Archive for November, 2006

Joe Frazier To Fight On Thursday

Thursday, November 30th, 2006

Joe Frazier returns to his smokin’ ways tonight

Joe FrazierHe’s only 62. 62 is the new 42, and we all know what George Foreman did in his 40s, so it’s no big deal that we hear Smokin’ Joe Frazier is going to be lacing up the gloves once again.

OK, put away your portable defibrillator….he’s lacing ‘em up for a charity event on Thursday night.

Frazier, the superlative left hooker from Philly who last fought as a pro in Dec. 1981 (a draw with Jumbo Cummings), will do something we’d all like to do: face off with a politician. He’s gloving up against the mayor of Memphis, Willie Hereton. The mayor’s been training for a spell, so he doesn’t totally embarrass himself, and word is that Frazier is weighing about the same as he did in the 70s. Hey, with the state of the heavyweight division as we know it, I hope Joe doesn’t look too good, because someone will try and lure him back into the ring for an oldies match with Foreman or Holmes. The mayor, word is, has a past as an amateur boxer, so maybe things will heat up in there…

Proceeds from the rumble will raise around $100,000 for a local drug treatment program.

Welcome back, Smokin’ Joe…

This Day in History (November 30, 1956)

Thursday, November 30th, 2006

Today in Boxing History: Floyd Patterson KOs Archie Moore

Patterson vs. MooreOn this day in 1956, Floyd Patterson won the heavyweight title with a fifth-round knockout of Archie Moore in Chicago. It made Patterson, who was just five weeks shy of his 22nd birthday, the youngest heavyweight champion in history.

Moore, the light heavyweight champ, had challenged Rocky Marciano for his heavyweight belt in September of 1955. Although Moore dropped the champ in round two, Marciano came off the canvas to score a ninth-round knockout.

Shortly after that bout, Marciano retired, thus vacating the title. The two fighters left standing after the elimination bouts were Patterson and Moore.

Going into the bout, Moore was the favorite. However, the boxing aficionados who predicted a Moore victory had underestimated Patterson’s hand speed. In the fifth, Patterson floored Moore with a left hook, and then dropped him again with a combination. Referee Frank Sikora counted Moore out at 2:27 in the fifth round.

Moore continued to defend his light heavyweight title, holding the belt until 1961. Patterson lost his title to Ingemar Johansson in 1959, and then became the first two-time heavyweight champion in history when he regained the belt from Johansson in 1960.

Patterson’s record as boxing’s youngest heavyweight champion stood until 1986, when a 20-year-old Mike Tyson won the WBC Heavyweight title with a knockout of Trevor Berbick.

Roman Greenberg Says He’ll KO Pannell – Big Deal

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Is Roman Greenberg too green, too berg, or too much?

We get loads of press releases daily from PR types and are happy to receive them, as they clue us in to the latest goings-on in the fight game. Often, the phrasing is hyperbolic, but that’s understandable, the publicists are paid to hype their guy. Occasionally, though, we get a release that oversteps the bounds, going from hyperbolic to ludicrous.

Roman GreenbergExhibit A: We got a release from the fine folks at Warriors Boxing, telling us about a Dec. 9 fight featuring Roman Greenberg (23-0, 16 kayoes), a Russian-born Israeli heavy, against Steve Pannell (34-10, 28 kayoes).

“I’ve paid my dues and fought my way here,� said Greenberg in the release, about his fight at the Seminole Hard Rock Live Arena. “Now I’m ready to make my move on the top fighters in the division in 2007, and I’m going to end the year with a bold statement by knocking out Steve Pannell.�

Now, I don’t know Steve Pannell personally, perhaps he’s a fine fellow who’s a joy to chat with at a backyard BBQ, but if you knock him out, you are not making a particularly bold statement. Of his 10 losses, every one has come by KO. He’s won once in his last eight fights.

I’m not necessarily trying to single out Warriors or Greenberg here, but this boxer hasn’t been shy about boasting of his virtues, and he’s received tons of hype from his backers in England, so he’s under the microscope.

If Roman Greenberg really wants to make a statement, he should sign on to fight one of the Eastern Euro prospects, like Dimitrenko, Bidenko or Virchis, or try and knock off Matt Skelton.

Steve Pannell, at this point, is a person who sadly has been reduced to hire himself out as a human punching bag—–beating up on him, Roman Greenberg, is no great feat.

