Boxing

More upside: Golovkin or Matthysse?
More upside: Golovkin or Matthysse?
10 minutes ago
The following is from Carl Froch, who faces Mikkel Kessler this Saturday in London, live on HBO and Sky Box Office. For any top class boxer, the chance to avenge a defeat is massive. I don't lose many fights and neither does Mikkel, but...
The following is from Carl Froch, who faces Mikkel Kessler this Saturday in London, live on HBO and Sky Box Office. For any top class boxer, the chance to avenge a defeat is massive. I don't lose many fights and neither does Mikkel, but when you do, the first instinct is to see them the next day and fight again. Three years have passed since the defeat in Herning - I wouldn't say it bothers me every day but to finish my career without the opportunity to face Mikkel again would be tough to swallow. I feel the same about Andre Ward too, but it's less intense as Mikkel and I are cut from the same cloth - proper fighters who put it all on the line and go toe-to-toe in battle. Does the defeat irritate me? Of course. Do I feel cheated by it? No. When a fight is as good as the first one and you don't win you are down after the event and you look at things in the fight that perhaps didn't go your way. But I lost that fight fair and square - I've got no problem with the decision and it still remains a pleasure and privilege to have been involved in one of the best fights for a long, long time in both Denmark and in the super middleweight division - but it would have been better if I'd won of course! Physically I'm in fantastic shape. I am a clean liver - I don't drink or smoke and I don't really like fast food. I don't balloon up during fights and that's obviously a huge advantage as I can concentrate on the fight without worrying about making weight. I'm in a great place mentally too - my little girl Natalia arrived a couple of weeks ago and both baby and Mum, Rachael, are doing great. Her arrival has been perfectly timed as it was a nice distraction from the training and then I refocused and became even more energised I can understand that people would have this as a pick'em fight as we're both World class operators with huge power and with punch resistance - it's the reason why it's the most hotly anticipated pure boxing match for some time now. I believe I will win, Mikkel believes he will win - Kalle and Nisse Sauerland will think they can come to England and return with two belts, Eddie Hearn knows I am going to win, my fans are coming to cheer me to victory, Mikkel's fans are travelling over to have a title party in London. My point? Everyone has an opinion because it matters - this fight has captured everyone's imagination and the pundits down to the casual boxing fan all have their opinions which is fantastic - even though ultimately, only Mikkel and I will decide who takes the glory. I don't like to look beyond the fight and think ‘what if...?' as the focus is solely on Mikkel. A defeat would be a bitter pill to swallow and two losses to the same man is tough. The positives are what I am looking at - huge fights with Andre Ward and George Groves are possibilities, and if the second fight is as good as the first, maybe we'll do it again.It's round 13 from three years ago. We'll pick up where we left off and it's going to be action packed. Like animals, it's our instinct to fight and that's just what people are going to get, fireworks. It's going to be one of those nights that if you are not there and not watching on TV, you are going to regret it as you'll miss something truly special. CARL FROCH VS. MIKKEL KESSLER II is presented live from the O2 Arena in London, SATURDAY, MAY 25 (6:00 p.m. ET/3:00 p.m. PT), exclusively on HBO. The fight also has a prime-time replay later the same day at 10:00 p.m. (ET/ PT).
23 minutes ago
The following is a blog from Mikkel Kessler ahead of Saturday's fight in London with Carl Froch. Hello fight fans!It´s one week until the big fight in London on HBO and let me tell you one thing, I am ready!I think Froch against m...
The following is a blog from Mikkel Kessler ahead of Saturday's fight in London with Carl Froch. Hello fight fans!It´s one week until the big fight in London on HBO and let me tell you one thing, I am ready!I think Froch against me is the most exciting fight in the super-middleweight division. Carl Froch is warrior like me, we are cut from the same cloth. We will both leave it all in the ring again, just like we did three years ago. There will be no pushing, no holding, no head-butting, we will continue where we left it in our brutal first fight three years ago.Carl will come to fight. Carl and I have fought all over the world, I´ve been in Wales, Germany, Australia and the US. That´s what true champions do - take the best fights out there against the best opponents...all over the world.The last time I fought on HBO was when I faced Joe Calzaghe in front of 55.000 fans at Cardiff´s Millennium Stadium. I never got the rematch, although I really wanted it. That is the reason why I give Froch this fight. He came to my place, I won and I promised him we´ll fight again. I am a man of honour and I will stick to my word. It´s only fair to have the rematch in London. The fight sold out in one day - all 18.000 tickets gone in a few hours! That tells you how special the fight in Europe is...We´ve had a great training camp. I have my own gym in Copenhagen. I can do all the training in there. My physical trainer Thomas Macon makes sure I stay in shape all year around. Jimmy Montoya came over in March to do the boxing training. I love Jimmy, he is one of the best trainers in the world. I´ve known him for a long time. He came up with the game plan to beat Froch in the first fight and we have created something special again this time.Beating Froch was very big for me. I had just lost the opening fight of the Super Six tournament and a lot of people were doubting me. But I got in there and proved them all wrong. I remember I was surprised by Froch - he was really tough and he got this long arms...and a lot of power. I caught him with a right in the eighth round but he came right back. The last two rounds were insane, we just fought our hearts out and left it all in there. The sell-out crowd was on their feet and I´ll never forget the feeling when my arm was raised. I want to feel the same again on May 25.It will be a great fight...don´t miss it!CARL FROCH VS. MIKKEL KESSLER II is presented live from the O2 Arena in London, SATURDAY, MAY 25 (6:00 p.m. ET/3:00 p.m. PT), exclusively on HBO. The fight also has a prime-time replay later the same day at 10:00 p.m. (ET/ PT).
