Roach not keen on Pacman duel with Khan

MANILA, Philippines - This early, Freddie Roach is stomping his foot on a Manny Pacquiao-Amir Khan showdown.
The celebrated trainer is handling the corners of both fighters, and he said there’s no way he’d draw the line between them.

Four-time Trainer of the Year Freddie Roach with pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao.
Pacquiao, at 32, is currently boxing's biggest draw, as pound-for-pound champion and the WBC/WBO welterweight champion.
Khan is only 24 but has shown enough flare and tremendous improvement in each fight, and many believe that he has what it takes to match up with Pacquiao.
Last week, the Englishman stopped Zab Hudah inside five rounds to unify the IBF and WBA light-welterweight titles.
Pacquiao and Khan train under one roof, whether it's at the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles or in the Philippines, as perfect sparring partners.
Roach said that's as far as it should go.

Banal retains WBO title vs Cave

MANILA, Philippines – AJ 'Bazooka' Banal retained his WBO Asia-Pacific Bantamweight title against Tyson Cave via an 8th round technical decision in Pinoy Pride 7: Battle at Mactan.
Banal was able to win despite having trouble with Cave's unorthodox style and antics.
The official time was 2:32 of the 8th round. All the judges gave the bout to Banal, with scores of 79-73, 78-74, and 78-74.

AJ Banal and Tyson Cave collide.
Banal aimed to hurt Cave through body punches, but the wily Canadian kept moving out of Banal's way. In the 1st round, Banal was able to unleash a left straight that staggered Cave backwards, but the latter recovered and even danced a little.
From the 2nd until the 4th rounds, Cave looked to frustrate

Cotto wants rematch with Pacquiao

MANILA, Philippines – Miguel Cotto is aiming to avenge his 1 of 2 career losses by fighting Antonio Margarito on December 3.
After that, the Puerto Rican will aim for a rematch with pound-for-pound king Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, the man who gave Cotto his 2nd career loss.
"Cotto's going to fight Margarito, then a rematch with Manny Pacquiao, or maybe a fight with Saul Alvarez," Manny Steward,

Floyd beating up sparring partners: trainer

MANILA, Philippines – Floyd Mayweather Jr. is curently training for his September 17 bout against 'Vicious' Victor Ortiz.
Floyd Mayweather Jr.
According to his uncle and trainer, Roger Mayweather, Floyd has been "putting in work."
"Floyd's just being Floyd," Mayweather told Examiner.com. "Ain’t much changed in the boxing or sparring."

Pacquiao vs Marquez 3 Tale of the Tape




Manny PacquiaoJuan Manuel Marquez
StanceSouthpawOrthodox
Height5'6 ½"5'7"
Reach67"67"
Neck16"

Marquez Vows Not To Make the Same Mistakes Again

With the bouts have been made in their last two fights, Marquez sets sails to the conclusion of their third fight on November 12 at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas. Marquez says this fight will resolve all the clouded issues in the past and will settle it good all in his favor. It took eight years to materialize the fight and it has come to the attention of many that the last third fight will definitely be a good one.
The wait is now over as the showdown between the two gifted warriors are all set to happen owing their promoters a great deal when it comes to a fantastic match of action packed boxing. The wait could have been longer but Bob Arum made the fight real.
Can the Mexican beat Paquiao’s speed and strength? Has the last two fights gave Marquez the experience he needs to take him down in his third fight? A warrior such as Marquez has reached to a high degree of excellence since he moved up to certain weight categories. By far Marquez is the only fighter that can trade punches with Pacquiao and hurt him much unlike any boxer Pacquiao has fought in the past.
Marquez has setting up some tricks up his sleeves by not rushing in through the first early rounds but rather neutralizing Pacquiao’s speed and power punches. But even with a fast knock out destruction early on in the first few rounds, Marquez needs to penetrate deeper within Pacquiao’s thick armor to really hurt him much. Juan Manuel Marquez must employ cunning tactics and innovative tricks to surprise Manny or nothing new might happen to their blockbuster fight. Pacquiao is set to defend his WBO welterweight title while Marquez is busy working out strategies to defeat Pacquiao in his last chance to redeem his name.

Manny Pacquiao vs. Juan Manuel Marquez III Tickets Go On Sale This Friday, July 22 At 10am PT


Chapter three of boxing’s best-selling rivalry goes on sale this week. The No. 1 pound-for-pound box office attraction and the Fighter of the Decade, MANNY “Pacman” PACQUIAO (54-3-2, 38 KOs), the lone congressional representative from the Sarangani province in the Philippines, returns to the Fight Capital of the World to defend his World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight title against professional nemesis, three-division world champion and future Hall of Famer JUAN MANUEL MARQUEZ (53-5-1, 39 KOs), of México City. Pacquiao-Marquez III erupts Saturday, November 12 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nev.

"My fight with Manny Pacquiao is going to be a war," said Marquez, Saturday night in Cancún, México, following his first-round knockout of former world champion Likar Ramos.

Promoted by Top Rank, in association with MP Promotions and MGM Grand, tickets to Pacquiao-Marquez III, priced at $1,200, $900, $600, $400, and $200, go on sale this Friday, July 22, at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT. Ticket sales at $1,200, $900, $600 and $400 are limited to 10 per person and ticket sales at $200 are limited to two (2) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster (800) 745-3000. Tickets also will be available for purchase at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com.

Khan-Judah half as good as Naseem Hamed vs. Kevin Kelly

By Brad Jones: Photo Credits Joe Comporeale – Over 14 years ago a young brash British boxer Naseem Hamed crossed the pond to take on the best America had to offer Kevin Kelly. What a great fight it was while it lasted in what was the modern days featherweight version of Hagler vs. Hearns.
The fight was a seesaw of knock downs hammed down in the 1st both fighter down in the 2nd Hammed down in the 4th before rising of the canvas to hit Kevin with blistering flurry that knock Kevin Kelly out cold! Tomorrow night Amir Khan and Zab Judah meet in a unification bout of the World Boxing Association (WBA) and IBF straps Amir is no Hammed I am under no illusion but if this is half as good as Hammed vs Kelly we are in for a hell of a fight.
The reason I feel this is both guys chins Judah’s of late have been under question both have a lot of heart and will not back down and both come to win which always helps .Like Hammed Khan crosses the pond a young hungry lion who’s exiting. Zab Judah like Kevin comes to win has a great boxing pedigree and is in home soil with allot to prove if its anything like Kelly-Hamed we will be in for a treat.

Fury: The Chisora fight is unofficially a world title eliminator for a bout against Wladimir

By Sean McDaniel: Photo credit: Trieger, Action images – Two big British heavyweights Dereck Chisora and Tyson Fury go at on Saturday night for what could be a fight where the winner gets a shot against IBF/WBA/WBO heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko, who is waiting for the dust to clear from this fight to see whether he’ll accept the winner as a challenger.
Chisora and Fury can help themselves in a big way to get a nice payday against Wladimir by winning impressively.
If either of these guys win in stinker, it’s likely Wladimir will move in a different direction rather than wasting time fighting someone who looked poor. Wladimir needs an opponent that will bring some excitement because in his last fight he was matched against a runner David Haye and the fight turned out to be a really boring affair with Wladimir easily winning.
“Wladimir has shown a lot of interest in the winner of this fight,” Fury said to the independent.co.uk. “Unofficially, this is a world title eliminator. Hopefully, the winner will do a better job than Haye, which won’t be hard.”
Chisora weighed in at a career high of 261 pounds at Friday’s weight, and things into question whether he’ll be fit enough to fight hard full the 12 rounds. Chisora looked to be fading last year in his bout against Sam Sexton but was able to pull out a 9th round knockout with a huge blitz.
It’s questionable whether Chisora will be able to do the same with the taller Fury, who has a good chin. With the weight that Chisora is carrying around, he might want to try to attack Fury hard in the early part of the fight while Chisora still has enough energy to score a knockout. If he waits too long, he could end up running out of gas and losing.
It’s questionable whether Fury or Chisora could do better than Haye because neither of them have the quick reflexes, the foot movement or the power that Haye possesses. If Wladimir doesn’t have anything to really worry about with either of these guys, he’ll pour it on with right hands and left hooks and score a stoppage in what will likely be a one-sided fight. I can’t say I see either of them doing a better job than Haye.

