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This Saturday
night, December 18, HBO will televise a twelve round fight from
the Staples Center in Los Angeles between former WBC and former
IBF Light heavyweight champions, Antonio Tarver and Glenoffe
Johnson. When Antonio refused to face his WBC #1 mandatory
challenger Paul Briggs, he did not wait to be stripped of his
WBC world title, he chose instead to relinquish the crown;
Johnson did likewise in refusing to face his #1 IBF challenger
Rico Hoye. Antonio and Glen both discarded their titles in
order to face one another in a much more lucrative, appealing
bout.
Boxing is in a rather sad
state when two governing bodies cannot step aside and allow two
reigning champions to unify two titles in their respective
division.
Regardless, whoever is
declared the winner Saturday night will more than likely be
considered the “People’s” Light Heavyweight Champion.
That brings me to the
fight. First off, I cannot see Glenoffe Johnson beating the 4-1
betting favorite Antonio Tarver. Glen started his fistic career
by posting 32 straight wins before running into the best
middleweight of his time, Bernard Hopkins. “The Executioner”
stopped Johnson in the 11th round; the fight took
place on July 20, 1997. Although it is no shame to lose to
Bernard, Glen lost his next two fights to Merqui Sosa and Joseph
Kiwanuka. After fighting most of his early fights at the
middleweight limit, Glen moved up to super middleweight in 1999
where he lost in his bid to challenge Sven Ottke for his IBF
title. In 2000, he would lose his next three fights to Syd
Vanderpool, Silvio Branco and Omar Sheika. In 2002, Glen
started the year losing to Derrick Harmon in Vegas.
Now campaigning as a light
heavyweight, Johnson lost a ten round decision on January 24,
2003 to Julio “Down by the Schoolyard” Gonzalez. Some thought
the fight had a controversial ending, I was there that night; I
thought Julio won the fight by two points. After fighting
Johnson’s inside fight most of the night, Julio then
intelligently decided to fight him from the outside where he
immediately took over the fight, Julio had Johnson on the verge
of a KO when the fight ended. After Julio, Glen drew with
Daniel Judah, won a big decision fight against Eric Harding,
then closed out the year by drawing with Clinton Woods. He
opened the year 2004 big time by beating the same Clinton Woods
over 12 rounds. Then came the big KO upset over the 7-1
favorite, Roy Jones Jr. In beating Roy Jones, Glenoffe beat the
best pound for pound fighter of his generation. I’m sorry, but
the Roy Jones he beat that night was in no way the same, great
fighter that was Roy Jones Jr. The damage to the
chin had already been done in the second Tarver fight. In my
sincere opinion, Roy Jones at his best, not only would not have
lost a round, but would have stopped Johnson.
Nevertheless, some of the
things Glen did in the Jones fight, he has to do in his fight
with Tarver. Knowing that Antonio has been known to be a slow
starter, Glen has to come out the same way he did against Roy,
he has to put constant pressure on Tarver from the opening
bell. Then again, by doing this, he may well put himself in
range of Antonio’s power shots. If Glen can cope with Antonio’s
big punches while being relentless with his aggressiveness,
combined with a huge punch output, he will give himself a chance
to win. He has to make Tarver fight going backwards; not
allowing him to get off fast combinations and not letting him
plant his feet for power shots.
Antonio Tarver is a
fighter who has finally come into his own. He has fought all of
his professional fights at the light heavyweight limit; he is in
a comfort zone. Antonio turned pro at the late age of 28. In
the 1996 Olympics, he won a bronze medal. He won his first
three fights in the tournament before losing a decision to the
gold medal winner Vassili Jirov. Tarver has an outstanding
record of 22 wins, 2 losses w/18 KO’s. The first of his two
losses came at the hands of Eric Harding. Fighting with a
broken jaw received early in the fight, Tarver fought bravely
on, finishing on his feet at the end of ten rounds. Antonio
KO’d Harding in the fifth round of their rematch. The other
loss of course, came in the first Roy Jones Jr. fight. The
fight was even after ten rounds, Johnson apparently believing he
had the fight in the bag, allowed Roy to steam roll right by him
in the remaining two rounds. Jones won the last two rounds big,
guaranteeing him the win. Of his two losses, both were avenged
by KO’s.
Antonio is the harder
puncher of the two, Johnson, the busier fighter. Tarver must
control the fight with his educated left jab. He must start
faster in this fight if he is to confuse Johnson who will be
trying to offset Antonio’s superior boxing ability by trying to
turn the fight into a brawl.
Anyway you look at it,
Glenoffe Johnson (41 wins, 9 losses, 2 draws w/28 KO’s) has a
monumental task in front of him, Tarver is far and away the
class of the division, barring an injury or a complete
breakdown, I look for Antonio Tarver to handle Glenoffe
Johnson. If he looks for the openings behind his terrific
boxing, Tarver might even be able to stop Glen in the later
rounds. It boils down to a fight between a pretty much complete
fighter going in against a rugged fighter who is very courageous
and doesn’t know the word quit. They say that styles make
fights, if true, Saturday night’s main event will be a fight
worth watching. Tarver, a boxer-puncher, will pit his will
against a very strong, swarming fighter in Johnson. In the
final analysis, Antonio Tarver is just too good and too slick
for the likes of Glenoffe Johnson. If you are looking for a
terrific fight, this one has all the makings. One thing for
sure, the winner will go on to much bigger things while the
loser will have go to back to the drawing board.
