A good showing by Britain's boxers at the European championships in Moscow is an encouraging sign
The amateurs go from strength to strength – and how good is that in the lead-up to the Olympics?
There are three Brits in the European finals in Moscow tomorrow – Khalid Yafai at 51kg, Ian Weaver at 57kg, and Tom Stalker at 60kg – the best British showing since 1961, when Frankie Taylor was a mere slip of a lad.
Yafai beat the German Ronny Beblik 5-0 – an unfussed and commanding performance from start to finish – but his brother Gamal, making his European title debut, has to settle for bronze after losing his semi 3-2 to the Russian Eduard Abzalimov.
Andrew Selby was left with too much to do after trailing the Ukrainian Georgi Chigaev 4-0 going into the final round of their 54kg semi. He too gets bronze, his second in a row at these championships.
Weaver did brilliantly to put 10 points on the awkward Irishman Tyrone McCullagh, conceding only three; Stalker saw off the German Eugen Burhard 5-2 in another tough fight.
Now, if they can just keep this momentum going for another 18 months or so ...
51kg: Khalid Yafai v Misha Aloyan (Russia)
57kg: Iain Weaver v Denis Makarov (Germany)
60kg: Tom Stalker v Albert Selimov (Russia)
SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST
Golden Boy Promotions is setting up shop in London. That is good news for boxing and, well, a bit of a shock for rival UK promoters. Still, competition is supposed to be the lifeblood of our wonderful capitalist system (as we no doubt will discover in the glorious years ahead).
LIGHTS OUT, MOUTH OPEN
James Toney fights Randy Couture in a UFC cage in Boston on 28 August. Anything said here about that confrontation will not match what Toney has to pronounce loudly on the subject. The man is a marvel in many ways. Read what he says here on
fighthype.com.
Enjoy that? It's a shame Toney didn't make more of his boxing career. For all the noise, there was a lot of talent.
IN MEMORY OF JACKIE TURPIN
And
this from the Leamington Observer, on one small club's efforts to stay afloat – and using the memory of a much-loved local fighter, Jackie Turpin, to inspire the next generation of amateur boxers in Warwick.
Amateur boxing is on a really good bounce right now, with the national squad doing great things in the lead-up to the London Olympics and really talented boxers emerging at all levels. It would be a shame if the grassroots started to wither because of lack of money.
I wonder what the new sports minister will have to say when confronted continually in the coming months and years with stories such as this, of a small club heading for extinction because they can't afford to turn the lights on or pay the water bills?
KHAN BACK ON THE STREETS
Amir Khan has always done his bit for boxing outside the confines of his own stellar existence – contrary to what some of his critics think.
This week he was at a struggling club in a pretty tough part of north-west London, Stonebridge ABC. Years ago the streets around Stonebridge were no-go areas; the Stonebridge Park estate was once called the worst in the UK, with violent death among young people a growing concern. It's still no Disneyland, but it's getting better.
Which is why Khan's visit meant more than a chance for the kids to rub shoulders with a world champion – he was able to tell them that a boxing club is not just somewhere to learn how to jab and hook but a haven from the streets and a place to learn about discipline and respect.
"Forty or 50 kids a day come here," he said. "That's 40 or 50 kids not on the streets messing around. They have something to do here and also their parents know where they are."
It sounds simple. But it matters. Khan came from the streets, so those kids appreciate he knows what he's talking about.
DON'T GIVE UP THE DAY JOB
Frank Maloney is encouraging his 25-year-old heavyweight prospect from Chatham, Tom Dallas, to keep working as a roofer.
"I am a great believer that a job for a fighter is good for them because it stops boredom," Maloney says. "A fighter will train in the morning, once in the afternoon and get bored. When that happens they sit around eating, drinking and getting into trouble."
Kevin Mitchell, who has worked as a labourer in lean times, will know exactly what he's talking about.
Maloney's super-bantam Rendall Munroe has grabbed plenty of headlines for carrying on his job as a binman while putting himself in contention for a shot at the WBC world title later this year.