Khan to make $1 million, Judah $500,000 for Saturday’s fight

By Dan Ambrose: Photo Credit Joe Comporeale – WBA light welterweight champion Amir Khan (25-1, 17 KO’s) will be making decent money on Saturday night against IBF light welterweight champion Zab Judah (41-6, 28 KO’s) with a payday of $1,072,500, according to boxing news from Dan Rafael.This, of course, doesn’t even count the UK money that Khan will be receiving for the bout. It will be shown on Primetime Pay-Per-View in the UK, and Khan could make a lot more than that if his numbers for his fight against the less than popular Paul McCloskey are any indication.
Judah, 33, will be making $500,000, which is good money for him given that he hasn’t really done much in terms of big fights since his bout with Miguel Cotto four years ago in 2007. Judah, a one time big star of the sport, fell off after that fight and hasn’t had any big time bouts until now. Judah won’t be sharing in any of Khan’s UK money, and that’s something he’s obviously not pleased about.
However, if he beats Khan on Saturday night, the chances are high that Judah will get a fight in 2012 against either Floyd Mayweather Jr or Manny Pacquiao. All Judah would have to do is make sure he wins one more fight in 2011 against a likely soft opponent and Judah would be in a good position to get a big money bout against Pacquiao or Mayweather. Khan wants the Mayweather fight himself and he’d be fit to be tied if Judah wins, but Khan is young enough to rebuild and still get big fights in the future. He may or may not still get a Mayweather bout if he loses to Judah, but Khan is young enough to where he can get fights against other stars and future stars later on down the road.

Paul Williams looking to fight Carlos Molina next

By Eric Thomas: With his controversial 12 round majority decision over Erislandy Lara last weekend, Paul Williams (40-2, 27 KO’s) is moving on to bigger and better things rather than trying to clear up matters by giving the southpaw Lara a rematch. Williams is now reportedly targeting junior middleweight fringe contender Carlos Molina (19-4-2, 6 KO’s) for his next fight, according to boxing news from Dan Rafael on his twitter.

Molina isn’t well known among casual boxing fans, but he’s known by hardcore fans and is coming off of an impressive 10 round unanimous decision win last Saturday night over Kermit Cintron. Earlier this year, Molina and Lara fought to a controversial 10 round draw in a fight that many fans felt Molina should have won in March. Molina landed the better shots in that fight and wore Lara down on the inside during the second half of the bout. However, the scores didn’t reflect that actual fight that took place in the year. Williams looked poor in beating Lara last Saturday night, and more than a few fans think that Williams should have lost. However, if Williams can beat Molina, the guy that fans thought should have been given the decision over Lara, then Williams will be redeeming himself in a way.
Molina, 28, is no stranger to controversial decisions, as he lost two fights to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and another fight to Mike Alvarado in the past. A lot of boxing fans thought that Molina should have won all three of those fights and I’m in agreement with that. I thought was clearly the better man in his two bouts with Chavez Jr. and slightly better than Alvarado.
One of the problems that is keeping Williams from going back and giving Lara a rematch is that Williams is only planning on fighting two or three more times and then retiring from boxing. Because of this, he’s trying to get the most out of the little time he has left in the sport.
Although it would be nice for Williams to fight Lara again, it’s not a fight that would attract a lot of attention from the larger casual fans, who have no clue who Lara is. Williams is better off moving on and taking on more popular fighters that can bring him more money before he retires. Williams would like to fight Sergio Martinez one more time. They’ve fought twice with Williams winning the first fight and Martinez the second. Williams wants more shot to see who the better fighter is.

Nacho Beristain: “Pacquiao will beat Mayweather”

By John F. McKenna (McJack): Legendary Mexican trainer Ignacio “Nacho” Beristain in Atlantic City this past weekend had a surprising response when asked if he thought Manny Pacquiao (53-3-2, 38 KO’s) would beat Floyd Mayweather (41-0, 25 KO’s) if the two were to meet.
The surprise was not that “Nacho” thought Pacquiao would defeat Mayweather. As reported in the Boxing Insider, what was surprising was that Beristain said that a victory by Manny over Floyd would be bad for boxing.
“It’s a very good, important fight but that fight should not happen,” stated Beristain. “Because I believe that Pacquiao will beat Mayweather your going to take away the glory that has made Mayweather these past years. Mayweather’s style – when he fights someone that pressures him and throws a lot of punches – he just beats him up.”
Beristain said that it would not be an easy fight for Pacquiao, but that he would definitely win.
Beristain has had plenty of close experience watching Pacquiao. He was in the corner of Juan Manuel Marquez for his two fights with Manny and he was also in the corner of Oscar De Lahoya when he took the vicious beating from Pac-Man.
When Beristain was asked what makes Pacquiao so effective, so great, he responded by saying “He just works too hard. His training is too hard. He works very hard.”
When asked how good Floyd Mayweather is, who has proclaimed himself as the greatest fighter of all time, “Nacho” said that Mayweather is a very good fighter, but that Pacquiao would defeat him because “He is just too tough, too strong.”
The great trainer and veteran ring observer “Nacho” Beristain has zero confidence that Floyd Mayweather, as good a fighter as he is, would prevail against Manny Pacquiao.
Obviously Beristain is going to stick by his fighter, Juan Manuel Marquez (52-5-1, 38 KO’s) in his November showdown with Manny Pacquiao at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. “Nacho” said that if Marquez “does his work very good he can win his fight with Pacquiao.” Not exactly a ringing endorsement for Marquez.
In addition to training Juan Manuel Marquez, the sixty eight year old Beristain has trained many other great Mexican fighters including Daniel Zaragoza, Humberto Gonzalez, Ricardo Lopez and numerous others. Because of his stature in boxing Beristain’s opinions carry a significant amount of weight.

Boxing notes: Brandon Rios' next move

Southern California has another star fighter following Saturday night's showing by Oxnard's Brandon Rios.
The 24-year-old unbeaten world lightweight champion kept his fists flying throughout his third-round TKO triumph over Maywood's gritty Urbano Antillon at Home Depot Center, positioning himself for a jump to boxing's deepest division (junior-welterweight) and perhaps a 2013 battle against Manny Pacquiao, according to both fighters' promoter, Bob Arum.
"Everyone wants to see Brandon now," Arum said.
Rios' next bout will be his second lightweight title defense, Arum said, most likely against Australia's Michael Katsidis, who has fought hard but lost recent battles against Juan Manuel Marquez and Robert Guerrero.
Arum said if Marquez puts on a strong showing but loses to Pacquiao in November, a Rios-Marquez bout is possible in the first quarter of 2012, with the move to 140 pounds following.
-- A Katsidis bout would continue the de-icing of relations between Arum's Top Rank promotion company and Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions. The companies stopped making fights following the Pacquiao-Ricky Hatton bout in May 2009, with De La Hoya and his business partner, Richard Schaefer, being sued by Pacquiao in connection with alleged defamatory statements about the Filipino superstar possibly engaging in performance-enhancing-drug use. That lawsuit was settled last month.
Now, the first Top Rank-Golden Boy card has been set, with Golden Boy's Daniel Ponce De Leon scheduled to fight Top Rank's world featherweight champion, Yuriorkis Gamboa, Sept. 10 in Atlantic City, N.J.
There's been talk another deal is in the works, with Golden Boy's Saul "Canelo" Alvarez tabbed to fight at Staples Center Sept. 17 against Top Rank's Alfonso Gomez.
It's a fluid situation. Arum said he hasn't been contacted about Gomez, and a Staples Center official said he's still in the process of "clearing the date" for the "Canelo" world super-welterweight title bout that would be shown on HBO's pay-per-view broadcast of the Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Victor Ortiz bout at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
--The manager for Coachella Valley junior-welterweight Timothy Bradley said Saturday night that he expects news to break this week about the fighter's future, which is in promotional limbo.
Bradley promoter Gary Shaw is seeking to collect money he would have gathered if Bradley had fought Amir Khan July 23 in Las Vegas. Bradley declined to accept the bout.
There's a possibility another promoter -- such as Arum -- will front a settlement figure for Bradley to pay off Shaw, allowing Bradley to defend his World Boxing Council belt on the Pacquiao-Marquez card in November.
Arum declined to discuss the matter. Bradley manager Cameron Dunkin said he's received a letter from the WBC asking what Bradley's intentions are.
Bradley has been discussed as Pacquiao's next opponent if another effort to stage a Pacquiao-Mayweather bout fails.

Five possible opponents for Saul Alvarez

"The kid has a rock star following. It's unbelievable. When all the little girls were following Alvarez and I was left behind, I was getting trampled. It was like, wow this kid is the next guy," said Oscar De La Hoya. Saul "Canelo" Alvarez is a superstar at 20 years old . He looks more like Brian Scalabrine than Julio Cesar Chavez. Yet, Alvarez fights with a ferocious style that boxing fans love. He is ready for his next fight. Therefore, who are five possible opponents for Alvarez?

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.
There have been talks about a fight between Mexican star Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and Alvarez. It would be an all-Mexican mega-fight. The winner of the fight would forever remain a boxing legend in Mexico. "Freddie wants that fight, we're ready. We just need a willingness on Canelo's part to do it. We're ready to do that fight. But, I don't think they want the fight," said Top Rank's CEO and promoter Bob Arum.

