Welcome To aBlackWeb

Official Black Web Boxing Corner

Added to Calendar: 05-18-24

Who Wins Tonight?

  • Tank Davis

  • Frank Martin


Results are only viewable after voting.
https://www.boxingscene.com/wbc-prez-smiles-spence-garcia-diamond-belt-stake--136573

WBC Prez Smiles: Spence-Garcia Will Have Diamond Belt at Stake

By World Boxing Council

World Boxing Council President Mauricio Sulaiman has announced that on March 16 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington Texas, the WBC Diamond belt will be at stake in the fascinating and gripping fight between WBC lightweight champion Mikey Garcia (39-0, 30 KOs) and IBF welterweight champion Errol Spence Jr (24-0, 21 KOs).

Spence Jr is a resident of Texas and is considered one of the best welterweights with significant punching power and refined technique.

Garcia who is also undefeated has fought several times in Texas, most recently in San Antonio when he defeated Sergey Lipinets in super lightweight.

While moving 2 division represents a major challenge for Mikey, he recognizes that it is those difficult fights that really motivate him, since his desire is to go down in history as one of the greats.

Facing Errol will be a complex mission, because in addition to giving away height and reach, Mikey has had to train and adapt his physique to face a different rival that comes to this battle with 11 consecutive knockouts.
 
https://www.boxingscene.com/anthony-joshua-reacts-ped-claims-from-jarrell-miller--136574

Anthony Joshua Reacts To PED Claims From Jarrell Miller

Jarrell Miller has questioned the size and strength of IBF, IBO, WBA, WBO heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua.

Miller, who himself tested for a banned substance in kickboxing competition, is not convinced that Joshua is an "all-natural" fighter.

He alleges that Joshua, during his rise, was tampering with performance enhancing drugs and is no longer the same fighter.

Miller will challenge Joshua on June 1 at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

He explained his suspicions regarding Joshua.

"Nobody could have put on 20-pounds between winning the Olympics and his first pro fight the way Joshua did without taking something. Impossible. We’ve busted our balls to get full testing for 10 weeks to make sure he’s clean before June 1. We’ve covered the bases. If he’s been taking performance-enhancing drugs I couldn’t care less now. I’ve studied him. His physique, his power, his stamina," Miller said.

"Since he won his titles his body’s slimmed down and he’s only really knocked out opponents who backed away. There’s not the same strength and stamina. Klitschko pushed for testing. In what subjects did Wladimir and Vitali get their PHDs? Sports medicine. Why did people who know everything about physics of the body want Joshua to test every other week? They pushed on that but settled a bit to make the fight."

Joshua raised his eyes at the comments and responded back.

"I take that as a compliment to all my dedication and strength and power training. If I was on steroids as well I wouldn’t fit in this shirt. He’s talking bull. At the London Olympics I was around 104 kilos and then weighed 107 kilos for my first pro fight the next year. What’s that, just half a stone with pro training? And he’s only talking about one year," Joshua said.

"What about the 11 years I’ve been boxing since I was 18. I’m now 115 kilos so that’s averaging just one kilo more a year. And that’s down to how hard I work and live. To all the strength and stamina training and weight-lifting. To how I control everything I eat and how I dedicate myself to boxing. It’s my life. It’s pretty much all I do. And it’s expensive, the food and the drink and the lifestyle.

"I’m actually cutting weight now so it would be pretty odd if I was doing anything. By the way, all the anti-drugs programmes I’m signed up to cost plenty, too. I have to let them know where I’m going to be every day. I get random tested roughly twice a week round the year by VADA (Voluntary Anti-Doping Association), I have been on that since 2012 and I pay £40,000-a-fight to be tested by VADA two times a week. And nothing. If ever there was something wrong in my next 10 years boxing it would be an accident. I don’t do anything."
 
https://www.boxingscene.com/arum-confident-interim-fights-make-wilder-fury-ppv-bigger--136600

Arum Confident Interim-Fights Will Make Wilder-Fury PPV Bigger

As reported earlier on BoxingScene.com, the WBC heavyweight title rematch between champion Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury is off for now.

The two fought to a controversial draw in December and were negotiating a rematch.

However, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman said on Tuesday he received confirmation from Fury that he would look elsewhere for his next bout.

"Deontay Wilder vs Tyson Fury is officially not happening next," Sulaiman tweeted.

"The WBC Boxing has received communications as our process, and while WBC Champion Wilder confirmed its willingness to fight the rematch, Fury will take on another fight with expectations to do rematch at a later date."

Negotiations seemed to be progressing for the second bout before Fury announced a new co-promotional deal with Top Rank and ESPN - direct competitiors of Al Haymon's PBC and Showtime, who Deontay Wilder is aligned with.

Top Rank CEO's Bob Arum, believes that a rematch will be even bigger if both boxers do interim fights.

“We envision this [rematch] can reach 1 to 2 million homes. The only way to do that is to allow the general sports fan to really get to know these guys,” Arum said to the Los Angeles Times.

“If that takes each of them fighting another opponent first, then rolling them into a September fight, the money on the table then would be more than they can conceive of … that’s the way I look at it.”

Wilder is now expected to take on Dominic Breazeale, who is the next mandatory WBC challenger. Breazeale was ordered to face Dillian Whyte in a final eliminator for the WBC interim-title, but now can bypass Whyte for a direct crack at Wilder.

Anthony Joshua, who holds the IBF, IBO, WBA, WBO heavyweight belts, will take on Jarrell Miller in June in New York.
 
https://www.boxingscene.com/team-wilder-were-still-going-fight-on-18--136608

Team Wilder: We're Still Going To Fight on May 18
by Jake Donovan

As far as Deontay Wilder and his team are concerned, the plan for his immediate future remains the same.

The unbeaten heavyweight titlist still has every intention of returning to the ring on May 18, manager Shelly Finkel confirmed to BoxingScene.com on Tuesday. His side also plans to treat that occasion as yet another opportunity to serve as an ambassador of the sport.

All he needs is an opponent.

It most definitely won’t be Tyson Fury, with whom he fought to a 12-round draw in their Showtime Pay-Per-View headliner last December. Nearly two full months worth of negotiating was thought to be close to finalized, until Fury (27-0-1, 19KOs) and promoter Frank Warren called an audible in signing with Top Rank and ESPN+ for all future fights.

While hope remained of keeping the fight alive. Fury and Top Rank confirmed with the World Boxing Council (WBC)—whose title Wilder has held since Jan. ’15—that they would be taking a different route for their next fight.

“Deontay will be OK. He’s obviously disappointed, but otherwise he’s fine,” Finkel said of his longtime heavyweight client. “We had our hopes up and figured (Tuesday) was the declare whether to go to a purse bid. If Fury still wanted the fight, we were prepared to make a (new) offer. If not, there’s no reason to send anything. Now we will look to finalize plans for his May 18 return.”

The latter ended up proving true, with Fury likely to make his ESPN+ debut in mid-to-late spring, while Wilder is proceeding with plans for a May 18 date atop a Premier Boxing Champions (PBC) telecast either on Showtime or Fox.

Whom he next faces hasn’t quite been sorted out yet, although mandatory challenger Dominic Breazeale would make the most sense just from a boxing politics standpoint. As the WBC initially approved and then ordered a rematch between Wilder and Fury, an interim title fight was also called between Breazeale and England’s Dillian Whyte, both of whom are owed title shots.

California’s Breazeale (20-1, 18KOs) is first in line for a mandatory title shot, having been appointed that slot after a Nov. ’17 knockout win over Eric Molina in a title eliminator. The 6’7” heavyweight—who is coming off of a 9th round knockout of Carlos Negron last December—publicly declared his availability during a recent edition of Inside PBC Sports, for which he serves as a co-host.

“I’m excited. That was the biggest thing that’s happened in the last 15 months,” admitted Breazeale, one of the few people in boxing pleased with the fallout of Wilder-Fury II, only if for the 15 months he’s waited for his title shot. “A situation like that, where Fury kind of pulls out of his situation with the rematch is the best thing for the WBC mandatory.”

