SubUrbano blight


The second event I covered was a Top Rank card on May 6, 2005 at Fort McDowell Casino in Fountain Hills, Ariz. Televised on “Solo Boxeo,” the marquee comprised Mexican prospects like Giovanni Segura, Mike Alvarado, Jesus Soto Karass and Jesus Gonzales. But that night no one stood out like Urbano Antillon.

I miss “Solo Boxeo.” I miss Urbano Antillon.

An easily hit facsimile of Antillon was in action Saturday on Fox Sports Español. He stopped a fellow Mexican named Luis Arceo who’d lost eight of his preceding 11 fights. The match goes on the books “TKO-3” for Antillon. That’s a very happy rendition of what actually happened, though.

Referee Juan Jose Ramirez called the fight off, on doctor’s orders, 2:25 into the third round. Could Arceo have continued? Sure. He had an ugly gash on his left eyebrow, but had the same gash happened over Antillon’s brow, the fight wouldn’t have stopped. The nature of the entire televised card was one of over-protectiveness. Who was protected? That’s the question. Every time the favorite got his man in trouble, the referee’s intervention came quick. Records got preserved.

Did the cut over Arceo’s brow come from a punch? That’s another question. Arceo’s trainer said to the referee, “Juan, it’s a ‘t’.” And the cut did have the sort of ‘t’ shape that rarely comes from a gloved fist and more often from a man’s head. Replays were inconclusive because there weren’t any.

Had the cut been ruled the result of a butt, and had the fight lasted another round, it likely would have been a draw on my card. I gave the first to Arceo. I had the second even. The third was trending Antillon. Don’t know what would have happened after that. Point is, Antillon (27-1) and Arceo (22-10-2) were a lot more even than their records.

This was supposed to be a rehab fight for Antillon, who was stopped in his last match by Miguel Acosta, a Venezuelan whose previous exploits did not anticipate a round 9 knockout victory over Antillon. Arceo was put there to be hit by Antillon. Trouble was, Antillon’s chin was available like he held a “Vacancy” sign between his gloves.

Where was the guy who boxed confidently, occasionally slipped punches and dropped a smooth left hook on the liver? Abandoned in the corner of some Southern California gym, I’m guessing.

The So-Cal gym scene is a delight to aficionados and visiting trainers. It’s a great place to get sparring for a champion who readies for a title defense. It’s where hungry young guys hone their craft, prove their toughness and impress fellow gym rats – then wear themselves into injury-prone strongmen with diminished coordination and a reflexive appetite for abuse.

The more a young Mexican demonstrates he has a strong chin, the more he gets to use it. That’s the trouble with reflexivity. At the same time he uses his strong chin to take a more direct route to his opponents, forsaking head movement and punch parrying, he also sustains the sorts of blows that slow the signals passed from brain to body. Soon enough, he’s brazen about getting hit and begins down a path that ends the same way for everyone who takes it – with an opponent whose punch he cannot withstand.

Urbano Antillon’s defense of a left hook, Saturday, was to throw his own left hook. His defense for a right hand, it seemed, was to eat the punch then throw another left hook. That sort of thing can be inevitable when you find yourself across the ring from an equal. But if Luis Arceo is now Antillon’s equal, Antillon’s last five years have been awfully damning.

That’s a real possibility. Antillon made his first noteworthy gym war in 2004 with Edwin Valero. Yes, that Valero. The Venezuelan got the better of Antillon. Not as much better as some have come to remember it, but better enough. Since then, Antillon has been on an atonement tour.

He made another gym war with Juan Manuel Marquez in 2007. Just last year, he was the toughest sparring Manny Pacquiao found while readying for Ricky Hatton – and much tougher on Pacman, as it turned out, than Hatton was. When you make hellish battles with Marquez and Pacquiao, though, aren’t you supposed to make lots of money?

The fights Antillon has been paid for include wearying brawls, too. There was an Olympic Auditorium scrap with Ivan “El Relampago” Valle in only Antillon’s 10th fight. Then came a 10-round battle of attrition with Fernando “El Pillo” Trejo right after Trejo stopped Jose Armando Santa Cruz. Antillon won both and gained experience. He gained experience in hard sparring with world champions as well. But at some point, Antillon’s valuable experiences became counterproductive proofs of machismo.

Saturday, Antillon seemed too deliberate. Nothing happened with the ease it used to. Some of that might be attributable to Arceo having a good opening round; Arceo does, after all, have 22 victories on his resume. But Antillon also seemed graceless. He was trying much harder and accomplishing less. That’s the troubling trait of a guy who’s been fighting either too often or too much. That’s a troubling trait to have at age 27 with nary a title fight on your record.

It’s time for Antillon to stop proving his toughness and start preserving himself. Next time some junior welterweight champion calls for sparring, Urbano needn’t answer the phone. He needn’t prove himself against hungry young prospects who remind him of his 2005 vintage either. He should work on defense with sparring partners who don’t take his hard counterpunches personally.

There’s little room for hope; Antillon appears to have lost too much already. But we’re loath to end things on a down note. So, there’s news that Antillon has a refreshed outlook on life with new trainer Abel Sanchez!

Still down? Well, how about the rumor that “Solo Boxeo” might come back . . .

Bart Barry can be reached via Twitter.com/bartbarry

Dynamic symulation and experiment on a sprayer boom structure.(Report)

Annals of DAAAM & Proceedings January 1, 2009 | Lupea, Iulian; Tudose, Lucian; Stanescu, Cristina Mihaela; Lupea, Mihaela 1. INTRODUCTION The dynamic behavior of agriculture sprayer mechanisms trailed by tractors has been constantly observed and analyzed (Ramon & De Baerdemaeker, 1997); (Kennes et al., 1999). The sprayer boom is a large and relatively slender component, used to support the spray nozzles. It is important to control and minimize the vibration of the structure on the vertical and horizontal planes, in order to insure the uniformity of pulverization over the field (Lupea et al., 2008). The horizontal and vertical movements, as well as the geometrical features of the sprayer boom, influence the pulverization quality. It has been made (Lebeau et al., 2004) a spray controller aiming to compensate the effect of the horizontal boom movements on the spray deposits homogeneity. In this paper the dynamic study of a sprayer boom structure of about 12m length on each side is presented. Initially, the real boom has been optimized in terms of minimizing the vertical vibration, considering the dynamic model of the whole sprayer mechanism excited from the ground when is following a standard bumpy path. In that approach the dynamic model of the whole sprayer mechanism and a rigid sprayer boom were considered. A similar downscaled (1/10) boom structure has been manufactured and tested. An important parameter of the dynamic behavior is the boom tip vibration amplitude. This parameter is observed in the finite element analysis of the optimized structure considered at a natural scale and in the experimental approach of the downscaled structure, resulting a good correlation (considering the scale factor). During the tests of the manufactured structure, scale factors such as the time factor and the force factor for transient dynamic load, have been considered. Other similar parameters, such as the resonant frequencies, have been observed in both models. This work was supported by the grant of the Romanian Government PNII Idei id 1077 (2007). website force factor reviews

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED] Further research is aiming a better understanding of the similarities of the real boom structure, the associated finite element model and the down-scaled real structure used for tests in the laboratory.

2. FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS Starting from the CAD model of the sprayer boom structure, a standard mesh procedure as a preprocessing step of a finite element analysis has been followed. Mainly shells, a reduced number of solid elements, rigid connections and a few spring elements were used. Some small components were replaced by lumped masses and finally, the same mass in both, the model and the real structure has been reached.

The model was prepared with HyperMesh preprocessor (2007, HyperWorks) for normal modal analysis with Optistruct solver which is using Nastran similar cards in the deck file. The frequency band of interest was between 0.1 and 60Hz. Some modes of vibration are preponderant moving on the vertical plane, others are on the horizontal plane and some are moving on both planes. The lowest mode is a lateral bending of the structure. The most important modes of vibration are in general the lowest ones, which generate large amplitude at the free end of the sprayer boom. Other important modes of vibration are those which can be excited by active loads. Hence, a typical time dependent load coming from the ground has been used to excite the sprayer boom arm structure. This load was derived from the dynamic simulation of the whole agriculture sprayer machine (including the suspension) trailed by a tractor when is following a standardized bumpy path. site force factor reviews

In order to find out the sprayer tip (node #202497, Fig.1.) vibration amplitude as a response to the dynamic load, a modal transient response procedure by using finite element analysis, has been applied. The time variable load coming from the dynamic modeling of the sprayer mechanism excited from the ground has been applied at the level of the symmetry line of the structure. The free end motion and the amplitude of the boom have been registered in three perpendicular directions (Fig. 2). The vertical (Oy) response amplitude is the most important (0.068m), followed by the lateral one (Oz) and finally the response along the length (Ox) of the arm. The modal method, instead of the direct integration method, has been chosen. The modal damping, experimentally measured on a similar downscaled (1/10) real structure which was manufactured for testing, has been plugged into the finite element model.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED] 3. EXPERIMENTS 3.1 Measurement Set-up A similar down-scaled (1/10) boom arm structure has been manufactured in order to perform tests in the laboratory, in parallel to the field tests.

The frequency response function–inertance of the downscaled manufactured structure has been measured.

A measuring set-up available in the Vibration & Noise Measuring Laboratory (www.viaclab.utcluj.ro) has been used. It is based on an acquisition system, a shaker, a force transducer, a light accelerometer and a Labview application.

A simplified measurement set-up is shown in Fig. 3. The device under test (DUT) is excited from the output channel 0, while the force transducer and the mini-accelerometer are monitored by using the input channel 0 and channel 1, respectively.

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED] 3.2 Measurement of the FRF-Inertance The force transducer measures the force transfered from the shaker to the DUT. The accelerometer, glued on the structure’s free end is monitoring the vertical acceleration. From the FRF peaks (Fig.4), the resonant frequencies of the structure in vertical plane and the modal damping values have been derived. A mean damping ratio value of 0.02, derived by using the bandwidth method for resonant peaks, has been plugged into the finite element simulation. The structure has been considered as lightly damped.

For the FRF-inertance (magnitude–phase) derivation, a Labview application based on sine sweept procedure in the frequency band of interest has been used (2008, Labview).

[FIGURE 4 OMITTED] 3.3 Down-scaled Structure Free End Response A Labview application has been developed. The application derives the manufactured structure compliance by double integrating the measured FRF-inertance, finds the main harmonics of the down-scaled time varying load acting on the similar down-scaled structure and calculates the structure responses for each harmonic (magnitude and phase) excitation. Finally, the application superposes the responses of the downscaled structure to the main harmonic excitations (Lupea, 2005). The time varying load imposed on the real structure is similar (down-scaled: 1/100) to that used for excitation on the modal transient response finite element simulation.

After the superposition of the harmonical responses, the structure’s tip vibration is depicted in Fig. 5.

[FIGURE 5 OMITTED] 4. CONCLUSION A transient response simulation of a real-sized and an experimental approach on the down-scaled sprayer boom structure have been performed. The free end boom structure vibration amplitude derived from FEA is in good correlation with the one obtained from the experiment based on the measured FRF-inertance. Resonant frequencies resulted from the simulation of the boom structure, the measurements on the real structure and on the down-scaled structure, correlate as well. By improving the finite element model, better results are expected. Other standard excitations will be imposed on the structures, observing the responses.

5. REFERENCES Kennes, P.; Ramon, H. & De Baerdemaeker, J. (1999). Modeling the effect of the passive suspensions on the dynamic behavior of sprayer booms. Journal of Agricultural Engineering Research, Vol. 72, Issue 3, 1999, pp 217-229 Lebeau, F.; El Bahir, L.; Destain, M.; Kinnaert, M. & Hanus, R. (2004). Improvement of spray deposit homogeneity using a PWM spray controller to compensate horizontal boom speed variations, Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, Vol. 43, Issue 2, 2004, pp 149-161 Lupea, I. (2005). Vibration and noise measurement by using Labview programming, Casa Cartii de Stiinta Publisher, Cluj-Napoca, ISBN 973-686-840-0 Lupea, I.; Stanescu, C. & Drocas, I. (2008). Measurements on the Sprayer Boom Vibration, The Fifth International Symposium about forming and design in mechanical engineering, COD 2008 Proceedings pp. 331-334, ISBN 978-86-7892-104-9, ADEKO Association for Design, Elements and Constructions, Belgrade, 15-16. April 2008, Novi Sad Ramon, H. & De Baerdemaeker, J. (1997). Spray boom motions and spray distribution – part 2: experimental validation of the mathematical relation and simulation, Journal of Agricultural Engineering Research, Vol. 66, Issue 1, 1997, pp 31-39 *** (2008) Labview–Sound and vibration toolset, National Instruments, Austin, Texas *** (2007) HyperWorks (HyperMesh and Optistruct), Altair Engineering Inc., Troy – Michigan Lupea, Iulian; Tudose, Lucian; Stanescu, Cristina Mihaela; Lupea, Mihaela




AUDIO: MIKE JONES ON THE SUNDAY SIZZLER


Welterweight Mike “MJ” Jones 19-0(16KO) Interview and Marc Abrams LIVE on air!! – Weekend Fight recaps and upcoming fight previews! 15rounds.com’s Johnny Schulz presents: Talking BOXING with JSizzle and New York Danny Stash – A weekly Sunday boxing show covering Boxing from all angles. • All of the week’s top boxing stories from results to previews, history, to stories outside of the ring and more.




Jewish champ will lose to Puerto Rican icon at Yankee Stadium


Provided that a bar mitzvah doesn’t prohibit it from occurring, WBA super welterweight champion Yuri Foreman is expected to defend his crown against former WBO welterweight titlist Miguel Cotto on June 5 at Yankee Stadium.

“The Yankees want to make a deal, we know we can make a deal, they’re just working through a problem at Yankee Stadium,” promoter Bob Arum told the Associated Press on Tuesday.

“But you wouldn’t believe it if I told you. They’ve leased out some lounges for this bar mitzvah and part of the deal was for a half hour or so, they could use the big screen in center field to show pictures and all that sort of stuff. Obviously you can’t do that if there’s a fight going on.”

Cotto (34-2, 27 KOs) last fought on Nov. 14 when he relinquished his belt to Manny Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs) by a brutal 12th round TKO.

On the undercard of the Pacquiao versus Cotto bout, Foreman (28-0, 8 KOs), who is ironically an aspiring rabbi, defeated Daniel Santos (32-4-1-1, 23 KOs) by unanimous decision to become Israel’s first ever world boxing champion.

Foreman, 29, the winner of the New York Golden Gloves in 2001, was considered as a potential opponent for Pacquiao after the WBO champion’s proposed matchup with Floyd Mayweather, Jr. (40-0, 25 KOs) deteriorated earlier this month.

