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TALKIN BOXIN
by Howie Reed
March 30, 2003
THIS is a column is suppose to and actually
sometimes does "Talk Boxin". In perspective boxing is but a very small
pebble in the lake of life. What those inside boxing take as important or
noteworthy is many times hardly worth reporting. There are times, many times
to few, when boxing does something that makes me proud and honored to be a
part of the sport. One of those events took place last Friday night at the
ORLEANS Casino in my hometown of Las Vegas. It was the monthly reasonably
priced professional
fight card. I was pleased when walking in as one of my favorite people
associated with the sport, Jody by name, was standing just inside the area
where tickets are collected. She was handling out miniature American Flags.
They were a popular item. Those who substitute cynicism for common sense or
logic will say, "It’s because they were free." I disagree. The United States
of America, England and Spain are fighting a "filthy degenerate mass
murderer." Like those that put it on the line each time they enter the ring,
those three countries are "putting it on the line." They and they alone are
stepping up to the plate in a contest that will surly dictate the future of
the world. "Does the world live in constant fear of a group of madmen or do
we live by the rule of law that holds the truly evil accountable for their
actions."
Just prior to the main event the lights were dimmed and the audience was
asked to stand. There followed a statement, read by Announcer Jake, on
behalf of the Orleans and freedom loving people everywhere. That was
followed by a stirring rendition of the National Anthem with this writer
singly loudly, abet off key. Thank you Orleans and thank you boxing.
THERE has always been a school of though in the World of Boxing that David
Tua’s most difficult task was overcoming his own management. Those of that
school point out that someone with his punching power wasted his "prime
years" wading through the "usual suspects". Those same people point to Tua’s
miserable performance against Lennox Lewis as the end result of those wasted
years. For the record that view may be more true then many us wish to
admit. Tua certainly has been mishandled by promoter American Presents.
After keeping him semi inactive he was put in with Lewis and then Chris
Byrd. Two very bad moves. The last fight was the start of the end for
America Presents that went "Belly Up" shortly after.
One boxing insider said, "Tua used to have power that could paralyze with
one punch. Joe Goosen ( former Trainer) tired to turn him into a two handed
fighter. Now his power is just above average." Some have suggested that Tua
has been ill served by long time co-manager/now trainer Kevin Berry. More
fuel was poured on that fire at the last press conference before Saturdays
night fight against Hashim Rahman.. "Most of all I thank Hasim Rahman for
showing up. With his weight problem and lack of communication amongst his
team, Rahman has to be the luckiest man in boxing! He is a one-punch wonder,
who got massacred in the rematch when Lennox Lewis decided to train
properly. Somehow, he managed to get another big fight, and made an old
Evander Holyfield look young! Now he gets to participate in a box-off for
the championship of the world. Like I said, he is the luckiest man in
boxing. " Tua did not seem to like what pal Berry was saying.
Not done Berry continued, "Since the last time David Tua and Hasim Rahman
met, David is 10-2 with 10 knockouts and two decision losses to world
champions. Rahman is 6 wins and 4 losses, with all 4 losses by knockout! The
winner of this fight is not difficult to pick. Rahman's chin is soft, and he
just happens to be facing the biggest puncher in the division. He lost to
Lennox Lewis and Holyfield. After this fight, it will be three strikes and
he's out!" Tua declined to add fuel to the fire. He is a gentleman.
Rahman is no slouch in the "Yak Yak" department. "After listening to tight
pants Crocodile Dundee over there", Rahman said gesturing to Barry, "it
almost got me scared! Hey tight pants, has David been hitting you? David Tua
must have hit you hard. Seriously, I must be lucky. Tua was an amateur star
long before I even started boxing. Tua was a pro before I even stepped into
a gym, and here I am fighting on the same level as him.If I listened to
tight pants (Barry), I might as well not show up. I might as well give up
and go back to Baltimore. I've been hearing from you how easy it will be for
Tua. It's gonna be easy, but you got the wrong victim! I'm gonna beat you,
man. I will be focused on the belt this time." Rahman must be a product of
the public school system. Kevin Berry is from new Zealand and Crocodile
Dundee is from Australia which is a really different place. As this is a Don
King fight you might ask why I haven’t quoted King. Besides the fact that I
NEVER quote King, sometimes, he wasn’t there. According to Bobby Goodman he
was "addressing the troops." Who’s ? No idear.
