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| Nope, it wasn't a fun fight to watch unless you think Haye can do no wrong. But hats off to the guy, his strategy was spot on. |
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Haye Fights Boring But Smart, Takes Valuev's Title
By Michael Woods
David Haye is quite an entertaining chap, before a bout. His trash talking is sharp and sometimes witty. But apparently the Hayemaker decided before his fight with Nikolay Valuev that he'd cease being an entertainer when the bell rang to kick off the action at the Nuremberg Arena in Nuremberg, Germany on Saturday night. Haye danced, and stayed out of range of the massive WBA champion Valuev, but threw punches at such a pathetic rate, there was no way the judges could award him the decision, any longtime fight watcher had to believe. Haye briefly changed his mind with a minute left in the 12th, and he staggered Valuev with a left hook. But he couldn't close the show. Seemingly, he was certain he'd done enough to win, judging by his demeanor after 12. TSS didn't think so, seeing a draw, and one had to figure the hometowner Valuev would get the nod after a less-than-stellar tussle. Then Michael Buffer read the cards, 114-114, 116-112, 116-112 and jaws all over the arena hit the floor as Michael Buffer said.."from London, England."
With the win, Haye must get credit for fighting a smart bout, as his movement, defense and occasional solid strikes did the job. Trainer Adam Booth and Haye crafted a wise gameplan, and even if viewers in the arena and watching on pay per view weren't rewarded with a fan-friendly scrap, Haye didn't seem to care as he held up his new bauble.
Haye (from England; 22-1, 21 KOs coming in) weighed 216.7 pounds on Friday, while Valuev (lives in Germany; ) was pounds. Haye strode to the ring with a look of determination fixed on his face. Valuev then came to the ring, and the defending WBA heavyweight champion was serenaded by a rock band which was not identified by the crack announcing team of Bob Sheridan and Benny Ricardo.
In the first, the seven footer Valuev, enjoying his foot height advantage, worked the jab to start. Haye backed up, lunged in with a jab here and there, and wasn't the mad bomber he promised he'd be. But Valuev was ponderous, as he plodded after Haye, two steps behind the Brit, who was the more effective of the two. In round two, I noticed that Valuev's back was waxed. Maybe he read Borges' piece? Haye kept moving, hurling the odd jab, a right every minute or so. A right with a 20 seconds left landed flush but didn't make the giant blink. In the third, Haye's strategy was the same. The lead-booted Valuev inched toward Haye, who scooted out of range. A Haye right was the best punch of the round, and another round of the TSS card was for Haye. In the fourth, Haye circled mostly to the left, staying calm, not expending much energy. To this point, a super smart tactical battle from Haye. But would judges in Germany agree? The giant closed the distance a bit better here. In the fifth, Haye kept away from the Valuev right, the only punch he worried about. Haye went lefty, then righty again. Why change what was working? Haye was a defensive wiz once again, but his reluctance to toss probably lost him the round. His hands were at his sides at times, and he was clearly confident that his plan would hold through twelve rounds.
In the sixth, Haye slipped jabs, moved to his left, and didn't bother to punch more than a couple times per minute. He was making it easy for the judges to give Valuev, who was basically useless but at least desirous of inflicting damage, the round. In the seventh, Haye, whether by design or from fatigue, was more often in punching distance of Valuev. Another tight round, none too scintillating for a viewer. In the eighth, Valuev was landing a right every minute or so. Haye got off a combo, but was it enough to impress the judges? In the ninth, the song remained the same. In the tenth, Haye's right was the best punch of another similar round. In the 11th, it was deja vu all over again. Same for the 12th, though Haye did hit with a right, and then a combo with 1:10 left. And then he wobbled Valuev with a left hook. A minute remained. Haye leaped in with a right, but mostly kept moving. He aimed another right, and then a clubbing left, after raising his hands in triumph. We'd go to the cards.
