09 Boxing Thread:: 12/12 Diaz.vs.Malignaggi HBO/Bradley.vs.Peterson Showtime

He's only fought Wright and Kolle at middleweight, so yea, I agree that 168 might be pushing it which is why the Pavlik fight would have been a great test.
 
Wish they could just give that date to Shane/Berto. (If they cant find a replacement for Pavlik).

Prolly too late to book a venue and do the proper promotion tho.
 
Originally Posted by GUNNA GET IT

It cant be no worse than seein JT laid out doin the Young Jocc Dance... *shrugs*

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[table][tr][td] [table][tr][td]Sergio Martinez Ready To Step in For Kelly Pavlik
Posted by: Rick Reeno on 10-21-2009.

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>>>Click Here For Tons of More Breaking Boxing News, Articles and Insider Information<<<

By Rick Reeno

BoxingScene.com was informed by promoter Lou DiBella that WBC junior middleweight champion Sergio Martinez is ready, willing and able to step in for the injured Kelly Pavlik and take on Paul Williams on December 5. Pavlik's trainer, Jack Loew, advised several news outlets in Youngstown that his fighter was still suffered from a staph infection in his left hand. The injury had previously postponed the fight from the original October date. Apparently the injury is so bad that Pavlik is not even capable of closing his hand to make a fist.

While Pavlik's team is looking to fight Williams on January 23, I have a feeling that Williams' promoter Dan Goossen will not agree to yet another postponement. When BoxingScene contacted Goossen, he was caught off guard by the news of Pavlik's withdrawal and wanted to speak with Top Rank and Team Williams before making any comments on the record.

Martinez is scheduled to return on December 12 in a non-title ten round untelevised bout on the Malignaggi-Diaz undercard. Martinez is already in camp and training to fight a southpaw.

If Williams decides to go with Martinez, the The issue of weight may come up. Williams has been training for a fight at 160, while Martinez has been training for a junior middleweight contest. DiBella is open to making the fight at 160 - for the right money.

"My guy has to be treated like a champion and not some second-class opponent. We are looking to make a defense of the green belt at 154. I'm willing to entertain any conversation about the fight taking place at middleweight but for every pound they want above 154, there better be a lot of money associated with it," DiBella said.

Nothing has been officially sent from Top Rank with respect to a postponement but if Pavlik is unable to close his hand [according to Loew], I don't see how he could possibly be physically ready for one of the most important, and toughest, fights of his career by a December 5 date if he's fighting off a serious staph infection and training at the same time.
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getting my money back as we speak.

update: wont refund it until they receive notice. Im like but you guys took it down from the site. Hes like yea its temporarily unavailable but we haventreceived any information regarding refunds
 
Originally Posted by GUNNA GET IT

I honestly dont see Andre Berto winning another fight

Come on, he's still got all the talent in the world. He just needs to someone to slap the hell out of him and tell him to focus on boxing.
Originally Posted by EAGLE 0N

Wish they could just give that date to Shane/Berto. (If they cant find a replacement for Pavlik).

Prolly too late to book a venue and do the proper promotion tho.

Way too late by now, the only way Shane fights on that day is if he gets matched with Clottey. And they're not going to do that to Berto.

Originally Posted by Scott Frost

Originally Posted by GUNNA GET IT

It cant be no worse than seein JT laid out doin the Young Jocc Dance... *shrugs*

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Originally Posted by Jagshemash

Maybe they can get a replacement for Pavlik like Martinez or Dzinziruk but it's probably too short of notice. Sucks for Clottey and Quintana too if the card is completely called off.

If Dzinziruk doesn't get the fight, I think he's leaving Universum and coming to the US to find promotion. He's was the first one who was supposedto fight PW after the Winky fight and his promoter over priced him.

I think Sergio would be fine with a fight at 160, it'll probably be his biggest payday.

But if he doesn't fight PW at a later date, Kelly is done at 160. All the money fights for him are at 168. Who's going to pay to watch him fight thelikes of Felix Sturm?
 
http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content6005.html
COTTO BREAKS SILENCE ON DISMISSAL OF SPARRING PARTNER

"He did not perform the work the way we work in this group. Here, we work seriously. No one comes to clown around or be mocked in the ring. The sparring partners are here to help us and make us work, not to have a good time, dropping their hands and showing off their abilities," stated WBO welterweight champion Miguel Cotto as he explained his decision to dismiss former sparring partner Frankie "El Gato" Figueroa. Figueroa, who previously helped Cotto train for his bout with Zab Judah, was brought in again to help him prepare for his November 14th clash with Manny Pacquiao. After only one week and roughly four sparring sessions, Figueroa was asked to leave Cotto's training camp without given any reason.

read more

http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content6005.html



http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content6008.html
GATO SETS THE RECORD STRAIGHT ABOUT COTTO AND HIS DISMISSAL FROM CAMP

