Tuesday, January 24, 2017

WBO confirns winner to fight Luis Ortiz



World Boxing Association President Gilberto Mendoza Jr. is firm that his organization will order the winner of Anthony Joshua vs. Wladimir Klitschko to fight unbeaten contender Luis Ortiz (27-0, 23 KOs).

Anthony doesn't have a strong chin



Most fight fans agree the upcoming April clash between young champ Anthony Joshua and “old” ex-champ Wladimir Klitschko is pretty much a 50-50 fight; certainly a tough one to pick a winner from. Fans also hope the Wembley mega-event that has smashed all previous ticket sales in the UK is a great fight.

One man who believes it will be “explosive” and “will not last too long,” is Klitschko’s co-trainer James Ali Bashir. Bashir in speaking with BaylorIC TV, said that “someone is getting knocked out” on April 29.“Wladimir Klitschko will be very well prepared when he comes into the ring. He’s always coming to fight at 100 percent readiness,” Bashir stated. “Anthony Joshua is a large, young, strong active fighter with a very strong punch. Joshua will be a very serious fight. In the ring, you will have two large, well-trained punchers. Someone is going to get knocked out.”

Joshua is of course 18-0(18) and he has yet to go beyond the 7th-round. Klitschko is 64-4(53) and he has shown in the past that he can stop a guy early or late on in a fight. But just who will get KO’d in April? According to Bashir, we do not yet know if Joshua has a good chin or not.“We do not know how strong Joshua’s chin is. But Wladimir does not have a weak chin, as some say,” Bashir continued. “Sam Peter put him down three times, and each time Wladimir got up and won the fight. And Peter – this is one of the most powerful punchers in the heavyweight division in the last 15 to 20 years. Wladimir is going to shock everyone. I expect an incredible fight. I don’t think it will be long, but it will definitely be an explosive fight. One of these guys will get knocked out.”

Klitschko, who will turn 41 in March, has not been involved in an explosive fight for quite some time, and the Peter fight Bashir talks about took place an eternity ago. But Bashir is definitely right when he says we do not yet know about the strength of A.J’s chin; even if we do know all about his punching power. Could this fight surprise us all and come down to who lands a bomb first? Certainly, Klitschko will have to let his hands go far more than he did in his losing fight to Tyson Fury.A great, explosive fight would be just what the heavyweight division could do with from such a high profile fight. Let’s hope Bashir is correct and both men deliver in style at the end of April.

Anthony Joshua focused on his fight


After just 18 bouts as a pro, all either quick or mid-rounds quick, KO wins, Anthony Joshua is ready for his “defining fight.” The big, record-breaking sell-out showdown between he and former king Wladimir Klitschko on April 29 will define the remainder of Joshua’s career, certainly – and AJ is hugely motivated to win.

“I tried to play it down, I’m quite like that – ‘It’s only another fight’,” Joshua said on the enormity of the upcoming fight when speaking with Sky Sports News HQ. “But emotionally you will always change how you feel about something. I’m going into the stage, emotionally, where this is my defining fight. I’ve done what I had to do to become [IBF] champion, which is great. But when we talk about defining fights, this is one that could change the perspective of my credibility within my industry. That’s why this fight is important.”Joshua added how this fight will contest, “The heavyweight championship.” If AJ can win, he will arguably become THE heavyweight champion in the eyes of most people. Deontay Wilder is of course the WBC ruler, and Joseph Parker the WBO, but unless the never beaten Tyson Fury returns to reclaim his previous status as the universally accepted and lineal champ, then the April 29 winner will be the main man in the opinion of many millions of fans.The fight could be a defining fight for Klitschko, though. If the 41-year-old can regain the title (or two of the belts he lost to Tyson Fury) his career will have a whole other dimension to it. And a Wladimir win would be a great comeback. For Joshua, if he does lose, say via close decision, he is young enough to come again.