John Ruiz (age 37; No. 1 WBA contender; 226 pounds; of Massachusetts, now living in Las Vegas; 43-8 coming in) took on journeyman Adnan Serin (age 34; 214 1/2 pounds; living in Germany, born in Turkey; 19-10 coming in; 4-5-1 in his last 10) in the chief undercard bout. Jawny was paid to let Haye fight Valuev, and knew he'd get the winner if he beat Serin. Ruiz is now being trained by Miguel Diaz, after a few fights with Manny Siaca. Jawny jogged to the ring, briskly, looking like he was wanting to collect loan money from Serin. Ruiz said he'd not be holding this time around. Would he stick to it? Judging by the first round, yes. He kept his hands moving, against a limited foe. Instead of tossing and then hugging, he took a half step back and reset. He was in no real danger of Serin advancing on him quickly, closing the gap and getting off. An uppercut rattled Serin, but he stayed on his feet. In round two, Jawny mostly pawed with the jab, understandable since Serin's O wasn't going to blow your doors off. The right uppercut found a home once again.
In the third, the two time WBA champ Ruiz kept on keeping on. He pumped the jab, sometimes with snap. Having not fought in a year, he did have some evident rust to shed. He had a nick on his left eye, near his nose, in the fourth. Diaz took care of it after the round. But we didn't know if a butt or a punch caused the cut. In the fifth, Ruiz thought to work the body a bit more but it should've been higher on his to do list. The blood flowed to start the sixth. Serin never get excited by the site of blood. He was hurt with a minute left, and a stoppage loomed. Serin got a break for a Ruiz low blow at the end of the round. Serin's soft middle called out to be walloped but Jawny didn't hear often enough. In the seventh, Ruiz cracked with five chopping rights and got a mandatory eight, because the ropes held him up. Three more clean blows had Serin's corner throwing in the towel and the referee halted the one-sided scrap.
Taras Bidenko (lives in Germany; age 29; 26-3 coming in) took on Robert Helenius (age 25; 6-6 1/2; 248 1/2; born in Finland, lives in Sweden; 10-0 entering) in another heavyweight bout. With a win, Helenius gets a date with Lamon Brewster. He uses his reach and height pretty well. In the third, Helenius had Bidenko bloodied up. His right eye was gashed, and after the round, his corner said no mas after the doctor examined the slice.
Alexander Frenkel (age 24; 193 1/2; lives in Germany, born in the Ukraine; 20-0 with 16 KOs entering) gloved up with American Kelvin Davis (196 pounds; age 31; 24-10 entering; ) in a cruiser/heavyweight match. Frenkel got right to work, and blasted Davis out in the first. Frenkel has a nasty left, and the ref stepped in a minute in, after Davis ate a bunch of left hooks and uppercuts. Now winless in his last eight, Davis should not be licensed to fight anymore, bottom line, for his own health and well being.
In the PPV broadcast opener, German Edmund Gerber (232; now 10-0) took on Shawn McClain (216 3/4 pounds; 4-5, 3 KOs) of NYC, coming off a KO win of unbeaten Faruuq Saleem, with Mike McCallum in his corner. The heavyweights went at each other right away and McClian was down in the first off a right. He went down again, on wobbly legs, shortly after. The ref stepped in and stopped it as McClain was getting battered in the corner. Put Gerber, who punches straight, fights smart and likes to put the hurt on, on your watch list for 2011.
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Francisco:
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Valuev? Who's that? A bum. A Don King fraud. The Klitchskos can easily crush Haye. That's why he found excuses against both fighters. Lame.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 06:25:12 PM
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tsonggo sunod:
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Haye got the victory doing the same thing that Holyfield did, hmmm! Holyfield even hit the hairy Russian more in my opinion. Well, that's how the water flows. Maybe Haye will now give Holyfield a shot and the WBA will order it.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 06:30:52 PM
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PETE STEWARD:
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Haye is the bloke that is a JOKE. Valuev was made for him to crush, slow easy to hit and no defense. And Haye ran like old woman from muggers in central park. But Valuev and his FANS LOLLLLLLLLLLLLL! Should not complain he got early christmas present when he got the decision over the Over the hill Real Deal last year. This is just Karma making things right by bitting Valuev in his BIG HARRY BUTT!....ruiz beat him too lol!
