WELTERWEIGHTS (147)
The most star studded and talent
ridden in boxing, there is so much talent here that there have been
several turf battles in all the alphabet organizations even as the
division is being held hostage by the whims and caprices of the now
glorified Floyd Mayweather who has slowed down the momentum for
unification with his ventures against De la Hoya at 154, while thankfully
sending Hatton back to 140 were he rightfully belongs. But you cannot stop
the talent from spilling over as Cotto manhandled Zab Judah and Shane
Mosley to my surprise. Cintron brutalized Feliciano to remain in our
consciousness, and Paul Williams removed the pretender Margarito from the
welterweight equation. Right now all the turf battles in the alphabet
organization have been completed more or less leaving us four legitimate
champions, with Mayweather (WBC), Cotto (WBA), Williams (WBO) and Cintron
(IBF).
The logical next fight would be
unification context among these champions; and do not be surprised if
Mayweather is not the last man standing after the dust settles. These
fights will be made cause of the marquee value of these champions, any
match up be it Mayweather vs. Cotto, Mayweather vs. Cintron, or Cotto vs.
Williams to a lesser degree or vice versa…or Cotto vs. Cintron, will
deliver a truck load of gold for all participants. I’ll place my bet on
the dark horses…Paul Williams and Cintron to be the last men standing.
CRUISERWEIGHTS (200) - MY
PERSONAL FAVORITE IN BOXING.
The top ranked contenders are
the most competitive in boxing today, all the combatants have fought and
defeated each other at one time or the other, and they are all extremely
heavy handed making for dramatic stoppages or shocking knockouts ala
Wilson of Nwodo. Most unfortunately for the division, none of these
contenders has the star power to attract idle observers back to boxing,
perhaps David Haye does, but he is moving up to the heavyweight division,
and keeping up with the tradition of cruiserweight champs searching in
vain for the green in the heavyweight division. I could go on about that
subject that inspired me to write "Back to the Cruiserweight Division" but
that would be for another day.
There could be some excitement
if David Haye vacates the WBA and WBC titles as we would see a dog fight
by the other fighters for each belt, many funny things could happen as
Darnell Wilson, Herbie Hide, Jeremy Williams could fight for the titles.
And yes Chris Byrd; who if he had any sense would come down to the
cruiserweight division were he missed a great fight with O’Neil Bell, may
be convinced to campaign in the division to earn some dough.
Thankfully Firat Arslan got rid
of “parallel champ for no reason” Virgil Hill who got defeated by Henry
Maske straight from over ten years in retirement...terrible. I like tough
as nails Steve Cunningham, Darnell Wilson, Jonathan Banks, Matt Godfrey
and O’Neil Bell, whose career just seemed to fizzle out after unifying the
belts, but he could be back, Mormeck is exciting to watch too, and If
David Haye remains, we could see him perhaps fight Cunningham or be
shocked by another cruiserweight contender. Either way I see no dominant
champion emerging in 2008
LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT (175)
I take it back, this division is
the worst in boxing today after the heavyweight division and is filled
with a couple of star fighters way past their prime. To make matters worse
the division is already being held hostage by my former idol but now
boring 43 year old Hopkins who has been inexplicably declared the best in
the division after beating the burnt out Antonio Tarver and defeating the
hapless Wright to settle nothing for the division. The top ten fighters
are all spent forces with careers looking to go downhill from here on, if
not explain the cancelled match up between Reggie Johnson and Glen
Johnson. There are no whispers for unification anywhere, and the best
fighter Zsolt Erdei is happily unknown and virtually unseen outside the
clubs he must be fighting in somewhere in Europe. Newest entrant champ
Chad Dawson may be good but his potential mandatories at the WBC are
virtually unknown outside the clubs in Europe and I am further confounded
by the scarcity of information or clips from their previous fights to wet
my appetite about them. Still they terrify me due to the skills they must
have obtained from KGB training camps - so there is a real possibility
that Dawson may get surprised by one of them, if that happens, the
division would be unheard of in 2008. Pathetic
SUPER MIDDLEWEIGHT (168)
Calzaghe has already stamped his
supremacy in the division after out-hustling Kessler to settle all
questions. But in 2008 they only fight that would excite him would be a
mega fight against Bernard Hopkins, in what promises to be a bore fest.
But that fight can only be made at Light Heavyweight, so that leaves the
division struggling to find itself.
Although Calzaghe did what he
had to do by remaining undefeated till now, I gripe against him for
dimming the emerging shooting stars of Mikkel Kessler and Jeff Lacy who
would have brought some star appeal back to the division and boxing in
general. Even revived and newly minted contender champion Sakio Bika got
bested by Calzaghe, so who are the unbeaten contenders to get everybody
excited and trooping into the arena to watch the super fight. No one
The only hope for the division
is if Calzaghe moves up to fight Hopkins; a real possibility giving all
the taunting and face offs between the two recently. We could really some
sparks fly if Kessler, Bika and the dangerous Carl Froch have a dog fight
for all the vacated belts assuming Calzaghe gives them up. If the Hopkins
fight falls through we may see another dreadful mismatch in Manfredo vs.
