Bad Left Hook: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:



Around SBN: Getting Marshawn Lynch touches is key for Bills' success Bar-right-arrows



Scheduled Event

Arthur Abraham v. Edison Miranda II (SHO)

Jun 21, 2008 9:00 PM EDT
Seminole Hard Rock - Hollywood, FL
Abraham TKO-4

Miranda reaches crossroads, Abraham reaches new heights

SCOTT'S BAD LEFT HOOK UNOFFICIAL SCORECARD
 Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Total
 Arthur Abraham 9 9 10 TKO                 28
 Edison Miranda 10 10 9                   29
SCOTT'S BAD LEFT HOOK UNOFFICIAL SCORECARD
 Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Total
 Andre Berto 10 10 10 10 9 10 TKO           59
 Miki Rodriguez 9 9 9 9 10 9             55
SCOTT'S BAD LEFT HOOK UNOFFICIAL SCORECARD
 Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Total
 Giovanni Lorenzo 9 10 10 9 9 9 10 9 9 9 (-1) 9 9 110
 Raul Marquez 10 9 9 10 10 10 9 10 10 10 10 10 117

 


 

Capt

Let's ignore all the post-fight shenanigans that are being talked about, and focus on the actual fight.

Edison Miranda has always talked a good game, and he was talking one of his best ever leading up to his rematch against Arthur Abraham last night. A couple of years ago, Miranda broke Abraham's jaw in two places but lost a controversial decision in Germany, having been docked five points for fouls.

I gave Miranda a good shot at scoring a minor upset over Abraham last night. He had the power, he seemed to have improved enough technically to make that power even more effective, and this would be King Arthur's first trip stateside. He was essentially fighting on Miranda's home turf in Hollywood, Fla., the same as Miranda did the first time against Abraham.

No dice. Arthur Abraham laid back for two rounds, turned up the heat in the third, and then demolished Miranda in the fourth with three knockdowns before the referee called the fight off out of necessity. Miranda was a walking punching bag at that point. A muscular punching bag, sure, but a punching bag regardless.

We have learned now for certain that whether it's 160 or 168 or last night's 166-pound catchweight, Edison Miranda is a one-trick pony who doesn't have a great chin and will never become more than the fighter he is, which is a guy that simply can't beat top-shelf opposition.

His three career losses have come to Abraham and Kelly Pavlik, the last two of which saw Miranda get manhandled by both guys. Miranda's wins have come against guys like an old Howard Eastman and Allan Green, the latter of whom is another fringe-y sort of fighter that has the tools to maybe score an upset, but most likely won't.

It's time, finally, for Edison Miranda to shut up before fights. He won't, and he'll be entertaining. He's a new, bigger Ricardo Mayorga. He's got power, he's got charisma, and there'll always be a home for him on TV because of his style. He's damn fun to watch, because it's pretty certain that someone's getting knocked out. HBO is interested in matching Miranda with Jermain Taylor if a Taylor-Lacy fight can't be made (credit: Dan Rafael). I'd watch it, no doubt. It'll be entertaining.

Miranda's problems are obvious. He has beyond subpar defensive abilities, and he seems to think he has a granite chin when the facts just don't support the theory. When he faces guys that punch back, he has crumbled. With no broken jaw the first time around, Abraham probably does what he did last night. And frankly speaking, Abraham-Miranda I was probably a career-best performance by Miranda.

Edison Miranda will move on. He wasn't done after Pavlik destroyed him, he won't be done now. Losing to the clear two best middleweights on the planet is not a death sentence. He'll be around for years, and he might pick up an alphabet strap along the way. Alejandro Berrio did.

As for Abraham -- wow. What a performance. He scouted Miranda for two rounds, essentially, then lived up to HIS talk, which was that Miranda was not a hard guy to beat. Once he saw his opening in the fourth, down Miranda went. And again. And again. He creamed Edison Miranda. It was a no-doubt, star-making performance.

Welcome to America, King Arthur. We await your return.


And who should Abraham fight next? Well, that'll have to wait.

The Showtime undercard did the boxing world a favor, with Raul Marquez outboxing, frustrating, and beating undefeated, untested, ridiculously ranked Giovanni Lorenzo over 12 rounds, winning a ridiculously razor-thin decision, 114-113 across the boards.

