|
 |
|
| Know who this is? A seriously slimmed down Chris Byrd. Chris, eat something or soo you're going to be out there challenging Pacquiao! |
|
|
|
| |
 |
|
|
 |
Byrd's Song: No More McDonalds
By Ron Borges
Roy Jones, Jr.’s mouth dropped as Chris Byrd approached him last weekend in Las Vegas. Instead of looking like a guy headed to join Jones for a joint appearance on ESPN2’s Friday Night Fights, Byrd looked like he was walking into a Nutri-System commercial.
The former two-time heavyweight champion of the world was always accused of being too small to compete in boxing’s most important division, despite victories over giants Vitali Klitschko and Jameel McCline, as well as wins against Evander Holyfield and David Tua. Now he really is.
After being stopped in an IBF elimination fight by 28-year-old Russian heavyweight contender Alexander Povetkin last October, the 37-year-old Byrd realized he was at a career crossroads. The heavyweights had not only grown too big for him, they had also grown too young.
To continue to be competitive Byrd realized he would have to re-invent himself. So he decided he would move down to cruiserweight, figuring losing the 20 or so pounds necessary to reach the 200-pound limit would not be all that difficult. Well, a funny thing happened on his way to 200 pounds. He didn’t stop until he weighed 173.
“Once I stopped eating junk and started eating right the weight just flew off me,’’ Byrd joked last week. “When people said I wasn’t really a heavyweight they were right. I wasn’t a real heavyweight. I was a fat light heavyweight.’’
Fat or not, he was also a heavyweight champion twice over which is something a lot of fitter and bigger men will never be able to claim. But those heavyweight days are behind Chris Byrd now, and a new stage of an old career is about to open on May 16 when he fights at light heavyweight for the first time against Shaun George (16-2) on ESPN2’s Friday Night fights.
Byrd signed with promoter Art Pellulo after ending a long-running feud with Don King that had limited his ring appearances to barely one a year since 2003. With King no longer blocking him and his size no longer a problem, Byrd believes he is no more than a victory or two away from a shot at not only the light heavyweight title but a chance to become only the third former heavyweight champion in boxing history to move down to 175 and win another world title.
If he does it, Byrd would join Jones and Bob Fitzsimmons, who performed the feat more than 100 years ago, an elite short list that few heavyweights would even think of ever trying to join. But then, few heavyweights were ever built like Chris Byrd.
“I believe I can be competitive in the division and win another championship,’’ Byrd said. “I had no trouble losing the weight. It took me less than six months and it wasn’t like I was starving myself.
“I only eat one meal a day most days anyway and I’m pretty active. I just had to make it a good meal and not stop at McDonald’s on the way home from the gym. I feel great at this weight even though it wasn’t where I intended to be.’’
Where Byrd intended to be was competing with the world’s top cruiserweights, a division filled with big punchers like David Haye (who himself is moving up to heavyweight) and Jean-Marc Mormeck. Big punchers and small paydays is not the combination anyone is looking for if they can avoid it and once Byrd began to change his diet and increase his workout regimen he suddenly found he might be able to.
“The cruiserweights are still big guys,’’ Byrd said as he eyed an incredulous Jones staring at him his mouth agape from across the room at the Planet Hollywood casino. “I turned pro as a super middleweight 15 years ago and when I moved up to heavyweight nobody thought I had any chance to be successful.
“I don’t imagine many people thought I had a chance of moving back down to light heavyweight either but here I am. I expect to be dominant at this weight.’’
The stylish southpaw has never been a big puncher, as his 21 knockouts in 45 fights attest. His has always been a game based on slick defensive moves, ring intelligence, quick hands and the ability to do his business and then move out of harm’s way before big galoots like McCline or David Tua could return fire.
Yet in later years, as he began to slow down as all fighters do, Byrd found himself more and more often forced to stand flat-footed and fire away against towering men like Wladimir Klitschko, who twice stopped him, or get up off the deck against McCline and find a way to win against tall odds.
But the loss to Povetkin was the final straw, a defeat that convinced him it was time to seek a new job or a new way to stay alive in his present one. Much to his surprise he found the answer in a division he never expected to compete in, but one where he believes he will finally have physical advantages as well as skillful ones.
“If I can’t hurt these guys then it’s time to stop,’’ Byrd (40-4-1, 21 KO) said. “I really think I’ll be bigger and stronger than these guys. And the top light heavyweights are the same age as I am. I really believe this will be a new chapter for me.’’
