Rearranging the pieces of the Middleweight Chess Board...
"THE NEW MIDDLEWEIGHT CHESSBOARD"
Well fellow forum go'ers and my fellow boxing enthusiasts...wer'e off to another fine year of middleweight boxing in 2006. Things are going to get hot in the next two to three months. Scores will be settled, hearts will be broken, records will be lost, and titles will be shuffled.
The turmoils of another sleepless insominiatic night have gotten the brain churning again and the fingers following slowly behind. In the wake of Bernard Hopkins retirement from the middleweight division by way of Jermain Taylor this writer's mind began stirring at around 11:05 p.m. and I sprang out of bed heading straight for the p.c. for what my wife calls another trip down obsession lane.
She's dead on the money.
For some reason of late...this forum has the dubious honor of being what inspires me, every day and every single night when my head either reaches or departs from the pillow.
The obsession never seems to pass and the wife never ceases to remind me of how my compu-chair is going to forever be grafted to my a**. I'm sure those with wives or lady friends now my plight. Every single forum member here has suffered the same roll of the eyes, the same huffs and puffs, the same scorn that I generally get on route to the comforts of my keyboard and flat screen monitor.
Anywho, off the wife (heh heh heh) and on to boxing.
Twice last year, rising young star, Jermain "Bad Intentions" Taylor (25 & 0 with 21 KO's) did what no man had done in over a decade...he won a 12 round unanimous decision over Bernard Hopkins subsequently breaking the "king's" clutch over the middleweight division ending Hopkins 12 year streak. Old news.
Be that as it may...the second victory over Hopkins should have cemented Taylor as the #1 middleweight king of the world so to speak, but the wins over Hopkins were questionable and lackluster leaving fans a bit befuddled & unsure of "the New Sherriff in Town". The fight being so close that all three ringside judges leaned towards Taylor by a 115-113 margin, with "The Associated Press" ringside having Taylor winning 115-114. Then you had the punchstats in which Hopkins was clearly in the lead. At the end of both "battles" with Hopkins, the sherriff appeared to be more of a deputy and this just did not sit right with the fans or media.
In the end though, Jermain did indeed walk with the titles and the belts. To Taylor's credit he did fight the best middleweight of our and of his time. To his credit again...he was able to perform a bit better than in their first fight.
Although, he still seemed as apprehensive in the late rounds as Hopkins seemed tentative in the opening rounds. Taylor did come better prepared for Hopkins, but the fans just wanted more from their new champion than he was able to give and as with the first fight Hopkins came on at around the sixth round and took Taylor's "Bad Intentions" with a grain of salt. Arguabley, from the middle rounds on Hopkins was the man that everyone wanted Taylor to be.
But in the end, Jermain retained the throne that Hopkins had owned & commanded for 20 title runs & we go into this new year with a new ruler...or do we?
As boxing fans we always question and condemn quite hastily. We always look for the next suitor...the next conqueror...nothing is every good enough for us. It's a bit shameful...but it is indeed our right to be skeptical.
Skeptical is indeed what this fan and writer will be regarding Jermain Taylor our new Middleweight Champion. After Taylor's "defeate" of Hopkins, he would then go on to spout out statements such as "I got hit alot...he was tuff...but I think I won the fight" and "I give myself a B on this peformance...I've still got a lot to learn..." at the post fight press conferences leaving many fans stuck in a perpertual state of doubt.
Forget about chessboards...the question with this kid is not a matter of knight takes pawn but whether or not to place a bet, walk away, or hold 'em or fold 'em with Jermain.
Up to this moment, Jermain Taylor has to be one confused young man, but as I said...we the fans are a fickle bunch and Taylor did not convincingly defeat our past King and there is where most of the animosity and uncertainties lie. All the promises of knocking the old man out went left the building faster than a speeding bullet...but in Taylor's defense...our previous King did not break out the big guns to defend his kingdom either.
While Hopkins and Taylor fans alike eagerly anticipated both fights, neither man truly dominated the other and neither man really exploited the other's short comings. There were few advantages gained, less ground covered, and even less explosions of raw power or aggression from previous respective performances. All in all...most casual fans considered the fights to be nothing more than a series a snore fests.
To say that both fighters gave the other too much respect is like flogging a dead horse...so let's just leave Taylor and Hopkins both now for a moment & concentrate on some other players on the board. Proffessionally, from writer's standpoint one can not be biased...so for the sake of this article not becoming biased....let's just do our best to write Hopkins out of the equation right now. Seeing that he is stepping up to 175lbs in hopes of beating Roy Jones Jr conqueror Antonio Tarver, in a last desperate move to solidify his legacy in history. Now that Bernard moves upwards, Taylor becomes the king of the board for the moment.
So folks...fair is fair, what is done is done, and we have our new Undisputed Middleweight Champion that maybe some of us are being a bit to critical towards.
But in the middleweight division...the move of one peice is naturally followed by another and in comes the next pawn, knight, or would be king trying to gain the commanding spot.
Enter Ronald "Winky" Wright...defensive master, technical tactician, humiliator of the great Tito Trinidad, two time dispatcher of the vastly skilled, highly regarded Sugar Shane Mosley, and conqueror of durable Sam "King" Soliman whom was just handily removed from a strong nineteen and running win streak.
Within a few weeks time of besting and retiring Felix "Tito" Trinidad, the very mention of Winky's name began thickening the plot surrounding the Hopkins and Taylor rematch. Wisely Taylor jumped in for the Hopkins rematch instead of allowing Hopkins the choice of opting out for Wright or Sturm. The money and history was made. Taylor defeated Hopkins again...keeping the titles that he had just recently won...again...and now we have what we will have.
Wright during the meantime went on to face Sam Soliman and we all know how that ended. After the defeat of the IBF's #1 man Sam Soliman, the fans have spoken...no they have practically began screaming that Taylor must face Winky Wright and he must defeat him soundly to gain any honor and glory of the belts that he now wears around his waist. It almost seems unfair, that Taylor should be...lifted up and justly glorified...but at the moment he is not championship material in many analyst's and commentator's minds.
Continued below...
Never beg a 40 dollar hooker...specially after she's just turned down your mom's credit card!!
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