However, Chavez is already scheduled to fight Peter Manfredo Jr. on November 19th and he might have a tuneup fight in September. He would not be available to fight Canelo until 2012. There is also a significant weight difference between them. Alvarez is a junior middleweight and Chavez is a middleweight that weighed 180 pounds in his last boxing match.

Paul Williams
There has been discussion of Alvarez fighting the winner of the boxing match between Paul Williams and Erislandy Lara. "Yeah, there's a good possibility. Obviously we look at everything. Every offer and every aspect of it. But, we will have to see what happens in this fight," said Golden Boy's Promotions matchmaker Eric Gomez.

Alvarez is likely to return on September 17th the weekend of Mexican Independence Day. The date of the fight lowers chances of a boxing match against Williams since the date is so close to his last fight. He rebounded after his loss against Martinez by winning a controversial decision against Lara. Equally important, Williams showed enough flaws in his last two boxing matches that he will no longer be avoided by elite boxers.

Vanes Martirosyan
Vanes Martirosyan is interested in fighting Alvarez. "I hear Canelo wants to fight in September. I say let's do it. We can sell out staples. How often do you get two undefeated fighters in the ring together. My style and Canelo's style guarantees a great fight for the fans," said Martirosyan.

Golden Boy Promotions has discussed a fight against Martirosyan. He is Alvarez's next mandatory opponent. The fight probably will not happen in September. However, it will eventually happen since he is a mandatory challenger.
Alfonso Gomez
Alfonso Gomez has mentioned that he wants to fight Alvarez. His trainer Edison Reynoso has discussed that he would prefer for him to fight Gomez instead of Mayorga. Reynoso does not like how he has lost almost every major fight that he has been in. Yet, Mayorga still has a better resume than Gomez.

Gomez is an experienced fighter that has a following in Los Angeles which is a possible location for the boxing match. It would be a fight between two Mexican warriors on Mexican Independence Day. On the other hand, Gomez is promoted by Top Rank which could be an obstacle to getting the fight made. There is also a weight difference because Gomez is a welterweight.

Ricardo Mayorga
Alvarez's trainer Reynoso and Golden Boy Promoter Richard Schaefer have both mentioned Mayorga as a possible opponent. But, Schaefer is worried that Ricardo Mayorga and his Promoter Don King might price themselves out of the fight. King is still a hard negotiator.

Mayorga would provide a exciting fight. It is also fight that Alvarez could win. Likewise, it would be impressive if he could beat Mayorga in a more dominant fashion than Cotto. It could lead to bigger fights for Alvarez. It could help prove that he is not too young to fight the best junior middleweights in the world.
Works Cited
7 July 2011 http://espn.go.com/
7 July 2011 http://www.boxingscene.com/

Billy Costello, ex-WBC champ, dies of cancer at 55

KINGSTON, N.Y. (AP) — Former World Boxing Council light welterweight champion Billy Costello, winner of his first 30 professional fights, has died of lung cancer. He was 55.
Costello died Wednesday at a hospital in his hometown, Kingston, N.Y., longtime friend Joe LaLima said Thursday.
Costello was 40-2 over a 20-year career that began in 1979. He won the WBC light welterweight championship in 1984 with a 10th-round technical knockout of Bruce Curry, then defended the title three times over the next year.
Costello lost the title to "Lightning" Lonnie Smith in an eighth-round technical knockout in 1985. His only other loss as a pro came to Alexis Arguello in 1986.
After retiring from fighting, he worked in building and road construction, as a boxing judge and with young people in his hometown.
LaLima said Costello could afford to live anywhere after his career, but stayed in Kingston.
"He chose to buy a home in his neighborhood, where he was needed to help kids stay straight," said LaLima, a friend of Costello's father who had known the fighter since he was a child.
Costello spent recent years helping run the city Police Athletic League boxing club, which sometimes hosts bouts in a neighborhood gym named for him.
LaLima said a pedestal and plaque are already in place and the money has been raised to put a 6-foot-tall statue of Costello at one of the main streets leading into the city.
There was no immediate information on funeral arrangements.

Klitschko wants to make Haye a 'better person'

HAMBURG, Germany (AP) — Wladimir Klitschko believes he is the man to deliver the therapeutic defeat he thinks David Haye needs to become a "better person" after their highly anticipated heavyweight fight on Saturday.
The fighters have been swapping threats that perhaps go beyond the often outrageous buildups to fights — both have predicted sending the other to hospital after the bout in Hamburg's soccer stadium.
Haye's antics seem to have irritated Klitschko, who says Haye needs a reality check and therapy for his big mouth.
"My name is Dr. Klitschko. I am a therapist and on July 2 I am going to give you treatment. It is going to be reality rehab. I will knock you out into reality, which will be good for your life.
"You will be a better person and have better manners," Klitschko told Haye, who was sitting next to him at a news conference on Monday.
The 35-year-old Klitschko, the IBF, WBO and IBO champion who has a 55-3 record with 49 KOs, has a doctorate degree in sports science.
Haye, the 30-year-old WBA champion, appeared unimpressed, neither by Klitschko's academic nor the boxing record.
"This is going to be the most brutal execution of a boxer that you've seen for many, many years," Haye predicted. "I'm going to go out there and absolutely destroy him, really quickly."
The fight has been in the making for more than two years and Haye has used the time to repeatedly mock Wladimir and his older brother Vitali, the WBC champion.
He has worn a T-shirt depicting the image of himself holding the severed heads of the Klitschko brothers. Wladimir has promised to make him eat it after the fight.
Haye has introduced a game app for smart phones called "David Haye's Knockout," with users playing as Haye aims to knock the head off a giant eastern European.
Klitschko said he respects Haye as a fighter but not as a person.
"You have a certain attitude that is not so good for your life inside and outside the ring," the Ukrainian said.
Haye, a former cruiserweight fighter who has a 25-1 record, with 23 KOs, has called both Klitschko brothers "frauds," who only fight "little fat puddings who turn up for a pay check."
Klitschko acknowledged that Haye looked superbly fit and confident ahead of the fight.
"I am going to get challenged in the ring," Klitschko said.
But he had no doubt that he would be the winner, promising to punish Haye for 12 rounds before knocking him out.

Mayweather returns to ring, controversy follows

NEW YORK (AP) — Floyd Mayweather Jr. says he never accused rival fighter Manny Pacquiao of taking steroids and that he's still open to fighting the Filipino icon.
Mayweather made the comments during a stop in New York on Tuesday to promote his Sept. 17 fight against welterweight champion Victor Ortiz. The fight at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas will be the first for Mayweather in a year and a half.
Most of the news he's made between fights has been outside the ring.
Mayweather is being sued in federal court for defamation after allegedly accusing Pacquiao of using performance-enhancing drugs. He also faces felony charges stemming from a domestic argument, and misdemeanor harassment and battery charges, among other things, in separate cases.

Klitschko beats Haye by unanimous decision


HAMBURG, Germany (AP) — Wladimir Klitschko wanted to punish David Haye for all the trash talking he did leading up to their title fight. He settled for merely making Haye another statistic in his dominating heavyweight run.
Matched up against an opponent who didn't fight nearly as well as he talked, Klitschko dominated from the opening bell Saturday night on his way to a lopsided decision win in a fight that did not live up to its advance hype.
"He was scared to fight me," Klitschko said. "I was expecting more of a challenge in the ring, but he was super defensive."
The win was the 14th straight for Klitschko and improved his record to 17-2 in title fights. More importantly, he captured Haye's version of the heavyweight title, giving he and his brother, Vitali, all the major heavyweight title belts.
The two have long promised their mother they would never fight each other, but Vitali was in Wladimir's corner and ready to celebrate with him after the win in a rain-soaked soccer stadium in Hamburg.
"We're celebrating with my brother that we've collected all the belts in the heavyweight division," Klitschko said. "It wasn't as spectacular as I expected, but I was trying."
Haye had been expected to give Klitschko one of his most difficult fights, but he fought sparingly, seemingly afraid to take punches to the head as part of the cost of getting inside against his larger opponent. Haye blamed a broken toe suffered three weeks before the fight, taking off his shoe in the ring afterward to show it off.
"I couldn't give everything I needed to, it was really frustrating," Haye said in the ring. "I had to knock him out and unfortunately I couldn't do it."
Klitschko was never able to really knock Haye down, though the Englishman was down quite often. Haye went to the canvas repeatedly on slips and flops, and finally referee Genaro Rodriguez had enough of it and gave Haye a count when he went down in the 11th round.
Haye won only one round on one ringside judge's scorecards, though that didn't stop him from raising his hand in victory when the bell rang to end the 12th round.
All three judges gave it to Klitschko by large margins, scoring the 12-round showdown 117-109, 118-108 and 116-110.
Haye, who stirred most of the hype with often crass trash-talking, had vowed to leave Klitschko quivering on the canvas. But he never gave himself an opportunity for a knockout by spending much of the fight on the outside.
He said he could not push off on his fight foot to get to Klitschko because of the injury, though he conceded that he was facing a big, strong opponent who gave him fits. The 6-foot-6 Klitschko had a 3-inch height advantage and weighed in at 242 pounds to 213 for the 30-year-old Haye.
"It was subpar, nowhere near as good as I would have liked," Haye said. "He fought the perfect game plan for someone with my style."
Haye, a former cruiserweight champion who had held the WBA heavyweight title, had campaigned for two years for a fight against one of the Klitschko brothers and his popularity in Britain allowed him to gain a 50/50 split of the purse. But his constant trash talking clearly irritated Klitschko.
That didn't happen, either, in a fight that didn't get good until the final round, when Haye landed a right hand to the head and Klitschko came back to land a series of jabs and rights to the head of Haye.
For most of the fight, Klitschko stayed behind his feared left jab. He landed a right on Haye's chin in the fifth but Haye recovered nicely, bouncing off the ropes to stay on his feet. Still, he seemed — like Haye — to not want to take any unnecessary chances in the ring.
"I wished I could knock him out impressively," Klitschko said. "But I had to be smart enough to not let him have a chance."
The 35-year-old Ukrainian is now 56-3, with 49 KOs, while the Haye is 25-2, 23 KOs. The Briton's only previous loss was in 2004, when he was knocked out by countryman Carl Thompson in a cruiserweight fight.
Klitschko also hasn't lost in seven years and, together with his brother, dominates the heavyweight division.
"He's big, strong and very effective at what he does," Haye said.

