~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 2, 2000 (17:53)
#201
When asked about the fight, John volunteered:
This should be a very good fight. I would not venture a prediction except
to say that it would be fun to watch.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 3, 2000 (22:53)
#202
WBA May Strip Lewis of Title
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The World Boxing Association (WBA) will hold a
meeting Monday to decide whether to strip undisputed heavyweight champion
Lennox Lewis of its version of the title.
The WBA, according to one of Lewis' lawyers, says Lewis must fight its
number-one contender Johnny Ruiz as a WBA mandatory defense before
fighting Michael Grant as scheduled in April.
Lewis won the undisputed championship last November when he outpointed
Evander Holyfield in a rematch of their highly-controversial draw of a year
earlier.
Pat English, a lawyer representing Lewis' U.S. promoter Main Events, said
Friday he will strongly object to the WBA's position at Monday's meeting in
Philadelphia.
English said Main Events had been told before Lewis-Holyfield II that their
second fight would be considered a mandatory bout by all three of the chief
sanctioning groups the WBA, World Boxing Council (WBC) and the
International Boxing Federation (IBF).
Usually a champion has 12 months to defend his title against the number-one
contender, unless an agreement is reached for a dispensation.
English said he was informed of the agreement to make Lewis-Holyfield II the
mandatory by all three groups by Frank Maloney, one of Lewis' managers.
English said WBC President Jose Sulaiman told Maloney of the agreement
and that Main Events proceeded with the bout under that assumption,
although there was no official notification that the WBA had come to such an
agreement.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 3, 2000 (22:55)
#203
I asked John for his opinion on the article and he referred me to Honest Howie's rankings with the this comment:
Here's the only rankings worth the money paid for them, because they were
paid for by legal gamblers, not by sleazy managers looking to get their
fighters a championship shot they don't deserve. Honest Howie's Top Ten:
and not a Johnny Ruiz in the bunch. The only name fighter Ruiz has beaten
is Tony Tucker, an over-the-hill blown up light heavyweight in 1998. Every
one of the alphabet soup sanctioning "organizations" (more like "syndicates") is crooked.
Honest Howie's Rankings
Heavyweight Division
Champion - LENNOX LEWIS
1. Ike Ibeabuchi
2. David Tua
3. Michael Grant
4. Andrew Golota
5. Oleg Maskaev
6. Hasim Rahman
7. Chris Byrd
8. Kirk Johnson
9. Evander Holyfield
10. Mike Tyson
~sprin5
Sat, Mar 4, 2000 (03:36)
#204
Ask John why Ike is number one, what has this guy got going for him?
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 4, 2000 (11:55)
#205
I emailed him with you question
Ayala to Defend WBA Bantamweight Title
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Paulie Ayala returns to the site of his biggest victory
when he defends his WBA bantamweight title against once-beaten contender
Johnny Bredahl of Denmark on Saturday night at the Mandalay Bay Events
Center.
Also on the card, Nestor Garza of Mexico risks his WBA super bantamweight
strap against Clarence ``Bones'' Adams.
Ayala (29-1, 12 KOs) rose from anonymity to stardom as he battled toe-to-toe
over 12 grueling rounds with two-time division champion Johnny Tapia in June.
In the thrilling war, Ayala handed Tapia his first loss as he took a razor-thin
unanimous decision and won the WBA 118-pound title.
Ayala returned to his hometown of Fort Worth, Texas for his first title defense
and kept his belt with a hard-fought victory over durable mandatory challenger
Saohin Condo of Thailand.
The 29-year-old later was honored by Ring Magazine as Fighter of the Year
and his memorable bout against Tapia earned Fight of the Year.
Bredahl (45-1, 23 KOs), the reigning European bantamweight champion, will
be looking to make the most of his second chance at a world title. In 1995,
he traveled to Ireland and was stopped in the eighth round by local favorite
Wayne McCullough, then the WBC bantamweight champion.
In the 122-pound title fight, Garza will be hard-pressed by Adams.
The once-beaten Garza (37-1, 29 KOs) won the title in a grueling battle with
countryman Enrique Sanchez on December 12, 1998. He survived a
first-round knockdown, dropped Sanchez in the third and slugged his way to a
bloody unanimous decision.
Both of Garza's title defenses have come by knockout. In his last title
defense in November, Garza traveled to Japan and stopped local favorite Kozo
Ishii in the 12th round.
Adams has won 14 straight fights to run his record to 38-3-3 with 18
knockouts. He is ranked 11th by the WBA in the 122-pound division.
The bouts will be televised by TVKO on pay-per-view beginning at 9:00 p.m.
EST.
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 5, 2000 (00:09)
#206
John's answer about Ike (per Terry's question):
Ike is the guy nobody wants to fight. He's 6'2", 245 pounds, thickly
muscled with power and excellent speed for that size. He throws far more
punches than most guys that weight and they are punches with bad intentions.
He has beaten the strong and talented David Tua and has knocked out the
elusive Chris Byrd. Although I think Michael Grant has even better physical
tools, right now nobody has put them together like Ike (with the exception,
of course, of Lewis, who is effective but uninspiring). Lewis's people do
not want him to meet Ike (that should tell you something). They know that a
fight with Ruiz is not going to do them any good--win or lose--but they
would rather face Tyson, because they know he can guarantee a crowd and a
big payday, and because--outside of a lucky punch--he is not likely to put
together the type of fight it takes to defeat a specimen like Lewis if it
lasts the distance.
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 5, 2000 (10:18)
#207
Lewis Will Shun WBA If Stripped of Title
LONDON (Reuters) - Undisputed champion Lennox Lewis will never again
fight for a WBA belt if the body strips him of their version of the world
heavyweight title on Monday, his promoter Panos Eliades warned on Sunday.
``If he's stripped tomorrow then obviously we won't be fighting for the WBA
(World Boxing Association) ever again,'' Eliades told BBC radio.
He said he was not optimistic and that the Briton was prepared for the worst.
``My gut feeling is that he will be stripped but I hope that they actually prevail
and do the right thing.''
Eliades said that if the WBA decided to take back the title ''there will be an
almighty publicity campaign in America and the WBA will also be brought
into disrepute.''
The WBA have told Lewis he must fight their number one contender Johnny
Ruiz in his next mandatory defense before any other fight and have called a
hearing in Philadelphia on Monday to decide what action to take next.
Lewis is already scheduled to meet Michael Grant at New York's Madison
Square Garden on April 29.
Eliades warned that the FBI, probing alleged corruption within the
International Boxing Federation (IBF), were sending two agents to the WBA
meeting.
``They think they should be there to see what's going on...I think the FBI will
want to look closely at the WBA now and see what they are going to do
tomorrow,'' he said.
LEWIS PREPARED TO FIGHT RUIZ
Eliades said Lewis was willing to fight Ruiz but only after the Grant fight was
out of the way.
``We are putting toward the WBA the case that they have to be sensible,
boxing needs them to actually be seen to be doing justice,'' he said.
``Lennox chose to fight Michael Grant because there was no available
contender for the WBA.
``We will fight Ruiz after Grant and they've got to do the right thing by boxing.''
Lewis took the undisputed heavyweight title in Las Vegas last November
when he outpointed Evander Holyfield in a rematch of a controversial draw a
year earlier.
That fight gave him the American's WBA and IBF belts in addition to his own
WBC version.
Lewis had immediate problems with the IBF, who initially withheld their belt in
a controversy over a $300,000 sanctioning fee for the fight and declared the
IBF title vacant.
An agreement was worked out between Lewis's lawyers and the IBF, whose
president Bob Lee is facing charges of taking bribes to fix world rankings and
secure bouts. Lee and three other defendants say they are innocent of
charges.