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 06:41:34 PM
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MisterLee:
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Another stinker eh? He should fight dirrell! :)
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 06:47:40 PM
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Jason:
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What an awful fight. Neither guy did anything, with the exception of Haye landing a good shot in the 12th. The story of this fight was simple: Two guys doing absolutely nothing. I was not impressed by Haye at all. He ran all night long, which was a good tactic for him, I guess, but man, this is a prizefight, you'd think he'd have to engage at some point. Valuev has got to be the slowest guy in heavyweight history. I don't think he can connect with a heavy bag. He has two punches, a jab and a straight right, and he misses them both virtually every time he throws them. Haye would get brutalized by either Klitschko. This fight was hardly his magnum opus. An ugly, ugly fight all around. Valuev should retire. This fight proved that the Holyfield fight was not an aberration, and it's clear that he just doesn't have the ability to land any punches anymore.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 08:19:28 PM
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brownsugar:
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ha ha,... I called it,.. glad I didn't have to pay,.. good win for Haye,.. Ruiz showed a little pop tonight,... now onto Dawson-Johnson.....
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 08:35:34 PM
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brownsugar:
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Wow,.. there was no point to the ref and Harry Joe's corner allowing him to take such a beating,... sickening and brutal,.. even to a diehard fan like me,... Yorgey was in no way ready for a boxer like Angulo,.. beating Hearns the hobbiest and sparring with Pavlik was absolutely no preparation for a killer like Angulo...
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 08:52:31 PM
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Pegleyjr:
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I'm glad the Hayemaker did well, I had a feeling he would. Also: I found a video promo on injured boxer Rita 'La Güera' Figueroa. Best wishes to her recovery. I get caught up in the excitement, skill and personalities.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 09:27:41 PM
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deepwater:
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Told ya so. suckas.lol
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 11:06:38 PM
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Fe'Roz :
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This is just plain sad. Fighters, especially the heavyweights, just fighting to win. Not with malice. Not to hurt their opponent. Just to add a W. To add to their already padded records. Sure,I know Lombardi said winning isn't everything; it's the only thing. but it's not why we watch boxing; at least not myself. I watch to see a well executed game plan designed to hurt the other man. A plan constructed to inflict damage to allow for the opening and possibility of summary judgement. A knockout. Not to see if a fighter can has stamina and can simply survive. Nor to see him look pretty for 180 seconds per round. If I want pretty, I'll watch a dance performance with gorgeous women. If i want stamina, I'll wait at the finishing line of a Marathon. Now I didn't see Haye not throw a Hayemaker tonight; a fight which by all accounts was snorer. But one thing is clear. We do not have a Heavyweight Champion alive that will compel the masses to return to our arena. Maybe the diehards ... but even they will die if forced to watch these kinds of fights. As for the Dawson win over the always tough Glen Johnson, I wish I could have screamed. Problem was, while Chad put on a very nice show, I was fighting harder just trying to stay awake. fighting at the elite level of boxing should, one would think, be a sacred honor. I know it's the most dangerous business. That is why I love it. But boxing is not billiards. It is about fighting. Not the number of 'nice' shots made. It demand a killer instinct. Dawson lacks it. He has so much... but so what if he commits so little. My attention to any one fighter is in direct proportion to his commitment to the hurt business.Not his promotional profile. The Hurt Business. Anything less, and you have my respect but will not get my attention. I will save that for other more interesting business .... in the Wall Street Journal.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 11:19:04 PM
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the Roast:
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Fe'Roz you are right on it as always. Haye's best tactic was to stay away from the plodding Giant. He did very little to back up his boasts. That's not how I like to see a challenger "take" a champion's title belt. The heavyweight division continues in it's sad downward spiral. Boxing depends on the lower weight classes. Next weekend should be spectacular.
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 11:34:05 PM
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Fe'Roz @ the Roast:
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In the meantime, Microsoft is slowly being out pointed by Google despite landing the better shots early. Stay tuned. pc
Saturday Nov 7, 2009 11:48:44 PM
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Arturo@feroz:
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Sorry but we don't always get what we want.IF you want to see brutality go to the UFC.I know the Dawson fight was boring but it wasn't his fault he was to good for Johnson.We all love to see great battles in the ring but they only come around once in a while.That's how it goes
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 02:43:43 AM
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LDM:
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I thought this place was 'The Sweet Science'? Hit and don't get hit?
