Sunday 27 December 2015

Boxing fans, and Nuthouse podcast panel members, Paul Webb,  Andy Paterson (@AndyP792), Adam Smith (@Smido11) and Kurt Ward (@BoxingAsylum), look back at the year 2015. 


Your highlight of the year?

Paul: It may have been for a Panamanian title which carries less worth than Adam's pound for pound rankings but seeing Anthony Crolla become a world champion is easily my highlight of 2015. Coming off a horrific injury suffered whilst tackling a burglar, the Manchester based lightweight had his shot postponed and when it finally happened he was the victim of poor judging as Darleys Perez escaped with an undeserved majority draw. Crolla, who is well known as one of the nicest guys in the sport, got his rematch and won with an impressive knockout. It was a genuine feel good story in a sport that hasn't had enough this year.

Adam: Personal highlight was being at Madison Square Garden for Gennady Golovkin vs  David Lemieux and Roman Gonzalez vs Brian Viloria.  Although it was the low point of my chaotic betting year, Tyson Fury beating Wladimir Klitschko has to be on my highlights list. An outstanding achievement against one of the most dominant champions in the sport. 
Terry Flanagan deserves a mention. He's had a cracking year with a sensational win over Diego Magdaleno possibly the performance of the year by a Brit. 

The best fights this year for me were, in no particular order, Jean Pascal vs Yunieski Gonzalez, Francisco  Vargas vs Takashi Miura, Nonito Donaire vs Cesar Juarez and Anthony Joshua vs Dillian Whyte


Andy: Historically, we’ve had a fair bit of change. Tyson Fury ending Wladimir Klitschko’s 10 years of dominance, Canelo Alvarez picking up the lineal middleweight title (catchweight or not), Gennady Golovkin continuing to show that he may be a near perfect fighting machine and Roman Gonzalez finally starting to get more mainstream respect, however, it has to be Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao finally squaring off. We finally got closure to a six-year waltz towards the fight.

Kurt: Seeing Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao finally square off was the highlight for me. Sure, the fight wasn't the spectacle we all hoped it would be with a huge audience around the globe tuning in, but the buildup and anticipation for a fight many (me included) never thought would happen made it the must see event of the year.

Also a mention to Tyson Fury for his incredible victory in Germany over one of the most dominant heavyweight champions in history. As a Wlad fan I was obviously disappointed in not only the loss, but the lackluster way he lost, yet I couldn't help feeling happy for Tyson after his interview in the ring.


Biggest let down of 2015?

Paul: Maybe it was never going to come close to the expectations of the millions watching, but it has to be said that with the eyes of the world on boxing on May 2nd, Mayweather Pacquiao did very little to help the sport. A commercial juggernaut that left both fighters set for life several times over but many fans feeling short changed, some would go a lot stronger but I enjoyed the fight. It was never going to be Gatti Ward but so few mega PPV events actually deliver and we did at least get the answer to what seemed a never ending question of who is the best boxer in the world, It was Floyd. It was always Floyd.

Adam: Kell Brook. 2015 should have been a year where the undefeated welterweight belt holder capitalised on the departures of Mayweather and Pacquiao, he didn't. An early mandatory and a quick 'for the fans' reappearance against Frankie Gavin was no way near good enough. Even the scheduled fight against Diego Chaves was a disappointment for me. I'm not confident for 2016 either. 

Andy: Mayweather-Pacquiao, because I’ve never felt so fatigued in all my life towards boxing in the build-up to that fight. Not only did the fight not deliver, we then had the blowback to deal with after Pacquiao needed shoulder surgery because he was injured going into the fight and Mayweather for using an illegal IV to rehydrate himself.

Kurt: Easy - the constant stream of shitty fights/cards being made in 2015. The bar should be set high with promoters, fans and broadcasters with everyone wanting to see the highest quality match ups, sadly as I type this the bar is probably level with a dwarf’s kneecap. And until we all demand better that’s where it will stay.

Promoters seemingly more interested in getting one over a rival than making and promoting great fights has seen many horrible matches here and across the pond. It simply isn’t good enough and we need a big improvement in 2016. Let's demand it. 


Realistic fight you want to see in 2016?

Paul: Khan-Brook surely has to happen this year! Neither fighter had a good year for different reasons and with Mayweather retired, Pacquiao looking elsewhere and no other way for either to make as much money, a summer showdown makes 100% sense.
A lot of people want to see Roman Gonzalez unify against Juan Estrada but I want to see him face the tricky, dirty but supremely talented Amnat Ruenroeng. Its not a fight HBO will clamour for but its an intriguing fight, If Gonzalez was able to put away the IBF champion he cements his P4P number one status.
Fury vs Joshua - if Fury comes through a rematch with Klitschko then no fight is bigger than him vs the stubhub heavyweight, I would love to see this.

Adam: Roman Gonzalez vs Juan Estrada. The three belt holders at flyweight are all fantastic in their own way and these two have already danced once. Estrada was the last person to even remotely test the undefeated Gonzalez back in 2012 and I'd love to see it again. 