Eliades said he was concerned that the influence of Don King, who promotes
Ruiz and who he said had taken legal action against him over the WBA affair,
might prevent any agreement being reached to enable Lewis to keep the belt.
``What worries me is that there are two very strong associates of Don King
that are sitting on the council tomorrow,'' he said. ``It doesn't suit the WBA or
Don King for Lennox to have the belts.''
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 6, 2000 (23:00)
#208
WBA Could Decide to Strip Lewis This Week
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Lennox Lewis could learn this week whether the
World Boxing Association (WBA) will strip him of its version of the
heavyweight title, ending his reign as the world's undisputed champion.
At a 4-1/2 hour hearing in a hotel ballroom Monday, WBA officials heard
testimony from a half-dozen witnesses, including promoter Don King,
regarding Lewis's failure to make his next mandatory defense against the
association's No. 1 contender, Johnny Ruiz.
``Fight or vacate the crown,'' King, who represents several WBA contenders,
said in describing what he claims to be Lewis's only choice under association
rules. ``That's what the deal is today, as we speak.''
WBA Championships Committee Chairman Elias Cordova of Panama later
said through an interpreter that seven committee members would reach a
decision on whether to strip Lewis of its crown ''within a few days.''
If the WBA strips its title from him, Lewis will never fight for a WBA belt
again, his promoter Panos Eliades told BBC radio Sunday.
``My gut feeling is that he will be stripped, but I hope that they actually prevail
and do the right thing,'' Eliades said.
Lewis has held the heavyweight belts from the three major worldwide boxing
organizations the WBA, the World Boxing Council (WBC) and the
International Boxing Federation (IBF) since capturing the WBA and IBF titles
from Evander Holyfield last November.
The British fighter has not faced a WBA contender since, but has scheduled
an April 29 bout with highly-regarded American Michael Grant at New York's
Madison Square Garden as part of a multimillion-dollar deal with cable-TV
channel Home Box Office.
A Grant representative asked the WBA panel Monday to sanction next
month's fight as a WBA title bout.
Meanwhile, Lewis attorney Patrick English said the WBA had no legitimate
contender until two weeks ago, when Ruiz was elevated to No. 1 status.
Backers of former WBA top contender Henry Akinwande have disclosed in a
New York lawsuit that the fighter suffers from cirrhosis of the liver as a result
of a hepatitis B infection and that he has been taking the drug interferon for
six months.
The Lewis camp said the champion could fight Ruiz three months after his
bout with Grant. ``We've offered to do a Ruiz fight in July. It's the quickest we
can do it,'' English told the WBA officials.
But Ruiz attorney Anthony Cardinale said if the April Lewis-Grant bout is
allowed to go ahead as planned, it would deny his client the championship
challenge he deserves under WBA rules should Lewis lose to Grant.
``I plead to the WBA that it would be an honor for me to fight for their belt and
I will be a champion for them,'' the Puerto Rican-born Ruiz said.
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 9, 2000 (12:25)
#209
Women's boxing becoming a real joke
by Tim Graham (ESPN.com)
This is turning into a joke, even by boxing's comical standards. And it
doesn't show any indication of improving.
Women's boxing of late. (Rim shot here).
Only a couple years ago, there was a foundation of legitimacy in women's
boxing. Laid by talented ladies like Christy Martin, Lucia Rijker, Sumya
Anani and Kathy Collins, the base seemed in place. It wasn't implausible
the sport one day might be mentioned in the same breath as basketball or
tennis.
Now it sadly may have gone past the farcical point of no return.
Women's boxing is turning into the most shameless one-on-one athletic
combat exhibition since the advent of cockfighting.
Compared to women's boxing, American Gladiators is off the
respectability chart.
Over the weekend, 38-year-old Jacqui Frazier-Lyde, the daughter of Joe
Frazier, turned pro. Keeping in mind her father retired when he was 37
because he felt his days were through, Frazier-Lyde showed skill
comparable to a preschooler in a playground scuffle.
Frazier-Lyde scored an embarrassing first-round technical knockout
when her opponent turned her back to avoid some less-than-spectacular
punches.
As expected, Frazier-Lyde immediately challenged Laila Ali, another
boxing novice who happens to have bloodlines of a legend. They
probably will make a lot of money for their matchup of mockery. Sadly,
it's the only reason they took the sport up.
Oh, yeah. The daughters of Archie Moore and Roberto Duran also want
to fight.
And let's not forget the other cadre of commercialized boxing ladies out
there: the sex symbols. Mia St. John is the poster girl for that group.
Meanwhile, the respectable talents of Martin, Rijker, Anani, et. al. go
unappreciated.
"It's women capitalizing on their father's names or their sexuality and not
going out there and doing what some of the other women have done," Rijker's
manager, Stan Hoffman, says. "These are women who spent years and years
learning their trade like the guys do. These women paid their dues and can
seriously fight."
Martin was the first to prove it to a widespread audience. She started
captivating global audiences on Mike Tyson undercards -- usually upstaging
the main event -- and she eventually appeared on the cover of Sports
Illustrated.
But what promoters and most fight fans saw wasn't a chance to celebrate
women in sports. They saw dollar signs. They had found another way to make
money off a woman's body, and fans had discovered a new form of cheap
entertainment.
Why did Bob Arum forego former client Rijker, inarguably the most
talented female fighter in the world, to pick up St. John, a woman who
knows more about T&A than TKOs? Because St. John, a woman who will get
seriously hurt and probably disfigured if she ever were to fight anyone
with talent, was relatively inexpensive and was more marketable
with her nude modeling past.
Arum, with sexual innuendo and double entendre one-liners at his press
conferences, doesn't conceal his reasoning.
"Bob Arum himself said to me, 'People like to see her rear end. That's
why they come,' " Hoffman says.
And Arum was financially -- if not morally -- right. St. John appeared on
the cover of Playboy last year, an honor that garnered more attention than
Martin received for being on SI.
Yes, Katarina Witt also appeared on the cover of Playboy and Steffi
Graf was featured prominently in SI's swimsuit issue. But they were
world-class athletes long before. They didn't need to display themselves for
validation, while Arum and St. John must use her body to drive ticket sales.
Arum and others of his ilk are selling sex over skill, flesh over
athleticism. And in that regard they can be likened to pimps. Promoters
easily can be viewed as such when it comes to male boxing, too. But the fact
of the matter is, male boxing isn't always a spectacle, while female boxing
has turned into nothing more.
"It really disturbs me," says Hoffman, who also manages WBA
middleweight champion William Joppy, former IBF middleweight and
super middleweight champ James Toney and heavyweight contender
Hasim Rahman.
"Sexism rears its ugly head."
There is a beautiful art to behold even when two anonymous men go
toe-to-toe in a smoke-filled auditorium. The crowd admires the spirit, the
skill, the will not only to win but to survive one more round.
Women boxers could be enjoying that same art. And if people think they
do, they're only fooling themselves because most are watching not for the
appreciation of the sport, but for the titillating amusement.
Remember the male vs. female bout in Seattle last year? The dog and the pony
must have had the night off.
Most people watch only to laugh. Right now, no one's giving us any other
reason.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 17, 2000 (18:06)
#210
Send Page
Friday - 18:24 03/17/2000, EST
Tyson to Box Savarese, Milan Braces for 'Mike Mania'
MILAN (Reuters) - Former undisputed world heavyweight champion Mike
Tyson will fight American Lou Savarese in Milan May 20 in what promoters
vowed Friday would be a more even contest than his four-minute demolition of
Julius Francis.
``This is a fight Tyson can't afford to lose,'' said Frank Warren, who promoted
Tyson's fight against Britain's Francis in Manchester in January.
