Saturday 15 May 2010

Floyd Mayweather now has upper hand in negotiations for highly-anticipated bout with Manny Pacquiao -- New York Daily News

By Tim Smith, New York Daily News

A fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao is all anyone in boxing can talk about now that Mayweather beat Shane Mosley and Pacquiao won a congressional seat in the Philippines. Everyone except Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter.

Manny Pacquiao (Volume 2)While saying that he is going to do his "darndest to make the fight," Arum has taken a vow of silence when it comes to talking about the upcoming negotiations. That's what he told reporters on a conference call on Wednesday afternoon, a day after returning from the Philippines where he helped Pacquiao in his successful bid for congress.

Here's what we know: The fight would happen on Nov. 13 at either Cowboys Stadium in Dallas or at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Arum said Pacquiao is going to fight on that date with or without Mayweather. We know that Mayweather said there is no fight if Pacquiao doesn't agree to Olympic style drug testing. We also know that Pacquiao, who said he was needle-phobic, didn't want to do blood testing and that killed the last negotiation.

With that background the next thing I want to hear from Arum is: "The deal is done and the fight is on."

If neither side says a word between now and then, I'm fine with that. It is obvious that both sides running back and forth to the media during the first negotiations led to hardened feelings and ultimately killed the deal. Pacquiao filed a lawsuit against Mayweather, his father, Floyd Sr., his uncle and trainer, Roger, saying that they defamed him by saying that he was a steroids user.

Arum said the lawsuit is still pending and is in play. Ostensibly that will be part of the new negotiations.

If they pick up where the old negotiations left off then the drug testing issue is the only sticking point. But a lot has changed since then. Both boxers have fought and won.

Pacquiao dominated Joshua Clottey in a match where Cowboys Stadium was the main attraction. The fight was a letdown. Before the first negotiations for the fight went off track, Richard Schaefer, Golden Boy CEO who works with Mayweather, cancelled a visit to Dallas to tour Cowboys Stadium. Mayweather loves fighting in Vegas and Schaefer has a loyalty to the MGM Grand.

Mayweather is probably going to come at the new negotiations from a different standpoint. He dominated Shane Mosley, who was No. 3 on most people's Pound-for-Pound list and was viewed as his first legitimate opponent at welterweight.

The result of the two fights has given Mayweather the upper hand in the negotiations, and it could re-open the issue of the financial splits. In the previous deal, the two had agreed to a 50-50 split on the revenue. Mayweather may try to press his status as the sport's top Pay Per View attraction.

Mayweather holds the all-time boxing PPV record for his fight against Oscar De La Hoya, which did over 2.4 million buys and generated $137 million.

Mayweather has now been involved in the two-highest grossing non-heavyweight boxing PPV events ever. That puts Mayweather in the driver's seat with Pacquiao, whose two highest PPV fights were against De La Hoya (1.25 million) and Miguel Cotto (1.2 million).

The other big issue is whether Pacquiao's congressional duties will interfere with his preparation for a proposed fight. Arum said Pacquiao won't have any problems balancing his congressional duties with his boxing preparation. The Philippine congress is in session in July and then takes two months off.

"When he is training, he runs in the morning, sleeps, goes to the gym, eats, then has his free time," Arum said. "His free time will now be devoted to his political responsibility. He'll have plenty of time to do his politics."

Arum said he will stick to the media blackout during the negotiations, because he thinks they will be able to get a deal that way.

"A lot of nice things can happen when people negotiate in good faith," he said.

That's true. But there could be a few more issues that come up this time that were resolved the last time, because things have changed now.

It will be interesting to see how this plays out and if both sides can keep their mouths shut while the negotiations are going on. But for now all indications are that the two best boxers in the world are heading for a showdown in November. And that is indeed good news for boxing.

The next thing I want to hear from both sides is: "The deal is done and the fight is on."