Andy: I wouldn’t mind seeing rematches with Ruslan Provodnikov and Lucas Matthysse, Francisco Vargas and Takashir Miura and, regardless of level, Frank Buglioni vs Lee Markham.

Roman Gonzalez seems to be after the big paydays and with HBO anointing him as P4P then I remain hopeful that the Juan Estrada rematch happens. A few weeks back it seemed like we could get Sergey Kovalev vs Andre Ward in 2016. That fight has to happen, for me that will crown the successor to Mayweather’s throne of P4P #1.

Kurt: Two fights for me which could, and should, be made in 2016. The first is Canelo Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin. I’m sick of catchweight fights, I just want the best fighting the best and these two are the best at 160lbs. Canelo might pretend he’s not a middleweight, or his body isn’t ready for middleweight, but that’s exactly what he is and the pressure will mount on him, especially with his Mexican supporters, to make the fight we all want to see.

The second is Kell Brook and Amir Khan. Amir didn’t get the Mayweather fight and it’s looking increasingly likely he won’t get the Pacquiao one either so it’s now time to make the next best and biggest fight out there. Brook will have to defend his title in a poor mandatory against Kevin Bizier in February and we will hopefully see Khan out around that time too. Then both can look ahead to a summer showdown. 


Promoter/Network bollocks aside - dream fight of 2016

Paul: There are less network promoter problems then there were heading in to 2015, Golden Boy and Top Rank seem to have rebuilt the relationship which just leaves PBC out of negotiation reach. The UK still has the great Sky Boxnation, Hearn Warren divide. A unification between Terry Flanagan and Anthony Crolla is as likely as Jermain Taylor seeing daylight again but it has so much going for it, two world champions both from Manchester. It would be a huge fight, I won't hold my breath it happens.

Adam: Canelo vs GGG. The Mexican is the only thing stopping this fight falling under the realistic category. I was once confident Canelo would fight GGG but the talk before and after the Cotto fight worries and frustrates me. Middleweight is 160lbs!

It'd be a nightmare bout for me as both are right up there amongst my favourite fighters. 

Kovalev Stevenson a close second
.

Andy:  Sergey Kovalev vs Adonis Stevenson…Stevenson we know isn’t the strongest around the beard and I have a nagging feeling Kovalev is hiding a bit of glass but that makes no difference, Kovalev is not a man to trifle with. Jean Pascal’s comments have seen Kovalev retort that he would “like to destroy Pascal as a boxer forever”. Stevenson could see a whole other level of brutality for previous actions and comments.


Kurt: Same as last year for me – Adonis Stevenson Vs Sergey Kovalev. I don’t really care who is to blame for it not happening, all I know is that we the fans are missing out on a fight between two ridiculous punchers in a fight that would have us all on the edge of our seat knowing the end can come at any second. Boxing needs exciting fights like this to be made. I didn’t think we would see it in 2015, and sadly I don’t see it happening next year either. I hope I’m wrong.


Thoughts on PPV in 2016?

Paul: I hate PPV , I don't care how many Rolex's it buys those involved it is an awful concept that plagues the sport and it's fans, however, there is no getting away from the fact it is here to stay. Quigg Frampton February 27th will be PPV, Joshua's fight on April 9th will be PPV, Klitschko Fury 2 will be PPV and that's just the first half of the year. Hearn and Sky love the PPV model, it's the only reason Sky bother to show boxing and in 2016 it will be used more and more frequently. I have long complained about its unnecessary over use but I am very much in the minority, if reports are to be believed that Joshua Whyte did 400,000 buys then it's clear enough people are happy to pay the money, until that stops happening nothing will change.

Adam: Four PPVs in Britain this year, two of which were Matchroom promoted. Not too bad on the face of it. But, as headline fights, we've had Kell Brook vs Frankie Gavin and a heavyweight British title fight. That'll be £30+ please. 

Anthony Joshua is a PPV fighter from now on. Get used to it. Matchroom and Sky Sports Boxing are two fold in my eyes; 1) Anthony Joshua, 2) everyone else. 

The fact the likes of Kevin Mitchell and Tony Bellew are used as PPV make weights is pretty horrendous but no longer surprising. Matchroom now have the stable and contacts to put on 'stacked' cards that the casuals will love at the drop of a hat. I think we'll get four PPVs in 2016. Quigg Vs Frampton, AJ in April, summer (hopefully Brook vs Khant) and Christmas Cracker IV.

Andy: My thoughts on PPV are well known, unless it is an elite main event with a top quality undercard then it shouldn’t be PPV. A lot of the regular Sky cards have been absolutely deplorable this year, whilst it seems the supposed “better” fights are getting shunted on to PPV. 