``Savarese has a good record and he knows this is a good opportunity to
upset the odds. I think Tyson, from what I've seen in the gym and in England,
is in top shape. He will continue on his march to regain the world title.''
Warren conceded that Francis ``wasn't the greatest opponent'' for Tyson on
his European debut and promised that the encounter with Savarese ``will be a
great treat for boxing fans.''
Savarese's record is 39-3 with 32 knockouts. In his last fight in June last year
he lost on points to Michael Grant who is challenging Lennox Lewis for the
unified world heavyweight titles April 29.
Promoters of the Milan fight said they expect a repeat of the ``Mike Mania''
that gripped England ahead of his January fight when Tyson hogged the front
and back pages of the British press.
WELL-SUITED IN MILAN
Tyson insisted that his latest fight be held in Milan so he could spend time
shopping at the fashion capital's chic boutiques, said Warren.
``Mike loves Milan and he's really looking forward to coming back here,'' he
added.
The boxer's Manchester fight was sold out in two days and the 10,000 tickets
for his Milan contest, which go on sale next week, are likely to be snapped
up just as quickly.
Ringside tickets are already being priced at a reported 1,000 pounds
($1,570), twice the cost for his Manchester fight.
Tyson has said he would like to return to the United States and fight
undisputed champion Lewis, but Warren said his managers would like to have
him fight a few more times in Europe first.
``Tyson's return to the U.S. will be decided after this fight,'' he said.
Warren said Tyson, who has won 47 of his 51 bouts, would arrive in Italy 10
days before the fight for training.
He declined to comment on the purses for the fight, which will be broadcast in
120 countries.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 27, 2000 (18:46)
#211
Viloria can lockck up U.S. Olympic berth this week
By Pat Bigold
Star-Bulletin
Brian Viloria can officially become the first Hawaii athlete to claim an Olympic boxing berth
in 43 years this week.
Having already won the 106-pound Olympic team trials and a qualifying box-off, all he has
to do is finish runner-up at the North American qualifier tournament in Tampa, Fla., which
began today.
It's an exercise to thin the ranks of the crowded 2000 Sydney Olympics boxing field.
Viloria is expected to ease through the test against boxers he's already beaten.
While relaxing in his hotel room on Friday, he told the Star-Bulletin that he finally feels like a
complete boxer.
"The right hand is coming on and the jabs are coming," Viloria said. "Every combination I
throw is crisp, hard punches.
"My body punches are getting stronger. As a boxer, I'm just becoming stronger."
Viloria has been getting to bed by 10 p.m. and gets up before dawn every day to run five
miles.
He prefers to have five snacks a day rather than three meals. He is also avoiding sweets
and fried foods.
And alcohol? Forget it.
"I don't see what satisfaction you get from drinking," said Viloria.
"My satisfaction is coming out on top and reaching the goals I set out to reach."
When he's bored, he goes out to a mall to buy a novel, plays the guitar or writes music.
Viloria, who owns a lap-top computer, also taught himself to create his own website.
"But I'm going to study more about HTML and go back to improve it," he said.
Staying out of trouble has never been a problem for Viloria, whose Olympic journey began
a few days after he graduated with honors from Waipahu High in 1998.
"I never had a graduation party," he said.
He was bound immediately for the nationals.
Viloria's travels have taken him all over the world, but last year was his most eventful.
He beat Cuba's 1996 gold medalist Maikro Romero for the world amateur title last August
in Houston. Viloria won American titles at the National Golden Gloves, the National
Amateur Boxing Championships and the U.S. Challenge.
He also defeated China's national champion at the Multi-Nation Festival of Amateur Boxing
in Liverpool, England).
Success hasn't changed Viloria, according to close friend and former sparring partner,
Arthur Valeriano.
Valeriano met Viloria at Waipahu High and stays in touch with him via email when he's
away.
"No matter how good he gets and no matter how many titles he claims, he'll be the same
Brian I met in history class," Valeriano said.
"The way he presents himself in the ring and outside the ring, there's perfect balance."
Viloria, a broadcast journalism student at Northern Michigan University, said he likes to
meet and converse with students.
When he came back to the islands last month after winning the Olympic team box-off in
Connecticut, he made visits to local schools, including his alma mater.
On a visit to talk with Filipino immigrant youngsters at Radford High, he said one student
asked if he gets mad when he's in the ring.
It was the right question.
"No, I try to be a controlled fighter rather than a wild, angry fighter," Viloria said.
"You have to be cool in the ring, show a poker face. If you hurt somewhere, you can't show
it."
Having already beaten Cuba's best fighter for the world belt, and being the personal
student of former U.S. Olympic boxing coach Al Mitchell, Viloria knows his chance of
medaling at Sydney is considered golden.
But he refuses to get comfortable, not even during the qualifier.
"I know it won't come to me," Viloria said. "I have to just go out there and take it myself."
~MarciaH
Tue, Apr 11, 2000 (19:52)
#212
This is Jon Saraceno's most recent column, originally
appearing Monday, Jan. 18
Tyson's win is a 1-punch blunder
LAS VEGAS - Just think about this for a moment. The man they
used to call "Iron" Mike Tyson, the furious little ring toughie who
once blasted fighters out of Nevada's 702 area code, almost got
his from a heavyweight named Francois.
Last time we checked, South Africa was elbow-deep in the
diamond business, but it wasn't exactly minting heavyweight
champs. Tyson, meanwhile, looks like a worn-out penny in the
ring.
Nothing against Botha (or his parents), but, seriously, when was
the last time you heard a blow-in-your-doors heavyweight named
Francois? Sounds like someone who whips up souffl�s at a
French bistro in South Beach.
Saturday night, he mostly creamed Tyson, until that disastrous
fifth round when Botha stuck his chin out and the slugger cracked
it like an egg.
Before that? Tyson almost made Botha look like what some
well-meaning but misinformed South African boxing fans call him:
the "white Muhammad Ali."
Here was a marginally talented fighter taunting and humiliating
the self-destructing ring bully. Hands down, chin out. Smacking
and demoralizing the once-indestructible champ. Backing him
up. Abusing him. Calling him names.
And, all the while, executing the perfect recipe for victory, one first
deployed by James "Buster" Douglas nearly a decade ago in
Tokyo. Jab, move slightly, right hand, hold, smother and frustrate.
For a little seasoning, just add a few dirty clubs to Tyson's skull
while in clinches.
There was Tyson, panicking and desperate. Swinging wildly and
bleeding. Doubting himself and everything in his world. Losing
the first round, then attempting to break Botha's arm by locking it
up and attempting to snap it like a dry twig.
An ugly but brief ring melee ensued.
Marc Ratner, executive director of the Nevada commission, said,
"It was very scary for me at the end of the first round."
Tyson lost the second round, then the third. And the fourth. Even
the fifth. Well, most of the fifth. Then it was hello, Francois,
goodbye chin.
Botha couldn't have fallen into a straight hand any cleaner had he
choreographed it for the World Wrestling Federation. Tyson's
camp knew Botha had a bad habit of dropping his left, and sure
enough, he didn't let them down.
"I just walked into a punch," he said. "I really thought it was going
to be an easy fight after a while. I just got careless."
Tyson, meanwhile, has far graver concerns. The heavyweight
division is so happy it needs a drool rag.
It's open season on Tyson, and don't think the guy doesn't know it.
Trainer Tommy Brooks and adviser Shelly Finkel and the fighter
tried to cover their tracks to preserve future pay-per-view buys. At
the gate, the public appears either suspicious, fed up or both.
The crowd of 12,000 included thousands of casino-purchased
tickets. Ticket sales were so slow that the MGM Grand ended up
dumping 200-plus tickets to employees for $16.
