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| Trainer Muhammad says Dawson would be tough for Spinks. Hey, what about Dawson versus Muhammad, Eddie? (photo by Richard Esposito) |
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Chad Dawson Has To Wish It Was 1980
By Ron Borges
Eddie Mustafa Muhammad fought back at a time when the talent pool in the light heavyweight division was deep and interest in boxing was too. The man he now trains, IBF champion Chad Dawson, is not so lucky, which is a burden his 57-year-old trainer is helping him shoulder.
On Saturday night Dawson, who is widely considered to be the best light heavyweight in the world, will try to expand his reputation in a rematch with former IBF title holder Glen Johnson, a man he feels he already defeated in convincing fashion a year ago; but such is the paucity of opponents at 175 pounds that Dawson is back in with him again because, frankly, the guy he wants to fight wants no part of him.
“The division’s not that deep now, like it was when I was fighting,’’ Muhammad said from Hartford, where the fight will be held. “I was there with (Matthew) Saad Muhammad, Michael Spinks, Victor Galindez, Marvin Johnson. What’s out there now is Chad and Bernard (Hopkins). If you throw Roy (Jones) and Joe Calzaghe (who is retired) in that’s as deep as it gets.
“Bernard and Roy are pretty much on their PF Flyers when you mention Chad Dawson to them. I understand that. Bernard is a businessman and right now the highest bidder is a fight with Roy.
“Bernard said he would fight the winner but I know how untrue that statement is. I have the young kid who is 27 and can box and can punch. Bernard wants no part of him. He wants to fight Old Roy. They don’t want to deal with what Chad brings. They don’t want anything to do with him.’’
According to Muhammad, who won the WBA light heavyweight title by stopping Johnson in 1980 after losing his first challenge three years earlier against Galindez at a time when he was still known as Eddie Gregory, they are not alone in their distaste for spending much time in the ring around the undefeated Dawson (28-0, 17 KO).
Same was true for several sparring partners hired to prepare him for this fight, including world-rated Chris Henry who just stopped Shaun George in July. A week spent sparring with Dawson led to two things – a paycheck and no desire for a second one.
“I went to give him his paycheck for the week and I told him we’d see him the next day,’’ Muhammad said. “I came back to get him and the man had left. Chad had been hitting him with everything.’’
Muhammad expects the same fate to befall Johnson (49-12-2, 33 KO) at the XL Center but perhaps more illuminating about how he feels about Dawson is that Muhammad believes were Dawson fighting when he was, nearly 30 years ago, the story might not be much different even though the competition would have been.
“Chad would have to step up his game but he could do that,’’ said Muhammad, who lost his title to Spinks after two title defenses and later lost a controversial split decision to Slobodan Kacar four years later for the vacant title before retiring with a 50-8-1 record and 38 knockouts.
“Spinks would have given him some problems but it would have been a real good fight. Chad’s a better boxer than Michael. He would have outboxed Saad Muhammad or Marvin Johnson. They fought one style. Chad has many styles. He’d go to their bodies and when they had to retreat they be out of their element.’’
Unfortunately for Dawson there is no such roster of potential opponents with whom he can enhance his reputation and make some money. Because of it he’s begun to consider going back to super middleweight in the hopes of getting into the mix of what is now a hot division because of SHOWTIME’s creation of the Super Six tournament to crown one universally regarded champion.
It is a frustrating time for fighters, especially ones like Dawson who believe they have been blessed with something special. While that may be true, selling it is no blessing. It’s a daunting task and maybe a curse.
In his last two outings, Dawson fought former champion Antonio Tarver in Las Vegas and the fights did not have 2,500 paying customers, according to commission records. Now he’s in Hartford without casino backing or much of a spotlight, hoping its proximity to his hometown of New Haven may at least bring in a crowd.
“The way the business is today would get anybody frustrated,’’ Muhammad said. “But you got to blame a lot of it on the economy. It’s not just on him. The economy is the culprit, not Chad.’’
The other culprit is the usual one: the alphabet soup of sanctioning bodies that rule the sport. For a time Dawson, who is without question the best light heavyweight in the world, held both the IBF and WBC titles but he was forced to relinquish the latter, not that it matters, to fight Tarver for the biggest payday available to him.
That is boxing these days, a place where old men like Johnson are recycled as challengers while young men like Dawson seek opportunities that are not often there.
