Rahman´s WBA ranking explanation

Collapse
Collapse
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Evil Abed
    The Darkest Timeline...
    Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
    • Nov 2009
    • 21964
    • 979
    • 1,320
    • 30,552

    #1

    Rahman´s WBA ranking explanation

    Rahman´s WBA ranking explanation
    by Gilberto Jesus Mendoza Alvarado on Wednesday, September 7, 2011 at 8:36pm
    This is the criteria used by the ratings committee.
    Hasim Rahman - record (50-7-2) 41ko (USA).
    Former: WBC, IBF and IBO heavyweight champion
    Fought WBA Interim Heavyweight Title vs John Ruiz
    The year 2010 fought 4 times and won 2 by KO and other 2 by TKO
    The year 2011 fought in the month of June and won by TKO6.
    The most active heavyweight contender the year 2010
    Entered the WBA rankings in the month of August, 2010 as #14 taking into
    consideration his record and activity.
    Was promoted to #6 taken into consideration his activity and caliber.
    In November 2010, was promoted to #5 after Valuev demotion.
    Then remained #5 till the month of May 2011.
    In June was promoted #4 due to activity, had just fought
    In July was promoted #3 due to Boytsov inactivity.
    In August promoted to #1 , after Povetkin becoming new Heavyweight champion and Chagaev demoted after losing to Povetkin.
    Rahman, scenario is exactly the same to the current super middle division
    where, the #1 conteder Stanyslav Khastanov lost to the #2 contender Karoly Balzsay for the vacant title, then Dimitri Sartison rated #3 is being
    promoted to the #1 position after Khastanov was demoted and Balzsay became champion.

    Log into Facebook to start sharing and connecting with your friends, family, and people you know.


    This is in response to Dan Rafael from the WBA.
  • Evil Abed
    The Darkest Timeline...
    Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
    • Nov 2009
    • 21964
    • 979
    • 1,320
    • 30,552

    #2
    Dan's response.

    @danrafaelespn
    Dan Rafael
    @GilberticoWBA Rationalization. Hasim Rahman at No. 1 does not pass the ha ha test. Blatantly wrong call. It is a disgrace.

    Comment

    • daggum
      All time great
      Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
      • Feb 2008
      • 43681
      • 4,650
      • 3
      • 166,270

      #3
      it makes perfect sense. valuev and ruiz are now retired so who else can be the #1 contender? it must be rahman!

      Comment

      • Evil Abed
        The Darkest Timeline...
        Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
        • Nov 2009
        • 21964
        • 979
        • 1,320
        • 30,552

        #4
        ..................bump

        Comment

        • Perfect Plex
          Undisputed Champion
          Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
          • Aug 2010
          • 2387
          • 63
          • 72
          • 9,770

          #5
          ''Was promoted to #6 taken into consideration his activity and caliber''.

          He's fought no one.

          Comment

          • odogg8121
            Undisputed Champion
            Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
            • Sep 2008
            • 1720
            • 66
            • 162
            • 9,961

            #6
            Well i wish i fought a lot of the top fighters, so should I be ranked #2 bahahaha; im just saying

            Comment

            • joe strong
              Average Joe
              Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
              • Jan 2009
              • 17972
              • 1,813
              • 868
              • 58,015

              #7
              i posted a thread a week or so ago about sasha has 90 days to sign to fight rahman...by what buddy just described about rahman could be said about oliver mccall who has fought & beat better competition.mccall has beaten name fighters with a close loss to boswell thrown in there & he had boswell hurt a few times & could have got the decision.i like rahman but he doesnt even own a regional belt.he has been active the last few years & could deserve a top 15 but # 1 is BS...

              Comment

              • joe strong
                Average Joe
                Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
                • Jan 2009
                • 17972
                • 1,813
                • 868
                • 58,015

                #8
                According to insider sources, the winner of this fight will have 90 days to defend their new WBA heavyweight title against a former two-time heavyweight champion who was also a "lineal" champion. He will always have significance because, as opposed to most titleholders, he's "the man who beat the man" and is part of the same championship lineage as Jack Johnson, Rocky Marciano, Muhammad Ali and Mike Tyson.

                Hasim Rahman.

                Nicknamed "The Rock", Hasim Rahman (50-7-2-1 NC, 41 KOs) began his professional career at age 22 and is a former WBC, IBF, and IBO world heavyweight champion. He won the titles in 2001 after a shocking one-punch knockout of Lennox Lewis in Round 5. Lewis regained his titles in their rematch seven months later.

