Vasyl lomachenko named 2017 ring magazine fighter of the year!

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  • oscar9992
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    #1

    Vasyl lomachenko named 2017 ring magazine fighter of the year!

    VASYL LOMACHENKO NAMED 2017 RING MAGAZINE FIGHTER OF THE YEAR




    In the 89-year history of THE RING’s Fighter of the Year award, no boxer has ever earned the honor with as few fights under his belt as Vasyl Lomachenko has. Then again, few have achieved as much as the Ukrainian amateur star did after only 11 pro bouts.

    Lomachenko (10-1, 8 knockouts) was selected as THE RING’s Prospect of the Year in 2013 after only one fight – his Oct. 12 pro debut against Jose Ramirez. Eight months after that impressive fourth-round KO, the wizardly southpaw won his first world title, the vacant WBO featherweight belt, by taking Gary Russell Jr. to school over 12 rounds. (Lomachenko’s boxing clinic against the highly touted unbeaten U.S. Olympian was performed in his third pro bout, just three months after he received his own education in gritty pro tactics via 12-round split-decision loss to grizzled veteran Orlando Salido.)

    Two years and three title defenses later, he won his second world title in a second weight class, the WBO 130-pound belt, with a fifth-round KO of Roman Martinez. His first defense – an embarrassingly one-sided mastery of Nicholas Walters that forced the unbeaten former featherweight titleholder to pull a “No Mas” after seven rounds – was so impressive that he instantly jumped into the top half of most pound-for-pound lists by the end of 2016.

    So, what made Lomachenko’s 2017 so special? Why was he selected as THE RING’s Fighter of the Year over worthy candidates such as Terence Crawford, Anthony Joshua, Mikey Garcia and Srisaket Sor Rungvisai?

    For starters, he fought more than the other standouts in 2017 – three times – continuing to outclass and bewilder opposition to between-rounds retirements, but he also made large strides toward transitioning from a boxing-world phenom to the kind of general sports standout recognized by casual fans and mainstream media.

    Lomachenko’s humiliating brand of dominance was expected against his first two opponents of 2017, Jason Sosa and Miguel Marriaga, both solid contenders that will give any other world-class featherweight or junior lightweight a grueling night. Lomachenko forced the battle-tested scrappers to remain on their stools after nine and seven rounds, respectively, and he didn’t mind showboating as he gradually picked them apart from every conceivable angle.

    Although Lomachenko was favored to beat his third opponent of 2017, fellow two-time Olympic gold medalist Guillermo Rigondeaux, he wasn’t expected to have his way with the counter-punching master.

    Rigondeaux, who carried a 17-0 pro record into their anticipated showdown at The Theater inside Madison Square Garden, was the older of the two savvy left-handers (37 to 29) and moving up from the 122-pound division, but the Cuban also brought with him a style that many believed was impossible to dominate or look good against.

    Lomachenko did both en route to Rigondeaux’s inglorious retirement after six rounds.

    Lomachenko downplayed the victory during his post-fight interviews, basically stating that he did what he was supposed to do, but there can be no downplaying of his boxing ability or his rising stature in the sports world.

    Lomachenko appears to be on his way to becoming a bona-fide attraction. It was literally standing room only inside the 5,000-seat Theater (with no space for comps or auxiliary media and tickets rumored to be going for three times face value on the secondary market prior to the ESPN-televised card). Promoter Bob Arum says the two-division titleholder will fight at least three times next year, perhaps once in the “big room” of Madison Square Garden. Lomachenko is clearly done with small venues and fighting in front of limited TV audiences.

    Lomachenko-Rigondeaux was watched by 1.73 million on ESPN (twice the number of viewers that tuned into a UFC offering on FS1 that was broadcast during the same time slot). It was ESPN’s highest-rated show on December 9, exceeding viewers for the Heisman Trophy presentation and the MLS Cup.

    Lomachenko’s future fights will be televised on Top Rank’s new network partner, ESPN, which contributed to his crossover appeal in 2017 and will undoubtedly enhance his popularity in the U.S. in coming years.

    For now, he’s the toast of the boxing world, where hardcore fans use his name as an adjective or verb when expounding on their favorite sport via social media. A talented prospect like Josh Kelly might be described as having “Lomachenko-esque” moves. A fighter who is bewildered into submission might be said to have been “Lomachenko’d.”

    Lomachenko’s reputation has been established enough in 2017 that boxing geeks now argue how he would fare in a mythical matchup with a prime Floyd Mayweather Jr. at 130 pounds.

    However, Lomachenko isn’t interested in the future hall of famer, but rather one of the standouts of Mayweather Promotions, former IBF 130-pound beltholder Gervonta Davis. His “call out” to Davis, which was directed at Mayweather’s official Twitter account, attracted a lot of attention and eventually pulled Mikey Garcia into the social media conversation.

    Lomachenko eventually Tweeted a poll of four potential opponents – Miguel Berchelt, Garcia, Davis and Jorge Linares – which has garnered more than 40,000 votes. Garcia and Davis received the most votes, but if he can get any two of the four in the ring in 2018 he’ll likely be a strong candidate for back-to-back Fighter of the Year honors.

    RUNNERS UP:
    Anthony Joshua
    Terence Crawford
    Mikey Garcia
    Srisaket Sor Rungvisai

    Following “Fighter of the Year” tradition, Vasyl Lomachenko will feature as cover star in the next issue of RING Magazine.
  • dan_cov
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    #2
    So beating a journeyman a weight below and a 38yr old two weight divisions below who didn't even attempt to win gets you this prestigious title these days?

