Skip to content
Boxing News
  • Home
  • Boxing Forum
  • Boxing Videos
  • Contact
Boxing News
Boxing Articles

State of the Boxing Union: The Middleweights.

ByJim Cawkwell 11/05/200511/05/2005

A feeling of change sweeps across the middleweight division, as an aging champion embarks on farewell tour, realizing that there is little glory left to savor. There is no shortage of willing pretenders waiting to scavenge what they may from the eventual demise of that champion’s historic reign, but the refusal of Oscar de la Hoya and Shane Mosley to participate in the middleweight ranks leaves a definite void. Nevertheless, this day, we record the State of the Boxing Union according to the middleweight division.

1. Bernard Hopkins: Like him or not, Hopkins is a fighter of great historical significance. Twenty middleweight title defenses against largely top-notch competition is a good indication of why Hopkins stands as pound-for-pound the best fighter in the world today. Of course, Hopkins is the aging champion of whom I referred to in the previous paragraph, but it is good to see his farewell tour conducted in fine company. Having beaten Oscar de la Hoya and Howard Eastman, being set to fight Jermain Taylor and possibly in line to challenge the winner of the Glen Johnson-Antonio Tarver rematch, Hopkins’ aim is to close a hall of fame career in style. The main criticism of Hopkins’ performances is his negative approach as evidenced against Eastman. However, Hopkins’ style breaks people down instead of blowing them away; it is what brought him to the summit and what should see him through to a long and prosperous retirement.

2. Felix Trinidad: The leading contender to claim the throne in Hopkins’ absence. I say this because, considering the exterior circumstances, I find it highly likely that Hopkins will not engage Trinidad in a fight once again. Revenge may be attainable for Trinidad, but it is not essential in affirming him as a great middleweight champion, and with his vaunted power, it is not inconceivable that he might try his luck in the super middleweight division. If anything, Trinidad’s self-imposed retirement breathed new life into his career, and he returned showing the same deadly power, accuracy and economy that brought him three world titles in as many weights. If his spectacular return against Ricardo Mayorga is anything to go by, the post-Hopkins era might see us loathed to mourn the old champion for too long.

3. Jermain Taylor: For all Taylor’s abundant skill, power and marketability as the heir apparent to Hopkins’ throne, I sense an unsettling dearth of confidence that undermines his preciously constructed reputation. In Taylor’s own vocabulary, something is lacking, something to convince beyond a reasonable doubt that he can end Hopkins’ great run as the middleweight champion. On the plus side, Taylor’s youth as well as his great jab and scintillating arsenal of punches set him some way apart from the rest of the mere prospects to have graduated from the 2000 Olympics class. However, semi-retired versions of Raul Marquez and William Joppy are no preparation for Bernard Hopkins, and I feel that Taylor’s chance comes because of his handlers’ hastiness, and much like welterweight Kermit Cintron found, the deep end is an unfortunate place to be when you are not ready for it.

4. Ronald Wright: Known as “Winky,” because he apparently kept winking at the maternity nurses in the hospital where he was born, Wright needs to keep his eyes open this Saturday as he faces the division’s most murderous puncher in Felix Trinidad. A brace of wins over a fallen Shane Mosley helped to establish Wright into a mainstream that never truly embraced him, despite all his attributes. He deserves the compensation of the Trinidad fight, having had his undisputed light middleweight title systematically stripped from him, but one feels he is out of his depth against the perilous power puncher from Puerto Rico. The upcoming fight represents textbook boxing versus efficiency and power; and if Wright can slay this particular beats, respect and recognition should prove less daunting foes to conquer.

5. Howard Eastman: “The Battersea Bomber” is certainly the best middleweight England has to offer, and perhaps even the whole of Europe, but that proved no consolation versus Bernard Hopkins. Once again, Eastman failed to impose his strengths and left only with excuses amongst the remnants of another failed world championship challenge. However, Eastman is one of the most intimidating propositions at the weight; possessing strength, skill and punch resistance enough to provoke doubt in the most single-minded opponent. Eastman will not fight Hopkins again, but he may receive one last chance, and in it, he must finally become a world champion, or settle for recognition as the middleweight division’s nearly man.

6. Felix Sturm: This German middleweight understands that the sympathy vote can do much to aid recognition in the boxing world, but he is also quickly realizing that failure to capitalize on it can prove costly. Undeniably, Sturm’s loss to Oscar de la Hoya for the WBO middleweight championship last year was unjust and a clear example of what the boxing industry will do to one individual in the way of a financial explosion. Currently slated to fight New Zealand’s Maselino Masoe for the regular WBA middleweight title, Sturm must understand that even if he wins, he must return to the America for future contests to rekindle the good impression he left there against De La Hoya. At just twenty-six-years-old, Sturm represents another promising future element of the division, but talent is nothing of not focused in the right places and Sturm can never be a world middleweight star hiding in Germany.