David Haye's top five fights: Fan's take


David Haye once attended a news conference wearing a T-shirt depicting an image of himself holding the Klitschko brothers' severed heads. Haye will never be called shy. He does not like the Klitschko brothers. Haye also has had an accomplished career in the crusierweight division. He is now ready to fight the best heavyweights in the world. However, what are David Haye's top fights in his career?

5: TKO 5 Monte Barrett, November 15th, 2008
Haye's fight against Monte Barrett was his chance to fight an experienced hard hitting heavyweight. Barrett was considered to be a challenging fight Barrett throws punches from strange angles and hits very hard. Yet, Haye was ready to prove he could succeed in the heavyweight division.

It was an action packed fight. Haye was hurt by a left hook in second round. However, Haye came back in the 3rd round and knocked down Barrett twice by a left hook to the jaw then a right. He continued the onslaught in the 4th round and knocked down Barrett two more times. Then, Haye in the fifth round hit Barrett with a right left combination which led the referee to stop the fight.

His second fight at heavyweight was far from a perfect fight for him. But, he proved he could defeat a solid and experienced heavyweight boxer.

4:TKO 4 John Ruiz, April 3rd, 2010
Haye was required to make his first defense of the WBA heavyweight championship against arguably the most boring heavyweight boxer of all-time John Ruiz. However, he did not want to fight to be a typical Ruiz snooze fest. Haye wanted to become only the second man to knock him out.

Haye dominated Ruiz throughout the boxing match. He knocked him down twice in the first round. He also knocked down Ruiz with strong punches in the 5th and 6th round. Haye hit him with a couple of powerful shots in the ninth round and Ruiz's camp threw in the towel to stop the fight.

Haye announced after the bout he was ready to unify the heavyweight belts by fighting either one of the Klitschko brothers. He mentioned that he planned to retire by 31. He wanted to end his career with a fight against one of the Klitschko brothers.

3:W12 Nikolai Valuev, November 7th, 2009
David Haye vs. Vitali Klitschko fight was being discussed. But, the boxing match never came to fruition so Haye decided to fight Nikolai Valuev. He was looking forward to have a chance to fight for a world heavyweight title. So a fight against the one of the Klitschko brothers had to wait.

The boxing match truly was David vs. Goliath. Haye was giving up nearly a foot and 100 pounds to the tallest and heaviest champion in history. Haye used his hand speed to continually beat Valuev to the punch. Haye rocked him with a hard punch in the final round. He almost became the first man to knockout Valuev. Haye won the boxing match by unaminous decision.

Haye became the first British fighter to hold a world heavyweight title since Lennox Lewis retired as champ in 2004. Equally important, he showed that his power carried up to heavyweight with his victory over Valuev. Haye was not afraid to fight men bigger men.

2: TKO 2 Enzo Maccarinelli, March 8th, 2008
Enzo Maccarinelli vs. David Haye was an extremely anticipated boxing match. It was a huge fight for Britain. There were 42,000 people in the arena and nearly half of a billion people watched on TV around the world. The boxing match was seen as the biggest British fight since Chris Eubank and Nigel Benn.

Haye lived up to his promise in the fight. He ended the match quickly. Haye hit Maccarinelli with a clubbing right hand two minutes into the second round and the referee stopped the fight. He showed the excellent punching power that he possessed.

Haye planned finally to leave the crusierweight decision behind and to move up to the heavyweight division. He was proud of his performance. "I talked the talk and walked the walk. I know how hard I punched. No crusierweight can live with my power and no heavyweight can either," said Haye.

1: TKO 7 Jean-Marc Mormeck, November 10th, 2007
Haye was an unproven fighter going into his boxing match against Jean-Marc Mormeck. He wanted to show that he was an elite fighter. It also gave Haye an opportunity to become a world champion.

The beginning of the fight there was constant back and forth action. The fourth round Mormeck connected with a combination of hooks that knocked down Haye. Haye regained composure in the seventh round nailing Mormeck with an uppercut, left hook, and overhand right combination that knocked him down. He got up from the knockdown. But, the referee ended the bout. Haye was declared the winner.

Haye was planning eventually to fight for heavyweight title. He also mentioned that it was very hard for him to make the weight for the fight.

Five reasons Mayweather will outshine Pacquiao this fall

 Boxing's two biggest pound for pound stars will be stepping into the ring this fall. While Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao still aren't fighting one another, each is in a high profile match which will command the attention of the boxing world.
Floyd Mayweather will return from a long hiatus on September 17th to meet WBC welterweight champion Victor Ortiz, and Manny Pacquiao will put his WBO welterweight strap up for grabs on November 12th when he meets Juan Manuel Marquez in a 144 lbs catchweight bout, the third bout in their series.
But which of the sport's kingpins will come out looking better? Here are 5 reasons why Mayweather will outshine Pacquiao this fall.
1. Ortiz's Style: Ortiz is going to bring the heat against Mayweather, constantly coming forward and attacking. Not only will this make the fight exciting from the start, but it will force Mayweather to stay busy as well. Contrary to popular opinion, Mayweather is at his best, and most fan-friendly, when a fighter steps into his wheelhouse.
2. Ortiz-Pacquiao Similarities: Victor Ortiz has several important similarities to Manny Pacquiao, all of which seem to hint at the possibility that Mayweather will be using this fight as preparation for a showdown against Pacquiao, perhaps sometime in the first half of 2012. Ortiz is an aggressive southpaw with great punching power, and he has quick hands. All of that means that Mayweather will be particularly geared up, focused and ready to perform.
3. Marquez's Style: While Ortiz's style seems likely to bring out the best in Mayweather, Juan Manuel Marquez's style serves as a dangerous riddle for Pacquiao. Even including Pacquiao's 2005 loss to Erik Morales, the man who has most flummoxed the Filipino icon since his US debut in 2001 has been Marquez. Marquez and Pacquiao clash in exciting fashion, but Marquez doesn't serve to make Pacquiao look "good".
4. Marquez at Welterweight: We've seen Marquez once at a weight above 135 lbs, and that's when he fought Mayweather. Mayweather, not a big welterweight, seemed much larger than the lightweight champion, and Marquez looked lethargic at the higher weight. Knowing that already, even a dominant Pacquiao win wouldn't mean as much, or seem as spectacular, as if the two had fought for a third time two years ago at 135 or 140 lbs.
5. Mayweather's Comeback: The long absence of Mayweather has created more intrigue for his upcoming bout. Will he be rusty, will he be able to keep up with the younger, more powerful, Ortiz? Meanwhile, we've seen a lot of Pacquiao lately. In fact, we've seen him fight eight times in the same period of time that we've seen Mayweather fight twice. That's a major plus in his favor when comparing the two fighters, but it also means that perhaps fans have gotten used to him and some of that intrigue is gone, particularly as opposed to Mayweather, of whom we have seen so little.
Sources: ESPN.com/boxing, Boxrec.com, ProBoxing-Fans.com

Fan's view: Will Mayweather-Ortiz and Pacquiao-Marquez III clear the way for Pacquiao vs. Mayweather?