Even those who don't know a left hook from a barbed hook can
see the Tyson of '99 cannot even imitate the Tyson of '89.
"There was a tremendous amount of rust," Tyson said.
Rust? He looked corroded. Like a '73 Toyota Corolla.
It's not just that his skills have eroded. Tyson was, as he admitted,
"gun-shy." His once-unshakable confidence has evaporated.
More gym sessions won't return what Tyson has lost forever, the
reflex action to fight without having to think about every
movement. For a fighter, that's like losing the elasticity in your
socks. Once it's gone, it's gone. Then everything falls.
~MarciaH
Mon, Apr 17, 2000 (14:01)
#213
TYSON FIGHT POSTPONED
Mike Tyson's planned fight in Milan against
fellow American Lou Savarese has been
postponed until at least June and might be
moved, according to Tyson's manager.
Shelly Finkel met with Tyson in Las Vegas to
discuss reports that the former heavyweight
champion was out of shape and not training.
The Italy fight, which had been originally
scheduled for April 8, had already been
delayed until May 20 and will be pushed back
again.
http://www.pa.press.net/sport/BOXING_Tyson_104271.html?pab161
~sprin5
Wed, Apr 19, 2000 (09:27)
#214
He needs to hire Stacey as his trainer.
~MarciaH
Wed, Apr 19, 2000 (14:32)
#215
He needs serious mental work before he can think of body work, I think.
~sprin5
Wed, Apr 19, 2000 (20:50)
#216
Yep.
~MarciaH
Thu, Apr 20, 2000 (18:57)
#217
Viloria going to Olympics
He is the first Olympic fighter from Hawaii in 44 years
Waipahu light flyweight Brian Viloria this morning became the state's first Olympic fighter in 44
years as he overwhelmed two-time Olympian Domenic Filane of Canada, with a 10-2 decision, in
the semifinals of the Central American qualifer in Tijuana . . .
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 21, 2000 (15:57)
#218
Grant Prepares for Lewis at His Best
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Michael Grant couldn't care less about Lennox
Lewis's mistakes.
It's what the Briton does correctly that interests Grant as he gets ready to try
to take away Lewis's heavyweight titles next week.
Surprisingly, Grant said in a conference call Thursday from his New Bern,
N.C., training camp that he hasn't watched any tapes of Lewis bloopers as
the two men get ready to fight April 29 in Madison Square Garden for Lewis's
World Boxing Council and International Boxing Federation titles.
And there have been a few fights and rounds that would not make a Lewis
highlight reel.
Lewis was knocked out by journeyman Oliver McCall in 1994 in the second
round. More recently Shannon Briggs stunned the big Briton in the first round
of their 1998 fight, but Briggs punched himself out, got sloppy and Lewis went
on to stop him. And there have other rounds and other fights when Lewis
looked less than a world beater.
But the 27-year-old Grant isn't looking to build his confidence by banking on
Lewis making the same mistakes.
In the 10 weeks of training for the biggest fight of his life, Grant said, ``I didn't
look for his mistakes. I looked for how he was winning his fights. I was
looking for his strengths to see what it is and, you know, how to get out of it.''
He said he has learned that Lewis, 34, is strong and a good athlete and he
likes his right hand. The 6-6 Lewis figures to weigh in at roughly the same
250 pounds as the 6-7 Grant.
But when pressed for specifics of what Lewis does best, Grant (31-0) was
vague, maybe by design.
``His strengths, his strengths, his strengths,'' Grant thought out loud, ``Uh,
his style, he carries himself back in the lean position. He uses his athletic
ability.''
Grant was quick to pay Lewis respect, saying, ``I don't think I can take
anything from the guy. I can stop him from using it. I can stop him from
executing.''
Grant said his plan is to ``pressure the guy and take him the full 12 rounds.
When you put pressure on a guy sometimes he pretty much doesn't want
any part of that. You have to impose your will on that person. I will develop a
pace he's not accustomed to,'' Grant said, adding that the pressure is
designed to limit Lewis's chances to think.
Lewis (35-1-1) has been criticized, particularly by his trainer, Emanuel
Steward, for thinking too much in the ring, for taking his love of chess and its
contemplation into the ring.
Grant said he is completely over his last fight in November when Andrew
Golota knocked him down twice in the first round and dominated him for most
of the fight before Grant stopped him.
``I was shaken a little bit and was laughing. I couldn't believe I was knocked
down.''
Grant finally caught Golota in the 10th round, knocking him down. Golota
quickly got up and did not appear to be hurt seriously. But he quit.
From that fight Grant said he learned not to take people for granted.
``I got too cocky at some point going into the fight,'' he said. ``I learned
patience gives you experience ... I learned about life.''
Steward said earlier this week he didn't see anything other than the right hand
that was particularly impressive from Grant in the Golota fight. ``It really didn't
prove much,'' Steward said, because ``when things get tough Golota doesn't
want to fight.''
Perhaps most significant, Grant learned the importance of keeping his hands
up. He worked continuously in camp on that boxing basic. The drill was that if
let his guard down he had to start the round over again.
Grant is not worried about working on his power against Lewis.
It's already there.
~zx6rider
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (08:38)
#219
Hi y'all. Long time, no see!
I can honestly say that I read every post in this topic and loved it! John Burnett, if I lived anywhere near you (and hadn't already had my life quota of concussions), i'd take up boxing and you'd be my coach...
Back to the topic on women boxers... I watched a fight last night on Showtime, Laila Ali vs Christina King, a 4 round slaughter. Ali has obviously been training, she was buff and very focused and used King as a speed bag for the entire 4 rounds. King, a supposed 3 time "Tough Woman" champion, fought...well, like a girl. And was pulverized for her trouble. She was flabby, slow, had no training, and bad motor skills. I think the only think she could kill would be a six-pack.
The comments entered earlier on by Marcia (I think) are pretty much on point. The weight classes seem to each have one or two at best talented women then the rest have no business in the ring. The really talented ones probably will never meet due to disparity in size, i.e Martin fights in the 140 weight class and Ali in the 160 weight class. That and The promoters... the fact that even in mens boxing the current champions fight a bunch of losers to build up their record while the fans wait for that one truly inspirational match-up to come around.
I'm quite the idealist. I hope for the day when boxers like Tyson will be banned for life, and jailed for assault and the boxers like De la Hoya will be the norm.
I wonder... if womens boxing is contested at the Olympic level, will more talented, better trained boxers will be produced?
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (11:44)
#220
Aloha, Gena. I forwarded John your post. You just might make his day! I am delighted to see you posting again. Excellent comments on the fight. I knoly heard it disected by sports reporters, but they did not like it - not her, though. Just the contender she was boxing.
Tyson does nothing for the sport and everything for purient interests. I'm with you! I'll let you know what John says when he gets a moment to comment. He is working on his Masters Thesis and for the duration is avoiding Spring.
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (11:46)
#221
Olympic level boxing might be the ONLY way to make women's boxing a viable and credible sport.
~zx6rider
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (15:40)
#222
hey!Lookee what I found! It's a site all about womens AMATUER boxing... http://www.usaboxing.org/womens.htm
It also lists what is required for it to become an Olympic contest.
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (15:55)
#223
Ooh...You did! Shall go there and hunt up the answers to the questions you asked in email - if you don't beat me to it *grin*
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (17:46)
#224
From John in answer to Gena's comment:
(Gena): I wonder... if womens boxing is contested at the Olympic level, will more talented, better trained boxers will be produced?
