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Boxing Was Naughty and Nice In 2013

2013 was a good year.
Looking back at what adventures pro boxing graced us with, the consensus from many a journalist has been it was one of the better years, if not the best one yet in the 21st century.
A number of highlights and lowlights took place the past 12 months, from more drug testing snafus to even more judging missteps. From more fight shows on the East Coast to less boxing cards on the West Coast, from better shows on one network to less on another network, and despite an ongoing civil war between promotion giants, the sport of boxing thrived.
Testing
Drug testing for performance enhancement drugs finally was accepted by most of the major promoters. In the past several years, only Golden Boy Promotions had their title fights and its participants drug tested for PEDs. Last year, Top Rank joined the club and had its fighters tested too.
Juicing by athletes continues in all sports. Boxing saw many of its top stars undergo testing in 2013 and most passed. Baseball was not so lucky and the NFL will soon see that most of its athletes are juiced too. Boxing has taken the proper step and thankfully so. Several boxers lost their lives after fighting in the ring, including Frankie Leal. Itâs too dangerous a sport to have any boxer juiced.
One group that should be tested more frequently is the female boxers. Juicing has been going on with female boxers for quite a while. Just because they are women doesnât mean they donât juice. One female fighter, who recently switched from boxing to MMA, had tested positive. No female fighter has died from injuries sustained from a contest, but women need to be tested too.
Boost in the East
A boom in boxing took place with many more major shows taking place especially at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.
Atlantic City had always had its share of boxing cards but in 2013 the new Brooklyn venue hosted a number of major fight cards including Paul Malignaggi vs. Zab Judah and the same Malignaggi vs. Adrien Broner.
Brooklyn finally has a house.
The effect of moving many cards to Brooklyn was that Las Vegas saw a downfall in boxing cards, thus leaving the door open to UFCâs MMA cards.
One security guard at the MGM in Las Vegas complained that it was a bad year in that venue. She was unaware that many cards had been shifted to Brooklyn, where five shows took place in 2013. In the past, many of those shows would have gone to Las Vegas, including Malignaggiâs and Bernard Hopkins vs. Tavaris Cloud.
Fight town
San Antonio was another locale that saw a major boost in fight cards. Starting with a Saul âCaneloâ Alvarez fight moving to the Texas city, it soon proved to be a major discovery for Golden Boy Promotions. More than 50,000 showed up to see Canelo fight Austin Trout in a junior middleweight unification bout at the Alamodome. Sure they only paid $20 or less, but to have 50,000 people show up was an incredible showing for the boxing world. That success allowed Golden Boy to move Broner vs. Maidana from Las Vegas. Ticket sales were not doing well in the casino capital so in a bright move, the fight card was transferred to San Antonio where it was received quite well. Itâs no longer a cow town, itâs a fight town now.
The mostly Latino crowd saw Argentinaâs Maidana upset the nefarious Broner to take the WBA welterweight title from the Cincinnati kid. It also witnessed Keith Thurman beat up Mexican tough guy Jesus Soto Karass. Its own southern Texas hero Omar Figueroa is on the verge of winning a world title in 2014. When that happens it should be explosive in San Antonio.
Television wars against females
The emergence of Fox Sports 1 has brought even more boxing to American viewers. It also provided more boxers to gain visibility. But only male boxers benefited. It seems thereâs an unwillingness to provide a slot to female fighters. Not even one slot was available to female fighters this past year on Fox Sports 1, Showtime or HBO.
A discrimination against female boxers seems to be in play, Â and it was especially evident in 2013. The three television networks mentioned above and ESPN, NBC and others, did not or would not air one single female bout.
Itâs not that women fighters nor their managers did not ask, they just were not obliged. One gripe from television networks and promoters is that they are not ticket sellers. True, but you cannot be a major ticket seller without television. Even with television backing some fighters couldnât fill a McDonalds restaurant with fans. Just take a look at Guillermo Rigondeaux or Austin Trout fight draws. They are great fighters but they do not sell tickets even with television backing.
Women boxers were ostracized by all of the networks and major promotion companies in 2013. It wouldnât be a surprise to see someone open a lawsuit against any or all of the boxing heavyweight networks.
The worst is HBO. They refuse to even talk about it. One of the representatives who was steadfast in his refusals was let go by the network last year. But it still has not showcased a female fight in decades.
