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It Only Took Three Weeks To Make “The Real Fight Of Any Century”

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This past Thanksgiving weekend a friend of mine who I’ll refer to as Dave, went to Las Vegas for the weekend. Dave is very connected to the entertainment field regarding Atlantic City and Las Vegas.

When I saw him the week after Thanksgiving, he said to me, “Frank, it’s set! Floyd and Manny are going to fight May 2nd of next year at the MGM in Vegas.”

Dave said, “The big executives at the MGM have already reserved the date for the fight.”

I said to him there’s been no announcement what so ever that the fight has been finalized. He simply said, “That’s what the big money boys are saying, they’ve been holding the date since October.”

Despite Dave being one of the nicest and most trust- worthy people you could have as a friend, I didn’t write what he passed along to me, even though I believed him. And the reason for that was, the Mayweather-Pacquiao bout has been on and off so many times that I just wasn’t confident that Mayweather wouldn’t find another way to stall it again. So I didn’t pursue it any further because of the overload of faux reports pertaining to the anticipated bout. Well, due to what’s recently been reported and how it appears the fight will be finalized soon, or so we think, it looks as if Dave will be right regarding when and where the fight will take place.

This shouldn’t be a big surprise.

On January 10th I wrote how I thought the time was nearing for Mayweather-Pacquiao and how HBO and Showtime would work together and not prevent the bout from being realized. And the reason I stressed in the article was: “the public is fed up with both fighters not facing each other and it was evidenced by their declining PPV buy numbers for HBO and Showtime. So they really didn’t have anywhere else to turn regarding opponents that could stimulate public interest.” So it looks like this coming May 2, on the weekend of Cinco de Mayo, Floyd Mayweather 47-0 (26) will fight Manny Pacquiao 57-5-2 (38) in what will be a blockbuster event five years after the sell by date of when it was truly a legitimate super-fight.

For the past week the activity/reporting regarding the fight coming to fruition has really escalated; however, Mayweather has flooded social media saying it’s not done yet and asking everybody to slow down while he tours the world on his private jet. Just once I would love to see Floyd overplay his hand, so much so that those who want to see the fight become disgusted enough that they lose interest in it. But that’s not going to happen, and what makes it worse is Mayweather knows it.

What stands out most to me and why Floyd is stringing the public along further is this – apparently Team Pacquiao hasn’t agreed to every single demand that Team Mayweather has insisted upon. And you better believe that until that happens there’s no way Mayweather will go through with the fight. None what so ever because with it being so close, and both the public and Pacquiao being so hungry for it, there is no urgency on his part to bend on anything, and he won’t.

The more Mayweather drags this on the more it becomes obvious that he isn’t cut from the same cloth as other past great champions. And yes, I’m saying he’s not the in-ring-fighter they were, and he’ll be forgotten soon after he retires regardless whether he wins or loses to Pacquiao. Sure, he doesn’t want to end up destitute like other past greats have, and to insure against that he’s managed himself brilliantly. He has more money than he’ll ever need, I think. And to that I say good for him. I’m for all fighters getting as much money as they can. But Floyd has taken it to the point that he’s lost touch.

Floyd has been convinced by the media and fans that he and Pacquiao fighting is a really big deal, but it’s really not. He’ll be 38 when the fight takes place, we’ve seen him lose at least once in the ring, to Jose Luis Castillo….so Manny really cannot be the first fighter to defeat him. As for Pacquiao, he’s been defeated five times and stopped three times. So what makes Mayweather beating him such a herculean feat? It doesn’t, and it’s unlikely that Mayweather will beat Pacquiao as conclusively and decisively as Juan Manuel Marquez did in 2012.

Mayweather-Pacquiao is Frazier-Ali I to those who were born after 1980. And the reason for that is, Mayweather has been the top dog in boxing for most of their teen years through adulthood. So to them Mayweather is the be-all end-all because they weren’t around to see the greats who fought during the sixties, seventies and most of the eighties.

In the realm of super-fights, Mayweather-Pacquiao isn’t as compelling to me and many others as Pryor-Arguello I, Duran-Leonard I, Leonard-Hearns I, Foreman-Ali. And it doesn’t even get within sniffing distance regarding anticipation of any one of the three clashes between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier circa 1971-75.

