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Boxing News 24: Golovkin won’t be fighting on April 26th after father passes away

Boxing News 24
 
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Golovkin won't be fighting on April 26th after father passes away
Mar 2nd 2014, 06:50, by admin

By Dan Ambrose: WBA middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin’s father has reportedly passed away in Kazakhstan, and Golovkin now won’t be available to fight on April 26th like his promoters at K2 Promotion had planed. Golovkin’s April 26th fight against Andy Lee was supposed to be announced this weekend, but that’s not going to happen now. […]

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Boxing News 24: Khan offers to fight Broner on Mayweather’s May 3rd card

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Khan offers to fight Broner on Mayweather's May 3rd card
Mar 2nd 2014, 07:30, by admin

@FloydMayweather, tell @AdrienBroner to fight me on your card and when I beat him, you fight me next! — Amir Khan (@AmirKingKhan) March 2, 2014 By Scott Gilfoid: Amir Khan floated a deal to Floyd Mayweather Jr. on his twitter today saying that he’ll agree to fight Adrien Broner on his next undercard on May […]

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Did Julio Cesar Chavez Jr Get Boxing Fans' Respect Back with Win vs. Bryan Vera?

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Did Julio Cesar Chavez Jr Get Boxing Fans' Respect Back with Win vs. Bryan Vera?
Mar 2nd 2014, 06:20, by Jonathan Snowden

This is a statement guaranteed to earn eye rolls from the hardcore boxing community. It runs so counter to the conventional wisdom that it likely will sound a bit heretical if you let it roll off your tongue. But here goes nothing.

It isn't always easy being boxing prodigy Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, who beat Bryan Vera by unanimous decision Saturday night by scores of 117-110, 117-110 and 114-113.

Done laughing? Because I was serious.

Yes, the son of boxing legend Julio Cesar Chavez has had plenty of advantages in his professional career. His name carries weight in this sport, especially in the Mexican community where his father was the most beloved sports icon of my generation. 

A star from day one, he's had the kind of training, matchmaking and money most boxers would give the world for. His only two amateur fights were broadcast on Mexican television when he was just a teenager. By the time he was 17 he was on a rocket ship to fame and fortune. The moment he proved he wasn't a complete pretender, his future success, on some level, was all but guaranteed.

 

But all of those advantages have a serious price tag attached. The pressure on his shoulders, to earn a place at his father's right hand, to live up to his name, to be worthy of the admiration that came so easily, is the kind that can slowly crush a man under its heavy weight.

Can you imagine what that must be like? In the ring it's just you and another man. Your name can only help you so much. Before the fight with the promoter, after the fight with the judges, your name matters. In the ring it's only your heart, mind and courage standing between you and an opponent with bad intentions.

In the ring Chavez Jr has become a very good fighter. He's an action fighter, a man with a granite chin and willingness to eat a punch to deliver one. At times he looks like Rocky Balboa, leading with his head, oblivious of everything except cornering the other man in the ring and mauling him.

And yet, despite his success, 47 wins and counting, his place in the sport is credited to his famous father. Here's Sports Illustrated's Chris Mannix with a representative take from 2013, right before his first fight with Bryan Vera:

Welcome to the wild world of Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., where boxing is a hobby, one he doesn't seem particularly interested in. Think the embarrassment of testing positive for a banned substance would wake him up? Nah. Think the promise of headlining high-profile, big-money super middleweight fights against Andre Ward, Carl Froch or Sergey Kovalev would light a fire under him? Guess not.

...until he takes his career seriously, he will continue to be little more than attraction. Until he makes a commitment, he will be just a kid cashing in on his father's name.

Fair? Perhaps. He's certainly made some mistakes along the way. But, as much as fans embrace him for his last name, it's also an albatross. If his name wasn't Cesar Chavez, in fact, he might get more love from boxing cognoscenti who seem so intent on finding reasons to criticize.

What a bitter pill to swallow. Winning early and often, drawing huge crowds and working your way to the top of the sport isn't enough. No matter what he does in a boxing ring, it will never be enough for Chavez Jr to supplant his father in the hearts and minds of Mexican boxing fans.