Judging the judges
Itâs impossible to please everyone when it comes to judging. But uniformity in judging should be mandatory if boxing, or MMA for that matter, is to thrive and progress.
One of the worst examples took place in California where Mexicoâs popular Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. fought Brian Vera and was awarded the win by unanimous decision. It was a shock to most of the fans there and those watching on television.
It was a case of Vera throwing many more blows and landing many more blows than Chavez, who resorted to pot shot rights and occasional left hooks. Vera connected much more than Chavez but lost the fight big. This type of fight also took place between Paul Malignaggi and Adrien Broner in June. That contest took place in New York and in almost the same scenario, the guy (Malignaggi) landing more blows, did not win. Was it a robbery in either case?
Judges need to discriminate between a pot shot that lands with hurting force and a pot shot that merely lands like a soft jab. One fighter, Erislandy Lara, is a master of the pot shot with no force and wins most of his fights that way. Itâs more quick than painful and probably couldnât hurt anyone above flyweight, but judges like to see those clear blows. All judges should be smart enough to refrain from giving an entire round to a pot-shotter instead of the busier fighter attacking the body and head.
One boxing legend once told me âlanding a combination is a beautiful thingâ and I agree. That is much more difficult to do than landing a pot shot. Stop counting pot shots for more than they are worth, unless that pot shot results in a knockdown or the fighter is wobbled and hurt from the blow.
Best judges of 2013
These are the people you want judging or refereeing a big important fight.
Max De Luca, Pat Russell, Lisa Giampa, Raul Caiz Sr., Julie Lederman, Fritz Werner, Tom Taylor, Ray Corona, Jerry Roth, Raul Caiz Jr., Jack Reiss, Patrick Connolly, Marty Denkin, Duane Ford, Jose Cobian and Patricia Jarman.
Best referees
Pat Russell, Tony Weeks, Raul Caiz Sr., Kenny Bayless, Tom Taylor, Jack Reiss, Vic Drakulich, Ray Corona, Steve Smoger, Benjy Esteves Jr., Lou Moret, Robert Byrd, Wayne Hedgepeth, and Eddie Cotton.
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Crossover star Holly Holm Adds New Dimensions to Claressa Shields

She laughs about it now, but back then it wasn’t all that funny.
Boxing champion Holly Holm was competing in her first professional MMA fight, and all her years of training inside the ropes as a world champion boxer had just taken over her entire body.
Holm had kicked her opponent down to the ground, so she did what any well-schooled boxer would do. She pivoted away from her fallen prey and headed over to the neutral corner.
All of that was wrong.
“What are you doing?” her coach yelled from cageside. “Finish her!”
It was Holm’s first big mistake in moving over from boxing to MMA, but she was lucky that night. It turned out that Holm’s opponent was finished whether she had run over there or not, so it was a lesson she could learn without much consequence.
But the instruction of that moment stands true today, so it’s just one of the many things Holm has shared with 25-year-old boxing champion Claressa Shields as the two-time Olympic gold medalist attempts to follow in her footsteps.
“I was thinking yeah, that will definitely happen to me!” Shields said.
After Shields signed a three-year promotional deal in December with the Professional Fighters League (PFL), the first thing Shields needed to do was look for the right gym.
Shields found that place at Jackson Wink MMA Academy in Albuquerque, New Mexico, one of the most famous MMA gyms in the country, and the one most recognized among the masses as the home gym of former UFC women’s bantamweight champion Holm and pound-for-pound king Jon Jones.
Holm remains the only fighter (male or female) to have won legit world championships in both boxing and MMA, and Shields said Holm welcomed her to Jackson Wink with open arms.
“She’s been super great and very nice to me. We both come from the same background…and she actually turned out to be a world champion [in MMA], actually turned out to be really good,” Shields said.
But Holm’s funny story about her first MMA fight is something that points to just how large a hill Shields has decided to climb.
Whereas pop culture has just recently started to realize the power of habits through the work of writers such as Charles Duhigg and James Clear, it’s something professional fighters have known for a long time now.
“Oh, you’re going to have a habit of this because you used to box.”
That’s something Holm tells Shields almost every time they work together, and there are just so many examples.
In fact, just watching the 25-year-old boxing champion trying to learn to do all these new things in a different way is exhausting.