Kurt: It comes down to the bar being set so low again for me. No fan out there would have any issue with certain fights being PPV, the massive events where fighters need to earn a huge amount of money. We get that. We’d obviously love to see these huge fights on terrestrial television but it just won’t happen. Hatton/Mayweather, Hatton/Pacquiao, Klitschko/Haye, these are the fights we understand being PPV. ‘Stacked’ cards full of domestic fights is where many have a problem. But make no mistake, over the years there have been some garbage PPV events with Eddie Hearn and Frank Warren putting on some right stinkers, but it doesn’t matter how poor we think they are, the buy rate is all that matters. If they shift buys then why wouldn’t they continue to do it?


The amount of British 'world champions'

Paul: Britain has plenty of TV channels showing the sport, a solid if sometimes frustrating board of control, some great gyms, some good trainers, smart promoters and terrific amateur set up, all of those things have culminated in this incredible success at world level. Of course, behind some of these titles there are some that have question marks, Haskins through no fault of his own won his on the scales, Liam Smiths WBO belt was gift wrapped in the form of John Thompson, similar for Flanagan who had his win overshadowed by Zepeda's inury.  Quigg and McDonnell have pretend WBA regular titles but both have proven themselves at 'world level'. Fury shook up the world, Brook beat a genuine champ, as did Selby and Frampton. Degale has had a terrific year and Crolla's rise has been remarkable, British boxing is booming I am expecting more in 2016.

Adam: To have 12 world title holders at the end of 2015 is an absolutely brilliant achievement for the whole of British boxing. Across multiple promoters, trainers and TV channels. 

I'm 100% with Tyson Fury on this one as we now have 'British world title' fighters. The uncontrolled and unregulated expansion of 'world title' belts has certainly reduced the value of any given belt. And how many of our world title holders can we say are the best in their division? Tyson Fury is the only one of the 12 we can confidently say is the best at his weight. Jamie McDonnell and James DeGale could well be the best in their division but need to prove it.

Andy: It will probably stay around the same give or take and supposing we are ignoring the mess the Panamanians have created. One will drop off after Frampton-Quigg however Stephen Smith could bring it back up. 
No doubt the majority of the current title holders will be matched cautiously throughout the year with the odd surprise or two, perhaps Joshua might get a vacant title shot, Callum Smith I don’t suspect will fight for a title, Paul Butler is in a division where all the title holders would all prove to be difficult opposition. It really depends on the ABC politics because we all know a “world title” can be plucked out of nowhere in boxing.

Kurt: Just another annoying part of the sport for me. Today a fighter can become a world champion while fans are still waiting to see that fighter face someone they’ve heard of before. I just can’t understand how we can give the same title of world champion to Tyson Fury and Liam Smith, for instance. One had to go to Germany to face the best fighter in his weight class in the world, the other had to face someone on a much lower level. It’s not Smith’s fault, of course, he has done everything asked of him, but it’s just the state of the governing bodies and dilution of the term ‘world champion’ for me. 

British boxing is doing great at the moment, there’s so much boxing on different platforms, there’s big fights that hopefully will be made, and we have fighters holding titles that can put them in line for good fights against top fighters. That’s all I want to see. 



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Wednesday 24 September 2014

British P4P Top Ten: September 2014

Regulars of the Nuthouse Boxing Podcast got together over the last few days to determine the top ten British boxers, regardless of weight class. 

The rankings are based on a descending points system, with a first-place vote receiving 10 points, a second-place vote receiving 9 points and so on. A tie goes to the fighter who receives the most votes from the panel.

The Panel: Kurt Ward, Steve Wellings, Donny Baseball, Adam Smith, Alex Morris, Andy Paterson. 



1. Carl Froch  
       Super Middleweight (33-2, 24 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (KO8) George Groves, May 31, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


2. Kell Brook  
       Welterweight (33-0, 22 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (MD12) Shawn Porter, August 16, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


3. Carl Frampton  
       Super Bantamweight (19-0, 13 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (UD12) Kiko Martinez, September 6, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


4. Amir Khan
       Welterweight (33-2, 24 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (UD12) Luis Collazo, May 3, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


5. Tyson Fury  
       Heavyweight (22-0, 16 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (KO4) Joey Abell, February 15, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: Dereck Chisora, November 29, 2014


6. Paul Butler
       Super Flyweight (16-0, 8 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (SD12) Stuart Hall, June 7, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: Zolani Tete, October 25, 2014


7. Jamie McDonnell
       Bantamweight (24-2-1, 11 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (KO10) Tabtimdaeng Na Rachawat, May 31, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


8. George Groves
       Super Middleweight (20-2, 15 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (UD12) Christopher Rebrasse, September 20, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


9. Scott Quigg
       Super Bantamweight (29-0-2, 22 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (KO3) Stephane Jamoye, September 13, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


10. Martin Murray
       Middleweight (28-1-1, 12 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (UD12) Max Bursak, June 21, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: Domenico Spada, October 25, 2014


The final tally:


Others receiving points: Chisora (11), DeGale (7), Macklin (3), Saunders (3).



Let us know your thoughts on our P4P list. All opinions/comments welcome.