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 02:50:17 AM
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steadadelica@fe'Roz:
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for me boxing is about stamina and grace, my favourite fighters have both these attributes along with essential others. A lot of the 10,000 capacity crowed at the fight were from Britain, they made the trip to Germany, so its hard to say no one is interested (does any have the PPV figures for Britain and Ireland)? As for the fight, well it was no barn stormer. But in terms of game plans, i though Haye executed his strategy well, hit and move, he just did too little of the former to take the KO - was this due to breaking his right (the hayemaker) in the 2nd? but then again Valuev barely even landed either so in the end I think the judges cold do little else? OK, so haye ran for around 2/3rds, but boxing isn't a game, you have to do what is required to win. I think the biggest pre fight questions were around the fighters chins; Haye's being suspect and Valuev's being possibly indestructible, and Haye staying out of the clinch, these key variables defined the fight. but all in all it was a little boring - suppose that's why we have weight classes? maybe they should reintroduce Super-Heavy in the pro's to stop these miss matches? so glad there was a popular decision, really no need for a rematch, Valuev's boxing skills are just pony.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 04:05:25 AM
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brainbashedbritboy:
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Haye did what he had to, which is avoid Valuevs shots and hit with his own, Holyfield hit Valuev but also got hit. Whats with all the hate, it was a clear win, Haye will fight either Klitchko, he may not win both but Wlad hasnt got a great chin either, Vitali is the man. Why would Haye stand and trade with Valuev and give up every asset, no one in the right mind would. Some sour grapes stinkin the place out today, maybe if Haye was called Holyfield it would be a different atmosphere. It wasnt a great fight no, but tell me a heavyweight match up of late thats been any better. As it is a man that has a usual weight of 14 1/2 stone beat somone thats normally the best part of 10 stone heavier. After Ruiz Haye will fight the Klit brothers and at least hit them with something of worth,,a feat nobody else has been capable of the past 2 years. Props to Haye for a class act display!
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 04:09:45 AM
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brainbashedbritboy:
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Haye did what he had to, which is avoid Valuevs shots and hit with his own, Holyfield hit Valuev but also got hit. Whats with all the hate, it was a clear win, Haye will fight either Klitchko, he may not win both but Wlad hasnt got a great chin either, Vitali is the man. Why would Haye stand and trade with Valuev and give up every asset, no one in the right mind would. Some sour grapes stinkin the place out today, maybe if Haye was called Holyfield it would be a different atmosphere. It wasnt a great fight no, but tell me a heavyweight match up of late thats been any better. As it is a man that has a usual weight of 14 1/2 stone beat somone thats normally the best part of 10 stone heavier. After Ruiz Haye will fight the Klit brothers and at least hit them with something of worth,,a feat nobody else has been capable of the past 2 years. Props to Haye for a class act display!
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 04:09:49 AM
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Yuvie:
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Some people are just plain haters, Haye did what he had to do to win against a guy massively bigger than himself. What did some idiots think he was gonna do? Come out blazing especially as he's known for a 'weak chin'. If only Haye was american, maybe then he'd get the props he deserves. Whatever happens in his future fights, for now he's kept the Haye train going. I certainly have some interest in the heavyweight division now that Haye is around.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 09:36:25 AM
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pony:
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boring fight, but really not sure what you guys expected. He wasn't going to just stand there and trade with valuev (that being said he didn't throw nearly as many punches as he should have). Not much has been mentioned about his hand here either which may have affected his performance. He should dispatch ruiz next then he may have his dance with one of the klitchkos... Vitali pretty much destroys him but he does have a punchers chance against Wlad which could be interesting.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 09:41:58 AM
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Twik:
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Haye and Holyfield next! They both have RUN boxing. Where has the fighting gone to?