That Shields practically lives inside the gym for weeks at a time so she can train four or five times a day for all the kinds of things she never had to worry about before as a professional boxer is a testament to her seriousness and her courage.
But perhaps the most amazing part of the entire story is that Shields still plans on boxing.
While Holm won world championships in both sports, she achieved those things separately. Meanwhile, Shields said she wants to do the same thing Holm did but at the same time.
So, while I’m standing there with her inside an MMA cage in New Mexico, Shields is plotting fights in both sports. On one hand, sheâs talking to me about a title unification bout in boxing against Marie-Eve Dicaire. On the other, she’s talking about future superfights in MMA against the likes of UFC champ Amanda Nunes.
“I’m trying to separate the two,” Shields said specifically about her training that day but she might as well have been talking about her whole life right about now.
It’s arguably the most amazing storyline right now in combat sports.
Shields started boxing when she was just 11 years old. She earned her first gold medal at the Olympics at 17 and her second four years later.
Today, Shields is a three-division world champion, and she says she’s not nearly finished adding to her growing number of boxing belts.
But all those years and all those successes have built so many habits. Ducking and slipping is great for boxing, but both become considerable detriments to defense when you suddenly have to worry about things like knees and kicks.
And what about wrestling and jiu-jitsu?
But all that stuff together is exactly what makes Shields’ epic decision to dare to be great at both sports at the same time so amazing in the first place.
Look, Shields might never accomplish the same amazing feat Holm did when she shocked Ronda Rousey in 2015 for the UFC women’s bantamweight championship.
But she’s aiming to eclipse that incredible mark anyway, and with Holm and many others offering Shields ideas about what she needs to think about as she climbs up the steepest hill she can find, she’ll definitely have her best chance at doing it.
Kelsey McCarson covers combat sports for Bleacher Report and Heavy.
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Boxers Fighting the Best and Doing It Again for the First Time: Part One

Britainâs Martin Murray has fought the very best and has now closed out a heartbreaking if not admirable and old school career.
Others are just beginning to hit their stride and suddenly the possibilities are mouthwatering.
The buzz is back on. The heat is coming. No excuses. No badly injured shoulders. No running. This is macho explosive. This is the best fighting the best like it used to be done. Cherry picking is not allowed.
Back in the day, warriors like Ernie Durando, Kid Gavilan, Joey Giardello, Tony DeMarco, Bobby Dykes, Paul Pender, Joey Maxim, Holly Mims, Bobo Olson, and way too many others to list here would fight other top-notch boxers. It was the norm; not the exception. Tony DeMarco beat Kid Gavilan in 1956 and then fought Gaspar Ortega three times in a row in a relatively short period of time.
In the process of compiling a 95-25-1 record, Ezzard Charles engaged in an eye-popping 27 fights against men who would go on to be enshrined in the International Boxing Hall of Fame and/or the World Boxing Hall of Fame.
The List
Rocky Marciano (twice) â IBHF/WBHF
Joe Louis â IBHF/WBHF
Jersey Joe Walcott (four times) IBHF/WBHF
Archie Moore (thrice) IBHF/WBHF
Joey Maxim (five times) IBHF/WBHF
Jimmy Bivins (five times) IBHF/WBHF
Charley Burley (twice) IBHF/WBHF
Harold Johnson IBHF/WBHF
Lloyd Marshall (thrice) WBHF
Gus Lesnevich WBHF
In addition, Charles had three fights with Rex Layne, two with Ken Overlin, two with Elmer Ray, and one with Bob Satterfield
âSome day, maybe, the public is going to abandon comparisons with Joe Louis and accept Ezzard Charles for what he wasâthe best fist fighter of his particular timeâ –Red Smith
Beau Jack, Aldo Minelli, Yama Bahama, Johnny Cesario, Fighting Harada, Eder âGolden Bantamâ Jofre, Vicente Saldivar, Jose âEl Huitlacocheâ Medal, and then later Juan LaPorte and Livingstone âThe Pit Bullâ Bramble did not know what easy opponents meant. They were willing to fight anyone anywhere and were seldom stopped.