There's always two sides to a story. After learning of Miguel Cotto's recent statements regarding his dismissal from training camp, jr. welterweight contender Frankie "Gato" Figueroa wanted to set the record straight about events leading up to his removal. Having served as Cotto's sparring partner in the past, Figueroa was brought in again as training camp began for the mega-fight with Manny Pacquiao. After only one week and a handful of sparring sessions, he was promptly told to leave without ever being given a reason why. Earlier today, however, Cotto commented on Figueroa's removal, saying "he did not perform the work" and "sparring partners are here to help us and make us work, not to have a good time, dropping their hands and showing off their abilities." Up until now, Figueroa chosen to stay silent about what went on in camp, but with Cotto's recent accusations, however, Figueroa felt compelled to release the following statement.

read more

http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content6008.html

http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content6008.html
 
Random, but from yesterday's NY Daily News:


Executioner's song

Don't count on Bernard Hopkins showing up at a UFC event anytime soon. The Philadelphian boxinggreat doesn't think too highly of mixed martial arts' fighters … especially their garb.

"Everybody is different but I don't want to watch two grown men wrestling with panties on," Hopkins recently told BoxingScene.com.
"I'm from the hood, we don't play that."

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[h2]John in hospital with dengue fever[/h2]

Comment Email Print By Dan Rafael
ESPN.com
Archive

Featherweight titlist Chris John is in the hospital in his native Indonesia battling a case of dengue fever, adviser Sampson Lewkowicz told ESPN.com on Saturday.

"It is not life or training threatening and [John] will return to training shortly," Lewkowicz said.

Dengue fever is a virus-based disease typically spread by mosquitoes.

Lewkowicz said John has been hospitalized for three days. He said John, 30, is planning to attend to the WBA's annual convention, which begins Nov. 16 in Colombia. After that, John is "looking forward to making his 13th title defense sometime around May 2010," Lewkowicz said.

John (43-0-02, 22 KOs) easily outpointed Rocky Juarez in his last fight on Sept. 19 in Las Vegas on the Floyd Mayweather-Juan Manuel Marquez undercard. It was a rematch of their disputed Feb. 28 draw in Juarez's hometown of Houston.

John, who has held a world title since 2003, suffered a fainting spell in June because of a blood disorder. He was forced to withdraw from the rematch with Juarez.
[h2]Pavlik says nearly dies from medication[/h2]

Comment Email Print Associated Press


NEW YORK -- Kelly Pavlik's life was in peril.

An allergic reaction to medication had caused the middleweight champion's temperature to soar past 104 degrees, and his heart rate to 150 beats a minute. When he was finally admitted to the hospital, the sweat was pouring off his body, which had turned shades of red and purple.

An infectious diseases specialist at the Cleveland Clinic told his father, Mike Pavlik, that the 27-year-old fighter had better keep fighting. The outlook was grim.

"I'm not a medical man," Mike Pavlik said, "but he was really close to the edge that day."

[+] Enlarge
Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images"I don't remember that day, that's how bad it was," Kelly Pavlik said of his allergic reaction. "They told me it was pretty serious. It was the worst form of reaction you could have."

What began as a small staph infection on the knuckle of his left hand, where Pavlik had received a cortisone injection, had somehow spiraled to this: A strapping young man who makes his living relentlessly pushing his body to the extreme was bedridden, his wife Samantha keeping vigil over him while doctors figured out what went wrong.

Pavlik says he doesn't remember everything that happened last month, only bits and pieces.

He recalls a doctor telling him that he wasn't going home right away, and that every step he took toward the emergency ward was more difficult than the last. He remembers his skin crawling, his heart feeling like it would jump right out of his chest.

He doesn't remember the steroids doctors gave him to make the reaction subside.

"I don't remember that day, that's how bad it was," Pavlik told The Associated Press. "They told me it was pretty serious. It was the worst form of reaction you could have."

It was also the lowest point in a summer of misfortune.

The staph infection appeared after Pavlik defeated Marco Antonio Rubio, a tough but woefully overmatched opponent, before an admiring crowd in Pavlik's hometown of Youngstown, Ohio.

He was playing basketball on a warm March day when the knuckle split open. After a few minutes, Pavlik looked down to see a colorless ooze where there should have been blood, and a trip to the doctor confirmed the bacteria.

A month went by and antibiotics weren't doing their job, so Pavlik had surgery in Youngstown to clean out the infection. When the stitches were removed, the hole was still there. Further tests revealed MRSA, a sometimes fatal strain of staph that resists broad-spectrum antibiotics.

"I was ready to say right there, chop the hand off," Pavlik said.

In the meantime, months of tough negotiations had resulted in an agreement between Pavlik and feared puncher Paul Williams. They would meet in early October in Atlantic City, with Pavlik guaranteed millions and both getting the HBO exposure every fighter covets.

The staph infection still wasn't getting better, though, and the fight was pushed back to Dec. 5. Williams and his promoter, Dan Goossen, were willing to work with Pavlik after seeing optimistic test results from the clinic. Doctors believed the infection would clear up and Pavlik could begin punching in mid-October, giving him time to prepare for the fight.