However, Pacquiao rejected the offer mainly because Foreman, at five feet and eleven inches, is quite tall for a welterweight. As evidenced by his paltry knockout percentage, Foreman does not possess tremendous power in either of his fists.

Still, Foreman is a tactician in the ring and his height has posed problems for his opponents in the past.

“Foreman is a solid boxer,” said Brad Sherwood, a personal trainer at Gold’s Gym in Medford, Massachusetts. “He is way taller than Cotto and Cotto has been through so many wars that he is old for a 29-year-old. But, I still think Cotto will win though because he is such a powerful warrior. I would take Cotto by a stoppage in the later rounds.”

Foreman was born in Gomel, Belarus.

At age nine, Foreman immigrated with his family to Israel and it was in the Holy Land where he began to box at a local Arab gym.

“The first time I walked in, I saw the stares. In their eyes, there was a lot of hatred,” said Foreman. “But, I needed to box; and boy, did they all want to box me.”

Particularly because of the pounding he received at the hands of Pacquiao, Cotto is going to “want to box” and bludgeon Foreman as well.

Foreman’s vast size advantage and relatively cautious style will keep him competitive in the fight.

Nevertheless, expect Cotto to ultimately brawl his way to a decisive knockout victory over Foreman whenever the two finally meet in the Bronx.

Photo by Chris Farina/Top Rank




Matthysse – Harris reamtch on April 2?


Sources notified 15Rounds that Carlstadt, NJ’s Vivian Harris, (29-4-1 19 KO’s), will be granted a rematch with Lucas Matthysse April 2 on ShoBox due to a controversial stoppage. We were unable to find footage of the bout, but multiple media sources reported that Harris’ night was cut short after taking a right hand in the fourth round.

“He threw two punches, I blocked them and the referee stopped it”, Harris angrily told us. “The whole crowd was booing and you will all see (that the ending was a joke) when it is on youtube. This guy used to getting people out of there early and that wasn’t happening against me!”

With many still insisting that he retire, Harris is excited about getting back on track in the rematch.

“I am going to try and get him out of there early next time. I have to throw more punches in the first few rounds in the rematch.”

Team Harris claims that Golden Boy Promotions CEO Oscar De La Hoya and Matchmaker Eric Gomez personally mandated a rematch immedately following the fight. They are also hoping for the official result to be changed to a no contest.

For more New Jersey boxing news, go to gardenstatefightscene.com




Former heavyweight champ Oliver McCall needs help or he’ll be dead within five years


Former WBC heavyweight champion Oliver “The Atomic Bull” McCall was arrested on Saturday night for possession of cocaine and a crack pipe in Fort Lauderdale Saturday.

McCall (54-9, 37 KOs), who upset Lennox Lewis (41-2-1, 32 KOs) by second round TKO for his title in September 1994, was scheduled to fight Zuri Lawrence (24-15-4-1, 8 KOs) this week at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in nearby Hollywood, Florida.

“The Atomic Bull,” who was raised on the South Side of Chicago, has amassed an extensive criminal record outside of the ring and last weekend’s infraction is a direct violation of his probation.

Inside the ring and at his peak, McCall was a slightly above average pugilist who possessed formidable power in both of his fists.

Unfortunately, the two-time Golden Gloves champion from “The Windy City” is a longstanding dope fiend whose emotional state has made him a pathetic laughingstock.

“My neighbor used to smoke crack,” said Quincy native Mike Cardello, 28. “It was truly sad because he was such a good guy. But, he never could overcome his personal demons. He died two years ago at only 49.”

More than two years after McCall shockingly knocked Lewis onto Queer Street, the combatants fought in a February 1997 rematch in Las Vegas.

The first three rounds between McCall and Lewis were nine minutes of uneventful and lackluster “action.”

When the fourth round began, McCall flatly refused to defend himself against Lewis.

If McCall’s lack of guard and retaliation wasn’t bizarre enough, the Chicagoan subsequently started to uncontrollably bawl like a woman watching Beaches as the round came to a close.

Ultimately, McCall’s loopy behavior forced referee Mills Lane to stop the match and award Lewis with a fifth round TKO victory.

“In the third round, he (McCall) got in close, and then seemed frustrated, and then he just back off and put his arms down,” said Lane. “I thought he was playing possum but then I saw his lips started to quiver and I thought ‘My God, is he losing it?’ I wanted to fix the fight for him, but he started crying, so I had to stop the fight.”

At an old 44, McCall has absolutely zero business trying to box again.

Oliver McCall is an unstable man who is in dire need of both psychological and substance abuse rehabilitation centers.

Impressively, McCall has never been knocked down as a professional prizefighter.

However, if he doesn’t receive immediate help, Oliver McCall will never rise and survive the count of life.




Segura retains Light Flyweight crown with third round stoppage over Tello


Giovanni Segura scored a third round stoppage over Walter Tello toretain his WBA Light Flyweight title in a wild brawl in Acapulco, Mexico.

the two traded shots from the start of the fight with the much shorter Tello showing no fear by throwing wide shots in an effort to work his way inside. There was no gameplan from either guy as one could not tell if Segura or Tello was orthodox or southpaw as they just squared up and whaled away at one another for basically the whole seven minutes of action with Segura landing the harder shots.

Segura landed a bout six straight hard shots that forced referee Luis Pabon to jump in at 1:51 of round three.

Segura, 108 lbs of Bell Gardens, California made the third defense of his crown and is now 23-1 with nineteen knockouts and he expressed interest in fighting WBO champion Ivan Calderon.

Tello, 108 lbs of Panama is now 14-4.

Urbano Antillon scored a third round technical knockout over Luis Antonio Arceo following an accidental headbutt caused a cut over the left eye of Arceo in round three of their scheduled ten round Jr. Welterweight bout.

The bout was action packed from the outset as the two stood toe to toe with Antillon landing the harder shots with left hooks to the head. The two fighters clashed heads in round three that caused the cut and that forced the referee Juan Jose Ramirez to stop the bout at 2:25 of round three.

Antillon, 136 1/2 lbs was coming off his first defeat when he was stopped by Miguel Acosta last fall gets back in the win column and ups his record to 27-1 with twenty knockouts. Arceo, 136 1/2 lbs falls to 22-10-2

Son of the Legend, Omar Chavez remained undefeated by scoring a one-punch knockout over Eugenio Lopez in round one of a scheduled six round Welterweight bout.

Chavez caught Lopez with a leaping left hook and the fight was stopped without a count at 1:44 of round one.

Chavez, 147 lbs is now 20-0-1 with fifteen knockouts. Lopez, 145 1/2 lbs is now 12-16-1.

In an exciting slugfest, seventeen year old Adrian Young remained perfect as he notched his sixth knockout in as many fights as he stopped Orlando Garcia in round three of a scheduled four round Featherweight fight.

Young controlled most of the fights except a few instances when the shorter Garcia landed wild shots for which it drew a large response from the crowd.

The end came when Young landed a short to the siude of the face that froze Garcia on the ropes and referee Juan Jose Ramirez stopped the bout at 2:39 of round three.

Young, 125 1/2 lbs of Los Mochis, Mexico is now 6-0 with all wins coming early. Garcia is now 3-12

Photo by Chris Farina / Top Rank




Pound 4 Pound Promotions Returns March 25!

15Rounds was informed that John Lynch’s Pound 4 Pound Promotions will return Thursday March 25 at the elegant Schuetzen Park ballroom in North Bergen, NJ.

In state prospects slated to appear on the card are lightweights Chris Green (3-1 one KO of Asbury Park), Danny McDermott (North Bergen – 8-1-1 3 KO’s), cruiserweight Patrick Farrell (5-0 3 KO’s – Jersey City), featherweight Victor Valenzuela (7-0 1 KO – Passaic), super middleweight Jason Escalara (7-0 6 KO’s) and junior middleweight Abe Torres 1-3-2 1 KO, each of Union City. Bronx NY’s Steven Martinez, a highly touted junior middleweight with a 3-0 (3) record will be on the card as well.

McDermot and Green each had good amateur backgrounds and are fixtures at Schuetzen Park. Farrell, a rapidly improving prospect, is coming off an impressive four round unanamous decision over The Contender’s Jon Schneider February 6. Valenzuela and Escalara are two highly touted local prospects. Martinez won the 2007 National Golden Gloves welterweight title, while Torres is best remembered for a thrilling August 09′ draw against Sparta’s Chris Murphy in what will go down as one of the most entertaining four round fights in North Jersey history.

Tickets will be available on location and at the majority of North Jersey’s boxing gyms.

For more New Jersey boxing news, go to www.gardenstatefightscene.com




Porter decision Jordan in Cleveland

Shawn “Showtime” Porter was crowned the new NABO Jr. Middleweight Champion with a 10 round decision over Russel “Spiderman” Jordan. Many at ringside belived that this would be a easy knockout for Porter although Jordan saw it differently. Jordan rocked his smaller oppenent at times with Porter’s eye being left eye bloodied from an accidental head butt in the fifth round. A tactical fight and a great test for the new champion.
Tom Miller and Phil Rogers each had it for Porter, 97-92, with Gene Glen calling it a shutout, 100-89. Porter improves to 13-0, 10 KO’s and Jordan dropps to 15-7, 10 KO.

*Referee Randy Jarvis took a point away from Jordan in the 9th round as he lost his mouthpiece for a second time in the round, judging it a delaying tactic.*

Lanard “The Fireman” Lane improved to 11-0 (7 KOs) with an eight-round unanimous decision against welterweight Martin Tucker (7-5, 3 KOs) of Toledo.

2008 Olympian Gary Russel Jr. remined at 7-0 4 KO with a 1st round knockout over Jario Delgado 3-5 3 KO

In the night’s opening bout, 200-pounders Brian Cook from Northfield and Justin Riegle from Orrville put on a four-round slugfest. What it lacked in style was made up for in tenacity as neither man would give in to some heavy punching. Cook (3-4, 2 KOs), went down twice in the third round. Riegle (3-3, 1 KO) got the unanimous decision.




The five most skilled boxers since 1985

Unfortunately, very little news of interest has emerged so far this week in the world of boxing.

Considering the relative dearth of recent activity in The Sweet Science, I decided to rank the five most skilled boxers to enter the ring over the course of the past quarter-century.

It is imperative that I emphasize the word “skilled.”

The forthcoming list is not comprised of the most accomplished or decorated pugilists since 1985.

Rather, I ultimately nominated the five fighters below based strictly on their physical gifts and their overall pugilistic capabilities.

1) “Sugar” Ray Leonard- Leonard (36-3-1, 25 KOs), named Fighter of the Decade for the 1980s by Ring Magazine, captured world titles at multiple weight classes.

Leonard managed to defeat legendary fighters Wilfred Benitez (53-8-1, 31 KOs), Thomas Hearns (61-5-1, 48 KOs), Roberto Duran (103-16, 70 KOs) and Marvin Hagler (62-3-2, 52 KOs).

Leonard, the winner of the gold medal as a light welterweight at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, possessed blinding speed and deft agility in the ring.

Furthermore, Leonard was a deceptively powerful puncher who could badly hurt an opponent with one solid shot.

“Leonard was a great fighter,” said promoter Rich Cappiello from Brockton. “But, above all, he was a tremendously gifted athlete.”

“Sugar” Ray, who was rightfully inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1997, is the most skilled boxer since Reagan’s second term.

2) Roy Jones, Jr.– Jones (54-6, 40 KOs) has been on a seeming mission for the past seven years to tarnish his once brilliant legacy.

Jones, named Fighter of the Decade for the 1990s by the Boxing Writers Association of America, has been shellacked by a host of marginal fighters since his career peaked in 2003 when he defeated WBA heavyweight champion John Ruiz (44-8-1-1, 30 KOs) by unanimous decision.

Prior to Jones’ descent, he was a chiseled physical specimen with incredible quickness and power.

Many critics claim that Jones never had a defining victory in his career and that he never defeated any elite opponents.

In actuality, Jones was a sensationally talented pugilist who, at his peak, could have beaten any fighter, from any era.

3) Floyd Mayweather, Jr.- Mayweather (40-0, 25 KOs), the winner of six championships in five separate weight classes, is a very polarizing figure both inside and outside of the ring.

Many onlookers believe that he sidesteps dangerous contenders like Evander Holyfield avoids condoms.

Other Mayweather detractors loathe his defensive-minded mentality.

Nevertheless, despite his litany of faultfinders, Mayweather is a skilled, boxing marvel.

“Pretty Boy,” the winner of the bronze medal in the featherweight division at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, is elusive and speedy and he often makes his adversaries look simply foolish.

Mayweather will never be a universally beloved figure in the sport of boxing.

Still, Mayweather and his incredible talents deserve to be respected and recognized.

4) Mike Tyson– Before he became a cannibalistic, convicted rapist, Tyson (52-6, 46 KOs) was an enormously gifted boxer.

Tyson, the youngest man to ever win the WBC, WBA and IBF world heavyweight titles, combined ferocious power, with extraordinarily rapid reflexes and quickness, to become a dominating prizefighter.

Tyson employed a Peek-a-Boo defensive style that enabled him to deftly dodge his adversary’s punches while he awaited his chance to explode offensively.

There is a widespread belief that Tyson won the bulk of his matches by intimidation alone.

Such a perception is unfair and inaccurate.

Before he squandered his talents, Mike Tyson was one of the most phenomenal forces to ever grace the ring.

At his pinnacle, Tyson could have knocked out any fighter ever on a given evening.

5) Manny Pacquiao– Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs), the first fighter to capture seven world titles in seven different divisions, is currently rated by Ring Magazine as the number one pound-for-pound boxer in the world.

Pacquiao has long been regarded as one of the best boxers in the sport.

However, his recent demolitions of solid scrappers Miguel Cotto (34-2, 27 KOs), Ricky Hatton (45-2, 32 KOs) and Oscar De La Hoya (39-6, 30 KOs) have elevated his status to a newfound superiority.

“The Fighting Pride of the Philippines” is scheduled to battle Joshua Clottey (35-3, 20 KOs) March 13 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington.

Another overwhelming performance by Pacquiao in “The Lone Star State” will only further heighten his iconic reputation.

Pacquiao has been blessed with every necessary tool to become an outstanding prizefighter and he has aptly utilized those abilities.

*Needless to say, this article is predicated off of my opinion.

I look forward to the thoughts and feedbacks of my readers.

