white is right
Hall of Famer
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2006
- Messages
- 10,160
Big farce
Comparing massive Valuev to Marciano is a joke
Nikolay Valuev has a questionable 44-0 record.
NEW YORK -- The circus was in town Wednesday, when WBA heavyweight champion Nikolay Valuev made the first stop of his whirlwind U.S. tour inside a tiny room in the Russian Firebird Restaurant in midtown Manhattan. Small by design, perhaps; the size of the room only made the giant Russian look that much bigger. Accompanying Valuev (besides a hoard of Russian media) were the usual theatrics that come with any Don King promotion, including a WWE-esque smoke entrance and a made-to-scale replica of the Empire State Building.
For most of the assembled masses, it was their first look (and one they waited an extra hour for while King apparently had Valuev brokering peace deals at the United Nations) at the 7-foot-2, 335-pound Valuev, who at age 33 has strung together a sterling 44-0 record by knocking out relative unknowns and robbing legitimate fighters.
Am I being too harsh?
John Ruiz doesn't think so. It was Ruiz who first put Valuev on the boxing map when he agreed to face him in Germany last December for his WBA title. For 12 rounds the methodical Ruiz -- giving away 11 inches and nearly 100 pounds -- battered the Russian only to have the decision taken away from him by a trio of judges, any one of whom would make Henry Hill look like an honest man. Afterward the crowd of 10,000, which had been pro-Valuev before the fight, roundly booed the new champion, voicing their disgust for, as Ruiz put it, "their own guy." Later, Valuev's exiled former promoter would say that he believed the WBA had been blinded by Valuev's massive physique and that, in his opinion, "Valuev lost every round of that fight."
King doesn't think so, but then again, King thinks he's promoting the next Rocky Marciano. While being careful not to compare the two directly, King made several references Wednesday to Valuev's approach of Marciano's 49-fight winning streak.
But Valuev's inflated win total has come against a host of has-beens headlined by Ruiz (who had unofficially retired before the Valuev fight, only to return when the WBA stripped James Toney of the belt after he tested positive for steroids) and Larry Donald. In his last fight Valuev battered journeyman Owen Beck, who afterward claimed to be relieved that he "didn't go home in an ambulance." I don't think Jersey Joe Wolcott ever said anything like that. After getting his first look at Valuev, Clifford Etienne (remember him?), who Valuev knocked out in 2004, reportedly got drunk and booked a flight home before being talked into staying by his manager.
Marciano, on the other hand, was a beast, a power-punching heavyweight with a flair for the dramatic. Besides Wolcott (whom Marciano knocked out in 1952 with what is widely believed to be the hardest punch ever thrown in boxing), the Brockton Blockbuster defeated superior talents Joe Louis, Ezzard Charles and Archie Moore. Louis, Charles and Moore -- slightly more formidable than Ruiz, Donald and Beck.
At Wednesday's press conference a reporter had the audacity to question Valuev's previous competition, a query that prompted this exchange.
"He beat Ruiz," said a perplexed King.
"Did he?" replied the reporter.
"Do you know anything about who I have fought?" asked Valuev.
"Not enough," the reporter replied.
"Then why are you questioning who I have fought?" he answered.
Because, Nikolay, when your chosen handlers are evoking Marciano's name, your record not only should be questioned, it should be closely scrutinized. Marciano earned his accolades by dominating a heavyweight division when it was actually worth dominating. Should Valuev top Marciano's total, it would be the biggest sports injustice since Barry Bonds' home run record.
When I went to California to observe Hasim Rahman train, I asked Rahman, then the WBC champion, who else in the division he was interested in fighting. "[Wladimir] Klitschko," he said matter-of-factly. What about Valuev? "Not interested," he replied. "Klitschko is the only other real champion."
By all counts, Valuev is a wonderful, educated guy who can deliver platitudes with the best of them. Perhaps it's a touch of cynicism creeping in after years of witnessing heavyweights fail to live up to expectations. Whatever the reason, I believe fans should think twice before hitching their wagons to another heavyweight, no matter how big he is. If you want to see the circus, call Barnum and Bailey; if you want good boxing, I suggest you find another division... Well this reporter has obviously watched alot of his fights, like all of zero..........
