Essential The Official Boxing Random Thoughts Thread...All boxing heads ENTER.

Black_Jesus

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from the home of coca-cola, i'm not referring to s
Keith made 8 million for :deadmanny: that ppv did 500k buys

Khan made 7million for Twitter fingers that ppv did 150k buys

do all the mental gymnastics in the world you want breh :russ:
You the one doing mental gymnastics.. Khan made more money than Thurman historically. had already been on a successful ppv that did 600k.. Gets paid proceeds from the UK market.. so he could negotiate a higher purse at the time.. And Khan also wasn't coming straight off a loss
 

LauderdaleBoss

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Worst part about it is he really lost to that bum before he got a title shot like we was gonna forget he put on a struggle performance against Ray Robinson. :mjlol:

Sheeiiit, Ray Rob got jobbed against Josh Kelly too. Whole career would be different if he got those 2 wins. :snoop:
 

ChocolateGiddyUp

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You the one doing mental gymnastics.. Khan made more money than Thurman historically. had already been on a successful ppv that did 600k.. Gets paid proceeds from the UK market.. so he could negotiate a higher purse at the time.. And Khan also wasn't coming straight off a loss

N how did all that work out breh :mjlol:


Nobody believes the bullshyt you typing but you N that fakkit Desjardins


fukk outta here :camby:
 

Derek Lee

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TEOFIMO LOPEZ HAS A MESSAGE FOR VASILIY LOMACHENKO: I CAN’T WAIT TO PUT ON EIGHT OUNCES AND PIERCE HIS SKULL

teofimo-lopez-ratings.jpg

18
AUG

BY JOSEPH SANTOLIQUITO

Teofimo Lopez Jr. has been growing impatient for some time, and the IBF lightweight titlist will be the first to admit patience is not exactly a forte of his.

Finally, on August 19, the deal was made for Lopez to fight Ring Magazine, WBA and WBO lightweight titleholder Vasiliy Lomachenko, which will most likely take place October 17 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

By the time they get into the ring, the 32-year-old Lomachenko will have gone 14 months between fights—the longest hiatus of the two-time Ukrainian Olympic gold medalist’s pro career.

Lopez (15-0, 12 knockouts) will have gone 10 months in between fights, which is the longest time he’s been off in his career.

That’s where the advantage lies—Lopez feels. He’s 23. Lomachenko (14-1, 10 KOs) is 32, with over 400 fights on his body. Lopez has over 150.

“Loma can think he’s going to beat me, and he can think he’s going to beat me easily, but deep down, they’re training their asses off so hard that me and my father (Teofimo Sr.) always talk about it that they’re over working the body,” Teofimo Jr. said. “I never stressed it. Richard Commey, world champion, he killed his whole body to fight me. We know what happened (Lopez won KO 2). Loma is going to kill his whole body during camp. I already know it. Let’s see what he says when we’re in the ring.”

Lopez said he did not have to analyze Lomachenko’s first foray as a 135-pounder. Loma was looking up at Jorge Linares after a blunt, accurate right put him on the canvas for the first time in his career during the sixth round of their fight on May 12, 2018 at Madison Square Garden for the WBA title.

“Jorge Linares was the first lightweight Loma fought and he dropped him,” Lopez said. “Just imagine if I hit Loma like Linares did. After that, he fought (Jose) Pedraza and he got his face beat up. He found it was a lot harder for him than he thought. He had a difficult time.

“(Anthony) Crolla was a p*ssy who was scared the whole time. Luke Campbell went down in the 11th, but that went to a decision. Loma doesn’t look like a fat boy, but he actually is a fat boy, because 135 is a little over his weight. If you look at the Luke Campbell fight, you can see there is just a lot of wear-and-tear on his body.

“I look at it like this—maybe this whole COVID-19 year helped him out. Maybe he needed it. That way he can probably at least hang in there a little bit with me. It’s going to be a great fight. I just look at the facts. You see a fighter who has gone up in weight class. Sometimes they go up too much where their body isn’t used to it, or the weight class is too big for them.

“With what Loma does with his experience and technique, he’s able to hang in there to at least get the job done.”

Lopez, who is aiming to become the youngest lightweight titlist in the four-belt era, does hold some deference to Lomachenko. He calls Loma a future hall of famer. He doesn’t dispute that. He says Lomachenko is a very talented fighter. He doesn’t dispute that, either.

“But, at the end of the day, I’m going to beat the shyt out of him,” Lopez says. “I’m not Linares. Everybody knows that. I’m not Pedraza. I’m not any of those guys he beat. They can say Loma is No. 1 at 135 and I’m second. Well, we’re going to change that when we fight. I’m not worried.

“A lot of people talk very highly about him. But if you look at it, there were so many mistakes he made against Luke Campbell. Loma tries too hard to make everybody think he can still do it, even though he’s 32 years old.

“This man has had over 400 fights. I have over 150 fights. I’m 23. I’m going to tell you this, when I get to camp, oh man, my body aches sometimes. If I’m 23 and dealing with stuff at this age, I can only imagine what he must be going through at 32 with over 400 fights.”