Source: nydailynews.com

Pacquiao dismisses Floyd's climb in rankings -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

MANNY PACQUIAO CUSTOM T-SHIRT NEW DESIGN!Told about the rankings made by Yahoo Sports that installed Floyd Mayweather as boxing’s No. 1 fighter, Manny Pacquiao just shrugged it off, telling his Canadian adviser Saturday that he remains secure about his current stature in the sport.

“We are not giving too much attention to that,” said Mike Koncz, narrating an incident when he informed his boss about Mayweather taking the top spot based on Yahoo’s rankings.

“When I told him that, he just stared at me,” said Koncz. “He doesn’t care what the others think because he knows who is truly the No. 1 fighter in the world.”

Yahoo had conducted a poll among boxing writers mainly from the US, Puerto Rico and Europe and the 33 surveyed, 20 picked Mayweather and 13 selected Pacquiao as their choices for No. 1.

Mayweather’s climb to No. 1 is due to his recent victory over Shane Mosley in Las Vegas, something that weighed more heavily among those polled compared to Pacquiao’s win over Joshua Clottey last March in Dallas.

Meanwhile, Koncz bared that Pacquiao, who has won a congressional seat in Sarangani, will be travelling to Manila anytime this coming week to attend to some personal matters.

Boxing is among the many things that is not on his priority list since the 31-year-old Pacquiao won’t be entering the ring until November against an opponent that should be named in the next several weeks.

Mayweather tops the short list that also includes the winner of the June 5 battle between Yuri Foreman and Miguel Cotto and even Antonio Margarito.

Source: mb.com.ph

Brit, Brooklyn boxers brawl at weigh-in for Garden bout -- New York Post

By George Willis, New York Post

The welcome mat has been laid out for Amir Khan. The popular British boxer makes his debut on American soil tonight when he defends his WBA super lightweight championship against Brooklyn's Paulie Malignaggi at the Garden Theater.

Both fighters like to trash talk, and emotions reached a boiling point at the weigh-in yesterday when the two sides got into a pushing and shoving brawl.

Amir Khan: A Boy from Bolton: My StoryThe scale was knocked over and so were several bodies, but the fighters emerged unscarred.

"The emotions are amazing between the two guys," Schaefer said. "I walked Amir back to his room after the weigh-in and Amir said to me, 'I'm going to punish him.'"

Malignaggi's response: "Bring it on!"

Khan, a silver medalist as a 17-year-old at the 2004 Games in Athens, is considered a future star in the sport. He has signed with Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions and is trained by Freddie Roach, the noted trainer of Manny Pacquiao. Five years into his pro career Khan is a world champion headlining on HBO's "Boxing After Dark" with pay-per-view riches beckoning on the horizon.

"He's here to become a global superstar," Richard Schaefer, the CEO of Golden Boy Promotions, declared of the 23-year-old from Bolton, England. "If you really want to be a true superstar you have to come to the United States and make a name for yourself, and that's exactly what Amir wants."

Khan (22-1, 16 KOs) is eager to justify the hype.

"I want to make a big impression in the United States," he said. "I could have stayed in the UK. But I want to make a name for myself and come over here. Paulie is the guy I'm going to use to be a big star over here."

Malignaggi isn't impressed.

"This is a fighter who has been built up to be a star, who hasn't really earned it yet," he said.

The Brooklyn native is oozing with confidence after a 12-round beat down of Juan Diaz last December. He sees Khan as his ticket to boxing's elite and perhaps a fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

"This is redemption," Malignaggi said. "This is what I've been waiting for because nobody, nobody thought I was going to be back in a world championship fight. It's an opportunity to beat a champion that everybody thinks is so great."

Both fighters are confident in their corners. Roach is Khan's third trainer, signing on after he was knocked out in one round by Breidis Prescott in September 2008. Khan, who has sparred with Pacquiao at Roach's Gym, has won all four of his bouts since.

"He still is learning, but he's come a long way in a short time," Roach said. "Getting knocked out by Prescott might have been the best thing that happened to him. It got us together."