It has been about two years since legitimate Manny Pacquiao vs. Floyd Mayweather rumors , musings and grumblings have been making the rounds. In the fall of 2009, Floyd Mayweather returned after a nearly two year absence from the ring to dominate Juan Manuel Marquez, and two months later, Manny Pacquiao resoundingly defeated welterweight champion Miguel Cotto.
Fast forward to the present, and we find that Mayweather is set to return from a year and a half absence from the ring to face welterweight champion Victor Ortiz, and two months after that, Pacquiao is set to meet Marquez.
Therefore, the obvious question then is if Mayweather vs. Ortiz and Pacquiao vs. Marquez III will clear the way for Pacquiao vs. Mayweather to finally take place. Here are 5 reasons why victories by each man this fall will lead to the mega-fight of the generation.
1. Mayweather Prep Work: Victor Ortiz shares some interesting attributes with Manny Pacquiao. Mainly, he's an aggressive southpaw with a big punch and quick hands. Mayweather has taken matches which served as style tune-ups in the past, namely when he fought Sharmba Mitchell before facing Zab Judah. Therefore, Mayweather could very well be putting in the prep work to get himself ready to fight Pacquiao next. Of course, you don't have to take my word for it, you can take Freddie Roach's instead.
2. Further Delay Could Derail: Top Rank's head honcho Bob Arum is big on letting matches simmer or marinate for as long as possible, in order to build up the hype, anticipation and payoff when two fighters finally meet. Sometimes that pay dividends, but sometimes that blows up in your face. For example, Arum was angling towards a future Yuriorkis Gamboa-Juan Manuel Lopez featherweight mega-bout, but that got destroyed when Orlando Salido upended JuanMa. Further delay could derail this fight as well, and sooner or later, one of these guys is going to lose before they face each othe, ruining the magic of the event.
3. Intermingling Opposition: The list of common opponents between Pacquiao and Mayweather has grown to be quite lengthy over the past few years. Pacquiao has faced all four of Mayweather's most recent opponents - Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Juan Manuel Marquez and Shane Mosley - although Mayweather faced three of them first, all excluding Juan Manuel Marquez... whom Pacquiao is of course set to fight again. The remaining competition the two haven't met comes with a mixture of low name recognition, lower weight class, or simply a poor quality of opponent for a pound for pound fighter. The remaining competition, that is, besides one another.
4. Legal Drama (Hopefully) Subsiding: Mayweather has been more active fighting legal battles over the past year than he has been fighting in the squared circle. Most have been delayed or averted, although Mayweather recently made news by no-showing a court ordered deposition for a defamation lawsuit filed by team Pacquiao. Hashing out a deal in their mutual lawsuit would be a boldfaced indicator that they are ready to do battle elsewhere, assuming Mayweather avoids jail time from his pending charges.
5. Money Still Matters: Interpret the phrase as you wish. Maybe it means that "Money" Mayweather still matters to the sport of boxing, or perhaps it could mean that his name on Pacquiao's resume still matters to his legacy. Or maybe it simply means that money still matters to both fighters and their promoters, and sooner or later, a combined $100-$150 million of earnings will be far too great to ignore, all other issues aside.
Sources: ESPN.com/boxing, Boxrec.com, ProBoxing-Fans.com

Tyson, Stallone, Chavez enter Boxing Hall


CANASTOTA, N.Y. (AP) — The once-proclaimed "baddest man on the planet" fumbled for words that wouldn't come. Sylvester Stallone knew exactly what Mike Tyson was feeling.
Both were inducted in the International Boxing Hall of Fame on Sunday, Tyson for his reign as heavyweight champion of the world, Stallone for his "Rocky" movie series, and the fans turned out in droves on a rainy, overcast afternoon.
Thousands packed every corner of the induction grounds, and Tyson was no match for the emotion of the moment.
"I've got to be goofy about this or I'll get emotional up here," Tyson warned before trying to honor the late trainer Cus D'Amato, who became his legal guardian after Tyson's mother died and taught him the finer points of the sweet science in a gym in Catskill, N.Y., just a 2½-hour drive from the Hall of Fame.
D'Amato died in 1985, the year before the hard-punching Tyson knocked out WBC champion Trevor Berbick in the second round to become the youngest heavyweight champ in history at age 20.
"All this stuff started when I met Cus, and Bobby Stewart (a social worker and boxing fan who introduced Tyson to D'Amato)," Tyson said. "I was in reform school because I was always robbing people.
"All my life I watched these guys. I look at them different," Tyson said as he looked around at a dais that included hometown heroes Carmen Basilio and Billy Backus, Jake LaMotta, Leon Spinks, George Chuvalo, and Marvin Hagler, among others. "Why would I want to be like these guys I always say. I don't know.
Tyson paused briefly — the crowd erupted in "Come on Mike!" — and then he tried in vain to continue.
"Oh, man," Tyson said. "I have to take my time with this because there's other guys up here, you know. When I met Cus, we talked a little bit about money, but we wanted to be great fighters.
"Hey guys, I can't even finish this stuff. Thank you. Thank you," Tyson said, then sat down.
If anyone could understand the 44-year-old Tyson's mind-set, it was Stallone, who penned the script about an underdog boxer from Philadelphia named Rocky Balboa and then played the part in the movies. "Rocky" was released in 1976 and was nominated for 10 Academy Awards, winning best picture, best director and best film editing.
"Rocky" made Stallone what he is today and captured boxing's heart from the outset. Every induction weekend is punctuated by the theme song from "Rocky," and on this day it seemed a little bit louder than usual as it blared over the loudspeakers when the honorees made their way onstage.
"I've never pretended to be a boxer. I don't possess those skills," said Stallone, who skipped the annual pre-induction parade because of security concerns. "What I do think I have is an understanding of what goes on outside the ring. Outside the ring is sometimes maybe an even bigger struggle than what goes on inside the ring, and I was able to capture that. Then I believe that you can identify more with the fighter."
Stallone paused as the crowd erupted again.
"More than that, you also realize that our life is a constant battle," Stallone said. "Sometimes I write things that may seem a little sentimental, but I truly believe it's not how hard you can hit — it's how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward because that's really what makes the difference in your life."
Stallone also wrote five other movies based on the Rocky Balboa character and in 2006 was awarded the Boxing Writers Association of America award for "Lifetime Cinematic Achievement in Boxing."
"There is special reverence for me," Stallone said. "They are the greatest athletes in the world. They are our connection to the past and our way to the future. They are the guys that go in there and take the blows and show that if you really put it out there on the line, you are a champion. You may not be the champion of the world, but you'll be the champion of your life.
"And Yo Adrian, I did it!" Stallone shouted in closing, repeating one of the more famous lines from the movie.
Mexican champ Julio Cesar Chavez, Russian-born junior welterweight Kostya Tszyu, Mexican trainer Ignacio "Nacho" Beristain, and referee Joe Cortez also were inducted.
Chavez, who grew up in an abandoned railroad car with his five sisters and four brothers, became a three-division champion, registering 88 knockouts before retiring with a professional record of 107-6-2.
"My induction into the Hall of Fame is not for me, it's for all of you and all of Mexico," Chavez said through an interpreter in a brief speech.
Posthumous honorees enshrined included: bantamweight Memphis Pal Moore, light heavyweight champion Jack Root, and middleweight Dave Shade in the old-timer category; British heavyweight John Gully in the pioneer category; promoter A.F. Bettinson; and former BBC broadcaster Harry Carpenter.

