Top Rank: Pavlik-Chavez bout ‘still possible’
Published: Wed, July 21, 2010 @ 12:10 a.m.
By JOE SCALZO
YOUNGSTOWN
Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. is a 24-year-old boxer with an unbeaten record (41-0-1, 30 KOs), a top ranking (the WBC’s No. 1 contender), a big name (thanks in large part to his famous father) and, presumably, a bright future.
And at some point in the last few days, Chavez’s handlers took a step back, reconsidered the wisdom of putting their fighter in the ring with Kelly Pavlik in December and decided, well, maybe it wasn’t all that wise.
So, according to several accounts, they nixed it.
Now, Top Rank chairman Bob Arum is hoping to “de-nix” it.
“The fight is not completely off yet,” Top Rank spokesman Lee Samuels said Tuesday night. “Bob thinks it’s a very attractive fight. He still wants to make it.
“It’s still possible. There’s still some life in it.”
Members of Pavlik’s camp were told Monday night that the fight was off. The original date — Dec. 4 — had already been nixed because the proposed venue, Dallas Cowboys Stadium, will hold the Big 12 championship game that day. But Arum, who put together a Manny Pacquiao-Joshua Clottey bout in Dallas in March, is still very interested in having Pavlik headline a bout at Cowboys Stadium.
Pavlik’s co-manager, Cameron Dunkin, said the Chavez fight fell apart after Top Rank president Todd duBoef and matchmaker Bruce Trampler approached Chavez’s trainer, Freddie Roach, and told him it was a “dumb fight.” Top Rank, which promotes Pavlik and Chavez, persuaded Roach to pull out, a decision that didn’t surprise Pavlik’s trainer, Jack Loew.
“Top Rank is the only one being smart here,” Loew said. “I’ve seen this kid fight. He’s not that good. I knew they’d have to come to reality.
“We would have ruined that kid’s career. That may have been one of our easiest fights in the last eight freaking years.”
The cancellation angered Dunkin, who has grown frustrated with Top Rank over the past few months, believing Pavlik’s April loss to Sergio Martinez soured the company on his fighter. He’s even asked Top Rank to release Pavlik from his contract, something the company has no plans to do.
“There’s no plans to lose Kelly Pavlik; he’s one of the top fighters in our company,” said Samuels, who said the company was considering 168-pound fighters until Dunkin told them Pavlik was open to staying at 160. “Losing a fight is not the end of the world. We were here in the 1980s with Hagler, Hearns, Duran and Leonard and they all had losses.”