Malignaggi (27-3, 5 KOs) has been rejuvenated under trainer Sherif Younan, who has encouraged Malignaggi slick-boxer style and tightened his form to add power to his punches. "Good technique and good form delivers power along with speed," Younan said. "[Khan] is definitely going to be surprised when he gets in there with Paulie."

Though Khan and Malignaggi might be fighting in the main event, the best 140-pounder on the card could be veteran Nate Campbell. He takes on Victor Ortiz in the other televised bout. In a division where Timothy Bradley and Devon Alexander hold titles, winners tonight can expect more big fight this year.

PREDICTION: Malignaggi has plenty of heart and determination, but I doubt he can match Khan's skill level. Khan might be just as fast as Malignaggi and with more power. It might be difficult for Malignaggi to win rounds without looking like he's running. Khan by decision.

george.willis@nypost.com

Source: nypost.com

Amir Khan hits back at Paulie Malignaggi after doping accusations -- The Guardian

Guardian.co.uk

Khan, 23, will make his US debut when he puts his WBA light-welterweight title on the line. Although he and Malignaggi have exchanged barbed comments throughout the build-up to this fight, Khan felt the American had crossed a line by questioning his Wild Card Gym stablemate Manny Pacquiao's reluctance to agree to blood-testing ahead of any potential fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

"He was saying I was on drugs as well and how big I had gone, but working with Alex Ariza [Roach's fitness and nutrition expert] and looking at how my body has changed, to be honest I've gone a lot slimmer," Khan said. "I was a big, big lightweight and I've trimmed down and made my legs bigger.

"What people like Paulie Malignaggi don't realise is the work ethic and the training that me and Manny put into our work. We work so hard and it just disrespects the trainers because they help us so much, push us 110% and do a wonderful job with us."

Khan believes the hard work he has put in under both Roach and Ariza has transformed his career after he left his home town of Bolton to train at the Wild Card in Los Angeles following the only defeat of his professional career, a one-punch, first-round knockout by Breidis Prescott in 2008.

"Since I've been in the Wild Card Gym with Freddie and Alex I think I've come on so much both mentally and physically," he said. "(I have been) using my brain, using my skills instead of just jumping in using my heart.

"The heart is there when I need to dig deep but instead of just going in there not using my brain – I used to get caught with stupid shots – now I'm picking the right shots at the right time and it's made a massive difference in my style. When we put it all together and we spar I see the differences from before.

"I had the skills, I just needed someone to bring it out of me and to give me the confidence; to say 'Look, use your brain instead of using your speed, your power. Rely on your boxing skills', and that's what I've done. Now I have my boxing skills and my speed and power."

Khan said he sought out Roach as a trainer "who's going to take me to the next level and bring the best out of me". He added: "I watch those old fights and I'm thinking 'If I was fighting myself...'

"My left hand was very low and I could get caught with a right hand and then I used to jump in with my body first and leave my back leg behind so my stance was wide and I used to be square on a lot of times and just look for that one big shot. But that's experience, I've learned from that and it's made me a better fighter."

He praised Ariza and Roach for putting him straight on the importance of making weight in a proper manner.

"I used to eat what I want, on a junk diet and used to think I could make my weight easy and kill myself over the last four or five days," said Khan. "But now I do it professionally. I work my way down and Freddie is always on my case or Alex's case, 'What's Amir's weight now?' They work together and I make the weight easily and I feel so much stronger."

Khan promised to beat Malignaggi in style and join Ricky Hatton as the only fighters to have stopped the 29-year-old American.

"If you look at his last few fights, even the guys that have beaten him, I don't think anyone has beaten him in the style which I'm going to beat him. I want to do a good job on him.

"We've got a gameplan to take into the fight, we'll stick to it and see how he copes with that gameplan. I'll listen to instructions from Freddie and it's a gameplan to stop him and if it's early, it's early but I know for a fact it won't go the full distance.