Friday 19 September 2014

Boxing's P4P Top Ten: September 2014



Words: Kurt Ward



Staff members at BoxingAsylum.com and regulars on the Nuthouse Boxing Podcast got together over the last few days to determine the top ten boxers in the world, regardless of weight class. 

The rankings are based on a descending points system, with a first-place vote receiving 10 points, a second-place vote receiving 9 points and so on. A tie goes to the fighter who receives the most votes from the panel.

The Panel: Kurt Ward, Steve Wellings, Brandon Weber, Donny Baseball, Adam Smith, Alex Morris, Tommy Allan, Andy Paterson, Matt Digiallonardo. 



1. Floyd Mayweather Jr.  
       Welterweight (47-0, 26 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT W (UD12) Marcos Maidana, September 13, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA


2. Andre Ward
         Super Middleweight (27-0, 14 KOs)
         LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Edwin Rodriguez, November 16, 2013
         NEXT FIGHT: TBA



3.  Manny Pacquiao
       Welterweight (56-5-2, 38 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Timothy Bradley, April 12, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: Chris Algieri, November 22, 2014



4. Guillermo Rigondeaux
       Super Bantamweight (14-0, 9 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT: W (KO1) Sod Kokietgym, 19 July, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA



5. Wladimir Klitschko 
     Heavyweight (62-3, 53 KOs)
     LAST FIGHT: W (KO5) Alex Leapai, 26 April, 2014
     NEXT FIGHT: Kubrat Pulev, November 15, 2014



6. Roman Gonzalez
     Flyweight (40-0, 34 KOs)
     LAST FIGHT: W (KO9) Akira Yaegashi, 5 September, 2014
     NEXT FIGHT: TBA



7. Timothy Bradley
        Welterweight (31-1, 12 KOs)
        LAST FIGHT: L (UD12) Manny Pacquiao, April 12, 2014
        NEXT FIGHT: TBA



8. Juan Manuel Marquez
       Welterweight (56-7-1, 40 KOs)
       LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Mike Alvarado, May 17, 2014
       NEXT FIGHT: TBA



9. Carl Froch
Super Middleweight (33-2, 24 KOs)
LAST FIGHT: W (KO8) George Groves, May 31, 2014
NEXT FIGHT: TBA



10.Bernard Hopkins
 Light Heavyweight (55-6-2, 32 KOs)
 LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Beibut Shumenov, April 19, 2014
 NEXT FIGHT: Sergey Kovalev, November 8, 2014
     


The final tally:












Others receiving points: Danny Garcia (5), Juan Francisco Estrada (4), Saul Alvarez (3), Miguel Cotto (2), Gennady Golovkin (1), Nonito Donaire (1).



Let us know your thoughts on our P4P list. All opinions/comments welcome.

Monday 15 September 2014

A Look Back At The Week That Was

Words: Kurt Ward


"Mayhem." Violent or extreme disorder; chaos. 

Mayhem, as readers will know, was chosen as the title for the recent rematch between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Marcos Maidana and I believe it was the perfect choice. Extreme disorder and chaos was evident in a backlash on boxing forums and social media in the aftermath of a horrible undercard, and a main event which failed to live up to the hype after the first bout between the pair.

American fans, angry at paying over $70 for this card - enabling Floyd to pick up a whopping minimum payday of $32m - vented their frustration online with many saying they would never pay to watch Mayweather fight again. 

I find it hilarious.

I once chose to stay up to watch Cornelius Bundrage lose his IBF light Middleweight title to Ishe Smith over twelve rounds at 5am (Yes, 5am. I'm in England). I knew it was going to be awful. I knew every round was going to be awful. And I knew I would be sitting through 12 rounds of it, but I did it anyway. I didn't stay up anticipating extreme violence or a war for the ages. I didn't for one moment envisage me one day telling my grandchildren about the war that was Smith/Bundrage and how "you should have been there, kids." 

As boxing fans we should know exactly what we are getting ourselves into when it comes to paying for a card or staying up late to watch one. If you choose to pay $70 to watch Floyd Mayweather win nearly every round against an opponent several levels below him, and then whine about it for days/weeks afterwards, I have no sympathy. Because you will be doing exactly the same thing when May rolls around and Floyd tells you, once again, that he will be going for the knockout. 

The same thing applies to David Haye. How many times will you buy his fights, bitch about it afterwards and then repeat? Instead of whining about it, surely it is far easier to simply not buy. But, hey, maybe you're just a glutton for punishment. 

Floyd is all about winning. It's all he has ever done ever since turning professional in '96. Entertaining the fans and making sure they get their money's worth are not of his concern. You all know what you will be getting from him. A boxing masterclass. An easy victory. But, by and large, a dull affair lacking in drama. 

By the way, the fact that I stayed up until 5am watching Smith - Bundrage, yet refused to watch the mess that was the undercard on Saturday - and won't even bother catching a replay of it - tells you everything you need to know about that card.

Thanks Al.

