Browsing articles tagged with " Timothy Bradley"
Jan
31

Tim Bradley defeated Devon Alexander

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bradley defeated alexander 300x247 Tim Bradley defeated Devon AlexanderIn a bout between two young undefeated fighters Tim Bradley managed to win a tough fight that will hardly be listed as a classic. Much was anticipated but this was bout showed that sometimes when two evenly match fighters, you get a tough fight to score. Bradley won in a quite anti climatic way when the fight was stop on cuts due to accidental head butts and Bradley was ahead on all of the scorecards.

This was a hard fight to score as Bradley and Alexander connected on the same number of punches and the boxer threw the more punches. What gave Bradley the edge with the judges was his pressure tactics, which neutralize Alexander slightly higher punch total.

This fight had two major problems. The first problem was Bradley rough style of fighting. Bradley is a smart fighter and he adjusts his style to his opponent. Bradley challenge was Alexander quick hands and boxing skills, so he pressured Alexander while reducing Alexander silky smooth style. Bradley proved not to be silky smooth but he did manage to rough Alexander up while neutralizing Alexander advantages in hand speed.

In the first round, Alexander connected on some nice blows and forced Bradley to miss on a couple of wild punches but at the end of the round, Bradley trapped Alexander on the rope and while he managed to connect a right hand, most of the combinations were blocked.

In the third round, Bradley successfully nailed with some clubbing right but the major event of the round was a head butt that opened up a cut over Alexander’s right eye. This was the first of many head butts that occurred due to a southpaw-orthodox fighter but also to Bradley style of getting close to Alexander in an effort to slow the quicker Alexander down.

In the fourth round, Bradley landed two giant right hands that allowed him to take the round but in the fifth round, Alexander boxing style took the round.
In the sixth thru ninth round, Bradley had the edge as he not only successfully landed the bigger punches but his frontal attacking style impressed the judges.

At the beginning of the tenth round, another head butt forced Alexander to see the ring physician. Complaining of a stinging sensation in his eyes, Alexander could not continue and the fight went to the scorecard.

Bradley won the fight by being more aggressive but it was not a dominant performance. Both fighters were even in skills with Bradley pressure style up against the boxing skills of Alexander. Neither could gain an advantage over the other and this lead to a close but often a sloppy fight.

So what now? Alexander may want a rematch but Bradley wants a bigger fight against Amir Khan and of course Manny Pacquaio but the latter is a long shot. The 140 pound division is becoming one of boxing deepest and Bradley along with Alexander will be part of some intriguing and possibly classic fights.

Alexander, Bradley along with Khan are young fighters who just entering their peaks. Their history has yet to be completed and written in its final form.

Jan
18

Alexander vs. Bradley: A Good Fight

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People seem to be surprised that the Devon Alexander vs. Timothy Bradley fight is not sparking all the fireworks that they imagined. Some writers view this fight like the modern version of Thomas Hearns vs. Marvin Hagler. If people got off their opium of hype and took a reality break maybe they would understand why this fight isn’t the super fight that it’s been hyped up to be. Don’t get me wrong, this should be and probably will be a good fight, but it’s not a super-fight like some hype spinners would like to make it.

Devon Alexander hasn’t really done much to merit the title of being called a great fighter; he is actually an average boxer. He was able to knockout Juan Urango, which indicates Alexander has punching power. Yet Alexander went on to really lose his fight against Andriy Kotelnick, although the judges gave Alexander a gift. In his bout with Kotelnick, Alexander was exposed for the limited fighter he is. Alexander is not able to control a fight; he has few ring generalship skills. Once you negate Alexander’s power he is helpless because his boxing skills are average to say the least. Alexander simply doesn’t have the skills to control a fight against a decent boxer.
Timothy Bradley looks like a weight lifter and he fights like one. Bradley has no power in his punches. He throws pitty patty punches because he cannot extend his arms fully to put some explosives into them. You could say that Bradley touches not punches. Although Bradley is fast he lacks true rhythm. Bradley’s style of fighting is not a good one to watch, it is not fan friendly; it is like the sound of finger nails scraping a blackboard.