Then came the allergic reaction and trip to the hospital, just before Pavlik was supposed to leave for New Jersey and a news conference to officially announce the fight.

"We learned our lesson once already when he went into a fight not feeling well," Mike Pavlik said, referring to his son's loss to Bernard Hopkins, when he became ill a couple days before the bout. "And we vowed we wouldn't do it again."

Still, Pavlik said he felt obligated to go through with the Williams fight. People were counting on him, and he was told by doctors that he'd be fine, even if he wasn't so sure.

"Since I started training, it was in my mind the whole time," Pavlik said. "It feels stiff, I ain't able to hit anything. I think my trainer was waiting for the moment when it just closes, but there was just no way to do it."

The infection had cleared up, but the surgeries were keeping Pavlik from closing his left hand. On Wednesday, trainer Jack Loew finally called off the fight.

Losing out on a big payday, the hospital trips, the allergic reaction -- all of it was frustrating. What bothers Pavlik the most, though, is that some fans don't believe any of it.

There are rumors he doesn't want to fight Williams, or fight at all. That he's holding out for more money, or to take Jermain Taylor's place in the Super Six tournament. Those who once called him a working-class hope have turned their backs, which happens quickly and easily when you carry a small town on your broad shoulders.

"There's nothing you can do about it," Pavlik said. "I'll sleep, eat well at night. I know the truth. But my dad, the guys in camp who now what's going on, it's hard on them."

Williams will face another opponent on Dec. 5, and Pavlik hopes he'll be able to fight him early next year -- "I'll be nervous on the fifth," he said.

Until then, the middleweight champion is left to ponder his summer of misfortune.

"I want to fight, and people question because I've been inactive, but there's goals I want to accomplish," he said. "It does feel like wasted time, where I could be out accomplishing a lot. And one big fight could sum up that big accomplishment."
[h1]Cruiserweight Adamek aspires to conquer the heavyweights[/h1]

By Dan Rafael
ESPN.com
(Archive)

Updated: October 24, 2009, 5:37 PM ET

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    Al Bello/Getty Images
    Tomasz Adamek, left, will face the biggest test of his career in Andrew Golota.
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    LIU JIN/AFP/Getty Images
    When the going gets tough, Andrew Golota usually finds a way to excuse himself from a fight.
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    Tom Casino/Showtime
    A win over Andrew Golota will make Tomasz Adamek one of Poland's brightest stars.

« Tough task | Brittle man | Polish pride »
[h3]Adamek testing the heavyweight waters[/h3]
Cruiserweight champion Tomasz Adamek couldn't get Bernard Hopkins into the ring, so he's taking the leap that many cruiserweights have taken.

He's going to test the waters at heavyweight by facing Polish countryman Andrew Golota on Saturday in a 15,000-seat arena in Lodz, Poland, about 85 miles from Warsaw.

Although the 41-year-old Golota has long worn out his welcome in most places, in their country the bout is a big deal, referred to as the "Polish Fight of the Century." That's even though Golota has always disappointed in his biggest fights, going 0-3-1 in heavyweight title shots, quitting against Mike Tyson and twice getting disqualified against Riddick Bowe.

[h4]How big is Adamek-Golota in Poland?[/h4]
Some stats on Saturday's fight dubbed the "Polish Fight of the Century":
  • • It will be the biggest audience ever (15,000-plus) to watch an event in Poland's biggest arena, Arena Lodz in Lodz.
  • • Golota's 1998 fight with Tim Witherspoon generated Poland's largest TV audience ever, which exceeded a 2005 visit by Pop John Paul II. Polsat expects this fight to break the record.
  • • Polsat predicted that 1 in every 4 Poles will watch the fight with viewership expected to exceed 10 million in a nation with a population of approximately 40 million.
  • • The card will be a five-hour live televised program, which will begin on cable and switch to terrestrial TV on Polsat, Poland's biggest network. The only other time that has been done was when Poland played in the World Cup.
  • • Polsat will use 23 HD cameras to cover the fight.

"Golota and Adamek are fighting for something bigger than a world championship or money. They're fighting for country," said Don King, who promotes Golota and used to promote Adamek. "In Poland, this fight will compare to our Super Bowl or the World Cup in terms of demand and attention."

Although Adamek is moving up in weight for the fight, he isn't necessarily leaving the cruiserweight division for good. He did vacate his alphabet title this week when, according Main Events promoter Kathy Duva, the IBF refused to grant him an exception in order to face Golota. However, Adamek still holds the Ring magazine title, which represents his status as the lineal champion, and he has not closed the door on returning to the 200-pound division after the Golota fight, win or lose.

"Nobody can take away my Ring belt without beating me in the ring and that will not happen," Adamek said. "I'm open to [fighting the best] cruiserweights in the world if this is what television [networks] and the fans want me to do. Can you be the best cruiserweight in the world and try to be best heavyweight? Why not?"

