Saturday, February 4, 2012

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. showing grit, ditching the silver spoon (Yahoo! Sports)

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. comes from boxing royalty. His father is widely regarded as one of the 20 greatest fighters in the sport’s history and the best ever to emerge from talent-laden Mexico.

When Chavez Jr. turned professional in 2003, he wasn’t what Bruce Trampler, the Hall of Fame matchmaker from Top Rank, would call a real fighter.

He had talent, though, at first, it was only Trampler who saw it. Because of his father’s success, the young Chavez grew up a rich and pampered kid who didn’t have to work for anything he got. That usually isn’t the way a world-class fighter is developed.

And when the young Chavez became a pro, he trained when he felt like. More often than not, when he didn’t feel like it, he’d go through the motions or he’d skip working out entirely.

Trampler said that one time he drove nearly four hours from Top Rank’s Las Vegas offices up the windy treacherous mountain road to get to Big Bear Lake, Calif., where the young Chavez was preparing for a fight. Trampler, one of the wisest boxing minds in the sport’s history, wanted to get a feel for where Chavez was.

When he arrived, he found that the training session was canceled, with Chavez tucked into his bed watching cartoons.

“What I saw was what had been going on for a while with him and what it was really the product of him being a spoiled rich kid,” Trampler said.

Trampler isn’t the type to put up with spoiled rich kids, even one whose father is one of the greatest fighters who ever lived.

He became determined to take Chavez to the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, Calif., to see trainer Freddie Roach put Manny Pacquiao through the paces. Pacquiao, regarded by many as the best fighter alive, has a notoriously great work ethic.

[ Related: Giants RB preps for second career in boxing ]

Chavez resisted though, until one day when Trampler caught him at the Wilshire Grand Hotel in Los Angeles. Chavez and his girlfriend exited a bank of elevators at one end. At the same time, Trampler exited one on the opposite end.

Chavez saw Trampler, but made like he didn’t, turned to his right and attempted to scoot away. But being so close to Roach, Pacquiao and the Wild Card, Trampler wasn’t going to give up. He turned and went around the back of the elevator and grabbed Chavez.

“I saw him and I said, ‘You little [expletive],’ and I grabbed him, and he said, ‘Oh, Bruce! Hello! I didn’t see you,’ ” Trampler recalled. “I told him I was taking him to the Wild Card. He didn’t want to go, but I said, ‘You’re going,’ and I dragged him into the car and took him.”

And that chance meeting by the elevators may have changed the young man’s life.

He’s now the World Boxing Council middleweight champion, is trained by Roach and will defend his belt against Marco Antonio Rubio on Saturday in San Antonio, Texas, at the Alamodome, the same building where his father fought Pernell Whitaker in 1993 in one of the epic bouts of the last quarter century.

And though there are still plenty of doubters about whether Chavez is the real thing, Roach is no longer among them. Roach, who will be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in June, not only has become convinced that Chavez is a world-class fighter, but he believes he’s good enough to take on the recognized top middleweight, Sergio Martinez, in his next fight.

Martinez is ranked third in the Yahoo! Sports boxing poll and is regarded by most as several classes above Chavez.

“Martinez is very athletic, and he has a lot of that going for him, but he’s just an average boxer, not a great boxer,” Roach said. “[Antonio] Margarito knocked him out and Margarito is just a tough guy, but he’s hardly a great boxer. Sergio is better now than he was then, but Julio is so much better, too.

“Sergio’s got that athleticism, but Julio is a better boxer. He understands boxing. He’s been around it his whole life and he has that grittiness and toughness you see. I have no problem putting Julio in with Sergio in his next fight.”

[Also: Legendary corner man Angelo Dundee dies ]

The commonly held perception of Chavez was that he is among boxing’s most protected fighters. He had only a handful of amateur fights, and Trampler pointed out that most of his early professional fights were, in essence, on-the-job training.