The Clymer Experiment Begins Tonight

The Washington Post September 20, 2006 | Tarik El-Bashir – Washington Post Staff Writer The decision to switch Washington Capitals veteran Ben Clymer from forward (the position he’s played the past five seasons) to defenseman (where he skated as a rookie) appears to have been a wise move. website ashburn ice house

“In the initial stages, I don’t see why Clymer can’t do this,” Coach Glen Hanlon said yesterday at Ashburn Ice House, where the team is holding its training camp. “I haven’t seen anything to deter my enthusiasm for his ability as a defenseman. He can skate and move the puck and do everything that you want a defenseman to do.” Clymer’s big test comes tonight in the club’s preseason opener against Tampa Bay at Verizon Center. Hanlon said he plans to give the Clymer experiment four exhibition games. If, after that, Clymer doesn’t look like he will crack the team’s top four, the 28-year- old veteran will return to his role as a checking-line winger.

Against the Lightning, Clymer will be paired with Steve Eminger, another offensive-minded defenseman.

“I’ve felt better than I thought I would feel,” Clymer said. “I thought there was going to be more scrambling, but maybe playing with Eminger has helped settle me down. I’m excited about [tonight]. It’s going to be a lot different in game situation.” Eminger added: “The style that the NHL is geared toward now is definitely [Clymer’s] style. A [defender] who can contribute offensively is key.” Clymer broke into the league as a defenseman with the Lightning, but was moved to forward midway through the 2000-01 season.

Veteran center Brian Sutherby took exception to a hit from minor leaguer Chad Wiseman during a scrimmage and challenged him to a fight. After the two dropped their gloves, Sutherby made quick work of Wiseman, who left the ice with what appeared to be a cut above his eye.

“It’s camp,” Sutherby said, shrugging. “I thought he took a run at me and clipped my knee. My emotions got going and I had a little fight. Everyone is out there trying to make the hockey club. I felt the hit was knee on knee. . . . It’s no big deal.” Hanlon brushed off the incident, saying, “All coaches enjoy feistiness and competitiveness.” Eleven players were reassigned yesterday, reducing the training camp roster to 38. Among the players headed for Hershey (Pa.) of the American Hockey League are: defensemen Sasha Pokulok and Trevor Byrne; forwards Steve Werner (Chevy Chase), Louis Robitaille, Joey Tenute and Matt Stefanishion; and goaltender Daren Machesney. The other cut players — forwards Oskar Osala and Francois Bouchard, goaltender Michal Neuvirth and defenseman Patrick McNeill — are headed back to their respective junior teams. here ashburn ice house

The roster for tonight’s game includes star winger Alex Ovechkin as well as newcomers Richard Zednik, Alexander Semin, Donald Brashear and Brian Pothier. Ovechkin is expected to skate with Sutherby and Zednik. Goaltender Olie Kolzig will start in net and is likely to play the entire game.

All 82 of the Capitals’ games will be televised. Fifty-six will be broadcast on Comcast SportsNet; WDCW (formerly WB50) will carry 13; NewsChannel 8 will show 10; and three are scheduled for national broadcasts. All games on Comcast SportsNet will be available in high definition. . . .

Several changes have been made to the team’s medical staff. The new doctors are Chris Walsh (internist), Bill Rich (ophthalmologist) and Thomas Lenz (dentist). Ben Schaffer remains the team physician. Capitals officials said the changes were necessary because of the club’s move from Odenton to the new practice facility in Arlington, which is scheduled to open in November.

Tarik El-Bashir – Washington Post Staff Writer




Gonzalez decisions Vazquez in Miami

William Gonzalez used the strength of a second round knockdown to score a unanimous decision over Jesus Vazquez in a twelve round Bantamweight fight at the Micccosuke Gaming Resort in Miami, Florida.

In round two, Gonzalez dropped Vazquez with a straight left hand. Vazquez was competitive but seemed to lose most of the rounds with some of the rounds, especially the ninth providing solid two way action.

Gonzalez a former world title challenger from Managua, Nicaragua won by scores of 119-108, 119-108 and 117-110 to raise his ledger to 24-3. Vazquez, of El Dorado, Mexico is now 19-4-1.

In a mild upset, Edel Ruiz scored a fourth round stoppage over former 122 lb champion Clarence “Bones” Adams in a scheduled twelver round Featherweight fight.

In round two, Adams landed a good over hand right but that was the high point for the former champ as he was rocked in round three from a hard right on the ropes. In round four, Ruiz landed a clipping right on the jaw that “short circuited” Adams that led to another right that sent Adams stumbling into the ropes that referee Frank Santore ruled a knockdown. Ruiz scored a second knockdowns another right to the top of the head put Adams in the canvas. Adams fought on only to eat a few more shots before Santore stopped the fight at 1:55 of round four.

Ruiz of Los Mochis, Mexico scored his fourth straight knockout and is now 34-22-4 with twenty-five knockouts. Adams of Las Vegas had not lost in eight years (just 3-0-1-1 in that span) is now 44-7-4.

Exceptions to NY gay marriage bill focus of talks

AP Online June 22, 2011 | MICHAEL GORMLEY ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) ??? New York’s three top political leaders said Wednesday they supported several additional religious exceptions to a gay marriage bill and were in critical negotiations over wording. site ny gay marriage

Even if the exceptions are approved, however, the Republican conference, most of whose members oppose gay marriage, must send the bill to the Senate floor for a vote. The Democratic-led Assembly has already approved the bill but would need to approve any revised version that might come out of the Senate.

Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Senate Republican leader Dean Skelos and Democratic Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said that while there was no deal on the religious exceptions, talks were encouraging.

“We are going back and forth on language,” Cuomo said late Wednesday. “But we have not hit any obstacles.” Negotiations were expected to continue into Thursday.

Negotiators are trying to include enough protections in the bill so religious groups that oppose gay marriage aren’t hit with discrimination lawsuits. Those provisions also are intended not just for the few undecided senators, but to satisfy the entire Republican conference enough to send the bill to the floor.

“It’s not just the people who are going to vote ‘yes’ or who may vote ‘yes,'” Cuomo said. “The entire conference is looking at this language and the whole conference wants to make sure that they feel confident that if it comes out, and if it passes, that it protects religion.” The need to get the Republican senators to agree to send the bill to the floor for a vote was a pressure point for some of the hundreds of demonstrators at the Capitol on Wednesday. Signs cropped up threatening Republicans that if they allow the bill to the floor they should face a costly primary even if they ultimately vote against gay marriage.

Conservative Party Chairman Michael Long has also urged Senate Republicans to keep the bill from the floor, where a block of Democrats and a few Republicans could pass it.

Cuomo said he’s optimistic his bill will pass in the coming days.

New York’s action is being watched closely as a pivotal moment in the national gay rights movement.

Earlier Wednesday, Skelos and Silver tried to minimize their differences over the bill in an optimistic press conference. But the religious protection additions hadn’t been printed by Wednesday night, so lawmakers didn’t have anything to vote on.

Leaders in the Assembly said they were ready to bring their members back on Thursday to take up the vote. The Democrat-led chamber easily passed a gay marriage bill last week but would have to vote again because of the religious protection changes.

The stronger protection for religious organizations, such as adoption agencies and marriage counselors who oppose gay marriage on principle, is sought by undecided Republican senators who are key to the vote. Currently, the Senate appears to be one vote shy of making New York the sixth state where gay marriage is legal.

Among Democrats in the Senate, 29 of 30 say they’ll vote for gay marriage, meaning only three Republicans need to vote for it to pass in the 62-seat chamber. Two have already committed to voting for it, and at least two others are undecided.

Wednesday, Republican senators met behind closed doors to take up other major issues including a property tax cap, New York City rent control and public college tuition increases.

Outside the Senate conference, members of several congregations sang hymns including “Amazing Grace” alternating with “God Bless America” in peaceful demonstrations by those for and against same-sex marriage. As proponents chanted and held signs calling for “Liberty and Justice for All,” senators quietly left their closed-door conference late in the morning.

A famous chef and television actress were among the advocates promoting legalization. Restaurateur Mario Batali said he was at the Capitol representing his 3,000 employees, who understand they should be able to make their own decisions on marriage, not the government.

Audra McDonald, who appears on ABC’s “Private Practice,” said she has many gay and lesbian Broadway friends in committed relationships and thinks there would be “tons” of weddings. this web site ny gay marriage

Both said gay marriage would bring an estimated $400 million economic boost for the state and New York City.

Cuomo, who took office this year, has invested considerable energy and political capital in the effort.

A similar measure to legalize same-sex marriage largely stalled two years ago when the state Senate voted it down. Since then, the movement has failed in Maryland, New Jersey and Rhode Island. Advocates hope a “yes” vote in New York will jumpstart the effort.

“I believe the people are entitled to a vote, and let the elected officials stand up and say ‘yea’ or ‘nay,'” Cuomo said. “I believe that’s how democracy works.” Two Republicans clearly undecided are Sen. Stephen Saland of the Hudson Valley, one of the Senate’s most veteran and respected members, and Sen. Mark Grisanti of Buffalo, a freshman who is part of the GOP youth movement voted into office in the 2010 Republican tide nationwide.

Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Iowa and the District of Columbia allow gay marriage. Of them, all but Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., allow at least limited religious exemptions.

New York’s legislative session had been scheduled to end Monday.

___ Associated Press writer Michael Virtanen contributed to this report.

MICHAEL GORMLEY




Weights from Cleveland

Shawn Porter 152 vs. Russell Jordan 152

NABO Jr. Middleweight Title

Lanard Lane 144 vs. Martin Tucker 144

Gary Russell, Jr. 125 vs. Jairo Delgado 128

Jake Giuriceo 144 vs. Sam Gibson 145

Justin Riegle 201 vs. Brian Cook 201

Venue: Wolstein Center, Cleveland, Ohio

Promoter: Prize Fight Promotions & Warner Promotions

Venue: Cleveland State University Wolestein Center

TV: ESPN 2 Friday Night Fights 9pm est.




TONIGHT – RING OF COMBAT XXVIII Live on www.GoFightLive.Tv


The RING of COMBAT Show is Entirely SOLD OUT!!
No Tickets Will be Sold at the Door.

THIS IS THE HOTTEST TICKET IN NEW JERSEY TONIGHT – SOLD OUT AND STANDING ROOM ONLY.

If you do not have a ticket then Go Fight Live.TV is the only place you can watch the Show. Don’t miss the action as Lou Neglia again brings a hot and action packed card to the Tropicana.

MAIN EVENT – CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHTS
Escovedo v Bedard v.

Ryan LaFlare vs. Justin Haskins
v .Gian Villante vs. Mike Cook
v. Louis Gaudinot vs. Tuan “Kid Thunder” Pham
v. Joe “Apocalypse” Abouata vs.

Brendan Barrett
v. Robert Cunane vs. David McMahon
About GoFightLive

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If Margarito wants a license, he needs to show up and explain himself


Anybody seen Antonio Margarito lately? Anybody heard from him? There have been more Tiger Woods sightings during the last three months than there have been of Margarito in more than a year. Margarito has vanished, almost as if he’s in hiding.

In the court of public opinion, it’s a bad idea, especially if he ever hopes to be licensed in the United States again. Fair or not, there is talk he is hiding because there is something to hide.
Out of sight, but not of mind.

Questions continue about why, not whether, his gloves were loaded 13 months ago before a loss to Shane Mosley in Los Angeles. Some people want him to apologize. I just want to hear an explanation, straight and unvarnished, from Margarito. He needs attorney Daniel Petrocelli for the legalese required in appearances before the California State Athletic Commission or the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation or some other bureaucracy.

But legal arguments won’t erase deep-seated skepticism about his claim that he had no idea disgraced ex-trainer Javier Capitello put some plaster-like substance into wraps that would turn gloves into weapons of mass destruction. Nobody who has ever worn gloves believes that one. Nobody who has ever worn shoes believes it either. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: If there’s a rock in your shoe, you know it.

I have no idea how Margarito would answer the questions. Until he does, however, it’s impossible for me to say that he should be re-licensed. If he can’t stand up and argue for himself, how can anybody argue for him?

He didn’t fight anywhere for a year. That was the idea when California revoked his license on Feb. 10, 2009. He did what he had to. He did the time. But the process is incomplete without an explanation that may – or may not – serve as the final punctuation in this ongoing controversy.

Top Rank’s plans for him to fight on the March 13 card featuring Manny Pacquiao and Joshua Clottey at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas were dropped because of pressure on Texas not to grant him a license. It just wasn’t going to happen.

His Texas application is still pending, but it doesn’t figure to go anywhere until he first re-applies in California. Even if he does that, there will be controversy that only he can address. If – as tentatively planned — Margarito fights on May 8 in Mexico, it would only be a further complication. Regulators in California or Nevada or Texas or Arizona probably would see the move as another way to duck the questions. He’s being doing a lot of that.

During the week before Pacquiao’s victory in November over Miguel Cotto in Las Vegas, he was scheduled to make an appearance at a nearby shopping mall. I and couple of other sportswriters jumped into a car and rushed out to meet him. He had been there. But by the time we arrived, he had vanished, which is what will happen to Margarito’s career if he doesn’t show up and practice some accountability.

Between Cotto’s victory over Clottey in June and his loss to Pacquiao, there had been a lot of talk about a Cotto-Margarito rematch. To this day, nobody knows whether Margarito’s gloves were similarly armed, locked and loaded in his stunning beat-down of Cotto.

But talk of a rematch, like Margarito, has vanished. Cotto told the English-speaking press that he would be interested in rematch. Then, he was quoted in the Spanish-speaking press as saying there was no way he would help Margarito make money.

Let’s just say that Cotto has his own suspicions.

Until we hear from Margarito, that’s all anybody has.

NOTES, QUOTES
· High school senior Jose Benavidez, a junior-welterweight from Phoenix, continued to impress by scoring two knockdowns in first-round stoppage of John Michael Vega Saturday night on the undercard of super-flyweight Nonito Donaire’s third-round KO of Manuel Vargas at the Las Vegas Hilton. Benavidez’ next fight is scheduled for the Pacquiao-Clottey weekend. He could appear on the undercard at Cowboys Stadium. But the place probably would be empty for bout early on the card. Instead, Benavidez (2-0, 2 KOs), who has Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach in his corner, might fight on a Dallas card Friday night in smaller room where people would see him. And remember him.
· Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps, who won a record eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympics, has added some boxing drills to his training regimen. He’s not the first. Swimmer Gary Hall Jr., a 10-time medalist over three Olympics, put on gloves and hit the heavy bags for years. Hall, who taught heavyweight Earnie Shavers’ kids how to swim, was a fight fan. Hall, a sprinter, said the regimen helped strengthen his muscles and improved his reaction time off the starting blocks.