“Chad is fighting this guy because we listened to the fan reaction,’’ Muhammad said. “He thinks he should have won the first fight even though he only won about three rounds and lost the decision in his hometown so, fine with us.
“Chad is two years smarter. He’s two years stronger. And Glen is two years older. Chad is going to make him use those old legs. He’s going to beat him up. Last couple fights I saw a decline in Glen Johnson. Saturday night you’re going to see a precipitous decline.
“Chad can really box and he’s got a little crack with that right hook now that he’s sitting down on his punches more. I got him to turn over that right hand. When he does that and starts going to the body it’s a whole different scenario. Chad will keep him spinning like a top and running into punches.’’
In the process, he’d also love to run into a future opponent worthy of the title, someone the public would buy to see him fight. That will not be, Muhammad believes, Bernard Hopkins but what he’s hoping is that maybe Calzaghe will get the itch one more time.
“If Calzaghe comes out of retirement that’s a big fight in Wales (Calzaghe’s home),’’ Muhammad said. “We got no problem going over to his hometown. I did that all the time. If you believe in your ability as a fighter you have nothing to worry about.
“That ring is both guys’ hometowns. It’s up to you to dominate. That’s what Chad is doing.’’
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MisterLee:
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I'm a big fan of Dawson, but watching that fight made me a Johnson fan. He seriously hurt Dawson at least twice, had more power connects and more often. Dawson just hit the philly shell every time he threw punches and danced. Didn't hurt Johnson once. If he did, someone please give me a round, and time it happened, b/c I don't remember it watching the fight three times. Against Tarver, dawson whooped his ARSE, i liked the first fight, he fought slick like Floyd Mayweather and later i read that floyd gave him a phonecall shortly before the fight and said good luck and that he's the next p4p king, and dawson decided to fight like floyd that night, and he did. He boxed beautifully agst adamek, but i feel johnson wrecked him worst than collazo wrecked berto, but ya know, johnson also has the best chin in boxing, or one of them, so dawson ain't gonna move or hurt no one, get ready for 12 rounds baby!!!
Thursday Nov 5, 2009 09:29:53 PM
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Pacifico:
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It's pretty funny that this article makes no mention of Tavoris Cloud, a fellow undefeated American light-heavyweight who's known as a puncher (18 KOs in 20 fights). Of course, since Dawson has been knocked down and/or hurt in many fights already, his team is probably terrified of matching Chad against him.
Other potential opponents for Dawson: Jean Pascal (24-1), Adrian DIaconu (26-1), Juergen Braehmer (34-2), and Karo Murat (20-0), all of whom could be viable opponents for Dawson.
But this whole "article" reads like a press release from Dawson's team anyway, so I'm not surprised that none of these fighters were mentioned.
Thursday Nov 5, 2009 09:48:50 PM
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brownsugar:
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I have to disagree with you Mister Lee,... I thought Dawson eaked out a close split UD and showed his desire to keep his crown,.. but I don't know how well he'd fare with those guys from the eighties,.. those guys would go at it with the intensity of a welterweights pace,.. and the first guy that made a mistake was made to pay huge,.. usually by knockout loss,.. Spinks was very adept at watching and waiting,... setting his opponent up for one hard punch,... Spinks usually looked like he was losing or was behind in a fight,.. then he'd come out of nowhere with the "closer"... a punch that would end the fight,... I thought the stakes were much higher in those days,.. because many of those fights never went the distance....
Thursday Nov 5, 2009 10:17:39 PM
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Isaiah:
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I've been a fan of Johnson ever since he had the best year of his life by outpointing Clinton Woods, knocking out Roy Jones Jr. and outpointing Antonio Tarver for the championship all to become the 2004 fighter of the year. (It was 2004 Johnson outpointed Clinton Woods, right?) Of course, I don't expect Johnson to be able to repeat such a great streak, but still, you can't sleep on this guy. By the way, who here thought that after whooping Tarver the first time, that Dawson would have to do it again? I think Dawson was avoiding a Johnson rematch for as long as he could until he basically had no choice especially seeing how Bernard Hopkins schedule is busy. Anyway, I still predict Dawson to score another UD over Johnson.
Thursday Nov 5, 2009 11:48:31 PM
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Fistic Fury:
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Light heavy is DULL.... and I should know it's my weight class. Dawson doesn't excite me, I know he's talented but he doesn't do it for me. If he can boil down to 168lbs like Shaw thinks he can then I suggest he does so...