Lopez made no predictions. He calmly and humorously pointed out what happened to Richard Commey. The former IBF titlist was supposed to give Lopez all kinds of hell.

Compounding that was Lopez coming off a lackluster July 2019 victory over Masayoshi Nakatani, in which he went 12 rounds for the first time. There was the family drama going on, which Lopez Jr. stresses has been squashed. There were doubts whether he could withstand a serious threat like Commey, coming off a dubious performance against Nakatani.

But in his biggest fight to date, on his biggest stage to date, Lopez devoured the hard-hitting Commey.

Adding more intrigue is the personal beef Lopez has with Lomachenko. Lopez felt that he wasn’t given the respect due a beltholder when negotiations settled to make the fight.

“People can think and expect an ugly fight; we obviously don’t like each other; he may not like my father more than me, it is what it is,” Lopez said. “In the end, I’m happy we came to some sort of an agreement. I know I got low-balled as fukk. They could have at least coughed up a little more money than they did.

“Whatever. They stuck to their guns. They’re going to use the rest of my money for the undercard. Okay, whatever. They put it out there on my birthday that I didn’t want this fight.

“I take all of that into consideration. I’ll take it all out in camp. It’s going to be worse for Loma than it was for Commey. I’m going to be on him like a savage. I’ve been dying to fight. I’ve been locked in a cage and ready to eat. My hands have been itching so bad. I feel sorry for my sparring partners.”

Lopez has already started training and says that he is ahead of schedule. His weight is good, even better than it was for the Commey fight, when he came into camp at 158 pounds. He’s been cutting weight and says on the night of the fight he should come in at around 145 or 147, right about where he was the night he fought Commey.

Lopez also knows the consensus of the boxing cognoscenti that he’s the overwhelming underdog. What’s more is the wide audience the fight will get being televised on ESPN—not pay-per-view. Lopez originally wanted the fight before a live crowd.

It enrages Lopez more that it isn’t.

Being in an empty arena does provide one plus: “People worldwide will hear me calling Loma a fukking bytch,” Lopez said, laughing. “He’ll understand what I’m saying. He knows what a fukking bytch is, because he is one.” :mjlol:

As for the doubters, “Good, I don’t care, everyone has their opinions about this fight, but that doesn’t matter; it’s about what I do and what he does,” Lopez said. “I didn’t watch his fight against Linares, but I do realize when someone is a little too over confident in what he does, it catches up to them. I think Loma thinks he’s a fukking god; that he can’t get touched.

“When he does get touched, that’s when you get Loma, because he does get frustrated. I love it. I’ve faced fighters like him that had winning streaks, though not style-wise, but confident-wise in the way they are.

“Don’t be surprised if this guy tries to fukking kick me or tries to hit me in the balls. You have to understand that when you have someone there and you’re talking shyt, and you hit and call them a fukking bytch, and keep hitting them, you get in their fukking head. I’m in his fukking head. I got into his head a long time ago.”

:heh:

Lopez says he possesses the kind of Mike Tyson-type rage that saw “Iron Mike” tear apart Michael Spinks in 1988 in a fight that seemed to end before it started.

“I remember seeing that fight on YouTube, and that rage and anger is why I love Mike Tyson so much,” Lopez said. “I can’t wait to put on eight ounces and pierce Loma’s skull.”


Joseph Santoliquito is an award-winning sportswriter who has been working for Ring Magazine/RingTV.com since October 1997 and is the president of the Boxing Writers Association of America. He can be followed on twitter @JSantoliquito.

Teofimo Lopez has a message for Vasiliy Lomachenko: I can’t wait to put on eight ounces and pierce his skull - The Ring
 

levitate

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Yeah, I’m gonna have to grab some gloves...
:francis:
Been going raw on the bag for the past few months...both wrists are starting to hurt when doing random stuff throughout the day...like turning doorknobs, picking up my son etc.

what gloves are y’all fukking with?
 

patscorpio

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Yeah, I’m gonna have to grab some gloves...
:francis:
Been going raw on the bag for the past few months...both wrists are starting to hurt when doing random stuff throughout the day...like turning doorknobs, picking up my son etc.

what gloves are y’all fukking with?

first you need to start wrapping your hands lol..it doesnt sound like youre doing that all
 

patscorpio

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Benavidez-Angulo: Showtime's Tripleheader Peaked At 245K Viewers; Averaged 188K
By Keith Idec

Published On Tue Aug 18, 2020, 06:39 PM EST

Showtime’s viewership went up slightly Saturday night from the network’s previous “Showtime Championship Boxing” telecast.

Nielsen Media Research statistics released Tuesday indicated Showtime’s tripleheader drew a peak audience of 245,000 toward the end of the lightweight title bout between Rolando Romero and Jackson Marinez. The main event, David Benavidez’s victory over Alexis Angulo, drew an average of 188,000 viewers.