Think about this, and how crazy it sounds when Mayweather says he’s the greatest or “TBE.”

On March 22nd 1967 Muhammad Ali knocked out Zora Folley in the seventh round to mark the ninth consecutive defense of his undisputed heavyweight title. One month later he was stripped of the title for refusing military induction. Ali didn’t fight again until October 26th of 1970 when he stopped top contender Jerry Quarry in three rounds. On December 7th he fought the next ranked contender, Oscar Bonavena, and stopped him in the 15th round of a rough fight. Twenty three days later on December 30th 1970, Ali agreed to meet an undefeated all-time great wrecking machine named “Smokin” Joe Frazier, who was at his absolute peak and the defending undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. Oh, and Ali would meet Frazier nine weeks later in the most anticipated sporting event in history, after fighting only 18 rounds in four years.

Yet Floyd Mayweather has strung along fighting the former featherweight champ for five years because not all of his terms to insure victory have been met! Yeah, he’s “TBE.”

Frank Lotierzo can be contacted at GlovedFist@Gmail.com

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Keith Thurman Returns with a Bang; KOs Brock Jarvis in Sydney

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The combination of age and ring rust made Keith Thurman a tricky proposition against Brock Jarvis, but the 36-year-old Floridian, a former WBA and WBC world welterweight champion, had too much firepower for the overmatched Aussie, knocking out Jarvis in the third round tonight in Sydney and setting up a massive fight with Tim Tszyu.

Thurman’s career has been repeatedly interrupted with injuries. He missed all of 2023 and 2024 and this was only his second fight back since being out-pointed by Manny Pacquiao in 2019. He was slated to fight Tszyu in March of last year in Las Vegas with two 154-pound straps on the line, but pulled out with a biceps injury and was replaced by Sebastian Fundora who saddled the snakebit Tszyu with his first defeat.

Against Brock Jarvis, Thurman started slowly. The TV commentating team, which included Tszyu and Shawn Porter, had the busier Jarvis winning the first two rounds. But the savvy Thurman was simply “processing data” and found his grove in the third frame, smashing Jarvis to the canvas with a combination climaxed by a wicked uppercut. Jarvis staggered to his feet but was a cooked goose and the referee waived it off immediately when Jarvis hit the deck again after absorbing a harsh left hook. The official time was 2:19 of round three.

It was the second bad loss for Jarvis (22-2), a noted knockout puncher who had previously been stopped in the opening round by countryman Liam Paro. He hails from the Sydney suburb of Merrickville which also spawned Hall of Famer Jeff Fenech, Jarvis’s former trainer.

Thurman advanced to 37-1 with his twenty-third win inside the distance. According to Tszyu’s promoter George Rose, the match between Thurman and Tszyu will finally come to fruition on July 6, likely at the Gold Coast Convention Center in Broadbeach. That’s predicated on the assumption that Tszyu wins his next fight without complications which comes on April 6 against Minnesota’s 19-1 Joey Spencer at Newcastle, Australia.

Other Bouts of Note

Melbourne Middleweight Michael Zerafa, who also covets a match with Tim Tszyu, improved to 33-5 (21 KOs) with a seventh-round stoppage of Germany’s obscure Besir Ay (19-2) who was on the deck twice before the referee waived it off. This was the second fight back for Zerafa after getting pulverized by Erislandy Lara who stopped him in the second round in March of last year. Ay, 35, is recognized as the middleweight champion of Germany.

In a middleweight match slated for 10, Tim Tszyu’s longtime sparring partner Cesar Mateo bombed out Sergei Vorobev in the fifth round, ending the match with a spectacular one-punch KO. The 26-year-old Mateo (18-0-1, 11 KOs) is a native of Tijuana. Vorobev (20-3-2) is a 30-year-old Sydneysider born in Russia.

Thurman vs. Jarvis, a pay-per-view event in Australia, aired in the U.S. on a tape-delay on the PBC youtube channel.

