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Vitali defends
his WBC Heavyweight Championship against Danny Williams this
Saturday night, December 11th at Mandalay Bay Resort
and Casino in Las Vegas. It will be the first defense of the
Lennox Lewis-vacated title he won by beating Sanders. The fight
card also features WBO Jr. Welterweight Champion Miguel Cotto
making the first defense of his title against hard punching
former champion Randall Bailey. FECARBOX champion Carlos
Navarro will meet former world champion Agapito Sanchez for the
vacant WBO Continental American 130-pound title. Opening the
show will be former IBF Jr. Lightweight champion Carlos “Famoso”
Hernandez who will be engaging in his first fight since losing
his crown to Erik “El Terrible” Morales. Famoso will be
fighting former NABF champion Juan Carlos “Ranchero”Ramariz in a
ten round bout. The card will be shown on HBO PPV.
It’s hard to
assess just how good Danny Williams really is. In the Tyson
fight, he came very close to getting knocked out on several
occasions. If Mike “A Beautiful Mind” Tyson had not trained for
a short fight, he might have stopped Williams. It was very
clear to me after watching the fight a couple of times that Mike
tired badly in the last round of the bout. I am not buying the
knee injury, I believe he hurt it, but the way I saw him move on
it, it had nothing to do with the stoppage. Iron Mike could
have gotten up, but what for? He was physically spent. I have
always said that if a credible fighter showed no fear of Mike
and fought him back, they had a chance to beat him. That’s the
reason I picked Evander Holyfield in their first fight on
November 8, 1981, a fight that never came off because Mike went
to the bucket. It was the same reason I picked Evander in the
two fights they did have. I knew Evander would stand up to him
and fight Mike the same way Buster Douglas and Lennox Lewis
did. Mike was stopped in all four fights.
I’m not taking
anything away from Danny Williams; he showed incredible
determination and a huge heart. He took the best Tyson threw at
him and hung in long enough to beat him down. In Vitali
Klitschko, Danny will face a giant heavyweight champion who
stands 6’7, is a huge right hand puncher and will be in the best
shape he can possibly be in. Danny at 6’1 will be punching up
and will have to get inside Vitali’s reach in order to do any
damage. It’s true that Vitali is a mechanical type of a fighter
who probes with his solid, hard left jab in order to unleash his
bomb-like right hand, once he has a fighter hurt, Vitali is a
great finisher. A
while back, going into the Sharmba Mitchell fight, I
wrote that Kostya Tzsyu was a small Vitali Klitschko, now I say
that Vitali is a big Kostya Tzsyu. They both are quintessential
seek and destroy fighters who carry TNT in their right hands.
I do not think that Danny
Williams carries the fire power that Lennox Lewis did, Vitali
took the best of the bombs Lennox threw and landed on him, Danny
may be under the misconception that Vitali also has a stamina
problem, he recently launched a vicious verbal attack on the
champion saying: “He does not like it when things get tough.
His heart is definitely a weakness and it’s up to me to expose
it once again.” Don’t count on it Danny. Williams was making
reference to the time Vitali quit due to an injured left
shoulder, suffering a TKO in the ninth round against Chris Byrd
while Vitali was well ahead on points. He went on to say:
“Klitschko only half-injured his shoulder near the end against
Byrd, he just pulled out and said he would live to fight another
day, those are not the words of a true warrior.”
I commend Vitali for
putting a stop to a fight that saw him win nearly every round,
Vitali, who goes my the nickname “Dr. Iron Fist,” is the first
heavyweight champion to hold a Ph.D. when he won the WBO title
from Hide, he showed intelligence by refusing to further damage
a shoulder that could conceivably end his career. He underwent
surgery to repair the injured shoulder.
Some called Vitali a
quitter after that fight, those doubters were proved wrong after
Vitali stood toe to toe with Lennox Lewis, a heavyweight
champion I truly believe was the best heavyweight of his
generation. Vitali led on all scorecards 58-56 when the fight
was stopped at the end of the sixth round due to the severe cuts
Vitali had suffered. He gave Lennox a fight I do not believe
Lewis was prepared for; Vitali averaged 72 punches per round and
40 jabs per round. Pretty good, when you consider that the
heavyweight average is 46 punches and 19 jabs per round. A 5-1
underdog vs. Lewis, Vitali landed 155 punches in six rounds, he
was on pace to land over 300 punches when the fight was
stopped. Also worth noting, the 430-punch output thrown by
Vitali in the six rounds of their fight were the most thrown by
a Lennox Lewis opponent. The Guinness Book of Records on
November 11, 1999, added Klitschko for becoming the fastest
heavyweight to win 26 fights by KO in the least amount of
rounds…60. Twenty-five of Vitali’s KO’s have come inside of
three rounds.
