"Malignaggi Will Not Allow Himself To Become a Gatekeeper"

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  • Vito Corleone
    Banned
    • May 2010
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    #1

    "Malignaggi Will Not Allow Himself To Become a Gatekeeper"

    Boxing Could Use More Paul Malignaggi's


    by Colin Linneweber
    Senior Analyst

    Written on May 23, 2010



    Speculation persists that former IBF junior welterweight champion Paulie “The Magic Man” Malignaggi will retire from boxing after he was pounded by WBA world light welterweight champion Amir “King” Khan, via 11th round TKO, last Saturday night at The Theater at Madison Square Garden.



    Khan (23-1, 17 KOs), making his United States debut, thoroughly dominated Malignaggi (27-4, 5 KOs) before referee Steve Smoger mercifully halted the bludgeoning.



    “I ran into a clone of myself when I was younger. But he was faster and stronger,” said Malignaggi, 29, whose only three previous losses came at the respected hands of Miguel Cotto (34-2, 27 KOs), Ricky Hatton (45-2, 32 KOs) and Juan Diaz (35-3, 17 KOs). “He’s bigger and stronger. But I gave it all I had.”


    A few days after he was decisively defeated, Malignaggi wrote on his Twitter account that he would not fight again in the immediate future.


    Malignaggi’s promoter, Tufts University and Harvard Law School graduate Lou DiBella, stated that “The Magic Man” will not allow himself to become a fighter designed to help younger opponents ascend through the ranks.


    Malignaggi, an Italian-American from Brooklyn, is a flamboyant, polarizing prizefighter. It is understandable that many fans consider him to be a scorching hemorrhoid.

    Nevertheless, Malignaggi is a defensive wizard in the ring . He's also is a legitimate pugilist, who possesses exceptional hand-speed and quick reflexes.

    Malignaggi absorbed tremendously violent punishment and abuse in his losses, particularly to Khan, Hatton, and Cotto.


    Still, “The Magic Man” always walked to the ring confident, and prepared to battle.



    Malignaggi may not be an elite, or popular, pugilist.



    However, boxing would be better off if it had more Paul Malignaggis competing in it.
  • Bigdaddy_Vh
    Interim Champion
    Gold Champion - 500-1,000 posts
    • Aug 2006
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    #2
    i have to say that i agree that boxing needs more Malignaggi's. I used to hate Paulie but he has absolutely earned my respect, even in losing. He has the heart that most in boxing do not.

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    • LVfrank
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      • Apr 2010
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      #3
      Always respected Malinaggi

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      • Vito Corleone
        Banned
        • May 2010
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        #4



        On August 16, 2008, a young man named Ronnie Vargas was shot to death. Vargas was a promising young fighter; a three-time New York Golden Gloves champion with an 8-and-0 professional record.


        Four days later, Paulie visited the Ortiz Funeral Home in the Bronx (where the family was sitting) and gave his IBF championship belt to Vargas’ father so Ronnie could be buried as a champion.


        If Paulie has much respect for himself and his body as he has shown over the years for his fellow fighters and boxing, he’ll think seriously about moving on to the next stage of his life.

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