It’s a chapter that will have to include at least one or more guys like a trio of 39-year-olds, Jones, Glen Johnson and Antonio Tarver, as well as 36-year-old Joe Calzaghe, who just eked out a split decision from 43-year-old Bernard Hopkins last week. What it likely would not include is 25-year-old WBC champion Chad Dawson. With so many of his contemporaries around, why mess with someone who wasn’t old enough to box when he began his professional career?
Jones, Tarver, Johnson and Calzaghe are Byrd’s true contemporaries but more importantly they are also his physical peers. To compete against the latter will take Byrd back almost 16 years, back to a time when he was winning the silver medal at the Olympics in Barcelona as a middleweight before turning pro and moving up from 168 to heavyweight after just three professional fights.
At the time Byrd’s decision was considered foolhardy by most boxing insiders but he has had the last laugh on all those who said a little man without a knockout punch could not long survive among boxing’s redwoods.
It has been a long road from that final amateur tournament to this new beginning at 175 pounds but this last chapter will not be like his 14 years in the heavyweight division. This will be a short story regardless of how quickly he gets his shot at joining Jones and Fitzsimmons in boxing’s history books.
Byrd’s hope is clear. He would like to see Jones dethrone Calzaghe next fall in England or Wales to win the linear light heavyweight title and then get his own chance to face the four-time world champion (middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight) in a big-money mega-fight that would be more about speed, skill and elusiveness than ponderous power punching.
“I’d love to fight Roy,’’ Byrd said. “I don’t know what he wants to do but it would be a great fight. Two former heavyweight champions fighting for a light heavyweight title! That would be history.
“A lot of guys go up in weight and some of them find ways to keep winning. Not many guys go up to heavyweight and then go back in the other direction. Once you gain that weight it’s too hard to lose it, mentally as much as physically. You just don’t want to do what you have to do but that wasn’t a problem for me. Keeping the weight on was always my problem.’’
Not any more. After 15 years and two reigns as heavyweight champion Chris Byrd is finally where people always said he should be. He’s in a division where he can finally pick on guys his own size.
|
quartz:
|
i am incredulous! why was Byrd eating mcdonald's! it helps keep weight on, but is hardly the food of champions!
Thursday Apr 24, 2008
|
|
BabyDee:
|
Nice read, but Roy Jones never went back down to Light Heavy and won a title, and I don't think Bob Fitzsimmons did either. They both moved from Light Heavy to Heavy, but at least Roy, I know for a fact has yet to win a title at Light Heavy (WBA, WBC, WBO, IBF, The Ring) since comming back down. I think Byrd will be the first to have done it.
Friday Apr 25, 2008
|
|
Radam G:
|
Byrd never had discipline. He ate that junk food from McDonald's because he didn't think that it would hurt him. Even as he was getting decked and kayo'd, he was still in self-denial. Same thing with sex. He doesn't believe that that has a bad effect before a bout. This guy is far from being Old School. He believes every piece of trash that he is told by one of those so-called modern-day expert -- a lot of New School wackos and punks (all wrong for boxing). I guess that getting knocked on his butt and TKO'd have brought him around. He is off the bad food. Now, he has to get off the good sex. It over relaxes a fighter and zaps his killer-instinct of snapping, popping, cracking and straight-up wrecking. I hope this dude goes to training camp and tells his fine-a$$ wife to stay home and off him. If he does this, he may just make some noise at light heavyweight. Holla!
Friday Apr 25, 2008
|
|
BIGDADDY74:
|
Your brain is showing D--, um I mean BabyDee. I think that Byrd could make for some interesting fights.Who wouldn't want to face the former Heavyweight Champ at 175?Pavlik,Calzaghe,JT,Jones and whom ever else wants a piece of history.
Friday Apr 25, 2008
|
|
Radam G:
|
You are wrong, BabyDee. Fitzsimmons won the middleweight title, first. Then, he went up and won the heavyweight. Then, he went down and won the light heavyweight title. Roy Jones Jr went up and won the heavyweight title. Then, he went back down and was given the light heavyweight title. Then, the WBC got sued by Graciano Rocchigiani for $30 million, declared bankruptcy. And then worked an agreement with Rocchigiani for the money and restored his title. Byrd would be the third person to come down from heavy champ to light heavy champ. Holla!