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 09:51:57 AM
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brainbashedbritboy:
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Im not against Haye fighting Holyfield but theres little gain in the sense we all know hes no longer the best heavyweight, no doubt the best his age tho. Haye wants to try himself against the best and hes manoevered himself into a position not to be ignored or offered peanuts, so the Klitchkos will be high on the agenda. Id sooner see Haye against Holy than Ruiz tho. I expect Haye will beat both but they arent in their prime. Haye is after the best fights out there, no ducking,to win Holyfield would show very little, to beat Wlad would be great, and Vitali, well i think its near on impossible for him but it would be good to watch him try, at least we have somone in the heavyweights not shy to throw a bomb. I arent blinded by patriotism and realisticly dont expect too much from Haye against the Klits but theres no1 with a better chance other than the brothers facing off against each other.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 10:15:33 AM
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deepwater:
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told ya so. haye vs ruiz next.after that klitcos will run.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 10:27:04 AM
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brownsugar:
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I hear the complaints,.. and I emphathize,..but Haye vs Valuev was "Dirty Work",.. that had to be done,.. if was boxings way of "Self Maintainence",.. the garbage had to go and Hayer performed his task admirably,... now that the heavyweight division is finally rid of the crude giant,.. it can move on.... by comparison Haye vs Ruis will seem like Pac vs Cotto,... the funny thing is,.. Ruis actually has a chance if he can get to Hayes chin...
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 11:48:26 AM
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AFN:
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Poor fight, poor decision, poor me. EL TOONOY
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 12:05:00 PM
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brownsugar:
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the Brits have another serious player in the heavyweight division,.. I wonder how far he'll go???
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 12:08:35 PM
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Freemore:
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This comments section is full of a massive bunch of American sour grapes!!! Haye did the business, the game plan was spot on. He will go through Ruiz like a hot knife through butter. The comments on this page would be so much different if Haye was a Yank...........quite sad really. A new Heavyweight era is upon us.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 02:17:58 PM
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brainbashedbritboy:
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Hearing ya loud and clear 'brownsugar',Ruiz has definatley a chance, in fairness a lot of heavyweights in the top 10 will feel they have due to Hayes dubious chin. What i did like was Valuev caught Haye a couple of times and didnt trouble him, but admitted they werent full force bombs. Haye is definatley beatable and in many respects is like Amir Khan, has excellent skills and strength but their defence has always gotta be top notch, the granite like chin of Holyfield is absent with these two. Whatever happens i really hope Haye impresses Americans, his talk is cheap but give the guy a chance, many didnt with him facing Valuev and hes proven them wrong. He wont ever be an Ali or Tyson but for a small heavyweight hes strong and isnt afraid of the big men of the division and hes potentially good enough to clean up the division, with a bit of luck on his side. Pc!
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 03:04:01 PM
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T:
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Sorry, but I doubt that Haye could clean up a spit bucket.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 04:24:41 PM
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ali @ Yuvie:
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Im with you what did they expect Haye to do he out weighs him by 100 pounds and this was only his 3rd fight as a heavyweight. If he fights one of the Klits he will be more offensive cause there not nearly as big as Valuev. I still want to see him fight one of the brothers I won't be to hard on him and yall shouldn't neither.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 05:18:32 PM
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ali @ Yuvie:
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Don't think that if Haye was a american fighter that he would get his props cause we have fighter over here that don't get the props they deserve. It just that they want to see all action fights and can't find enjoyment in the sweet science.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 05:26:50 PM
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ali @ TSS readers:
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Please do not bring up Ruiz ever again I would appreciate it were trying to bring some excitement to the heavyweight division. Thanks alot Yall!
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 05:38:07 PM
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the Roast:
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@ ali, I would love it if we never saw Ru...I mean that man ever again. To bad for us, that guy gets the first shot at Haye. With Haye's suspect chin, that guy could be champ again. I may puke if that happens.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 09:27:12 PM
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Fe'Roz @ arturo:
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You are absolutely right. We don't always get what we want or expect. I watched two fights last night: The Angulo destruction of Yorgey and the Dawson dance with Johnson. And I absolutely hated Jack Loew and the referee's tolerance of such unwarranted brutality. It was inexcusable. I am not interest in seeing men get hurt. I am in seeing men test themselves in a business whose middle name is Hurt. That means many things. Great head movement. Great footwork. Great hands. Speed. But those are also part of other less martial arts. Left tackles in Football require all of the above... and more. The game has always had it's golden eras when great talents pit themselves against the best, and thus the most dangerous, opponents. Wars ensue. As do crowds. Large ones. Haye may against others be the tonic the division needs. Dawson for all his skills may also be the tonic for other maladies. Insomnia for example.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 10:49:10 PM
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Mr. Joshua:
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John Ruiz is like a raging case of hemorrhoids. You want them to go away, you wish they'd go away, but they fester, and fester, and fester, and don't go away. That sums up John Ruiz and his next undeserving title shot. I certainly won't be tuning in.
