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Contender Clash: Bika TKOs Manfredo
By Michael Woods
A fighter can get some hometown help when he’s fighting in his backyard, and in New England, boxers have been helped every now and again by partisan refs and judges. But when you are eating a buffet full of power shots, as Peter Manfredo did in a hometown outing in Rhode Island on Thursday night, no amount of home cooking can alter the inevitable. Sakio Bika’s heavy hands smacked Manfredo from ring post to ringpost, and the inevitable came in the third round of the headline bout of a Versus card which took place at the Dunkin Donuts Center in Providence, Rhode Island. Bika scored a TKO win after he dished out about ten rounds worth of punishment on Fredo in a minute’s time, and grinned broadly as he clutched the vacated IBO super middleweight title.
Bika, who was in a thriller winner with Jaidon Codrington a year ago, and gave Joe Calzaghe fits two years ago, is the sort of busy, strong kid who could well earn a title crack sooner rather than later off this effort. Manfredo afterwards said he wasn’t sure what lay ahead for him in the ring. I guess chances are better than 50% that he’ll call it a day; my guess is that friends and family will pressure him to hang ‘em for good.
The 27-year-old Manfredo (167 ¾ pounds) had a 31-5 record coming in, while the 29-year-old Cameroonian Bika (166) had a 26-3-2 mark coming into Rhode Island.
Early on, Bika looked to be the obviously stronger hitter from second one. Late in the second, Fredo scored a knockdown, off a push. Bika protested, to no avail. He even shoved the ref Ricky Gonzalez because he was irked but he was not DQd. Fredo’s gloves hit the canvas, so it should’ve been a double knockdown.
In the third, Bika battered Fredo on the ropes. He ate shots, much like he did against Joe Calzaghe, and the ref almost stepped in. Bika blasted him with uppercuts, and hooks, and Fredo almost went through the ropes, and Fredo showed big heart staying up. But his legs were gone, and the ref let him take as much as he could’ve. He stepped in at 1:50 of the third round, and Fredo didn’t protest. The crowd of Islanders didn’t care for the call and threw some garbage in. The ring announcer JD Vena (hey JD!) asked the people not to channel Josh Beckett. Bika landed 81-217, while Fredo went 34-89.
In the TV opener, Detroit’s Corny Bundrage (28-3 coming in), age 35, took on Oklahoma’s Grady Brewer (23-11 coming in), age 37, in a junior middleweight scrap. They appeared on The Contender season two together, and were pals. Brewer, the season two winner, had fought just once in the last two years, and is coming off knee surgery. Bundrage came in on a roll, off a win over Kassim Ouma in his last outing.
Corny drops his left low, daring his foe to hit him. Brewer early on didn’t target that apparent opening. Brewer upped his output in the third; good thing, as the crowd wasn’t jazzed by the early rounds. Maybe, they figured, this thing would build to a boil. Corny hit the deck with 40 seconds to go, off a shove, but he didn’t beef when ref Ed Claudio started a count. Corny asked, “What happened?” when he went to his corner.
Claudio yelled at both guys several times, for getting tangled up, for rassling, for being lazy. The ref showed more fire than the fighters, in fact. He took points from both for holding.
This one was hard to figure. Both men seemingly worked hard to get into great shape, but spent too much time expending energy. Corny (164 to 103 edge in punches landed) had a point deducted for hitting on the break with ten seconds to go, for the record. The crowd booed halfheartedly, which was apt, because that’s basically how the fighters fought. The judges spoke after ten snoozy frames: 94-91 (Brewer), 95-90 (Bundrage), 93-92 (Brewer)—Brewer took a split win.
Jaidon Codrington (19-2) met Bill Gill (8-21) in a scheduled tenner between two light heavyweights. The Don had some trouble with the journeyman, who really has skills not indicated in his record, and has lost four straight now. He hit Gill hard in the cup in the fifth. Gill got some revenge with a sharp right cross in the eighth, but he truly leverage that smack. The Don then hurt Gill with a right with a minute left. Gill almost toppled, stayed up, and then stumbled to the ropes right before the bell sounded. The official time of the stop, because Gill wasn’t defending himself, was 2:57 of the eighth.