PRICE RETURNS AFTER INJURY


OLYMPIC bronze medallist David Price returns to action next month after recovering from a hand injury.

Price (4-0) boxes a selected opponent at Leigh Indoor Sports Village on Friday March 19 on a Frank Maloney show being televised live by Sky Sports.

The 6ft 8in Liverpool boxer now hopes for an injury free year which will help him rise towards to summit of the British heavyweight rankings.

Maloney said: “David’s right hand has been concerning him for some time, but it has now been sorted.

“I believe that David will hit harder than ever now and is determined to show that he is Britain’s best heavyweight prospect.

“I saw David spar with another one of my hopefuls, Tom Dallas last year and he showed then that he is for real.”

Price added: “I couldn’t be any happier than where I am now, and once I get my wins into double figures I will start thinking of titles.”

In an exciting top of the bill battle on the Leigh card Belfast’s Martin Lindsay (15-0) risks his British featherweight title against in-form Welshman Jamie Arthur (16-2).

Other stars on the bill include former British super-middleweight champion Tony Quigley, British flyweight king Shinny Bayaar, Paul Edwards, Mark Moran, Karl Place, Rick Goddins and Kieran Farrell.

Tickets for are available for £40 and £80 ringside from 0871 226 1508 or www.frankmaloney.com




Guillermo Rigondeaux ““I will be a 3 weight champion in the next 18 months”


One of the most celebrated amateurs of all time, Guillermo “El Chacal” Rigondeaux, decided in 2009 it was time to leave his homeland of Cuba and get paid for his undoubted talents.

Having had to abort his initial attempt in August 2007, Rigondeaux finally defected in February 2009. After undergoing a rigorous training programme that helped get him back into the best fighting shape of his life, he made his much anticipated debut in May 2009. Since then, he has run his record to an impressive 5-0 (4). The latest win took place at a recent edition of “Friday Night Fights” where he was matched with Adolfo Landeros.

Landeros had clearly seen better days but was expected to bestow Rigondeaux a few rounds. The 30 year old Mexican was known for his toughness sporting a 20-12-1(13) ledger going in but, he’d never fought anyone of Rigondeaux’s immense quality and was dually bowled out in just 28 seconds. Rigondeaux threw a combination that saw his beleaguered opponent looking to cover up prior to being thrown a picture-perfect left hook to the body which saw Landeros writhing around in agony for several minutes.

Going in to this fight, some had questioned Rigondeaux’s ability to fight on the front foot and go for the kill. Even his trainer, Freddy Roach, was unsure about Rigondeaux having to carry the fight and not look to play the role of counterpuncher. However, if this performance was anything to go by, he is most certainly the dynamic fighter that audiences want to see time and time again. He says of this and the win over Landeros, “I didn’t even get going but I have been working on fighting more aggressively and I showed Friday night how I can be as effective when attacking as defensively”.

Last September, Roach spoke about Rigondeaux’s forthcoming fight with Giovanni Andrade, where he waxed lyrical about his charge’s defensive skills adding that the Cuban would win a world title inside of 10 fights. It is something Rigondeaux firmly believes he can achieve, “I am a novice-pro but ready to fight for a world title that should answer your question. I am preserved and seldom hit because of my defensive skills so I will be champion into my late 30s”.

Interestingly, going into his last fight he weighed just 1lb over the Bantamweight limit, while a beefier Landeros was 6lbs heavier. Rigondeaux rationalises this, “I will fight in March this year for the 118lbs title and then I will move back up to 122lbs and then 126lbs. I will be a three weight champion in the next 18 months”. This is undeniably a hectic schedule but, the experience of regularly fighting every other day during competitions for sustained periods of time, should benefit him considerably.

Rigondeaux’s impressive skills were in evidence in the Amateurs for the best part of a decade when, in addition to several other titles, he twice won both the celebrated Olympic and World titles. When asked of which title he was most proud, he stated unequivocally, “Olympic Gold because it is the most prestigious and very competitive”. However, he was far more reticent when asked about his toughest opponent, “I fought many tough guys so I would not like to single one out in case I disappoint some of the others. There are a lot of very tough amateurs on the world circuit”. During his amateur tenure, several different records have been published for him but he claims his record was 247 fights with only 3 losses.

Since joining Roach in Los Angeles at the famed Wild Card gym, Rigondeaux has become somewhat of a gym rat and affirms, “In the pro game I have to train very hard and be very disciplined. I love training hard and sparring with experienced opponents”. When asked about sparring with those experienced opponents he added “Manny and Amir are very exciting fighters. I would love to spar both of them because I will gain a lot from them and they will from me but, we are in the same team so the competitiveness will be there but it’s not the same as actual combat”.

Rigondeaux is well practiced in two of boxing’s lost arts; bodypunching and slick defensive moves that only Floyd Mayweather Jnr, Ivan Calderon are capable of today. His hero Pernell Whitaker, who briefly worked with Rigondeaux when he first arrived in America, was also slick and brought a ton of old school tricks to every fight. The Boxing I.Q that these two possessed make the mind boggle.

Since going pro, there have been a few documented problems behind the scenes in relation to ascertaining the identity of Rigondeaux’s manager. Following arbitration late last year, it was revealed that Irish businessman Gary Hyde holds this position. Rigondeaux commented, “Gary was the first manager to sign me and looked after me when I had nothing in Cuba. When I left Cuba I met with some other people who took advantage of my situation but all the problems are behind me now and I have a good team around me”.

When talking about his early years and how it moulded him mentally and physically as a fighter he says “I used to pull large tanks of water for many miles to my family home from the village so I think that’s where I get my base strength. As for the boxing in Cuba, if you don’t get on the national team life is very difficult so when I joined boxing first, I found it very natural and spent most of my days practicing”. Rigondeaux’s self-discipline ensures that he trains religiously three times a day and whilst he is left with little time for other enjoyments, when he does have chance to relax, he enjoys Rega Bo music – both listening and dancing to it!




VIDEO: PORTER – JORDAN PRESS CONFERENCE

Watch all the action from Wednesday’s press conference in conjunction top Friday Night’s ESPN 2 card in Cleveland featuring Shawn Porter and Russell Jordan

Watch ESPN Friday Night Fights Press Conference in Sports  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com




Q & A with “Marvelous” Marvin Sonsona


One of the brightest young prospects in world Boxing will be back in action in just over a week for his first fight of 2010. “Marvellous” Marvin Sonsona 14-0-1(12) goes into the lions den when he faces Wilfredo Vazquez Jnr 17-0-1(14) who is the son of his namesake father. It provides Sonsona only 19 with the chance to become a two weight world champion himself with the fight being for the vacant WBO Super Bantamweight title. Over the past few months Sonsona has hit a growth spurt that has seen him skip the Bantamweight division altogether moving up 7 pounds from his days at Super Flyweight and growing 2 inches. Here’s what he had to say on several subjects.

Hello Marvin, welcome back to 15rounds.com

Anson Wainwright – How do you feel about being called the next Manny Pacquiao? Is there added pressure?

Marvin Sonsona – I really feel honored being called the next Manny Pacquiao. Who wouldn’g be? But then, there is only one MANNY PACQUIAO.

It is however to my advantage being called that way. Now, I have all the reasons to work harder in terms of training, discipline and dedication to my career. I can aim high and dream big. I am still young and I know that there are still lots of things to learn. I am still very, very, very far from what Manny has achieved.

Anson Wainwright – Why move up in weight and fight Vasquez instead of an easier foe first?

Marvin Sonsona – My management team and I believes that it is better to move up in weight and fight a high-caliber opponent than fight an easier foe. It will not take me anywhere fighting easy opponents because I will never know my capabilities – where I stand – how far I can go – and I might get used to fighting easy opponents hence, take things easy, too. I will never make use of my God-given talent.

Fighting good and de-caliber opponents will make me a better boxer because I will always try to improve my boxing skills.

Anson Wainwright – Can you breakdown your opponent for me – strengths, weaknesses, etc.?

Marvin Sonsona – Physically, he looks stronger. But he does not have the rich amateur experience that I have. So, come fight night – I will let my fists do the talking.

Anson Wainwright – Are you concerned about fighting Vazquez in his hometown? If so what can you do?

Marvin Sonsona – I am not concerned where the fight is. As far as I know, I come to fight and I will fight. There will be a good fight come February 27th.

Anson Wainwright – You will be fighting on PPV in North America. How important is it for you to showcase your skills to US and Canadian fans?

Marvin Sonsona – It is very important for me to showcase my skills to US and Canadian fans because I know that this is where I will be known internationally. It is very important not to disappoint them again after my performance last November 21st in Rumble X, Ontario, Canada. I have learned my lessons and I promise them that they will see what they want to see on February 27th – a very good fight from me.

Anson Wainwright – For those watching you fight for the first time, what can they expect to see? What kind of a fighter are you?

Marvin Sonsona – I am a fighter – I come to fight – so they will see a good boxer in me.

Anson Wainwright – Any prediction?

Marvin Sonsona – Considering that Vasquez is a good boxer and he is from Puerto Rico where the fight is – this will be a good fight. Vasquez will surely put up a good fight for his countrymen just a I come to fight for my country too. Both of us will fight the best we could.

Thanks for your time Marvin, good luck in your quest to becoming a two weight world champion.

Anson Wainwright
15rounds.com




ENTER EDDIE CHAMBERS


On March 20th, Eddie Chambers will enter enemy territory to fight for the heavyweight title. To beat Wladimir Klitschko, the reigning WBO and IBF champion, Chambers will have to execute a three-pronged attack. First, he’ll have to get into Klitschko’s turf, a piece of canvas the long-armed Ukrainian diligently protects with stiff, straight jabs. Second, he’ll have to stun Klitschko with enough power to earn the giant’s respect. And if Eddie Chambers can achieve these two necessary goals, the third will just happen: Chambers will own Klitschko’s head and, when the fight is over, he’ll also own Klitschko’s crown.

You don’t have to be a five-star general to come up with this battle plan. Any fight fan knows exactly what must be done to wrest Klitschko’s belts. So far, only three men have beaten Wladimir and no one has beaten him in the last six years. Klitschko is not an exciting fighter, but he is big and he is strong and he does train hard and he looks the part, which is a compliment in this division where weigh-ins are a formality and flesh too often spills over trunks. Whenever I watch Wladimir Klitschko fight, I’m frustrated—frustrated at the champion for fighting so methodically and frustrated at his opponents for not executing any sort of plan. Instead of taking chances, today’s heavyweight challengers have accepted jab after jab after jab until they’re so busted up they can’t continue or they’re so demoralized they wilt. That’s when Klitschko’s PhD kicks in. Once Dr. Steelhammer recognizes his opponent can’t hurt him, he turns brave, releases his cocked right hand and it’s show over.

Enter “Fast” Eddie Chambers. He’s a small heavyweight. He’s also a skilled heavyweight. And he’s been a frustrating heavyweight in his own right. Too many post-fight interviews have begun with Eddie apologizing to his fans for not working hard enough or steadily enough. Eddie Chambers has only lost once, and in that loss to tough gold-medalist Alexander Povetkin, Chambers, who won the first few rounds, stopped fighting. In his victories, Chambers stops fighting during portions of each round, thus the post-fight apologies. His boxing skills have carried him past decent opposition to a 35 and 1 record, but Eddie Chambers will have to work harder and steadier to get in on Klitschko, to hurt Klitschko, to break Klitschko’s mind.

Fans of Chambers, and I’m one of them, look at Eddie Chambers’ last fight as a gauge by which to judge the emergence of this tweny-seven year old from Philadelphia as a true contender. Fighting the then-undefeated Alexander Dimitrenko, whose height, reach and weight are very close to Wladimir Klitschko’s, Chambers won handily. He worked hard during most of the fight, steadily attacking the bigger man and, surprise, surprise, by fight’s end Chambers owned Dimitrenko’s head. Suddenly, we saw the fighter Eddie Chambers promised we’d see, a new and improved boxer/puncher who didn’t punch out until the final bell rang. Also new and improved was Eddie Chambers’ physique. Gone was the layer of soft baby fat that once hid his muscle. He wasn’t ripped in the tradition of Evander Holyfield, few men are, but he looked like a professional. Eddie Chambers didn’t have to apologize for anything that mid-summer night. He was excited and confident and seven months later that confidence remains. I believe that Eddie Chambers believes he can beat Wladimir Klitschko. That’s a good start.

Four weeks away from his title shot and Eddie Chambers is fifteen days into his training camp at the Fernwood Resort in the Poconos. Kids on winter holiday are running wild through the resort’s lobby, but across the lot and up the stairs it’s peaceful. There, set up in a converted warehouse, is a simple, functional gym with two heavy bags, two speed bags and a single ring. When my brother and I walk in, no one’s there, but the prep work’s been done. Wraps are lined on a table. Pieces of tape have already been cut. Gloves are arranged in a row, laces loosened. Two chairs face each other, waiting for fighter and trainer to conduct their pre-sparring ritual where trainer prepares his fighter’s hands. It’s an interesting boxing still life, a picture of a man’s world before the men enter. One of these absent men hopes to be the next heavyweight champion of the world.

The first men to come through the door are not the day’s featured subject. They’re the sparring partners, a heavyweight named Shawn McLean, and a bigger heavyweight, seven-footer Marcellus Brown. They sit at opposite corners of the gym, open their bags and start to untangle their wraps before re-rolling them. McLean, whose most notable win is a knockout against overly-handled and once 38-0 prospect Faruq Saleem, understands that the room belongs to the man he’s paid to hit and he seems happy to talk about “Fast” Eddie.

“He’s like a magician. In boxing he’s the master of deception. You think you can break him and it’s a set up. You can’t relax in there with him. And he has a particular pop, a certain kind of pop. Not a Tyson pop. A stun pop. Three or four of those and you’re wobbling.”

More men enter the gym. Ex light-middle champion Robert “Bam” Hines, trainer Robert Murray’s two sons, current welterweight Steve Upsher Chambers, and finally big Rob Murray, Chambers’ trainer, who has known Eddie since he was a kid. All of these men have been with Chambers for years and immediately the room takes on a warmth, a looseness, without any tough-guy posturing. Hands are shaken all around, introductions made and then Eddie Chambers enters the room. He’s by no means the biggest man here, by no means the toughest looking, but on closer inspection his eyes take the room’s focus. They are young, alert, alive eyes that have the super-clarity of a winner. His torso looks strong. His arms defined and his chest tight. And his legs are muscled, the legs of an elite sprinter, or a man who has danced the canvas for thousands of rounds. Chambers begins to stretch and Rob Murray begins to talk about his fighter and the upcoming fight.