about 1 hour ago
Oscar De La Hoya is confident that Golden Boy Promotions can secure a big fight between Floyd Mayweather and Canelo Alvarez, saying that he believes both competitors want the fight. From Hoy Los Angeles: "(Alvarez) is ready, is motiv...
Oscar De La Hoya is confident that Golden Boy Promotions can secure a big fight between Floyd Mayweather and Canelo Alvarez, saying that he believes both competitors want the fight. From Hoy Los Angeles: "(Alvarez) is ready, is motivated, he wants that fight. No doubt, he wants to fight Mayweather. Is a fighter who is learning is growing, he's becoming more intelligent, stronger, is very fast. I know that Mayweather wants the fight, he'll take the fight. Something tells me he wants to fight him." Oscar said this five days ago, but nothing big has changed here. Despite reports that the Mayweather camp was demanding 147 pounds, Richard Schaefer has said that's not the case, and that the fight is being discussed and worked on as we speak. This is a dangerous thing to dangle in front of boxing fans, though, and I don't say that to doubt Schaefer's sincerity in wanting to make this fight. If it doesn't happen, what we're likely to see is several reasons "leaked" or "rumored" -- Mayweather and the weight, Canelo and the money, whatever else. And then fans are going to come to their own conclusions simply because we're unlikely to get a concrete, single reason as to why the fight that the people are demanding can't happen, when we're told both guys want it to happen on September 14. In other words, while this is in no way a Mayweather-Pacquiao situation yet (this fight can happen, that one never realistically could have), there is at least a mild similarity in that it's The Fight right now. And if it doesn't happen, that hurts the sport's image again.
about 1 hour ago
Gotta love Giovani Segura – not only is he an action hero, but he’s pushing the already stretched frontiers of sponsorship in boxing by emblazoning the name of a registration services company on his Julio Cesar Chavez style h...
Gotta love Giovani Segura – not only is he an action hero, but he’s pushing the already stretched frontiers of sponsorship in boxing by emblazoning the name of a registration services company on his Julio Cesar Chavez style headband. Who knows what this week will bring in terms of advertising, but it’ll have some good boxing. Carl Froch and Mikkel Kessler fight on HBO in a card made only slightly less appetizing by the scratching of the Jean Pascal vs. Lucian Bute co-feature. There’s also a few other bits and bobs, so check it out. Mikkel Kessler vs. Carl Froch II, Saturday, HBO, London. Has it really been three years since these guys last fought? Geez, time flies when people are punching each other in the face. The intervening time hasn’t done much to take the lustre off this super middleweight match-up. Since Kessler’s original victory, Froch (30-2, 22 KO) has enhanced his prestige with his ridiculously competitive schedule while the Dane has mainly treaded water. A full preview will be along later in the week, but I reckon this will be similar to the original war, at least to start with. But Kessler (46-2, 35 KO) will show his age after the early rounds and the gritty Froch will take over, eventually grinding out a stoppage win. On the untelevised undercard, British super middleweight George Groves (18-0, 14 KO) takes on Noe Gonzalez Alcoba (30-2, 22 KO) in a fight that doesn’t really get my blood pumping. Another rematch features light heavyweight contenders Tony Bellew (19-1-1, 12 KO) and Isaac Chilemba (20-1-2, 9 KO), who fought to a draw in March. The original was an absorbing, if frustrating, contest in which neither man really did enough to win. Both should come in to the do-over extra motivated, and as such I favour Bellew. He was less impressive last time out and has more to gain from improving. Delvin Rodriguez vs. Freddy Hernandez, Friday, ESPN2, Uncasville Conn. A nice little Friday Night Fights main event pitting perennial junior middleweight contender and all round nice guy Rodriguez (27-6-3, 15 KO) against Mexico City battler Freddy Hernandez (30-4, 20 KO). Hernandez’ best victory is over a diminished Luis Collazo. Rodriguez is way more technically sound and won’t oblige the Mexican by getting involved in trading or mauling – he’ll pick him off from the outside all night long. The Rest. Not a whole lot. The sport’s littlest action hero, junior flyweight Roman Gonzalez (34-0, 28 KO), fights at home in Nicaragua on Saturday against the unheralded Ronald Barrera (31-11-2, 19 KO)… It’s been a big month for Argentine boxing and junior bantamweight Omar Narvaez (38-1-2, 20 KO) continues that, taking on Felipe Orucuta (27-1, 23 KO) in Buenos Aires.
about 1 hour ago
Welcome (finally) to the Matthysse Era
Welcome (finally) to the Matthysse Era
about 2 hours ago
Real News, not stepped on.