Friday Apr 25, 2008
|
|
Radam G:
|
The WBC got sued by Rocchigiani for stripping him of the title and giving it back to Jones Jr, after RJJ decided to give up the heavy belt and come back down to light heavy. The WBC tried to con Rocchigiani out of its WBC light heavyweight by saying that the organization had made a typo in listing him as the champion. Holla!
Friday Apr 25, 2008
|
|
G.O.A.T:
|
Talking about a boxers sex life with detailed words like "good" can't get your quotes in the suggestion box. Wait I took the bait didn't I. We've found a white folk Radam must like huh? Holla! Anyways Byrds a good guy but his head is monstrously out of proportion.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
rick roma:
|
His head looks pasted on the body of someone else. The skin is a completely different color. Somethings wrong if this is accurate. He must be so drained that it is adversely effecting his body (and appearance in general). Byrd gets KO'd within 5 vs literally anybody at this weight. RJJ should take this on short notice for a quick KO or better yet Tito Trinidad could get a quick W.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Orby:
|
I believe that picture as much as I believe the Life Magazine photo of Lee Harvey Oswald holding the Mannlicher-Carcano that did JFK. If this is genuine, then Byrd is superhuman. How in the world did he take all those big shots from Klitschko (among others)?? Somehow I think all this weight drain at 37 is unhealthy and not the formula for success. But we'll see. A guy like Ricardo Mayorga should be calling him out loudly right now, ala Hatton to Mayweather, because he could be the great benefactor here and notch himself a career resurrecting 1st round KO of a former alphabet champion. Mayorga - Byrd, then Mayorga - Mayweather, then Canastota for the classy Nicaraguan.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Robert Curtis:
|
I could care less about Chris Byrd at cruiser or light-heavy or whatever. Now if James Toney could drop 30 or 40, that might be interesting for a week. How about a reality TV show combining the concepts of Contender and World's Biggest Loser? The world's top heavies all go to fat camp.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Robert Curtis:
|
I'm reflecting on what a mess boxing is when a 37 year old on a crash diet is boxing news. Joe Frazier left the game at 34 because it really was a game then and not a joke. Between the overfed heavies and all the ancient geezers on human growth hormone, we might as well be watching the Special Olympics. Obviously, Two Ton Tony Galento was born in the wrong time.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Adrian:
|
I am amazed by the transformation and just hope that a nice guy like this knows what he's doing dropping 40 off pounds. Wish he takes care of his health, he just looked a lot healthier as a heavy...maybe its just the picture.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Dino:
|
His head does look pasted on, doesn't it? Actually, I was five feet away from Byrd and "EZ" Hernandez when this photo was taken. Orby, you started making valid points early, but then it was like you walked away from your computer screen before you hit send, and somebody commandeered it and took us to Nicaragua. I believe if you willingly climb through the ropes to face the Klitschko Brothers, on three occasions, in Germany, (Germany!...Good Luck with trying to get a fair decision there!) You probably don't fear anything weighing 175 pounds on planet earth...short of a 175-pound Bionic Pit Bull.
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
ICE:
|
BABYDEE...RJ did win the 175 pound title with his decision over Tarver. And as far as Byrd is concerned, I remember him when he was at 139 POUNDS in the 1988 Olympic Trials. (I was 165, RJ was 156)
ICE
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Radam G:
|
G.O.A.T., you are making no sense. Any way, I refuse to energize you with whatever motive that you have in mind --perverted or bigoted! Holla!
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
G.O.A.T:
|
Could you actually stand a fighter like Wlad Klitschko next to any heavyweight in history and say he should go to fat camp? Just alot of jealously in the air , but ya'll be alright
Saturday Apr 26, 2008
|
|
manboobs the great:
|
good for Chris Byrd!! A very underated and avoided fighter, I hope this move treats him well. I think Chris will get some guys outta there at LH. He's old enough to know what he has to do, just hope he's not to old to do it. Good luck Chris!
Sunday Apr 27, 2008
|
|
ricky roma:
|
My balls dropped when I saw this picture.
Sunday Apr 27, 2008
|
|
TREY:
|
I never liked your style of fighting, but I like your courage and commitment.
Sunday Apr 27, 2008
|
|
BabyDee:
|
Radam G, again, I wasn't sure about Fittzsimmons, so thanks for clarifying that, but my point still stands that RJJ did not come back down and win a title. He (RJJ), as you stated, was given one. He did not win. Byrd will be #2. Byrd in the LH div. will be interesting. We will see in May!
