View Full Version : Adamek, Valuev and Casamayor Move Forward


chop
10-10-2006, 02:10 PM
By Tom Donelson

Adamek leads yet another European invasion!

Tomasz Adamek entered the final stanza knowing that his title was on the line. In the first round, he hit the canvas from a Paul Briggs left hook and throughout the fight, Briggs' right hand found a home upon Adamek face.

There was a definitely back and forth flow in many of the rounds. Adamek used his quick hands to unleash his combinations, but Briggs' punches had more impact and Briggs was actually the more accurate puncher despite being outpunched.

This was a fight with many close rounds and Adamek came away with a split decision by the smallest of margins. In the final round, both Adamek and Briggs exchanged punches with Adamek gaining the edge as he found just enough energy to pull out the last round. Two of the judges gave Adamek the advantages in many of the close rounds but no one really complained about the decision. Instead, they were treated to what was the best fight of the weekend, and of the best of the entire year.

The light heavyweight division is becoming more competitive and Adamek is just one good fighter fighting for his claim to be the best. Hungarian fighter Zsolt Erdei is the WBO champion and like Adamek, undefeated. Clinton Woods finally exercised a few ghosts when he took a close bout from Glen Johnson in a defense of his IBF title. And Frenchman Fabrice Tiozzo holds the WBA light heavyweight title. Just in case, you have missed the pattern; all of these champions are European.

With Roy Jones, Jr. on the downside of his career and Antonio Tarver recovering from a whipping at the hands of Bernard Hopkins, Europeans have simply taken over the top slots of the division just as they had done in the Heavyweight division.

The major American challenger is Chad Dawson, who goes to Europe to challenge the once defeated Croatian fighter Stipe Drews. Adamek showed heart and excellent boxing skills in defending his title against the rugged Paul Briggs, who showed himself a worthy challenger.

Valuev Shows Up

No one will confuse Nikolai Valuev with one of the all time greats. He is big, plodding Heavyweight with slow hands but he does have two important features. He appears to be able to take a punch and he has endurance. Monte Barrett hit Valuev with wild rights and sharp heft hooks, but nothing that Barrett did appear to faze him. The critics will point out that his punches appear to lack punch for a man his size and his hands speed will not remind us of Ali.

After pounding and mauling Barrett for eleven rounds, Valuev has shown that he can beat second tier heavyweights. Over the past year, He has beaten Larry Donald and John Ruiz in two close bouts, and smacked Owen "What the Heck" Beck around for three rounds. Valuev has yet to challenge an elite heavyweight, but we now know he can at least beat top twenty heavyweights.

Casamayor finally does it.

For the past decade, Joel Casamayor has always fallen short. He never got a chance to fight Floyd Mayweather and lost close bouts to Arcelino Freitas, Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo. One of the better junior lightweight/lightweight fighters since he left Cuba, he always seemed to fall short in the big bouts. These losses were close decisions that could have easily gone the other way. It just seemed that Casamayor fell short by inches. Inches away from true greatness.

A draw against Kid Diamond last year showed a boxer on the downside of his career as his speed appeared to be waning. This past Saturday, he finally put some of those ghosts back in the closet as he defeated Corrales for the second time in three meetings. Yes, it was close and it was a split decision but this time, he got the benefit of the doubt and this was after Corrales came into the fight closer to a welterweight than a lightweight.

For one night, Casamayor fought, as if he was 25-years-old and not 35. Now he is the official king of the lightweights and looking for big paydays as his age starts to become a factor.

Lethal730
10-10-2006, 02:13 PM
Valuev would have beaten Ali in his prime..

chop
10-10-2006, 02:21 PM
psssssssss get out of here with that bollocks

Ali beat guys 10 times better than that freak, anyway do not derail my thread

you can have you're own noobie thread

Lethal730
10-10-2006, 03:04 PM
just wanted to see your reaction to that statement

chop
10-10-2006, 03:14 PM
I thought so...

dont play with my feelings like that bro :(

Jim
10-14-2006, 10:12 AM
The Briggs/Adamek fight was a cracker & completely overshadowed the main event.
Colonel Bob referred to it as one the best fights he's EVER commentated,comparing it to Ali/Frazier in Manilla.
I'd love to see Adamek/Kessler or Briggs/Kessler.

chop
10-14-2006, 11:26 AM
Briggs would be to big for Kessler, Mundine will take him if they ever have a rematch

it was a great fight and Briggs was robbed by the judges imo
I had Briggs up by atleast 3 points and Adamek even lost a point for low blows
there first fight was a war also

Jim
10-14-2006, 11:40 AM
I missed their 1st fight.
I was pulling for Briggs all the way but Adamek deserved the nod I thought.I just feel that Briggs didn't do quite enough to take the title from the champ,Adamek finished the fight strong too,I had to give him the 12th rd.
Kessler is a monster at 168,he beat Choc handily in their 1st fight & rumour has it that he only trained 2-3 weeks because of a back injury.
Kessler should hammer Beyer.

chop
10-14-2006, 12:01 PM
Briggs might have looked worse in the later rounds but if you watch it closely you can see he is blocking most of Adameks punches
he lost the 12th but definately won the 11th, I scored it after watching it again and I had Briggs 3 points up, I wasnt doing a very unbiased scoring to because in my head I though Adamek won at first but when it cam to scoring the fight I had Briggs up by 3 points

anyway it was one hell of a fight and I hope they go at it again one more time

Jim
10-14-2006, 10:42 PM
I havn't followed boxing as closely as I have in the past,I do preference mma these days but I found a live stream site recently to watch the good fights so its kind of resparked my interest.I don't have PPV so its very handy & free.

chop
10-15-2006, 03:45 AM
awesome, wanna pm me the link?

I am the same, I always loved boxing but I didnt have internet for so long or ppv so I went off whatever I seen live or at the pub