Sunday Nov 8, 2009 11:21:54 PM
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brownsugar:
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the authors description of the fight sounds likes a "lord of the rings" fantasy tale,.. "Haye hit the lead-booted Giant but he didnt' Flinch",.. or something like that,...... Ruiz is indeed as hard to keep away as a hardy weed,.. or Jason Voorhees/Michael Meyers,.. you thing he's gone,.. but he just keeps coming back....they ought to get him a hockey mask with a chipped edge for his next fight....he's taylor made for Haye who should crush him inside the distance....
Monday Nov 9, 2009 12:08:18 AM
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mortcola@tsongo:
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You said it first - Haye won the championship by doing slightly less against Valuev than 77-year old Holyfield did. Of course, Holyfield deserved that win, but this just shows how meaningless Haye's "victory" is. Valuev's skills are marginal, though he's composed and sticks to his fundamentals. His size advantage is only geometry - it doesn't come with additional power. He never does anything dramatic or unexpected, so if you can get in and around and outland him, you win. Haye simply lacks any and all cred as a heavyweight champ. Let him gut it out and win or look decent against a heavyweight with an arsenal and I'll start to think of him as a heavyweight - champion is another story.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 07:40:05 AM
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mortcola:
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Ruiz will be a hard fight for Haye. Here's another idea: let's see who comes out ahead in a match between Haye and Adamek - two recent arrivals at heavyweight. Whatever else you say about Golota, Adamek beat him down with accuracy, power, and movement. Really impressive, disciplined performance. Haye has to overcome my BS alarm before I will allow him to claim any legitimacy. Let him know.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 07:43:12 AM
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mortcola@ali:
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Ali, I don't want to hurt you by bringing up Ruiz. But if you have a wet, smelly, itchy, discolored blister covered with bristly hairs, you shouldn't ignore it. Visit your local health care professional today.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 07:46:47 AM
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ali:
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I wish Ruiz will get back in the ring with his worst nightmare David Tua and get knockout again that way we won't have to worry about him being is the mix of the heavyweight division.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 08:10:47 AM
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ali:
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Haye vs Adamek would be an exciting fight....Haye vs Toney I would love to see....Hopkins has talked about moving up to fight for a heavyweight title this would be perfect guy for him to fight. He has a date with Jones if he gets pass him and beats Haye that would be great way for him to retire..
Monday Nov 9, 2009 08:19:25 AM
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Rhyming like Pete Steward:
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Haye at 29 is no boxing dime. Don't expect for him to last a long time. The heavyweight division is so full of slime. The CIA should declare it a bleeping crime. And put yellow tape around that crime scene. And let all the cruiserweight -- quasi-heavyweight -- boxers come up and sweep it clean. Twenty-five years old, the cruiseweight division is about to be. Maybe all the pugilists in it will come up and make these pathetic heavys flee. The end.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 09:43:25 AM
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Phibo:
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@Rhyming like Pete Steward
Haye was the best Crusierweight by a distance though and had all the belts before he now stepped upto heavyweight.
It was an ugly fight and an ugly win, but that was the only way to beat Valuev, he was never going to knock him out in the first few rounds like he's done in the past at Crusier.
Judge him after Ruiza.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 11:56:30 AM
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Jason @ mortcola:
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To quote TSS reader mortcola, "Here's another idea: let's see who comes out ahead in a match between Haye and Adamek - two recent arrivals at heavyweight." This is an EXCELLENT suggestion, and one I didn't really consider. Adamek looked far more impressive in beating Golota (Valuev & Golota are at essentially the same skill level these days), and I think this makes for an intriguing fight. Very good suggestion.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 03:01:32 PM
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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.
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