Chavez, who turns 26 on Feb. 16, is 44-0-1 with 31 knockouts. But, like Greg Haugen once said before fighting Chavez Sr. in a match in Mexico City that drew over 130,000 fans, many of those were the equivalent of “Tijuana taxi drivers.”

But Chavez showed surprising skill, and mettle, in handling Sebastian Zbik on June 4 to win the WBC belt that had been stripped from Martinez. Zbik isn’t a dangerous puncher, but he was a quality boxer with a lot of experience who was the favorite.

“That was a big turning point for me, that fight,” Chavez said. “He is a very good fighter and when I beat him, I knew I could compete with anyone.”

He handled Peter Manfredo easily in his first title defense and is looking much more like he belongs than just a protected kid treading off his father’s big name.

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Veteran boxing official Wayne Kelly dies at 63 (AP)

SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (AP)—Wayne Kelly, a boxing referee who officiated several notable bouts, has died. He was 63.

The International Boxing Federation said Kelly died Wednesday from a heart attack.

Kelly’s career spanned more than two decades. He was remembered best for officiating the first fight between Riddick Bowe and Andrew Golota. He also officiated several IBF/USBA title fights including Wladimir Klitschko vs. Sultan Ibrigamov and Arturo Gatti vs. Wilson Rodriguez.

Kelly was a Vietnam War Veteran. In lieu of flowers, the Kelly family is suggesting a donation be made in his memory to the Vietnam Veterans of America.

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Olympic boxing great Stevenson out of hospital (AP)

HAVANA (AP)—Three-time Olympic heavyweight boxing champion Teofilo Stevenson says he’s recovering well after spending two weeks in hospital for an arterial clot.

Stevenson said on Wednesday he was hospitalized on Jan. 13 after doctors detected a clot in an artery near his heart. He spent 15 days in intensive care before being released last week.

The 59-year-old told The Associated Press in an interview at his home in western Havana that he was exercising and walking on doctors’ orders, and planned to return soon to his work as vice president of the Cuban Boxing Federation.

“I’m fine now,” Stevenson said.

He was also happy to knock down reports that he was in grave condition.

“People called me from all over Cuba, from other parts of the world, even from Miami,” said Stevenson, clad in Cuban sports garb. “Imagine, they had already killed me!”

Stevenson is one of three boxers to win gold medals at three Olympics, earning his in 1972 in Munich, 1976 in Montreal and 1980 in Moscow. He also captured three world amateur championships.

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Mayweather gets license for May 5 fight vs. Cotto (AP)

LAS VEGAS (AP)—Floyd Mayweather Jr. got almost everything he wanted Wednesday, receiving a boxing license and naming an opponent and a date for his next fight.

The unbeaten champion got everything except a showdown with Manny Pacquiao.

Mayweather will fight Miguel Cotto on May 5 at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand Garden after Nevada’s athletic commissioners granted him a conditional license for one fight before he goes to jail in June.

Mayweather (42-0, 26 KOs) chose Cotto (36-2, 29 KOs), the respected Puerto Rican champion, as his next opponent only after failing to land a date with Pacquiao, the superstar Filipino congressman. The two sides have discussed what’s likely to be the most lucrative fight in boxing history for nearly three years without reaching a deal.

“I presented Pacquiao with the fight,” Mayweather said after meeting with the Nevada commission. “Pacquiao is blowing a lot of smoke. … He doesn’t really want to fight. I gave him a chance to step up to the plate. We’re talking about a $10 million fighter that I tried to give $40 million to. We didn’t even talk about the back end.”

While Mayweather once appeared to be uninterested in the bout, he’s now very interested—but Pacquiao’s interest appears to have cooled. In recent weeks, Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum repeatedly discounted the possibility of setting up the fight.