“No one will outwork Eddie. People say he’s too small. Louis weighed 190 and he stopped freight trains. When we fought Peter we were 223. We didn’t like 223. We wanted to get sleeker. The Klitschko brothers fight like cavemen. Eddie’s a Lear Jet and they’re prop planes. They have such a strong boxing fan base that people bought into it. It’s a pity HBO didn’t buy into Eddie. This kid has character. You can’t go around with a needle and say it’s time for a character shot. He’s the best fighter, the best athlete I’ve ever worked with. What we do here, we’ll bring to the dance. This guy is going to go back to Emanuel Steward and say, I can’t hit this motherfucker. And then Manny Steward will have to earn his pay.”

Chambers finishes jumping rope, a good four-rounds’ worth with no one-minute breaks, and he’s not even breathing. He wears a black T-shirt with the outline of the top half of a face, two eyes peering out, red. Across the T-shirt, two words: Fight Angry. Chambers shadowboxes for a few minutes, watching his moves in the mirror. I watch his feet. He’s a pro. Balanced. Super-quick.

Chambers sits down in one of the empty chairs. Rob Murray sits in the other, across from his fighter. The still life takes on movement. It’s time for this trainer to earn his pay.

Murray wraps Chambers’ hands methodically. Careful and slow seem to be the beat of the pre-sparring work here and even the hip hop music, coming from a portable radio by the door, is more about slow rhythms than frenetic riffs. It’s a beautiful wrap-job, even and smooth, three vertical lines of raised tape on each hand turning potentially lethal fists into almost-delicate sculptures.

Steve Upsher Chambers, no blood-relation to Eddie but a best friend and fellow fighter, turns on the round buzzer and 3:00 flashes in red. It’s time to spar.

First up is Shawn McLean. McLean weighs 220, stands 6’ 2” but it’s not even close. Eddie’s jabs are fast and crisp. His hooks are textbook. The pop of leather against flesh indeed leaves McLean wobbly. At one point Rob Murray asks McLean to get busy with the jab. “Double it up,” he yells at McClean. “Double it up,” Chambers echoes. The contender wants to work. When the third round ends McLean has a badly bloodied nose, and his breathing is labored and heavy. To his credit, the sparring partner wants to go one more round, but Murray waves him off.

Next up is the giant Marcellus Brown. Brown is 26 and 17, but the way he spars, his record is deceiving. This super-heavyweight is a towering man, wide-backed, thick-shouldered, mighty-armed and he fights like his afternoon’s shift is more than a payday. This is sparring with bad intentions. In the first round, Chambers beats him around the ring. Brown complains his shoulder hurts and Murray tells him to shut up about his shoulder and fight. Brown takes direction well. He zones in on Chambers, eyes locked on eyes, and shoots jabs reminiscent of Klitschko’s. And then Brown unloads rights that seem capable of knocking off a man’s head. Chambers is the picture of cool. He takes the jabs, moves away from their sting and lands crisp jabs of his own. They’re fast and they crack. And when Brown’s right hands come thundering in, Chambers is nowhere to be found. Still, some of Brown’s jabs land and for too many seconds Chambers stands still, calling his sparring partner forward while producing no offense. “I’m right here,” Brown says and Chambers answers, “Come on.” Brown comes on, stays busy and wins the round. Round 3 feels like a fight. Brown lands early. The punches wake Chambers and he starts to throw combinations, moving to the side of Brown’s jabs and under, landing left hooks and uppercuts that raise Brown’s chin to the rafters. A new rule of physics seems proved: Skill makes you taller. Suddenly the seven-footer doesn’t look that much bigger than the young man eleven inches his junior. When Round 3 ends, Marcellus Brown is huffing and puffing while Chambers breathes easy. In six rounds, he’s beaten two big men and looks untouched, clear-eyed still.

Rob Murray steps into the ring, pads covering his hands, and works with Chambers. Suddenly the trainer is all teacher, showing his student how to get inside the jab and how to work once inside the conquered territory. Murray works the same move over and over until Eddie gets it right, explaining the move, offering positive reinforcement, forcing his pupil to start the move over when he gets it wrong, admonishing Chambers to keep his hooks tight instead of throwing over-handed loops. “You got to do it while you’re right there.” It’s both literal and symbolic advice. Do it when you’re close to Klitschko. Do it when you’re in Germany fighting for the title. Do it when you’re right there, your body sound and your mind sound, supremely confident.

Chambers winds down his workout with stomach exercises that look impossible. Head on the canvas, legs against the ring post, he lowers his legs to the floor and lifts them all the way up, over and over and over and over. His face shows pain but he continues, stoically. Just as he started his day stoically, running five miles through the Pocono Mountains, sprinting whenever he came to a steep incline. Just as he worked over two big men stoically, bloodying one, battering another.

After some final stretches, Eddie Chambers comes over to talk. He’s thoughtful and articulate, clearly a smart young man in a game where smart men often rule. I’ve seen Chambers fight half a dozen times and I ask him about his consistently calm demeanor in the ring.

“I enjoy the business of the fight. I always want to feel as comfortable as in sparring. When the lights come on it’s like messing around in the gym. The only fight I lost, I knew I had him (Povetkin), but I didn’t have the energy. I know I have them when my punches feel like poetry. I can walk in. Most guys think they can bomb me out because I’m not strong. When they realize I’m stronger they’re like, What can I do? Well, I got paid. I did what I could. It becomes survival mode for them.”

I’ve seen Chambers recognize the exact moment when his opponents go into survival mode. He smiles, his eyes go as mean as the red eyes on his T-shirt, and that’s when he seems to take joy in beating the man in front of him. It’s a survival-of-the-fittest-and-fastest joy, a joy that’s appropriate and even necessary for a prize fighter. Think Muhammad Ali, a fighter Rob Murray refers to often when speaking to Chambers, reminding the young heavyweight about the old-school fighter who made big-purse fights possible for black athletes. Ali spoke like a poet, but in the ring, and often out of the ring, he was a cruel man.

“I’m building on what I did last time,” Chambers says. “I’m stepping it up. Wladimir is the same size, has the same style as Dimitrenko, but times two. He’s stronger. I’ve stepped up the intensity. Running. Sparring. Lifting. Everything done is done with extreme intensity. My plan is to do what I did but not stand in front of him.”

If he can give Klitschko angles, if he can force himself to not step straight back when Klitschko throws his methodical jab, and if he can remain intense for all three minutes of all twelve rounds, busy, always busy, shooting the kinds of three-punch combinations he flashed in sparring, Eddie Chambers could become heavyweight champion at the young age of 27.

Aside from Klitschko’s strength and six-year dominance of the heavyweight division, there is one other concern going into this fight that, surprisingly, doesn’t seem to overly concern trainer or fighter—it’s the issue of German home cooking. The Germans are notoriously nationalistic when it comes to judging fights. Witness the scores when Chambers defeated Dimitrenko, a Ukrainian now residing in Germany, in their fight in Hamburg. While the Auslander beat the hell out of the Deutschlander and knocked him down twice, one judge scored the fight a draw. Rob Murray seems philosophical about the matter and believes Goossen Tutor Promotions will work in the pre-fight days to ensure post-fight fairness.

“It’s supposed to be all neutral. I have a lot of confidence in Dan Goossen. Winning or losing, he always answers the phone. Not just when we ate steak. He also answered when we ate hot dogs.”

Unfortunately the Germans prefer Sauerbraten to American grade-A. I hope Dan Goossen actively and vociferously insists on a panel of impartial judges and an impartial ref for this championship bout. Perhaps it’s a sign of Murray’s supreme confidence in his fighter that he’s not overly worried about the three men sitting ringside. Echoing Murray’s sentiment, Chambers says, “I’m not going to think about it. I have no choice. I’ll fight twelve rounds. In my mentality I’m a boxer/puncher. If I don’t knock him out I have to leave it in the judge’s hands. I hope I get a fair decision.”

A fair decision. Too often in boxing, especially too-often for the visiting team, this is a pipe dream. One scenario I see is Chambers dominating the fight, neutralizing Klitschko’s jab, avoiding the powerful straight right hands just as he did sparring against Marcellus Brown, and getting the short end on at least two judges’ scorecards. Sure, an appeal is possible, but we all know that a day later, maybe two, bad decisions solidify and cries of outrage fade. And with this fight not being shown in the United States (shame on HBO and Showtime for not featuring the one American boxer who actually has a chance to win the crown) a bad decision is sure to stick.

Las Vegas odds, right now at about 2 to 1, do not favor Eddie Chambers. And the odds makers are usually right. They’ll look at Chambers’ small stature and his lack of power and his inexperience performing on the biggest stage. While it’s easier to make a case against Chambers, a case can certainly be made for him. At 6’ 1”, 210 pounds, he’s small by today’s super-heavyweight standards, but he’s bigger than Jack Dempsey when he beat Jess Willard, bigger than Joe Louis when he beat Primo Carnera. Chambers may not be the second-coming of Tyson, but his punches have pop. He’s knocked out half his opponents and I’ve seen the swift sting of his textbook left hooks and right crosses and inside uppercuts from a ringside seat several times, most dramatically when he bloodied Derric Rossy’s face and busted his eardrums. I also saw Eddie Chambers smile while doling out that brutal beating, a visible cruel streak that starts in his eyes. This will help him against Klitschko. Too many of Wladimir’s opponents didn’t appear to truly want victory and after a round or two their dances turned defensive, their faces softening, their eyes glazing over with dull acceptance. In Chambers’ sneer there is something taunting, cocksure and crafty, and dangerously aggressive. He knows he’s good and he enjoys imposing his will, two marks of a winning fighter. And while he has never fought for the title in front of fifty thousand enemy fans, he has been a road warrior of late. The Klitschko fight will take place in a soccer stadium in Düsseldorf, but the too-polite German crowd, whose cheers are more ordered than raucous, won’t faze him. So Chambers has a chance. It’s a David and Goliath story, which is the story of a little man against a big man, but also the story of a young, quick, crafty man against a Philistine lumberer, whose arrogance hinted at mental fragility. Long shot, yes. Impossible shot, not at all.

Thinking about the upcoming fight, the eloquent Rob Murray uses another man’s words to highlight what he foresees happening next month; Murray paraphrases lyrics by the Godfather of Soul, James Brown.

I don’t want nobody
to give me nothing
Open up the door,
we’ll come right in.

Together, Eddie Chambers and Rob Murray have worked hard for many years—and this training day was a hard day, the sparring some of the most vicious I’ve seen. When Eddie Chambers stands in his corner on March 20th facing the champion, he won’t have to ring the bell to enter Wladimir Klitschko’s door. The timekeeper will do that for him. What Chambers does next will be up to Chambers. If he comes in right, if he fights correctly, if he stays calm and confident, which I believe he can, “Fast” Eddie Chambers will soon be smiling.

Photo By Claudia Bocanegra




Dieuly “Untamed Beast” Aristilde Knocks Out Elijah McCall Tuesday Night in Hollywood Florida!

Miami’s DJ Laz got the party started for the Clash of the Heavyweights Tuesday Night Fights at the Hard Rock Live in Hollywood Florida. An energetic musical intro got the crowd ready for a great night of showcasing talented raw young heavyweights.

Boxings’ glamour division has always been the heavyweights, home to such icons as Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano, and Mike Tyson. The Heavyweight Factory has come to resurrect the heavyweight division. What they have done is taken the finest athletes in the nation, young men who have succeeded in other sports, put them in the gym with trainers who have been to the top before. Such as, former heavyweight champions Michael Moore and Oliver McCall. And now they unleash their talents in the boxing ring.

In a wildly exciting main event Dieuly “Untamed Beast” Aristilde 6-1 scored a big upset knockout win over Elijah McCall, son of former Heavyweight Champion Oliver McCall. Dieully barely made it out of round one when McCall knocked him down 3 times. Dieuly landed huge right hands and left hooks from the opening bell proving McCall to have a sturdy chin but was floored by big right hands from McCall who easily won the first round 10-7. The second round and third rounds were a crowd pleasing brawl of heavyweight proportions which saw both fighters landing big shots but the Beast getting the better of the exchanges. Dieuly answered the fourth round bell possessed and landed several huge left hooks and right hands finally put McCall down at 1:13 of round 4. This fight was an amazing brawl and Aristilde showed unbelievable heart by getting off the canvas to score a monstrous knockout. This fight gave the fans their money worth which is ironic because most people paid money to see McCall’s father who was scratched from the card due to a recent drug possession incarceration.

Miami native and Florida State University graduate Michael Mitchell 1-0 made a successful debut with a hard fought UD win over Robert Turner 0-2. The former ‘Noles safety Mitchell’s raw talent was evident as he controlled the pace and stalked Turner during the entire fight. The 6’3” 215# Mitchell won all three cards at 39-37.

Former University of Miami fullback James Bryant was very impressive and showed great natural ability with a big knockout at 2:00 of round 1 over Roy Boykins 1-4. Bryant a 6’ 3” 245 pound banger showed great form while easily taking out Boykins.

Heavyweight Factory’s Roger Pinckney made a successful professional debut as he knocked Sean McPhee down in a quick manner with a stinging uppercut in a fight that was a bit sloppy from the opening bell. The end came quickly at 1:20 of round 1.

In the second fight of the night Cuban defector Luis Ortiz handily disposed of Lamar Davis (4-2) by first round TKO. Ortiz had an extensive amateur background in Cuba including a loss to Odlanier Solis. The end came at 1:28 of round one.

Cuban Yasmay Consuegra 1-0(1KO) dismantled Curtis Harper 0-1 with a barrage of punches all started with a big right hand that buckled Harper and sent him for a chicken walk across the ring. Referee Frank Gentile ended the bout 1:40 in the 1st round. Harper was another product of The Heavyweight Factory. Both fighters were making their respective debuts.

Former University of Miami and NFL running back Quadtrine Hill earned a big 1st round knockout over Vashawn Tomlin 0-2. Hill a southpaw, rocked Tomlin with a early straight left hand which was a very quick start to a very quick finish. Tomlin was mercifully counted out at 1:50 of round 1.

Notable attendees- Evander Holyfield-Shannon Briggs- Zuri Lawrence-Dyah Davis- Micheal Moore, Bubby McGirt and Dj Laz




Q & A with Robert Helenius


It’s been just over 50 years since Ingemar Johansson ruled the Heavyweight division. Since then no Scandinavian fighter has threatened to make his mark on Boxing’s most famous division that is unless you want to include Brian Nielson…no thought not. That could all be about to change however with the emergence of Robert “The Nordic Nightmare” Helenius. The 26 year old boxer debuted in May 2008 and has moved quickly. A year into his career he stopped former British Champion Scott Gammer in six. Then last October the Finnish Boxer stopped Taras Bidenko in the third round he followed it up just a few weeks back when he turned back battle hardened former World Champion Lamon Brewster. At a strapping 6’6 and a svelte 240+ pounds Helenius took apart his more experienced foe. Whether Helenius is ultimately a Johansson or a Neilson is still to be decided but if he doesn’t reach the promised land of untold riches that being Heavyweight champion of the world it wont be because he isn’t willing to test himself.