Notes:

Did I hear Kenny Bayless chanting 'Hardwork, dedication' in the ring before the first bell?

How about that flute? Surely worth the price of the PPV alone, no?

Leo Santa Cruz was paid $750,000 to beat up Manuel Roman on the terrible undercard from Vegas. Roman, ranked 126 in the super bantamweight rankings by Boxrec, never stood a chance. Cruz now says he wants to face the likes of Rigondeaux and Carl Frampton, but with the huge purses on offer to beat up guys levels below, it's hard to see him taking on the difficult challenge that both men would present. 

Floyd may not have a great relationship with the fairer sex but he seems to be on excellent terms with his fellow man. His constant cuddling of Maidana throughout the twelve rounds revealed a softer side to the man from Grand Rapids.  See, ladies, he's not all bad.


Some things you should simply not do. Do not call Mike Tyson a convicted rapist to his face. Never spend $70 on a Mayweather PPV and never, ever, mention the name Guillermo Rigondeaux on Sky Sports television . Ed Robinson did just that on Saturday night after Scott Quigg dominated and stopped Bantamweight Stephane Jamoye in three rounds in Manchester. 

Quigg's reaction was of complete shock. I genuinely believe Scott would have been less surprised if Ed had revealed that Quigg's promoter, Eddie Hearn, had been living as a woman named Edwina for the past twelve months and would be undergoing gender reassignment surgery. 
Quigg is a quality little fighter but we need to see him in with someone legit in his next fight. Frampton, Santa Cruz and even a fight with the oldest looking 28-year-old on the planet, Kiko Martinez, would be great for the Bury fighter. 

If you haven't seen it yet try and catch the fight between Denton Vassell and Sam Eggington on the Manchester undercard. A really fun fight that may have slipped under the radar with some fans. 


November 29 is going to be one hell of a night for British fight fans. From London we will see two grudge matches as Tyson Fury and Dereck Chisora square up for their rematch after the proposed fight fell through in July after Chisora suffered a hand injury. On the undercard of that fight will be Billy Joe Saunders, fresh off being sidestepped by the WBO in his chase for a world title shot, taking on Chris Eubank Jr. He's got a famous father, apparently. 

Nathan Cleverly and Tony Bellew, both now at Cruiserweight after being beaten to a pulp at light heavy, will face each other again three years after their original meeting. The bout looks likely for Liverpool again. 

All three are great fights. Just a shame that boxing fans will be split as to what show they watch live. The TV and laptop will probably come in very handy that night. 

Audley Harrison MBE, or 'Sir Audley' as I refer to him, is making a boxing comeback after finishing second in the celebrity Big Brother house. Coming across as a genuinely nice guy, the Olympic gold medal winner and unified Prizefighter champion, beat some tough competition to get that second spot. Someone who used to be known as Frank, a dancer from Strictly Come Dancing, a woman known for being on the dole, an Essex bird, and a woman from Emmerdale Farm were all brutally dispatched and left in the wake of 'A-Force'. 

Sadly, Audley was pipped to the post by Hollywood legend Gary Busey, but second place is very respectable with the amount of talent on show.

Surely a bout against Anthony Joshua, in what would be a battle of former British Olympic gold medal winners, is not too far away.  

Sad news on Friday as Sheffield boxer Jerome Wilson was seriously injured after being stopped in six rounds by Serge Ambomo. He left the ring on a stretcher and underwent what his promoter David Coldwell described as a "life-saving brain operation".

Coldwell confirmed on Sunday night that Wilson remains in a medically induced coma.

We all send him our best wishes and hope he can make a complete recovery.


We have a new WBA Heavyweight champion, folks. His name is Luis Ortiz and he picks up the interim belt after stopping Lateef Kayode in the first round of their fight in midweek. Apparently, the WBA now want Ortiz to face Ruslan Chagaev, the WBA 'regular' champion, with the winner eventually going on to meet WBA 'super' champion Wladimir Klitschko. 

Wait, what? My head hurts, I think I need a lie down. 



Catch me and my fellow panellists live every Sunday at 8.30pm BST/3.30pm EST for the Nuthouse Boxing Podcast 


Sunday 24 August 2014

If You're Looking for Trouble: The Edwin Valero Story

El Inca


Words: Kurt Ward

Romulo Quirarte, trainer of tough Mexican lightweight Antonio DeMarco, had seen enough. After nine punishing rounds in Monterrey, Mexico his man could simply take no more. The date was February 6, 2010 and Edwin Valero, the WBC champion at 135lbs, had just won the 27th bout of his professional career. Quirarte's decision to call a halt to the bout also added DeMarco's name to a list with 26 other men who had failed to see the final bell against Valero. Hailing from Venezuela, Valero, 28, - known as El Inca to boxing fans, was in the prime of his career. He was an unbeaten two-weight title holder with a 100% knockout ratio. Turning pro in 2002, he had only boxed 64 rounds due to his incredible punching power. The win over DeMarco that night was supposed to be the start of big things after a career that had stalled and stuttered . That ninth and final round, on February 6, 2010, however, would prove to be his last.

