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Thai Fighter Ruenroeng Beats Shiming in Macau

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So to Macao, China, the world’s true capital of sin, a pit of fervour in chance that dwarfs the take in Las Vegas weekly, a pie from which boxing, in the form of its most Machiavellian avatar, Bob Arum, desperately wants to carve itself a piece. Arum’s chariot is the most watched fighter in the history of boxing: Zou Shiming, a superstar of such enormous proportions in his native China that he was able to draw down hundreds of thousands of dollars for what amounted to preliminary contests against hopeless opposition. Shiming’s problem was only that his devotion to the amateur game that made him famous was so overstated that he entered this contest at 6-0 (with one knockout) but at thirty-three years of age. As tender as he is old in boxing terms be does not have time to play fighter and so he was matched today with the #2 contender in the white-hot flyweight division, Amnat Ruenroeng.

A bold move you might say, given that Shiming has boxed twelve rounds only once and furthermore that not only is he unranked himself but that he has never met a ranked fighter. There has been speculation, however, that Shiming may hold a sign over Ruenroeng, having bested him in the amateurs. Surging professional turns from novices Naoya Inoue and Vasyl Lomachenko may also have stiffened resolve, as did Ruenroeng’s lukewarm performance against puncher McWilliams Arroyo last September. Lurking in the shadows of that performance is a hardened fighter with a chequered past and vast experience in combat sport despite a ledger that read just 14-0 in boxing. Furthermore, he had derailed another prospect nursed by the warmth of huge promotional strength, Kazuto Ioka. Ioka had been ordained a monster in waiting by the powers that be, but was run over by a steaming Ruenroeng. Arroyo in September; Ioka in May – and a wide points victory over Rocky Fuentes last January was a run that made the Thai a fringe contender for Fighter of the Year 2014.

2015 has started well for him, too, as he today out-prodded in Shiming a fighter that carried the weight of one-hundred million dollars upon his narrow shoulders. As the man once said, money can buy you class.

An uncertainty purveyed Shiming’s work from the first and I suspect Ruenroeng, more experienced in professional combat as in life, sensed it. He adopted a waiting posture. Shiming, determined to counter, mirrored him, and Ruenroeng’s reach advantage was in play, allowing him to dominate an anaemic battle of the jabs, a disaster for the Chinese. In the second, he caught something of a break, flashing up a left hand counter as Ruenroeng tumbled away from him in a clash of knees and Shiming had a point to play with. He needed it – Ruenroeng refused to be baited even as Shiming adopted a teasing expression and poked out his chin, hands low, repeatedly through the fourth and fifth. The Thai was patient, waiting, coiled, looking for a jab that was dominating sparse action as Shiming slipped, feinted and danced his way around the ring, neglecting to throw punches.

He did manage a leaping left-hook in the fifth that I thought narrowly brought him that frame, making the fight level on my card after the questionably ruled knockdown in the second round, giving the sixth a crucial feel. Freddie Roach, superstar trainer to the superstar Shiming, sensed this and sent out his charge with instructions to throw more leather. Shiming obliged, but Ruenenroeng shaded a tense round with that irritating jab and that cobbled, sudden right.

The tension was palpable, the men climbing around each other as they clinched, Ruenroeng twice throwing Shiming to the canvas as they bumped, but it was Ruenroeng that dealt more completely with the ebb of the fight; again and again he moved away in increments designed to bring Shming onto his jab. Shiming seems willing, moving forwards with his hands high, but he looked neither the superstar amateur of his early years or the supposed professional we were sold after his last fight, against Kwanpichit, another Thai. Rather he seemed some hybrid of the two, and one that had brought to the table the weakest of both worlds. Ruenroeng was dominating Shiming with the jab, controlling him with it, instilling within him a fear of it. Roach’s exhortations became more and more extravagant between rounds until he hit the heights of demanding the Chinese let his hands go; there appeared no more for the trainer to give. Shiming, after just six professional fights, seemed gunshy. By the eleventh, he surely needed a knockout on any cognitive card and a different tension began to build – could an unheralded Thai jailbird come to the newly anointed sin city and receive the blessing of a fair decision?

Boxing, as well as Ruenroeng was the winner here today. My card read 116-111 to the Thai and so did that of all three official cards. Ruenroeng dominated by my eye. He was clearly the stronger man, he clearly wielded the better jab and when he threw it, the right hand was on a postage stamp behind that jab. For all that he did little, Shiming often did nothing and he paid for it in humiliation. A comeback is likely with so much money on the table, but how does he improve on this performance? It is the ultimate embarrassment for the name trainer to find himself yelling into the face of a charge who does not speak his language in the late rounds that his man “throw more combinations”, but there was nothing else for Roach to say. It was exactly what Shiming needed to do; he was incapable.

