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A Woman's View: Klitschko vs. Ibragimov

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  • #11
    Originally posted by potatoes View Post
    What Amy doesn't understand is that if Klitschko had thrown the right more often he would also have left himself open to a counter more often. Klitschko simply wasn't in the best position to throw the right and it is foolish to miss a lot when you are fighting a counter-puncher. Amy also predicted an early knockout, and that is another indication that she has many more things to learn about boxing.
    But with the double jab backing it up, he wouldn't have. Hopkins doubled jabbed/right hand lead Tarver all night and that did great sucessful for him in a good fight.


    lol whats so special about this article? and how is the fact that she is a woman relevant?

    the article was a simple recap and people are talkin as if she should get a pulitzer
    I completely agree.

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    • #12
      Originally posted by MassageQueen View Post
      As far as I'm concerned the fight was BORINGGGGGGGG! Even though
      I was going for Klitschko to win all I was yelling out throughout the
      fight was "double jab and THROW A STRAIGHT RIGHT!!!" I feel that Wladimir
      had many more opportunities to actually use his right.. It's not like Ivragimov had any power that could possibly hurt Klitschko anyway.. so idk what everyone is talking about how he had to be so careful not to get caught.. Didn't anyone check out the compubox numbers?? Ivragimov wasn't exactly very accurate.. I like Klitschko, and I'm glad he won, but I miss the days when heavyweight fights were actually exciting..



      ...Wlady will step it up in his next fight. It was an awkward fight against an awkward opponent. I like this Article by Dan Rafael and I usually hate that guy.

      Klitschko routs Ibragimov, unifies IBF and WBO titles


      By Dan Rafael
      ESPN.com
      (Archive)



      NEW YORK -- At last, the heavyweight division has a unified champion.

      Wladimir Klitschko is that man.

      It was not a scintillating fight and nobody will compare it to Ali-Frazier, but Klitschko dominated pesky Sultan Ibragimov on Saturday night to win a lopsided unanimous decision before 14,011 at Madison Square Garden as he unified his world title belt with Ibragimov's.

      That leaves two more belts to go for Klitschko, one owned by Oleg Maskaev and the other by Ruslan Chagaev, who was ringside.

      But Klitschko has a leg up on them and, in a division in which he is so clearly at the top, deserves to be called the champion, not a mere titleholder.

      Klitschko was excited to have finally accomplished one of his primary goals of unifying belts despite the less-than-stellar bout, which he won 119-110, 118-110 and 117-111.

      ESPN.com also scored it for Klitschko, 118-110.

      "The result counts," he said. "I'm happy to get the WBO belt back because it was the first belt I won [in 2000 before losing it in 2003]."

      But Klitschko, who also has the IBF title, knows there is more work to do.

      [+] Enlarge
      Wladimir Klitschko

      AP Photo/Frank Franklin II

      Klitschko isn't about to rest on his laurels; he'd like to unify the entire heavyweight division.
      "I just want to continue beating everyone to unify the rest of the belts," Klitschko said.

      "I want to get the other two belts now."

      That could be tough. Chagaev is looking at a meaningless fight against journeyman Luan Krasniqi.

      Maskaev faces Samuel Peter on March 8 in Cancun, Mexico, and the winner will be obligated to face Vitali Klitschko, Wladimir's older brother.

      Still, this fight was a step in the right direction.

      It was the first unification bout in the division since Lennox Lewis outpointed Evander Holyfield in their 1999 rematch. And in an era when the division has been almost anonymous since the 2004 retirement of universally recognized champion Lewis -- who was ringside working HBO's broadcast -- it desperately needs a leader.

      Klitschko has long been regarded as the No. 1 heavyweight and now maybe, just maybe, some will call him champ.

      From Lewis' retirement until Saturday, the four major organizations sanctioned 33 so-called world heavyweight championship fights. So unifying has to count for something.

      Besides, Klitschko has reigned longer than any of the other titleholders. He has dominated in all four of his defenses.

      He finally picked up another belt.

      And he received the endorsement of vanquished Ibragimov.

      When asked whether he viewed Klitschko as the legitimate champion of the division, Ibragimov was on board. He nodded his head in approval.

      It was almost a walk in the park for Klitschko against Ibragimov, a southpaw from Russia who won the silver medal in the 2000 Olympics.