Gena: The answer is undoubtedly yes. If women's boxing became an Olympic
sport, there would be a much better international amateur infrastructure to
support them and all gyms who accept amateur males for training would have
to do the same for women as well. More trainers would get involved with
women fighters. Weight class difference would not be a reason to keep
Christy Martin (or anyone else within 20 lbs.) from fighting Ali, if the
money and billing was right. The match could be made if a contract could be
agreed upon. Martin is still a more experienced and better skilled fighter.
Ali does have a great deal of natural genetic talent. She is also obviously
getting excellent training. For a person with her limited time in the ring,
she is quite well schooled and with continued motivation and barring injury,
she will only get better. I love watching GOOD women fighters. I don't
recommend professional boxing, however, for anyone, male or female, who has
a decent education and middle class opportunities. I would also hate to see
Leila Ali's lovely face defaced. She's a beauty, and as a (sometimes
chauvinistic) red-blooded heterosexual male, I appreciate that as much as I
do her talent.
~zx6rider
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (19:10)
#225
O.K. John... Lets do a "tale of the tape" like the big commentators do it.
The match is, hmmm, Lucia Rijker vs Leila Ali (I'm giving you two "lookers")
Granted, Rijker has held several martial arts titles, the latest of which were in kickboxing (4 different world titles), but what the hey.
So, let's also give Ali another year of preperation. Now let's also make it a real match, at least 10 rounds, televised.
Ali: 5'10'' 165 lbs
Rijker: ?? in the 'up to 140 lbs' class (IFBA) (Same as Martin, who by the way, refuses to fight Rijker)
check out http://sportsplacement.com/lucia.htm for a write up on Rijker. I find it interesting that one of her nicknames is 'Lady Ali'
Who wins? can we petition somebody to get this fight for real?
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (22:52)
#226
From John in response to Gena
O.K. You probably know more about it than I do, because I don't go out of
my way to look for women's bouts...I usually only see those that are on
undercards of a main event featuring men. I have seen Rijker fight, though,
and she is special, although about 20 pounds lighter than Ali. She is too
skilled and experienced for Ali at this point. Ali would need the year of
serious training and "tune-up" bouts. Most of the good fighters are in
lower weight classes than Ali. Other fights that would make sense for Laila
Ali (you spelled it right the first time, then I misspelled it "Hawaiian
style) would be Trina Ortegon for Ortegon's IFBA middleweight (160 pounds)
title (again Ali would need about a year's seasoning)...or Sandra Reihart
(rated #1 junior middleweight, 154 pounds). Dakota Stone (#3 junior middle
IFBA) would also make a good matchup for Ali...good skills, moderate but not
overwhelming power). The IFBA junior middleweight title is vacant...I don't
know if Ali can lose the 7-8 pounds necessary or if that would interest her.
What the promoters really want is kind of a round-robin "Daughters of the
Legends" tournament. Freeda Foreman (beautiful woman, laughable boxing
skills, I'm surprised she's not a "Georgianne" or "Georgette"), Jacqui
Frazier-Lyde...crude mauler, 7-11 defense (open all night), and J'Marie
"Lady Mongoose" Moore, daughter of legendary light-heavyweight champion
Archie "Mongoose" Moore. Moore is heavier than Ali, fights light-heavy (175
pounds, which by the way was MY division over a quarter-century ago). She
is also beautiful (men WILL watch) and has noticeable boxing skills (no one
will laugh). That may be really the best fight for Ali. Give her a year of
serious training, though, and I think she will be ready for anyone. Good
jab, keeps her hands up in good defensive position, is confident but less of
a hot dog than Dad was, values her pretty face and does her best to keep it
from getting hit (boxing is ultimately the art of hitting and not getting
hit).
As for Rijker-Ali...Rijker would only do it if there was big money involved.
Ali could gain more respect with a win over Rijker despite the size
difference because of Rijker's obvious skills (pound for pound, probably the
best at this moment). The only thing there would be in it for Rijker would
be money. She would be giving up a lot of size, but she has excellent power
and great fighting instincts. I don't know about petitioning promoters
(their only interest is usually self-interest). If Martin doesn't want to
fight Rijker, her opportunities in her weight class is limited as Rijker has
the IFBA belt (the most respected belt in the women's fight game). I'd
still like to see Martin-Ali or Stone-Ali. Moore-Ali might actually be the
best fight, but the "Daughters of Legends" hype has a certain odoriferous
quality to it, good fight possibility or not. BTW, Gena, you are welcome to
e-mail me anytime: beaufordb@hotmail.com.
~MarciaH
Thu, Apr 27, 2000 (22:42)
#227
Lewis Lighter Than Grant for Heavyweight Title Bout
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Lennox Lewis weighed in at 247 pounds and Michael
Grant was 250 pounds Thursday for their heavyweight title fight at Madison
Square Garden Saturday.
Lewis, 34, was five pounds heavier than he was for his last fight in November
against Evander Holyfield when he won the undisputed heavyweight
championship of the world.
The 27-year-old Grant (31-0) weighed 252 pounds last November when he
came back from a beating and two knockdowns in the first round to knock
down Andrew Golota in the 10th and win when Golota quit.
A crowd of about 300 people watched the weigh-in outside Madison Square
Garden. A contingent of British fans cheered their hero who weighed in first.
When Grant, wearing stylishly thin-rimmed eyeglasses, stepped on the
scales he was greeted with a smattering of boos.
The 35-1-1 Lewis, who will earn about $10 million to Grant's estimated $4
million, will defend only the World Boxing
Council and International Boxing Federation titles on Saturday.
A recent court order effectively stripped Lewis of the World Boxing
Association title. The court ruled that Lewis violated an agreement he had
with promoter Don King to fight the group's No. 1 contender and said if he
fought Grant the WBA's No. 5 contender it could not be for the WBA title. The
WBA originally had sanctioned Grant to fight Lewis.
Grant is ranked No. 2 by the WBC and the IBF.
~sprin5
Fri, Apr 28, 2000 (07:55)
#228
Grant is the real number 2 right? How did John Burnett's rankings go?
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 28, 2000 (18:49)
#229
From John in response to Terry's question:
I thought I had given plenty of thought to that one. Grant still looks too
raw. He could get lucky, but the last time Lewis got careless in a fight
was when he lost to Oliver McCall in 1994. Lewis is a big hitter and
capable of one punch K.O.s. Grant is more of a clubbing puncher. I'll take
Lewis by late (10-12 round KO) or decision. I'm a notoriously terrible
prognosticator, though. There's no way I would put my money where my
fingers are on it.
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 28, 2000 (19:41)
#230
From John regarding Grant's claim to Number 2 ranking:
Grant's a legitimate #2, and I think he may be a legitimate champion in a
few years, but right now, you can bet Lewis's folks are glad they have Grant
in front of him instead of Ike Ibeabuchi.
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 28, 2000 (21:28)
#231
Lewis-Grant Bout Trainers End Their Feud
NEW YORK (Reuters) - There was a time when the two veteran fight trainers
could not be trusted to be in the same room with each other, let alone to sit
down and share jokes, without the threat of mayhem.
But these days, as their boxers prepare for their heavyweight title fight
Saturday, Don Turner, who guides challenger Michael Grant, and Emanuel
Steward, Lennox Lewis's gym guru, seem to have put their disdain for each
other on hold. They even sat down together for interviews with reporters this
week.
That's not to say that Turner wouldn't relish finally having one of his fighters
beat a Steward fighter, especially Lewis. Turner has gone up against Lewis
and Steward three times and has come away with very good paydays but no
bragging rights.
Lewis made that very point the other day in reaction to a Turner quote that
Lewis was a good fighter when coming in but far from great when
back-peddling.
That, added to other disparaging remarks by Turner before other fights,
prompted Lewis, a 12-5 favorite in Caesars Palace, Las Vegas, to beat Grant,
to say that Turner ``is just batting zero right now. Three strikes and you're
out.''