Arrested for murder
Two months later the boxing world would be stunned by the news that 24-year-old Jennifer Carolina, wife of Valero and mother of his two children, had been stabbed to death at the hotel InterContinental in the Venezuelan city of Valencia. The couple had checked into the hotel around 11:30pm after travelling  from Merida. Six hours later Valero went downstairs to the front lobby and confessed to the brutal killing. He was then arrested and placed into custody.

Twenty-four hours later he, too, would be dead.

The start of the rage

After competing in over 90 amateur bouts Edwin Valero was set to turn to the paid ranks but his future career - and life -  was also almost ended on February 5, 2001 when he was involved in a motorcycle accident.  Speaking to Doug Fischer, then of MaxBoxing.com, Valero revealed that he had been speeding, wearing no helmet and had struck the back of a car at high speed, fracturing his skull. His plan of turning professional was put on hold for over a year as he recovered from his injuries. 

Finally receiving the green light from doctors in Venezuela to start his career, Valero quickly amassed twelve straight wins - all by first round knockout - before Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy promotions came calling. 

Signing with such a powerful promotional outfit, who could offer him American television exposure, was what he had been waiting for. But problems, as they often did with Valero, arose immediately. Scheduled to face Francisco Lorenzo on a HBO televised card from New York, Valero failed the pre-fight medical and his career was once again thrown into doubt. The damage inflicted in the motorcycle accident four years prior, which Valero had failed to disclose to his new backers, meant that he was not fit to fight. Dr. Barry Jordan, a neurologist for the New York State Athletic Commission, suggested that Valero should retire and never fight again. His license suspended, Valero went back home unsure of whether his career was over.

The famous tattoo
Ignoring recommendations from NYSAC that he should not step inside the ring again, Valero was able to pass a medical in Argentina enabling him to fight for the first time in 17 months. Unsurprisingly, he stopped his opponent in the first round. This would be the start of a world tour, of sorts, for Valero as he travelled wherever he could to make a living. The locations may have changed but two things never did; Valero kept winning and he kept on scoring knockouts. 

Despite the successes inside the ring trouble was never far away.  On May 2, the same night Manny Pacquiao destroyed Ricky Hatton, Valero was arrested in Nevada for drink driving. Because of the offence he was denied a visa in the United States which prevented him from appearing on the big Pacquiao - Cotto card later that year. Valero claimed he was being treated unfairly by the U.S. because of his support for Hugo Chavez,  the Venezuelan president, yet in September '09 he was arrested in his home country on assault charges amid claims he had struck both his sister and mother. 

A month before he died he was arrested again for allegedly assaulting his wife. Mrs Valero had suffered a collapsed lung and multiple bruising.  She later told police the injuries were the result of a fall down stairs. Wherever he travelled trouble was a loyal passenger. It seemed to follow him his entire life. 

The Nightmare

It won't come as a surprise to many that a man who had a history of drug and alcohol abuse should suffer from Paranoia. Upon waking in the early hours of April 18, 2010 after a cocaine and alcohol binge, Valero would find his wife murdered next to him. The confession he would make to hotel staff minutes after waking would later be retracted, however, and a new story, one of underworld thugs planning kidnap and murder, would emerge.

“We were driving and I had been drinking Vodka. I was drinking and drinking. All of a sudden, I realized that someone was following us. It was like 10:30 pm. I sped up until we reached a toll booth and I told the police officer that someone wanted to rob or kidnap us…I don’t remember which toll booth. After a while at the booth, he told us to go to the Hotel Intercontinental in Valencia. I went there because they were trying to kidnap me. I think they’ll find out what happened soon enough. What I would like, though, is to call my manager, Segundo Lujano. He should come.” - Valero from his cell in Carabobo.

It sounded bizarre. The mad ramblings of a desperate man trying to escape justice for a heinous crime committed against an innocent young mother. Family members believed the drink and drugs had turned him into a paranoid monster who had invented tales of plots against him and his loved one. Was it all paranoia, though? Let's rewind back.

On April 12, 2009, almost exactly a year before she was stabbed to death in a hotel room in Valencia, Jennifer Caroline was hospitalised after being shot outside the couple's home in Merida. According to a report in the Venezuelan daily Meridian, Jennifer was shot in her left thigh by unknown assailants on motorcycles. Valero, said the report, brought his wife to the hospital. The shooters were never caught. 

A year later police believed they had their man. Valero, according to them, in his drug and alcohol induced state, attacked and killed his wife in their hotel room for unknown reasons. Heavy traces of cocaine would later be found in his system. Despite a huge search of the hotel and surrounding area by police the murder weapon would never be recovered.

The End

The Family
Edwin Valero died on April 19, 2010 after 
using his sweatpants to hang himself in his holding cell. He was on suicide watch but it was fellow prisoners who alerted staff that something was wrong after hearing noises from the cell which held Valero.  Local police chief Wilmer Flores would tell reporters that Valero still showed signs of life when he was found but attempts to save him had failed. 