7. Fernando Vargas: “Ferocious” Fernando displayed solid skill, focus and patience in defeating Dutchman Ray Joval earlier this year. It was a decidedly subdued ring return for a fighter who, at just twenty-seven-years-old, already has so many memorable fights to his name. Having returned and stated an intention to campaign at middleweight, I place Vargas here despite a post-fight assertion that he might move back to light middleweight; I expect his exasperation fresh from the heat of battle might be cooled by the possibility of more lucrative middleweights matches. Steroid accusations, career-threatening injuries and two world championships, Vargas seems to have squeezed a career’s worth of turbulence into eight professional years. But if he can merge his passionate, hard-hitting style with his natural skill and ring intelligence, we may see that the best is yet to come from Fernando Vargas.

8. Sam Soliman: The Australian middleweight “King” is merely chasing his tail at the moment and waiting, no, begging for the chance to get involved in the world title picture. However, Soliman’s one high-profile appearance in American ended in defeat to the aforementioned Ray Joval. Remember also that Soliman has seven losses on his record, a statistic that makes it somewhat easier for champions and more recognizable contenders to dismiss the relevance of his challenge. The one indisputable fact though, is that Soliman can fight, and if given the chance to compete for a world title, even in defeat, would give a fantastic value occasion.

9. Kingsley Ikeke: Ikeke’s televised win over former middleweight and super middleweight contender Antwun Echols ensures that he will figure in some significant fights in the near future. Originally from Nigeria, Ikeke comes to us from Toronto in Canada, fighting with an extraordinary height advantage for this division (Ikeke stands at six-feet-four inches tall). With only one loss, Ikeke is doing things the correct way by campaigning exclusively in North America, and having acquired the IBF’s number two spot against Echols, we may find him in line for a title shot before long.

10. Ike Quartey: Consecutive decision losses to Oscar de la Hoya then Fernando Vargas persuaded Ghana’s Quartey to retire from boxing five years ago. But now, he’s back! And yes, he brought the “Bazooka” jab and right hand back with him. Quartey is said to be campaigning as a middleweight, but also reportedly has a fight scheduled with Verno Phillips one weight class south at light middleweight. Therefore, I place Quartey here, on the very threshold of the middleweight top-ten. My hunch is that, sooner rather than later, Quartey’s hunger will drive him to the middleweight division permanently, and when it does, his powers, when added to the rest of the ingredients in this middleweight list, will make for some explosive results.

Stay tuned to SaddoBoxing.com for more of the State of the Boxing Union series, coming soon.

Jim Cawkwell can be reached at jimcawkwell@yahoo.co.uk

Post navigation

Previous Previous
Is This the Wright Moment to Step Up?
NextContinue
Vicente \”Chente\” Escobedo: Hometown Supports Homegrown Talent.

Boxing Site Team

Owner/Webmaster:
Saddo 📧

Site Photographer:
Jane Warburton 📷
Site Writers:
(Click name to view all that writer’s work)
  • Curtis McCormick
  • Nick Chamberlain
  • Jose Espinoza
  • Robert Brizel
  • Richard Eberline
  • Danny Wilson
  • Bruce Dingo
  • Alejandro Tostado
  • Ricky Jones
  • Wellington Amadulu