A purse bid hearing for Wilder-Fury II was twice postponed, the second time indefinitely as the WBC gave both sides additional time to come to terms. With the fight now officially off the books, the sanctioning body is no longer on the hook to mandate an interim title fight and could instead greenlight Breazeale going straight to the title.

Whomever the next option, Wilder remains on course for his springtime appearance. Barclays Center remains strongly under consideration to host the event—as was believed to be the case when the plan was still Fury—with Las Vegas also in the mix as well as an outside possibility of the 6’7” Alabama native returning to Birmingham, less than an hour from his Tuscaloosa hometown and where four of his eight title defenses have been held.

The most recent of the bunch came in Feb. ’17, when Wilder knocked out then-unbeaten Gerald Washington in five rounds live from Legacy Arena in downtown Birmingham. Breazeale fought on the undercard, scoring a 5th round knockout of unbeaten prospect Izuagbe Ugonoh. However, his most infamous part of the night came post-fight, when the respective camps of Wilder and Breazeale were embroiled in a mini-brawl in the lobby of a nearby Westin hotel.

Bad blood has existed between the heavyweights ever since, with Breazeale at one point even filing a lawsuit over the incident, although it was ultimately dismissed by a California District court. It didn’t do anything to alleviate tension between the two, which of course can easily be settled in the ring.

Eventually, it will be revealed whether it’s that matchup or another option. Regardless, Wilder isn’t going to wait around of his next fight—not for Fury or any other notable heavyweight.

“We’re still fighting May 18, although of course as of now not versus Fury,” Finkel noted, though not at all ruling out the possibility of an eventual sequel between the two. “We’ll known the final opponent in the next few days.”

https://www.boxingscene.com/wilder-manager-we-wanted-rematch-next-fury--136617

Wilder Manager: We Wanted The Rematch Next, Fury Didn't
Deontay Wilder took a swipe at Tyson Fury after the Brit postponed a rematch with the WBC heavyweight champion.

The WBC on Tuesday confirmed that Fury has informed the organisation that Wilder will not be his next opponent.

Wilder and Fury were ordered to do battle again after their controversial draw in Los Angeles last December, but a second fight is on hold.

Former IBF, WBA, IBO and WBO champion Fury last week aimed a tweet in the direction of Wilder stating: "I will fight anyone in world boxing, don't use boxing politics as an excuse not to challenge me the lineal heavyweight champ."

The American responded with some verbal sparring after the WBC announced that the rematch is off – for the time being at least.

"You sorry m***********. We knew you only said this because] you knew you wasn't fighting me next. #CloutChaser you requested a warm-up fight first," Wilder tweeted.

"I don't blame you though, I probably would too if I saw my brains splashed all over the canvas."

Wilder's co-manager, Shelly Finkel, says they were ready to face Fury next - but the Gypsy King had other ideas for the future.

"It's obvious that Fury doesn't want to fight us next," Finkel said to ESPN. "Hopefully, we will get the next fight after that. So, in the meantime, we will do our own fight. We wanted to fight Fury next. We had no interest in another fight first. The proposal Top Rank sent was for a fight first and there's no reason we can't do our own fight if we're not fighting Fury next.

"Everything that we heard from Tyson Fury was that he wanted to fight Deontay next and we were willing to do that. Fury wasn't."
 
https://www.boxingscene.com/de-la-hoya-sends-legal-letter-mayweather-over-ryan-garcia--136618

De La Hoya Sends Legal Letter To Mayweather Over Ryan Garcia

According to a report from the Los Angeles Times, Golden Boy Promotions CEO Oscar De La Hoya has sent a cease-and-desist letter to Floyd Mayweather Jr. - advising the former division champion to stay away from unbeaten lightweight contender Ryan Garcia.

Garcia, regarded as one of the top prospects in the Golden Boy stables, was ringside in Caron on February 9th to watch WBA super featherweight champion Gervonta Davis blew away Hugo Ruiz in one round.

Coincidentally, Golden Boy had a card that night in Indio - about 2.5 hours away - and Garcia decided to attend a Mayweather Promotions card.

Since last year, the 20-year-old Garcia has been voicing his desire to fight Davis.

In a video posted on TMZ, Mayweather offered Garcia a sum of $200,000 if he can defeat Garcia’s former Mayweather-promoted sparring partner, Rolando Romero.