Monday Apr 28, 2008
|
|
Phil:
|
That pic is so obviously faked - it's not even close
Monday Apr 28, 2008
|
|
Paul:
|
I;m the one who took the photo of Chris, I gotta tell you all, when I asked Chris if he could pose for the photo, I too was surprised. I wanted to take some photos of Chirs working out, but Dino and I arrived late and Chris was about to go home. So I asked Chris to do a fighter's pose for me, which he did. In fact, I even commented to Chris that people are going to be surprised when they see the photo, and he commented that the world will be shocked. So all you non-believers will have to wait until May 16th to see if this photo is real or not.
Tuesday Apr 29, 2008
|
|
raygun:
|
this guy is going to get hurt he obviously is NOT eating well..you cannot deny yourself of a certain amount of calories when training what you expend you MUST replenish..he looks sickly and ready to get taken out ..Also after so many years of fighting at heavyweight what he has lost was NOT fat but muscle..He may not get beat by a fighter per say but his body WILL give out..
Wednesday Apr 30, 2008
|
|
Dino:
|
Phil, Here's a guarantee I make you. The picture is real. Now, I didn't see Byrd get on the scale, so the question becomes is he really walking around at 175-180? I'm going with yes, in that everything about the guy strikes of honesty and class. Raygun, I believe you are very much underestimating this fighter. Here's a kid who knows a bit about dieting AND is highly intelligent. He certainly knows what it takes to continue on in this sport, having already fought some lions, and didn't stop at cruiserweight because "the weight just kept coming off". Let's here from our resident experts out there. Is Byrd "wishful thinking"? Or is he going to become a dominant force in the 175-pound division? Put me down for he's going to reek havoc to the point where other 75-pounders will maintain a full dance card, one that doesn't include Chris Byrd's name on it. So let's recap. It's unbelievably rare to have a champion moving *down* in weight. Will Byrd have major success in his attempt? You naysayers have pretty much said "uhhh...No!" Any other believers?
Wednesday Apr 30, 2008
|
|
paul8000:
|
he probably would have lost some muscle, but how can you say he hasn't lost fat?..that's crazy...you think he lost 50lb of muscle?...he's lost a LOT of fat ( he had plenty to lose ). I'd like to see him fight Tarver. I think Byrd would win that one.
Wednesday Apr 30, 2008
|
|
Keith:
|
Chris has 21 KO's, with 20 of them at HEAVYWEIGHT!!! He will be a power puncher in the Lt. Heavy division. He has the speed and the fact that he lost all of that weight doesn't necessarily mean he lost a lot of muscle. I think he kept the muscle mass and lost the gut! Im with you Dino. I think he is going to cause some havoc and become THE Lt. Heavy Champ soon enough. Also, let me put this out there. Byrd has been KO'd 3 times in his career (And he was never knocked out cold! He always got back up!). Name a Lt. Heavy that can punch harder then Ibeabuchi, Klitschko, or Povetkin (Can you??). He won't be hurt by the Lt. Heavies (including Jones Jr.), he is one of the fastest (next to Jones Jr.), and one of the best defensive fighters to lace'em up!
Friday May 2, 2008
|
|
Reginald Von Gleason:
|
This move is a big mistake. Byrd had a marvelous career and has nothing left to prove. Older fighters that drop weight never makes sense. Look what happened to Jones after he beat Ruiz. Byrd is compromising himself physically with this massive weight loss. He was already a fading fighting, losing weight won't change that direction.
Wednesday May 7, 2008
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
"I Don't Care Who Wins"
"Margarito has never really fought a big name until now. I've always been a fan of Margarito and I'm predicting a knockout win from Margarito this weekend. I just don't think Cotto is powerful enough to knock Margarito out and he'll have to use his skills, he'll frustrate Margarito but Margarito will get to him in the end. I'm going for 10th round TKO. That's my heart. Now my head is saying, Margarito has never fought anyone on the level of Cotto and it might show. We could see a competitive fight but with Cotto clearly winning the rounds for a decision win. It's a hard fight to call but whatever the result it's gonna be an enjoyable fight. I don't care who wins."
--TSS reader Yuvie flips a coin (photo courtesy Chris Farina/Top Rank)
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
To suggest story ideas to TSS, please email
To send us press releases and fight announcements, please email
To contact the editor, please email
|
|
|
|