"I'm definitely going to win but not only win, win in a good style."

Source: guardian.co.uk

"Elite boxing panel" to Manny Pacquiao: Floyd Mayweather, Jr. is better -- Examiner

By Eric Sloan, Examiner.com

It's not time to update the boxing pound-for-pound (P4P) rankings here; however, an "elite panel of boxing writers," according to Yahoo! Sports, says that the man at the top spot is no longer Manny Pacquiao--it is Floyd Mayweather, Jr. We're not talking about a small margin of victory either. Floyd commanded 20 of 33 first place votes with Manny taking the remaining 13. Given that Yahoo! and The Ring are basically in bed together these days, we may well see Mayweather take the top P4P there as well in the coming weeks.

Manny Pacquiao Pound 4 Pound Men's Tee, XX, BKMayweather deserves mad respect for what he did against Shane Mosley on May 1st and there is no doubt that he is one of the top fighters in the world. The troubling trend with the "elite" boxing writers though is that Mayweather receives too much P4P credit for his victories.

Coming out of retirement in September 2009 to bully Juan Manuel Marquez vaulted Mayweather to a near unanimous No. 2 P4P ranking. That fight was as lopsided as a bad breast augmentation and nobody seemed to care that Floyd dishonored the weight limit in order to maximize his size advantage over Marquez. The problem at the time was that Mayweather was immediately ranked ahead of Mosley--a man Floyd had not been willing to fight.

So, to the delight of boxing fans, Mosley and Mayweather threw down. That fight, as dominant as it was, was just as much about the fact that Mosley did absolutely nothing after the second round. It could be argued that Andre Berto, Paul Williams, Miguel Cotto, Luis Collazo, Joshua Clottey, and just about everyone else on the radar at 147 would have looked equally impressive against Sugar Coma Shane. Manny Pacquiao would likely have knocked him out.

Now every boxing writer is entitled to an opinion. The problem with P4P voting though is the analysis. Most voters seem to weigh recent performances over the aggregate level of opposition. They demand a certain level of accomplishment, and rightfully so, but there also seems to be a bit of matchmaking going on as well.

Mayweather has fought twice since his "retirement" in December of 2007. Pacquiao fought six times. Mayweather fought one welterweight. Pacquiao faced three. Mayweather scored no knockouts. Pacquiao stopped four fighters. Mayweather has physically developed into a true welterweight. Freddie Roach believes Pacquiao has maxed out in size as a junior welterweight.

To properly compare Manny and Floyd from a P4P perspective, then equal size is the modifier. In other words, put all of Pacquiao's talent, power, speed, stamina, heart, and every other attribute into Mayweather's frame. Frankenstein Pacquiao versus modern Mayweather--true P4P analysis. Now, who wins? Whoever that is should be the number one fighter in the world. Any of the elite boxing writers want a do over?

Source: examiner.com

Pacquiao wins the election, but he still has to get Mayweather’s vote -- 15Rounds

By Norm Frauenheim, 15Rounds.com

Campaign promises in politics are like noses in boxing. They are there to be broken. But Filipino Congressman-elect Manny Pacquiao has one promise he can’t break:

He has to fight Floyd Mayweather, Jr.

If the Mayweather promise wasn’t exactly stated in Pacquiao’s successful run for the seat representing the Sarangani province, it was there, everywhere. Few would have paid as much attention otherwise. Just ask Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum, who a few days ago returned from the Philippines so upbeat that it was as if his flight through time zones included a stop at The Thrilla In Manila.

Inside Government - Congressman, 1975“It’s amazing how many people came up to me as I was leaving the Philippines and asked me: When is the Mayweather fight going to happen?’’ Arum said Wednesday in a conference call with a few media members. “That’s the fight people want to see. That’s the fight that I’m going to do my darndest to make happen.