    May as well start just handing it to everyone then free with a happy meal as they do world titles.

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    • Mr Objecitivity
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      #3
      Originally posted by dan_cov
      So beating a journeyman a weight below and a 38yr old two weight divisions below who didn't even attempt to win gets you this prestigious title these days?

      May as well start just handing it to everyone then free with a happy meal as they do world titles.
      Beating Rigondeaux (especially in the manner that Lomachenko did) is a better feat than pretty much any feat any other boxer has displayed this year in my honest opinion.

      Also, Rigondeaux was 37 years old at the time of his bout against Lomachenko and not 38. At least be honest and not lie.

      Lomachenko's bout against Miguel Marriaga only occurred because he needed an opponent after his initial bout against Orlando Salido was cancelled after Salido refused to accept the bout from taking place. Pretty much no other boxer was willing to face Lomachenko so he faced Marriaga as a result, who wasn't even his best opponent anyway but was available at the time.

      Also, Lomachenko beat Jason Sosa who was previously unbeaten and in a way nobody else has. He is also one of the best boxers in that division.

      So taking into consideration all of these factors, Lomachenko clearly deserves this prize. Unless you can name me another boxer with better display of feats and accomplishments than Lomachenko's?

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      • dan_cov
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        #4
        Originally posted by Mr Objecitivity
        Beating Rigondeaux (especially in the manner that Lomachenko did) is a better feat than pretty much any feat any other boxer has displayed this year in my honest opinion.

        Also, Rigondeaux was 37 years old at the time of his bout against Lomachenko and not 38. At least be honest and not lie.

        Lomachenko's bout against Miguel Marriaga only occurred because he needed an opponent after his initial bout against Orlando Salido was cancelled after Salido refused to accept the bout from taking place. Pretty much no other boxer was willing to face Lomachenko so he faced Marriaga as a result, who wasn't even his best opponent anyway but was available at the time.

        Also, Lomachenko beat Jason Sosa who was previously unbeaten and in a way nobody else has. He is also one of the best boxers in that division.

        So taking into consideration all of these factors, Lomachenko clearly deserves this prize. Unless you can name me another boxer with better display of feats and accomplishments than Lomachenko's?

        37\38 like it makes a difference absolutely ancient for a sbw though its funny you should tell me not to lie by getting his age wrong by a yr, a simple honest mistake unlike you trying to sell some bs about Jason Sosa being undefeated, wth? And no he isn't one of the best at the weight he's a gatekeeper that's lost just about everytime he's stepped up.

        Again as I keep saying I'm a Loma fan but all you lot want to do is crown him and gift him all these accolades by pretending his competition is something it isn't just like the same people did with GGGs opponents which were proven to be **** like any sane fan said all along.

        Loma is simply brilliant but lets not all try sell his resume like dodgy used car salesman.

        Sor Rungvisai deserved it more twice beating the P4P #1 including a shocking, stunning one punch knockout.

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        • Madison Boxing
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          #5
          On behalf of nsb, congratulations to lomachenko, well deserved.

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          • b00g13man
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            #6
            Rungvisai is getting shafted all over imo. The same media that universally crowned Gonzalez #1 don't appear willing to acknowledge the brutal dethroning.

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            • Tony Trick-Pony
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              #7
              Good for Loma!

              I'm glad he's fighting three times in 2018.

              The way he goes through these guys untouched, he can definitely fight pretty often.

              He'll never get to as many fights as the guy he reminds me of-Willy Pep- but he can definitely put in a lot of work for the archives.

              If he could get Berchelt, Linares and Mikey and beat them all, he definitely gets back-to-back FOTY.

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              • Tony Trick-Pony
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                #8
                Originally posted by Mr Objecitivity
                Beating Rigondeaux (especially in the manner that Lomachenko did) is a better feat than pretty much any feat any other boxer has displayed this year in my honest opinion.

                Also, Rigondeaux was 37 years old at the time of his bout against Lomachenko and not 38. At least be honest and not lie.

                Lomachenko's bout against Miguel Marriaga only occurred because he needed an opponent after his initial bout against Orlando Salido was cancelled after Salido refused to accept the bout from taking place. Pretty much no other boxer was willing to face Lomachenko so he faced Marriaga as a result, who wasn't even his best opponent anyway but was available at the time.

                Also, Lomachenko beat Jason Sosa who was previously unbeaten and in a way nobody else has. He is also one of the best boxers in that division.

                So taking into consideration all of these factors, Lomachenko clearly deserves this prize. Unless you can name me another boxer with better display of feats and accomplishments than Lomachenko's?
                Man, ever since this fight was announced, people have been skewing the age. Haha. It's a cheap tactic but clearly many will stoop to it. I've seen Rigo being 38, 39, 47, and so forth. Then you correct them on the age and they say whatever. Clearly a tactic to run down Loma with lies.

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                • Pretty Boy32
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                  #9
                  Rightly so, an outstanding talent

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                  • Mr Objecitivity
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by anthonydavid11
                    Man, ever since this fight was announced, people have been skewing the age. Haha. It's a cheap tactic but clearly many will stoop to it. I've seen Rigo being 38, 39, 47, and so forth. Then you correct them on the age and they say whatever. Clearly a tactic to run down Loma with lies.
                    Yup, it's always possible to diminish any boxer's success / victory / accomplishment by nitpicking certain imperfections

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