Said Duva: "He holds something very valuable and he is not going to give it away. He doesn't have to make any decisions right now. Tomasz is very comfortable at both weights. It's a win-win situation. We want to keep all our options open."

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Al Bello/Getty Images

Tomasz Adamek had to part ways with a belt in order to fight Andrew Golota at heavyweight.

Adamek's lone defeat came via decision when he lost his light heavyweight belt to Chad Dawson in 2007. Since then, Adamek has campaigned as a cruiserweight, winning seven fights in a row. He also claimed the world title with a stirring point victory against Steve Cunningham in a 2008 fight of the year candidate and has defended the title twice.

Cunningham is Adamek's mandatory challenger, and Duva and Adamek have expressed interest in the rematch. However, fights with Hopkins or Golota were far more lucrative. When the bout with Hopkins couldn't be finalized, they opted for Golota. Cunningham, meanwhile, has been ordered to face Matt Godfrey for the vacant alphabet belt.

Adamek said he has no concerns with putting on the additional weight to fight Golota.

"Right now I weigh 215," said Adamek, 32, who makes his home in New Jersey now. "That is a very comfortable weight for me, very natural. I feel very good, in great shape. I can fight either cruiserweight or heavyweight. My natural weight is 215, so if more heavyweight fights can be made that would be good. We do not see any good cruiserweight proposals being made.

"Maybe next year at the same time I can have a fight with the Klitschkos. It is my dream to be a champion in this category. In the heavyweight division whoever is smarter and faster can win. I am not afraid of anybody. I always believed that [the] world belongs to those not afraid of taking a risk. I'm ready to take my chances, I'm prepared mentally and physically to be a great heavyweight."

Golota, who weighed in Friday at a career heavy 256 pounds to Adamek's 214.2 pounds, said Adamek is in for a rude awakening.

"If somebody asks to me to dance, I never say no, and this was Adamek's idea -- not mine," Golota said. "So I said, 'Why not?' He has never fought anybody from the heavyweight division, and has no idea how hard we can hit."

Sam Colonna, Golota's trainer, has worked fights as an assistant in Adamek's corner, and knows how tough he is.

"[Golota] has to be busy because Adamek is one of the toughest fighters I ever saw in my life," Colonna said. "I will never forget the smell of blood when Adamek was fighting Paul Briggs the first time [to win a vacant light heavyweight title in 2005]. He fought 12 rounds with the broken nose, an injury he sustained two weeks before fight. We went through four towels just to get the blood from his face between the rounds. But Andrew can be the same way. He fought Mike Mollo with one eye, another one completely closed and begging doctors to not stop the fight."

Adamek (38-1, 26 KOs) and Golota (41-7-1, 33 KOs), idle since retiring after the first round with a left biceps injury against Ray Austin in November 2008, are friendly and have boxed on the same card together before. But this is business.

"Golota is my friend, but you know Andrew is a little bit older. I am younger," Adamek said. "Maybe Andrew has one or two fights more and that's it. Maybe it's my turn next, but after me there will be someone younger. That's the way it goes. "
[h3]Martinez for Williams?[/h3]
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FightWireImages.com

Able-bodied: Sergio Martinez is willing and more than ready to fight Paul Williams.

Although the Dec. 5 Kelly Pavlik-Paul Williams middleweight championship fight is down the tubes, called off Wednesday because of Pavlik's ongoing left hand problem, Williams will still fight on that date and headline an HBO "World Championship Boxing" card, according to HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg.

However, promoter Dan Goossen must find a new opponent for Williams, as well as a new venue since Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, N.J., is not interested; Pavlik was the big draw there. The most likely opponent is junior middleweight titlist Sergio Martinez, who was being lined up to fight in an untelevised HBO undercard fight on either Dec. 5 or 12 as an insurance policy in case Pavlik's hand injury forced him out of the fight, which it did.

"We're ready, willing and able to fight Williams and there is nobody in the world who will give him a more difficult fight at 154 pounds than Sergio," Lou DiBella, Martinez's promoter, said. "These are the two best lefties in the division, the two best guys in the division. I don't think it's an easy fight for Williams or for Sergio. I've had preliminary discussions with Goossen. I knew the Williams people and HBO wanted us on one of those undercards in December in case of this eventuality with Pavlik. Sergio was getting ready to fight a southpaw just in case. We had always been kept in mind as the insurance policy. Now they need someone and we're deal makers not deal breakers but if they think Martinez is coming for ham sandwich, they're wrong. Come with a proper offer and we'll make the fight in two seconds."

Goossen is also talking to Universum, which promotes titleholder Sergei Dzindziruk. Williams holds the interim version of the title and is the mandatory challenger.

"Goossen said, 'I can always make Williams with Dzindziruk,'" DiBella said. "I think it was Goossen's way of badly starting negotiations for a Martinez fight."

I can't find an article but I know Adamek KOed that no heart having fool Golota in 5.
 