Hello Robert, welcome to 15rounds.com

Anson Wainwright – You recently beat former World champion Lamon Brewster. What can you tell us about that fight? How pleased were you with your performance? What did beating Brewster do for your confidence?

Robert Helenius – Of course it was a really good fight. I was in good shape and everything worked well. Everything worked fine. I did almost everything that my coach said and that lead me to victory. He said I should throw 1-2 punches – I did that and Lamon was on the floor in the second round.

Anson Wainwright – Do you know where and when you will be back in action? How about an opponent?

Robert Helenius – My promoters are planning a fight in Finland sometime soon. It would be great to fight there again!

Anson Wainwright – Three of your last four opponents have stepped you up in terms of competition. Is this something you will continue to do?

Robert Helenius – That is entirely up to the trainer and the promoter. I fight everybody they throw at me.

Anson Wainwright – Can you tell us about your team, who is your manager, trainer & promoter? Where do you train for your upcoming fights?

Robert Helenius – I train in Berlin most of the time with Ulli Wegner and Georg Bramoswki. My promoter is Team Sauerland, the matchmaker is Hagen Doering and the manager is Wilfried Sauerland.

Anson Wainwright – Though you were born in Sweden you were raised in Finland which has no history of Boxing. How did you you first get into Boxing?

Robert Helenius – Through my father – he was a trainer in our hometown and he had trained for maybe 20 years and he got me started. He had a lot of boxers in Finnish championships and won lots of medals with them. I started at the age of 14.

Anson Wainwright – Can you tell us about how you progressed through the amateur’s. What titles you won and what your final record was?

Robert Helenius – My biggest success was the silver medal at the European Championships in 2006!

Anson Wainwright – When your not Boxing what do you like to do away from Boxing?

Robert Helenius – I love to spend time with my family – we´ve got two young children and I really enjoy being around them!

Anson Wainwright – What is your career plan for this year? What are your goals in the coming years?

Robert Helenius – That is entirely up to my promoter and trainer and what they think is good for me, I want to be a champion one day but we have to take things slowly. There are still a lot of things I need to work on – I can keep improving every day.

Anson Wainwright – Who has been the toughest opponent to date? What is your best performance?

Robert Helenius – The Brewster TKO…for now!

Anson Wainwright – Who was your boxing hero growing up and why?

Robert Helenius – When I grew up I really loved to watch Lennox Lewis – and Muhammad Ali of course.

Thanks for your time Robert, keep up the good work.

My pleasure. Please send my regards to all the Boxing fans in Ameica!

Anson Wainwright
15rounds.com




Former Heavyweight Champion Oliver McCall busted for crack, AGAIN! Zuri Lawrence fight Scratched!


Oliver ….not again! Boxing suffers another ugly black eye. Former World Heavyweight Champion Oliver “The Atomic Bull” McCall is currently sitting in the Broward County Jail after being arrested on February 13th for POSSESSION OF COCAINE, POSSESSION OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA, and PROBATION VIOLATION. McCall was schedule to fight Zuri Lawernce February 16th, no replacement has been found and the fight has been scratched. I spoke with a representative from the Heavyweight Factory, the promotion company handling the event, and they assured us the show will go and there will still be fireworks at the Hard Rock Live in Hollywood FL.

The 44 year old McCall is best known for winning the WBC Heavyweight Championship 1994 after scoring an upset knockout victory over Lennox Lewis, in Lewis’ home town of London, England. This was only to be followed by his infamous, in-ring meltdown in the rematch with Lewis.

McCall’s career has often been mottled by several stints in drug rehabilitation facilities and arrests for disorderly behavior. In January, 2006 he was arrested by police in Nashville, Tennessee, who say they had to use a Taser on McCall after he tried running away from officers trying to arrest him for trespassing in a public housing development. Police told reporters that McCall had in his possession a glass pipe and a five-dollar bill containing a small amount of cocaine. They say the 40-year-old McCall later spat at an officer and threatened to kill him. He was held on $299,000 bond and charged with criminal trespass, resisting arrest, assaulting police officers, threatening to kill an officer, and being a fugitive from justice on charges in his home state of Virginia. He was released on 8 May 2006. McCall was arrested for possession of crack in September of 2007 in which he is currently still on probation for. He was scheduled for release of probation in April.

On a recent comeback trail McCall defeated Australian John Hopoate by 2nd round T.K.O on the 22nd of May, 2009 for the vacant IBA Intercontinental heavyweight belt. McCall dominated the fight and knocked Hopoate down twice. He defended his IBA continental belt against Franklin Lawrence by a ten round unanimous decision on the 21st of August 2009 at the Orleans Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas. On the 23rd October 2009, He defended his IBA continental Title again by a ten round unanimous decision against 6?8 Lance Whitaker.

This story pains me to write. This is an absolute disrespect to the sport of boxing and to the champions before and after him. Oliver, in my opinion you should have to forfeit the title of champion due to this selfless act! You are a disgrace to the sport and the young kids who look up to the hard fought champions for hope and inspiration.

Google Offers vs. Groupon? Nah! Real rival to online coupons is bulletin board.(Business)

The Christian Science Monitor January 26, 2011 | Wood, Janine Byline: Janine Wood Despite all the hoopla about online ads and coupons, most of America still advertises in amazingly archaic ways: a sign in a shop window, a business card on a bulletin board, a flier under the windshield wiper. go to web site groupon phoenix

It’s not only cheap – printed fliers and a few pushpins – it’s also effective. “I’ve never paid for advertising,” says Jeanne Pinsof Nolan, owner of The Organic Gardener in Glencoe, Ill. Five years ago, she posted a flier on a grocery store bulletin board and now has some 150 clients. “My advertising is my flier,” she says.

This tranquil corner of the advertising world is huge – by one estimate 90 percent of ads are not digitized – and increasingly under scrutiny by online ad companies. One reason national ad giant Google was willing to pay a whopping $6 billion for online coupon company Groupon was the latter’s ability to bring local businesses onto the Internet.

Now, Google is reported to be testing its own local ad service, dubbed Google Offers. By bringing mom and pop stores online, Google, Groupon, and all the other group coupon sites hope to reap a bonanza.

“The percentage of local advertising that is not digital – and that’s most of it – will change because the cost of advertising online is really low,” says Frank Mulhern, associate dean of research at Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism in Evanston, Ill.

How quickly the online companies will succeed is another matter. Local online ad spending will grow nearly 18 percent this year, according to Borrell Associates Inc., a research and consulting firm in Williamsburg, Va. That’s a little faster than the almost 14 percent rise forecast for total online ad spending. Online coupons are growing faster – up 50 percent between 2009 and 2010 – and worth more than $10 billion, Gordon Borrell says.

Still, Internet ad salespeople will have to convince people like Peter Sykes. Laid off from a hunting store, he now rides his bike around Riverwoods, Ill., stuffing fliers into mailboxes to promote his fly fishing and hunting instruction. Would he offer a big discount on Groupon to generate more traffic? “I’m not a techie,” he says.

“The sites offer great deals to the consumers at the expense of the small businesses,” says Utpal Dholakia, a marketing professor at Rice University’s business school in Houston, and author of a recent study on Groupon. He found that 32 percent of the businesses surveyed said their Groupon promotion was unprofitable. More than 40 percent of the respondents said they would not run the promotion again.

“It’s like dynamite,” says Jay Goltz, a Chicago business owner and blogger for The New York Times. He had 900 customers respond to his Groupon ad, but is unsure how many were already customers. In addition, he questions how many people will return to his stores as repeat customers. “It’s a great invention, but it could blow up your house,” he adds. “I wouldn’t predict the end of the bulletin board.” The old world and the new world collide at Newport Coffee House here in Bannockburn, Ill. The bulletin board is so crowded that a table is positioned nearby to catch the overflow. While waiting in line for coffee, customers can check out the Pet Pal dog-walking service or pick up a schedule of language classes.

“We get about one or two businesses a day asking to post on our board,” says owner Nevair Jindoyan.

However, after perusing the bulletin board, many customers grab a coffee, sit down with friends, pull out smart phones, and scroll for deals.

“Ooh,” says a customer checking her BlackBerry, “I can get $50 off on a $100 massage from Groupon today.” Another customer scrolls down to WeDeal and reveals the day’s discount to the rest of the table.

There are many other deals available online. Foursquare, a mobile social-networking game, allows members to “check in” at local businesses and receive “specials,” which are discounts for loyal customers. A business can tap into this by offering tips at various places where would-be customers congregate. “For instance, a fitness trainer could build [his or her] following by offering tips at various gyms around the city,” says Erin Gleason, Foursquare’s spokeswoman. site groupon phoenix

LivingSocial, another daily-deal site with more than 10 million subscribers, offers ways to blend small businesses to take advantage of online advertising. “It may not be that we have the organic farmer, but we can work with the organic farmer and the local winery to create a tailored package,” says Korina Buhler, a spokeswoman for LivingSocial.

Ms. Pinsof Nolan, owner of The Organic Gardener, recently developed a website and has considered Groupon. But she continues to get most of her customers from her old standby, the flier with the tear-off phone numbers at the bottom.

“There’s nothing like seeing something right in front of your face,” says Regina Ruggiero, whose company, New York Blackboard of New Jersey, has been making bulletin boards since 1944.

And sometimes the old technology actually trumps the new one.

“I’m thinking of canceling my online dating service,” says Judy Brinkerhoff-Smith, who paints portraits of families and their pets. Her bulletin board brochure prompted 30 calls from single men, and she ended up dating one of the callers. She welcomes the calls and says, “We are all just trying to make a connection.” Wood, Janine




Night of Champions ringside report

Life after Amir Khan began for Frank Warren on Saturday at the Wembley Arena in front of around 5,000 people. It proved to be a successful night for his up and coming young guns all getting the W, most of them doing it inside the distance.

In the main event Nathan Cleverly 19-0(9) stepped up from domestic level to European level with little problems scoring a fifth round stoppage over Italian Antonio Brancalion 32-8-2(8) claiming the vacant European crown. After a lively opening round in which Cleverly had the better of things he took over and although he was caught with a few punches the 22 year old landed far more, some impressive flush shots. By the end of the fourth he dropped the Italian with a hard right, the bell rang before Cleverly could follow up. Smelling blood the Welshman went straight for Brancalion who he had on unsteady legs and teetering by the time referee Jean-Louis Legland saved him from any further punishment at 1.15 of the fifth.

The Welshman appeared at the press conference with a broad grin and all three belts he’s collected over the past 15 months. Cleverly described the fight as “A comfortable night” Warren was pleased with his charges performance and praised him adding “I’d be surprised if he didn’t fight for a world title before the end of the year” Though he still has things to learn Cleverly has a very good base to add to and proclaimed “I’m still a maths student….i haven’t taken this business serious yet” Well if this is a part time pro and as he believes he has a further 25% to add to his game the world scene should be on red alert.

Londoner Kevin “The Dagenham Destroyer” Mitchell improved to 31-0(23) with a thunderous second round stoppage over Ignacio Mendoza. In the first Mitchell sized the Columbian up, after that he clearly had the measure of his man. When Mendoza threw a combination Mitchell counted with a booming right hook before landing a left as Mendoza was falling. It was easily the best KO of the night. Mitchell holds the best unbeaten record in British Boxing at the moment.

At the press conference Warren proclaimed that the WBO had given him and Golden Boy 28 days to finalise a fight between Mitchell and there Interim Lightweight champion Michael Katsidis. It’s a fight Mitchell would very much like adding “I’m a big fan of his but i think he’s made for me” When asked about the knockout Mitchell added “I sized him up in the first, in the second i went for him. I caught him and he went down, i thought what a touch!”

Olympic Gold medallist James “Chunky” Degale 6-0(4) scored an impressive second round stoppage over Matthew Barr 14-6(6). Barr was dropped three times before the fight was waved off at 1.38 of the round. Degale later went on to say that he though he’d come a long way in the past year and felt like a much better fighter that he was a year ago when he debuted. It certainly looked that way, in his early fights he boxed on the back foot but he seems to have developed a bit more devil in his work to go with his undoubted talent.

Though he heard the bell for the first time and had a few scratches Frankie “Funtime” Gavin 6-0(5) scored a shutout 60-54 points win over the always durable Peter McDonagh 14-16(2). Gavin’s superior skills and speed clearly won him the fight but McDonagh deserves credit for his toughness. It was a case of get the win and look good next time for Gavin who will without doubt be a better fighter for this fight.

Afterwards at the press conference Frank Warren said he thought Gavin would be ready for a domestic title by the end of the year. Gavin echoed his promoters comments saying “After watching Lenny Daws (The British Champion at 140 who drew with Jason Cook) last night i’m ready”

In a British Heavyweight eliminator Derek “Del Boy” Chisora 12-0(7) made good on his promise to beat up Carl Baker 9-5(6) stopping his over matched opponent in two one sided rounds. The first was a feeling out process for Chisora before he went to work in the second and repeatedly hurt his man before Baker was stopped on his feet at 2.13 by referee Howard John Foster.The previous day at the weigh in when both men squared up to each other for the face off Chisora planted a kiss on Baker’s lips. Baker took exception and pushed Chisora to the ground. It looked at though there would be bad blood between them but it ended up being a one sided beat down from. Word is that Chisora will now face the winner of Sam Sexton & Danny Williams who have been ordered to fight each other by the the British Boxing Board of Control.

Swindon’s Jamie Cox 14-0(8) appeared to have a warm up fight on paper when he met Michael Frontin 2-7-1(0) but it turned out to be anything but that. Though he won the fight he was cut and bleeding at the final bell. Cox won 78-76 on referee Grant Wallis card.

It was a good night for the Walsh clan with Liam Walsh 7-0(6) scoring an impressive four round stoppage over the usually durable Sid Razak 4-41(1) at Super Featherweight.

Ryan Walsh moved to 9-0(3) when he beat Ian Bailey 5-4(0) by the single score of 59-55 on referee Jeff Hinds card at Super Bantamweight.

In Bantamweight action Michael Walsh continued his KO streak to take his record to 7-0(7) with a stoppage over Najah Ali 3-1(1).