For Ruenroeng, big fights lie ahead for what passes at 112lbs for big money, against the likes of Roman Gonzalez, Juan Francisco Estrada or Naoya Inoue.

For Shiming, it’s a long, hard look in the mirror.

— Photo Credit : Chris Farina – Top Rank

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Oleksandr Usyk is the TSS 2024 Fighter of the Year

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Six years ago, Oleksandr Usyk was named the Sugar Ray Robinson 2018 Fighter of the Year by the Boxing Writers Association of America. Usyk, who went 3-0 in 2018, boosting his record to 16-0, was accorded this honor for becoming the first fully unified cruiserweight champion in the four-belt era.

This year, Usyk, a former Olympic gold medalist, unified the heavyweight division, becoming a unified champion twice over. On the men’s side, only two other boxers, Terence Crawford (light welterweight and welterweight) and Naoya Inoue (bantamweight and super bantamweight) have accomplished this feat.

Usyk overcame the six-foot-nine goliath Tyson Fury in May to unify the title. He then repeated his triumph seven months later with three of the four alphabet straps at stake. Both matches were staged at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Fury was undefeated before Usyk caught up with him.

In the first meeting, Usyk was behind on the cards after seven frames. Fury won rounds 5-7 on all three scorecards. It appeared that the Gypsy King was wearing him down and that Usyk might not make it to the finish. But in round nine, the tide turned dramatically in his favor. In the waning moments of the round, Usyk battered Fury with 14 unanswered punches. Out on his feet, the Gypsy King was saved by the bell.

In the end the verdict was split, but there was a strong sentiment that the right guy won.

The same could be said of the rematch, a fight with fewer pregnant moments. All three judges had Usyk winning eight rounds. Yes, there were some who thought that Fury should have been given the nod but they were in a distinct minority.

Usyk’s record now stands at 23-0 (14). Per boxrec, the Ukrainian southpaw ended his amateur career on a 47-fight winning streak. He hasn’t lost in 15 years, not since losing a narrow decision to Russian veteran Egor Mekhontsev at an international tournament in Milan in September of 2009.

Oleksandr Usyk, notes Paulie Malignaggi, is that rare fighter who is effective moving backwards or forwards. He is, says Malignaggi, “not only the best heavyweight of the modern era, but perhaps the best of many…..At the very least, he could compete with any heavyweight in history.”

Some would disagree, but that’s a discussion for another day. In 2024, Oleksandr Usyk was the obvious pick for the Fighter of the Year.

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A No-Brainer: Turki Alalshikh is the TSS 2024 Promoter of the Year

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Years from now, it’s hard to say how Turki Alalshikh will be remembered.

Alalshikh, the head of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, isn’t everyone’s cup of tea. Some see him as a poacher, a man who snatched away big fights that would have otherwise landed in places like Las Vegas, New York, and London, and planted them in a place with no prizefighting tradition whatsoever merely for the purpose of “sportswashing.” If that be the case, Alalshikh’s superiors, the royal family, will turn off the spigot once it is determined that this public relations campaign is no longer needed, at which time the sport will presumably recede into the doldrums from whence it came.

Be that as it may, there is no doubt that boxing is in much better shape today than it was just a few years ago and that Alalshikh, operating under the rubric of Riyadh Season, is the reason why.

One of the most persistent cavils lobbied against professional boxing is that the best match-ups never get made or else languish on the backburner beyond their “sell-by” date, cheating the fans who don’t get to see the match when both competitors are at their peak. This is a consequence of the balkanization of the sport with each promoter running his fiefdom in his own self-interest without regard to the long-term health of the sport.

With his hefty budget, Alalshikh had the carrot to compel rival promoters to put down their swords and put their most valuable properties in risky fights and he seized the opportunity. All of the sport’s top promoters – Frank Warren and Eddie Hearn (pictured below), Bob Arum, Oscar De La Hoya, Tom Brown, Ben Shalom, and others – have done business with His Excellency.

Frank Warren and Eddie Hearn Flank the big Cheese

The two most significant fights of 2024 were the first and second meetings between Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury. The first encounter was historic, begetting the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era. Both fights were staged in Saudi Arabia as part of Riyadh Season, the months-long sports and entertainment festival instrumental in westernizing the region.