In his last fight, Vitali
stopped Larry Donald in the tenth round, the first time Larry
has been KO’d. If he had enough left to KO Donald in the tenth
round and went six extremely hard fought rounds with Lewis,
combined with a serious punch output, I really believe Danny
shouldn’t bank on Vitali tiring in their fight.
Before Tyson, Williams was
KO’d in the sixth round by someone by the name of Sinan Damilsam
in February of 2003, he was badly hurt in round two and was
dropped in the fourth round before the fight was called in the
sixth. Household name Michael Sprott also decisioned Danny
eleven months ago after Williams had KO’d Sprott twice in 2002
and 2003. In 2001, Corrie Sanders destroyed Sprott in one
round. Emmanuel Stewart who once employed Williams as a
sparring partner for Lennox Lewis was quoted recently, this is
what he had to say: “Since the Tyson KO, Danny is a new man.
He’s on the big stage in his first title fight. We’ll see.
Vitali can throw punches in bunches when necessary and he may
choose to test William’s mettle early. Should Williams survive
the early rounds, look for a Klitschko late round stoppage, as
his jab becomes the difference.”
Herbie Hide, a
Klitschko KO victim who has sparred countless rounds with Danny
Williams, has picked Vitali to KO Williams. As Herbie put it,
“Danny got lucky with Tyson, he would have to get lucky again to
beat Vitali Klitschko. Lennox Lewis, who knows both fighters
extremely well, is picking Vitali to beat his countryman Danny
Williams. He had this to say: “Just looking at the fight and
the statistics, I realize that Klitschko has a big advantage.”
I have to agree with Emmanuel, Herbie and Lennox; I’m picking
the 3-1 favorite Klitschko to stop Danny inside six rounds. If
Lennox Lewis, who hits very, very hard couldn’t stop Vitali in
their hard fought fight, what chance does Danny Williams have to
stop Vitali Klitschko when neither Lennox or lethal punching
Corrie Sanders couldn’t get it done.
Although Danny
Williams has always been a heavy fighter, going in at 265 pounds
against Iron Mike, he didn’t do himself any favors coming in at
270 pounds in today’s weigh-in. At 6’1, I would have liked to
see Williams come in around 255/260 pounds in order to give
himself better mobility. The bigger the target, the better it
will be for Vitali to zero in. Klitschko equaled his career
high when he weighed in at 250 pounds. By weighing in at a huge
270 pounds, Danny equaled the highest weight ever recorded in a
heavyweight title fight. In 1934, “The Ambling Alp” Primo
Carnera, standing at 6’6, weighed in at 270 pounds for his fight
with Tommy Loughran.
In the semi main
event, Miguel Cotto, heir apparent to Felix Trinidad as Puerto
Rico’s favorite fighter, will make the first defense of his WBO
Jr. Welterweight crown when he opposes heavy-handed, former
champion Randall Bailey. This should be a bombs away kind of
fight. Cotto isn’t going into the fight over confident; he
knows Bailey is a hard-hitting, dangerous opponent. He is fully
aware that of Randall’s 28 wins, 27 have come via KO. Even so,
Miguel Cotto has the making of becoming a huge superstar. He
will out think, out box and beat Bailey at his own game. I look
for Cotto to stop Randall, he will continue to get better and
better, Randall Bailey is as good as he will ever be.
FECARBOX 130
pound champion Carlos Navarro, brother of WBC #1 Super Flyweight
contender Jose Navarro, will be facing former world champion
Agapito Sanchez. This figures to be a very competitive fight,
Sanchez has the experience edge with a record of 35-9-2 w/ 18
KO’s while Navarro has a respectable resume of 23-3-1 w/13
KO’s. I really do not know what Agapito has left after engaging
in quite a few wars that total 46 fights; Carlos will have to
overcome the experience factor if he is to win.
Opening the
telecast will be “Ringside LA With Johnny Ortiz” favorite Carlos
“Famoso” Hernandez, he will be exchanging punches with Mexican
veteran Juan Carlos “Ranchero” Ramirez in what looks like an
exciting matchup set for ten rounds. I look for Famoso to make
a big statement since his thrilling fight with Erik Morales.
Famoso is a champion without a belt; he will beat Ranchero with
his non-stop aggressive style. I look for Carlos to be fighting
for a title in the coming new year. Carlos Hernandez waited a
long time to become a world champion, he will be a champion
again…crème floats!
This is an
outstanding fight card, be sure to watch it!
UNTIL THE
NEXT ROUND…PEACE AND GOD BLESS! |
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