The preceding all leads up to the report on the Saturday night fight between
David Tua (42-3-1) and Hashim Rahman (35-4-1). The official decision was a
draw which probably had everyone, including Stevie Wonder, shaking their
collective heads. The scoring was 116-112 for each and then a 114-114.
Talkin Boxin, added by limited scoring fluid, had it 115-114 for Rahman. The
AP had it 116-112. Once again in a pivotal fight David Tua proved that he
does not have the "acquired skills" to win against an opponent that has
any semblance of a jab and can stay in the center of the ring. Saturday
night Rahman dominated the first five rounds with a average jab and an
occasional overhand right. Tua tried to "jab back" but neither his heart or
skills were in the effort.
Talkin Boxin gave Tua the next 3 rounds mostly as he used his "45 degree
right" to set up the occasional left. The flip side of those rounds is that
at 256 Rahman was taking a break. Rahman broke up the rally when he won the
9th by being aggressive and fighting back. The 10th was key as it appeared
to be Tua’s until near the end when Rahman turned it on to "half" the round
on the Talkin Boxings card. Tua probably won the last two but it really
didn’t make any difference. Tua was cut by fights end under both eyes and
bleeding from the nose. Rahman had a slight cut under his left eye brow.
There definitely were no winners including the "sparse" crowd that turned
out for the fight. One big looser was Judge Bill Clancy who had 116-112 for
Rahman. He gets the Ray Charles Award for the week. The TV Talking Heads
didn’t rally against his "lousy" judging. Guess that’s reserved for Nevada
Judges.
ITs time once again to visit the swell folks and the world of boxing. If
this were an old "Soaper" radio show there would be dramatic music playing
under the announcer as he opined, " Welcome to the weekly world of boxing.
The column that asks the question, "Can a sport run by hoodlum’s, crooks,
thieves, liar’s and politicians survive in a world run by hoodlum’s, crooks,
thieves, liar’s and politicians ?" The answer ? Probably.
THERE are a lot of things that are positive about the sport of boxing. One
of those is not "CryBaby" Sharmba Mitchel. Those not familiar with the
little wimp he is a jr. weltweight (aka super lightweight) of above average
ability. That is to write that he is OK against average or below average
opponents but when he steps up in class as he did against Kostya Tzysu he
quits like a dog. (That fight was February of 2000 in Las Vegas. Shambra
quit on his stool after the 6th round. He said he "hurt his knee".) Mitchell
can’t draw flies so his promoter Gary Shaw, they make a great pair, is
looking for Arturo Gatti. Gatti is promoted by Main Events where Mr. Shaw
use to work until they recently "parted" ways. Toss into the mix the IBF
(formerly known as "I Be Fixin" and probably headed back in that direction
again) and you got the making of fun.
Mitchell wants the IBF to make him the number one contender so he’ll
sometime down the road maybe get a fight with IBF Champ Kostya Tszyu again.
Ain’t going to happen especially when Mitchell called Tszyu a "bum". Not the
little jerks best move. That aside for appearances sake, "Appearances are
everything", Shaw wants a title eliminator between Mitchell and Gatti. "
Main Events informed the IBF that Gatti would not be participating in a
junior welterweight elimination bout against Mitchell." OK. Now from Mr.
Shaw. "Obviously Main Events was not confident Gatti could beat Mitchell. It
is too bad, a fight between two former world champions and the top two
contenders would have been a win-win situation for boxing fans, getting a
great fight and seeing the winner become the true mandatory challenger."
With Gatti out, next would be Oktay Urkal (not your basic household name)
then Zab Judah, whose career is mired in litigation. Whose left? Omar Weis
at #5 whose claim to fame is that he whacked the heck out of Camacho jr. I
give the final say to main Events, "It makes absolutely no sense for Arturo
to fight such an irrelevant opponent in order to get a title shot. Arturo is
clearly the number one draw in the division and Arturo, Pat Lynch and Main
Events will determine who, where, and when he fights."
AS one gets older and some would think wiser, although I’m fighting that
label, we seem to remember words spoken by a parent. Mom’s was "be
patience". Last week in my attempt to bring readers up to speed on the
various ranking organizations information on the WBO was missing. Their web
site was "under construction" which eliminated the chance that I’d be able
to lift information. "Low and Behold", which Mom also used like a Latin does
chilies, the past week the WBO has through their action said more than I
ever could. All the information concerned who was going to get the first
shot a "new" heavyweight champion Corrie Sanders. One of the Championship
belts that Sanders won when he KO’d Wladimir Klitschko was from the WBO.