Mayweather and Pacquiao are boxing’s top two stars, and they have taunted each other with jabs including a posting on Twitter on Wednesday in which Mayweather referred to the Filipino star as “Miss Pac Man.” They also have a defamation lawsuit pending in federal court in Las Vegas stemming from Mayweather’s accusations that Pacquiao took performance-enhancing drugs.

“He’s ducking and dodging me,” Mayweather said of Pacquiao. “He really didn’t want to fight from the beginning. He got famous basically by piggybacking off my name. When you mention Floyd Mayweather, man, you mention an all-time great, an icon in the sport of boxing. When you mention Manny Pacquiao, they say, `Oh, that’s the guy who’s trying to fight Floyd Mayweather.’ When it’s all said and done, all the guy did is just piggyback off my name.”

Mayweather will take on Cotto at light middleweight (69.9 kilograms, 154 pounds), a move up from the longtime welterweight’s past four fights. Mayweather, who beat Oscar De La Hoya at super welterweight in 2007, beat Victor Ortiz last September to win the WBC welterweight title.

Before getting his license on a 5-0 vote, Mayweather got a lecture from Nevada athletic commissioners.

They told the fighter, his manager-promoter and his lawyer they want a prefight report May 1 to ensure Mayweather abides by conditions set by a Nevada judge in a criminal domestic violence case. He will begin serving 90 days in jail June 1, but is likely to serve only about 60.

Commission Chairman Raymond “Skip” Avansino Jr. said it would be a “tragedy” if Mayweather didn’t meet the requirements to make the multimillion-dollar Cinco de Mayo bout. Mayweather received a temporary reprieve on his short jail sentence last month so he could fight on a traditionally huge weekend for boxing in Las Vegas.

“But we think Mr. Mayweather is certainly going to comply with this,” Avansino said.

Commissioner Pat Lundvall told Mayweather he can’t postpone or delay serving his jail sentence and must stay out of trouble for the 14-plus weeks he’s training to take on Cotto.

“I’m just happy to be fighting May 5,” Mayweather said as he emerged from the hearing room. “They granted me one fight. I need to conduct myself like a gentleman and do everything that the court ordered and then come back in front of them and show them that I deserve to have a license for a whole year.”

Mayweather, a seven-time world champion in five weight classes, will turn 35 this month.

Cotto is coming off of the second defense of his title, a 10th-round technical knockout win over Antonio Margarito in December. Cotto’s only defeats are against Margarito and Pacquiao, who stopped Cotto in November 2009 in perhaps the Filipino champion’s most impressive victory.

“He’s the best at 154,” Mayweather said of Cotto.

In a joint statement announcing the fight, Cotto said he intends to be the first boxer to beat Mayweather.

“I am here to fight the biggest names in boxing,” Cotto said. “I’ve never ducked anyone or any challenge in front of me.”

Both fighters have agreed to Olympic-style drug testing for the 12-round fight handled by Mayweather Promotions, Golden Boy Promotions and Miguel Cotto Promotions.

The May 5 fight date was set before Mayweather pleaded guilty Dec. 21 before a Las Vegas judge to a reduced battery domestic violence charge and no contest to two harassment charges. The plea stemmed from a hair-pulling, punching and arm-twisting argument in October 2010 with Josie Harris, the mother of three of Mayweather’s children. Prosecutors dropped felony and misdemeanor charges that could have gotten Mayweather 34 years in prison.

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Floyd Mayweather Jr. to fight Miguel Cotto in May (Yahoo! Sports)

LAS VEGAS – Floyd Mayweather Jr. made the only choice he could since being unable to land a fight with Manny Pacquiao, announcing at a Nevada Athletic Commission licensing hearing Wednesday that he would fight World Boxing Association super welterweight champion Miguel Cotto on May 5 at the MGM Grand Garden.


Mayweather and Pacquiao are widely considered the world’s top two fighters and have been negotiating to fight each other on and off since late 2009.