Legendary promoter Bob Arum, who signed Valero to a deal in early '09 and would go on to promote his last three fights, would tell reporters: "I was grooming him (Valero) as a great future opponent for Manny Pacquiao. That would have been a sensational fight. 

"Next to Manny he was the most exciting fighter out there. Non-stop action. An unbelievable fight he and Pacquiao would've made.

"Now we will never know."

As Valero celebrated in the ring that night against DeMarco, for the 27th and final time of his career, the future, finally, looked so bright. His wife and two children were ringside and, in that moment of celebration, they were happy. 

Tragically, that happiness would be short lived, and two months later the young family would be destroyed forever. 



Contact Kurt on Twitter @BoxingAsylum


Saturday 2 August 2014

Boxing in 2014: A review so far

We ask boxing fans to come together and look at the year so far. What has been the highlight? The biggest let down? Most anticipated fight? And politics aside, the dream bout of 2014? Find out below. 

Steve Wellings of Irishboxingreview,  founder of First Class Boxing Paul Webb, Nuthouse Podcast host Andy Paterson, dart player extraordinaire and big boxing fan Chris Mason, Heavyweight boxer Clarence Tillman and Nuthouse podcast member and producer Kurt Ward give their opinions.


Highlight of the year so far?


Steve: Klitschko vs. Leapai of course! Seriously though, there have been a few moments of interest here and there but we really need a strong end to the year if it is to match 2013, which was great. Mayweather-Maidana was interesting in the way Maidana forced the fight and succeeded in making it closer than most of Floyd's other recent bouts which is about as much as we can hope for at the moment with him. Stiverne's comprehensive knockout of Arreola has opened up a potentially noteworthy period in the heavyweight division. The Froch-Groves rematch was a highlight more for the event than the fight but at least it provided a conclusive finish to the pre-fight animosity and confusion of the first fight. Lomachenko making history with his win over Gary Russell Jnr.

Paul: Curtis Woodhouse winning the British title. I was fortunate to be sat ringside as the former footballer achieved a life long dream of winning the Lonsdale belt. It was one of the most emotional atmospheres I have experienced at a fight as the crowd and majority of press seemed to be willing him on in a contest on paper he had no business winning. Darren Hamilton boxed well but was out jabbed and hustled by Woodhouse and when the loud mouth MC John McDonald bellowed "and the new" the celebrations in and out the ring were something special.

Andy: Nothing really sticks out other than some great scraps in the UK so far. Won’t forget Tommy Coyle’s war with Daniel Brizuela; it was one of those fights where your score card was all over the place. I think I ended up abandoning my score card and just let the fight play out. It was nice to see Gavin Rees also go out on a winning note and on his own terms, he has always been an underrated technician by some people. And then there was round 5 of Travis Dickinson against Matty Clarkson, the police should have been called in for that one!

Chris: Tough question. I liked Lucas Matthysse vs John Molina Jr, but for me it's the rise of Chris Algieri and his win over teak tough Ruslan Provodnikov.

Clarence: Carl Froch's knockout of George Groves. Can't get too much better than that.

Kurt: The event that was Froch - Groves II. Seeing 80,000 pack out Wembley stadium for a sport which has been viewed as dying by some was incredible to see. Boxing was in the mainstream, and people who don't follow the sport were actually interested in what was happening. We will hopefully see more of these huge events over the coming years.



Biggest let down of the year so far?


Steve: I'm disappointed that Kovalev Stevenson has not yet been agreed. Once again we have seen the bizarre situation in boxing where the best do not have to fight the best. A champion can make good money and defend one or even two belts without facing off against the best in his division. It's a sad state of affairs but nothing new in the modern era. Fury-Chisora II was a letdown. I was looking forward to the fight and the manner it fell through, rather than the fact that it did, was poor form. Withdrawals are never ideal but I feel sorry for Fury having so many opponents pull out on the actual week of the fight. This also greatly affects the fans who have shelled out ticket and hotel money. I don’t doubt that Chisora's injury was genuine but after being messed about by Haye it is tough for Fury not getting any decent ring time. Mike Perez was a huge letdown last weekend. After working his way up through the rankings for the past seven years, on to HBO television and the verge of a world title shot, to then come in to the ring in such poor shape is unforgiveable. It's different even from the likes of Odlanier Solis who despite being arguably more talented is always running around with a muffin top hanging over his shorts and blowing out of his backside after a few rounds. We have come to expect that from Solis who is operating on a lesser scale against guys like Tony Thompson and often displays such unprofessionalism. But for Perez this was wholly unacceptable.

Paul: Fury - Haye second postponement.
I was so desperate for this fight to happen as I believe Fury would have been completely destroyed and end all thought of him ever fighting for a world title. Sadly for the second time it was called off leaving fans disappointed and Fury back in the mix to face Klitschko. If that fight happens I think the Ukrainian will pick up a first round stoppage for the first time in 11 years.

