Wednesday, 24 February 2010

Humberto Soto-David Diaz - There Could Be Fireworks; For As Long As The Fight Lasts! -- Eastside Boxing

By James Slater, Eastside Boxing

As fans may know, the excellent Humberto Soto will clash with the teak-tough David Diaz on the under-card of the upcoming March 13th Pacquiao-Clottey card, and the two will fight to decide the vacant WBC lightweight crown. On paper, a definite win for the far more polished Soto, the fight could well be lively and exciting for as long as it lasts.

Former featherweight and super-featherweight titlist Soto, 50-7-1(32) and now aged 29, will be having his second fight up at lightweight, having won a commanding ten-round UD over Jesus Chavez last time out.. Having won his last six, since his unfair DQ loss to Francisco Lorenzo in June of 2008 (on the under-card of Pacquiao's crushing win over Diaz) - including a "revenge" win over Lorenzo - Soto is on a roll. Stopped just once in his long career - by Hector Javier Marquez, way back in 2000 (a retirement loss) - Soto has to be seen as a fighter with a great chance of keeping his unbeaten streak going against Chicago's Diaz.

Having fought just once since his brutal 9th -round KO loss to "Pac-Man," against common opponent Jesus Chavez (Diaz winning a majority verdict over Chavez, back in September of last year), it's tough to gauge how much the 33-year-old former WBC 135-pound champ has left. Diaz sure took quite a beating from Pacquiao, having a good long rest of well over a year after the fight that saw his record go to 34-2-1(17).

Diaz may be the more proven lightweight, having fought his entire career at either 135 or higher, whereas Soto has had just the one bout at the weight, but Diaz will be giving away height and reach, as well as age, against "La Zorrita." And Diaz' southpaw stance is unlikely to overly trouble Soto, as the Mexican has been in with left handers before and won.

Adding everything up, the March 13th fight looks like a very, very hard night's work for the older man. However, Diaz will almost certainly come in ready to fight and fight hard in giving it his best shot. And Diaz can bang, we must not forget that. Soto, while a good boxer, has also shown how he can be dragged into a real fight, where his chin is tested. Diaz' only hope, surely, is to make the fight a dogfight next month; but even if this is how the match turns out to be fought, Soto will still prevail in my opinion.

Though he has only been stopped once at lightweight (Diaz' other inside distance defeat coming up at 140, against Kendall Holt), the former champ looks headed for either a KO or a TKO against Soto. I go for the man from Tijuana to get the job done, in an exciting, if largely one-sided fight, in around eight or nine rounds. Diaz, who may well get busted up along the way, will go out on his shield though.

Source: eastsideboxing.com

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Uknown Chambers one victory from stardom -- The Ring

By Michael Rosenthal, The Ring

Eddie Chambers is a single victory away from reaching the pinnacle of the boxing world. At the moment, though, a reasonable question for the casual fan might be: Eddie who?

Such is the lot of arguably America’s best heavyweight, who faces the daunting and normally futile challenge of fighting gargantuan RING champion Wladimir Klitschko on March 20 at the 50,000-seat Espirit Arena in Dusseldorf, Germany.

Of course, Chambers says he’s different from a long line of opponents who were unable to cope with Klitschko’s immense size – 6 foot, 6½ inches, 240-plus pounds – and his fine-tuned, time-tested ability to use it against smaller foes.

The 6-1 Philadelphian says he has both the skills and game plan to shock the boxing world, which hasn’t seen Klitschko lose since he punched himself out and was stopped by Lamon Brewster in 2004.

Chambers doesn’t get much respect going into the fight, though. Odds makers have made Klitschko as much as a 10-1 favorite to make Chambers his 12th consecutive victim. On top of that: As of now, the fight isn’t scheduled to be on TV in the U.S., meaning his countrymen might not see it if he pulls off an upset

And Chambers can live with that. When he wins – and he’s certain he will – the world will have no choice but to take notice.

