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hopkins


Tuesday Apr 22, 2008

Hopkins has enough money. He's done it all in boxing, except absorb a bad beating. Why continue, and risk that prospect, Borges says.

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Borges' Message To B-Hop: Better Stop

By Ron Borges

B-Hop better stop.

      The time comes for every fighter when continuing is a case of diminishing returns. Forty-three year old Bernard Hopkins seemed to hear that whispered message last Saturday night as he nearly tricked and slicked his way to a victory over undefeated super middleweight champion Joe Calzaghe in Las Vegas.

      In the end, Hopkins’ hand was not raised. He lost a split decision just closely enough to be questionable in the opinion of his supporters but not controversial in the minds of anyone save, perhaps, Hopkins himself.

      “I don’t think he won, so how can I give him credit?’’ Hopkins said ungraciously after two judges had Calzaghe winning by three and a hard-to-fathom five points while the third, Adelaide Byrd, gave Hopkins a career achievement award with a 114-113 margin of victory.

      “I got beat tonight but not by Joe Calzaghe. I took the guy to school. I made him look amateurish. Joe throws punches like my sister. To give him credit now would be submitting to the situation and I refuse to do that.’’

      Hopkins was partially correct. The passage of time and the inexorable physical erosion that comes with it for a boxer had as much to do with Hopkins’ loss as did Calzaghe but the fact is Calzaghe went down in the opening minute of the fight from a straight right hand to the nose and lost the next round as well. So he was three points down in the opinion of most, and already forced into the kind of slower-paced fight Hopkins hoped to create with his biggest fight barely underway; yet he still came back to win.

      By the fight’s mid-point, Calzaghe had taken a one point lead on two of the judges’ cards and from the fifth round on Hopkins won only one round on those two cards. The reason was that for the first time in his career Hopkins faded badly over the final few rounds, his legs deserting him perhaps because he had chosen to spend most of the fight retreating in an effort to lure Calzaghe into a mistake of over enthusiasm.

      He didn’t make it, but neither did Calzaghe look good in victory. What he looked like was a guy who slaps more than punches and who in this case had problems landing anything clean against a 43-year-old man. Yet that did not mean he wasn’t landing.

      According to Compubox’s often suspect “statistics,’’ Calzaghe struck Hopkins 232 times, which were the most ever landed on him in the 21 Hopkins fights tracked by the CompuBox calculators. He also outlanded him by more than 100 punches but more importantly he out-threw him by a margin of 239 (707 to 468). It was expected that Calzaghe would be the busier fighter because Hopkins is a cautious counter puncher by nature while Calzaghe is one of the busiest boxers in the business. What was not expected was that Hopkins’ fight would grind to a halt in the final three or four rounds.

      One measure of Hopkins’ successful plan was that it reduced Calzaghe’s punch output to 58.9 per round, well below his normal average in big fights where he is often in excess of 70 punches a round. But while Hopkins succeeded in forcing Calzaghe into fighting his fight he wasn’t able to win it because by the 10th round he was, as they say in Calzaghe’s native Wales, ‘’knackered.’’

      When the bell sounded to open Round 10, Hopkins was still on his stool, a telltale sign of a man whose body was arguing with him about what to do next. Less than a minute later, Hopkins was rolling on the floor claiming a low blow. A replay showed Calzaghe had hit him low in part because Hopkins was pulling his neck down, but the punch was also half blocked by Hopkins and so its power was greatly dissipated.

      Still, referee Joe Cortez gave Hopkins a full five minute rest period and he needed every minute of it.

      The next round he tried the same thing, with Cortez less cooperative this time,  and Calzaghe would later contend had Hopkins’ not been given “rest breaks’’ in a sport that has no timeouts, he would not have gone the distance.

      That is debatable, because Calzaghe never seemed to land a clean blow on the shifty Hopkins, but what is not is that Bernard Hopkins has come to that crossroads all fighters face. It is time to stop. Now it is not only outsiders who are telling him that, it’s his body. Whether he listens is up to him, but his long-time co-trainer Nazim Richardson said before the fight and repeated it after that the counsel he’d given Hopkins was to beware the timeline of boxing.

      “I told him he’d experienced everything there is in boxing but a bad beating,’’ Richardson said. “No reason he has to. At 43, what else is there for him to do?’’

      Nothing now that he’s financially comfortable and established as a fighter of some historic import. To continue is to tempt cruel fate, a fate that is always the same for the fighter who stays too long. It is to end up wearing sunglasses at midnight.

      As for Calzaghe, his future at 36 seems equally clear. He said he intends to retire at the end of the year and so will probably fight only once more. He’d love for that opponent to be current middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik, but that is not going to happen. Pavlik’s promoter, Bob Arum, has no interest in such a fight nor does Pavlik need it.

      That leaves Calzaghe with no viable opponent at 168 pounds if he chose to retain his super middleweight titles and no reason to fight the American young gun at light heavyweight, Chad Dawson, because Dawson is too much risk for not enough reward either financially or in the court of public opinion.

      What that means is a fight against another faded legend in 39-year-old Roy Jones, Jr. or the blunted force that was once Felix Trinidad. In the end it seems nearly certain the choice will be Jones, who was everywhere in Las Vegas last week saying he’d happily journey to England or Wales to face Calzaghe. In fact, he proposed a two-fight deal which seemed absurd but was an indication of how anxious another old man is to get in with Calzaghe before he too retires.

      “I’d love to go to Wales and fight in front of 70,000 or 90,000,’’ Jones said. “I’d like to propose a two-fight deal. The first one ever there. If there’s a reason to have a second one, we fight it over here.’’