But there aren't many out there who have had "proper jobs". It wasn't always this way. The world light-heavyweight champion Bob Foster, famously, was a sheriff; Emile Griffith trained as a milliner; Paul Pender was a postman; among old-timers, Bob Fitzsimmons was a blacksmith, as was the great Les Darcy.
And, as they say, it didn't do them any harm.
Dallas, a former ABA champion who has been developing quietly, is looking for his 11th win on the spin at Brentwood on 25 June.
Boxing's quiet destroyer won hearts and minds with a methodical but lethal attack on his WBA light-welterweight challenger
Amir Khan joined the party when it was winding down, shortly after 3am at the Affinia Hotel across the road from Madison Square Garden, but he could hardly stop smiling through his lightly busted-up eyes.
He had arrived. He had conquered New York, or at least a bit of it. In the theatre of the Garden a few hours earlier, Khan had given Paulie Malignaggi a beating so one-sided that even the locals were impressed.
That, for me, was interesting. When Naseem Hamed won a six-knockdown war with Kevin Kelley in 1997 in the Garden proper, he became an instant hit with American writers and fans looking for excitement. Naz was so arrogant he had no qualms describing himself as a cross between Elvis Presley and Muhammad Ali. They loved it.
Khan is not in that league of self-aggrandisement, although he is slipping into the third person more regularly. His popularity here is built on more conventional foundations: speed, power and, unless you'd forgotten, vulnerability.
The odds on his chin giving up on him at the highest level remain short but he has worked extraordinarily hard on his defence – which is why he will probably never be the wild, swinging, knockout king boxing craves. He is a quiet destroyer. As he said on Saturday night, he broke Malignaggi down methodically, taking few risks, keeping his punches straight and his concentration rock solid.
In the world that Freddie Roach has designed for him, there is little room for flamboyance. This is business. And business means Khan will stick to the rigid verities of the fight game, the chief one being that everything comes off the jab.
He has probably the most lethal jab in the world around 10 stone. It shoots from his shoulder like a bullet and is returned to its holster just as quickly, tucked up around his chin in partnership with his right glove.
Malignaggi, no slouch, had no answer to it. He was accused of not moving his head enough; it moved plenty when Khan's left smashed into it. But evasive head movement is not easy when a fighter is confronted by an opponent whose feet and hands are that quick. Khan moved in and out of firing range with lethal precision and Malignaggi, six years older at 29, could not match it.
So dominant was Khan through sheer speed that Malignaggi stopped boxing for long periods as he sought refuge in retreat. When he did advance, he was frequently met by a barrage that would have ripped a lesser fighter's head from his shoulders. He has some chin. And a great heart.
There are few places for Malignaggi to go now. For Khan, the possibilities are many.
I think Richard Schaefer, the chief executive of Golden Boy Promotions, will outvote Khan and his trainer, Freddie Roach, to get Michael Katsidis in a London fight with the WBA light-welterweight champion on 31 July.
Fighter and mentor say they want Marcos Maidana, who is a frightening puncher but not much of a boxer; they know Katsidis is a more dangerous mix of both, as he showed in not only battering Kevin Mitchell at Upton Park on Saturday night, but drawing the East End favourite into exactly the wrong sort of exchanges.
Mitchell, who said he had been distracted by private problems, walked into the firing line with little lateral movement and paid the price. He did exactly the opposite of what he did against Breidis Prescott. That night he boxed as well as he ever has done. Against the Australian, he lost the plot so quickly there was hardly a story to tell.
He will be back, because he has bags of heart and pride. That pride is seriously hurt right now and the only place to heal the wound is in the ring, his second home. Mitchell, unlike Khan, is a born rather than manufactured fighter. If the two ever meet, it will be a fascinating contest.
Meanwhile, Khan should get ready for some more smiling. He has plenty to be ecstatic about.
Amateurs’ success bodes well for London 2012 Olympics | Kevin Mitchell
A good showing by Britain's boxers at the European championships in Moscow is an encouraging sign
The amateurs go from strength to strength – and how good is that in the lead-up to the Olympics?
There are three Brits in the European finals in Moscow tomorrow – Khalid Yafai at 51kg, Ian Weaver at 57kg, and Tom Stalker at 60kg – the best British showing since 1961, when Frankie Taylor was a mere slip of a lad.