’’ This corner, like several others, has been skeptical about chances that Arum or anybody else has at putting together a rare fight that can captivate worldwide attention. Yet, that rare potential is still there, despite the buzz-kill that came with the noisy, then dreary negotiations that fell apart just five months ago. It’s hard to pinpoint what exactly re-invigorated interest. Maybe, the interest was always there anyway.

Whatever it was, Arum re-discovered in his trip to the Philippines that the appetite for Mayweather-Pacquiao is as keen as ever. If there were any misgivings still with him in the wake of the feud, that baggage wasn’t with him upon his return. In part, I suspect, that’s because it’s so easy to get caught up in the phenomenon that is Pacquiao, whose ability to surprise is seemingly endless.

The word after his one-sided decision over Joshua Clottey on March 13 in Dallas was that he couldn’t win in a return to the political ring against a wealthy, well-entrenched rival. Even Filipino writers who chronicle his every move, made it sound as if Pacquiao’s chances at defeating Roy Chiongbian were about as good as Clottey winning a rematch.

Like coming back from a loss to Erik Morales in their first fight, however, Pacquiao learned from defeat, adjusted and added a right to the left for an uninterrupted run of 12 successive victories since 2005. There are no lasting losses for Pacquiao. There are only lessons. If the 31-year-old Filipino can adjust, so can the 78-year-old Arum.

This time, Arum promises not to negotiate in the media, which late last year was like a flame to a fuse. It blew up egos that are never far from exploding.

“Once you start negotiating through the media, it becomes ego driven,’’ said Arum, who is talking about Nov. 13 or Nov. 6 at either Las Vegas’ MGM Grand or Cowboys Stadium in the Dallas metroplex. “People can’t wait to give a statement to the press. The flames just shoot up and there is no real opportunity for rational behavior to take over. Everyone is so interested is setting forth his position to the media that it becomes the contest. That involves me as well as everybody else.’’

Arum’s acknowledgement of his role in the blowup represents a promising sign. But it’s reasonable to remain skeptical about whether he can rein in his quick temper, which has been great for the media but often a deal breaker in negotiations, especially involving a fighter, Mayweather, he doesn’t like.

For Arum , a good starting point – a symbol of good will – would be to drop a lawsuit filed against Mayweather, Golden Boy President Oscar De La Hoya and others. It charges that Pacquiao, who has never failed a sanctioned drug test, was defamed in what was said and written in the debate over Mayweather’s demands for random testing. If the public didn’t suspect Pacquiao as a user of performance-enhancers before, it does now. That, at least, is the allegation.

Arum said Wednesday that “the lawsuit is still being actively pursued.” However, he also said: “All these issues are on the table and they will be negotiated and nothing cannot be discussed.

’’OK, can we talk about taking that lawsuit off the table?

It’s a beginning, a tentative step in trying to find out whether Mayweather is really interested. He says is. Then again, he says a lot of things. It’s also reasonable to be wary of Mayweather, a man of many motives, moods and roles. A kinder, gentler and better Mayweather showed up in the pre-fight build-up to his brilliant victory on May 1 over Shane Mosley.

At news conferences during the two weeks before opening bell, he dropped the profanity. It was hard to tell whether he was playing his own brand of politics in Las Vegas while Pacquiao was running a political campaign on the other side of the world. But a likable Mayweather, before, during and after the fight, emerged. That, too, looms as a promising sign for a deal.

Still, the imminent renewal of talks could all be for naught if the impasse over random, Olympic-style drug testing remains unresolved. It’s hard to see how Mayweather, who underwent eight tests before his decision over Mosley, can compromise on that one. He has said he won’t. If he does, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, which supervised the testing for Mayweather-Mosley, will surely criticize him.

Meanwhile, there are reports that Pacquiao, who has said blood-testing weakens him, might be willing to soften his stand of no testing within a couple of weeks of opening ball.

Without some sign of compromise from either or both camps, forget it. There’s no reason to even begin talking.