But if the Londoner who captured Olympic gold in 2012 can beat Klitschko, his already enormous popularity and credibility will absolutely skyrocket. The pressure on both men must be quite something heading into this big fight. Klitschko has of course experienced plenty of massive fights and the pressures they bring before, but will Joshua be able to handle it all on the night?

A great case can be made for either man winning the fight that will play out before over 80,000 fans.

Sunday, January 15, 2017

James DeGale front teeth missing

James DeGale shows the scars of battle as he is missing his front teeth.

DeGale's gum shield came out numerous times during his fight with Badou Jack, and it looks like he paid the price..

Some Harsh warning to James Degale

‪After I become IBO Super Middle-Weight World Champion on Feb 4th. I'm coming for James Degale & the rest of those teeth #TakingAllTheBelts‬
 

Carl Froch on Eubank jr


  Carl Froch believes Eubank Jr is the man to beat Gennady Golovkin.

"Eubank Jr is a very good fighter, very skillful, very hard, very fit and a real force to be reckoned with at middleweight. I'd love to see him fight Triple G and I think that he can beat Triple G - I really do,"

Manny Pacquiao Story


                                                                          EARLY DAYS
BORN in Kibawe in the Philippines, eight days before Christmas in 1978, Manny Pacquiao’s childhood was not filled with cheer. His family struggled to survive such was the poverty, and Pacquiao has told tales of eating just once a day and sleeping in the street. Exactly what he ate on certain days left a lot to be desired. There is a story that goes: family starving so daddy kills the dog and cooks it.At the age of 16, the teenage waif – often forced to use his fists to survive on the streets – sneaks on to a ferry to Manila, and lies about his age (says he’s 18) so he can become a professional boxer. The malnourished youngster is unbeaten in his first 11 fights but the temptations that money brings – gambling and alcohol – soon hack away at his natural discipline and he loses fight No.12 when Rustin Torrecampo flattens the flyweight (108lbs) in three rounds.Shocked by his stumble, he vows to take the sport seriously again.
FIRST WORLD TITLE
FOLLOWING the first loss of his career, Manny Pacquiao wins his next 12 fights (11 by knockout) to set up a shot at respected WBC flyweight champion Chatchai Sasakul. The bout [above] takes place in the outdoor Tonsuk College Ground in Phuttamonthon, Philippines.
Sasakul had lost only one bout of 33 and, over the first seven rounds against Pacquiao, appears to be heading towards another victory. But the Filipino uncorks two left hands to knock out the champion in the eighth and claim his first world title two weeks before his 20th birthday.
But Pacquiao is starting to fill out. After a lifetime of scrimping and scraping for food, the youngster is eating regularly and, probably belatedly, maturing physically. He just about makes the 112lb weight limit for his first defence (a win over Gabriel Mira), but he is drained for his next one. After starving himself, and several attempts to vomit out the last dregs of mass from his emaciated frame before the weigh-in, he comes in too heavy. Only the title will be on the line for Medgoen Singsurat, who makes the most of the opportunity by knocking out a drained Pacquiao with a body shot in round three.
Again Manny vows to learn lessons from defeat and in 2001 makes a decision that will turn his fortunes around when he wanders into Freddie Roach’s Wild Card gym in Hollywood.
BREAKTHROUGH
MANNY PACQUIAO and Freddie Roach’s relationship takes off. The American coach begins to shape one of the greatest fighters from modern times from the furious and unkempt brilliance the Filipino brings. Growing rapidly, Pacquiao leapfrogs two divisions and lands in the super-bantamweight division. In June 2001 – on the undercard of Oscar De La Hoya’s win over Javier Castillejo – Manny wows the fans at the MGM Grand when he batters IBF champion, Lehlo Ledwabu in six rounds.
It’s his second world title but his real breakthrough occurs two years later when he thrashes the great Mexican, Marco Antonio Barrera, in 11 savage rounds in a featherweight title fight. The beating makes the boxing world sit bolt upright and take notice. The Filipino’s ludicrously fast limbs are too much for Barrera but Pacquiao is far from perfect.