They loved him nonetheless—when it was easy to do so. It's a romance that is suddenly in serious trouble. Fans could only give Chavez Jr so many chances before the drugs, poor training habits and, the biggest sin of all, lackluster fights, cost him dearly in his community. 

A drunk driving arrest, the first loss of his career and a subsequent drug suspension, all in succession, hurt Chavez Jr. with his fans. When he returned, overweight and out-of-shape against Vera last year, it seemed the final straw. He was gifted a decision but everyone who saw the fight knew he hadn't been the better man.

Long one of the most consistent draws in the sport, there were plenty of good seats at the Alamodome as fans abandoned the young star in droves. In the rematch with Vera, Chavez Jr had a lot to prove, both to fans and himself. 

For the most part, he delivered. Fully engaged this time around, Chavez Jr got out front quickly, walking through Vera's punches in order to deliver crashing shots to the body and head. It was an impressive performance.

But, just as he appeared to be winning back the love of the crowd, Chavez Jr made a critical misstep. Vera, a journeyman in his tenth year as a pro, has only been stopped twice in his career. Junior seemed on his way to being the third. Rather than pursue the knockout in the twelfth and final round, however, Chavez Jr decided to dance and run, preserving his huge lead on the score cards instead of looking for the spectacular finish.

As he shuffled and did a terrible Muhammad Ali impression, the previously partisan crowd let him hear it, boos raining down from the top of the building to the bottom. Chavez Jr's gameplan may have made tactical sense, but it lacked the romanticism Mexican fans demand of their heroes.

Chavez Jr was expected to pursue his foe until the final bell rang. Backward steps are for lesser men. He wasn't just a true warrior—he was the son of the great Chavez. This kind of gamesmanship, to the fans in the arena at least, was beneath him.

What had been a beautiful redemption song hit a final, sour note. Chavez Jr may be back, but it's not clear yet if his fans are. Perhaps a fight with Gennady Golovkin, heavily teased in the post-fight, will answer both questions once and for all.

 

 

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: 6 Things We Learned from Ricky Burns vs. Terence Crawford

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6 Things We Learned from Ricky Burns vs. Terence Crawford
Mar 2nd 2014, 05:07, by James Garner

As predicted by Bleacher Report's Briggs Seekins, Terence Crawford won a clear points victory over Ricky Burns in Glasgow on Saturday night.

Burns had held a WBO world title since 2010, initially in the super-featherweight division, but the fighter from Nebraska is the new champion in the lightweight division.

Crawford will return to the U.S. with the belt and may well face Raymundo Beltran in his first defence, the fighter who was unlucky to only get a draw on the judges' cards in Burns' previous fight.

The scores were 116-112, 116-112 and 117-111, and whilst the right man won, there was maybe a little home bias there. I scored it 119-111 for Crawford.

Here are six things we learned from the action.

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. vs. Bryan Vera: Winner, Scorecard and Analysis

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Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. vs. Bryan Vera: Winner, Scorecard and Analysis
Mar 2nd 2014, 05:31, by Brian Mazique

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. was in better shape physically for the rematch with Bryan Vera on Saturday night at the Alamodome in San Antonio. Texas. He did what he should have done in the first fight, and that was win convincingly—at least on the official scorecards. 

Per HBO Boxing, here’s how the official judges scored the bout:

In the first fight, Vera was robbed of a victory and Chavez escaped with a controversial unanimous decision.

This time, Chavez actually deserved to win the fight, though not by a big margin. 

Vera was game, but Chavez landed the more telling blows throughout the fight. Vera also had a point deducted in the eighth round. On my card, that point deduction was the difference in the fight. I had it 114-113 for Chavez.

In the 12th and final round, Chavez chose to dance and taunt rather than finish strong. It drew boos from the crowd and the scorecards a little closer. He seemed to give the round to Vera.

The fight featured fouling from both men, though Vera was the only one officially docked a point for his actions. As ESPN’s Desmond Howard points out, Chavez got away with low blows late in the bout:

Vera fought hard the entire fight and only appeared to be hurt once. In the 11th round, Chavez caught him with a thunderous right hand with just under a minute left in the round.