If the drug-testing issue is resolved, another one looms over the money. Before a proposed March 13 fight, they had agreed to a 50-50 split. But the equation has changed. Mayweather ‘s pay-per-view numbers are harder to debate now than they were before he beat Mosley. His victory over Mosley generated 1.4 million customers, or twice that of the 700,000 who bought the HBO telecast for Pacquiao’s victory over Clottey. Depending on the projection, Pacquiao and Mayweather could set the pay-per-view record, meaning their purses could be a split of $100 million.

If the agreement isn’t 50-50, the devil is in the percentages. If Mayweather demands 55 percent, the additional five percent means $55 million for him and $45 million for Pacquiao, who might need some money after spending a reported $6.5 million on his Congressional campaign. The difference amounts to 10 million reasons to fear that the fight won’t happen. For now, however, I’ll bet on the optimism.

It’s the only way to vote.

Source: 15rounds.com

Malignaggi at Home versus Khan -- SecondsOut.com

By Steve Kim, SecondsOut.com

December 19th, 1997 will forever be etched in the mind of Paulie Malignaggi. On that night at the famed Madison Square Garden, a highly-touted fighter from Great Britain took on the local favorite from New York. That fight was the memorable shootout between “Prince” Naseem Hamed and Kevin Kelley, which Hamed won in four pulsating rounds.

"I remember it well," Malignaggi told Maxboxing on Sunday night, "because it was the first live fight I ever attended. So I definitely remember it very well. And I knew Kevin Kelley from Gleason’s Gym; I had just started boxing; I actually hadn’t had an amateur fight yet. I had just joined the boxing gym about six months earlier and had started learning how to box. That was the first live fight I ever attended. Live pro fight, anyways. I have fond memories of that night. Kevin didn’t win, but it was an incredible atmosphere; it was incredibly entertaining as well."

This weekend, inside the small room of MSG at the WaMu Theater, Malignaggi- who hails from Brooklyn- faces Amir Khan, who is making his Stateside debut.

"I see some similarities here; mainly, Khan is British and I’m from New York. Also he’s has a Middle Eastern similarity as well," pointed out Malignaggi. Like Hamed, Khan is of Middle Eastern descent, Hamed being Pakistani and Khan being Yemeni."Kevin was a hot-shot New Yorker, I’m a hot-shot New Yorker. I think the only difference is that Hamed was more flashy than Khan. Khan is a trash-talker, too, but not to the same level as Hamed. Khan is not as clever."

Malignaggi’s promoter, Lou DiBella, played an integral role in making Hamed-Kelley a reality since he was in charge of HBO’s boxing division back then. He believes that this fight is a valid comparison. "With a couple of exceptions, Hamed was undefeated and he could dance and sing,” said DiBella. “Hamed was an entertainer in and outside the ring. This kid’s more of a straight fighter and the other thing is, at the point in which Hamed came to conquer America, he had never been knocked out in a round by a journeyman."

DiBella is referring to Khan’s lone blemish, a first round TKO at the hands of Breidis Prescott, who isn’t exactly Aaron Pryor. Khan has what could be described as a “china chin.” Problem is, Malignaggi has “china fists.” His brittle hands have contributed to him having just five knockouts to his credit in 30 professional bouts. It’s one of the major reasons why Golden Boy Promotions (which just recently inked Khan) tabbed Malignaggi.

So what wins out, the not-so-irresistible force or the easily-moved object?

When asked if he would attempt to check Khan’s chin early on, Malignaggi answered, "Strategically, you just come in and do what you do best; obviously, everybody knows what type of fighter I am. You pretty much know what to expect from that end. I’m sure Khan will do the same thing. Yeah, I’m not a big puncher; some of it, again, I don’t have to make excuses. I’ve had hand injuries. I’ve had a trainer that was clueless for two years. That definitely didn’t help my cause as well. My hands are fine now. Last year was the first full year, top to bottom, I had with healthy hands. So I feel like I’m getting stronger. I feel like I’m able to juice up his power a little bit. But let’s face it; even guys like Willie Limond, a junior lightweight/lightweight, he put Khan down and almost out. So if you blow on Khan’s chin, you might hurt him."