Though big brother Kevin had done the business earlier Vinny Mitchell 11-1(2) wasn’t able to complete a good night for the family when he was surprisingly stopped in four by former opponent Jon Baguley 9-17-1(4).

George Michael Carmen successfully made his debut with a four round decision over Matt Seawright 3-25(0) in Welterweight action.

In attendance were Up and coming Light Heavyweight Tony Bellew who hopes to get a fight with Cleverly down the road. European Light Middleweight champion Ryan Rhodes. Along with the Light Middleweight Prizefighter Steve O’Meara who was part of James Degale’s camp. English Soccer player Joe Cole was also ringside.




In pursuit of an unbiased look at Kelly Pavlik


Wednesday brought some good news about Kelly Pavlik. All is ready but the contracts for Pavlik to defend his middleweight championship in April against Sergio Martinez. It isn’t the rematch we wanted for Martinez after his fantastic fight with Paul Williams two months ago, but it’s better than any match we’ve seen Pavlik make since Bernard Hopkins in 2008.

It’s also an occasion for examining personal bias, something I’ve wanted to do for a while. The last three years in the boxing gym – privy to arguments between numerous ethnicities and nationalities – have seen me play a role like neutral solon. When a Filipino and a Mexican argue about who won Pacquiao-Marquez II, I’m the tiebreaker, in other words, chastening both for ethnic bias.

But observing’s not as much fun as participating. That’s why I promised the next time a prizefighter who looked like me and came from my country was in a major fight, I’d do an examination of conscience – as the Xaverian brothers at St. John’s High School used to put it.

Kelly Pavlik meets those criteria. What follows, then, is a good-faith effort to better understand why we cheer the fighters we cheer, and where to draw a sensible line for cheering against others.

Folks who put on gloves and headgear tend to cheer fighters according to this hierarchy: 1. Race, 2. Fighting style, 3. Nationality, 4. Personality. This is supposed to be the post-racial world of 2010, I know, so if it makes things more palatable, go ahead and attribute our fixation on race to the forum in which it appears: We routinely get punched in the head.

As a white man in a country led by a black man, I’m now able to enjoy some newfound liberty. I think cheering for someone because he shares your race does not make you a racist. Cheering against someone because he does not share your race, though, may be something you shouldn’t do.

In an important essay about the need for affirmative action, written 23 years ago and subtitled “Reckoning with Unconscious Racism,” Professor Charles Lawrence made a thought-provoking case that anticipated a day when all racism was unconscious. Those of you who’ve suffered through some form of corporate diversity training are surely rolling your eyes right now, saying, “‘Unconscious racism’! Where does it end?”

Point taken. But consider: When the CEO of a Fortune 500 company acts ethically in the task of choosing his replacement, what qualities does he look for? After all, he’s done a fine job for the shareholders, and it’s his professional obligation to find someone who’ll do the same.

Acting in the best interests of his employer, then, he’ll select someone who reminds him of himself. That’s why there aren’t many latina women leading Fortune 500 companies. They’re not all less-qualified. Their predecessors aren’t racists. And yet the boardroom remains monochrome.

Two points, there, pertaining to prizefighting. First, we don’t need to be racists to cheer guys who remind us of ourselves. Second, we do need to be conscious of this predisposition before having our shoulders measured for that cloak of objectivity. That’s true for all sports fans, of course, but boxing, for all the criticism we accept, has always treated ethnic bias more openly than our peers; we expect more honesty from ourselves as fans.

Kelly Pavlik is white like me. He fights in the simple way – jab, hook, cross – that appeals to someone with my slower reflexes. He’s an American. He never belittles an opponent.

That role of the neutral solon I play in the gym? It partially reduces to my people not having a very impressive run in boxing these last 25 years.

That’s also the reason I feel an initial spark of interest about Pavlik that I don’t feel when I hear about Sergio Martinez or Paul Williams. After I think about Martinez or Williams matching up against Pavlik, I might well favor them or even cheer them against Pavlik. But that happens afterwards, and consciously.

What fearlessness I have in wandering about this minefield of bad faith and ruined reputation comes courtesy of Shannon Briggs. Before his 2006 fight with Sergei Liakhovich in Phoenix, Briggs called himself the “Great Black Hope” – in contrast to all the Eurasian heavyweight champions at the time. Intoxicated by a chance to represent his people, Briggs also made allegations of racism at the Liakhovich camp.

How much did this bother a Belarusian making a first title defense in his adopted hometown? In the post-fight press conference, after he’d lost his WBO belt in the fight’s final second, Liakhovich brought it up almost immediately. He turned to Briggs and said, in broken English, he wanted everyone to know he’d never said anything derogatory about black Americans.

Briggs said, “I know.” Then he explained it was just a ruse to sell the fight and get in Liakhovich’s head. Don King cackled away. Liakhovich looked more relieved than offended. And I promised myself I’d never be called a racist and take it seriously again.

Still, voluntary examinations of conscience can’t hurt, especially when I cheer against people.

I cheered against Fernando Vargas when he fought Oscar De La Hoya, but obviously not because he was latino. I’ll cheer against Floyd Mayweather when he fights Shane Mosley, but obviously not because he’s black. I’ll cheer against Wladimir Klitschko when he fights Eddie Chambers, though I can’t imagine it’s because he’s white.

I don’t like the personalities of Vargas or Mayweather, or the fighting style of Klitschko.

I’ll cheer for whomever I wish, then, for whatever reason – and that will probably mean Kelly Pavlik. But when I cheer against someone, I’ll do my best to ensure it’s not for ethnic reasons. I think that’s about as much as we can ask of ourselves.

Bart Barry can be reached via Twitter.com/bartbarry

Photo by Chris Farina/Top Rank




AUDIO: SHAWN PORTER ON THE SUNDAY SIZZLER


Catch the on demand replay of this weeks Sunday talk show the Sunday Sizzler with JSizzle and New York Dan. This week Shawn Porter and Marc Abrams LIVE on air!! Also a variety of other great boxing topics. Come see what the Sizzler is all about.




Donaire dismantles Vargas in three


Nonito Donaire retained the Interim WBA Super Flyweight championship with a third round stoppage over late replacement and undersized Manuel Vargas at The Hilton Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.

The size disparity was evident early as Donaire pushed Vargas back anytime he needed to with his punches. Vargas was very guarded early as the former minimumweight title challenger knew he was really up against the odds on this night. In round three, Donaire landed a heavy three punch combination that was capped off by a big uppercut that sent Vargas down flat on his back for referee Joe Cortez ten count at 1:33 of round five.


Donaire, 115 lbs of General Santos City, Philippines will now look for a Summer showdown rematch with Vic Darchinyan as his record now stands at 23-1 with fifteen knockouts. Vargas, 114 lbs of Laguas De Moreno, Mexico is now 26-5-1

Fernando Montiel remained his WBO Bantamweight title with a body shot knockout over Ciso Morales.

Montiel landed a left to the body and a grazing right that sent Morales down for referee Robert Byrd’s ten count and the bout was waved off at 2:06.

Montiel, 118 lbs of Los Mochis, Mexico is now 40-2-2 with thirty knockouts. Morales, 118 lbs of Talabon Bohol, Philippines is now 14-1.

Gerry Penalosa turned back the clock and fought through two nasty cuts but showed his experience but still came up on the short end of a close split decision loss to Eric Morel in a WBO Interim Bantamweight title bout.

Morel boxed very well over the over the first few rounds as he jabbed and moved in and out befuddling Penalosa. That didn’t last long as Penalosa was very patient and began to apply pressure in little bunches as he would land some pesky three and four punch combinations. In round six, two accidental headbutts opened up two separate cuts around the eyes of Penalosa but despite the blood, the fight was allowed to continue and that seemed to light a fire under Penalosa.

Penalosa looked to be getting the better of the action over the second half of the fight with his work rate whereas Morel would land some jabs and move but not many power shots behind them. Penalosa could very well have taken five of the last six rounds but it wasn’t to be as Morel got the split decision by scored of 116-112; 115-113 with Penalosa gaining a card 115-113.

Morel, 117 lbs of Madison, WI vis San Juan , PR now will gain a shot at Fernando Montiel with a record of 42-2. Penalosa, 118 lbs of San Caious, Philippines is now 54-8-2.

Bernabe Concepcion hung on for a unanimous decision over Mario Santiago in a Featherweight elimination bout.

Concepcion had a lot of success early as he landed winging rights hands and backed up Santiago with some flush shots. Santiago was jabbing but little else as he ate those shots. In round six, a booming right sent Santiago to the deck and and he was hurt. Concepcion tried to end things but Santiago held him off and landed a enough shots that Concepcion was backing off towards the end of the round.

Concepcion took the next couple rounds to build up his comfortable lead on the cards. Santiago got foing towards the end of the ninth and carried that momentum into the final round as he rocked Concepcion with a barrage of punches against the ropes and Concepcion looked to be in trouble. Concepcion tried to fire back in a wildly entertaining exchange that thrilled the crowd for the last thirty seconds of the fight.

It was too little, too late fro Santiago as Concepcion, 126 lbs of Catandunes, Philippines, won by scores of 98-91; 96-93; 97-92 to raise his record to 28-3-1and earn a shot at WBO champion Juan Manuel Lopez in June. Santiago, 126 lbs of Ponce, Puerto Rico is now 21-2-1.

Photos by Chris Farina/Top Rank

RTM! (read the manual).(OPERATIONS: MACHINERY MATTERS)

Food & Drug Packaging October 1, 2007 | Henry, John I never pay attention to instruction manuals and it drives my wife nuts. Using a manual to dope out how to install a dishwasher or set up a DVD player just feels like cheating to me. (I’m also not good at asking directions when lost. It’s probably a guy thing.) This may be OK for household appliances but not for packaging machinery. Unfortunately, too many equipment manufacturers build great machines and then fail to provide equally great operating, maintenance and set-up manuals. here how to install a dishwasher

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] There are several reasons for this:

* Many packaging machines are customized for each application. Sometimes this means modification of a standard machine. Other times it means a customized machine from the ground up. Customized machines require customized manuals which are time consuming to write. An inverse law of documentation is in play: The more customized the machine is, the harder the manual is to write.

* The manufacturer, and especially the writer, may not understand how the machine will be used in operation. More importantly, they may not match the level and style of the manual to the person who will be using it.

* Some machine builders use engineers to write the manual. Engineers are great at many things; technical writing is not always one of them. Other builders will use in-house or outside technical writers who may not completely understand the machine.

* It’s hard to write a manual before a machine is completed and tested. Once it is completed and tested, the customer usually wants it shipped immediately.

* Then there’s money. Customers often buy machines on the basis of initial price rather than overall cost. When they don’t, builders think they do. Good manuals cost and builders are reluctant to charge for them. web site how to install a dishwasher

Bad manuals cost even more. These costs accrue over the life of the machine in poor set-ups, improper operation and inadequate maintenance. Unfortunately, the machine cost is visible, the lifetime costs are hidden.

All of these problems are compounded in imported machinery by translations. It’s easy, but wrong, to blame machine builders for these problems. Customers share a lot of the blame by not insisting on good manuals (and being willing to pay for them!). Builders must also do their part by showing the customer the value of a good manual.

The Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute (www.pmmi.org) publishes an excellent Technical Documentation & Style Guide. Buyers should insist that machine builders use this as a guideline for their manuals.

A final thought: Machine manuals need to be profusely illustrated with pictures, diagrams, drawings and charts. One picture is worth a thousand words.

A good manual, by itself, is not enough. People need to use it. But that’s another column.

John Henry, Certified Packaging Professional (CPP), is renowned as the Changeover Wizard. His company, Changeover.com, specializes in improving line efficiencies for packagers by reducing downtime. Contact John at johnhenry@changeover.com or 787-550-9650.

Henry, John




Kim stops Harris in Five!!!!

Ji Hoon Kim scored a fifth round stoppage over Tyrone Harris in a scheduled ten round Lightweight bout at The Pechanga Hotel and Resort in Temecula, CA.

Harris came out early and controlled the action over the firt stwo rounds as he used his technical ability and landed some nice right hooks from his southpaw stance. The bout slowly started to change in Kim’s favor as he applied the pressure and started to back Harris up.

In round four a little cut opened up over the right eye of Harris. Kim started the fifth out like gangbusters as he applied serious pressure and scored a knockdown from a barrage of punches to the body. Kim jumped on Harris and landed several unanswered punches that led referee Wayne Hedgepath to stop the bout at 1:52 of round five.

Kim, 133 1/2 lbs of Goyang City, South Korea is now 20-5 with seventeen knockouts. Harris, 132 1/2 lbs of Lansing, MI is now 24-6.

Ruslan Provodnikov scored an eighth round stoppage over former IBF Lightweight champion Javier Jauregi in round eight of a scheduled ten round Jr. Welterweight bout.

Provodnikov dominated the action as he landed vicious shots to the head and body of Jauregui with Juaregui throwing and landing very little throughout the affair.

In round eight, Provodnikov landed some solid lefts and then a perfect right that set up a flurry on the ropes until referee Jack Reiss stopped the bout at 2:10 of round eight.

Provodnikov, 141 1/2 lbs of Brazuka, Russia now is 15-0 with ten knockouts. Juaregui, 142 lbs of Guadalajara, Mexico is now 53-17-2

Maxim Vlasov scored a first round stoppage over Julius Fogle in a scheduled six round Super Middleweight bout.

Vlasov was more aggressive until he landed a right hand that sent Fogle to his knees. Referee Wayne Hedgepath counted to ten just as Fogle got to his feet and the fight was over at 2:42 of round.

Vlasov, 166 1/2 lbs of Russia is now 16-0 with seven knockouts. Fogle of Cary, NC is now 15-2.

Garrett Simon made quick work over an overmatch and rotund Francisco Mireles in a scheduled four round Heavyweight bout.

Simom dropped Mireles with the first punch of the fight and then got the victory after a barrage on the ropes for which referee Jack Reiss mercifully stopped the bout.

Simon, 202 lbs is now 2-0 with two knockouts. Mireles, 262 lbs of Agua Prieto, Mexico is now 8-5




KING OF THE STREETS TO BE NAMED MARCH 5TH AT THE HARD ROCK RUMBLE 2!!!!

YouTube backyard brawler and MMA prospect, Killa Gorilla Ced James will be facing Miami-Dade county barenuckle legend, Dada 5000. This contest will not only be a super heavyweight matchup it will also settle the age old question “Who runs these streets?”

