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Let the night air cool you off
Wlad dominated as expected. If you didn't have a pony in the race, you probably wouldn't have found much to enjoy in that fight. Luckily for me I am a fan of Wlad's.



the samoan lawyer's Avatar
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Big fan of Cotto and great to see him back looking sharp and throwing combo's again. Not a fan of Wlad or either K2's but wasnt exactly surprised the fight went the way it did.

Hard to call between Bradley and JMM but im gonna go with Bradley on this one, especially after seeing his last fight showed he's hard as nails!!

which leads me to.....

Mike Alvarado (No. 3) vs. Ruslan Provodnikov (No. 6)
12 rounds - Junior welterweight division (for Alvarado's WBO title. October 19th.


This is gonna be a brawl, cant pick a winner in this one. Im a fan of Brandon Rios and was a bit gutted he lost to Mile High Mike but at least it was a great fight.
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Wlad dominated as expected. If you didn't have a pony in the race, you probably wouldn't have found much to enjoy in that fight. Luckily for me I am a fan of Wlad's.
Did anyone really give Povetkin half a chance? I've read some headlines, "the greatest fighter today", come on.
Today, it's not just muscles and endurance. It's how tall you are and how long your arm stretch is.



Hayden Panettiere? Well, I guess he can add another TKO to his illustrious career
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Would this really excite any boxing fan outside those who buy the big bucks seats in Vegas?

Boxing - Lennox Lewis in talks over $100m Klitschko fight
The 48-year-old Briton, who was the last undisputed heavyweight champion of the world, was offered $50m (£31.3m) by promoters to fight again as he watched Wladimir Klitschko’s world title defence Alexander Povetkin at the weekend.

That figure was on his mind the last time he considered a return to the ring, but he would now expect double that.

"I said at the time that it will take $50million to get me out of my pyjamas but now I have to consider the value of my legacy of having retired as undisputed champion," was quoted as saying by the Mail.

"That will cost them $100million."

Lewis is certainly talking a good fight at the moment after having told the Telegraph that he would still be able to knock out Tyson Fury. Fury then launched into a Twitter tirade over the claim, but Lewis appears ready to back his words up in the ring, telling the Mail that he would return to professional boxing – for the right money.

"($100m) is my price tag and it is under discussion," Lewis said.

"I have told them I can be ready in six months and I am in provisional training.

"I am already under 300lb (around 50lb shy of his fighting weight)."

The 6’5” Lewis retired in 2004 after a 16-year professional career that was preceded by five years as an amateur, which saw him win Olympic gold at Seoul in 1988.

Lewis quit the sport after retaining multiple world titles against Vitali Klitschko in June 2003, initially promising to fight on but later backtracking. His record stands at 42-2-1, and he is widely regarded as the last great heavyweight.

The Klitschko brothers have since gone on to dominate the division, which has declined in popularity due to a relative lack of talent, and the emergence of Mixed Martial Arts.

Of the two Klitschko brothers, Lewis said he would prefer to fight Wladmir, having already proved himself against Vitali.

"I beat Vitali so I would like to fight the other brother but we’ll see how it works out. I want to bring back the Sweet Science to heavyweight boxing," he said.

Lewis was ringside for Wladmir’s victory over Povetkin, who was knocked down four times, but having watched the fight at close quarters, he left rather underwhelmed.

"In a way this fight confirmed my disappointment with the state of heavyweight boxing right now," he said. "The best I could find to challenge Wladimir was a kid who is not fully developed either physically or in terms of experience.

"People paid a lot of money in expectation of a great fight but Povetkin was not properly prepared for the most important fight of his career.

"Wladimir should have gone for the knockout after putting him down four times but I think he missed having [the late] Manny Steward in his corner. Manny would have told him what he told me when I fought Vitali - to go in and finish him.

"I suspect Wladimir had a problem with his right hand because as the fight went on he didn’t use it that often. But having said that he showed great movement, was very light on his feet and was never in danger of losing."
http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/news/b...2607--box.html
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What bullsh!t.

Lennox in his prime takes care of Wlad handily. He took on the stronger-chinned of the brothers when he was undertrained and still beat him.



Let the night air cool you off
I never thought he would have, and I still don't think he would have won. Of course since he is a heavyweight the layoff/age wouldn't have been as much of a factor as it would for say a Welterweight or something. Heavies rely on their power mainly, and you don't lose that as quickly as you do your speed. But, it's a moot point I suppose.



I agree, that would be an interesting fight. But I want to see him rematch Pacman before that. I'm one of those who didn't agree with the decision the first time, so at least it will shut people up like me.

And let's say Pacman wins...I'd like to see him break yet another undefeated streak. Mayweather, perhaps?



Let the night air cool you off
Ruslan Provodnikov, my favorite fighter and yours, is awesome. He made Mike Alvarado quit in his hometown. And did you see that mouse over Alvarado's eye? Alvarado looked like a broken man after that fight, this could be the fight that steals his spirit.



the samoan lawyer's Avatar
Unregistered User
Anyone watching Froch vs Groves this weekend? Decent card, should be a great night. Most of the fighters are entertaining to watch apart from in the Joshua fight although its always good craic waiting for a spectacular ko.

With regards to the main event, i have no idea now what way it will go. Froch hasnt look himself this past week and from the clips shown of his sparring with Eubank jr, he looked a shell of his former self and that was against a middleweight! Groves has been much quieter than in the first fight, I just hope he's not going to be hard to listen to if he gets the win. He got his prediction correct in the first fight in dropping Froch with the right in the first round, now he's predicting winning by left hook.

All in all, should be a great night.



The People's Republic of Clogher
I've always found Froch an easy guy to respect but a very hard guy to like. Is this one fight too far for him? He's not had a massive amount of fights for his age but he's been in a number of wars.
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