Vito Antuofermo, Ralph Dupas, Willie Pastrano, Curtis Parker, Bennie Briscoe, Kassim Ouma, Emanuel Augustus, Scott LeDoux, Ben Tackie, Ray Oliveira, Renaldo Snipes, Freddie Pendleton, John Scully, Charles Murray, Ted Muller, Anthony Ivory, and Alfredo âFreddyâ Cuevas were also representative of those who would fight anyone anywhere. Picking made-to-order opponents was not what they were about.
Ali, Norton, Young, Quarry, fought one another. So did Duran, Leonard, Hagler, and Hearns. Across the pond, Watson, Benn, and Eubank did the same. Frazier, Holyfield, Mugabi, Tszyu, Cotto, and Chacon never ever backed away, nor did Mexican notables Castillo, Marquez (JMM), Morales and Barrera.
No one will accuse Floyd âMoneyâ Mayweather of not fighting the best but they might point out that Floyd sometimes used long time intervals between bouts to his advantage. âMoneyâ was not a particularly active fighter. The phrase âcherry pickingâ gained traction during this time.
Still, Andre Ward cleaned out an entire division. Cotto fought Pacquiao and Canelo, De La Hoya met Pacquiao, Klitschko faced Fury and then Joshua. Fury — after beating Klitschko — fought Wilder twice. Chisora will fight anyone they put in front of him. Heck, GGG fought 24 brutal rounds with Canelo and if that wasnât the best fighting the best, what was?
ââŠgreat fights lead to other great fights.ââMax Kellerman
To be continuedâŠâŠ
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Ted Sares can be reached at tedsares@roadrunner.com
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At the Moment Boxing is Dormant, but There Will Be Fireworks Aplenty in February

At the Moment Boxing is Dormant, but There Will Be Fireworks Aplenty in February
The month of January has been quiet on the boxing front and thatâs putting it mildly. And making matters worse, the monthâs best offering, a Golden Boy card on Jan. 30, bit the dust when Sergey Kovalev tested positive for a banned substance, harpooning his bout with Bektemir Melikuziev and forcing the cancellation of the entire card.
Once considered a shoo-in for Canastota, Kovalev has degenerated into a longshot and his match with Melikuziev didnât figure to help his chances. The Uzbek southpaw, a Bronze medalist at the Rio Olympiad, has only six pro fights under his belt but is so highly regarded that the bookies installed him a 7/2 favorite.
Showtime has a PBC card on Jan. 23 headlined by a WBO world title match between super bantamweights Angelo Leo and Stephen Fulton, thereâs an intriguing heavyweight match on the 29th between musty Manuel Charr and Don Kingâs undefeated Trevor Bryan, and Caleb Plant is slated to defend his IBF 168-pound belt the following night against Caleb Truax, but thatâs it for this month, quite a limp slate, even considering that January is historically a slow month for the sweet science.
The good news is that things will heat up in February.
February 13
The 13th will be a particularly busy day. The action kicks off in the afternoon (U.S. time) when Josh Warrington, the Leeds Warrior, defends his IBF world featherweight title against Mexico Cityâs Mauricio Lara on a Matchroom/DAZN card. Warrington (30-0, 7 KOs) doesnât pack a hard punch, but makes up for it with a high-octane attack. He will go to post a solid favorite over Lara (21-2, 14 KOs).
That evening, two West Coast shows will compete for eyeballs.
In Las Vegas, Joe Smith Jr. (26-3, 21 KOs) opposes Russiaâs Maxim Vlasov (45-3, 26 KOs) for the vacant WBA light heavyweight title. A Long Island construction worker who has branched out and started a tree surgery business, Smith will be forever remembered as the man who rucked Bernard Hopkins into retirement, but based on his recent efforts that was certainly no fluke. In bouts with Jesse Hart and former title-holder Eleider Alvarez, Smith showed that he is a skilled craftsman with a high boxing IQ.
The are two title fights on the Golden Boy card going head-to-head in Indio, CA. Itâs Brazil vs. Argentina when Brazilâs Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) opposes Brian Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs). Teixeira will be making his first start since copping the WBO 154-pound title with a mild upset of Carlos Adames in November of 2019. That was a bloody battle in which Teixeira overcame a big deficit to pull the fight out of the fire.
Teixeira will dress as the underdog vs. Castano, a second-generation professional boxer who was reportedly 181-5 as an amateur and who recently held a version of the WBA light middleweight title (doesnât everybody?). The draw on Castanoâs ledger came in a spirited skirmish with Erislandy Lara.