Calzaghe II, but then Pavlik may step up to the plate for a mega fight, I
dare say I like his chances against Calzaghe in a US vs. UK contest with
cross over appeal to a wider and whiter American audience.
MIDDLEWEIGHTS (160)
Jermain Taylor seemed like the
savior of the division a very long time ago after getting through Hopkins
twice and surviving a war of attrition with Winky Wright, but he almost
killed his career with style disasters against the sprinting Spinks, and
the hit and run trained former rebel soldier Kasim Ouma; I blame Taylor’s
promoters for these publicity disasters; because when you put a boxer
puncher in front of Taylor he fights back hard, and many pundits changed
their minds about him after Pavlik. Either way the division got the needed
boost after Pavlik knocked him out to remind fans this was once the
division ruled by Hagler, Mugabe, Sugar Ray etc. Look for Pavlik to beat
Taylor in the rematch, I hope Pavlik remains at 160 though so we could see
a possible unification against Felix Sturm or the tenacious Arthur Abraham
– there may be no money in these fights but it would be the next logical
fights out there keeping unification as the overriding objective.
Light Middleweights (154):
After the Light Heavyweight
division I rank this division very low as it is filled with declining
fighters past their prime named Mayorga, Roberto Garcia, Spinks and the
great Oscar De la Hoya to name a few. They situation is further
complicated by they fact that Oscar could really awaken the division with
some fights within the division, but who can he fight to ignite the spark.
His loss to Mayweather already tarnishes anything he could further achieve
in the division, and nobody wants to see him fight Spinks or the revived
Vernon Forest. Forest may actually be the savior of the division, but if
Forest losses to Mayorga in another mega fight we would be left with the
dreadful Cory Spinks as the last man standing. Look forward to an
un-televised rematch between Spinks and Mayorga if that happens.
140 and below
Except for the fact that these
fighters weigh far below what I consider healthy, all they fights in these
divisions are fast and furious, there is no stop in the flow of punches
thrown and there is always the bloodied
Jorge Arce, or the fast paced
Manny Pacquaio to remind us all what boxing is all about. These divisions
are the very bedrock of boxing if only these fights were televised
stateside for me to watch.
HEAVYWEIGHTS (Unlimited lbs)
This division is usually used as
the benchmark to gauge the popularity of boxing since Jack Johnson,
Dempsey, Sonny Listen to name a few, so I am left with no choice but to
score the division as the worst and most uninspiring among the divisions
today; all the ranked contenders are not even athletic, flat footed and
plodding comes to mind, and they essentially lack real boxing skills, they
seem to rely on a power punch that just isn’t there. No unification fights
were made in 2007 and they Soviet’s seized all the belts to my
mortification. As an American resident I still have cold war phobias about
visiting the soviet union least they KGB grabbing me on a on a visit for a fight in Kiev if I keep on
researching their secret boxing training programs. I cringe when I think
about they time I will be forced to buy a ticket bound for Uzbekistan to
do a story on Chagaev if he ever decides to defend there in the future,
but I will be forced to go, and will probably have the greatest time of my
life with all the women while sampling vodka martinis, albeit with eyes in
my back waiting for they KGB to show up.
To make matters worse CHAGEAV VS
IBRAGIMOV and PETERS VS MASKEAV got cancelled and Sam PETERS barely
escaped with his interim belt against MCCLINE basically killing all
momentum of expectations that Peter was the hope of the heavyweight
division at they end of 2007. The fallout from that performance has Peters
vs Maskeav headed for the Cancun instead of Madison Square garden.
Hopefully, Klitschko should
annihilate the undersized Sultan Ibragimov in 2008, but what then, another
pointless defense against another journey man ala Ray Austin (where is he
now) comes to mind. I almost forgot he has to fight the winner of rising
American contender Eddie Chambers vs. the unknown Alexander Povetkin who.
Nobody will watch those fights, how do you promote it, they victor
Klitchko is so obvious until more clips of the soviet becomes available.
There may be some interest if Maskeav gets through Sam Peter, but if Peter
wins by anything except a knockout, there will be no interest in Klitchko
vs. Peters 2.
There is glimmer of hope for the
division as Chageav battles Matt Skelton in his first defense, an upset
either way could further darken they clarity of the landscape, but the
winner of that fight may have to fight the winner of Liahovich vs.Valuez,
that could be fun.
All said and done 2008 may still
beat our expectations, Punch On