Yafai beat the German Ronny Beblik 5-0 – an unfussed and commanding performance from start to finish – but his brother Gamal, making his European title debut, has to settle for bronze after losing his semi 3-2 to the Russian Eduard Abzalimov.
Andrew Selby was left with too much to do after trailing the Ukrainian Georgi Chigaev 4-0 going into the final round of their 54kg semi. He too gets bronze, his second in a row at these championships.
Weaver did brilliantly to put 10 points on the awkward Irishman Tyrone McCullagh, conceding only three; Stalker saw off the German Eugen Burhard 5-2 in another tough fight.
Now, if they can just keep this momentum going for another 18 months or so ...
51kg: Khalid Yafai v Misha Aloyan (Russia)
57kg: Iain Weaver v Denis Makarov (Germany)
60kg: Tom Stalker v Albert Selimov (Russia)
SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST
Golden Boy Promotions is setting up shop in London. That is good news for boxing and, well, a bit of a shock for rival UK promoters. Still, competition is supposed to be the lifeblood of our wonderful capitalist system (as we no doubt will discover in the glorious years ahead).LIGHTS OUT, MOUTH OPEN
James Toney fights Randy Couture in a UFC cage in Boston on 28 August. Anything said here about that confrontation will not match what Toney has to pronounce loudly on the subject. The man is a marvel in many ways. Read what he says here on fighthype.com.Enjoy that? It's a shame Toney didn't make more of his boxing career. For all the noise, there was a lot of talent.
IN MEMORY OF JACKIE TURPIN
And this from the Leamington Observer, on one small club's efforts to stay afloat – and using the memory of a much-loved local fighter, Jackie Turpin, to inspire the next generation of amateur boxers in Warwick.Amateur boxing is on a really good bounce right now, with the national squad doing great things in the lead-up to the London Olympics and really talented boxers emerging at all levels. It would be a shame if the grassroots started to wither because of lack of money.
I wonder what the new sports minister will have to say when confronted continually in the coming months and years with stories such as this, of a small club heading for extinction because they can't afford to turn the lights on or pay the water bills?
KHAN BACK ON THE STREETS
Amir Khan has always done his bit for boxing outside the confines of his own stellar existence – contrary to what some of his critics think.This week he was at a struggling club in a pretty tough part of north-west London, Stonebridge ABC. Years ago the streets around Stonebridge were no-go areas; the Stonebridge Park estate was once called the worst in the UK, with violent death among young people a growing concern. It's still no Disneyland, but it's getting better.
Which is why Khan's visit meant more than a chance for the kids to rub shoulders with a world champion – he was able to tell them that a boxing club is not just somewhere to learn how to jab and hook but a haven from the streets and a place to learn about discipline and respect.
"Forty or 50 kids a day come here," he said. "That's 40 or 50 kids not on the streets messing around. They have something to do here and also their parents know where they are."
It sounds simple. But it matters. Khan came from the streets, so those kids appreciate he knows what he's talking about.
DON'T GIVE UP THE DAY JOB
Frank Maloney is encouraging his 25-year-old heavyweight prospect from Chatham, Tom Dallas, to keep working as a roofer."I am a great believer that a job for a fighter is good for them because it stops boredom," Maloney says. "A fighter will train in the morning, once in the afternoon and get bored. When that happens they sit around eating, drinking and getting into trouble."
Kevin Mitchell, who has worked as a labourer in lean times, will know exactly what he's talking about.
Maloney's super-bantam Rendall Munroe has grabbed plenty of headlines for carrying on his job as a binman while putting himself in contention for a shot at the WBC world title later this year.
But there aren't many out there who have had "proper jobs". It wasn't always this way. The world light-heavyweight champion Bob Foster, famously, was a sheriff; Emile Griffith trained as a milliner; Paul Pender was a postman; among old-timers, Bob Fitzsimmons was a blacksmith, as was the great Les Darcy.
And, as they say, it didn't do them any harm.
Dallas, a former ABA champion who has been developing quietly, is looking for his 11th win on the spin at Brentwood on 25 June.