Hey, remember when everyone was all Viagra for the Chin Checkers a couple years ago. Ya just never know, do ya?
SPEEDBAG Tony Danza chatted with Nick Charles, hyping the latest season Contender season. The show will feature cruisers, and this cast is the least accomplished batch the producers have offered up so far. Maybe we’ll be pleasantly surprised, when the new season kicks off on Dec. 3rd on, you guessed, Versus.
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SchoolOfHardKnocks:
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Bika is very strong. Manfredo, jr fought a stupid fight standing right in front of this guy. He was too big and strong for Manfredo,Jr Bika would KO Taylor and Lacy.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008 10:59:34 PM
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Fistic Fury:
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I disagree, I think Taylor and Lacy would both beat Bika.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008 11:46:22 PM
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Real Talk:
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Maybe Taylor , doubt Lacy could .
Friday Nov 14, 2008 01:27:15 AM
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SchoolOfHardKnocks:
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Neither Bika, Taylor or Lacy have good defense so whoever is leading will get the other. I just feel that Bika has a better chin and is just a tougher and rougher fighter then Lacy and Taylor. I would love to see that fight. Bika lost to Calzaghe by decision and it wasn't an easy fight for Calzaghe. If Ouma and Spinks backed up Taylor Bika might run him over. Here's a great war Bika vs Miranda...what do you think?
Friday Nov 14, 2008 01:40:23 AM
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Fistic Fury:
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Sounds a good match up. Miranda is exciting to watch but he runs out of steam fast and has a questionable chin.
Friday Nov 14, 2008 03:13:55 AM
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Solo:
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Bika Vs Miranda would be a war! Very much agree SoHK.
Friday Nov 14, 2008 07:29:44 AM
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andy from newcastle:
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Sign me up. I third that request. Bika Miranda. Toonoy
Friday Nov 14, 2008 09:25:05 AM
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Radam G aka Humble PRG eating goose and flying back to Cali USA:
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I'm with Fistic Fury about Taylor, but not Lacy. Bika is slap puncher. I won't be surprise when he breaks his hands. This dude slaps more than Slappy Joe, but is far from the skills and speed of the SlappyMan -- probably the next Italian to retire undefeated. Holla!
Friday Nov 14, 2008 12:14:48 PM
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Hakim:
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Calzaghe and Bute both outclassed Bika, winning nearly every round against him (and this despite Bika's dirty tactics and constant use of the head -- esp. against Calzaghe). I doubt that Lacy or Taylor or Miranda would have as much success, but think that Taylor would probably stand the best chance because of his superior skills. One thing's for sure: even without Calzaghe in the picture, the SW division is looking really promising right now, and it'll be interesting to see who ultimately comes out on top: Taylor, Bika, Kessler, Lacy, Bute, Andrade, Inkin, Froch, Pascal ...? Perhaps even Abraham, Pavlik and Sturm will move up, too, once they realise that's where all the action is. But even with the last three in the picture, my money would be on Kessler cleaning out the division and unifying the titles. But there's certainly plenty of stiff competition there, and should be some great fights in this division over the next few years ...
Friday Nov 14, 2008 04:09:13 PM
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Hakim:
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And btw: Joe Calzaghe is no more Italian than Barack Obama is Kenyan. He's Welsh.
Friday Nov 14, 2008 04:10:53 PM
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stryder:
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I'm pretty sure Joe C was born in Rome, Italy. Also how Welsh of a name is Calzaghe?
Friday Nov 14, 2008 05:38:25 PM
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troy:
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Joe was born in London to an Italian father & welsh mother, moved to Wales when he was two, if you americans had any brains you may know that parts of Wales have large Italian communities, the lineage goes way back, just because his last name sounds Italian, doesnt mean he is Italian
Friday Nov 14, 2008 06:14:31 PM
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Fistic Fury:
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Super middle is looking real good. I wouldn't rule out Froch ruling the division for years to come from what i've seen and I hope he does because I really like his style, He has a swagger about him that I like but this next fight with Pascal is the first top guy he's taken on so i'll reserve judgement.