                In 2005, the WBC designated Rahman as Vitali Klitschko's next mandatory challenger - the fight was set for April 30. Following several postponements, Vitali retired and the WBC voted to award its heavyweight championship to Rahman, making him a two time heavyweight champion. He lost the title the following year to Oleg Maskaev.

                After losing to Wladimir Klitschko in December 2008, Rahman would take a 15 month hiatus before staging one last run at a major heavyweight title. Since March 2010, the Rock is 5-0, 5 KOs and has beaten:
                Clinton Boldridge, KO 1
                Shannon Miller, TKO 4
                Damon Reed, KO 6
                Marcus McGee, KO 1
                Galen Brown, TKO 6

                Analyzing Rahman
                Hasim, 38, possesses a powerful jab, potent right hand and a reach that spans 82-84". He has excellent timing and is very aggressive in attacking with his power punches. The Rock also knows when to turn on the heat on his opponents and is known to be a good finisher. Rahman, because of his power and long reach, is a threat to anyone in the heavyweight division and dangerous at all times. Regardless of who's winning on the scorecards, a fighter like Rahman is always in the fight.

                Rahman vs Povetkin
                Alexander Povetkin (21-0, 15 KOs), of Russia, is currently the WBA's No. 2 world-rated heavyweight contender. He's a former Olympic gold medalist and perhaps one of the most accomplished amateur boxers ever. His professional boxing resume includes a knockout victory over former two-time heavyweight champion Chris Byrd, and unanimous decision victories over one-time heavyweight title challenger Eddie Chambers and former U.S. Olympians Jason Estrada and Larry Donald. Povetkin has won three of his last four bouts by knockout.

                If Rahman fights Povetkin, he must discombobulate the highly skilled Russian. Povetkin will attempt to fight at angles and use decent hand-speed at close quarters to punish Rahman with combinations. The Rock's jab will have to work overtime as the former champion should attempt to keep Povetkin off rhythm and at long range and force Povetkin to be on the defensive most of the fight. If Rahman can unload his big right-hand and hurt Povetkin early, he has a chance to knock the Russian off his gameplan.

                Rahman vs Chagaev
                Ruslan Chagaev (27-1-1, 17 KOs), a native of Ukraine who fights out of Berlin, Germany, captured the WBA heavyweight title when he dethroned 7-foot tall defending champion Nikolai Valuev via a majority decision in April 2007. It would be Valuev's first loss in 47 fights. During his two-year reign, Chagaev successfully defended his title with a unanimous decision over Matt Skelton (then 21-1) and a technical decision over Carl Drumond (then 26-0). Since losing to Wladimir Klitschko in June 2009, Chagaev has defeated Kali Meehan (then 35-3) and Travis Walker (then 34-5-1) to become the WBA's No. 1 heavyweight contender.

                If Rahman fights Chagaev, the Rock must be wary of Ruslan's excellent left-hand which he throws from a southpaw stance. Chagaev's loves using his left and throws it effectively to the head and body. Ruslan's southpaw stance might pose a problem as the orthodox fighters , like Rahman, are not used to fighting southpaws. In order to win, Rahman must take away Chagaev's left-hand by moving to his left to avoid Ruslan's power. Rahman must also find or create opportunities where he can land his big right hand. The Rock would have a decisive reach advantage over Chagaev and must use it to his advantage to nullify Chagaev's southpaw advantage.

                Interesting Match-Ups
                Rahman's power, size, reach and experience should make for an interesting fight regardless who he faces. There's little doubt, though, the Rock will be the underdog - especially since his opponent will have home field advantage. In order to win, Rahman must score a knockout or TKO - or knock his opponent down a few times or pitch a virtual shutout en route to winning a decision.

                If Rahman is looking to outbox Povetkin or Chagaev, he should stay home. Even if Hasim manages to outpoint his opponent in a competeive bout, its unlikely he'll be awarded a decision, given the fight will take place in Russia or Germany.

                Fortunately for Rahman, Chagaev and Povetkin are aggressive, offensive fighters who will be more vulnerable than the defensive-minded Wladimir Klitschko. Rahman needs to fight a "war" - not a chess match. Controlled violence is the key to victory for Hasim... And, as Lennox Lewis can attest, Rahman is well-capable of ending a fight with one punch...this is what i posted

                Comment

                Working...
                TOP