Adamek has options in two divisions after crushing Golota

Sunday, October 25, 2009 | Print Entry

Sure, Tomasz Adamek was only fighting a faded 41-year-old Andrew Golota, but he looked terrific in his move up to heavyweight Saturday. The cruiserweight champ, outweighed by 42 pounds, took it to Golota from the outset and laid a beating on him in Lodz, Poland, en route to a fifth-round TKO in the most heavily hyped fight in Polish history.

Adamek scored two knockdowns -- in the first round and in the fifth round -- before unloading on the helpless Golota to force the stoppage later in the fifth round.

While Golota (41-8-1, 33 KOs) is surely finished at this point with yet another nonperformance in a big fight, Adamek is fighting very well right now. The best thing for him is that he has options. He can stay at heavyweight or return to cruiserweight to defend the lineal title. Is there a future fight with Wladimir Klitschko or Vitali Klitschko in his future? Both Klitschkos were willing to give former cruiserweight champ David Haye a shot until he punked out against both of them. Why not Adamek? Perhaps a fight with the winner of the Roy Jones-Bernard Hopkins rematch at cruiserweight?

Adamek (39-1, 27 KOs) and his promoter, Kathy Duva of Main Events, will weigh the options. They won't make any rash decisions; rather, they'll see where they can make the biggest fight for the most money.

Adamek likely will return to fight in his adopted home base of Newark, N.J., in early February, but in which division he'll box hasn't been determined. Here's some of what Adamek and his team had to say after the victory:

On the magnitude of the fight: "I will never forget this moment, fighting in front of almost 17,000 Polish fans against a Polish legend that went through many great battles. It was a meaningful night for me. By beating Andrew Golota I made a statement about my power. I wanted to show how good I can be as a heavyweight. I got hit couple of times pretty hard, but I was never in danger. Looks like my iron chin will work for me in a higher weight class also."

On scoring the knockout: "I never treat any fight as something personal and it was the same this time. I did not plan to knock Golota out. It was not my intention. After the first knockdown, I knew I could hit him at will. I paced myself in Round 2 and 3, waiting for the right moment to up my tempo. [Trainer] Andrew Gmitruk was telling me to not get too cocky. I remembered this every minute I was in the ring. It was not easy win, regardless of the outcome. I had to be careful not to get hit by this powerful 260-pound man. It worked."

On fighting as a heavyweight: "I hope I proved to everybody that I can be 215 pounds and be effective as a heavyweight. But my foes in the cruiserweight division should not be too happy yet. If the major television outlets will offer great fights, I will be back and knock out those guys too."

On his future: "I will go back to the U.S. in couple of days, maybe enjoy myself for couple of weeks and then eagerly await the next challenge. It's in my nature not to be lazy for too long. I love my home, wife and two daughters, but after a while I miss the ring. I want to thank everybody who believed in my skills and determination. I never had a doubt about the outcome of this fight. I want also to thank Andrew for accepting this fight. He helped me realize my dream of becoming a heavyweight."

Here's some of what Gmitruk had to say about his pupil after the victory:

"I knew this fight would look this way. To be honest, after the first knockdown this fight was over. It was just question of time. Adamek will use every weakness of his opponent so mercilessly. It was painful to watch. Tomasz used Golota's slowness to do exactly what we were talking about in training. Tomasz hit Golota with a lot of body shots and just peppered him with combinations when Golota was getting tired. Adamek was very calm and composed. I think this is the biggest change in his style of fighting. He picks when to attack in the best possible moments, never leaving his rival a chance to react. He is not going into unnecessary brawls. We were working on this, but I'm not sure this is something you can teach. He just has it. Golota wanted to tear Adamek's head off and was not pacing himself. He fought exactly like we thought he would."

Here's what Duva thought of her company's franchise fighter:

"It wasn't just that Tomasz Adamek knocked out Andrew Golota; it was the way he did it. Watch the highlights. He showed power and speed. He showed he has a heavyweight punch and incredible combinations. Adamek made a statement. And from the texts I started getting directly after the fight, the boxing world is taking notice."

"We are going to assess all of our options in the coming weeks. Basically we are interested in the most money we can make. We have cruiserweight options and we now have heavyweight options. I couldn't be happier for Tomasz."

A roundup of the past week's notable boxing results from around the world:
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Saturday at Lodz, Poland​
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Heavyweight
Tomasz Adamek TKO5 Andrew Golota

[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Adamek, 39-1, 27 KOs; Golota, 41-8-1, 33 KOs
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Rafael's remark: Although Adamek has fought on both HBO and Showtime, the cruiserweight champion is nothing more than an afterthought to them despite his crowd-pleasing style and loyal following. With no room at the inn and HBO unwilling to commit to an Adamek-Bernard Hopkins championship fight, Adamek, who makes his home in New Jersey, returned to his native Poland for his nation's biggest-ever fight. It was a heavyweight showdown with Golota, the longtime enigma who remains beloved by his people despite a career filled with disappointments. It didn't matter that Golota, long faded at 41, is a quitter with no mental strength who has gone 0-3-1 in title bouts (including pathetic first-round knockout losses to Lennox Lewis and Lamon Brewster) and was twice disqualified against Riddick Bowe. They didn't even care that he was stopped in one round in his last fight by journeyman Ray Austin. This fight was like the Super Bowl or World Cup in Poland. There was an overflow crowd of about 17,000 at the Arena Lodz and a national audience watching on Polsat, the country's largest over-the-air network, which expected viewership to surpass 10 million (about a quarter of Poland's population).