Friday Nov 14, 2008 07:26:42 PM
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SchoolOfHardKnocks:
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I agree with everyone! This is what boxing needs. Great fighters will come but in between all we need is great fights. Hakim..I agree with you that I think Kessler is the best of the super middleweights of the guys you named..What was Manfredo, Jr even thinking about getting in the ring with Sakio? Manfredo, Jr is about 5'7 and he should be fighting at either 147 or 54. Remember Alphonso Gomez beat him in the Contenders the first time they fought. What do you guys think of a fight between Sakio Bika and Glen Johnson?
Friday Nov 14, 2008 08:06:37 PM
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stryder:
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Hey troy I understand why you think Americans have no brains, but dosen't having an Italian father make Joe C at least part ITALIAN! Furthermore if his dad is Italian and he uses his fathers last name I think his name not only sounds Italian, it is!
Friday Nov 14, 2008 08:37:02 PM
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Hakim:
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If Calzaghe is Italian because he has an Italian surname, then I guess that makes Roy Jones ... Welsh! It also makes most of the top ten greatest boxers ever (e.g. Johnson, Robinson, Clay, Armstrong) English, and America now has a Kenyan president. The fact is that Joe's dad was born in Sardinia but spent most of his life in Britain. Joe was born in London, his mother is Welsh and he grew up in Wales speaking English and Welsh, not Italian or Sardinian. I'm pretty sure that that makes him Welsh. Similarly, Mikkel Kessler's mother is English, but he's Danish.
Friday Nov 14, 2008 11:01:24 PM
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stryder:
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I didn't mean to offend any of you. In America we tend to hold on to our heritage because of the "melting pot". I guess we should maybe take a page from your book and just call ourselves Americans. Oh btw this is one American that welcomes a Kenyan President with open arms!
Saturday Nov 15, 2008 05:04:07 PM
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Radam G aka Humble PRG:
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Hakim, the man is a proud Italian, and has made note of that by the use of his boxing nickname. Obama is a proud Hawaiian of Kenyan descent. He lets the world know that he is proud to be in his own words: "A mutt." Holla!
Saturday Nov 15, 2008 05:47:59 PM
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2Easy:
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Who is known as the Italian Dragon? Of course Joe Calzaghe. Proudly acknowledging his heriage.Just respect the man. He knows who and whose he is.
Sunday Nov 16, 2008 12:00:18 AM
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REAL TALK:
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Punching is one of the most important disciplines , right up ther with movement . If you don't move the fight could change like zap . If you don't close that fist tight ...same . meditate on that . What ...I thought I heard somthin .
Sunday Nov 16, 2008 12:41:09 AM
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Education:
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UHH , Of coarse he's part black ...... uhummm ...I mean part Italian . I can here people flicking off now . GUESS WHAT !??! ITALIANS and SPANISH FOLKS and anyone with that blood line got AFRICAN BLOOD IN THEM ... DO YOUR HOMEWORK ..... YEAH WHAT . YOU MIGHT SPEAK THAT LANGUAGE , BUT THAT DON'T MEAN THAT'S WHAT YOUR ROOTS ARE LOL . WHERE DID YOU THINK HE GET THAT RYTHYM FROM . TRUTH HURTS .
Sunday Nov 16, 2008 12:47:57 AM
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Not Hip To The Hype
"Haye has said that without the hype, boxing is boring. This tells you something about him as a fighter and as a man. And maybe something about his low expectations of his own value as a fighter. Why isn't his skill good enough? Which audience is he trying to impress? When I watch fights, I watch the contest, the skill, the drama, the match-up. Screw the circus hype."---TSS reader Mortcola, giving thumbs down on David Haye and his pre-fight antics
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