      Ukraine's Klitschko -- himself a gold medalist in 1996 -- beat him almost solely with his jab, a damaging, powerful left that he relied on from the opening bell.

      He never even threw a right hand until the fourth round.

      In the end, Klitschko (50-3, 44 KOs) landed 148 of 348 blows (43 percent) -- 108 of them jabs. Ibragimov (22-1-1, 17 KOs), who spent most of the fight leaning back and refusing to engage, landed only 97 of 316 blows (31 percent), not nearly enough to do any damage against 31-year-old Klitschko, who is 6-foot-5, three inches taller than Ibragimov.

      "I thought Klitschko was a lot faster tonight than in his last few fights," said Ibragimov, 32, whose title reign came to an end less than a year after he beat Shannon Briggs to win his title this past summer and followed it up with one defense, in October against Holyfield. "My plan was to work on being more active and come straight forward, but it was tough because this guy held a lot. I did not feel hurt at all, but I felt like Klitschko was winning."

      The first six rounds were as tactical and uninteresting as a prize fight can get. As the fighters circled each other and punched each other's gloves, the crowd grew restless and booed. It was hard to blame people.

      The booing continued into the seventh, but in the eighth, there finally was a brief burst of action as Klitschko rattled Ibragimov with combination. But the moment was all too brief.

      Early in the ninth, Klitschko knocked Ibragimov into the ropes and seemed to have him hurt. Ibragimov was on shaky legs and winging wild shots to no avail.

      Klitschko hurt him with a pair of right hands in the 11th, but the round was moments from ending and he couldn't follow up.

      However, Klitschko was in complete control and the second belt was just a few minutes away. Unifying belts has been so important to Klitschko that he accepted a pay cut to make the fight with Ibragimov, giving him a 50-50 deal.

      "To be the heavyweight champion means a lot," Klitschko said before the fight. "The title is very special and is different than other titles in sport. The heavyweight champion can use that title to inspire people outside of the ring all over the world."

      He's on his way.

      Comment


      • #13
        Originally posted by potatoes View Post
        What Amy doesn't understand is that if Klitschko had thrown the right more often he would also have left himself open to a counter more often. Klitschko simply wasn't in the best position to throw the right and it is foolish to miss a lot when you are fighting a counter-puncher. Amy also predicted an early knockout, and that is another indication that she has many more things to learn about boxing.
        Well she said early means 8th round and a lot of people had their ko around that round.

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        • #14
          Without women, would Wlad have a fan?

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          • #15
            Originally posted by DiegoFuego View Post
            Without women, would Wlad have a fan?
            Not all men hate heavyweight champs who've won 50 fights, including 44 KOs, and have two world titles.

            Do you always have to be so ******, Diego?

            Comment


            • #16
              Originally posted by Tunney View Post
              Do you always have to be so ******, Diego?
              There's no way he can answer that correctly. If he says no, it's because he's ******. If he says yes, he's ******.

              Comment


              • #17
                No, the fight was very exciting ... watching it from the ringside in MSG. I liked the walk-in part the most (just kidding), with both Sultan and Wladimir passing by just 3 feet away.

                Comment


                • #18
                  Originally posted by ExecutiveOutlaw View Post
                  lol whats so special about this article? and how is the fact that she is a woman relevant?

                  the article was a simple recap and people are talkin as if she should get a pulitzer. i swear some of you need girlfriends

                  whos the hottie in your avatar?

                  Comment


                  • #19
                    Originally posted by ExecutiveOutlaw View Post
                    lol whats so special about this article? and how is the fact that she is a woman relevant?

                    the article was a simple recap and people are talkin as if she should get a pulitzer. i swear some of you need girlfriends
                    Well... it is a very fluid and precise recap, which is exactly what the official BS writers lack.

                    Also, I think the phrase "a Woman's View" in the title of the article intends to emphasize the neatness, precision, and fluidity with which a woman can express her ideas.

                    Comment


                    • #20
                      Originally posted by Tunney View Post
                      Not all men hate heavyweight champs who've won 50 fights, including 44 KOs, and have two world titles.

                      Do you always have to be so ******, Diego?
                      lol,,,thats been his attitude ever since his idol hasim the bum rahman got whooped again by maskeav. now all europeans are bums

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