Malignaggi makes the point that all punches hurt to a certain degree and all boxers have varying degrees of resistance to them.

"So I don’t come in getting away from the game plan, but let’s now go above and beyond here; a grown man hits Amir Khan, he’s going at any point," he continued. "I mean, a grown man hits anybody in the chin, he can go at any point. I understand some of us hit harder than others, but punches never tickle. And if my punches tickled, I never would’ve won a world title in my career."

The promotion is now in its final stages with the final press conference having taken place on Wednesday afternoon in the Big Apple. But as of late last week, it wasn’t clear if Khan was going to be given clearance to even re-enter the country. He spent the last weeks of his camp in Canada after touching down initially at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, California, under the watchful eye of Freddie Roach.

The whole situation left Malignaggi antsy.

"Yeah, man, I went through a whole training camp just to have this thing taken out at the last second; I was pretty frustrated. I’m pretty relieved. I’m more relieved than anybody," said Malignaggi, who, during this stretch, blew up DiBella’s cell phone. "Because I was like, ’Yo, what’s going on?’ Everybody was like holding information back. ’Oh, he’s going to be here; he’s going to be here.’ A week later, he still wasn’t here. So I’m like, ’Yo, something’s up right now. Somebody’s not telling me something.’ So I started really thinking. I was just really hoping people weren’t lying to me. I started getting pissed off. But everything’s alright now."

Fighters get paid to fight. They don’t get a dime for their countless hours of preparation if the bouts don’t come off. It’s the most helpless feeling in the world for a professional prizefighter.

"That’s what I was thinking, because if the fight gets canceled halfway through camp, it’s like, alright. But for a fight to get canceled right at the end of it- and that’s never happened to me, thankfully- just the thought of it, you put in all that work, stay disciplined for all that time and just have your mind set on the game plan, being disciplined, doing what you have to do every single day, day in and day out, and then it’s taken away? Aww, man, just the thought of it was frustrating me," lamented Malignaggi.

Perhaps the only one more relieved that Khan eventually received his work visa was DiBella.

"Let me tell you something; it was a wonderful blessing that he was able to get in because Paulie only had 24 hours of anxiety and it would’ve just kept going. I’m happy for Paulie’s benefit, but also for the benefit of my ears that Khan got in," said the promoter, laughing.

Once again, Malignaggi finds himself the B-side of a big promotion. But this time under much different circumstances.

"He’s the B-side, in terms of what he’s getting paid by the television network, and he’s the B-side, in terms of the odds-makers, but he’s clearly in the eyes of the United States of America and for the purposes of this promotion, he’s clearly not the B-side," DiBella pointed out. "And that’s what I argued all along and I still stand by that. That’s why we’re in New York, where, yes, there will be some Brits there; there will be a Khan contingent, but you’re going to hear chants for Paulie in that room.

"It’s not going to be Amir Khan’s room."

P-WILL

Had a chance to talk to someone in Paul Williams’ inner circle and I was told that they have made it clear that Williams will settle in at 154 pounds and they have basically given up the pipe dream of facing the likes of Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather for now. They can scream at the top of their lungs all day long; they are never getting those fights. It’s like this, I see that Halle Berry is back out on the market, but let’s be real, I’m not taking her out anytime soon.

Also, they have realized that for them, the west coast isn’t the best coast. They believe that it would be much more ideal for Williams to be showcased consistently in markets like D.C., Atlantic City or even Atlanta.

Well, that’s a start. Now, if they can get only get him more active than he’s been recently.

BUTE

I got a call from a representative of InterBox, which handles the career of IBF super middleweight champion Lucian Bute. I was informed that Bute will return to the ring in his home country of Romania on July 24th against a still-to-be-determined foe. It doesn’t seem like HBO will be televising this one as they are already committed to a date featuring Yuriorkis Gamboa in Las Vegas.