When you put these two styles together, Alexander and Bradley, it may turn out to be just a stare contest. It can turn out into two guys posturing in front of each other with no one really taking a risk. To make it a good fight, they are going to have to become aggressive and go for the knockout. Alexander has not shown that he has the spirit necessary to walk down a boxer like Bradley and knock him out. Bradley will try to make it a chess match and win the decision. Alexander cannot win a decision; it is up to Alexander to make this an exciting fight by cornering Bradley and knocking his head off. Alexander has to exert pressure on Bradley for twelve rounds to make this a good fight.

What is commendable about this fight between Alexander and Bradley is that they are willing to fight each other. We live in a time when marketing has taken over boxing and good old fashion fights don’t happen that regularly. Alexander and Bradley are willing to face anyone you can place in front of them, they aren’t running or hiding like most boxers today. That is what fans appreciate from these two champions. If these two fighters go for the knockout and don’t spend twelve round staring at each other, this will be a good fight.

I would like to see the winner of this fight face Marcos Maidana or Victor Ortiz if he is still hanging around this division (Ortiz is probably already a welterweight), those will be exciting matchups and will really fill up stadiums. Because of Amir Khan’s style of running I don’t think he would make a good fight with either Alexander or Bradley. Bradley would just out speed him and Alexander doesn’t have the fire to go after runners.

Jan
12

Ring Life: Timothy Bradley by HBO Boxing

By Admin  //  Alexander vs Bradley  //  1 Comment

Ring Life takes an intimate look inside the life of Tim Bradley as he prepares for his highly anticipated bout with Devon Alexander Saturday January 29th at 10pm ET/7pm PT on HBO. You can also watch the latest issues and fighters challenges for the incoming fight in HBO 24/7 Alexander vs. Bradley Face Off with Max Kellerman.

Watch Ring Life: Timothy Bradley Video

Jan
9

HBO 24/7 Alexander vs. Bradley Face Off with Max Kellerman

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alexander bradley face off hbo 247 300x165 HBO 24/7 Alexander vs. Bradley Face Off with Max KellermanThis is the face off for “The Superfight” on January 29th on HBO. Tim the headbutt king Bradley takes on Devon Alexander in a battle of undefeated champions. Shit I’m excited. This is the face off with Max Kellerman.

Watch Alexander vs. Bradley Face Off with Max Kellerman Video

Jan
8

Devon Alexander and Timothy Bradley Greatest Hits Video (HBO)

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Jim Lampley takes a look at Devon Alexander and Tim Bradley’s Greatest Hits Video. It features the best boxing fight of both like to name some Alexander vs Urango, Bradley vs Abregu, and Alexander vs Kotelnik. Also includes the heated challenges of both. Don’t miss Alexander vs Bradley Saturday, January 29th at 10pm ET/7pm PT on HBO.

Watch Devon Alexander and Timothy Bradley Greatest Hits Video


Dec
21

Devon Alexander vs Timothy Bradley bout hits Silverdome

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Alexander vs Bradley live fight 300x200 Devon Alexander vs Timothy Bradley bout hits SilverdomeNot that its promoters are likely to pay much attention, but there is probably a cautionary message implicit in the fact that the roof at the Minneapolis Metrodome caved in less than a week after Gary Shaw and Don King announced that the Jan. 29 Devon Alexander vs Timothy Bradley live fight would take place at the Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich.

We’re not exactly comparing apples and oranges in pointing out that the principal differences between the two venues is that the onetime home of the Detroit Lions is slightly older and has an even more sordid history of weather-related calamities than its sister dome in Minneapolis, which was one reason the Lions considered it a smart business move to pay $26 million not to play there once Ford Field was completed eight years ago.