But given an impasse in talks, and with Pacquiao moving toward a June 9 bout in Las Vegas against World Boxing Organization super lightweight champion Timothy Bradley, Mayweather chose to face Cotto. There weren’t a lot of credible options, and Cotto represents likely the sternest he could have faced other than Pacquiao.



 Floyd Mayweather Jr. said he was disappointed not to be fighting Manny Pacquiao.
(Getty Images)


The Nevada commission last month ordered Mayweather to appear before it after he requested a boxing license because of a guilty plea Dec. 21 to a domestic violence charge. The commission approved Mayweather’s request by a 5-0 margin, granting him a conditional license. Among the conditions are that he agree to report to the Clark County Detention Center to serve his 90-day jail sentence June 1 without attempting to delay it, that he completes his community service and that he remains out of trouble.


The commission will check on Mayweather’s progress toward completing the community service May 1.


After the hour-long meeting, Mayweather said he was excited to fight again.


“I think Miguel Cotto is a hell of a fighter,” a somber-appearing Mayweather said following the hearing. “He’s a strong, solid 154-pounder. Pacquiao was trying to fight him at 147, but you know me. I don’t never want to put a guy in a position where he’s not comfortable. I want to beat a guy when he’s at his best. If he’s his best at 154, and he’s strong and he’s solid, that’s the weight we’re fighting at.”


Cotto, 37-2 with 30 knockouts, was stopped by Pacquiao in the 12th round of a Nov. 14, 2009, fight. Cotto is coming off an impressive 10th round technical knockout of Antonio Margarito on Dec. 3 at Madison Square Garden in New York.


Mayweather, 42-0, had considered bouts against Saul “Canelo” Alvarez, Robert Guerrero and Erik Morales, among others. For a variety of reasons – inexperience, size and age – none were would result in a high-end pay-per-view show.


At the hearing, Mayweather was grilled about his guilty plea and said he made it in order to prevent his children from having to testify. He was asked extensively about counseling and whether his training would interrupt it. He said it would not.


Mayweather said he was disappointed not to be fighting Pacquiao but said he made every effort to get the fight made.


“I presented Pacquiao with the fight, and all I got to say is, Pacquiao’s blowing a bunch of smoke up everyone’s ass,” Mayweather said. “He don’t really want to fight. I gave him a chance to step up to the plate. We’re talking about a $10 million fighter who I tried to give $40 million to. We didn’t even talk about the back end.


“Everything everybody is hearing is just a bunch of lies. I’ve got the proof. The proof is in the pudding and I’ve got the proof from all my meetings with [Pacquiao adviser] Michael Koncz. Floyd Mayweather has proof. When it’s all said and done, like I said before, I’m honest and a stand-up type guy.”


Top Rank has yet to announce that Pacquiao will fight Bradley, but the other finalists on promoter Bob Arum’s lists are committed. Cotto took the fight against Mayweather and Arum plans to match Juan Manuel Marquez and Lamont Peterson at Cowboys Stadium in the summer.


Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach told Yahoo! Sports, “It looks like Bradley is going to be the guy.”

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Nonito Donaire could join the ranks of Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. (Yahoo! Sports)

The story is familiar even to the most casual of boxing fans: The young fighter of Filipino descent starts off in the lightest weight classes, dominating opponents and picking up titles. One by one, he punches his way to world championships, leaving in his wake a collection of battered and beaten bodies.


He’s doubted at first, derided as “just a little guy,” but he eventually wins over the critics and becomes widely regarded as the best fighter in the world.


Manny Pacquiao was on that path about 10 years ago and is now, along with Floyd Mayweather Jr., by far one of the two best fighters in the sport.



Nonito "The Filipino Flash" Donaire owns world titles at flyweight, super flyweight and bantamweight.
(Getty Images)


Nonito Donaire (27-1, with 18 knockouts) is on that same path right now and it would hardly be a shocker if the three-division world champion wound up with belts in six or seven classes and was universally recognized as the greatest fighter in the world within a couple of years.