RSS Feed

RSS Boxing Forum

  • On This Day: Corrales vs Castillo I – The Greatest 10th Round Ever (2005) 07/05/2026
    Originally published at: On This Day: Corrales vs Castillo I – The Greatest 10th Round Ever (2005) On May 7, 2005, Diego Corrales and José Luis Castillo delivered one of the greatest fights in boxing history, a brutal war capped by a legendary tenth round that still defines the sport. 2 posts - 2 participants Read full topic […]
  • Abdullah mason v joe cordina july 4th 05/05/2026
    3 posts - 3 participants Read full topic […]
  • Tyson fury 1 or junto nakantani? 04/05/2026
    i questioned making this topic as they are both excellent wins but thought it might create some debate so what is the better win? oleksandr usyk’s first victory over tyson fury or naoya inoue’s victory over junto nakatani? i’ll create a poll as well incase anyone just wants to vote Tyson Fury Junto Nakatani Click to view the poll. 4 posts - 3 participants Re […]
  • Nikita Tszyu vs Oscar Diaz Preview: Unbeaten Clash Headlines Newcastle Card 03/05/2026
    Originally published at: Nikita Tszyu vs Oscar Diaz Preview: Unbeaten Clash Headlines Newcastle Card Nikita Tszyu faces unbeaten Oscar Diaz in a 10-round super welterweight main event in Newcastle on May 6, headlining a stacked No Limit Boxing card featuring multiple unbeaten clashes. 10 posts - 2 participants Read full topic […]
  • Canelo Alvarez v Christian Mbilli 01/05/2026
    Canelo Alvarez and Christian Mbilli have reportedly signed a deal to face each other in September. According to Ring Magazine, the pair will headline a ‘Mexico vs the World’ event in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. While the report did not explicitly mention a date, it is understood that the bout is being lined up for September 12, to commemorate Mexican Independence […]
  • Ari bonilla (tic’s prospect watch) 30/04/2026
    keep an eye on ari bonilla, one of those lower-weight prospects quietly building a solid record. 20 years old, fighting at super fly, he’s 6-0 (2 kos) and came through a strong amateur system, including a bronze at the boxam elite tournament in spain in 2024. born in california and raised out of ciudad juárez, bonilla fights orthodox and shows that classic m […]
  • Conah Walker vs Sam Eggington Preview: Midlands Derby Headlines Stacked Wolverhampton Card on DAZN 30/04/2026
    Originally published at: Conah Walker vs Sam Eggington Preview: Midlands Derby Headlines Stacked Wolverhampton Card on DAZN – Boxing News Conah Walker faces Sam Eggington in a fiery Midlands derby on May 2 in Wolverhampton, headlining a stacked Matchroom card featuring Bilal Fawaz vs Ryan Kelly and Shannon Ryan vs Nicola Hopewell live on DAZN. 19 posts - 4 p […]
  • On This Day: Muhammad Ali Stripped of His Title After Refusing Draft (1967) 28/04/2026
    Originally published at: On This Day: Muhammad Ali Stripped of His Title After Refusing Draft (1967) – Boxing News On April 28, 1967, Muhammad Ali was stripped of his heavyweight title and banned from boxing after refusing induction into the U.S. Army at the height of his career. 4 posts - 3 participants Read full topic […]
  • Oliver McCall to fight again at 61 28/04/2026
    Boxing icon who KO’d Lennox Lewis set to return aged 61 to continue 41-year sequence | talkSPORT I actually fact-checked this to see if it was true. Yeah, the guy fought as recent as June of last year, but c’mon… I then looked into who was sanctioning these fights and found that it’s an org by the name of BIBA (British & Irish Boxing Authority). In fact, […]
  • Skye Nicolson vs Mariah Turner Preview: Interim World Title Clash Headlines Melbourne Card 27/04/2026
    Originally published at: Skye Nicolson vs Mariah Turner Preview: Interim World Title Clash Headlines Melbourne Card – Boxing News Skye Nicolson defends her WBC interim world title against Mariah Turner in Melbourne on April 29, with Andrew Hunt vs Benjamin Hussain and a stacked undercard also featured. 6 posts - 3 participants Read full topic […]
  • Anthony Joshua v Kristian Prenga 27/04/2026
    Anthony Joshua will face Kristian Prenga in Riyadh on July 25 in what is expected to be his warm-up fight for a long-awaited clash with Tyson Fury. All 20 of Albanian heavyweight Prenga’s wins have come by knockout, but he has yet to face an opponent in Joshua’s class. “It’s no secret I’ve taken some time to consolidate and rebuild to be ready for stepping b […]
  • Tyson Fury wants one more warm up! 26/04/2026
    “We’ve signed, we’re just waiting – we’re ready to go," Brown told the Goldstar Promotions social media team. "The thing is, Tyson has been out of the ring for a long time. "So we’d probably want another fight before the AJ fight – a proper warm-up and then we’re ready to rock and roll. "We’ve got an exclusive partnership with Netflix, as […]
  • Boxing history's greatest by country 24/04/2026
    There’s lots of boxing rich countries (or sovereign states, as it were) out there, each with their own legacies and lists. You got the US, the UK, Japan, Mexico, Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Argentina, Panama, Cuba, Ukraine, to name a few. More than many other sports, boxing invites people within a country to debate their own greatest fighters. That being s […]
  • Ronny alvarez (tic’s prospect watch) 23/04/2026
    ronny alvarez is one of those cuban prospects quietly building serious momentum right now. the 21-year-old super middleweight is sitting at 6-0 with 5 kos, and if you’ve been paying attention to the amateur scene, his name should already ring a bell. he started boxing at just 8 years old and came up through that classic cuban system, stacking accolades early […]
  • On This Day: Lennox Lewis, Altitude and One Perfect Punch – The Night Rahman Shocked the World (2001) 22/04/2026
    Originally published at: On This Day: Lennox Lewis, Altitude and One Perfect Punch – The Night Rahman Shocked the World (2001) – Boxing News On April 22, 2001, Lennox Lewis lost his heavyweight crown to Hasim Rahman in one of boxing’s biggest upsets—a result shaped by preparation, conditions, and a perfectly timed right hand. 18 posts - 5 participants Read f […]

© 2026 Boxing News

  • Home
  • Boxing Forum
  • Boxing Videos
  • Contact