King has a well-documented history of fleecing would-be entrepreneurs hosting his fights, but in this case The World’s Greatest Promoter was occupied with the funeral arrangements for his wife Henrietta, who passed away the week before last, and it was Shaw who struck the deal with Andreas Apostolopoulos, the Greek-born Canadian financier who bought the Silverdome at auction earlier this year. He then offered Shaw and King a site-fee deal in which the Silverdome actually outbid a couple of Las Vegas casinos, as well as sites in St. Louis, Southern California and Atlanta for the right to host the fight.

“He’s bought this place dirt cheap, and it’s zoned so that he can’t do anything else with the property,” said a boxing promoter with no vested interest in the Bradley-Alexander bout. “Whatever he paid for this fight is a cheap advertisement that says to the world, ‘Hey, I’ve got a domed stadium here ready to host your event.’ ”

The Silverdome will be configured to seat 15,000 on fight night, but with HBO bankrolling the bout to the tune of $3 million, actual paid attendance is a matter of scant consequence to either of its promoters.

Although it has not officially been labeled a tournament, Bradley-Alexander was envisioned as the other bracket in a junior welterweight series, the first half of which was last weekend’s Amir Khan-Marcos Maidana

Victor Ortiz-Lamont Peterson card. Plainly, the hope had been that with sufficiently strong showings, Khan and Ortiz might establish themselves as credible opponents, if not for the Bradley-Alexander winner, then for each other. Khan, after scoring a quick knockdown, had to weather a late Maidana barrage in which he was all but knocked out himself, and was fortunate to squeak out a win. Ortiz, after having Peterson all but KO’d, escaped with a majority draw. The upshot is that all Khan and Ortiz probably deserve is rematches with Maidana and Peterson.

The Key to victory

Breidis Prescott, the author of Khan’s lone professional defeat, has been added to ESPN2’s Jan. 14 card in Key West, Fla. A pair of New Englanders — Peter Manfredo of Providence (vs. Daniel Edouard) and Worcester’s Edwin Rodriguez (vs. Aaron Pryor Jr.) fight in the principal bouts on what will be the second “Friday Night Fights” telecast of the new year. …

Irish middleweight Andy Lee remains the leader in the clubhouse as the next challenger to WBC middleweight champion (and likely 2010 Fighter of the Year) Sergio Martinez. Martinez promoter Lou DiBella had the match all but made 10 days ago, but encountered some resistance from HBO, which would presumably televise the March 12 bout. DiBella countered with a proposal to stage Martinez’ mandatory (vs. “interim” champion Sebastian Zbik) on the same date, with Lee-John Duddy in the co-feature) but HBO was even less enthusiastic about that idea, putting the Emanuel Steward-trained Lee back in the lead. Martinez is not under contract to either network, so DiBella could in theory shop the title fight to Showtime, but if he does he’ll probably have to find a new date and DiBella said that Foxwoods and even Boston remain possible venues. …

Don’t know if you were paying attention, but the date penciled in for Manny Pacquiao’s next fight has quietly shifted from April 16 to May 7. Ostensibly the date was changed because Freddie Roach thought Pacquiao needed more time to rest up from what was a taxing performance against Antonio Margarito, but it’s hard to see that three weeks makes much difference. The name most often bandied about is still Shane Mosely’s, but May 7 happens to be the weekend of Cinco de Mayo, leading us to suspect that Pacquiao’s next opponent could turn out to be old amigo Juan Manuel Marquez. …

While the overall selection process for the International Boxing Hall of Fame is still a work in progress, this time the system worked. No one will quarrel with the three inductees — Mike Tyson, Julio Cesar Chavez and Kostya Tszyu — elected from the “modern” category last week. We would question the wisdom of the decision to include Sylvester Stallone in the Class of 2011 that will be installed next June.