The Oct. 12 fight in Riyadh between undefeated light heavyweights Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol produced another unified champion. This wasn’t a great fight, but a fight good enough to command a sequel. (Beterviev, going the distance for the first time in his pro career, won a majority decision.) The do-over, buttressed by an outstanding undercard, will come to fruition on Feb. 22 in Riyadh.

Turki Alalshikh didn’t do away with pay-per-view fights, but he made them more affordable. The price tag for Usyk-Fury II in the U.S. market was $39.99. By contrast, the last PBC promotion, the Canelo vs. Berlanga fight on Amazon Prime Video, carried a tag of $89.95 for non-Prime subscribers.

Almost half the U.S. population resides in the Eastern Time Zone. For them, the main event of a Riyadh show goes in the mid- to late-afternoon. This is a great blessing to fight fans disrespected by promoters whose cards don’t end until after midnight, and that goes double for fight fans in the U.K. who can now watch more fights at a more reasonable hour instead of being forced to rouse themselves before dawn to catch an alluring match anchored in the United States.

In November, it was announced that Alalshikh had purchased The Ring magazine. The self-styled “Bible of Boxing” was previously owned by a company controlled by Oscar De La Hoya who acquired the venerable magazine in 2007.

With the news came Alalshikh’s assertion that the print edition of the magazine would be restored and that the publication “would be fully independent.”

That remains to be seen. One is reminded that Alalshikh revoked the press credential of Oliver Brown for the Joshua-Dubois fight on Sept. 21 at London’s iconic Wembley Stadium because of comments Brown made in the Daily Telegraph that cast a harsh light on the Saudi regime.

There were two national anthems that night, “God Save the King” sharing the bill, as it were, with the Saudi national anthem. Considering the venue and the all-British pairing, that rubbed many Brits the wrong way.

The Ring magazine will always be identified with Nat Fleischer who ran the magazine from its inception in 1922 until his death in 1972 at age 84. It was written of Fleischer that he was the closest thing to a czar that the sport of boxing ever had. Turki Alalshikh now inherits that mantle.

It’s never a good thing when one man wields too much power. We don’t know how history will judge Turki Alalshikh, but naming him the TSS Promoter of the Year was a no-brainer.

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The Ortiz-Bohachuk Thriller has been named the TSS 2024 Fight of The Year

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The Aug. 10 match in Las Vegas between Knockout artists Vergil Ortiz Jr and Serhii Bohachuk seemingly had scant chance of lasting the 12-round distance. Ortiz, the pride of Grand Prairie, Texas, was undefeated in 21 fights with 20 KOs. Bohachuk, the LA-based Ukrainian, brought a 24-1 record with 23 knockouts.

In a surprise, the fight went the full 12. And it was a doozy.

The first round, conventionally a feeling-out round, was anything but. “From the opening bell, [they] clobbered each other like those circus piledriver hammer displays,” wrote TSS ringside reporter David A. Avila.

In this opening frame, Bohachuk, the underdog in the betting, put Ortiz on the canvas with a counter left hook. Of the nature of a flash knockdown, it was initially ruled a slip by referee Harvey Dock. With the benefit of instant replay, the Nevada State Athletic Commission overruled Dock and after four rounds had elapsed, the round was retroactively scored 10-8.

Bohachuk had Ortiz on the canvas again in round eight, put there by another left hook. Ortiz was up in a jiff, but there was no arguing it was a legitimate knockdown and it was plain that Ortiz now trailed on the scorecards.

Aware of the situation, the Texan, a protégé of the noted trainer Robert Garcia, dug deep to sweep the last four rounds. But these rounds were fused with drama. “Every time it seemed the Ukrainian was about to fall,” wrote Avila, “Bohachuk would connect with one of those long right crosses.”

In the end, Ortiz eked out a majority decision. The scores were 114-112 x2 and 113-113.

Citing the constant adjustments and incredible recuperative powers of both contestants, CBS sports combat journalist Brian Campbell called the fight an instant classic. He might have also mentioned the unflagging vigor exhibited by both. According to CompuBox, Ortiz and Bohachuk threw 1579 punches combined, landing 490, numbers that were significantly higher than the early favorite for Fight of the Year, the March 2 rip-snorter at Verona, New York between featherweights Raymond Ford and Otabek Kholmatov (a win for Ford who pulled the fight out of the fire in the final minute).

Photo credit: Al Applerose

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