanuel Augustus in Michigan was the Worst Decision of the Decade. Their fight, televised on ESPN2 from Burton’s home state, was utterly one-sided. Despite an unnecessary point deduction by the referee, Augustus should have had the verdict running away. Somehow, one judge scored the bout 99-90, while another had it 97-92 for Burton.

The third judge scored the fight 98-94 for Augustus, and even that was a little too close. Making matters worse, when commentator Teddy Atlas approached the Michigan Boxing Commission representative on air, they apparently did not know the difference between a majority decision and a split decision. Augustus gained a small measure of justice, stopping a by-then faded Burton in 2006.

Promoter of the decade: Top Rank

With the reign of Don King Productions winding down, and Golden Boy Promotions rising up as the decade began the clear choice for Promoter of the Decade is Top Rank. Again, Top Rank helped create or elevate three of the decade’s the biggest stars in Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao. In addition, Top Rank was largely behind the renaissance of the featherweight division.

Knockout of the decade: Manny Pacquiao KO2 Ricky Hatton (see above)

Write ups compiled by Matt Yanofsky and Mario Ortega Jr. Awards voted on by staff.

Photo by Chris Farina of Top rank




Here’s one resolution for a New Year: Pacquiao-Mayweather before 2011


“When archaeologists discover the missing arms of Venus de Milo, they will find she was wearing boxing gloves.”
— John Barrymore

The late Barrymore, a great American actor more than 70 years ago, is long gone, but he could have been speaking about the Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather negotiations, which have been putting more nausea into ad nauseam with each passing day. It’s hard to know whether to laugh, cry, scream or just ask for the barf bag.

I’ve done all of that and more since the talks spun out of control and into a familiar gutter. There are no winners here, other than perhaps Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and Arizona Senator John McCain.

Jones must be relieved that nobody dragged him into it by accepting his $25-million offer to stage the fight at Cowboys Stadium. McCain has to be happy he didn’t follow up on a reported suggestion that he become an arbitrator. The escalating Pacquiao-Mayweather blood feud makes the health-care debate sound like kumbaya. There’s no peace here. Only a piece of you-know-what.

How the talks, seemingly so smooth in the early stages, turned into such a stinking mess is probably not a surprise if placed within boxing’s usual context, which is older than Barrymore’s defining line and probably at least as ancient as the marble in the de Milo statue. But Pacquiao-Mayweather looked as if it were a chance to move on and beyond a frayed way of doing business.

That said, the business still beckons with enough potential money to say that it also wouldn’t be a surprise if the fight was signed, sealed and delivered in a sudden announcement next week. With a reported potential of $40 million for each side, it’s hard, perhaps impossible, to walk away. In the end, nobody is making a compromise. There is only one thing they’re making: Money, money, money.

But the process won’t make new fans out of a public leery of a sport that never seems to get out of its own way. Michael Katz, who is to fight-writing what Barrymore was to acting, would write that the only thing killing boxing is boxing. Nothing has changed and, oh yeah, Happy New Year.

Pacquiao’s defamation suit, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas, against Mayweather Jr., Mayweather Sr., Roger Mayweather, Oscar De La Hoya and Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer could only insert more vitriol into rancor that began with the Mayweather camp’s demand for Olympic-style blood testing. That’s one interpretation among many, too many.

Who knows? Both sides were quick to say that the lawsuit doesn’t necessarily kill the fight. Okay, then maybe it is just another step in the negotiations. To wit: The Pacquiao camp says it will drop the lawsuit if Mayweather backs off on the demand for random testing, especially unannounced tests within 30 days of opening bell, which had been scheduled for March 13. Then again, maybe the lawsuit is a real expression of Pacquiao’s anger at how he believes he has been smeared by the blood-testing demand, which includes at least an implication he is using HGH.

Pacquiao’s drug-testing resume is spotless in Nevada. But the state’s Athletic Commission doesn’t conduct the comprehensive, random tests done by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. Oh yeah, USADA has been another issue. The Mayweather camp wanted it to conduct the tests. No way, said the Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum, who has said urine testing is sufficient. But physicians have said repeatedly that only random blood tests can detect HGH.

Credibility? That’s hard to detect anywhere.

The Mayweather demands are undercut on several fronts. Schaefer said no to blood testing for Shane Mosley, a former BALCO client, amid plans for a fight in 2008 against Zab Judah. According to reports of testimony to a grand-jury investigation, Mosley said he unknowingly used the clear, the cream and EPO, which were Performance Enhancing Drugs readily available in BALCO’s PED dispenser. Yet, Schaefer said Mosley had never tested positive in tests conducted by the Nevada State Athletic Commission. Hence, Schaefer said, it was wrong to treat him as a cheater.

“We are not going to do other tests than the Nevada commission requires,’’ Schaefer said in an Associated Press story. “The fact is Shane is not a cheater and he does not need to be treated like one.”

Why should Pacquiao be treated any differently?

Then, there’s Pacquiao who has reportedly said he doesn’t like needles, yet has tattoos that prove he has been needled often. Pacquiao’s anger at suspicions inherent to Mayweather’s demands is understandable. But those same suspicions are also the price of athletic fame these days. Even if Pacquiao pursues the lawsuit and wins, he will have to live with questions he can’t knock out. Olympic swimmer Dara Torres underwent a battery of random tests at her own request when she decided to make a comeback as a 40-year-old mom. She passed them all. Yet, suspicions are still there.

Olympic-style testing, no matter what acronym conducts them, is random and more thorough than anything done by a boxing commission. But the prevailing assumption is that athletes are always a masking agent ahead of any technology.

Mayweather has to know that, too, and he has used it in what some say is an early attempt at gamesmanship. Then again, there are others who say that Mayweather is simply hiding behind the demand in an attempt to delay the fight until May or September. The theory is that Mayweather has decided he wants a tune-up.

An extra helping of skepticism is needed for anything done by Mayweather. He likes to talk about a level playing field and transparency, yet he was happy to pay Juan Manuel Marquez $600,000 — $300,000 a pound – for being two over the contracted weight in September. Then, he refused an HBO request to step on an unofficial scale on the night before his one-sided decision over Marquez. So much for transparency.

In hindsight, you can only wonder why everybody talked and acted as though the March 13 fight was a done deal when there wasn’t a contract with Mayweather’s signature on it. There’s another New Year’s resolution in there somewhere.

But maybe this flap is a good thing. Initially, Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach balked at March 13. It was too early, he said. Pacquiao still needed time to recover from his bruising victory over Miguel Cotto in November. And, yeah, maybe Mayweather really does need a tune-up. And, maybe, a fight later in 2010 will lead to some history in the ring and a rich rematch. More important, maybe it represents an opportunity for Nevada and other state boxing commissions to upgrade the testing process, especially for the biggest fights.

But, please, quit all the rancorous maybes and get the fight done. If there are only lawsuits and screaming arguments, only archaeologists will find the game, buried with de Milo’s long, lost arms.

Photo By Chris Farina/Top Rank




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