We’re not saying Stallone doesn’t belong. Some will say, “If you’re going to put ‘Rocky’ in the Hall of Fame, what about Joe Palooka?” Stallone isn’t being honored as a fictional character, but as the screenplay author of an iconic boxing film. The late Budd Schulberg, who wrote “On the Waterfront,” is in the Hall. “Rocky” debuted 35 years ago. Stallone could have been inducted last year (when his presence would have augmented a comparatively weak group of moderns) or next year (though Thomas Hearns’ name will appear on the ballot for the first time). …

Dec
21

Devon Alexander vs Timothy Bradley on January 29th

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12 9 alexander bradley presser 450 300x300 Devon Alexander vs Timothy Bradley on January 29thWBO light welterweight champion Timothy Bradley (26-0, 11 KO’s) has an important fight coming up against World Boxing Council (WBC) light welterweight champion Devon Alexander (21-0, 13 KO’s) on January 29th at the Silverdome, Pontiac, Michigan. This was supposed to have been a unification bout but Bradley wasn’t interested in paying the sanctioning fees for the WBC title, so if he beats Alexander, the WBC title will go vacant but it won’t go to Bradley. It seems that Bradley doesn’t care about winning one more title because it would likely slow him down by forcing him to fight uninteresting contenders from time to time.

Watch Devon Alexander vs Timothy Bradley Live Online Stream!

Bradley and Alexander have bigger things on the horizon. The winner of this fight will take on the winner of the Marcos Maidana vs. Amir Khan fight sometime next year for a unification bout, which will get a lot of attention and make a big star out of the winner of that fight. All of this could in theory end with the winner of those fights possibly facing someone like Manny Pacquiao or Floyd Mayweather Jr. It would be hard to see those fighters ignoring the eventual light welterweight winner, because of how popular they will be. But at the same time, the eventual winner of all these fights won’t necessarily need to fight Mayweather or Pacquiao to make good money. They’ll do fine against other opponents like Saul Alvarez, Andre Berto and Shane Mosley.

Alexander looked bad in his last fight against Andriy Kotelnik last August. Alexander, while fighting at home in Saint Louis, won the fight by a 12 round unanimous decision but the bout ended up being very close and Alexander got hit a lot in the fight. This wasn’t the kind off performance that boxing fans were expecting from Alexander when he signed on for the Kotelnik fight. Alexander was expected to win the fight with ease, but instead he went life and death with him. Kotelnik exposed Alexander as being vulnerable to getting hit with jabs and counter shots. This obviously won’t escape the attention of Bradley, who has an excellent jab is good at firing back at his opponents when hit.

Dec
20

Alexander vs. Bradley on January 29th Live on HBO

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alexander vs bradley fight1 300x200 Alexander vs. Bradley on January 29th Live on HBOOne of the most anticipated fights in boxing — and the biggest bout of a young 2011 — will take place when undefeated world champions DEVON ALEXANDER “The Great” and TIMOTHY “Desert Storm” BRADLEY duke it out at the 140-pound weight limit on Saturday, January 29 at the Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan.

Boxing fans have been waiting for years to see these two young world champions collide. The St. Louis phenom Alexander (21-0, 13 KOs), who will put his unblemished record and World Boxing Council (WBC) super lightweight championship at risk while Bradley (26-0, 11 KOs), from Palm Springs, Calif., enters the bout with a similarly perfect record and his World Boxing Organization (WBO) junior welterweight crown on the line.

Tickets, priced from $25-$400, will go on sale This Friday! December 10, and can be purchased at the Silverdome box office, by calling (248) 338-2500 or online at www.silverdometickets.com. The event is being promoted by Gary Shaw Productions, Don King Productions and Thompson Boxing Promotions..

“I’m extremely excited about this fight being announced,” Alexander said. “The fans will finally get to see what I believe is going to be one of the best fights in boxing, the two best 140-pounders going head to head. Tim Bradley is considered No. 1 at 140 and I’m considered No. 2, but anybody that knows me will say that I don’t like being second best at anything. Come January 29, the whole world will know I am the best 140-pounder in boxing.”