Friday Nov 6, 2009 01:35:58 AM
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Buttchomp:
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Hey Dawson camp,.... Ever heard of IBF Champion Tavoris Cloud, sure you have and you want nothing to do with him, because your now in the Mayweather business- most money, least risk, not good for the sport..
Friday Nov 6, 2009 04:11:36 AM
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Reno:
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Cloud is a virtual nobody in boxing and he's pretty much a 1 dimensional slugger. Dawson will fight this guy eventually for peanuts because theren isn't no one else out there really, and no one knows Cloud unforturnately outside of avid boxing fans which is why they haven't fought yet. I thought Dawson won the first Johnson fight convincingly, yeah Glenn did rock him but that shouldn't take away all the early work that Dawson put in in that fight. Unfortunately Pacifico the general public never heard of any of those guys, and it's a strong possibility that HBO wouldn't pick up any of those fights because those guys are virtual unknowns.
Friday Nov 6, 2009 09:25:44 AM
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bill major:
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man,glen johnson looks streamlined and in terrific condition. i gotta go with the warrior this time. he is one hell of a fighter ,if dawson beats him convincingly this time then ill give him his due but i think GJ is going to be at his best . i look forward to this one big time.
Friday Nov 6, 2009 09:33:31 AM
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mortcola:
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Gotta like Johnson as a fighter. He's old-school, tough as nails, unshakeable, not the best toolkit in the game but the ones he has, he knows how to use. The main reason he won't beat Dawson without a KO - the same reason as last time - is that he doesn't have a top gear. He'll gut it out, throw volume but without a great connect %, make the other guy work. But, while Dawson can be hurt, he also keeps his composure, and I think he just has too many tools - including speed, accuracy, and versatility, not to mention some more seasoning compared to last time. I'll never root against Johnson, but I see him losing another decision.
Friday Nov 6, 2009 01:55:49 PM
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puncher:
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Now lets get down to it.....how would he have done against Hollyfield? down and out and would not even know what hit him.
Friday Nov 6, 2009 03:13:04 PM
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AFN:
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Dawson has plenty of options, most mentioned above in various responses. Personally, I'd like to see him up to cruiserweight for a rematch with new heavyweight sensation (sic) Tomas Adamek, or an all American bash with USS Cunningham. Like most others here, I'm a big Road Warrior fan, but see Bad Chad getting a non disputed UD this time around. Red Stripes are on me if Glenn wins though. JAH TOONOY
Friday Nov 6, 2009 05:26:28 PM
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Isaiah:
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Be a man of your word AFN. Where can I pick my beer up if Johnson wins? Will you mail me a case to a nuetral address of my choosing? If you can make it to Indiana, if you live in the states and Dawson wins, lunch is on me. (At the restaraunt of my choosing of course.) I picked Dawson to win, but I'm up for a friendly wager. By the way you all, anyone knows there is much more demand for a Dawson/Johnson rematch then for Dawson to fight Cloud. Don't worry though. Dawson ducks no one and might just fight Cloud next.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 12:50:10 AM
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mr. snipes 11-6-81:
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mustafa muhammad is still sour grapes over spinks. Saad and spinks were both great champs and the heartless eddie was not, so he defeats them in makebelieve fights. his vic. over saad was what turned saad into a slugger and if they fought again he would have been ko'd. eddie was a lazy, heartless fighter who was a true frontrunner who never won tough ones. like all the bed-stuy, brownsville fighters in history.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 10:52:50 AM
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Reno:
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I wouldn't advise Dawson moving up, because he is already not a big puncher at this weight. Moving down would give him more pop to his punches and more options. At cruiserweight other than Adamak and Cunningham (which won't make much money) who else is there? Either stay put or move down to super middle., if Dawson stays at light heavy he should completely clean out the divison and try to hold all the titles like Hopkins did at middleweight. Just my two cents.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 01:52:55 PM
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Is It Only Money That Matters?
"Who refuses to take a drug test worth $40 million?" For the American psyche, money is everything. It transcends what is right or what is wrong. For a certain amount of money, I'll do anything. Manny is Filipino, and he cannot fathom that kind of thinking. Is that what capitalism should be? I can't understand why $40 million should dictate your personality. Simply put, Pacquiao has his own dignity and refuses to be manipulated into taking $40M and giving his (butt) to anyone who wants it." ---TSS reader "Tony" informs readers of a possible cultural difference which causes certain peoples to interpret Pacquiao's refusal to cater to Mayweather's testing demands (photo by Chris Cozzone)
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