“I’m very hungry,” Chambers said over the phone from his training camp in the Pocono Mountains. “And I don’t just mean money. I’m talking about respect. … No one sees me as a threat in any way. They think it’s going to be another walk in the park (for Klitschko) because I’m a small guy without much power. I’m not that strong, or even that fast. Why would people want to watch another American get slaughtered?

“… I believe I’m one of the best heavyweights of my era and I’ll prove it by beating the best heavyweight out there now. Wladimir is still a man. And there’s always a way to beat a man.”

The irony here is that America might fall in love with Chambers if given a chance. He’s one of the most-articulate and engaging fighters you’ll ever meet. Interviewing him is invariably a pleasure.

And he’s unusual in that he seems to lack an edge, at least outside the ring. He might strike you more as an intelligent guy who would do your taxes than a professional boxer, a notion that made him chuckle because he knows it’s true.

His body contributes to the deception. He has always been relatively short – 6-1 is generous – and pudgy. He just doesn’t look like an elite athlete, although he has worked hard over the past few fights to harden his muscles and improve his overall condition.

He weighed a near-career-low 208½ pounds when he outpointed Alexander Dimitrenko in July, his most-impressive performance.

“I’m getting a little fanatical about it,” Chambers said. “I’ve been training since July, honestly. Not boxing but a lot of cardio, a lot of running. I don’t want to put on unnecessary weight, for this fight in particular.”

And, while Klitschko certainly deserves to be favored, there are reasons to give Chambers a shot.

One, this will be his third fight in Germany. His only loss was a decision to Alexander Povetkin in Berlin in 2008, his first fight on an unfamiliar continent, and he easily outpointed the favored Dimitrenko in Hamburg upon his return to Germany.

Chambers (35-1, 18 knockouts) expects to be perfectly comfortable when he arrives in Dusseldorf in a few weeks even though Germany is Klitschko’s home base.

“The first time I went I just wasn’t mentally prepared,” he said. “I was so wound up I just stayed in my room the whole time. I didn’t enjoy the experience at all. Against Dimitrenko, it was the opposite. I enjoyed the locals, I ate at nice restaurants, I enjoyed the experience.

“I think it’s important to have fun. Even in the ring, you have to have fun. You need to get yourself excited. That’s what I learned from that experience.”

Chambers also proved against Dimitrenko that he can handle a big man. The Ukrainian, unbeaten when Chambers fought him, is 6-7 and weighed 253 but the little American gave the best performance of his career to win a one-sided decision, even if one sight-challenged judge scored it a draw.

Obviously, Dimitrenko isn’t Klitschko (53-3, 47 KOs) but Chambers demonstrated that he can overcome an enormous size difference and turn in a dominating performance with his skills, speed and new-found aggression.

Chambers was always criticized for relying primarily on his defensive skills instead of letting his hands go.

“Eddie realized finally in the Dimitrenko fight how valuable fighting is,” said his promoter, Dan Goossen, who has been among those pushing him to throw more punches. “… He was just tremendous from an offensive standpoint. He realized that it’s easier to fight someone when you’re throwing punches instead of just trying to dodge them.

“He needed to throw more punches because he’s fast, accurate and good defensively. It all came together against Dimitrenko.”

Again, however, Dimitrenko isn’t Klitschko. So why will Chambers be different from the rest when he steps through the ropes and looks up at the world champion?

“I’m different altogether from the guys he’s fought,” Chambers said. “I’m more deceptive than those guys. My speed is good. He’s not slow but he doesn’t move much. Those are things I’m working on. I’m not going to stand around and make decisions on the fly like others have. I’m going to think things through beforehand. I’m not going to take a few punches to give one. If you stand in front of him, he’ll probably knockout you out even if you have a good chin. … You can’t stay on the outside, though. The thing is to fight your way in, make him respect what you’re trying to do. Then, when you’re in there, you keep firing.

“I know it’s not going to be easy. They’ve [Klitschko and his brother, Vitali] been dominating for a reason. They’re the best in the world … until someone gets in there and beats them. I want to shock people.”