Although his hands move rapidly, there is an obvious reliance on his left. The right mitt lacks education and serves as little more than a rangefinder for his favoured weapon. And his feet, though quick, often clumsily leave him square on and vulnerable to counters.
For now, though, it doesn’t matter. Pacquiao is the most exciting young fighter on the planet.
MEXECUTIONER
ANOTHER brilliant Mexican, Juan Manuel Marquez, looks set to be the latest fighter to crumble beneath Manny Pacquiao’s fury in 2004.
Dropped three times in the opening round, Marquez is on the brink. But he defiantly survives and begins his comeback. Over the next 11 rounds, Pacquiao’s technique deficiencies are exposed and he’s thought fortunate to be awarded a draw by the judges.
Ten months later, it’s a defeat. Mexico’s superb Erik Morales wins a unanimous 12-round decision – cutting Manny along the way – that underlines Pacquiao’s problems. His trainer Freddie Roach constructs a plan to correct them, and the Filipino is forced to use his right hand – over and over – in the gym.
In a rematch with Morales, Pacquiao deploys lateral movement and his right hand to better effect. Erik – so confident beforehand – is hammered to defeat in 10 rounds. There is a rubber match and Pacquiao’s improvement even more evident as he batters his rival into third round submission.
Manny follows that by outscoring both Marco Antonio Barrera and Marquez in returns to complete an impressive run of form against Mexican fighters.
SCALING GOLIATH
MANNY PACQUIAO embarked on one of most impressive runs of form in modern boxing history in 2008. With world titles in three weight classes bagged, and supremacy secured in four, the southpaw sets his sights on lightweight and WBC boss, David Diaz. Pacquiao was ferocious, dominating before icing his rival in the ninth.
“I’m more experienced, especially my strategy and techniques, and more improved in my right hand, and also movement side to side, and timing,” Pacquiao noted at the time. “I’ve learned how to be a counter-puncher as well as an aggressive fighter.”
Armed with his new box of tricks, Pacquiao aims even higher. In a matchup masterminded by trainer Freddie Roach, Manny agrees to go into battle against the most popular fighter in boxing, Oscar De La Hoya at welterweight (a weight class almost 40lbs higher than when he turned professional). Many scoff at the former flyweight’s chances against the bigger man but it’s no contest at all. Pacquiao sets about the ageing and weight-drained warrior from the off, and after eight one-sided sessions, De La Hoya – swollen, bruised and ashamed – quits on his stool.
What follows is stunning. In 2009 he drops down to light-welterweight and sparks Britain’s Ricky Hatton in two rounds before jumping back to 147lbs and handing great Puerto Rican Miguel Cotto the kind of shellacking that might have ruined a lesser fighter.
He closed 2010 by scything through the much bigger Antonio Margarito to bag a world light-middleweight title. At this point, Pacquiao is considered almost invincible.
POLITICS
MANNY PACQUIAO is not content sitting around doing nothing. In May 2010, Pacquiao was elected to the House of Representatives in the 15th Congress of the Philippines, representing the province of Sarangani. He was re-elected in 2013 to the 16th Congress of the Philippines.
A hero of gargantuan proportions in Manila, Pacquiao’s presence causes the city to come to a halt. He appears in television commercials, and his roadwork is often sabotaged by coaches of female fans desperate to catch a glimpse of their idol.
But, of course, with adulation comes temptation and Pacquiao almost loses everything that is dear to him as a result.
PERSONAL LIFE
FAME often comes with a price and Manny Pacquiao’s marriage almost collapses in late 2011. As well as carving out a career in politics, finding time to play basketball[above], and releasing records, Pacquiao also owns bars and pool halls. Stories of infidelities get louder and louder until his wife Jinkee reaches her limit and tells Manny she’s leaving. Hours before he fights Juan Manuel Marquez for the third time (winning a highly controversial decision over 12), he is begging her to come and watch him fight.
While promising to change his ways, Pacquiao dedicates himself to religion and the Christian faith. Freddie Roach – Pacquiao’s trainer – voices his concern about the latest direction his fighter is heading.
“He doesn’t have that killer instinct anymore. He feels he doesn’t have to hurt people, he just has to beat them. But that’s the way it goes.”
