Saul Canelo Alvarez spent nearly an hour answering question today at his and Austin Trout's media day outside the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas. Alvarez says he's not a very good fighter in sparring.
Austin Trout joins SWFight.com to reflect on his last day of training and is asked if he think he will be robbed in San Antonio.
You can see them in the dim corners of dingy gyms from one end of the country to the other. They play dominoes at rickety card tables. They wander back and forth, unsteadily, across the room, the heat—almost never offset by whirring ceiling fans—and the permanent stench of sweat, grit, and cracked or creaking leather a backdrop to nearly all they say or do. Now and then one of them will come up to you and offer advice when he sees you struggling with the heavybag or making a fool of yourself in front of a mirror. They teach arcane, archaic methods. Their eyes, unfocused, wander here or there; you can catch a glimpse of pain in them from time to time. Their hands are as gnarled as tree roots breaking through the earth. They stand in front of begrimed windows looking down on the faraway streets below. Who can tell you what their daydreams are? (read more)
Via Deadline: "Robert De Niro and Edgar Ramirez have signed on to star in Hands Of Stone, a drama written and to be directed by Jonathan Jakubowicz. Boxing fans will know where we are going from the title. Ramirez will play champ Roberto Duran. De Niro will play his trainer Ray Arcel in a drama that focuses on how each man changed the life of the other.......The focus will be on the Panamanian boxer’s incredible brawls with Leonard, culminating in an inexplicable ending of the famous fight where Duran quit in the ring and cried "No mas," on a night when Leonard was having his way."
Pretty flashy, much better, scored 23.
Fan cards page at eyeOnTheRing dot com is up.
With two sharp blows to the head, 23-year-old Jean-Pierre Bauwens Junior sends his opponent straight to the canvas and becomes the WBC youth international boxing champion. Yet this is only a small victory. The eldest of seven kids, four of whom have autism, Junior must now face increasingly tougher opponents to secure a home and a better life for his brothers and sisters. When family tragedy strikes, the pressure mounts and Junior must split his time between the gym and caring for his autistic siblings. “Everything will be alright,” says Junior to his grieving mother. “I know, my child,” she says. “We have one advantage, we have each other.” This stunning documentary, reminiscent of Ken Loach’s social realist style, is a welcomed reminder of the power of documentary to capture real life stories in a raw and unmediated way.
Eddie Showtime Walker vs Steve Wakeling Glory March 23rd, 2013 www.fistsoffortune.com
Hamilton Nolan, periodically a pretty boxing writer, takes on the question of, well, Why are we interviewing athletes who have been knocked out of their heads, and won't remember a word they said? The Bradley interview and the one where JuanMa started spouting conspiracy are mentioned.