Nielsen’s numbers from Saturday’s show include viewers that watched it on television. Those that streamed the event on laptops or other devices aren’t included in those figures.

david-benavidez%20(3)_2020_08_16_091411.jpg


The main event of Showtime’s previous three-bout broadcast – Angelo Leo’s 12-round, unanimous-decision win against Tramaine Williams in a WBO junior featherweight title fight August 1 – attracted a peak audience of 209,000 and an average audience of 150,000. The show headlined by Leo-Williams was Showtime’s first live boxing broadcast since March 13 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The average viewership for the Romero-Ramirez match was 180,000. Las Vegas’ Romero (12-0, 10 KOs) recorded a controversial, unanimous-decision victory over the Dominican Republic’s Marinez (19-1, 7 KOs) to win the WBA interim lightweight title in the second of three fights Showtime televised from Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut.

The opener of Showtime’s broadcast Saturday night, heavyweight contender Otto Wallin’s fifth-round stoppage of Travis Kauffman, was watched by an average audience of 139,000.

Sweden’s Wallin (21-1, 14 KOs, 1 NC) defeated Kauffman by technical knockout when Kauffman re-injured his surgically repaired left shoulder and referee Michael Ortega stopped their scheduled 10-rounder at 2:32 of the fifth round. The 34-year-old Kauffman (32-4, 23 KOs, 1 NC), of Reading, Pennsylvania, announced his retirement after losing to Wallin.

Phoenix’s Benavidez (23-0, 20 KOs) completely controlled his scheduled 12-round fight against Angulo, until the Colombian contender’s trainer stopped it following a one-sided 10th round. The 23-year-old Benavidez was stripped of his WBC super middleweight title at the scale Friday because he was 2¾ pounds overweight for his TKO victory over Angulo (26-2, 22 KOs).

Showtime’s next live boxing broadcast is scheduled for September 19.

Erickson Lubin (22-1, 16 KOs), of Orlando, Florida, is scheduled to encounter Cleveland’s Terrel Gausha (21-1-1, 10 KOs) in the main event of that tripleheader from Mohegan Sun Arena. Lubin and Gausha will meet in a 12-round, 154-pound WBC elimination match.
 

patscorpio

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Frampton-Traynor ESPN Telecast Peaked At 427K Viewers, Averaged 264K
By Keith Idec

Published On Tue Aug 18, 2020, 07:19 PM EST

ESPN drew viewership Saturday comparable to many of the network’s recent weeknight, primetime audiences for a late-afternoon/early-evening show that showcased Carl Frampton and Michael Conlan in tune-up fights.

Nielsen Media Research reported Tuesday that ESPN’s three-bout broadcast Saturday from London attracted a peak audience of 427,000 and an average audience of 264,000. The peak viewership occurred near the end of Frampton’s seventh-round stoppage of Darren Traynor in the main event of a lightweight fight at York Hall that was scheduled for 10 rounds.

Earlier Saturday, Conlan recorded a 10th-round, technical-knockout victory over Sofiane Takoucht in the second of three bouts ESPN aired. In ESPN’s opener, Archie Sharp edged Jeff Ofori on points in a 10-round lightweight bout.

carl-frampton_1.jpg


Nielsen’s numbers from Saturday’s telecast include viewers that watched it live on ESPN. Those that streamed the event on laptops or other devices aren’t included in viewership numbers.

ESPN’s most recent primetime boxing telecast, which aired July 21 from Las Vegas, drew a peak audience of 471,000 and an average viewership of 399,000. Mexico’s Oscar Valdez (28-0, 22 KOs), a former WBO featherweight champ, stopped Puerto Rico’s Jayson Velez (29-7-1, 21 KOs) in the 10th and final round of the main event that night at MGM Grand Conference Center.

Three weeks later, Belfast’s Frampton (28-2, 16 KOs) secured his place in a potential 130-pound title fight against Jamel Herring by beating Traynor. Scotland’s Traynor (16-4, 7 KOs) was a late replacement for Latvia’s Vahram Vardanyan (21-1-1, 14 KOs), whose visa issues would’ve prohibited him from entering the United Kingdom to face Frampton.

If Herring (21-2, 10 KOs) successfully defends his WBO junior lightweight title against Puerto Rico’s Jonathan Oquendo (31-6, 19 KOs) on September 5 in Las Vegas, a Herring-Frampton fight could take place sometime in November at a site to be determined.

Conlan (14-0, 8 KOs), another Belfast native, is expected to move down to the junior featherweight limit of 122 pounds for his next fight. He became the second straight opponent to stop France’s Takoucht (35-5-1, 13 KOs).

Sharp (19-0, 9 KOs) barely beat Ofori (10-3-1, 3 KOs), a fellow London native, 96-95, on the scorecard of referee Marcus McDonnell.
 

FreedMind

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Anybody wanna talk about Benavidez doin 198k :whew:


Plant did 1.8 MILLION his last fight




Some of y’all told me Benavidez is a bigger draw tho :lupe:



Yea yea yea Fox vs Showtime N all that but cmon :heh:

This is 100% Rollie's fault. The robbery made everyone turn their TV's off.:scusthov:
 
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