by Cliff Rold - Two weeks from now, it arrives.
The best boxing weekend of 2014…and Showtime. From Friday, September 5, through Saturday, September 6, there will be top-tier fights in four countries, across several weight divisions.
The least significant card of that weekend, on paper, will be on Showtime in the US.
Of the top matches, the bout likely to combine the most tickets sold with the highest number of global television viewers has yet to land anywhere on the US television dial. Recent history suggests it will. Whether it’s an ESPN affiliate (even online) or another cable outlet in the eleventh hour, one would assume there would be somewhere to see a battle for the World Heavyweight Championship.
This isn’t kingpin Wladimir Klitschko (62-3, 52 KO, holder of every Heavyweight honor but the WBC’s) fighting someone like Alex Leapai, a long faded Jean Marc Mormeck, Mariusz Wach, or Francisco Pianeta.
No, this is a real defense against a real challenger.
It might be, in the moment, the best of Klitschko’s challengers. Bulgarian Kubrat Pulev (20-0, 11 KO) earned his shot in 2013, becoming the first man not named Wladimir Klitschko to defeat longtime fixture Tony Thompson since the year 2000. A 2005 World Amateur Bronze Medalist and 2008 Super Heavyweight Olympian, Pulev at nearly 6’5 and weighing around 250 lbs. is one of the few challengers in the division who can match Klitschko’s size. [Click Here To Read More]
The best boxing weekend of 2014…and Showtime. From Friday, September 5, through Saturday, September 6, there will be top-tier fights in four countries, across several weight divisions.
The least significant card of that weekend, on paper, will be on Showtime in the US.
Of the top matches, the bout likely to combine the most tickets sold with the highest number of global television viewers has yet to land anywhere on the US television dial. Recent history suggests it will. Whether it’s an ESPN affiliate (even online) or another cable outlet in the eleventh hour, one would assume there would be somewhere to see a battle for the World Heavyweight Championship.
This isn’t kingpin Wladimir Klitschko (62-3, 52 KO, holder of every Heavyweight honor but the WBC’s) fighting someone like Alex Leapai, a long faded Jean Marc Mormeck, Mariusz Wach, or Francisco Pianeta.
No, this is a real defense against a real challenger.
It might be, in the moment, the best of Klitschko’s challengers. Bulgarian Kubrat Pulev (20-0, 11 KO) earned his shot in 2013, becoming the first man not named Wladimir Klitschko to defeat longtime fixture Tony Thompson since the year 2000. A 2005 World Amateur Bronze Medalist and 2008 Super Heavyweight Olympian, Pulev at nearly 6’5 and weighing around 250 lbs. is one of the few challengers in the division who can match Klitschko’s size. [Click Here To Read More]
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