Photo credit: Grant Trouville / No Limit Boxing

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Friday Boxing Recaps: Observations on Conlan, Eubank, Bahdi, and David Jimenez

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Friday Boxing Recaps: Observations on Conlan, Eubank, Bahdi, and David Jimenez

March 7 was an unusually heavy Friday for professional boxing. The show that warranted the most ink was the all-female card in London, a tour-de-force for the super-talented Lauren Price, but there were important fights on other continents.

Brighton

Michael Conlan, who sat out all of 2024 on the heels of being stopped in three of his previous five, returned to the ring in the British seaside resort city of Brighton in a shake-off-the-rust, 8-rounder against Asad Asif Khan, a 31-year-old Indian from Calcutta making his first appearance in a British ring.

Conlan, a 2016 Olympic silver medalist who famously signed with Top Rank coming out of the amateur ranks, is now 33 years old.  Against Khan, he was far from impressive, but did enough to win by a 78-74 score and lock in a match with Spain’s Cristobal Lorente, the European featherweight champion.

Conlan, who improved to 19-3 (9), absorbed a lot of punishment in those three matches that he lost. With his deep amateur background, Michael has a lot of mileage on him and he would have been smart to call it quits after his embarrassingly one-sided defeat to Luis Alberto Lopez. His frayed reflexes speak to something more than ring rust. Heading in, Khan brought a 19-5-1 record but had scored only five wins inside the distance.

Conlan vs Khan was the co-feature. In the main event, Brighton welterweight Harlem Eubank, the cousin of Chris Eubank Jr, improved to 21-0 (9 KOs) with a dominant performance over Conlan’s Belfast homie Tyrone McKenna. Eubank was credited with three knockdowns, all the result of body punches, before referee John Latham had seen enough and pulled the plug at the 2:09 mark of round 10. It was the fourth loss in his last six outings for the 35-year-old McKenna (24-6-1).

Harlem Eubank wants to fight Conor Benn next and says he is willing to wait until after his cousin “wipes Benn out.” Chris Eubank Jr vs Benn is slated for April 26 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The North London facility, which has a retractable roof, is the third-largest soccer stadium in England.

Toronto

Local fan favorite Lucas Bahdi and his stablemate Sara Bailey were the headliners on last night’s card at the Great Canadian Casino Resort in Toronto. The event marked the first incursion of Jake Paul’s MVP Promotions into Canada.

Bahdi, who is from Niagara Falls but trains in Toronto, burst out of obscurity in July of last year in Tampa, Florida, with a spectacular one-punch knockout of heavily-hyped Ashton “H2O” Sylva. His next fight, on the undercard of Jake Paul’s match with Mike Tyson, was less “noisy” and the same could be said of his homecoming fight with Ryan James Racaza, an undefeated (15-0) but obscure southpaw from the Philippines who was making his North American debut.

Bahdi vs Racaza was a technical fight that didn’t warm up until Bahdi produced a knockdown in round seven with a sweeping left hook, a glancing blow that appeared to land behind Racaza’s ear. The Filipino was up in a jiff, looking at the referee as if to say, “this dude just hit me with a rabbit punch.”

The judges had it 99-90, 97-92, and 96-93 for the victorious Bahdi (19-0) who was the subject of a recent profile on these pages.

Sara Bailey, a decorated amateur who competed around the world under her maiden name Sara Haghighat Joo and now holds the WBA light flyweight title, successfully defended that trinket with a lopsided decision over Cristina Navarro (6-3), a 35-year-old Spaniard who “earned” this assignment by winning a 6-round decision over an opponent with a 1-4-3 record. The judges scored the monotonous fight 99-91 across the board for Bailey who improved to 6-0 and then returned to the ring to assist her husband in Lucas Bahdi’s corner.

Also

Twenty-two-year-old super bantamweight Angel Barrientes, a Las Vegas-based Hawaii native, delivered the best performance of the night with a one-sided beatdown of Alexander Castellano whose corner mercifully stopped the contest after the seventh round as the ring doctor stood in a neutral corner chatting with the referee.