The semi main event is the
fight I am looking forward to watching. Julio Gonzalez, like a
lot of the young fighters I have mentioned in past articles, has
been a co-host on my radio show “Ringside La with Johnny Ortiz”
many times. We take great pride in having spotted their
championship talents early on…before most people knew who they
were.
I was told today that in
lieu of the professional debut of gold medal winner Andre Ward,
the Julio Gonzalez-David Telesco fight would not be televised
unless there are early KO’s in the two live fights HBO plan to
show. Last Saturday night’s fight between WBC heavyweight
champion Vitali Klitschko and Danny Williams will open the
telecast in its entirety. Being that the winner of Gonzalez-Telesco
fight could conceivably fight the winner of Tarver-Johnson, I
would think it would be more appropriate for the avid fight fan
to see. I guess the powers that be, think Andre Ward’s four
round pro debut is more important that showcasing hometown hero
Julio, a former WBO light heavyweight champion who was the first
man to beat Darius Michalzewski and holds a win over the man in
the main event…Glenoffe Johnson. To illustrate just how screwed up some of these governing bodies are, the WBA has Michalzewski as their No. 1 mandatory challenger, Darius lost a unanimous decision and his WBO title to Julio in his backyard of Hamburg, Germany, yet he is No. 1 while his conqueror, Julio Gonzalez is ranked No. 13. I wish the WBA would explain that one to me.
The Gonzalez-Telesco fight
figures to be very good fight, we here in Los Angeles are well
aware of the fistic talents of Julio, who in his first important
fight, went the distance with Roy Jones, who at the time, was
considered the best pound for pound fighter in the game. Julio
was young and inexperienced, he was not ready for the likes of
the great Roy Jones Jr., but putting on such a heroic display of
bravado, he endeared himself to all of the Latino fans who
watched the fight, Julio also won the hearts of every fight fan
here in Los Angeles and the world over. After their fight, Roy
Jones said that Julio Gonzalez would one day be a world
champion… his prophesy became a reality.
In David Telesco, Julio
will find a willing adversary. David is a former world title
challenger who gave Roy Jones a very tough fight before losing a
decision in 2000. Telesco is considered a very dangerous KO
puncher, of his 29 wins; he has stopped his opposition 24
times. He has only lost 4 fights and one draw on his record.
This fight has all the looks of a real shootout, these are two
fighters who can box and punch. Outside of Roy Jones, I have
never picked against Julio, he will win a very hard fought
fight. Being that Julio and David are explosive punchers, this
fight has KO written all over it, if that is to be the outcome…Julio’s
my man.
A great middleweight fight
is on tap on the undercard; undefeated, young Tarvis Simms
(19-0, 11KO’s) will meet a tough customer in Carlos Bojorquez
(23-5-6, w/19 KO’s). Tarvis would like to join his brother his
brother, WBA 154 pound interim champion Travis as a world
champion in 2005. Tavis is a southpaw that can bang with both
hands. In Carlos, he will be facing a durable seven-year
veteran who comes to fight. I think this is a good fight for
Bojorquez, although Tarvis is unbeaten, his ledger doesn’t have
any big names on it. Carlos could conceivably be catching him
at the right time. Bojorquez retired Pernell Whitaker so we
know he can beat a superior boxer, if Carlos can take the best
the young Simms has to offer…he will beat him. It is a good
fight on a good card.
In Andre Ward’s pro debut,
the 2004 Athens Olympic gold medal winner is fighting someone by
the name of Christopher Molina. I have never seen Christopher
fight, so it’s hard to make a fair assessment of his talent.
I’m sure Ward isn’t going to be fighting someone he can’t beat
in his pro debut. He looks like the winner. Heavyweights Vinny Maddalone vs. Ronnie Smith, Jr. welterweights Daniel Cervantes vs. Juan Alfonso Figueroa and Mia St. John vs. Lisa Lewis, lightweights, round out an intriguing fight night at the Staples Center.
Klitschko-Williams Recap:
My four predictions
concerning last Saturday night’s card proved to be right. I
picked Vitali to KO Williams, Cotto to KO Bailey, Famoso
Hernandez to beat Ramirez and Carlos Navarro to beat Sanchez.
In the Navarro fight, I said that I didn’t know how much Sanchez
had left, if Navarro could overcome the huge experience factor
that favored Sanchez, he would win…he could and he did.
Vitali Klitschko is the
premier heavyweight champion; there is not a doubt in my mind
that he would emerge victorious over the other three champions.
His total destruction of Danny Williams came as no surprise to
me. Vitali is just too strong, too big and too powerful for
most of the heavyweights fighting today.
James “Lights Out” Toney
is the WBC No.1 mandatory for Vitali. It would be an extremely
tough fight for the big Ukrainian, not to mention the most
profitable. One thing for sure…I would give James a much better
chance of beating Vitali Klitschko that I would the other three
champions.
UNTIL THE NEXT ROUND…PEACE
AND GOD BLESS! |
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