by David P. Greisman - Take a handful of 135-pound fighters and place them in a bowl. Add a pinch of pugilists who formerly weighed in at 130 pounds, all of whom are now looking to mix it up five pounds north. Stir.
The lightweight division has the right recipe for a meaty, juicy stew, for delicious, fulfilling fights. Take in too much, however, and the weight will get to you. Throw in the wrong ingredients and alphabet soup will ruin the meal.
One cook who has left the kitchen is Nate Campbell, who, quite literally, has grown too big for the division.
Campbell was to defend his three lightweight titles – one each belonging to the International Boxing Federation, World Boxing Association and World Boxing Organization. But he lost his belts at the scales, weighing in at 137.5 pounds.
That was one pound less than what Joan Guzman weighed this past September, one night before he was supposed to have stepped into the ring against Campbell. Guzman never stepped back on the scales. Instead, he was taken to the hospital and treated for dehydration. Campbell and Guzman agreed to fight in an over-the-limit bout, but Guzman pulled out hours before, leaving Campbell without an opponent and without a payday.
“I’m disappointed. There’s a lot of disappointment,” a subdued Campbell said that night. “I really trained hard for this fight. I’m ready to fight right now. I accepted the fight with him over the weight. It didn’t matter to me what he weighed. I just wanted to fight. [details]
The lightweight division has the right recipe for a meaty, juicy stew, for delicious, fulfilling fights. Take in too much, however, and the weight will get to you. Throw in the wrong ingredients and alphabet soup will ruin the meal.
One cook who has left the kitchen is Nate Campbell, who, quite literally, has grown too big for the division.
Campbell was to defend his three lightweight titles – one each belonging to the International Boxing Federation, World Boxing Association and World Boxing Organization. But he lost his belts at the scales, weighing in at 137.5 pounds.
That was one pound less than what Joan Guzman weighed this past September, one night before he was supposed to have stepped into the ring against Campbell. Guzman never stepped back on the scales. Instead, he was taken to the hospital and treated for dehydration. Campbell and Guzman agreed to fight in an over-the-limit bout, but Guzman pulled out hours before, leaving Campbell without an opponent and without a payday.
“I’m disappointed. There’s a lot of disappointment,” a subdued Campbell said that night. “I really trained hard for this fight. I’m ready to fight right now. I accepted the fight with him over the weight. It didn’t matter to me what he weighed. I just wanted to fight. [details]
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