Lorenzo was also docked a point in round 10 for an intentional headbutt, so that means without that foul, it was a draw. I don't know how anyone could've seen this fight as a draw.

Marquez was the aggressor despite being older and supposedly not possessing the same power. Lorenzo's best work was done counter-punching, but even when he scored there, he was generally being scored upon by Marquez. Most of the big exchanges -- and there were some furious, nasty brawls within the fight -- went Marquez's way. The most notable of the bad blood stuff came when Marquez and Lorenzo violently scrapped well after the bell sounded to end of that 10th round where the headbutt occured.

The visual toward the end of the fight was excellent, with blood streaming down Marquez's face from at least three cuts around his right eye, but here he was still the guy pressing the action. The old man who was supposed to be the legitimate win for Lorenzo was taking the kid to boxing class.

To summarize, a cagey veteran exposed a hype-job. I'm not trying to dump on Lorenzo. He didn't rank himself #4 in the IBF's system. He fought like a punk many times in the fight, though, and did give an overall poor account of himself. But that happens. I'm not writing him off as a jerk or anything.

So, now, Marquez is in line to face Arthur Abraham. He doesn't have a hope in hell, but Lorenzo probably would've been eaten alive by Abraham anyway.


But the fight to see at 160, unquestionably, is Pavlik-Abraham. If Jack Loew or anyone else thinks Kelly Pavlik is going to get Abraham out of there in "three, four, five rounds," they're nuts.

The fight is excellent on paper, with Fight of the Year-like potential. Two great punchers. Abraham is an excellent counter-puncher and pouncer. He's also superb defensively. Pavlik is underrated as a defensive fighter, and has the great knockout percentage. You can't beat that fight. And really, it's ahead of Pavlik-Calzaghe on my wishlist.

Let's answer why, huh? These guys are both in their prime. They're the two best middleweights, both unbeaten. Calzaghe is a light heavyweight, and I know it'd be awesome to see a fight at 168 between Pavlik and Calzaghe to decide three lineal championships, but that can wait as far as I'm concerned.

Abraham will face Marquez next, and it looks like Pavlik will take on Marco Antonio Rubio. Tune-up fights, both acceptable given what should be next. Both camps have talked about the fight, and I don't think there'd be any real problem making it happen. 

It's a must-see, a must-have, a must-make for the promoters. I'd put that fight top five on my most desired bouts right now.


Over on HBO, Andre Berto easily handled Miki Rodriguez, as everyone expected, eventually scoring a seventh round TKO against the overmatched ex-policeman. Berto, as usual, dominated.

Berto is also now the WBC welterweight titleholder, which puts him in the lion's den. Max Kellerman noted many times how short Berto is at welterweight, but I don't really get that, nor see it being a huge issue. He's an inch and a half taller than Cotto, a half-inch shorter than Mosley, taller than Judah, as tall as Clottey, an inch shorter than Quintana, etc. Paul Williams (6'1") and Antonio Margarito (5'11") are not the norm at 147. Berto will be fine.

Does he have things to work on if he's going to step up? Sure. What 24-year old doesn't, belt or no belt? And no, he should not rush into fighting the top-tier welterweights right now. It's way too far of a step up.

The fact is, Berto is probably going to have to put up with some criticism as a major titleholder, because he's not ready for those best of the best dudes. A fight with a guy like Luis Collazo would present Andre with a lot of new looks, things he'd have difficulty handling. It's not a knock on him at all, it's just that that's a fairly big step up from guys like Rodriguez, Michel Trabant, David Estrada and Cosme Rivera.

If he takes a couple more fights like that, which isn't hard to imagine at 22-0, he's going to receive some backlash. In the end, though, his career might be better for it. To be honest, it wouldn't shock me to see his next fight against someone like Delvin Rodriguez or maybe a Dmitriy Salita.


Overseas, Amir Khan and Mikkel Kessler both won as expected. I'm a big fan of Khan, and despite some of the things I've said (which were all deserved), I do like Kessler, and I really like him as a fighter. I've never once said that he can't go in the ring. The man can fight.