Not surprisingly, Bradley sees it differently.

“Devon Alexander is a skilled southpaw that lacks championship fight experience,” Bradley said. “There has been so much talk in the past about me avoiding him but I have never passed the opportunity to beat any other former champions. Now the time has come to prove who the best junior welterweight in the world is and I hope that Devon is ready for the can of whoop ass I’ll be serving him on January 29th.”

Alexander, 23, had two career-defining wins in 2010: a scintillating eighth-round knockout via right uppercut of then-International Boxing Federation (IBF) champion Juan “Iron Twins” Urango on March 6, and, in his most recent defense on August 7, Alexander held back a strong challenge from Andriy Kotelnik to win a unanimous decision by identical scores of 116-112.

Alexander won his first title, the WBC super lightweight championship by stopping the former holder of that crown, Junior Witter when they met on August 1, 2009, in Southern California. (Ironically, it was Bradley who had vacated the WBC crown.)

Alexander has successfully emerged from behind the shadow of fighting most of his career out of the Cory Spinks camp. He has elusive defensive skills – no doubt picked up from his mentor – but has shown enough firepower to become a legitimate knockout threat.

Bradley, 27, won his first world title in 2008, travelling across the pond to dethrone the defending WBC super lightweight champion Junior Witter in the Englishman’s backyard of Nottingham, England. Bradley’s sixth-round knockdown of Witter shocked the hometown crowd as Bradley won a hard-fought split decision.

One year later, in his second championship defense, Bradley unified the title by dominating then-WBO champion Kendall Holt. Bradley weathered a first-round knockdown, and showed his trademark heart and determination during the remainder of the match, to win by unanimous decision.

Bradley opted to keep the WBO junior welterweight title. He has successfully defended that title twice. In August 2009 he dominated former world champion Nate Campbell before an accidental clash of heads near the end of round three led to the fight later being ruled no contest when Campbell could not continue due to a nasty gash over his left eye.

Bradley followed that with a December 2009 schooling of undefeated interim WBO champion Lamont Peterson, which included a third-round knockdown, the first time Peterson had ever hit the canvas in his 27-bout professional career.

With no worthy contenders available to defend his title against, Bradley moved up to 147 pounds and won a 12-round unanimous decision over undefeated Top-10 welterweight contender Carlos Abregu on July 17.

“If Alexander vs. Bradley doesn’t get your heart pumping then you aren’t alive,” said Bradley co-promoter Gary Shaw. “This isn’t just a title unification fight, this is for the whole ball of wax — the class of the junior welterweight division colliding head-on to determine the world champion. One thing I admire about both these men. When a challenge is made, they don’t make excuses, they make fights.”

Bradley co-promoter Ken Thompson has a similar view.

“This fight has been long awaited by boxing fans since in fact it’s a battle between the best junior welterweights on the planet,” Thompson said. “Two undefeated fighters will decide the future of the division and what better neutral ground than the Motor City – Detroit. I have known Tim Bradley since he laced gloves for the first time as a professional, and he has never stopped amazing me with his talent and charisma inside the ring. Alexander will have his hands full on a great Motown boxing night.”

Alexander promoter Don King is excited to see his young world champion entering the biggest match of his career.

“I have promoted Devon Alexander’s entire professional career, and I couldn’t be prouder of this fine young man,” King said. “He’s a model citizen in St. Louis and the world’s treasure as a fighter. Devon and Timmy are two of the best American fighters we have, and, most important, they are two of the best people we have in the sport. Boxing fans and the sport will be the winners for this world championship unification.”

Alexander vs. Bradley will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing, beginning at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT

“We believe Alexander vs. Bradley is a spectacular way to launch a new season of boxing on HBO,” said Kery Davis, senior vice president of programming, HBO Sports. “Fight fans have the date circled on their calendars and sports fans everywhere should do the same.”