Sweden Okays Boxing Lite

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Sweden ends 36-year ban on boxing… sort of

Ingemar JohanssonSweden, birthplace of former heavyweight champion of the world Ingemar Johansson and one of the more enlightened countries on the planet, banned professional boxing in 1970 after a study determined that the those who engage on the sport run the risk of suffering “severe and even life-threatening injuries,� and that boxing “had a brutalizing effect on the audience� and “was governed by unsound economic interests,� according to the AP.

That law will run its course by year’s end and the Swedes will now allow boxing “events� to take place, while maintaining the ban on full-fledged professional boxing in Sweden.

The Swedish organizers who sought permission to have fights in their country agreed after much debate to alter the rules of the pro game to make them more similar to amateur boxing — which means fewer rounds, allowing doctors to stop the bouts, and the like.

But the commission turned down a request by Sauerland Event to stage a WBA heavyweight title fight featuring champion Nikolai “The Russian Giantâ€? Valuev in Stockholm in January. The proposed title fight would have been fought under the WBA’s regular rules, where the boxers run the risk of “severe and even life-threatening injuries,â€? etc., so the commission nixed a big fight with big Nic in their home country.

That, however, isn’t the end of story. A boxing event in Goteborg in January featuring former WBO titleholder Armand Krajnc and Sweden’s top female boxer, Asa Sandell, was given the thumbs-up.

Krajnc praised the decision. “It’s nice that there are still sensible people in Sweden,” he told the newspaper Dagens Nyheter. “But this has taken way too long… To be able to finish your career in your own country isn’t bad.”

The Kronk Kloses

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Manny Steward and the end of the end of another era

Manny StewardIt’s a sad time for Michigan fight fans and, really, fight fans the world over that enjoyed seeing the products from the Detroit pugilism machine known as the Kronk Gym churn out champs, contenders and prospects for 30 plus plus years.

The legendary Kronk Gym, a grimy basement gym that housed two dozen world champions, has shuttered its doors for good for good, the city’s Recreation Department announced.

Emanuel Steward’s gym was already struggling, and took one on the chin when thieves stole copper pipes in September, cutting off its water supply and forcing Steward to close the noted fighter factory.

Steward, who came to Kronk in 1971, had been keeping the Kronk running for months, paying out of his own pocket, after Detroit shut down the recreation center that houses it because of a budget deficit. But it takes around half a million bucks a year to keep the fight fixture open, and the city can’t spare a dime.

The cost of fixing the plumbing and making other major repairs led officials to decide to make the gym’s shutdown permanent, said the Recreation Department’s deputy director, Lawrence Hemingway to the AP. “It’s the oldest rec center in the city. It has lived a useful life,” he told the Detroit Free Press for a story published Wednesday.

Hilmer Kenty was the first Kronkie to win a world title, in 1980, and Tommy Hearns, the Motor City Cobra, soon followed suit. Milt McCrory, Jimmy Paul, Duane Thomas, Steve McCrory, Mike McCallum, Michael Moorer – the gym kept producing well-schooled technicians who also liked to bang, and weren’t afraid to finish a foe if the time was right.

More importantly, perhaps, Kronk was a safe haven for untold numbers of kids destined for an unsavory street education. They learned structure and discipline, and fired fists instead of guns in their spare time.

Farewell, Kronk. You will be remembered fondly, and will never be replaced.

Calzaghe/Manfredo Meet The Press

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Joe Calzaghe and Peter Manfredo Jr. hit New York in style

Manfredo CalzagheUndefeated super middleweight sensation Joe Calzaghe (42-0, 31 KOs), from Newbridge, Wales, boxing’s current longest-reigning world champion, will make his landmark 20th title defense – sixth-best on boxing’s all-time list – against top-10 contender Peter Manfredo Jr. (26-3, 12 KOs), from Providence, RI.

The Calzaghe-Manfredo world super middleweight championship fight will take place Saturday, March 3, 2007, at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, Wales, Calzaghe’s first fight on his home turf since September 10, 2005, when he successfully defended his title against Evans Ashira.

Calzaghe, 34, returns to the ring after successfully defending his titles last month for the 19th time, defeating former Olympian Sakio Bika. Calzaghe ended Bika’s four-year, 12-bout unbeaten streak, in a fight that also marked Calzaghe’s debut on HBO. The victory elevated Calzaghe into a sixth-place tie with former strawweight champion Ricardo Lopez and former featherweight champion Eusebio Pedroza on the all-time list for successful title defenses. A victory over Manfredo would advance Calzaghe into a fourth-place tie with former heavyweight champion Larry Holmes and former middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins.