Roach: Mayweather could be prepping for Pacquiao


Floyd Mayweather Jr.  
AP – FILE - In this April 30, 2010 file photo, Floyd Mayweather Jr. steps on the scale at a weigh-in ceremony …
NEW YORK – Freddie Roach believes that Floyd Mayweather Jr. could be preparing for a long-awaited showdown with Manny Pacquiao by returning to the ring in September.
The trainer of the Filipino sensation told The Associated Press in a phone interview on Wednesday that he thinks Mayweather has agreed to fight young welterweight titleholder Victor Ortiz because his style would help get him ready for a fight against Pacquiao.
"Of course, that's the first thing that came to my mind," Roach said.
Ortiz and Pacquiao are both fast, high-volume punchers who tend to press the action. They are also southpaws, and Mayweather — who will be ending a 16-month layoff when he steps into the ring Sept. 17 — has rarely fought left-handed opponents during his undefeated career.
The few he has fought, Zab Judah to name one, have cause him some problems.
"I'm just figuring he'll give us a good blueprint to fight him, how Floyd handles fighting a southpaw," Roach said of Ortiz, who won the WBC 147-pound title with a narrow unanimous decision over Andre Berto in April, a certain candidate for Fight of the Year.
"Some left-handers have given him trouble," Roach said. "Judah gave him trouble but couldn't maintain the pace. Guys like Victor Ortiz, Manny Pacquiao, they can maintain that pace. And I do think the southpaw stance gives him trouble."
Pacquiao is scheduled to face Juan Manuel Marquez in November in the third fight of their epic series, after routing Shane Mosley last month. Mayweather easily beat Marquez in September 2009 before soundly beating Mosley in his most recent fight.
Richard Schaefer of Golden Boy Promotions, who handles Ortiz and has worked with Mayweather in the past, laughed off the suggestion that "Money Mayweather" could be getting ready to face Pacquiao by accepting a fight against someone as young and hungry as his fighter.
"If you want to get ready for Manny, of all people, you're not going to fight Victor Ortiz," Schaefer said. "You would be shooting yourself to pick someone as tough, as physical, as strong, as young as Victor to prepare for Pacquiao."
Pacquiao and Mayweather have come close to reaching a deal for potentially the richest fight in boxing history on multiple occasions, only for it to evaporate.
Mayweather has insisted that he will require random blood testing for any future fight, even though it is not required by any boxing commission. Pacquiao has agreed to the blood tests but the two sides could never agree on a specific protocol.
Ortiz agreed to blood and urine testing laid out by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.
Pacquiao recently settled a defamation lawsuit against Schaefer and his partner, Oscar De La Hoya. Pacquiao claimed in the suit that he has never tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs, but said that De La Hoya and Schaefer — along with Mayweather, his father and uncle — had embarked on a smear campaign to make people think he used drugs.
Mayweather and his family members weren't involved in the settlement so that case is still pending, which presents yet another obstacle to the megafight ever happening.
In the meantime, Mayweather will start preparing for Ortiz. The former five-division champ has often been criticized for facing opponents who are smaller than him or past their prime, but that won't be the case when he steps into the ring against the WBC titleholder.
"Victor Ortiz is one of the most exciting guys in the sport. He's a tremendous story, great personality, bilingual," Schaefer said. "And it's the comeback of Floyd Mayweather.
"Over the last couple years, he always fought the guys before Pacquiao and he still got criticized," Schaefer said. "Finally, the media and fight fans realize he doesn't duck anyone. Coming back to fight Victor Ortiz shows you what he's made all about."(yahoo.com)

Manny Pacquiao: Will Pacquiao Accept $65M Fight vs Saul Alvarez?


MANILA—Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim has offered $65 million to Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao to fight in Mexico next year with one of Mexico’s up-and-coming fighters.
This was revealed yesterday by Ilocos Sur Gov. Luis “Chavit” Singson, a long-time confidante of Pacquiao, who said that negotiations with Slim, the world’s wealthiest man, have already started and that Pacquiao was interested in the guaranteed money.
Singson’s report came after Top Rank’s Bob Arum revealed that American boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. had turned down a $65 million offer from a Singaporean group to fight Pacquiao.
In a phone interview, Singson said that Slim had told him about his desire to host one of Pacquiao’s fights as a favor to his countrymen who have been looking to see Pacquiao fight on their soil.
The $65 million offer to Pacquiao was guaranteed by Slim, who would pick the Mexican opponent for the world’s best pound-for-pound boxer.
He said Slim is looking at WBC light middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez as likely opponent for Pacquiao.
The unbeaten Alvarez is just 21 and holds an awesome 36-0-1 record with 26 knockouts.
Since 1995, Pacquiao has figured in more than a dozen fights with Mexican or Mexican and Mexican-Americans such as Oscar De La Hoya, Erik Morales, Marco Antonio Barrera and Juan Manuel Marquez but he has never fought in Mexico.
He added that unlike Mayweather, Pacquiao would not turn down $65 million especially since he still has to find his match in the ring.
“I think Manny is still at his peak,” said Singson.

Marquez-Pacquiao III a done deal

Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - Filipino boxing icon Manny Pacquiao's confirmation, boxing pundits have long agreed, is as binding as a signed fight contract.
"Tuloy na po 'yun, abangan n'yo (It's on, wait for it)," Pacquiao said during an interview with ABS-CBN's Dyan Castillejo.
The Filipino ring superstar was, of course, referring to his third clash with Mexican great Juan Manuel Marquez on November 12 in Las Vegas.
Marquez, the WBA and WBO lightweight champion, signed the contract--which assures him a personal-high $5 million purse plus a share in pay-per-view revenues--last May 19 at Beverly Hills Hotel in Los Angeles.
Pacquiao's adviser Mike Koncz is to bring the contract to Manila for the pound-for-pound king's signature. Koncz has not arrived from the United States, though.
Under the fight's financial terms, Pacquiao will get $20 million--virtually the same amount he earned in his lopsided unanimous decision victory over Shane Mosley on May 7--plus a share in PPV revenues.
In their first tussle in 2004, Pacquiao settled for a draw despite knocking Marquez down three times in the first round. They met again in 2008 at 130 pounds with Pacquiao squeezing out a split decision on the strength of a third-round knockdown.
The trilogy is set at a catch weight of 144 lb with Pacquiao's WBO welterweight title also at stake. Marquez fought and lost to Floyd Mayweather Jr. in the same catch weight in 2009.
If Marquez beats Pacquiao, a fourth fight will be held with the Mexican, who stands to receive $10 million.(yahoo.com)

Khan running out of easy options

By William Mackay: With his win over a hand-picked Paul McCloskey last time out, WBA light welterweight champion Amir Khan has run out of soft opponents to fight and is looking at the unpleasant option of having to face quality guys moving forward. WBC/WBO light welterweight champion Timothy Bradley, who punches with no more power than McCloskey, chose not to fight Khan next. This was a fight that Khan really wanted, and it’s not hard to see why.
Bradley doesn’t have size or power, and it’s a fight that Khan would have been able to finish on his feet and possibly win a close decision. But with Bradly off the table the options aren’t good for Khan, because the possible opponents for him are guys like Zab Judah and Roberto Guerrero, both of which would have an excellent chance of beating Khan and ruining his dreams for the time being of being a big star. Judah is dangerous because of his power, and Guerrero because of his excellent overall boxing skills. These are two guys that could very well beat Khan and send him back to square one with his career. Had Khan taken on a halfway decent fighter in his last bout instead of the little know weak punching McCloskey, Khan would likely get a pass if he fought a weaker fringe contender this time around. But he can’t do that now. Khan has to step it up and face someone good.
HBO probably won’t like it if Khan digs up another obscure fighter again to beat to pad his record and look good against. Khan didn’t even look good against the hand-picked McCloskey, and didn’t get the bounce that he probably thought he would get from a win over this guy. But that’s over with. Khan and his team now have to fight a solid choice unless they want to be grilled by the boxing public and risk becoming a laughing stock for choosing weak fighters. I have a feeling that Khan may not fight Judah or Guerrero, and could end up choosing the weak punching Erik Morales.
I hope I’m wrong but that’s who I see Khan facing next. Judah and Guerrero’s names have been mentioning but I see Morales being the one that Khan actually faces. This will be like Khan’s fight against the fading Marco Antonio Barrera where Khan can dominate with speed over an aging, smaller fighter without the size or the power at light welterweight to knock Khan out.

Manny Pacqiao VS. Sugar Shane Mosley - Live Streaming

Watch Live Manny Pacqiao VS. Sugar Shane Mosley.

It’s less than a week before the much awaited fight between Manny Pacquiao and Sugar Shane Mosley. It has been reported that the tickets are now sold out and this also means that many people really want to watch the clash between the two prized fighters in the boxing world today. Let us see who’s the better fighter when the two face each other in the ring on May 7.

Mosley insists he will beat Pacquiao

MANILA, Philippines – If Manny Pacquiao thinks all he has to do to win on May 7 is show up on fight night, he is terribly mistaken.
Shane Mosley said it is not right to count him out against Pacquiao when they wage a 12-round welterweight war at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas for the simple reason that he looked dull in his last two fights against Floyd Mayweather and Sergio Mora.
“Do people have blinders on?” said Mosley as quoted by Michael Rosenthal of The Ring, who was in Big Bear, California, during an open workout held last Tuesday.
Mosley said he has all the physical tools to put an end to the rampaging ways of Pacquiao, who has terrorized those who dared to cross paths with him.
Counting on his size, speed and power, Mosley said that if a lumbering guy like Antonio Margarito can land his best blows on Pacquiao, what more if the guy in front of the Filipino pound-for-pound king is him?
“I have all the (physical) adv

Pacman thrilled to have Azkals watch his bout


MANILA, Philippines – Manny Pacquiao sounded pleased after hearing reports that the Philippine Azkals wanted to watch his upcoming fight this May 7.
The boxing superstar said it's an honor to have the country's booters watch him, as he takes on "Sugar" Shane Mosley at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
"Manonood daw sila. Karangalan ko na nandoon sila, makasuporta sa akin," he told in an exclusive interview with abs-cbnNEWS.com.
Pacquiao is in the US preparing for his match against Mosley. He will be defending his World Boxing Organization welterweight belt from the American.
Pacquiao stressed that, like what the Azkals have been trying to do in their matches, he will again try to make the country proud during his fight abroad.
"Para sa ating bansa ang bawat laban na ito," he said.
A few members of the Azkals, on the other hand, are in Daly City, California, supervising tryouts for other Filipinos interested to join the team.
They would love to watch Fighter of the Decade Pacquiao inside the MGM Grand if given the chance, they earlier said.
“We can drive down and see him. We haven’t seen him train. We’d like to see him,” Azkals player Anton Del Rosario said. – With report from Dennis Gasgonia, abs-cbnNEWS.com