Less than two weeks after that win the WBO decided that Sanders had to
defend the title within 120 days and sign for that fight by last Thursday
less than 20 days from winning the title. When no agreement was signed a
purse bid with #2 Lamon Brewester (29-2) was held in Germany.
As this was unfolding the WBO #1 contender was David Tua. Working without a
net, I’m going out on the limb and predict that he’ll still be #1 after
beating .#13 Hashim Rahman. The actual draw shouldn’t change ranking but it
does give the WBO an excuse, maybe. To put Rahman’s ranking in perspective,
remember he KO’s Lennox Lewis, he’s ranked behind Francois Botha, Juan C.
Gomez. Sinan Samil San , Jameel Ben McCline , Fres Oquendo , Kirk
Johnson , Evander Hollyfield ,Lou Savarese and John Ruiz. Rahman is ranked
ahead of Atila Levin and Fabio. For reasons "unknown" the WBO decided that
David Tua was "unavailable" to fight Sanders. The question is, "Why was the
#1 contender unavailable ?" This is exactly what Martin Pugh, Tua's
co-manager, asked, "The WBO declared Tua unavailable without any formal
notice to him, his management or his promoter. Why is the WBO in such a
hurry to hold a purse bid for this fight? And isn't it curious that the
purse bid is scheduled one day before Tua's fight against Hasim Rahman?"
Good questions with the WBO doing a classic Gregory Hines to keep from
answering.
WBO President Paco Valcarcel wrote "rest assured that all my actions are
guided by my strict guidance to our rules and regulations." Even the dense
will recognize the answer as "physobabble" which means nothing but does take
up some space. Senior Valcarel’s action are especially "suspect" when one
looks at the recent history of the WBO. As Ace Reporter Kevin Iole of the
Las Vegas Review Journal points out, " the WBO frequently has overlooked its
rules. WBO Regulation 5 states a heavyweight champion must fight a mandatory
once within every 12-month period, but Klitschko took 26 months before
fighting a
mandatory .Klitschko won the title Oct. 14, 2000, by defeating Chris Byrd,
but Klitschko did not make a mandatory defense until Dec. 7 (2002), when he
stopped Jameel McCline. In the interim, Klitschko defeated Derrick
Jefferson, Frans Botha and Ray Mercer, all rated No. 10, and Charles
Shufford, who was unrated." So much for rules.
On Friday The WBO purse bids process was held. The bid was won by
Klaus-Peter (Klitschko’s promoter) and German Universum $1,832,200. The
opponent will; be , no don’t you dare laugh, Lemon Brewster. Is it just me
or do we pronounce is like the fruit ? The Sanders-Lemon fight will have to
take place prior to July 7 or Sanders will loose the prestigious WBO Crown.
The champ gets 75% of the purse of the fight is held in South Africa or 80%
at a neutral site.
HOOKS, JABS and other things that go bump in the night. One of the lessor
lights that promotes is a character named Les Bonano. He primarily plies his
trade in the South most notably Louisiana and Mississippi. To provide a
benchmark on Mr. Bonano he is a former Sheriff in New Orleans which at one
time (while he was in office) had the reputation as at the bottom of the
pecking order for law enforcement. Corrupt is too kind a word although there
is no "poof" that Mr. Bonano was touched or tainted or troubled by the
situation. His most visual, valuable and viable fighter was Clifford "The
Black Rhino" Etienne. That is until Etienne got KO’d in under a minute
against Mike Tyson. For that fight, such as it was, Mr. Bonano took away a
couple of hundred thousand without absorbing a punch. Now that the Black
Rhino is no longer a "name" Bonano has dropped him like a bad habit.
(Although why one would like to drop a bad habit, they are fun, is a mystery
to me.) . "I am ashamed by his performance", said Bonano. He wasn’t ashamed
to accept the $200,000 dollars as a result of Ertienne getting hammered.
Just a guess on my part but along with truth I’m now going to add the word
ashamed to the list of words that Bonano doesn’t understand. (excerpt)
(Opinions and editorials of
HotBoxingNews.com is the opinion of those writers and may not be the
opinion of HotBoxingNews.com)
Want to make contact or comments to Howie Reed
Go Here! mailto:reed@hotboxingnews.com
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