Real News, not stepped on.
about 3 hours ago
Atlantic City, a place as contrived and grandiloquent as Donald Trump’s patented comb-over, bore witness to something starkly genuine on Saturday night in the form of Lucas Matthysse’s fistic firepower. The horizontal rain sw...
Atlantic City, a place as contrived and grandiloquent as Donald Trump’s patented comb-over, bore witness to something starkly genuine on Saturday night in the form of Lucas Matthysse’s fistic firepower. The horizontal rain sweeping the boardwalk in the aftermath provided a fitting eulogy to a fight that ended with Lamont Peterson sideways on the canvas. Presumably slamming the door on any remaining naysayers, Matthysse’s brutal disposal of Peterson in three rounds confirmed him to be the class of boxing’s talent-rich 140 lb. division. Surrounded by the decadent, neon-lit artifice of America’s favorite playground, Matthysse’s true colors as a bona-fide sensation emerged. In the city that inspired Monopoly, another mustachioed man, referee Steve Smoger, went against his usual bloodthirsty instincts and called a halt to the proceedings as a dazed Peterson went down for a third time, still feeling the effects of the left hook tomahawk that had sent him reeling moments before. The courageous Peterson protested his fate, but a consensus emerged that, like the Borg or superconductors, resistance would have ultimately been futile. Peterson is a good prizefighter, holding his own against many of the division’s top talents in the past. Matthysse ripped through him like a feverish tot tearing through wrapping paper on Christmas morning. The 43% chance of winning a blackjack hand at one of the city’s many temples of false hope would appear to be a much more manageable scenario than the one awaiting Matthysse’s next victim, er, opponent. Taking my seat at Boardwalk Hall, still coming to terms with my own shellacking at the hands of a merciless deck and an unsympathetic dealer, I found myself sitting next to a childhood friend of Paul Spadafora. In between claims of a burgeoning Floyd Mayweather-Spaddy undefeated mega-bout, I watched the Shawn Porter-Phil Lo Greco fight unfold, as Manny Steward might say, exactly how I thought it would. The only memorable blow landed by Lo Greco was a loud proclamation of Porter’s resemblance to a prominent member of the female anatomy. The ambition in attempting any kind of verbal communication was commendable, considering Lo Greco’s mouth was consistently stuffed with leather throughout the one-sided spectacle. Haroon Khan, Amir’s younger brother, knocked out diminutive Vincente Medellin in roughly the same amount of time it took for ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr. to utter his signature phrase, “It’s Showtime!” The Devon Alexander redemption tour continued with a stoppage win over a game, but limited, Lee Purdy. Purdy grinned and mugged his way through seven rounds, perhaps hoping each facial expression would negate the fusillade of clean punches Alexander was raining upon him throughout the bout. Blasting tempests of bloody snot at the end of each round ensured Purdy made a mark on the canvas, if not the scorecards. It was a showcase performance for Alexander, a fighter in need of public rehabilitation after dreary showings against Tim Bradley and Randall Bailey, and widely denounced, controversial wins over Andriy Kotelnik and Matthysse. The level of competition here in Purdy will likely prevent Alexander from skyrocketing back to the top of everyone’s talent-to-watch lists, but he dispatched the man in front of him with such efficiency and speed that the notion of his next appearance now becomes a bit more palatable. The evening closed with Matthysse’s coming out party on the world stage. With 32 knockouts in 34 wins, Matthysse’s clout was never in question. Doubters pointed to his two defeats, against Zab Judah and Alexander. Those decision losses at the hands of speedier boxers perhaps suggested some vulnerability against a certain style and level of fighter. While he certainly had a case for winning those fights (both decisions were highly debatable), he did not resemble the unstoppable
about 4 hours ago
Mikkel Kessler feels he is at the peak of his powers ahead of Saturday's super-middleweight unification fight with Carl Froch.
Mikkel Kessler feels he is at the peak of his powers ahead of Saturday's super-middleweight unification fight with Carl Froch.
about 4 hours ago
Ever since it was first announced, boxing insiders and fans alike have been buzzing about the much-anticipated upcoming middleweight championship showdown between defending WBA/IBO champion Gennady "GGG" Golovkin (26-0, 23KO’s) and I
Ever since it was first announced, boxing insiders and fans alike have been buzzing about the much-anticipated upcoming middleweight championship showdown between defending WBA/IBO champion Gennady "GGG" Golovkin (26-0, 23KO’s) and I
about 4 hours ago