The gritty Castellano, who hails from Tonawanda, New York, brought an 11-1-2 record and hadn’t previously been stopped. A glutton for punishment, he appeared to suffer a broken orbital bone. Barrientes improved to 13-1 (8 KOs).

The show was marred by an excessive amount of fluffy gobbledygook by the TV talking heads which slowed down the action and made the promotion almost unwatchable.

Cartago, Costa Rica

Fighting in his hometown, super flyweight David Jimenez scored a lopsided 12-round decision over Nicaragua’s Keyvin Lara. The judges had it 120-108, 119-109, and 116-112.

Jimenez, now 17-1, came to the fore in July of 2022 when he upset Ricardo Sandoval in Los Angeles, winning a well-earned majority decision over a 20/1 favorite riding a 16-fight winning streak. That boosted him into a title fight with the formidable Artem Dalakian who saddled him with his lone defeat.

Jimenez’s victory over Lara was his fifth since that setback. It sets up the Costa Rican for another title fight, this time against Argentina’s Fernando Martinez who acquired the WBA 115-pound title in July with an upset of Kazuto Ioka in Japan. Lara, who unsuccessfully challenged Ioka for a belt in 2016, falls to 32-7-1.

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Price Conquers Jonas on an All-Female Card at Royal Albert Hall

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Ben Shalom’s BOXXER Promotions was at London’s historic Royal Albert Hall tonight with an all-female card topped by a welterweight unification fight between WBC/IBF belt-holder Natasha Jonas and WBA champion Lauren Price.

Liverpool’s Jonas, who turns 41 in June, has had a sterling career, but Father Time has caught up with her. The 30-year-old Price, an Olympic gold medalist, had faster hands, faster feet, and hit harder. The classy Jonas (16-3-1) acknowledged as much in her post-fight interview: “She beat me to the punch every time.”

The scores were 100-90, 98-92, and 98-93.

In advancing her record to 9-0 (2), Price built a strong case that she is the best fighter to come down the pike from Wales since Joe Calzaghe. As for her next bout, she hopes to fight the winner of the March 29 rematch in Las Vegas between Mikaela Mayer and Sandy Ryan. That match, with all of the meaningful welterweight hardware at stake, would be a hot ticket item if potted in Cardiff.

Semi-wind-up

Caroline Dubois staved off a late rally to successfully defend her WBC lightweight title with a majority decision over South Korea’s spunky Bo Mi Re Shin. The judges had it 98-92, 98-93, and 95-95. Although the 95-95 tally by the Korean judge was quite a stretch, Shin performed far better than the odds – Dubois was a consensus 35/1 favorite — portended.

Dubois, a 24-year-old Londoner trained by Shane McGuigan, is the sister of IBF heavyweight title-holder Daniel Dubois. Reportedly 36-3 as an amateur, she advanced her pro record to 11-0-1 (5). Heading in, Shin (18-3-3) had won nine of her previous 10 with the lone setback coming via split decision in a robust fight with Belgium’s Delfine Persoon in Belgium.

Other Bouts of Note

Kariss Artingstall returned to the ring after a 14-month absence and scored a unanimous decision over former amateur rival Raven Chapman. The scores were 98-91, 97-92, 96-93.

The prize for Artingstall, who happens to be Lauren Price’s partner, was the inaugural British female featherweight title and a potential rematch with Skye Nicolson who would relish the chance to avenge her last defeat, a loss by split decision to Attingstall in the quarterfinals of the Tokyo Olympics. Nicolson, who was part of tonight’s broadcast team, defends her title later this month in Sydney against Florida’s Tiara Brown.

It was the first 10-rounder for Artingstall (7-0). Chapman (9-2) had an uphill battle after Artingstall decked her in the second round with a straight left hand.

In a mild upset, Jasmina Zopotoczna, a UK-based Pole, won a split decision over Chloe Watson, adding Watson’s European flyweight title to her own regional trinket. One of the judges favored Watson 97-93, but each of his colleagues had it 96-95 for the Pole. Although there was no great furor, the verdict was unpopular.

Zapotoczna, who fought off her back foot, improved to 9-1. It was the first pro loss for Watson who is trained by Ricky Hatton.

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