Q & A with “Fast” Eddie Chambers


As the old saying goes it’s not the size of the dog in the fight it’s the size of the fight in the dog” and this certainly applies to “Fast” Eddie Chambers. He lives in a world of Heavyweight giants, pretty much every opponent in his career has had height, reach and weight advantages over him. As you can see by his 36-2(18) record among the pro’s he’s more than held his own. The 29 year old debuted back in 2000 and learned on the job until he started 2007 when he made a move from the Heavyweight pack beating Derric Rossy KO7, Dominick Guinn PTS10 & then outpointing Calvin Brock in an IBF title eliminator. That win set him up to fight Alexander Povetkin, a former Olympic gold medalist. It was to be Chambers first defeat but he had learned a lot from fighting on the road for the first time as a pro. After four more wins the later being against Samuel Peter who he outpointed. He again traveled to Germany, this time he took on 6’7 behemoth Alexander Dimitrenko who outweighed him by in excess of 40 pounds. Not to be denied he boxed the fight of his life stunner the previously unbeaten Ukrainian again on points. The win set him up for a title challenge when he met Wladimir Klitschko in Germany in early 2010. Like many men previous he found it difficult to get past the big man and was stopped late in the twelfth. It hasn’t affected his desire, after 11 months off when he let the battle scars mentally & physically heal he rebounded to outpoint old adversary Rossy over the distance back in February. No he intends to watch several other fights play out over the next few months before looking for another big fight.



Hello, Eddie, welcome to 15rounds.com
Anson Wainwright – Back in February you returned from a near year long absence and beat Derric Rossy. Can you tell us about the fight and how happy you were to be back in action?
Eddie Chambers – Umm well I wasn’t happy with my performance. I feel like to a degree I gave my best but I still expected more from me even in the weakened state I was. It was a good comeback fight; there was a lot on the line. I just really wanted to dazzle the crowd and also get a stoppage, that’s what I expected. Beat the guy like I beat him the last time (Chambers scored a seventh round TKO over Derric Rossy in 2007) Of course he’s gotten better, but no matter how much better he is than before I think, I’m on another level and I think I’d have proved it further if I’d stopped him. But all the respect to Rossy who took the shots and continued to fight the way he did through out the fight.
Anson Wainwright – Though it’s early days when are you looking at fighting next & who are you targeting?
Eddie Chambers – Well honestly with me I’m just targeting the top guy. My goal obviously is to be world champion and I’ve been close at one time or another. I think that’s where I should be looking but everything that will get me toward that, any kind of fight with name fighters. I know there’s some fights already made up and I just want to let them happen so I won’t make any decision right away with Haye fighting Wladimir, Adamek fighting Kevin McBride. So there’s really not a lot for me to go at right now as far as top contenders for the titles. So we’ll just sit back and wait just a bit. Then jump in with whoever’s ready. Of course you know and everybody knows I’ll fight anybody and I’m looking for that soon. So hopefully I get that opportunity to fight for the title again. I’d like to fight Haye but of course he’s fighting Wladimir and not looking to fight a tough fight with me who’s not really to well known to away fans. He wouldn’t have much to make from me & Wladimir as well, but it’s not to be because what’s the point he’s beaten me already all he has is to lose. So why not just go about there business and fight each other and leave me in the rear view. I’d love to get those guys in the ring & hopefully that comes very very soon.
Anson Wainwright – Of course in 2010 you challenged Wladimir Klitschko for his IBF & WBO Heavyweight titles; you were stopped late in the twelfth. What can you tell us about that fight from your point of view? Was it a good learning curve despite the defeat? How good do you think he is?
Eddie Chambers – You’ve got to say great. I believe I’m just as good as anybody period, skill wise and ability wise but they go into the fight with a plan coupled with Emmanuel Steward but there’s no unbeatable force right now. I believe If I had had the right plan and been in the right state of mind to execute that plan I think just as he was successful, I could of been successful, it just happens that way. But he has a heck of a championship pedigree, he’s been there years now, he’s been world number one for a long time. He has to go down in the era as one of the greats of Boxing especially Heavyweight Boxing. So the plan they had worked to perfection as it does most other times. When I say perfection there was a lot of difficulty he had with me in some areas as far as landing some shots, there was frustration there but that’s because of my ability and toughness. I didn’t bring enough focus to deal with the preparation he had. I was in great shape I was prepared physically but mentally I wasn’t prepared for what It meant, when you see 55,000+ in the stadium I realized this is something big and then when you get in the ring you realize there’s a whole lot more on the line and you have to get your feet wet a little bit. I didn’t have a huge amateur background, I did have experience but I was never really able to see that before except in the fight before which was Dimitrenko which was on a much smaller scale, though it was important to my career. I’ve seen it and fought the great Klitschko now I have to prove I’m great. I may never get another shot at him (Wladimir) but at least there will be some guys that I can prove that on in the future.
Anson Wainwright – You didn’t fight in 11 months after the Klitschko fight. What did you do with your time off?
Eddie Chambers – Well I took about 11 month’s total. I took it off because it was necessary. I even talked to Emmanuel Steward and he gave advice to me. You see a lot of guys and they get stopped or lose a big fight and it takes a lot out of them physically and mentally and guys comeback straight away and you can’t do that. You take that physical trauma and that’s enough as it is then you take the mental beating you give yourself for losing. You lose that opportunity and it hurts, it takes some getting used to it. I’m not going to lie I sat around most days and didn’t enjoy anything for awhile. I didn’t go outside, I didn’t see people because of how I felt, it hurt. There was so much riding on it in my mind. It takes some serious heart, it’s a rough period and you have to find something which you enjoy and that’s what I did in the time off and tried to enjoy myself best I can. Once I got back I didn’t forget the Klitschko thing because that’s something you need to remember in your mind but now I’m turning the page in my career and trying to start another run.
Anson Wainwright – Who are members of team Eddie Chambers; Who’s your manager, trainer & promoter? Also what gym do you train at?
Eddie Chambers – My manager and trainer is one person right now Robert Murray Snr and my promoter is Dan Goossen. I train at James Shuler’s Memorial gym in West Philadelphia.
Anson Wainwright – You weigh around 210 which isn’t much over the Cruiserweight limit. How tempting is it to drop down a few pounds and try to win a world title there? Especially with a possible Super 6 tournament and even a fight with fellow Philly fighter Steve Cunningham?
Eddie Chambers – Oh I would hope I never have to fight Steve. He’s a friend of mine but we both understand the sport. It was tempting (To drop down to Cruiserweight) at one time; it was more tempting when I was challenging to be Heavyweight champion of the world. I could say hey while I’m waiting I could prove how good an athlete I am by going down and fight for the Cruiserweight championship as well. That’s a little greedy but that’s a challenge, that’s the kind of thing I was trying to put out there. I thought of it at one time but I just believe going down would be like a step back, most people would expect me to do so well and dominate what if god forbid I had a tough fight or lost a fight in the Cruiserweight division their going to look at me an say he wasn’t much anyway. My stock would drop, even If it was a tough fight where they expect you to blow these guys out because your bigger faster and stronger and they say he’s not as good as we thought he was.
Anson Wainwright – You’re from Pittsburgh can you tell us about how life was growing up and how it took you into Boxing?
Eddie Chambers – Well my upbringing was tough, very tough at times. It as tough on me dealing with some kids, I was a real good kid and it made it more tough. I think what got me into it was my father, he used to fight too and he could see what was going on. He heard something’s about some of the kids and I really didn’t have the most confidence. He got a bit tired of hearing about me dealing with some guys giving me problems so he said “I’m going to create a monster” make me a tough guy or at least at that time give me some confidence. I was a little chubby kid and and some kids picked on me not physically more verbally. So he took me to the gym so I could defend myself, I didn’t honestly want to do it, It took me awhile to get me in the gym and stay in the gym. I was trying to avoid the fights at all costs. He took me in and the first day I sparred, handled the kid. I did well and I was sort of surprised but it didn’t do to much to me because I had a couple of tough sparring sessions after that and I was thinking this wasn’t something I really wanted to do, get hit in the face and head and didn’t plan it as a career for myself. So I just went out the next tournament, the Golden Gloves. I fought the first fight and I beat the kid half to death basically and I was thinking this was a fluke so in the next round I stopped the guy in the first round. So I was like wow I’ll keep going till I lose. It took me ten fights before I lost in the amateurs and I had 8 straight stoppages and that loss was just before a National tournament. I thought this is something to do and I seem pretty good at it and as I progressed I continued to get better and better and better. I went to the Olympic trials; I tried that didn’t make it. I think I was more suited to the professional game. I only had 4 years amateur, a lot of kids have there first fight at like 8 years old. I turned professional at 18 and did more of my real learning when I turned professional, once I go to that point I pretty much had everything under control and I real started to develop at that time and I learned at a good pace. That’s pretty much how it happened.
Anson Wainwright – One of the biggest fights in Boxing appears likely to take place this summer with Wladimir Klitschko unifying with David Haye. What do you think of that fight how do you see it going?
Eddie Chambers – Honestly I think David Haye has a good shot if he can land a good shot. But I think by 4, 5, 6 Wladimir will hit his groove, use his jab, line that right hand up. It will be difficult for Haye to land, Haye could land over the top and with his speed you never know. I think Wladimir’s height and reach it’ll be hard for David Haye. Towards the middle rounds Wladimir will land a couple of right hands and it’ll be over.
Anson Wainwright – Away from Boxing can you tell us a little about yourself, what are your Interests & Hobbies?
Eddie Chambers – Most of them are still sports besides video games and when I’m playing them there sports games. I love to play Basketball and I also love to bowl. I’ve been working at my bowling game and been doing pretty well with it. Just spend time with friends; I’ve just done a road trip with family and friends to visit others. These are things I like to do.
Anson Wainwright – Have you ever bowled a perfect game?
Eddie Chambers – No, I’ve bowled a clean game but never a perfect game. Honestly my highest score and some people would laugh is about 215. I’m learning still. It’s fun and a good sport. Hopefully one day I’m good enough to play in the US open, I’ll keep working on it.
Anson Wainwright – Finally do you have a message for the Heavyweight division?
Eddie Chambers – Honestly it’s not an I’m going to knock everyone out type of message, I just encourage the guys out there to give me a shot, or lets make great fights for the fans to enjoy. I think that would be the best thing to Boxing especially the Heavyweight division. If we can get that done we could really turn some heads. People mention MMA more than Boxing and it’s tough when you perform in it and not get a real fan base. I just really hope we can make the best fights out there.
Best Wishes & thanks for your time Eddie.
Anson Wainwright