      This from a guy who in his prime refused all efforts to get him to leave the U.S. to fight in England or Germany, turning down offers to face Calzaghe and the then undefeated German WBO champion Dariusz Michalzewski in his (and their) prime.

      “When I was on top of the world, why would I go to the other guy’s place?’’ Jones asked. “If he’s going to beat me and I’m the best in the world come to my place.’’

      Jones spoke first of a 60-40 split to his advantage but quickly amended it to 50-50, the same tactic Hopkins used before he signed to face Calzaghe. That seems likely to be what the terms will be if the fight is to come off but it is a long road between talking with Roy Jones, Jr. and getting him to sign a contract. In the end however it seems all but guaranteed.

      As for Bernard Hopkins, he’s fighting himself now and that is how it should be. He’s fighting to do what boxing is telling him to do, which is box no more.

      “I haven’t had time to smell the roses yet,’’ Hopkins said at a post-fight press conference that was at times contentious and at other times more like a valedictory address for a man on his way out. “Maybe this is the time for me to stop and smell the roses.’’

      That would be wise, because to make another choice is to all but guarantee a time is coming to taste his own blood and perhaps write an ending to his career in boxing no different than that of all the fighters Nazim Richardson was gently warning him about.



Rashad:  Their is no way B-Hop should retire! I want to see a rematch to get a clear winning which I think B-Hop would be! The only way you got more then 114-113 for either fighter was from bias of who you wanted to win the fight and/or how you score the fight. Do you score fights for the fighter that threw more punches but the majority of them were blocked? Or do you score the fight for the cleaner and harder punches that landed cleaner. B-Hop still has a lot in him, he can still hang and beat the best. I would pick him against Dawson, Tarver, and gun-shy Jones Jr. which is why we need a rematch!
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
Joe:  Joe would win in a near shutout in a rematch, which thankfully will never happen. He was the one who figured out Hopkins as the fight progressed and now knows exactly what to do starting with the first round. Also, BHop also has nothing left in the tank so really what's the point?
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
donputo69 hanging out in the beautiful island of puerto rico.:  PLEASE RETIRE..NOBODY WANTS TO SEE ANYMORE..you will be doing me a big favor..lmfao..holla back..
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
Smiley C:  If Sissy Joe Calzaghe wants to keep that goose egg, he better retire. This nut-slapping bum is walking on thin ice. I cannot wait to see him down on the canvas and unable to get up. Fo' sure!
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
d:  bernard hopkins did his thing in my oppinion he did make calzaghe appear big time amatuarish. do you see the replays with calzaghe winging these horrid wide wide wide shots that to me looked like a girl fight not even in the amateur sorry for the spelling. now i dont think hopkins won but it was close slappy or not joe did land enough punches to win but that is because hopkins is sooooo old. never in my oppinion could calzaghe hold a candle to jones , hopkins, etc in their prime. if he fights chad he will lose bad real bad. i really liked joe before this fight but even though he won and is undefeated as silly as it may sound i feel he was exposed. if he wont face chad maybe he should set something up with chris byrd hes old too. i think there are quite a few people who could dethrone joe.
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
d:  i would like to see glenn johnson get a fight with hopkins and see if he could overcome what stopped him last time i think glen would run over hopkins now.
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
Dos:  I bet that JC used a lot of ice on his nose after the fight. He was talking about B-Hop's nose before the fight. Now look who got a nose job. B-Hop tried to hack it off. JC's nose was growing because he was lying about B-Hop being a dirty fighters, when JC is the dirty one. Just imagine this cat nut slapping a legend then admitting to it. Punk-ass Pinocchio.
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
T-Dub:  I think what you guys don't realize about Bernard is that he is a con. And what I mean about con is that he conned you guys into thinking he still can fight. What you don't realize is that Calzaghe showed that Bernard can't fight an all out 3 minutes of each round. Talking about amateurish. Bernard dives in like he doesn't have skills. What about the so called low blow, that was Bernard trying to get a breather because his legs were gone. He is a guy from prison who thought that he was going to bluff Calzaghe and actually Calzaghe bullied the bully. Bernard is truly a fake now. The only reason he beat Tarver is because Tarver doesn't have any heart and Tarver wants Roy Jones, Jr because that's the only person he is truly not afraid of.
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008
Nuckle:  I dont want to see my boy BHOP go, but he's old and it's time to hang up the gloves. If he retires now he still retires on top. Sissy Joe didnt win in my eyes fighting like an amateur and a girl. RJJ will beat Sissy Joe easily, he will throw more punches and combos than BHOP did. Plus his hand speed. Glen J will knock him out, he will eat right through those slaps and land something serious. Chad D is too young and will definetly out box him. Tarver will outbox him too. Pavlik will never back up, he will move Sissy Joe back and land that monsterous right hand. Please let him fight one of these guys so we can prove to the Brits (because they seem to be the only ones that dont know) how overrated Sissy Joe is.
Thursday Apr 24, 2008
Pin Galarga:  It's time for us to rest from HOP. He has harm boxing enough and Boxing will have a lot more class after him and Mayweather are out of the picture. We don't need CEO boxers, we need real champions and their game of retiring and coming back for money fights only has to stop. Boxing needs more champions like Cotto and less businessmen who take honor away from the sport. IF THEY CAN'T FIGHT THE CONTENDERS COMING UP, THEY SHOULD BOTH RETIRE..
Thursday Apr 24, 2008

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