Adamek gave up his sanctioning organization belt to make the lucrative bout, but he still holds the Ring magazine cruiserweight title as the lineal champion at 200 pounds. Although he weighed 214 pounds and was far smaller than Golota, who was a career-heavy 256 pounds, Adamek thoroughly dominated. He decked Golota with a flurry of punches late in a big first round. Adamek was way faster than Golota, who couldn't land anything clean and spent a lot of time on the defensive. Adamek continued the assault throughout the fight, rocking Golota repeatedly with flurries and a strong right hand. He hurt Golota again in the fourth round with a right hand and follow-up attack. In the fifth, another right hand sent Golota to the canvas for the second time. Adamek continued landing overhand rights until Golota staggered into the corner and American referee Bill Clancy jumped in to rescue the defenseless Golota.

It was a tremendous performance for Adamek, who maintained before and after the fight that he is more than willing to return to cruiserweight to defend the title or remain at heavyweight, where he's interested in a fight with either Wladimir or Vitali Klitschko, the brothers who hold three of the four alphabet belts. Both Klitschkos are in need of notable opponents and surely a match with Adamek would be big in Europe or even in New York. Wherever Adamek, 32, can make the most money is where he will fight. Main Events' Kathy Duva, who promotes Adamek, told ESPN.com she expects Adamek to return to action in early February in Newark, his home base, where Duva has the Prudential Center on hold. Adamek won his eighth fight in a row since losing his light heavyweight belt via decision to Chad Dawson in February 2007 and moving up in weight. Golota lost his second in a row, dropped to 3-4 in his past seven and really needs to hang 'em up before he gets hurt.
[/td] [/tr][/table] [table][tr][th=""]
Saturday at San Juan, Puerto Rico
[/th] [/tr][tr][td]
Junior middleweight
Kermit Cintron TKO5 Juliano Ramos