Certainly, things are about to change.
ROBBERY
MANNY PACQUIAO’S run of 15 fights and seven years without a loss came to a cruel end on June 9, 2012.
Inside the labyrinthine walls of the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Timothy Bradley was awarded a decision over Pacquiao that puzzled the vast majority that watched. Almost all the media in attendance felt that the Filipino, now 33, had done more than enough to earn the decision. Boxing News’ Daniel Herbert – a veteran of almost 30 years ringside reporting – scored the bout 119-109 in the favourite’s favour.
But the judges, perhaps swayed by Pacquiao getting a contentious nod over Juan Manuel Marquez in 2011, scored the fight 115-113, 115-113 and 113-115 in favour of Bradley.
The fans were furious with the decision and any possibility of Pacquiao fighting Floyd Mayweather looked further away than ever before. But in just six months time, the superfight went from being a long shot, to virtually impossible.
SPANGLED STAR
JUAN MANUEL MARQUEZ was eager to beat Manny Pacquiao after three debatable decisions. Some would argue that the Mexican had deserved all three but the best he had received was a draw in their opening showdown.
So when the duo agreed to Part IV, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in December 2012, all everyone involved wanted was a definitive result. And they got it.
After five rounds of super-charged action the contest seemed to be going Manny’s way. He had recovered from a knockdown in the third, upped the pressure, and decked Marquez in the fifth. “I didn’t think the fight was going to last much longer,” Freddie Roach would describe about his feelings after five rounds. He thought his charge was about to conclude their rivalry at last.
And then it happened. With Pacquiao pressing his advantage he left himself square on to a counter right hand. The punch flew only a short distance but its effect was felt all over the world. Manny collapsed, face-first, unconscious, defeated. His wife screamed in terror as the father of her children lay motionless on the deck.
Marquez ran across the ring with his arm aloft in victory. He had done it. He had beaten Pacquiao. And in doing so, he seemed to end any chance we had of seeing the Filipino one day face Floyd Mayweather.
ROAD BACK
FOLLOWING back-to-back losses to Timothy Bradley (controversial) and Juan Manuel Marquez (emphatic), Manny Pacquiao’s career was in tatters.
But, with an alleged tax bill that was spiralling out of control, and a desire to prove he was still a major force, he embarked on a comeback.
In November 2013, almost one year after being flattened by Marquez, Pacquiao took on Brandon Rios in Macau. Rios was a decent opponent but made for Manny, who did as he pleased before winning a lopsided decision. If the jury were unconvinced by that showing, they were far more impressed by what followed.
In April 2014, Pacquiao went back for seconds with Bradley and this time there was no doubting who was the better man. Pacquiao turned in his finest performance in years to win a unanimous decision and become the first to (officially) beat the American.
Suddenly there were whispers again about a Floyd Mayweather showdown. And they got louder and louder during the build-up to Pacquiao’s November 2014 thrashing of Chris Algieri.
Pacquiao had won three fights in a row, barely losing a round in the process. Perhaps they were not vintage performances but they illustrated that, yet again, he had learned the lessons from defeat.
Mayweather will be the next to test the resurgence.
SHOULDERING THE BLAME
Ultimately, Pacquiao was soundly beaten by Mayweather in an anti-climactic fight. Afterward, he revealed that he had aggravated a shoulder injury during the fight. It transpired that Pacquiao had injured his shoulder during training, and there were disputes over whether or not he should have disclosed this information before the fight.
Regardless, he underwent surgery and returned for what he said would be his final fight, a third meeting with Bradley. The Filipino icon looked phenomenal, twice dropping Bradley to earn a unanimous decision.
His retirement was predictably short-lived. He returned to the ring in November, thrashing WBO welterweight champion Jessie Vargas in Las Vegas. Attention now turns to a likely fight against Australia’s Jeff Horn, but it’s a rematch with Mayweather that Pacquiao really wants.
Culled from Boxing news