Michael Rosenthal can be reached at RingTVeditor@yahoo.com

Source: ringtv.com

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Filipino television says Pacman visibly shaken during blood tests -- Yahoo! Sports

By Steve Cofield, Yahoo! Sports

Now see, it wasn't that hard after all. Manny Pacquaio objected to giving blood too close to his potential fight against Floyd Mayweather. He even said he was afraid of needles. Yesterday, was scary time for Pacman as he went through a battery of prefight tests and gave blood to determine if he was free of performance enhancing drugs.

Filipino television did a video feature covering the doctor's visit and claimed that Pacquiao was "visibly shaken" while giving blood. Do you see anything?

Maybe we missed it but maybe out of respect for the national hero, that part of the visit was left on the cutting room floor. Pacman trainer Freddie Roach has begun the prefight hype sounding confident his guy will get by Joshua Clottey on Mar. 13 in Dallas.

"Well, the more I watch Clottey, the more mistakes I find in him and I’m very confident Manny is going to knock him out and be the first person to knock him out," Roach said. "I know he [Clottey] has a good chin. He’s a tough guy and he’s a nice guy, but just studying the tapes of him, he won’t last 12 rounds with Manny Pacquiao in my opinion."

According to GMANews.tv, Pacman's entourage will hit Dallas on Mar. 8.

Source: sports.yahoo.com

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RICKY HATTON IS PILING ON THE POUNDS -- Daily Star

By Helen Morton, Daily Star

RICKY Hatton looks more like Ricky Fat’un in this shocking picture.

The light welterweight seemed heavier than ever on a pub visit.

Locals were shocked by the one-time champ’s size as he supped Guinness with pals.

The boxing legend may need to shed four stone before a fight later this year.

Ricky, 31, has piled on the pounds since his last fight against Manny Pacquiao, 31,in May last year.

He was drinking in The Farmhouse restaurant in Coventry.

Manager Mohammed Sarnwal, 18, said: “It was very obvious Ricky Hatton has put on a lot of weight. I watch all his fights on telly, and it was shocking to see him walk through the door, looking so big. He seemed like a really nice bloke who cared a lot about his fans."

“He said he wasn’t training at the moment, but that he would be starting soon. I’m sure he’ll get down to the right weight for his next fight.”

Hatton always eats a full English breakfast before fights, has only lost two – against Pacquiao and Floyd Merryweather Jr.

Source: dailystar.co.uk

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It's a wrap: If anyone can beat Floyd Mayweather Jr. it's Manny Pacquiao -- BraggingRightsCorner

By Daniel Miltz, BraggingRightsCorner.com

Out of all the fighters out there in and around Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s weight division, Manny Pacquiao has the best chance of beating him.

Stylistically, Manny matches up well against Mayweather. If you take a look at the Floyd Mayweather Jr./Zab Judah fight, you'll notice how Judah caught Mayweather with some good shots early on and in the middle stages of the fight. Zab Judah, like Manny Pacquiao is a south-paw with speed. But unlike Manny, Judah doesn't have the stamina, chin or discipline.

Judah's best weapon in that fight was the left hand - a punch Manny Pacquiao lands often against his opponents. There is no doubt that Manny would be landing a few of these powerful left hands on Mayweather's chin in the course of the fight; how many can Floyd Mayweather absorb before he falls? Or the better question probably is, can Mayweather avoid the left hand all night? Possible. But doubtful.

Mayweather has a great defense, but Pacquiao has the offensive firepower, speed, activity and stamina to capitalize. Even if Manny doesn't stop Mayweather, he certainly has the aggression and overall style to make it difficult for Mayweather, possibly out pointing Floyd in a close fight. Remember, most judges will favor aggression and activity. There is no doubt in my mind Manny will be more active, the only question will be how effective he will be.

It's certainly not a foregone conclusion that Manny Pacquiao WILL beat Floyd Mayweather Jr. if these two fight - I see a slight edge in favor of Manny - and that's the reason why this fight is so attractive... but if anyone can beat Mayweather, it's Manny Pacquiao!

Source: braggingrightscorner.com

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