Khan has been talking about moving up a big step, but even as good as he already is, that's probably rushing things. Hopefully, Kessler will find a good dance partner. and get himself back on American TV, which will not be easy since he has angered both major networks in the last year. HBO was peeved (along with Calzaghe, Frank Warren, and others) that Mikkel was essentially a no-show in promotion last November, and Showtime can't be happy with them about the Miranda ordeal.

But I like watching him fight, because he's good. It'd be great to see him on live American TV again.


When all is said and done for this big Saturday in boxing, it was Edison Miranda, of all people, who had the most poignant parting words:

"I have no quarrels tonight. He was prepared and he felt very strong. I don't know what happened. I was 100 percent coming into this fight. I don't know. He was too strong today. He's a great champion."

2 comments | 0 recs

More on the Alexander Abraham story

Alexander Abraham is denying the story through Team Sauerland, but fact remains he was arrested and had to make bail. Tim Smith has also reported the story on ESPN.com, so I don't know how seriously to take the Abraham camp on this one. Probably with at least a giant grain of salt.

There is a legit $100,000 fine being levied against Arthur Abraham, and if it's not paid, Arthur faces a suspension in the States. This whole situation is just utterly stupid and shameful. Let's hope it doesn't mess up Arthur's career, because all he did last night was his job.

We'll have more on last night's fights later tonight with a full recap of all the action.

As a side note, how about this one? ESPN's Dan Rafael reported in his Insider blog (which is always worth the money, for the record) that Nate Campbell told him that terms have been agreed to for a fight with Joan Guzman...on September 13th on Showtime. That's right -- the exact same date as Casamayor-Marquez.

Come on, guys.

4 comments | 0 recs

Report: Alex Abraham kicks Miranda after fight

Hyefighter_alex_abraham_medium Source: Boxing Scene

A lot of live reports are talking about this all over the place, but keep in mind this is all "if it's true" subject matter I'm going to discuss.

Alexander Abraham, the younger brother of Arthur Abraham, allegedly attacked Edison Miranda after Miranda had been knocked out by Arthur in Hollywood, Fla., last night. Boxing Scene says that Alex (also a pro boxer) kicked Miranda while ring doctors were trying to attend to the losing fighter, and that a scuffle broke out that also involved Randall Bailey, a friend of Miranda's.

Now, again, if it's true...

This is a disgusting, classless thing for Alexander Abraham to do. He should be ashamed of himself, and his brother should be ashamed of him, as well. Any fine levied by the commission would go against Arthur, who did nothing wrong by all reports. Alexander was taken away by security, it says.

In what was a great night for Arthur's career -- his first trip to the States was a rousing success, and he erased any possible doubt about his superiority to Miranda -- it would be a shame for it to be remembered because his idiot brother felt the need to assault a downed man who was receiving medical attention. I'm sure Edison said something in the hype to the fight that probably irked Alexander (and Arthur, for that matter), but grow up.

If it turns out that these are B.S. reports (though there are plenty flowing in), then disregard all that I've said about Alexander. Here's a photo of Alexander running into the ring to celebrate with Arthur after the fight was stopped:

Capt

via Yahoo! Sports / AP

0 comments | 0 recs

Quick n' Dirty: Saturday winners

Showtime:

Arthur Abraham beat the hell out of Edison Miranda in the fourth round, knocking him down three times before the referee stepped in. Abraham-Pavlik now has to be considered a no-doubter among boxing's most desired fights.

Raul Marquez upset Giovanni Lorenzo via unanimous decision, 114-113 across the board. Lorenzo had a point deducted for a blatant headbutt in the 10th, or it would've been a draw. Which would've been a joke. Marquez took Lorenzo to school.

HBO:

Andre Berto overwhelmed Miki Rodriguez in seven rounds, knocking him down twice. Laurence Cole stopped it shortly after the second knockdown of the round. Berto is the new WBC welterweight titleholder. The fact that this was a title fight speaks highly of the WBC to be sure.

Chris Arreola beat Chazz Witherspoon via third round DQ. Apparently a member of Witherspoon's corner entered the ring. I missed the fight, someone give me the scoop.