Vera survived, but that punch is what gave Chavez the confidence to coast in the final round. Vera’s biggest issue was his lack of punching power as Steve Kim of Max Boxing points out:

The resiliency to the plethora of punches that were thrown was the key to the fight. Here’s the final punch stats from HBO Boxing:

From here, Chavez seems free to pursue bigger names for a larger payday. Quite honestly, he will find the going tough if he faces an elite super middleweight. He throws one punch at a time and lacks the foot and hand speed to consistently get to agile fighters. 

At the end of the fight, Chavez called out a man it seems he has no chance to defeat, Gennady Golovkin. Per HBO Boxing, Chavez told HBO’s Max Kellerman:

Golovkin’s skill level, punching power and defense are superior to Chavez's.

The latter does have a granite chin, but that will only allow him to absorb punishment. It won’t mean that he’ll actually defeat Golovkin, or any other elite fighter in his weight region.

Vera has made a nice reputation for himself and some money along the way. He should get another shot against a fairly big name. But unless they are as slow and plodding as Chavez, he probably won’t have as much success.

 

Follow me. I'm addicted to The Sweet Science.

@BMaziqueFPBR

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ESPN.com - Boxing: Chavez Jr. bests Vera by decision in rematch

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Chavez Jr. bests Vera by decision in rematch
Mar 2nd 2014, 05:30, by Dan Rafael

SAN ANTONIO - Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., in shape, on weight and apparently focused on the task at hand, left no doubt this time as he outslugged Bryan Vera in a brutal super middleweight fight on Saturday night at the Alamodome.

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Salido vs. Lomachenko: Winner, Scorecard and Analysis

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Salido vs. Lomachenko: Winner, Scorecard and Analysis
Mar 2nd 2014, 04:20, by Brian Mazique

On Friday, Orlando “Siri” Salido (41-12-2) lost the WBO featherweight title on the scales. On Saturday, he defeated an overmatched Vasyl Lomachenko (1-1) at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, by split decision to take some of the sting away. 

Though he was very celebrated as an amateur, it’s clear Lomachenko isn’t ready to be considered an elite professional. He didn't have the goods to defeat the wily Mexican veteran. 

The official scorecards were as followed, per HBO.

Salido didn’t make weight for the fight, so he surrendered $15,000, and the title is now vacant. But he did prove that Lomachenko at least needs more seasoning before he’s fit to challenge for another world title.

The fight was ugly and messy the whole way through, and that’s just the way Salido wanted it. ESPN’s Dan Rafael and HBO’s Max Kellerman talked about Siri’s tactics:

Many of Salido’s shots ventured low during the fight, but the body shots that landed north of the border bothered Lomachenko. Referee Laurence Cole did not make his presence felt at all, though.

Salido was not warned enough for his low blows, and both fighters were allowed to hold excessively. Steve Kim of MaxBoxing.com had an excellent point that talks about both ignored infractions.

If you mix in all of those factors, it made for a pretty difficult fight to score and watch.

I had it 115-113 for Salido. After the fight, Lomachenko told Kellerman he thought he won the bout during the post-fight interview.

Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix didn’t hold back his criticism of Cole’s refereeing. He tweeted this just before the end of the bout:

It’s hard to say whether things would have been different with another referee, but if you were grading Cole for his performance, it would be hard to go any higher than a "D."

Many fight fans and analyst seemed to like the fact that Lomachenko fell short in his pursuit of a title. By looking for gold in just his second bout, he and his camp have received the label of arrogant and privileged. 

Mannix says the loss served him right.

From here Salido will almost certainly move up to 130 pounds after failing to make weight. Even though he lost the title, the win over Lomachenko will get him a nice bout to begin his career in a new weight class.

As for Lomachenko, he’s still just 26 years old. He has time to improve, but in the biggest showcase of his very young career, he fell flat. It’ll take a string of great performances for him to regain the buzz he had.

 

Follow me. I'm addicted to The Sweet Science.

@BMaziqueFPBR

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