[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Cintron, 32-2-1, 28 KOs; Ramos, 15-3, 12 KOs
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Rafael's remark: Coming off his solid points victory against Alfredo "Perro" Angulo on May 30, Cintron returned to the ring. Although this wasn't a major fight for the former two-time welterweight titleholder, it meant a lot to the 30-year-old Cintron. He was born in Puerto Rico but grew up in Reading, Pa., and has always wanted to fight in his homeland. Promoter Lou DiBella made it possible for Cintron to perform on the island, and he did it with a dominant performance against Brazil's Ramos, 29, in the main event of a pay-per-view televised on Dish Network. Cintron fought at 150 pounds by design. He wants to show he can fight the best in the 147-pound welterweight division or the best in the 154-pound junior middleweight division. He'll go where he can get the biggest and best fights, although junior middleweight titlist Daniel Santos, of Puerto Rico, who has his own fight to worry about Nov. 14 against Yuri Foreman, has started taking shots at Cintron. Santos-Cintron would probably be a big fight in Puerto Rico. But back to the Ramos fight. They started slowly, although that's Cintron's style. But he became more aggressive in the third and fourth rounds. In the fourth, Cintron rocked Ramos with a series of shots and then dropped him near the end of the round with a booming right hand. Ramos survived but the fight was over, officially ending 10 seconds into the fifth round when Ramos didn't come out. Ramos dropped his second in a row by TKO. If you did not catch the pay-per-view, the bout will eventually be replayed on DiBella's "Broadway Boxing" series on Sports Net New York, so if you live in the region or have satellite service you'll be able to check it out.
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Saturday at Veracruz, Mexico
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Junior bantamweight
Tomas Rojas W12 Evans Mbamba
Retains an interim junior bantamweight title
Scores: 119-108, 117-109 (twice)
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Rojas, 32-11-1, 22 KOs; Mbamba, 16-1, 8 KOs
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Rafael's remark: Rojas, 29, of Mexico, took a big chance by facing South Africa's Mbamba, 28, with a date against champion Vic Darchinyan on the books for Dec. 12 on Showtime. Anything could have happened -- a loss, a cut or some other injury -- to waylay his payday against Darchinyan. Fortunately, Rojas had no such issues as he dominated fellow southpaw Mbamba en route to the lopsided decision in a TV Azteca main event. Rojas was clearly the stronger, more physical fighter. Rojas had picked up the vacant interim belt in July with a ninth-round knockout of Everardo Morales. But Darchinyan was an active champion who was not injured, so the WBC's only reason for sanctioning the unnecessary interim belt was to pocket the sanctioning fee that went with it. It was pointless. Rojas has been on a solid run of late, moving to 6-0-1 since he being knocked out by Jorge Arce in September 2007.
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Friday at Bolton, England
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Junior middleweight
Ryan Rhodes TKO7 Jamie Moore
Wins European junior middleweight title/Title eliminator
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Rhodes, 43-4, 29 KOs; Moore, 32-4, 23 KOs
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Rafael's remark: Year after year, there is always at least one standout fight from Great Britain. This year, Rhodes' upset of Moore in a classic slugfest looks to be the one. With slam-bang action all the way, it's a clear fight of the year candidate. Twelve years since an unsuccessful challenge for a middleweight belt and viewed as past his prime, England's Rhodes, 32, once a rising star of British boxing, survived an all-out battle with countryman and fellow southpaw Moore, 30. After six heated, give-and-take rounds -- especially the toe-to-toe third and sixth rounds -- Rhodes was the one with more left in the tank. While Moore appeared to be fading, Rhodes kept swinging. He knocked Moore down with a hard right hand early in the seventh round, but he survived. They continued swapping punches at close quarters, but Rhodes had more steam on his punches. He finally staggered Moore with a big overhand right, which sent him reeling into the ropes. Rhodes, who said afterward it was the toughest fight of his 14-year professional career, chased after him and unloaded approximately 11 blows against the defenseless Moore before referee Howard John Foster intervened. What a fight and what a victory for Rhodes! The victory not only earned him the European title, which Moore was defending for the second time, it also moved him a step closer to a world title shot against Sergio Martinez. Moore had been on a tremendous 12-fight winning streak until losing for the first time since dropping consecutive fights in 2004.
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Friday at Laredo, Texas
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Welterweight
Freddy Hernandez W10 Damian Frias
Scores: 98-92 (three times)
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Hernandez, 26-1, 18 KOs; Frias, 16-2, 7 KOs
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Rafael's remark: In the "ShoBox" main event, California-based Mexican Hernandez, 30, had a pretty easy time with Frias. Hernandez, who could be considered a fringe contender, dominated virtually all of the fight except for the 10th round. That's when the Cuban-born, Miami-based Frias, 33, finally opened up. He hurt Hernandez briefly in the final round, but it was too little, too late as his 12-fight winning streak came to an end. Had Frias, who hadn't fought for nine months, been more aggressive and let his hands go earlier in the fight, it could have been a much different story. This wasn't exactly a memorable fight. Hernandez hasn't lost since a split decision to Golden Johnson in 2005, although he did have a head-butt-induced no-contest in 2003.
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Junior featherweight
Victor Fonseca TKO9 Al Seeger
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Fonseca, 17-0, 9 KOs; Seeger, 28-5, 22 KOs
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Rafael's remark: Fonseca, 28, of Puerto Rico kept his perfect record intact, but it sure wasn't easy. He was trailing 79-72 (too wide) and 77-75 on two of the scorecards and was even (76-76) on the third when he hurt an already-bloodied Seeger and knocked him down midway through the ninth round to end the fight. Seeger, 29, of Savanna, Ga., was taken to the hospital afterward for precautionary reasons. Seeger was pretty aggressive for most of the fight, his first bout since the tragic outcome of his April 30 victory against Benjamin Flores in Dallas. In that fight, Seeger stopped Flores in the eighth round and, five days later, Flores died from head injuries suffered in the bout. Against Fonseca, Seeger used his jab nicely, but also was hit with a lot of shots from Fonseca, a southpaw who had some zip on his right jab. The blows Fonseca landed bloodied and swelled Seeger's face. In the ninth, Fonseca cracked Seeger with a left hand, hurting him. As Seeger went staggering backward, Fonseca chased after him and landed another left hand for the knockdown. Referee Ruben Carrion didn't bother to count, immediately waving off the fight at 1 minute, 41 seconds. The loss was Seeger's fourth in five fights, a slide that began when Daniel Ponce De Leon smashed him in the eighth round of their junior featherweight title bout in October 2006. During the slide, Seeger has also been crushed in one round by the explosive Yuriorkis Gamboa, who would go on to win a featherweight belt.