“On the night of the fight, Manfredo is in for the harsh reality of boxing,â€? said Calzaghe. “There’s a world of difference between being a reality TV star and a world champion boxer. He’s only seen the glitz and the glamour of the sport, now he’s in for the real thing against me. Manfredo will go from being a star to seeing stars. From what I have seen of him he is a good tough kid and is well-known in America, but this is my 20th title defense and my ninth year as world champion and Manfredo isn’t going to spoil it for me.”

Manfredo, who earned worldwide attention with his runner-up finish on NBCs “The Contender� during the show’s debut season, is the first fighter from the series to challenge for a world title.

“I want to thank Joe Calzaghe for giving me this chance,â€? Manfredo said. “And while I have the utmost respect for his skills and our mutual Italian heritage, I must follow in the footsteps of previous generations of Americans who fought the British in the Revolutionary War and the rematch, the War of 1812, and use my skills to beat the British once again.â€?

“I’m delighted that Joe will make his historic 20th World Super-Middleweight title defense against Peter Manfredo on HBO,â€? promoter Frank Warren said. “It’s a landmark occasion in the history of British boxing and it’s great that the American fight fans will be able to see it. Peter’s a good fighter, and his attacking style, matched against Joe’s come-forward style, will make for a great fight.”

Mark Burnett, reality star maven and co-promoter of the bout, said, “I hope this will be the first of many fights between my two home countries. Peter Manfredo has showed the skill and heart that earned him this opportunity and we expect this to be one of the most exciting fights of the new year.�

HBO Sports senior vice president Kery Davis said, “Joe Calzaghe is a terrific champion and we’re thrilled to be showcasing his 20th title defense. Peter Manfredo has the opportunity of a lifetime to go overseas and pull off a shocker.�

Calzaghe-Manfredo is promoted by Frank Warren’s Sports Network, in association with Mark Burnett’s The Tournament of Contenders, and will be broadcast live in the U.S. on HBO World Championship Boxing, beginning at 5 P.M. ET / 2 P.M. PT and replayed later that evening at 10 P.M. ET.

This Day in History (November 29, 1902)

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Today in Boxing History: Tommy Loughran born in Philadelphia

Tommy LoughranOn this day in 1902, former light heavyweight champion Tommy Loughran was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Loughran was one of the most talented fighters in the history of the sport.

Early in his career, Loughran fought a competitive six fight series with Harry Greb, but no titles were at stake. During his quest for a championship, Loughran also scored wins over Georges Carpentier and Young Stribling.

Finally, in 1927, he won the New York State Athletic Commission World Light Heavyweight belt with a 15-round decision over Mike McTigue. Loughran held the title until 1929 and defended it against fighters along the lines of Jim Braddock and Mickey Walker.

In September of 1929, he vacated the title to compete as a heavyweight. Loughran earned a shot at champ Primo Carnera in 1934, but lost a 15-round decision. He retired in 1937.

Loughran only scored 17 knockouts in 174 fights. It is one of the lowest knockout percentages of any champion in history and a testament to Loughran’s ring skills.

Loughran passed away in 1982. He was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1991.

Save Us Spike Lee, Budd Schulberg and Joe Louis

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Joe LouisI’m a tough nut to crack. I don’t like “Rocky,� love “Raging Bull,� must be a dark side of the moon kind of guy. I remember drifting through Michael Mann’s “Ali� almost half asleep, seemingly narcotized by the reverence. When Mario Van Peebles appeared as Malcolm X in “Ali� like a bronze angel from on high, I flashed on Denzel Washington’s pulsating portrayal of Malcolm in Spike Lee’s “X� – and that’s when it hit me: “Ali� had all the right ingredients but one. It had the wrong director. What “Ali� needed was Spike Lee. So when I heard that the always controversial but all the more fascinating for it Spike Lee was developing a film on former heavyweight champion of the world Joe Louis, called “Save Us Joe Louis,� I was pleased as punch.

In the May 5, 2005 Variety, Army Archerd reported that “Lee and Budd Schulberg have been working (writing) the Joe Louis project for five years. It’s the story of the two Louis-Max Schmeling championship bouts (1936 and 1938) and the global ramifications. Lee says characters involved in the pic will include FDR, Hitler, Mussolini and Sugar Ray Robinson for starters, adding Schulberg was on hand for the 1938 fight. Lee tells me, ‘Bud (93) is going strong. This is a David Lean caliber film.’�

The film called “Save Us Joe Louisâ€? (the working title was “The War to Comeâ€?) will focus on the rivalry and eventual friendship between heavyweight champions Joe Louis and Max Schmeling. Their lives and fights intersected while Europe was at war and the rest of the world was about to join in (World War II, 1939-1945), and Joe the American and Max the German became proxies for their rival nations. When Louis visited the White House at the President’s request, FDR told him, “Joe, we need muscles like yours to beat the Nazis.â€? Joseph Goebbels, one of Hitler’s henchmen, wrote to Schmeling after he won the first fight with Louis on June 19, 1936, “I know you fought for Germany, that it was a German victory. We are proud of you. Heil Hitler!â€? Such was the heated atmosphere of the Louis and Schmeling fights.