If Garcia could defeat Romero, than Mayweather would have no problem with setting up a fight with Davis.

What caught De La Hoya's eye, is circulating video that showed Garcia attending Mayweather's birthday party from this past weekend.

That was enough for a legal letter to get issued - and De La Hoya's company made it clear that if Mayweather tries to tamper with Garcia then a legal battle will erupt.

Garcia is scheduled to headline a Golden Boy promoted card on March 30th from Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio. DAZN will carry the event and the opponent is Puerto Rico’s Jose Lopez (20-3-1, 14 KOs). Lopez is handled by Miguel Cotto Promotions, who work very closely with Golden Boy.
 
https://www.boxingscene.com/warren-furys-interim-fight-espns-call-out-our-hands--136623

Warren: Fury's Interim-Fight Was ESPN's Call, Out of Our Hands

According to Frank Warren, the lead promoter for heavyweight contender Tyson Fury, it was ESPN who came down with the ultimate decision to take a pass on the scenario of doing an immediate rematch with WBC champion Deontay Wilder.

Wilder and Fury fought to a controversial draw on Showtime Pay-Per-View last December at Staples Center in Los Angeles.

A rematch appeared to be close to a deal, before Fury shocked the sport by signing a co-promotional deal with Top Rank and ESPN.

Fans were up in arms earlier this week, when it was officially announced that Fury had removed himself from facing Wilder next - and instead would take an interim-fight - and then pursue the Wilder rematch. The WBC officially canceled their mandate for the rematch.

Warren explained that he was fully on board with doing the rematch next, and so was Fury, but Top Rank and ESPN had other ideas.

"ESPN are insisting that he has a fight on there before he fights Wilder," Warren told BBC Radio 5 live.

"(It) will give him bigger exposure, and thus make pay-per-view a bigger attraction when they do the pay-per-view.

"Tyson wanted the fight (with Wilder). I certainly wanted it. A little bit disappointed in some ways, but that's the decision they've made."

Wilder is under contract with Premier Boxing Champions, who have content deals with Showtime and Fox Sports. Wilder is now likely going to fight WBC mandatory challenger Dominic Breazeale on the date of May 18th.

It's unknown when Fury will return, but dates in May and June are being kicked around, and former WBO heavyweight champion Joseph Parker has been mentioned as a possible opponent.

Their main heavyweight rival - WBA, IBO, WBA, IBF world champion Anthony Joshua - is scheduled to return on June 1 against unbeaten Jarrel Miller and Madison Square Garden in New York City.
 
https://www.boxingscene.com/dominic-breazeale-im-ready-fight-deontay-wilder--136635

Dominic Breazeale: I'm Ready To Fight Deontay Wilder

Dominic Breazeale would be more than ready to enter a direct crack at WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder- but also says Dillian Whyte remains an option.

Breazeale and Whyte were this month ordered by the World Boxing Council to collide for the interim-WBC heavyweight title - in what would also be a final eliminator.

The contest was ordered after a bout between Whyte and his compatriot - IBF, WBA, IBO, WBO champion Anthony Joshua - did not come to fruition.

After the Joshua contest fell out, Whyte began to call for a fight with Breazeale, who is currently the WBC's mandatory challenger.

Whyte may be in for more frustration after a rematch between Wilder and Tyson Fury was postponed until a later point.

The crumbling of the Wilder-Fury rematch has now opened the door for Breazeale.

And Breazeale has his sights set on a world title showdown with Wilder, but at the same time the 33-year-old is not ruling out stepping into the ring with Whyte.

"Of course I want to fight for the world title, but at the same time, I understand the fans want to see me and Dillian Whyte fight," said Breazeale to Sky Sports.

"I'm a fan pleaser and I'm ready to fight. My preference would be Wilder, of course, definitely. World title shot. It's everything I've been waiting for, for the last 15 months."

Breazeale said he would not need long to prepare for his next fight.

"As long as they give me a good eight to 10 weeks before a fight to let me know who I'm going to fight, whether it be Dillian Whyte or Wilder, that will be ample time to prepare for an individual," he added.
 
Back
Top