I guess the hackneyed cliques will continue.....
Comparing massive Valuev to Marciano is a joke
Nikolay Valuev has a questionable 44-0 record.
NEW YORK -- The circus was in town Wednesday, when WBA heavyweight champion Nikolay Valuev made the first stop of his whirlwind U.S. tour inside a tiny room in the Russian Firebird Restaurant in midtown Manhattan. Small by design, perhaps; the size of the room only made the giant Russian look that much bigger. Accompanying Valuev (besides a hoard of Russian media) were the usual theatrics that come with any Don King promotion, including a WWE-esque smoke entrance and a made-to-scale replica of the Empire State Building.
For most of the assembled masses, it was their first look (and one they waited an extra hour for while King apparently had Valuev brokering peace deals at the United Nations) at the 7-foot-2, 335-pound Valuev, who at age 33 has strung together a sterling 44-0 record by knocking out relative unknowns and robbing legitimate fighters.
Am I being too harsh?
John Ruiz doesn't think so. It was Ruiz who first put Valuev on the boxing map when he agreed to face him in Germany last December for his WBA title. For 12 rounds the methodical Ruiz -- giving away 11 inches and nearly 100 pounds -- battered the Russian only to have the decision taken away from him by a trio of judges, any one of whom would make Henry Hill look like an honest man. Afterward the crowd of 10,000, which had been pro-Valuev before the fight, roundly booed the new champion, voicing their disgust for, as Ruiz put it, "their own guy." Later, Valuev's exiled former promoter would say that he believed the WBA had been blinded by Valuev's massive physique and that, in his opinion, "Valuev lost every round of that fight."
King doesn't think so, but then again, King thinks he's promoting the next Rocky Marciano. While being careful not to compare the two directly, King made several references Wednesday to Valuev's approach of Marciano's 49-fight winning streak.
But Valuev's inflated win total has come against a host of has-beens headlined by Ruiz (who had unofficially retired before the Valuev fight, only to return when the WBA stripped James Toney of the belt after he tested positive for steroids) and Larry Donald. In his last fight Valuev battered journeyman Owen Beck, who afterward claimed to be relieved that he "didn't go home in an ambulance." I don't think Jersey Joe Wolcott ever said anything like that. After getting his first look at Valuev, Clifford Etienne (remember him?), who Valuev knocked out in 2004, reportedly got drunk and booked a flight home before being talked into staying by his manager.
Marciano, on the other hand, was a beast, a power-punching heavyweight with a flair for the dramatic. Besides Wolcott (whom Marciano knocked out in 1952 with what is widely believed to be the hardest punch ever thrown in boxing), the Brockton Blockbuster defeated superior talents Joe Louis, Ezzard Charles and Archie Moore. Louis, Charles and Moore -- slightly more formidable than Ruiz, Donald and Beck.
At Wednesday's press conference a reporter had the audacity to question Valuev's previous competition, a query that prompted this exchange.
"He beat Ruiz," said a perplexed King.
"Did he?" replied the reporter.
"Do you know anything about who I have fought?" asked Valuev.
"Not enough," the reporter replied.
"Then why are you questioning who I have fought?" he answered.
Because, Nikolay, when your chosen handlers are evoking Marciano's name, your record not only should be questioned, it should be closely scrutinized. Marciano earned his accolades by dominating a heavyweight division when it was actually worth dominating. Should Valuev top Marciano's total, it would be the biggest sports injustice since Barry Bonds' home run record.
When I went to California to observe Hasim Rahman train, I asked Rahman, then the WBC champion, who else in the division he was interested in fighting. "[Wladimir] Klitschko," he said matter-of-factly. What about Valuev? "Not interested," he replied. "Klitschko is the only other real champion."
By all counts, Valuev is a wonderful, educated guy who can deliver platitudes with the best of them. Perhaps it's a touch of cynicism creeping in after years of witnessing heavyweights fail to live up to expectations. Whatever the reason, I believe fans should think twice before hitching their wagons to another heavyweight, no matter how big he is. If you want to see the circus, call Barnum and Bailey; if you want good boxing, I suggest you find another division... Well this reporter has obviously watched alot of his fights, like all of zero..........