After the climactic Louis-Schmeling rematch on June 22, 1938 in Yankee Stadium, the film “Save Us Joe Louis� will follow the fighters into their postwar and post-boxing lives. Max becomes a Coca-Cola magnate in Germany and lives to a ripe old age, but never shakes the Nazi stigma. Joe loses everything but his shirt and dignity and becomes a greeter at a Vegas casino.

Although the film is not yet in production, funding is where things stand, many big names, in addition to Spike Lee and Budd Schulberg, have been mentioned as possible players in “Save Us Joe Louis.� Terrence Howard, of “Crash� and “Hustle & Flow� fame, is rumored to be interested in playing the champ, even though Vin Diesel was in the early running. Danny Glover has shown an interest in portraying Joe in his later years, while Samuel L. Jackson sees himself in several roles. Hugh Jackman has been penciled in as a maybe Max Schmeling, with Maximilian Schell possibly playing the German champ in his dotage. There has even been talk of Jodie Foster playing Max’s movie star wife Anny Ondra.

With so many of Hollywood’s heavy hitters warming up in the batter’s box for what to these ears sounds like the best boxing movie since Scorsese’s “Raging Bull,� I wanted to get the latest scoop and asked Budd Schulberg, Spike Lee’s co-screenwriter on “Save Us Joe Louis,� for an update.

Budd Schulberg has been around. He was born in New York City on March 27, 1914. His father, B.P. Schulberg, was a film pioneer, a Hollywood insider. Budd went to L.A. High, Deerfield Academy and Dartmouth College. He worked briefly as a screenwriter in Hollywood, before serving in the U.S. Navy during WW II. At war’s end, he was in charge the photographic evidence at the Nuremberg Trials. Schulberg got mired in the HUAC mess, but paid penance with some of the greatest screenplays ever written (and greatest films ever made): “The Harder They Fall� (1956), a thinly disguised account of the career of one-time heavyweight champion Primo Carnera (1933-1934), starring Humphrey Bogart as sleazy Eddie Willis, a down on his luck ex-sportswriter hired to shill for a promoter and his latest harebrained scheme, a clumsy giant named Toro Moreno; “A Face in the Crowd� (1957), a redemptive political object lesson starring Andy Griffith as “Lonesome� Rhodes, an Arkansas hillbilly with the gift of gab who plays the guitar and carries a mean tune, a good old boy who slimes his way to the top of the tower of power to become one of the worst bad old boys of all time; and of course the seminal “On the Waterfront� (1954), that twilight tale of love and regret, complacency and the mob, the dockside parable of broken promises, broken dreams and broken noses, a timeless noir flush with indelible lines like those spoken by ex-pug Terry Molloy, played to Academy Award winning perfection by Marlon Brando, lines written by screenwriting’s poet laureate, Budd Schulberg:

“It wasn’t him, Charley, it was you. Remember that night in the Garden you came down to my dressing room and you said, ‘Kid, this ain’t your night. We’re going for the price on Wilson.’ You remember that? ‘This ain’t your night!’ My night! I coulda taken Wilson apart! So what happens? He gets the title shot outdoors on the ballpark and what do I get? A one-way ticket to Palooka-ville! You was my brother, Charley, you shoulda looked out for me a little bit. You shoulda taken care of me just a little bit so I wouldn’t have to take them dives for the short-end money… You don’t understand. I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I coulda been somebody, instead of a bum, which is what I am, let’s face it. It was you, Charley.â€?

I spoke with Schulberg at the Hammerstein Ballroom at the Manhattan Center in New York City where he was attending a recent Broadway Boxing show and asked about the genesis of the Spike Lee/Budd Schulberg Joe Louis film project.

“It began actually at one of those pre-fight dinners at the Garden where we were both were and got to talking about Joe Louis and the Joe Louis film that had never been made,� said Schulberg. “We met again after that dinner and decided to do it. We did extensive research for three or four months. We did nothing but read about Joe Louis, Max Schmeling and so forth. Then for a year we worked on several different drafts.�

For Spike Lee, the director and race man, the life and career of Joe Louis, the anti-Jack Johnson by temperament and design, but no less heroic for it, must have been nothing less than manna from heaven.

