The Sweet Science
HOME ABOUT CONTACT
EnglishRussianChineseItalianDeutchFrenchSpanishPortugueseJapaneseKorean
The Sweet Science Boxing
Boxing Podcast Boxing RSS 
Glen Johnson


Tuesday Oct 4, 2005

“It’d be a different fight between us because Roy Jones has a different style than I do,” Johnson said. “Tonight, Roy didn‘t do too much to impress anyone. I’d love to fight Tarver a third time. He said he was going to do it and I expect him to do it.”

      Print this article     Email this article

Glen Johnson is Waiting for Tarver

By Rick Folstad

For most of Saturday night’s fight, Antonio Tarver looked like a guy trying to feel his way through the dark. Fists spread out wide in front of him, he cautiously plodded forward in the general direction of an elusive Roy Jones Jr., pawing with his right jab as though he was trying to reach out and see if there was something in front of him blocking his way.

There wasn’t.

On a night when Roy Jones Jr. showed flashes of what he used to be, he also proved that you can’t bluff your way into a championship. In the end, his fight game proved to be more vaudeville than back alley, more drama than barroom brawl.

Playing to a wild crowd of 20,895 at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, Jones wiggled his hips, made faces, touched his shoes with his gloves and generally out-performed Tarver.

He just didn’t out-fight him.

In the end, Tarver won a unanimous decision that few could argue with. Even Jones admitted that on that night, Tarver was again the better fighter.

“Tarver would have given me all I could handle in my best days as a light-heavyweight,” Jones said shortly after the fight.

"Tonight, I really had to dig deep," said Tarver, who rocked Jones in the 11th round. "I let him know my will was stronger than his."

Someone who watched the rubber match up close was former light-heavyweight champ Glen Johnson. Fresh off a knockout win over George Khalid Jones in an IBF eliminator fight the night before in California, Johnson, who lives in Miami, flew in for the fight because he needs to remind Tarver that he’s still out there, still waiting for a chance to complete his own little trilogy with Tarver.

Like Jones, Johnson went 1-1 in his first two fights with Tarver. He won a split decision in their first meeting last December, while Tarver won the rematch this past June.

Dressed in a dark, pinstripe suit, Johnson didn‘t show any war wounds from the night before. Talking while waiting for the Jones-Tarver post-fight press conference a little after midnight in the catacombs of the Forum, he said the only thing that surprised him about the fight was the lack of action.

“It was an entertaining fight, but not an exciting fight,” he said. “I was surprised they didn’t [mix it up] more. It was supposed to be a grudge match, but instead, it was a dance lesson.”

Johnson would like to do a few steps with Tarver if he’s up for it.

“It’d be a different fight between us because Roy Jones has a different style than I do,” he said. “Tonight (Saturday), Roy didn‘t do too much to impress anyone.”

“I’d love to fight Tarver a third time. He said he was going to do it and I expect him to do it.”

If Johnson has to resort to calling him out to get another fight, he’s ready to do it.

“If there is not a Johnson-Tarver III,” he said, “Tarver is definitely the coward, not me.”

Acknowledging Johnson at the press conference, Tarver joked that maybe he had earned himself an easy fight.

"My last 12 fights have been against top contenders," he said. "Can't I get a soft break?"

He certainly earned it. 

add to Facebook add to Myspace add to Digg add to Mixx add to Linkedin add to Yahoo Buzz

Contact Rick Folstad @ TheSweetScience.com


Name: Email:  (will not be displayed, TSS Privacy, your email is required to autoapprove your comment)

Please be respectful, and do not use foul language in your comment

Discuss this article in the forum

  THESWEETSCIENCE.COM   More from the Top Team of Writers in the Fight Game ...
 
More from this Writer
Columns by Rick Folstad
 
Recent boxing Columns and News
•  TSS Salutes One Of Boxing's Special People: Lorraine Chargin by Ron Borges
•  Sechew Powell Gets Revenge With Smart Showing Against Deandre Latimore by Michael Woods
•  Rooting For Chambers Is A Lot Different Than Picking Him To Beat Wlad by Frank Lotierzo
 
 


TSS Video
Roger and Floyd Mayweather in LA talking about Mosley fight
  
Roy Jones and Bernard Hopkins smack talking in L.A.
  
Oscar De La Hoya on Mosley-Mayweather fight and Manny Pacquiao
  
More Video
TSS Photo Archive

Angie And Goody...23 Years Later
Twenty three years later after they seconded Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard in Las Vegas, Goody Petronelli and Angelo Dundee crossed paths again. This time, it was at Foxwoods. Photo/friend of TSS "The Iceman" John Scully reports there were only pleasantries exchanged. Goody didn't debate the split decision victory enjoyed by Leonard, which to this day Hagler disputes.

Round by Round Coverage
Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto
Fight aficionados, tune in for live, round by round coverage of the Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto welterweight championship on Saturday, November 14th beginning at 9 pm ET / 6 pm PT.

The Sweet Science Writers
The Sweet Science
Legal  | Privacy  |  Sitemap  |  Disclaimer  |  The Savage Science © 2004-2007 The Sweet Science Boxing.  All rights reserved. .