Jame Degale and Badou ends in draw


James DeGale and Badou Jack fight to a majority draw in Brooklyn, both fighters retain their titles.

Scorecards: 114-112 DeGale 113-113 x 2.

What a fight! Credit to both fighters.

Saturday, January 14, 2017

Top fight in view for 2017


Gennady Golovkin vs Canelo Alvarez (middleweight)
Easily the biggest fight that can be made in the sport, these two elite superstars have been circling each other for a while.

Anthony Joshua vs David Haye (heavyweight)
Both favourites in their upcoming fights against Wladimir Klitschko and Tony Bellew respectively, should they both win a showdown between them would shatter UK records.Amir Khan vs Kell Brook (welterweight)
Negotiations for this domestic superfight are reportedly going well. There is a chance these two bitter rivals could finally meet this year.

Andre Ward vs Sergey Kovalev II (light-heavyweight)
These two pound-for-pound stalwarts were involved in the most anticipated – and ultimately one of the most closely contested – fights of 2016.

Tyson Fury vs Deontay Wilder (heavyweight)
Fury is reportedly returning to action this year and has his sights set on WBC champion Wilder. Two huge personalities and two unbeaten talents – a winning formula.

Roman Gonzalez vs Naoya Inoue (super-flyweight)
Two of the best and most exciting fighters in the world and they both hold world titles in the same division.

Manny Pacquiao vs Terence Crawford (super-lightweight)
If Pacquiao is serious about his comeback, Crawford awaits.

James DeGale vs George Groves II (super-middleweight)
If DeGale adds the WBC belt to his IBF title and Groves collects the WBA strap, a unification rematch between the two Londoners would be huge.

Billy Joe Saunders vs Chris Eubank Jnr II (middleweight)
If Eubank Jnr isn’t staying at super-middleweight, he has unfinished business at 160lbs.

Adonis Stevenson vs Artur Beterbiev (light-heavyweight)
WBC champion Stevenson needs a real test, and Beterbiev needs a title shot.

Dillian Whyte vacates the British title



BRIXTON heavyweight Dillian Whyte has vacated the British title as he pursues a potential WBC world title shot.

The British Boxing Board of Control had ordered him to box Sam Sexton in defence of his title, but Whyte told Sky Sports News that he felt such a fight would be a ‘backward step.’In December, Whyte engaged Dereck Chisora in the 2016 British Fight of the Year, earning a narrow points decision to claim a lofty WBC ranking.

He is firmly inside the division’s top 10, and had previously indicated that he could be matched with former champion Bermane Stiverne in a final eliminator. Stiverne was scheduled to box Alexander Povetkin last year to determine a mandatory challenger for current champion Deontay Wilder, however the Russian failed another drug test before the bout, prompting Stiverne to pull out.

Whyte’s promotional stablemate, Luis Ortiz, is also ranked highly by the WBC.

Another option for Whyte is a rematch with Chisora, given how exceptional – and close – their first meeting was. According to both men, it all comes down to money but there is plenty of room on the Anthony Joshua-Wladimir Klitschko April 29 undercard for such a rematch.Whyte won the vacant British title in October of last year when he forced Ian Lewison to retire after 10 rounds. It was his second attempt at the belt, having been knocked out by Anthony Joshua for it in December 2015.

Wilder will make the next defence of his WBC crown on February 25 against lightly-regarded Andrzej Wawrzyk.