Author: ERIC ARMIT
Date: 2/9/2010
So,
instead of Pacquiao vs. Mayweather we will get Pacquiao vs. Joshua Clottey and
Mayweather vs. Shane Mosley. Down the line the hope is that Pacquiao vs.
Mayweather will still happen, but nothing is certain in boxing. Clottey is no
pushover, as Zab Judah found
out, but on form Pacquiao must be a heavy favourite. Mayweather should beat
Mosley, but again nothing is certain in boxing.
It is
ironic that the drugs testing is not a problem with Mosley, after all Shane did
admit to taking performance enhancing drugs, but stated that at the time he was
not aware that what he was being given was a banned performance enhancing drug.
Unlike Pacquiao, Mosley has agreed to the drug testing regime insisted on by
Mayweather, so the fight is on for May 1 in Las
Vegas.
Naturally Edwin Valero is looking to move up to light
welter with a view to a bout with Pacquiao. Now that would be
something.
All of
those fights have to be more attractive than Bernard Hopkins against a very shot
Roy Jones in Las Vegas on April 3.
It amazes me that anyone would even think of buying this fight after Jones was
blitzed in one round by Danny Green in December. Damaged goods just does not
even begin to describe the once great Jones. I guess some people will buy
anything with a label, no matter how shoddy.
It also
looks as though we are back to the old heavyweight roundabout. Nikolay Valuev
loses to David Haye, so naturally that qualifies him to challenge Vitali
Klitschko in Gelsenkirchen on May 29
for the WBC title. Valuev loses, and gets the fight that Haye wants-only in
boxing could this happen.
Other
major fights signed up include Kelly Pavlik defending his middleweight titles
against Argentinian Sergio Martinez
in Atlantic City on April 17, Lucien
Bute defending against Edison Miranda in
Montreal on April 14, and Gavin Rees
victim Souleymane M’Baye fighting unbeaten Canadian Antonin Decarie for the
vacant interim WBA welterweight title in Levallois on April 10.
M’Baye
gets this fight as part of a settlement in a case he brought against the WBA. As
we know there is nothing wrong with the real WBA champion, Shane Mosley, or the
secondary champion Vyacheslav Senchenko, so the interim title is suddenly there
to help solve a legal wrangle. It is difficult to think of a single instance now
where the interim title is used for the purpose it was originally introduced,
namely to keep a title active whilst the champion is out with a long term
injury.
Nkosinathi Joyi challenging Mexican Raul Garcia for the
IBF strawweight title in South
Africa on March 26. Joyi is a very talented
young fighter and a win for him would not really be an upset even against
unbeaten southpaw Garcia.
It is
difficult to see how the WBC can justify having Cuban Odlanier Solis at No 2 in
their ratings as he never fought anyone in their top 40, and his best win was a
stoppage of oldie Monte Barrett (but then they have Ray Austin No 1!). Solis is
supposed to fight Costa Rican Carl Davis Drummond in defence of his WBC
International title in March, but that depends on the outcome of a charge
against Drummond in California of
allegedly carrying a concealed weapon.
On the
plus side the talented Cuban former amateur star Guillermo Rigondeaux donated
his purse from his fight against Adolfo Landeros to the ”Children of Haiti
Fund”. A nice gesture. Rigondeaux looks the nearest thing to a certainty for a
world title in 2011.
The IBF
have stripped Panamanian Celestino Caballero of his super bantamweight title for
failing to enter into negotiations/ purse offers for a defence against Takalani
Ndlovu. Caballero still holds the WBA title-or does he? He is no longer a double
world champion and therefore can’t be a “super champion” and there is already a
secondary champion, so in theory he has no title. What a mess they have made of
our sport.
Gabriel
Campillo found out that it is not a good idea to defend your title in another
country when the local guy you are fighting is also the promoter. The Spaniard
retained his WBA light heavyweight title on a controversial decision over Beibut
Shumenov. However, allegedly, the promoter (Mr Shumenov) refused to pay him
until he got his return fight, which he duly won.
It was
different with Evander Holyfield. Evander demanded 10% of his purse for fighting
Frans Botha in
Uganda be paid
into an escrow account in advance. When it did not turn up the fight was off. If
they could not raise 10%, what chance did they ever have of paying the full
purse? Then confusion started as the original Swedish promoters paid advance
money to Joey Abell to fight Evander in
Uganda.
Evander’s team, and Botha, and the WBF (ederation) denied all knowledge of the
Abell fight and insisted that Evander would fight Botha in
Las Vegas. However, promoter Don
Elbaum was talking about a Holyfield vs. Abell fight on March 27, but some
sources give February 27. Evander has a date pencilled in for April 24 in
Las Vegas, presumably with Botha,
but nothing is signed yet.
All
this for a fight for a nothing title between a 47-year-old former legend who has
not won a fight since 2007 and a 41-year-old who in his last fight could only
manage a draw with a guy with an 8-1 record. Some people will buy anything-or
have I said that before.
Every
time you turn around another son of a famous boxer is fighting in Mexican rings.
We now have Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and Omar Chavez, the sons of the great Julio
Cesar. We have Jorge Paez Jr., Carlos Zarate Jr., Alfonso Lopez, the son of
Ricardo Lopez and Mauricio Pintor, the son of Lupe Pintor, German Torres Jr. and
this month Guty Espadas Jr. tries to regain the WBC featherweight title he held
back in 200/2001. Don’t put your daughter on the stage obviously does not cut it
in
Mexico.
Two
bits of news that slipped passed me at the time. The first was an announcement
that the IBF, WBA and WBC leaders had met in Cancun to
discuss uniting, cooperating and working together. Oh yeah, that’s about to
happen- I don’t think! None of the leaders of those bodies is ever going to
voluntarily share power with anyone. It holds out the mirage of having one world
champion, or some standardisation on ratings, and that would work against the
commercial interests of each of those bodies. They all do some dumb things
sometimes, but they can all recognise a suicide pact when they see it. Nothing
will come of it, that I guarantee.
The
other news was that the Boxing Promoters Association in
America was
creating a judicial over-sight process to review inept judges. I will believe
that might happen the first time I hear a promoter agreeing that his fighter
lost a fight that went to a close split decision. Scoring in boxing is
comparable to the way a beauty contest is judged. “That’s the way I saw it” can
be either an honest response, or a cop out for bias or incompetence, but the
sport has no way establishing or measuring that. It is not unusual for there to
be a six, eight or even more points difference between the scores of two judges
watching the same fight. There was an eight points difference between the judges
of the second Campillo vs. Shumenov fight and a six points difference in the
Adamek vs. Estrada fight. The idea will never get anywhere because every State
Commission will jealously guard their own right to be the judge of the
judges.
Texas seems
to be a bit of a wild card amongst US Commissions. They allowed Edwin Valero to
fight there despite his being under suspension in New
York and now the State is being talked about as the site
for the comeback fight of Antonio Margarito. There seems to be some resistance
to Margarito fighting again in the States, even after he has completed his
suspension, so it might be difficult to stop him
legally.
South
Africa lost one of its best young boxers with
the death of Mlungisi Dlamini in a car crash. Dlamini, 27, was WBF and IBO
lightweight champion and unbeaten with 21 wins and a draw. His career suffered a
hiccup when he was trying to establish a base in
Australia but
was involved in a brawl at a hotel there in 2007. However, he returned to
South Africa,
and got his career back on track and seemed to have a great future. Such a
tragedy.