Dada known mostly for his pontification on youtube will face the 265lb Killa Gorilla James Friday March 5th in Hollywood Florida for 3 rounds of Street Brawling Bliss. These potential mixed martial artist will be following in the auspicious footsteps of fellow Street Prince Kimbo Slice. There be a new king of the streets crowned, the question is will he be Broward or Dade my bets on the guy who lands the first punch. Don’t blink this one will be over in a minute.

For tickets contact TicketMaster or Jimi Chaikong for discounted tickets at 954 708 6853




Q&A Victor “Mermelada” Cayo


It seems likely that Victor “Mermelada” Cayo 25-0(16) will get his big chance to break into the upper echelons of the talent laden Light Welterweight division when he takes on Marcos “El Chino” Maidana 27-1(26) for Maidana’s Interim WBA Light Welterweight crown on 27 March live on HBO. Cayo 25, who hails from Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic is ranked highly by the WBA #2 & IBF#10. Having maintained a busy 2009 schedule going 5-0(2) with one of those wins being against former World champion Julio Diaz. He took time out of a busy training camp in Oxnard, Ca. to share his thoughts on various things including his upcoming fight.

Hello Victor, welcome to 15rounds.com

Anson Wainwright – You have your biggest fight of your career on 27 March when you travel to America to face Marcos Maidana. What do you know about Maidana and what do you expect him to bring to the fight?

Victor Cayo – Maidana, is a tough fighter with a great record, I expect him to come forward and try to knock me out. My plan is to use his aggression against him and make him pay for his mistakes.

Anson Wainwright – He’s known as a big puncher do you think you’ll have to be cagey for a few rounds and box him or are you looking to try to get on the front foot and back him up?

Victor Cayo – It’s hard to say, definitely keep my distance and use my speed to beat him. My job is to listen to my coaches and execute our plan of attack.

Anson Wainwright – Do you see this as a coming out party for you?

Victor Cayo – Absolutely, this is the most important fight of my life. There is lot at stake for both of us. God willing on March 27th the whole world will know who Victor Cayo is.

It has been rumoured that both Maidana and you had to sign an agreement in the contract with HBO that the winner wouldn’t enforce a title fight with Amir Khan for at least a year. Is this true and can you tell us about this?

Victor Cayo – I’m not sure regarding that question. Sampson & my manager handle all my business in the U.S.

Sampson Lewkowicz – This is a very tough fight and we’re not looking past it, we’re just focused on this fight.

Anson Wainwright – Can you tell us about your team. Who is your manager, trainer & promoter and also where do you regularly train for fights?

Victor Cayo – I have a great team: My manager is Caesar Mercedes Maguita from DR, my trainer is Gabriel Sarmiento, & I am promoted by Warrior Boxing. I train at World Crown Sports training facility located in Oxnard, CA. I enjoy coming to Oxnard, CA to prepare for my fights it has a great training environment and keeps me 100% focused in my boxing.

Anson Wainwright – Can you tell us about your early years growing up in The Dominican Republic and how it took you into Boxing?

Victor Cayo – I started boxing at the age of 11; I would always get into street fights so I needed to learn how to protect myself. One day I was walking by this boxing gym in my neighbourhood asked the coach to teach me how to box and defend myself. I have been doing this ever since and won’t stop till I become a World Champion.

Anson Wainwright – Did you have much of an amateur career back in your homeland? If so what titles did you win, what was your record and did you face any well know guys who are now pro’s?

Victor Cayo – I had easily over 300 amateur fights; I won numerous tournaments growing up. I participated in the Military Games in DR which are very competitive, these games show who is the best in DR. I won a Silver Medal in the Cupa Independencia De Boxeo; we would fight against Canada, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Haiti, Ecuador, & Italy. I did fight against and beat Felix Diaz who was the 2008 Gold medallist in Beijing.

Anson Wainwright – What do you enjoy doing when you’re not fighting?

Victor Cayo – I love staying active when I am not boxing, I enjoy playing basketball, softball, & playing pool. I also enjoy hanging out with my friends and family get-togethers.

Anson Wainwright – Your nickname is “Mermelada” how did you get that nickname?

Victor Cayo – Well for the people that don’t speak Spanish “Mermelada” means Marmalade (Fruit Jam). When I turned pro, I signed with my boxing manager Caesar Mercedes during the signing we were having lunch together I asked him to pass me the marmalade to put on my toast, then he said that’s it your ring name is going to be “Mermelada” with your slick boxing style and good looks that fits you perfectly.

Anson Wainwright – Who would you say is the toughest opponent you have faced so far?

Victor Cayo – Noe Bolanos. He was a tough SOB, there are certain fighters in the world that won’t go down, he’s one of them.

Anson Wainwright – What is your first boxing memory and who was your hero growing up?

Victor Cayo – My first boxing memory was at age 11 walking into that boxing gym amazed by the sparring sessions and training regimen, I was very impressed. I don’t have a boxing hero but one of my favourite fighters is Bernard Hopkins.

Anson Wainwright – Do you have a message for the Boxing world ahead of your fight with Maidana?

Victor Cayo – First things first, I want to thank 15rounds.com for your time and support I don’t get much exposure in the U.S. but on March 27, 2010 the whole world is going to know who Victor “Mermelada” Cayo is. I want to thank all the boxing fans around the world that support boxing and especially to my all friends and family back home. I want to dedicate this fight to my country of Dominican Republic and hope to inspire the young fighters like I was inspired at age 11.

Thanks for your time “Mermelada”

Anson Wainwright

15rounds.com




More anguish for Carbajal as his inmate brother threatens to evict their mom

Michael Carbajal, who was always willing to fight anybody for as long as it took, is now in a fight he could never have imagined, few would ever believe and yet continues like a haunting nightmare.

It has been nearly two years since his brother, Danny, was sentenced to 54 months in prison for fraud and forgery after working as the trainer, manager and financial advisor for Michael, whose punches and blood earned more than $7 million in a Hall of Fame career as unique as any in a cruel business as old as Cain and Abel.

There was no healing on Feb. 21, 2008 when Danny was marched out of Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix and transported to the Arizona State Prison in Florence. There is no statute of limitations on betrayal. But at least it seemed as if it was over in a way that would allow Michael Carbajal to move on and repair a fractured life. It isn’t.

Michael now is fighting to save his mother, Mary, from an attempt by Danny to have her evicted from her Phoenix home, where she has lived for the last 15 years. Michael’s attorney, Ty Taber, said the home was purchased with money from the junior-flyweight’s purse in a 1990 victory for his first major championship, the International Boxing Federation’s title, which he took from Thailand’s Muangchai Kittikasem at old Veterans Memorial Coliseum in a Phoenix bout televised nationally by ABC.

“It’s unbelievable to me,’’ said Taber, a Phoenix attorney who was in the crowd for Carbajal’s dramatic seventh-round stoppage of Kittikasem two decades ago in a bout that was the first real sign of unprecedented stardom for one of boxing’s little guys. “Poor Michael. I mean, Danny thinks he has a big financial empire that he is manipulating from prison, where he sits, rotting away.

“I can’t believe he is doing this to his own mother.’’

In a letter dated Feb. 4, 2010 and addressed to Mary Carbajal, Danny’s attorney, Jonathan Dessaules, threatens eviction if she has not moved out by March 8. Other than to say that the letter spoke for itself, Dessaules, of Phoenix, had no comment.

“This is the lowest you can go,’’ said Michael, who called his oldest brother “a disgrace” after Phoenix reporter Paul Rubin broke the news in a chilling story, headlined Brother’s Keeper, for the Nov. 1, 2007 edition of the New Times.

Michael’s emotions ranged from angry to tearful as he sat on the steps in front of his Ninth Street Gym, once a church. Where the congregation once sat, there’s a ring. On a stage, there are heavy bags where the preacher once stood at the bully pulpit. Today, the only chorus is in the rhythms of a speed bag. But for Michael, it’s a place of faith, maybe more now than ever.

With help from friend and companion Laura Hall, Michael’s commitment to his mom, to what he knows and who he knows has been deepened by a personal trial, a breach of trust, brought on by a brother he never thought he would have to question.

“Yeah, he fooled you,’’ Michael said. “But he fooled me more than anybody.’’

The more that Michael looks around and reflects on his career, he sees reasons to believe that the trust once thought to be fundamental between brothers was always a fraud. For years, Danny said there was no legal contract between the two. There was no need, the brothers always said.
“We were family,’’ Michael said. “Danny always said it and I trusted that.’’

But Michael said he found an old document at the Court of Records a few days ago after he got news of the letter to his mom, now 78. It’s a managerial contract, said Michael, who said it was drawn up in October, 1988, or within weeks of his silver medal at the Seoul Olympics. He said it includes his signature.

“But I never signed my name to a contract with Danny,’’ Michael said. “I never saw that contract.’’

Trust in his brother was there, even during the first few years after Michael’s career ended in 1999. At his induction to the Boxing Hall of Fame at Canastota, N.Y., in June, 2005, Michael tearfully called Danny the world’s greatest trainer. By then, however, questions were beginning to emerge in the wake of the unsolved murder of Danny’s estranged wife Sally. Sally, who was in the crowd with Danny at the Seoul Olympics and at ringside for Michael’s pro career, was killed along with companion Gerry Best five years ago.

Danny was sentenced after pleading guilty to three felonies based on the theft — hundreds of thousand dollars was the reported estimate – from accounts and property held by Sally. Danny’s daughters, Josephine and Celia pleaded guilty to conspiring with their dad and against Sally, their mom. Neither was sentenced to jail.

In the threat to evict Mary Carbajal, now 78, from the home purchased for her after husband Manuel died in 1993, Michael is convinced he sees another damning stitch in a scheme, which was a word used by Judge Andrew Klein when he sentenced Danny.

“Greed and a pattern of wrongdoing spread out over three years,’’ Klein said.

In the Feb. 5 letter, it says that Mary Carbajal “admitted in sworn testimony” that Danny is the home’s owner of record. The letter also says: “You also do not pay any rent for your occupancy. Our client, therefore, has decided to terminate the occupancy…’’

In 2007, Michael filed legal documents, saying that he is the lawful owner of the home purchased for his mom, as well as other property in Phoenix. Mary Carbajal’s testimony is based on a lawsuit that she and Michael filed in another case involving life insurance. Danny is alleged to have bought policies, transferred them into his own name and then cashed them out.

“Your own mom, man,’’ Michael said. “How do you do something like this to a mom?’’

Michael looked off in the distance and then across Fillmore Street as if he was searching for an explanation. He saw an empty lot. A few weeds and no words.

The, a couple of grade-school girls, one on a bicycle, stopped in front of the gym. They looked at Michael smiled, looked up at the entrance and then back at Michael.

“Is it haunted in there?’’ one of the girls asked. “We hear there might be ghosts in there. Tell us, but don’t scare us.’’

Nah, he said.

“There are only good ghosts in there and they hang out in the basement,’’ said Michael, who then turned around and went inside, smiling and perhaps knowing that ghosts couldn’t haunt him the way a brother has.

NOTES, QUOTES
· One of the best in today’s generation of little guys, super-flyweight champ Nonito Donaire, faces a new opponent Saturday night at the Las Vegas Hilton in the featured bout on pay-per-view television. The original opponent had to suddenly withdraw a couple of days ago because of an eye problem. Instead of Gerson Guerrero, Donaire (22-1, 14 KOs) faces the unknown in Manuel Vargas (26-4-1, 11 KOs). Sometimes, the unknown is more dangerous than anything. “But it forces to you think, be spontaneous,’’ Donaire said Thursday in a conference call. “I’ll have to be aware and ready to make quick adjustments.’’

· Promoter Bob Arum mentioned that the Las Vegas Hilton was the site of Leon Spinks’ upset of Muhammad Ali in 1978. More fitting perhaps, it also was the Vegas hotel for Top Rank’s promotion of Carbajal’s signature fight, a seventh-round stoppage of Humberto Gonzalez in the first bout of their trilogy. Donaire is the star on a card featuring Filipino and Latin fighters in the lighter weight classes.

· More Donaire: He is a target for some trash talk from Vic Darchinyan, who is anxious for a rematch in an attempt to avenge his loss by knockout in 2007 to the likeable Filipino-American. “He’s like a little chihuahua, just barking and barking and barking,’’ said Donaire, who added that he soon will move up in weight to bantam, then feather. “For me, it is now or never for super-flyweight.’’




The Ultimate Guide to Lightning Roulette Casino: A Fusion of Thrills and Strategy

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At its core, How to Play Lightning Roulette follows the basic rules of European roulette but adds an electrifying twist with the Lightning Numbers feature. Each game round sees between one to five numbers struck by lightning, assigning them multiplied payouts of up to 500x. This feature not only intensifies the excitement of each spin but also increases the potential rewards, making every round unpredictable and thrilling. The game’s integration of advanced RNG technology with live dealer interaction creates a dynamic and engaging environment that captivates players.

Strategies for Lightning Roulette: Maximizing Your Winning Potential

While Lightning Roulette relies heavily on luck, adopting certain strategies can enhance your playing experience and potential for success. Diversifying your bets, managing your bankroll wisely, and understanding the odds are key components of a strategic approach to this game. Players should focus on covering more numbers to increase their chances of hitting a Lightning Number, while also being mindful of their budget to sustain longer gameplay sessions.

Lightning Roulette and Boxing: An Unexpected Connection

The synergy between Lightning Roulette and the electrifying world of boxing may not be immediately apparent, yet both realms share a common thread of excitement and unpredictability. Just as boxers strategically navigate their matches, anticipating and reacting to their opponents’ moves, Lightning Roulette players must employ strategy and quick decision-making with each spin of the wheel. The game’s suspenseful nature and potential for sudden victories mirror the intense, fast-paced action found in the boxing ring, providing a unique crossover of thrill and strategy for fans of both disciplines.

Why Lightning Roulette Casino Stands Out in the Online Gambling Arena

Lightning Roulette has set a new standard in the online gambling industry, offering a game that is not only visually stunning and engaging but also provides the potential for significant winnings through its innovative features. The combination of live dealer interaction, high-quality streaming, and the unique Lightning Numbers feature ensures an unparalleled gaming experience that keeps players returning. Its success reflects Evolution Gaming’s commitment to innovation, pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in online casino entertainment.

Conclusion: Lightning Roulette Casino – A Must-Try Experience for Casino Enthusiasts

In conclusion, Lightning Roulette Casino offers an electrifying twist to the classic game of roulette, making it a must-try for anyone looking to elevate their online gambling experience. Whether you’re drawn to the thrill of the lightning strikes or the strategic depth of the game, Lightning Roulette promises an unforgettable adventure that combines the best of traditional casino gameplay with modern technological advancements. So, step into the world of Lightning Roulette and let the excitement begin.