Fight Camp 360 Pacquiao vs. Mosley, episode 1: Shane looks old and slow



by Chris Williams: All I can say is after watching the first episode of Fight Camp 360 Pacquiao vs. Mosley tonight is that Shane looks really old and worse than that, he looks painfully slow. Once again, Pacquiao’s management has struck gold by finding someone who isn’t at his best.
You can just look at how old Mosley looked in the episode 1 to pretty much right him off completely, but when you look at Mosley’s poor showing in his last two fights that clinches it for me. Mosley doesn’t have a chance at beating Pacquiao. He’s just too old and slow at this point to win. As far as the first episode goes it was pretty boring with just a bunch of video of Pacquiao and Mosley being shuffled around from place to place, Pacquiao posing for photos and with a lot of old fight clips mixed in.



In the case of Mosley, the fight clips were really old, dating back to his fights with Oscar De La Hoya in 2000 and 2003. I figured they would do this to try and sell the fight, because if they showed how bad Mosley had looked in his last two fights against Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Sergio Mora it would be like PPV repellent. Another thing that tipped me off was trainer Freddie Roach and promoter Bob Arum both talking about how you can’t count Mosley out and how he’s not an easy fight. Roach rarely says good things about Pacquiao’s opponents and the fact that he’s saying good things here it suggests that he’s trying to sell the fight to a skeptical public.
The episode was aired on CBS where a lot of casual boxing fans got to see it. I wonder if they will be interested enough to pay to watch this fight? Maybe if they drop the price to $15 so that boxing fans wouldn’t mind seeing a mismatch.

Morales doesn’t think Maidana hits as hard as Pacquiao



By Jason Kim: Erik Morales (51-6, 35 KO’s) is giving himself an excellent chance of beating knockout artist Marcos Maidana (29-2, 27 KO’s) on April 9th in their fight at the MGM Grand, in Las Vegas, Nevada.
One of the things that Morales is looking at to suggest that he’ll win is Maidana’s power. Morales doubts whether Maidana punches as hard as his old nemesis Pacquiao, who beat Morales in two of the three times they fought. Morales said “Do you think he [Maidana] hits harder than Pacquiao, for instance?”
Maidana may or may not hit as hard as Pacquiao with his best shot. It’s hard to tell, but the difference here is that Maidana has very heavy hands and hits hard with every punch he throws. It’s like he’s hitting you with a power punch when he’s just throwing normal shots.
He tends to wear down his opposition rather than blasting them out with one shot. Getting hit really hard over and over again is difficult for fighters to take. Maidana just ends up bludgeoning his opponents into submission over a period of rounds. Morales is going to find out that Maidana has a different kind of power compared to Pacquiao.

It might not be the same as the Filipino fighter in terms of a single shot, but he’s going to be hitting Morales a lot in this fight and it’s difficult to imagine that he’s going to be able to stand up to that kind of heavyweight punishment for 12 rounds.
Morales says “I think that his style is very good for my style…I think I can adjust very well to his style. I’ve seen him and I feel very confident that it’s the fight style for my style.”
In his prime, Morales might well have been good enough to beat Maidana if he were big enough to fight him. However, Morales has fought at lighter weights and he’s not the same fighter he once was. In his prime, he would have been asking a lot of himself to bulk up enough to beat a bigger, stronger fighter like Maidana. But now that Morales is old and looking shot, it’s even harder for him to beat him now.
Morales is fighting out of his weight class against one of the biggest punchers in the light welterweight division. And on top of that, Morales has struggled against the three mediocre opponents he’s been in with during his three fight comeback. Maidana is a lot better than the three guys that Morales has faced. This means that Morales is going to have to be a lot better than he was in those three fights if he wants to beat Morales on 4/9.

David Haye vs. Wladimir Klitschko analysis and prediction

By Daniel R: On June 25th or July 2nd, WBA heavyweight champion David Haye and IBF/WBO heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko will finally square off in the most anticipated heavyweight fight in years. This is my analysis and prediction of the fight.

Firstly, Haye has without a doubt injected life into a dead division and is finally stepping up in class by facing Wladimir where we will be able to see just how good he is. His main attribute is his speed, coming up from cruiserweight he is the fastest and most athletic heavyweight out there. His movement and evasiveness has proven to work which was evident in the Nikolay Valuev fight where he circled the ring and used his speed to get in and out without getting hit.
I think this will cause big problems for Wladimir who has not fought anyone who is as quick on their feet and evasive as Haye is. Another attribute for Haye is his power. By making Valuev do a dance in the 12th round, flooring John Ruiz with the first right hand and completely destroying Audley Harrison, his power cannot be denied and all of these fighters had better chins than Wladimir. However, Haye’s level of opposition is clearly not great, with only four fights at heavyweight against B class fighters in Valuev and Ruiz and C class fighters in Harrison and Barrett.
Haye cannot criticize either of the Klitschko’s of fighting nobodies, and Wladimir is a major step up from recent opposition. Lastly, Haye’s punch resistance is a big question, having been knocked down at cruiserweight and hurt in the Barrett fight it is clear he lacks good punch resistance and if he is getting dropped by cruiserweights you can’t help but wonder what happens when Wladimir lands a solid right hand or left hook.

Secondly, Wladimir Klitschko, a very safe fighter however has one of the best jabs in boxing and immense power. In his most recent fight destroying Samuel Peter, Wladimir’s jab-jab-jab and right hand have proven to be a deadly combination. I believe Wladimir is the hardest hitter in boxing and with impressive knockout wins over Eddie Chambers and Peter this is evident.
Considering he’s a 6ft 6 240lbs guy his speed is also impressive, not to the level of Haye’s speed but he is still the fastest heavyweight Haye has faced and I think Haye underestimates Wladimir’s speed and with his hands held at his waist this could cause Haye problems. But despite all this like Haye Wladimir doesn’t have the greatest chin being knocked out three times most notably by Corrie Sanders and Chris Byrd who were both fast which makes this fight even more interesting.
After considering all of this, the outcome of the fight depends on who lands the first meaningful punch and my prediction is a knockout win for Haye in the 3rd or 4th round. I think Hayes speed will be the determining factor, I see Haye using quick movement to avoid the Klitschko jab leaving Wladimir puzzled as he has never fought anyone like this before and I see Haye getting in and out landing hard combinations to the chin of Wladimir eventually knocking him out. However, this is a fight with two of the hardest hitters in boxing and I would not be surprised at all to see Haye crumble after getting hit with the first meaningful punch from Wladimir.
This is my first post guys, so take it easy on me……
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