Lewis was referring to Turner losing to Lewis with both Henry Akinwande and
Evander Holyfield. Actually Turner's record is 0-2-1 against Lewis, who fought
to a highly controversial draw with Holyfield in their first fight last March in
Madison Square Garden.
Turner has not risen to the bait as he might have just a few months ago and
even defended the British champion.
``You hear that Michael has more guts than Lennox. I don't buy that. It's the
way he fights. Sometimes (Lewis) fights too economically for the public to
accept. But he's a two-time champion and an (Olympic) champ, and you
don't get that because you can't fight.''
Turner says his anger toward Steward stems from Steward's attempt to steal
a fighter from him several years ago.
Steward would not discuss the issue publicly, instead focusing on his own
impressive accomplishments, which include working with a long list of
champions.
Steward, the founder of Detroit's famous Kronk gym, guided journeyman
Oliver McCall to a second-round knockout of Lewis in 1994, the only defeat
for the world champion. That was the fight that finally convinced Lewis's camp
that they needed a change and they hired Steward.
Steward was something of a culture shock for the members of the insular
Lewis camp who are fearful of outsiders, especially those who aren't
pom-pom waving cheerleaders for the their fighter.
Such adulation, Steward said, was not doing Lewis any good.
It's important ``to be real with him,'' Steward said earlier this week. ``Other
guys tell him what he wants to hear. I'm telling him more negative things than
positive things.''
That approach has miffed some of Lewis's long-time counselors. But they
bow to Steward's insistent and successful methods, which includes teaching
Lewis better footwork, which was ``terrible'' says Steward when he first began
working with the Briton. Even now with Lewis a world champion, Steward
says he emphasizes proper balance more than anything else in camp.
Another change Steward says he made was ``to bring in quality sparring
partners, young undefeated fighters, not guys he can beat up.''
Steward has had a long campaign for Lewis to be much more aggressive and
meaner, to use his impressive 6-5 size, excellent, if often lazy, jab and
powerful right hand for spectacular victories instead of doing just enough to
win.
Steward said he keeps his own score as the fight progresses and ``I tell the
boxer the score. I'm always very honest with the fighter.''
In the first Holyfield fight, ``I knew (the judge) they brought in to give Evander
the advantage,'' Steward said, adding that he told Lewis in the late rounds
that he had to be more aggressive to win.
``The rest of the corner was upset with me pushing him. If I hadn't he wouldn't
have gotten the draw,'' Steward said.
Turner, a former average welterweight and middleweight from Cincinnati,
worked with former champion Larry Holmes toward the end of his career
before he got his big break when Holyfield hired him for his first fight with Mike
Tyson.
Turner, who never seems to be far from a smile that lands somewhere
between bemusement and a smirk, had his greatest moment as a trainer
when Holyfield won the World Boxing Association title in one of the biggest
upsets ever.
Turner, of course, is looking for another big upset and says his 6-7 fighter
also at 250 pounds is just three pounds heavier than Lewis has the strength,
desire and athleticism to beat Lewis, who at 34 is seven years older than
Grant.
One upset already went into the books when the two trainers buried their feud
this week.
~MarciaH
Sat, Apr 29, 2000 (21:22)
#232
Forwarded to me by John:
Ibeabuchi not competent to stand trial
Associated Press
LAS VEGAS -- Former heavyweight contender Ike Ibeabuchi will spend time in a
state mental health facility before facing charges he sexually assaulted
an outcall dancer who was sent to his hotel room.
Over Ibeabuchi's objections, a judge ruled that he should be sent to a
state facility for mentally ill offenders until doctors determine he is
competent to stand trial.
The ruling came late Wednesday after three doctors interviewed
Ibeabuchi to see if he understood the charges against him.
"He doesn't share the same reality as the rest of us in this courtroom," Dr.
Thomas Bittker told District Judge Joseph Bonaventure.
Ibeabuchi, considered one of the top heavyweight title contenders before
his arrest, at first refused to acknowledge the judge in the courtroom. But
he nodded his head when asked if he would agree to be interviewed by
the doctors.
Ibeabuchi told the judge he did not want to be sent to Lakes Crossing,
the state's facility in Sparks, Nev., for the mentally ill.
"I'm not suffering from any psychological or mental ailment," he said.
Ibeabuchi, 26, faces multiple felony charges stemming from the incident
last July at the Mirage involving the dancer, who testified earlier that she
was sexually assaulted after she was sent to strip for him in his room.
Bittker said two hours of talking to Ibeabuchi showed he had an
overwhelmingly narcissistic personality that prevents him from perceiving
others' point of view.
He said the boxer has some paranoia and does not grasp the relationship
between behavior and consequences.
Bonaventure ordered doctors at Lakes Crossing to keep Bittker apprised
of Ibeabuchi's treatment.
"I'm going to try to get you back as soon as possible so we can clean up
this matter," he told the boxer.
Ibeabuchi had to be removed from the courtroom during an appearance
after his arrest when he became unruly. He did not display the same
attitude in his latest appearance, although he made his points with force.
"My life is already messed up, and I don't care which way it goes from
now on," he said.
Ibeabuchi, a native of Nigeria, was 20-0 with 15 knockouts and ranked
No. 2 by the IBF when he was arrested.
~MarciaH
Sat, Apr 29, 2000 (23:47)
#233
Long Live the King
by John Burnett
Lennox Lewis bounced Michael Grant like a beach ball in a 2nd round kayo.
Three kmockdowns in the first round (right cross, two right uppercuts) and a
right uppercut coup-de-grace in the second round. This was not beautiful.
It was also not boring or uninspring. Grant, after having dissed Lewis in a
pre-fight press conference ("suspect chin," "suspect body," "suspect
haircut"), and having eschewed boxing (he's crude, but he can box at a
rudimentary level) went right after Lewis. It played perfectly into Lewis's
hands. No one else has as much one-punch power as Lewis, and few have been
more reluctant than he has in the past to use it. Lewis's trainer, Emanuel
Steward, said that the fight plan would be to use Grant's aggressiveness
against him. That worked to perfection. With Ike out of the picture, at
least for the time being, David Tua is probably the best challenger out
there. Johnny Ruiz is going to have to impress someone else besides the WBA
if he is going to get a shot. I certainly didn't see Grant winning this
fight, but I didn't think he'd be stupid enough to give it away when there
are things he could've done (and didn't) to make it a competitive fight.
But after Grant recuperated from an early beating at the hands of Andrew
Golota to take a 10th round TKO the low-blow Pole, Lewis commented, "I'm not
Andrew Golota. If I get him into trouble, I'll finish him." And finish him
he did.
~MarciaH
Sat, May 13, 2000 (22:42)
#234
From John Burnett:
From Sports Illustrated (May 15, 2000, p.24)
Last week in New York City, Lennox Lewis lost his WBA heavyweight title belt
even while knocking out Michael Grant, Lewis was stripped of the title for
failing to first fight the WBA's leading challenger, John Ruiz, whom most
experts agree shouldn't rank among the top five heavyweights. Meanwhile,
across the Hudson, IBF president Bob Lee and three colleagues were standing
trial in U.S. District Court on racketeering charges for allegedly accepting
$338,000 to rig their sanctioning body's rankings.
If you have soured on the sweet science and its depraved rankings systems,
you may want to visit http://www.Boxingranks.com Last week the site
unveiled what it says will be a monthly boxing writers' poll, ranking the
top 10 fighters in all 17 pro weight classes.
"We hope to establish the boxing rankings like the college football
rankings," says the site's founder (Honest) Howie Sirota, a Wall Street
lawyer and a boxing fan," and Don King can't buy the writers, certainly not
as easily as he can the alphabet-soup governing bodies."