The IBF just recently installed Jesse Brinkley as Bute’s mandatory, an opponent that might not have been accepted by HBO. So perhaps this works out perfectly for everybody involved. Bute stays active, draws big back home and HBO doesn’t have to foot the bill.

30 FOR 30

On Tuesday night I saw “Straight Outta L.A.” on ESPN’s ongoing “30 for 30” series, directed by Ice Cube, which looked at the relationship between the Raiders and the city of Los Angeles and the rise of “gangsta” rap and, specifically, his former outfit N.W.A.

I thought it was OK, but to me (and I say this as someone who was a die-hard Rams fan, till they jumped ship after the 1994 season), it was like a less authentic version of “The U,” which traced the rise of the Miami Hurricanes in the 1980s and its place in the South Florida community. Here’s the thing, the real renegade Raiders, to me, will always be associated with Oakland, where they won the majority of their championships and had their most memorable moments like “The Holy Roller” and “The Ghost to the Post.”

Yeah, gang members and N.W.A. wore Raiders paraphernalia; well, you’d expect that since they do have a great looking logo (admittedly), but more importantly, they had those menacing colors, the famed silver-and-black. Crips and Bloods weren’t going to wear the purple-and-gold of the Lakers (who truly have been L.A.’s favorite franchise for over three decades), but I do remember many individuals of the same element sporting Los Angeles Kings gear, who in the late 80s, ditched their old uniforms for the same color scheme of the Raiders.

I’m guessing that they weren’t fans of Wayne Gretsky, Bernie Nicholls and Luc Robitaille.

The Raiders had a certain fan base, no doubt. But here’s the truth, they rarely sold-out (forcing a number of games to be blacked out, locally), they were a mediocre-to-bad franchise starting from 1986 and really, neither they, nor the NFL, are especially missed in Los Angeles. Life has gone on just fine without them. In fact, I always thought our city was 25-percent safer with the Raiders having moved back to Oakland (I mean, the first episodes of “Gangland” on the History Channel could’ve focused in on the Raider home games at the Coliseum).

All I can say now is, good riddance to the “Rai-duhs” (But I do miss the Raiderettes).

RAJON RONDO FLURRIES

There have been early conversations between the camps of middleweight champion Sergio Martinez and Shane Mosley. But again, these are just preliminary talks; nothing more. Both sides are just sifting through various options...A fight between Robert Guerrero and Joel Casamayor is being discussed for the pay-per-view undercard on July 31st, when Juan Manuel Marquez and Juan Diaz get it on again in Las Vegas...Told that Sergio Mora, who was to have faced Brit Mathew Macklin, has balked at that fight...Alfonso Gomez will be featured on the July 3rd edition of “Top Rank Live” on Fox Sports Net/Espanol...Bob Arum said on a conference call with reporters that the one thing that will suffer in Manny Pacquiao’s life, with his recent election victory, is his love of billiards. With his new responsibilities, he won’t have time to play as he once did. It’s the end of Manny-sota Fats, I guess...Just a gut feeling, but I don’t think the proposed fight between Gamboa and Celestino Caballero (which was slated for the HBO broadcast on July 24th) will take place. The problem? Very simple, not enough money to satisfy both sides. Plus, I think Gamboa wants a safer option...Told that Nonito Donaire is being strongly considered to open up the July 10th Showtime telecast before “JuanMa” Lopez faces Bernabe Concepcion in Puerto Rico...Seriously, did anyone really think that Rajon Rondo would ever be this good while at Kentucky? He may be a top ten player in the NBA right now...This week’s edition of “The Main Event” features Larry Merchant of HBO Sports and Lem Satterfield of Fanhouse.com...Any questions or comments can be sent to me at k9kim@yahoo.com and you can follow me at www.twitter.com/stevemaxboxing. You can also become a Facebook fan of Maxboxing at www.facebook.com/MaxBoxing

Source: secondsout.com