Teixeira vs. Castano will more than likely precede the match between Joseph âJojoâ Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) and Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) in the bout order. Diaz will be making the first defense of the IBF 130-pound title he won from Tevin Farmer in January of last year. Rakhimov, a native of Tajikistan who currently resides in Ekaterinburg, Russia, will be making his U.S. debut.
Feb. 20
The featured bout of the second Matchroon/DAZN event of 2021 is a 12-round welterweight contest between David Avanesyan (26-3-1, 14 KOs) and Josh Kelly (10-0-1, 6 KOs). The well-traveled Avanesyan has turned his career around after suffering a sixth-round stoppage at the hands of Egidijus Kavaliauskas in February of 2019. Since then, heâs won three straight in Spain, including back-to-back knockouts of the highly-touted and previously undefeated Spaniard, Kerman Lejarraga.
Englandâs Kelly, a former Olympian, is moving up in class, but at last look he was a very slight favorite over his Russian adversary. Akin to Warrington vs. Lara, the match is expected to take place at Wembley Arena where Anthony Joshua TKOed Kubrat Pulev before 1,000 fans on Dec. 12.
The all-Mexico showdown between Miguel Berchelt (38-1, 34 KOs) and Oscar Valdez (28-0, 22 KOs) is the crĂšme-de-la-crĂšme of the February docket. On paper this bout, a Top Rank promotion pushed back from Dec. 12 when Berchelt tested positive for COVID, will warrant consideration for Fight of the Year.
Berchelt, who will be defending his WBC 130-pound world title, has knocked out 15 of his last 17 opponents. This will be the third fight at 130 for Valdez, a two-time Olympian who successfully defended his WBO world featherweight title six times before vacating the belt because he was having trouble making the weight.
If Berchelt (pictured on the left) is victorious, he is expected to move up to lightweight where some rich paydays await in potential fights with Vasyl Lomachenko and bevy of young hotshots. If Valdez wins, it is expected that he will pursue a unification fight with the winner of the forthcoming match between Carl Frampton and Jamel Herring.
Top Rank honcho Bob Arum has indicated that both the Smith-Vlasov and Berchelt-Valdez fights will be staged in Las Vegas at an MGM property, but not necessarily at the MGM Grand where Top Rank promoted 24 shows without fans during the pandemic.
Feb. 27
On the last Saturday of the month, fight fans in the U.S. can take in a doubleheader if they can roust themselves out of bed in the middle of the night. In Auckland, New Zealand (18 hours ahead of New York), thereâs a big domestic clash between heavyweights Joseph Parker (27-2, 21 KOs) and Junior Fa (19-0, 10 KOs). These two have been on a collision course since 2009 when Fa, the older man by 27 months, defeated Parker in the first of their four meetings as amateurs. Parker won two of the next three to even the series at 2-2.
Here we have a bout with international significance that is also a match for neighborhood bragging rights. Parker and Fa grew up in the same South Auckland neighborhood and attended the same LDS church. But yet it wonât be hard to contort this fight into a grudge match. Parkerâs family roots are in Samoa; Faâs in Tonga. The two nations have a fierce rivalry in rugby.
This fight was more than two years in the making and when the bout was finally signed, 9,000 tickets went on sale to the general public.
Later that day, at a yet undetermined site in London, Carl Frampton (28-2, 16 KOs) seeks to become a title-holder in a third weight class when he challenges WBO 130-pound title-holder Jamel Herring (22-2, 10 KOs). The twice-postponed fight will air in the U.S. on ESPN+.
Frampton is currently a consensus 3/2 favorite over Herring who suffered an eye injury over his right optic, described as scraped lens, in his messy September fight with billy goat Jonathan Oquendo. A former Marine and former Olympian, Herring currently trains with Terence Crawford in Omaha
As we move into March, the first Saturday will bring the rematch between Dillian Whyte and Alexander Povetkin. Whyte dominated the first meeting until Povetkin found a home for a hellacious uppercut in the fifth frame, terminating the bout. Whyte, at age 32 the younger man by nine years, is favored to avenge that bitter defeat. As for the location, promoter Eddie Hearn has had conversations with potential suitors in Gibraltar and Monaco.
So, hang in there, fight fans. January may be dry, but thereâs a whole bunch of interesting fights lurking around the corner.
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