Andy: Adonis Stevenson ducking Sergey Kovalev, no question about it. Yvon Michel justifies the blatant duck that Kovalev doesn’t put a lot of bums on seats; that it beyond pathetic. It will be interesting to see how the law suit that was lodged by Main Events plays out. My understanding is they have a solid case.

Chris: Been a few. Fury not getting a fight has been frustrating, but personally I was gutted to see Groves get KTFO by Froch.

Clarence: Erislandy Lara vs. Canelo Alvarez. When you're in a winnable fight you have to take it. Lara, for some reason, didn't.

Kurt: The potential Stevenson - Kovalev fight falling through after Stevenson signed with Haymon and moved to rival network Showtime. The fight could still happen, of course, but this move just puts a few more roadblocks in the way. I believe the fight is very unlikely to take place, which is a real shame as that is a fight everyone wants to see.


Fight you are most looking forward to in 2014?

Steve: I'm not sure the fight will live up to expectations but Bellew vs. Cleverly should be good fun in the build-up. Hopefully Bellew will be at his shit-talking best and give plenty of nuggets for the "Bellew of the Week" segment of the podcast. Other than that there's not a great deal that excites me. Mayweather-Maidana is going over old ground. If Stiverne-Wilder gets nailed down then that could be interesting. I really hope Kell Brook vs. Shawn Porter happens. Brook cannot afford another pull out and if he does then I wouldn’t be surprised to see Hearn drop him. Porter has looked like a beast in his last two fights, against Malignaggi and Alexander, a sharp contrast to the guy that struggled with Julio Diaz.

Paul:  Frampton Martinez II.  There are a lot of unmade fights that have a lot of intrigue but this rematch for the IBF title is one I can't wait to see. How much has Martinez improved since the first fight? Will Frampton be complacent thinking he has already beat him? All will be answered in front of a huge crowd in Belfast. Most importantly a win will give him leverage in the Scott Quigg negotiations.

Andy: At this moment in time it is probably the rematch between Carl Frampton and Kiko Martinez. Martinez has been on a reign of terror recently but I still don’t see any improvements in his game from the 1st fight. Roman Gonzalez vs Akira Yaegashi is another one. Everyone who follows the lower weight classes will know that Gonzalez is the de-facto #1 fighter at Flyweight, now he has the chance to prove it by grabbing the lineal title.

Chris: Porter v Brook, Cleverley v Bellew, Wilder v Stiverne, Chino v Floyd, But it has to be Pacman v Algieri.

Clarence: Deontay Wilder vs. Bermaine Stiverne. We finally get to see Wilder in with someone who's actually there to fight.

Kurt: Probably Porter defending his title against Kell Brook. On paper it looks to be a very close fight and any outcome could be possible. This is Brook's chance to show the world he really is as good as some believe after years of struggling to land that one big fight. Will he sink or swim? A massive British showdown with Amir Khan awaits if he does something rare; take the title off an American on US soil.


Promoter/Network bullshit aside, what would your dream fight be in 2014?

Steve: Golovkin vs. Cotto would help to sort out the middleweight picture and once Golovkin has cleaned up,  he then has a natural path to move up and chase Froch and Ward (if he comes out of a self-enforced retirement). On a personal level I'd like to see Frampton vs. Santa Cruz if and when Frampton beats Kiko. Frampton-Quigg would be good too but strangely it could be the Rigondeaux fight that gets made first as Rigo is so difficult to match and promote and would be willing to travel anywhere for a scrap. In the UK Saunders vs. Eubank Jnr would be a tasty affair and surely has to be made soon.

Paul: Alvarez vs Golovkin.  Golovkin is the man right now, blowing everyone away and a fight with Cotto is a possibility, but the Puerto Rican has been stopped twice and would likely suffer a similar outcome. Alvarez, however, is huge at the weight, has a decent chin and has proved his ability following the Mayweather loss with some solid wins. It would be a huge fight and a lot more competitive than you think.

Andy: I don’t have one, I have several; Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao, Adonis Stevenson-Sergey Kovalev, Carl Frampton-Scott Quigg, Marco Huck against either Nathan Cleverly or Tony Bellew, a rematch between Takashi Miura & Sergio Thompson and Vasyl Lomachenko against Donaire or Rigondeaux.

Chris: GGG v Froch, GGG v Floyd. Golovkin is one of my current favourite fighters and I want to see him tested and pushed. Unless Algieri beats Pacman then I suppose the one we all want to see is him face Floyd.

Clarence: The obvious one... Mayweather vs Pacquiao but since we know that's not going to happen I'd say GGG vs. Andre Ward.

Kurt: It's still Mayweather - Pacquiao for me. The fight should have happened years ago; it hasnt, and, in my opinion, will never happen, but this is still the biggest fight in the sport and would be a huge boost for boxing. They have been the two best boxers in this sport for a long time and it would be a travesty if they never faced off in the ring before ending their hall of fame careers.


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