Thus far the site's Boxing Writers' Ranking Poll has 25 members, including
such venerable ringside pundits as Bill Gallo of the New York Daily News,
author Pete Hamill, George Kimball of the Boston Herald, HBO commentators
Larry Merchant and Jack Newfield, and Wallace Matthews of the New York Post,
none of whom are compensated for voting. Old habits die hard, though. At a
press conference last week Matthews remarked, "O.K., I'm voting. Send the
graft."
--John Walters
(I wish they'd rank the Top 20. J.B.)
~MarciaH
Sun, May 14, 2000 (16:11)
#235
After John and I exchanged email about boxing and my missing the point, I went into http://www.Boxingranks.com/Departments/monthly_boxing_writers_poll.htm
to see what they were talking about. If these writers can stay clean (no payoff for their votes) it surely would be worth while to have some reliable way of measuring one contender against the rest in his category.
~MarciaH
Thu, May 25, 2000 (23:13)
#236
Panama's Duran Puts Back Record June Bout
PANAMA CITY, Panama (Reuters) - Veteran Panama boxer Roberto ``Hands
of Stone'' Duran broke training on Thursday to announce that his
record-breaking June bout against Pat Lawlor had been put back two weeks
to June 16.
Duran and Lawlor were due to meet on June 3, in a twelve-round rematch for
the vacant National Boxing Association (NBA) super-middleweight belt, but
the fight was put back to accommodate backers.
``We made a contract with CBS television, and they wanted us to change the
fight to June 16 for publicity reasons in the U.S.,'' Duran told Reuters at a
Panama City press conference.
The bout, which falls on Duran's 49th birthday, is set to extend the four-time
world champion's 117-fight career to a record fifth decade.
Fight sponsors Cervezas Baru confirmed that officials from the Guinness
Book of Records will attend the promotion at the capital's New Panama
Gymnasium to verify the record.
``It won't be an easy fight, and for this reason I've been training hard,'' a
fit-looking Duran told reporters.
The former champion, who lost to Lawlor over six rounds in a 1991 clash,
added that he was going to ``make him pay.''
FROM SHINING SHOES TO CHAMPION
Duran learned his aggressive, two-fisted style in the tough streets of Panama
City's El Chorrillo neighborhood in the 1950s and 1960s, where from the age
of seven he earned a few cents shining shoes and dancing in the local bars.
Making his professional debut in 1968 at the age of 17 in a four-round fight in
the Caribbean city of Colon, Duran went on to win world titles at four different
weights.
The first came in 1972 when he put tartan-clad Scottish lightweight champion
Ken Buchanan down in the 13th round of their Madison Square Garden clash.
Duran went on to defend the title 12 times before over the next seven years,
before moving up to beat Sugar Ray Leonard for the World Boxing Council
(WBC) welterweight belt in an epic 15-round battle in 1980.
Two further titles followed at junior middleweight against Davey Moore in
1983, and a final crown at middleweight in a surprise upset against Iran
Barkley in 1989.
More than a decade has passed since his glory days, but Duran says he has
no plans to hang up his gloves.
``This will be my last fight in Panama City, but I will have two more in the U.S.
and then I will make a tour of Europe,'' he said.
BATTLING THE YEARS
Giving away more than a decade in age, Duran will have his work cut out for
him to beat San Francisco-based Lawlor.
But with ten pounds to go to reach the 168-pound weight limit, Duran has
been helped by the two-week postponement.
The former champion said he would also be helped by training once again in
Panama City under the guidance of his old mentor Nestor ``Plomo'' Quinones.
Quinones, who has worked with Duran since he was an eager youngster in El
Chorrillo, is overseeing a harsh daily training schedule, including road and bag
work, together with eight rounds of sparring.
While many in Panama would like to wish Duran an honorable retirement,
veteran trainer Rigoberto Garibaldi said the former champion remains in good
shape.
``Duran hits hard with both hands, and his reactions are still strong,'' Garibaldi
told Reuters with an indulgent smile. ''I've trained three world champions, and
he carries on being the best of them.''
~MarciaH
Fri, May 26, 2000 (21:15)
#237
Salud rock solid Jesus Salud remains unbeaten in Hawaii with a third-round TKO
By Dave Reardon - Star-Bulletin
It was back to old times for Jesus Salud.
It was back to the canvas for his opponent, Boyke Sillehu.
About 2,500 watched Salud dominate Sillehu last night at Blaisdell Arena. He knocked
down the Indonesian three times in less than three rounds to remain unbeaten in 35
professional boxing matches in Hawaii.
Referee Abe Pacheco called the fight with 28 seconds left in the third, after Salud peppered
Sillehu with sustained combinations to the ribs.
"I feel he was taking too much punishment, he wasn't fighting back," Pacheco said.
The veteran official made many similar calls in Salud fights in the '80s and early '90s, as the
Waipahu-trained boxer from Nanakuli built the foundation of a career that would take him to
a world title and a new home in San Diego.
Many other familiar faces from the past surrounded Salud last night, including former
stablemate Paul Lucas (now a police officer) and trainer Al Silva.
But even at 37, Salud (61-9) looks toward the future and another shot at the title.
"I still believe in my ability," Salud said. "I hadn't fought in a year, but I didn't feel rusty."
He certainly didn't look out of tune. While Salud is not as quick as he was in the '80s, he
seems stronger.
Salud rocked Sillehu (24-5-1) several times, most notably with a flooring left hook to the head 23 seconds into the fight.
"Oh, that first punch," Silva marveled. "When he went down, I knew Jesus had additional
power."
Salud hurt Sillehu with another big right 17 seconds before the end of the first, setting the
stage for a flurry of scoring shots nearly to the bell.
Sillehu connected with a right to Salud's head midway through the second round, but Salud
countered immediately with scoring jabs and a sharp right, left combination to the head at
55 seconds to the bell.
Then, with eight seconds left, Salud knocked down Sillehu again with another big right hook.
Before Pacheco called it in the third, Salud knocked down Sillehu a third time, with a right
set up by a left jab at 1:47.
Salud's current trainer, Abe Sanchez, said he was pleased overall.
"We wanted to go back to where Jesus was three or four years ago. He'd become
complacent," Sanchez said. "We don't like him to sit and react. We want him to make (the
opponent) react. I won't say it was an 'A' fight, but he did a lot of good things.
"We wanted some rounds, and the kid gave him some rounds," Sanchez added. "There's
two guys in there, so (Salud's) gonna get hit."
Sillehu and his trainer said they should have had the opportunity to hit the favorite son
longer.
"This guy was going to knock Salud out," trainer Felix Cazeres said. "The fight was
definitely stopped too soon."
Sillehu has won 19 of his fights by knockout, including a May 13 stop of WBO
Intercontinental bantamweight (118 pounds) champion Don Don Concepcion at the
Sheraton Waikiki.
"I could keep fighting," said Sillehu, who was visibly nervous before the bout. "I knew I hurt
him."
Salud acknowledged that Sillehu landed the one good shot, but said it didn't bother him
long.
"The ref did a good job," he said. "He wasn't protecting himself or throwing punches. He
was just winging from the outside, and I was very patient."
QUICK JABS:
In a co-main event, Andy Tabanas (40-4-1) TKO'd Agus Ray (25-10-4) in the fifth round for
the WBO Asia-Pacific Junior Flyweight title ... In the prelims, Mike Jamison (6-0)
decisioned John Lopez (5-4), Mark Burse (4-0) TKO'd Pablo Ontiberos (4-11) in the
second, Tali Kulihaapai (7-0) TKO'd Gene Valdez (0-2) in the first, and Clay Lewis (1-0)
decisioned Jaime Bretado (3-8) ... U.S. Olympic boxing team member Brian Viloria of
Waipahu attended last night's matches. He returns to Colorado Springs, Colo., on June 4 to
train for USA vs. Ukraine matches June 19 in Dallas. Then he comes back to Hawaii for two
weeks before returning to Colorado.