“He is already a great fighter and he has such great knockout power and overall fighting ability; he can still get a lot better,” said Freddie Roach, Pacquiao’s trainer. “I was talking with [ex-boxer] Jesse James Leija the other day and we were saying how hard this guy can punch. He’s really dangerous and he can knock you out with one shot.


“To me, even though maybe he doesn’t get the recognition like Manny does, or like [Mayweather], he’s already in the top five and I think he has the ability to move up.”


[Related: Floyd Mayweather Jr. will fight Miguel Cotto on May 5]


Donaire, who owns world titles at flyweight, super flyweight and bantamweight, will seek a fourth crown Saturday when he meets Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. at the Alamodome for the vacant World Boxing Organization super bantamweight belt in a bout televised by HBO.


Donaire is hardly caught up in the hype. He’s eager to fight, particularly coming off a bout in October in which Omar Narvaez sought to survive and didn’t engage, making for an ugly fight which drew hoots from the bloodthirsty crowd.


He’s looking forward to swapping blows with Vazquez in the kind of fight in which his speed and power almost always wins out, and insists he’s not thinking of what may lie ahead.


All the accolades are great, said Donaire, a good photographer who is frequently seen shooting fights at ringside, but they mean nothing until his career is complete.


“I don’t think about it,” he says of the similarities to Pacquiao’s career path. “I enjoy boxing for the moment. I love the excitement and the competition. I am content to leave it to the fans to decide my place in the sport’s history.”


Donaire, 29, is right about where Pacquiao was at the same age. Pacquiao turned 29 on Dec. 17, 2007, and was regarded as a top-10 fighter by that stage.


Pac-Mania was in full force in the Philippines by then, but it hadn’t really caught on as much in the U.S. He’d just come off a convincing win over a faded Marco Antonio Barrera and was poised to fight Juan Manuel Marquez for a third time in a bid for the super featherweight belt.


It was that split-decision win over Marquez on March 15, 2008, that started Pacquiao collecting belts like Christmas ornaments. After winning the super featherweight title from Marquez, he won the World Boxing Council lightweight title from David Diaz in his next outing. After a non-title bout with Oscar De La Hoya, Pacquiao then won super lightweight, welterweight and super welterweight titles in his next four matches.


Currently, Donaire is fifth in the Yahoo! Sports ratings, behind Mayweather, Pacquiao, Sergio Martinez and Marquez.


If he wins on Saturday – and he’s a heavy favorite to do so – it will be his fourth championship, and a jump to featherweight would be looming fairly quickly.


“He doesn’t have the body to go much beyond [super featherweight], I don’t think,” said his manager, Cameron Dunkin, one of the game’s most astute observers. “But if he can pull that off – and it’s a lot to ask of anyone – and goes through 122, 126 and 130, when you put that together with what he’s already done, it’s pretty amazing.”


Donaire’s biggest competition for the top spot, once Mayweather and Pacquiao leave the scene, is probably his close friend, super middleweight champion Andre Ward.


Ward, the 2004 light heavyweight gold medalist, is a brilliant tactician who is just now emerging as a complete fighter. Ward, ranked sixth in the Yahoo! poll, has the defensive ability, the power and the punching accuracy, and, most significantly, the quality opponents to make him ascend to the top spot.


Bruce Trampler, the Hall of Fame matchmaker from Top Rank, raves about Donaire, but said if there is something that may keep him from earning legendary status, it’s the quality of opposition he ahead.


“He’s already an exceptional talent,” Trampler said. “He has a chance to be a great, great fighter, but when you think of the all-time greats, Sugar Ray Leonard had [Marvelous Marvin] Hagler, Tommy Hearns, [Roberto] Duran, [Wilfredo] Benitez, guys who were great in their own rights.


“You think of Ray as great, and he was because of the great fighters he beat. That’s the one question about how this kid will be remembered, but he is without a doubt a tremendous talent.”

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