“When Joe Louis started to make a name for himself in New York after beating Carnera and Baer,� Schulberg told me, “Time magazine had him on the cover with the words: ‘THE BLACK MOSES’ – and that’s the line we take.�

The title of the film “Save Us Joe Louis� has an interesting origin.

“That is based on the story of a young black kid that’s being executed,� explained Schulberg. “When they strapped him down, attaching all the things to him, he actually cried out, ‘Save me Joe Louis!’ In fact we have that scene in the film. Joe Louis was like a god really.�

“Save Us Joe Louis� has been five long years in the making, but has not really begun. “One of our problems is that this is a much more costly film than Spike had been in the habit of making. His films have been about $35 to $40 million, and this would be almost twice as much. It’s a huge canvas,� Schulberg said. “Disney likes it and has offered about $35 million, roughly half of what we would need. So we’re looking for someone to match Disney.�

I asked Schulberg if he and Spike Lee had decided on a leading man, someone to play the singular “Brown Bomber.�

“Spike has talked to Terrence Howard about playing Joe Louis. We both agree he would be ideal. We’re aware of the fact that the new generation isn’t aware of Joe Louis in the way they are of Ali,� said Schulberg, “and we’re hoping the chemistry of an upcoming star like Terrence Howard will help us overcome that problem.�

Shannon Briggs Meets Sultan Ibragimov

Tuesday, November 28th, 2006

Team Ibragimov outbids Don King for Shannon Briggs fight

Sultan IbragimovSeminole Warriors Boxing, Golden Boy Promotions, Golden Grain Promotions and Sampson Lewkowicz won the promotional rights to the WBO heavyweight championship bout between their fighter, unbeaten Sultan Ibragimov, and the champion from Brownsville, Brooklyn, Shannon “The Cannon� Briggs.

The winning bid from Team Ibragimov was $2,501,000. Briggs’ promoter, Don King, came in second at $1,501,000.

“This is what happens when a team comes together and makes a concerted effort to get things done,� said Leon Margules, Executive Director of Seminole Warriors Boxing. “We put together a spectacular bid, won it, and now we’re going to get right to work to secure a venue and put on the best show we possibly can for fight fans around the world.�

“From the moment I first saw him fight, I knew Sultan Ibragimov had the tools to become a world champion,� said Golden Boy Promotions President Oscar De La Hoya. “Now, we’re on the brink of seeing him fulfill his destiny by defeating Shannon Briggs and winning the WBO heavyweight title.�

“The heavyweight championship is the most prestigious title in sports, and part of reestablishing it in the minds of the public is to promote it properly,� said Ibragimov’s manager Boris Grinberg. “I am confident that the promotion of this fight will once again show why the heavyweight champion is truly the greatest athlete in the world.�

“All the business is done and now I can focus on training my hardest and knocking out Shannon Briggs,� said Ibragimov. “I have been waiting a long time for this moment, but all the sacrifices will be worth it when I get to put that WBO belt around my waist.�

Ex-WBA Heavyweight Champ Hospitalized

Tuesday, November 28th, 2006

Greg Page hospitalized with pneumonia in Kentucky

Greg PageFormer World Boxing Association heavyweight champion Greg Page has been hospitalized since Friday, the Louisville Courier-Journal reports, and is undergoing treatment for “pneumonia and other complications.”

Page, who held the WBA title for a spell in 1984, is in stable condition, according to a hospital press release.

On March 9, 2001, the fighter suffered bleeding in his brain and fell unconscious during the tenth round of a fight with Dale Crowe in Erlanger, in Kentucky.

He’s dealt with partial paralysis, impaired speech and other effects of the traumatic brain injury since then. In late February and early March, Page was listed in critical condition at a hospital, as he battled pneumonia, severe dehydration and a blood infection.

The boxer beat Gerrie Coetzee in South Africa, a jubilant and exclamatory victory for a black man, and snagged the WBA crown with his KO8 win. Four months later, Page lost the crown to Tony Tubbs in Buffalo (UD15). Page debuted as a pro in 1979. After his loss to Tubbs, Page soldiered on, but never again received a shot at a legit title, and was used a record-builder by up and coming fighters. Page suffered from comparisons to another Louisville product, Muhammad Ali, and of course couldn’t live up to the billing as the next Ali.

TSS wishes him well in his ongoing health struggle…