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Featherweight
Gary Russell Jr. W4 Noe Lopez
Scores: 39-37 (three times)
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Russell Jr., 5-0, 2 KOs; Lopez, 4-4
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Rafael's remark: Russell, of Capitol Heights, Md., was the 2008 U.S. Olympic bantamweight but did not compete in Beijing after passing out attempting to make weight on the eve of his first bout. It was a bitter disappointment for Russell, who launched his pro career in January. Showtime offered highlights of his tough fight with Lopez, who rocked Russell in the third round of the closely contested bout. Showtime's Steve Farhood, who was ringside, said the fight could have been a draw. He said the first round was close, the third round was a clear round for Lopez, 20, and that Russell, 21, clearly won the fourth round because Lopez gave it away by not fighting.
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Friday at Las Vegas
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Heavyweight
Oliver McCall W10 Lance Whitaker
Scores: 95-94 (three times)
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: McCall, 54-9, 37 KOs; Whitaker, 34-6-1, 28 KOs
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Rafael's remark: At one time, this would have been a significant heavyweight fight between former champion McCall and former contender Whitaker. But that was more than a decade ago. Now they are just two guys playing out the string with a bit of name recognition. McCall, 44, scored a first-round knockdown, which was the difference in the fight. McCall won his third bout in a row since losing a lopsided decision in Germany to Juan Carlos Gomez in a title eliminator in October 2007. Whitaker, 37, dropped to 3-3 in his past six bouts dating to 2005.
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Thursday at Lemoore, Calif.
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Super middleweight
Edison Miranda KO1 Francisco Sierra
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Miranda, 33-4, 29 KOs; Sierra, 20-3, 19 KOs
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Rafael's remark: There are few fighters as much fun to watch (or listen to trash talk) as Miranda, the big bomber from Colombia. Although he's lost against his best opponents -- Kelly Pavlik, Arthur Abraham (twice, including one highly controversial decision) and a lopsided decision to Andre Ward in May, he returned from the loss to Ward to score this easy wipeout knockout. The 28-year-old Miranda, working with new trainer Joe Goossen for the first time, had no problems with Sierra. Miranda worked his jab until finding a spot to throw his powerful right. And when he did, it landed. He rocked Sierra with a few right hands and left hooks and finally put him away with a short one to the temple that sent Sierra to the canvas face-first with 44 seconds left in the opening round. Sierra, 21, of Mexico, saw his nine-fight winning streak come to an abrupt end. Promoter Dan Goossen, now co-promoting Miranda with Seminole Warriors Boxing, has suggested that Miranda face Allan Green, whom Miranda soundly outpointed in 2007, in a rematch to determine who should take the place of Jermain Taylor should he, as many expect, drop out of Showtime's Super Six World Boxing Classic super middleweight tournament after suffering a brutal knockout and severe concussion against Arthur Abraham in the tournament opener Oct. 17. Goossen has very little hope of getting Miranda a spot in the tournament, but he's just looking out for his guy. Even without being in the tournament, Miranda's style and knockout power should afford him another quality opportunity after this rebound victory.
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Lightweight
Martin Honorio TKO5 Ricardo Medina
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Honorio, 26-4-1, 14 KOs; Medina, 31-35-5, 17 KOs
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Rafael's remark: Honorio, 29, of Mexico, has had only three fights in three years, but this was his second fifth-round knockout victory in a row since losing via first-round knockout challenging then-featherweight titleholder Robert Guerrero in November 2007. The victory set up Honorio, now at lightweight, for a Nov. 28 "ShoBox" fight against rising prospect John Molina (18-0, 14 KOs). That should be a much tougher fight for Honorio than Medina proved to be. Honorio was docked two points for low blows in the early going, but ended it with an overhand right to Medina's chin. Medina, 38, of Mexico, lost his third fight in a row.
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Wednesday at Rye Brook, N.Y.
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Light heavyweight
Byron Mitchell TKO2 David Telesco
[/td] [/tr][tr][td]Records: Mitchell, 28-5-1, 21 KOs; Telesco, 30-7-1, 25 KO
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Rafael's remark: About 10 years ago, this would have been a pretty interesting fight. But at this point, it was about two guys trying to hang on in the twilight of their careers. Mitchell apparently will be the one to keep his hopes alive after the convincing knockout victory. He dropped Telesco at the end of the first round with an overhand right on the chin. In the second round, Telesco stunned Mitchell with a left hook, but Mitchell followed with another overhand right just as Telesco was firing a left hook. Mitchell's blow landed first, sending Telesco face-first to the mat, and the referee called it off with Telesco trying to get to his feet. Mitchell, 35, twice held a slice of the super middleweight title and faced several quality opponents, stopping Frankie Liles in 1999 to win a belt for the first time. He also faced Joe Calzaghe (knocked him down) and Sven Ottke in losses before a four-year layoff until returning in 2007. In 2000, Telesco, 41, faced a prime Roy Jones for the light heavyweight title and lost a shutout decision. In July, Telesco returned from a four-year retirement for an easy knockout win. This was the second bout of his ill-advised comeback.
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yoo if yall got Andre Berto twitter read his latests %!%!.. he MAD as hell at Shane.
I know Pro is seein this %!%!
 
Yeah i'm reading that. he provided a boxingtalk link with shane saying "i'll ruin berto's career"
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Too bad i can't read the whole story, gotta pay to be a member inboxingtalk
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He said I'll whoop your $$* homeboy and in my head I starting singing "I'll whip yo head boy, that's for Kanye West."

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But that's Shane lately though. He beat the #1 welter and can't get a fight. They'll get the fight done eventually.

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Berto and Paul about to become best friends on Twitter.
 
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