Elsewhere:

Amir Khan stopped Michael Gomez in the fifth round to improve to 18-0 with 14 knockouts.

Mikkel Kessler beat Dmitri Sartison via 12th round knockout. Kessler is 40-1 now, with his 30th knockout. Sartison is 22-1. Kessler is now the WBA super middleweight something or other. It's one of the worst belts in boxing.

We'll have much more tomorrow on tonight's big fights. How about that Arthur Abraham, though? Jeez.

1 comment | 0 recs

Bad Left Hook Fight Night: Abraham-Miranda II

This is the type of fight that shouldn't require any hype. Their first fight -- which is going to be replayed again tonight at 6pm on Showtime -- was a war, with Abraham having his jaw broken in the fourth round and fighting on to a 12-round decision win anyway. A controversial, very close decision win, yes, but a win. It was the first loss of Miranda's career.

Though this fight won't be for Abraham's 160-pound title since it's being fought at a 166-pound catchweight, it's intriguing and feels necessary. Abraham and his team have been quoted as saying they simply do not like Miranda as a person, and Miranda seems to have little personal regard for Abraham either. But trash talker extraordinaire Miranda has shown begrudging respect for the toughness of King Arthur. How could he not?

Most feel that since Abraham is the better all-around fighter, he should have an easier time with Miranda so long as he doesn't have his jaw broken again. But Miranda is the epitome of a guy with a puncher's chance -- any shot could finish any fight. He's a monster puncher who looked a lot more disciplined in his January destruction of David Banks, finishing Banks with what amounted to the first good shot he landed in the fight, as he laid back and picked his spot in the third round.

Abraham has to be the favorite, but I think Miranda might just win this one on power. If he does, he's red-hot again. He'll always be in demand thanks to the way he fights, but a shot at a 168-pound title could await him should he win tonight. For Abraham, this is a first trip to the States, and like it or not, that means a chance at real stardom outside of Germany. He's a legit fighter; there is no doubt of that. But he's a virtual unknown over here. He'll get the chance to end that. And he does have the power to knock Miranda out.

The undercard fight is marginally interesting just because the winner gets Abraham next, which is scheduled tentatively for this fall. Lorenzo is totally unproven, but skilled. Marquez is just another 36-year old guy who is past his prime. His status as a former 154-pound titlist isn't all that amazing, since he didn't ever score a win over a great fighter. The three best fighters he's ever fought have all knocked him out. Even so, he's the best fighter Lorenzo has ever faced.

Card starts at 9pm on Showtime. Be here!

Box_abraham_miranda_412_medium

via espn.com

ARTHUR ABRAHAM

IBF Middleweight Titleholder
Ring Magazine No. 1 Middleweight Contender

 

EDISON MIRANDA

 

26-0 Record 30-2
21 KO 26
Berlin, Germany (Yerevan, Armenia) Hometown Buenaventura, Colombia
28 Age 27
5'10" Height 6'0"
Sebastien Demers (KO-3)
Edison Miranda (UD-12)
Kingsley Ikeke (KO-5)
Notable Wins Allan Green (UD-10)
Willie Gibbs (KO-1)
Howard Eastman (TKO-7)
Notable Losses Kelly Pavlik (TKO-7)
Arthur Abraham (UD-12)

GIOVANNI LORENZO

Ring Magazine No. 10 Middleweight Contender

  RAUL MARQUEZ

 

26-0 Record 40-3-1
18 KO 29
Jeringa, Dominican Republic Hometown Houston, TX
27 Age 36
6'0" Height 5'10 1/2"
Sherwin Davis (TKO-3)
Bruce Rumbolz (TKO-3)
Robert Kamya (TKO-3)
Notable Wins Keith Mullings (SD-12)
Romallis Ellis (TKO-4)
Anthony Stephens (TKO-9)
Notable Losses Jermain Taylor (TKO-9)
Fernando Vargas (TKO-11)
Yory Boy Campas (TKO-8)

48 comments | 0 recs



Managers

Gijoecobra_small SC

Editors

Cat_from_hell_small Matt Miller

Small Brent Brookhouse

ad

Site Meter