~MarciaH
Tue, Jun 20, 2000 (22:54)
#238
Viloria takes on
golden hue of
national spotlight
Sports Illustrated covers the
Waipahu boxer from head to toe
in gold paint for a photo shoot
By Pat Bigold
Star-Bulletin
People have been coloring Brian Viloria since he beat Cuba's best for the world amateur
light flyweight title last year.
The popular shades are gold for Olympic medal and green for the fortune promoters are
already lining up to offer him.
As if that pressure wasn't enough, Sports Illustrated officially gilded the 19-year-old Waipahu
resident this month.
"We did a photo shoot and they painted me in gold," Viloria said by phone from the
Colorado Springs training center.
"I looked like a statue. They put it all over my body. My face. My hair."
Viloria, somewhat surprised at being the only boxer selected by SI for the golden boy pose,
said the water-based colors "felt cold" being applied.
"They did one photo in the boxing ring and one on top of the roof with the sky as the
background," he said.
A spokesman at SI acknowledged the photo shoot but would not reveal the magazine's
plans for the art.
"It's a secret," he said.
As for Viloria, he was more concerned with getting the paint off his skin after the session.
"It came off but I really had to scrub," he said.
The photo shoot with Teen Magazine the next day was a lot less complicated.
Viloria is a young athlete whose Olympic dream has exploded into a kaleidoscope of
publicity.
He became a media darling after the world championship and even more so since he
secured his 106-pound berth on the Olympic team.
He's a devastating hitter, coveted by promoters Don King and Bob Arum, and he's
well-spoken enough to draw reporters like flies to honey.
He's been called America's "Mighty Mouse" for his diminutive 5-foot-3 stature, as well as
"The Hawaiian Punch," an unoriginal nickname given by the mainland press to almost every
Hawaii-born boxing celebrity (Andy Ganigan and Jesus Salud also were billed that way).
During the Olympic athletes' media session in Houston earlier this month, Viloria was one of
the most interviewed subjects.
The media exercises are almost as exacting as his training for Sydney.
But Viloria can still recall an experience at age 11 that fired his imagination about Olympic
glory.
"When I met two of the 1992 Olympians at the Waipahu gym, Oscar De La Hoya and Eric
Griffin, they encouraged me," he said. "We sparred, trained. We have videos at home."
The warmth shown him by De La Hoya and Griffin rubbed off on Viloria. He said he never
tires of chatting with youngsters who want to ask all sorts of questions.
"Do you get mad when you fight?" "Does it hurt to get hit?"
After a scheduled exhibition series of bouts against the Ukraine in Fort Worth, Texas
yesterday, Viloria is expected to be in Honolulu until July 10. It's a chance to do what he likes
best.
"I'm just happy to hang out with my dad, my brother, my old friends, go back to the old gym
and talk to my old coaches," he said.
Olympic Profile
Brian Viloria
Age: 19
Hometown: Waipahu
Sport: Boxing (106 pounds)
Olympics: First
Olympic dream quote: "When I met two of the 1992 Olympians at the
Waipahu gym, Oscar De La Hoya and Eric Griffin, they encouraged me."
Sydney 2000 Olympics
~sprin5
Fri, Jun 30, 2000 (09:58)
#239
Tyson may have whupped up on Frank Warrent and held him hanging out of a window over some jewelry bill. The guys on CNN Radio are saying "why couldn't they show this, I'd *pay* to see that." If they had fessed to it, Brit copys would have tossed Tyson out of the UK.
And Lennox Lewis says he'll fight Tyson before Tua. Will Ruis and Tua fight to unify the IBF and WB titles? Does Tyson stand a chance?
Predictions? Tyson tries to eat Lewis children but can't find any anwhere. Butterbean takes Laila Ali on the UnderCard. And Tyson fails to bite off George Foreman's ear during the post fight interview.
~MarciaH
Thu, Jul 13, 2000 (17:03)
#240
Lewis Outweighs Botha on the Scales
LONDON (Reuters) - World champion Lennox Lewis weighed in almost 14
pounds heavier than South African Frans Botha before their heavyweight title
fight Saturday.
The Briton, who defends his World Boxing Council (WBC) and International
Boxing Federation (IBF) titles, hit the scales at 250 pounds Thursday.
The total was three pounds more than the 247 pounds Lewis carried during
his last title defense in New York in April against American Michael Grant.
Botha appearing to half-hearted boos on the open-air stage in London's
central Covent Garden registered 236 pounds. It was heavier than his usual
fighting weight of around 228.
Both men were late appearing on the sheltered stage in a pedestrian area
where crowds usually gather around mime artists and jugglers rather than
boxers stripping down to their underwear.
They flexed their muscles in turn as ring card models, wearing a uniform
loosely based on that of the Beefeaters at the Tower of London, paraded
before the crowd.
A performing artist with a squeaky voice, a plastic butterfly on his head and
two open umbrellas over his shoulder, tried valiantly to keep his audience
around the corner.
As hard-hatted construction workers craned from their scaffolding for a better
view, promoter Panos Eliades sensed a selling opportunity and reminded the
crowd that there were still tickets remaining to be bought.
``Buy now, because if you don't buy now, you won't be there,'' he declared.
~MarciaH
Thu, Jul 13, 2000 (17:04)
#241
I sent the above to John Burnett for his opinion. His comment:
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz...I'll watch if I can find a place to see it for free. Botha may be just good enough to survive, but not good enough to make it interesting. It could end up a spectacular Lewis knockout, but it would come against less-than-spectacular opposition, Botha's ranking notwithstanding. He's an honest, hardworking heavyweight fighter, a good gateway opponent, but hardly a challenger to a real champion. He is tough, though, and takes a great punch. If Lewis had enough savagery in him (he doesn't), it could end up a one-sided, bloody 12-round debacle like the 15-round beating Larry Holmes gave Randall "Tex" Cobb. That was the fight that caused Howard Cosell to stop broadcasting boxing...news which Cobb received with the quip, "I'll go another 15 with Holmes if Howard will stop calling football."
~MarciaH
Thu, Jul 13, 2000 (22:02)
#242
(Terry)And Lennox Lewis says he'll fight Tyson before Tua. Will Ruis and Tua fight to unify the IBF and WB titles? Does Tyson stand a chance?
(John)Sorry it took me so long to get back to you on that one...I don't know if Ruiz and Tua will meet. Tua doesn't care who he fights because he knows he is competitive with anyone out there right now. Ruiz is not in Tua's or Lewis's league. As for Tyson, although he has eschewed basic boxing skills (which he once exhibited) and his defense has eroded, he has a puncher's chance in any fight he's in. He has one-punch knockout power. Few people have that and those who do are never out of any fight because one can get lucky anytime before the final bell. Lewis would and should be a solid favorite (I'd go about 8-5 or 9-5) over Tyson. Still, nobody wants to meet Ike, and everybody is hoping that his volatile personality gets him thrown in jail for a long time before he gets his shot. Lewis and Tua would be an excellent match: tall guy versus short guy, both with decent skills and both with one-punch KO power. I'd pay to see that.
~MarciaH
Wed, Nov 1, 2000 (17:02)
#243
"I love boxing. Where else do two grown men prance around in satin
underwear, fighting over a belt?... The one who wins gets a purse. They
do it in gloves. It's the accessory connection I love."
~ John McGovern