Tuesday, November 29, 2005

"UNDISPUTED"...Roy Who???

This is my man..."JERMAIN TAYLOR" He is the Undisputed Middle weight Champion of the World! He beat Bernard Hopkins Ass already & hes about 2 do it again! Nobody wants to give him his "just-do"...So Jermain...This bLOgs 4 You YO!
In the first Jermain Taylor-Bernard Hopkins fight in July, Taylor was busier, at least in the early going. Hopkins, who doesn't start fast but measures his opponent and then attacks with almost surgical precision, started slow. There's no doubt that Hopkins came on in the end and hurt Taylor but by then the challenger had the early rounds in the bank. Hopkins was the unified champion and Jermain was the challenger in their first meeting, therefore the popular belief among fans was that the challenger would need to comprehensively dominate or knockout the champion to take his title. Unfortunately neither fighter dominated the entire fight in their initial encounter and the fight ended in an unsatisfying split decision. Fortunately both fighters are meeting again on December 3rd. For Taylor versus Hopkins II or your next fight, pay close attention to those boring rounds where not much of any consequence is happening. Remember, someone has to win those rounds and very often all the judges have to go on is who seemed busier. (More)
This Saturday night, at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, Jermain Taylor and Bernard Hopkins go at it once again for the undisputed middleweight championship of the world.Only, this time, it's very much disputed.Coming into their initial matchup there was no doubt as to who was the 'undisputed middleweight champion' - it was Bernard Hopkins. 'The Executioner' not only carried that mantle proudly, but it was so closely associated with him that it became a part of him. You began to think his full name was 'Bernard Hopkins, undisputed middleweight champion of the world' every bit as much as Marvin Hagler was 'Marvelous'.
Unlike his idol, Hopkins didn't change his name legally, but he didn't have to. He, along with everyone else, related his accomplishments as a prizefighter to who he was as a person.It was a part of an identity, his being. But for the first time in about a decade, Hopkins will walk into the ring as a mere challenger, a beltless boxer trying to win back his titles.But in his eyes (and many others') all he's trying to do is get back the belts that were given to Taylor on loan by Duane Ford and Paul Smith, the two judges that had Taylor 'beating' him the first time by scores of 115-113. That pair trumped the scorecard of Jerry Roth, who viewed the fight a 116-112 victory for the Philadelphian.Outside of HBO and the state of Arkansas, the majority of those ringside that night felt as though Hopkins had done more than enough to make his 21st successful title defense.Taylor was like the young, wild, untamed stallion who broke out quickly with his passion and energy out of the gate as Hopkins was the seasoned thoroughbred who took some time to get his legs stretched out but came on strong. Some say that despite Hopkins' finishing flourish, he had fallen about a furlong or two behind Taylor, who outworked him early on.
Perhaps he did. But there's an old saying from legendary basketball coach and sage John Wooden that says: 'Don't mistake activity for achievement', which boxing fans tend to do more and more in the age of CompuBox, where thrown punches are mistaken for ones that actually land and debilitate the opposition.But much of the blame should be placed on the narrow shoulders of Hopkins himself. For a guy who is as paranoid as Art Bell, he should've known better than to have left the fight in the hands of anybody but his own two fists. Perhaps he may have fallen into a false sense of security given his new promotional partnership with Oscar De La Hoya, who promoted the first bout. Maybe, juuust maybe, for the first time ever, he became part of the establishment he for so long disavowed.Surely, with his own company promoting their first fight, he couldn't possibly get jobbed or get the short end of the stick in a close decision.How wrong he was.Because Taylor is the establishment's dream. Young, handsome and generally well-mannered. The kind of fighter that is deemed 'marketable', the kind of black athlete that is acceptable to the 'red states'. He's Grant Hill to Hopkins' Allen Iverson.He's the kind of boxer that HBO is dying to promote, uhhh, sorry, I mean sign to a multi-fight deal and showcase.Hopkins, however, is forever the renegade.There's a line of thinking that says that Taylor having gone 12 tough rounds with Hopkins comes out of that bout with an invaluable amount of experience. That could be the case. But you could also hypothesize that Taylor, for the only time in his professional career, comes into a bout with a tinge of doubt. Before the early rounds with Hopkins had taken place in July, you could've made a strong argument that he had never lost a round. Not only did he lose rounds, but he got hurt for the first time in his life by Hopkins' assault in the late stages of the fight.He can claim all he wants that he wasn't buzzed by the old man, but it's hard to shake the image of him covering up and turning away from Hopkins in the last few frames. And the shots of his reaction in the immediate aftermath of the 12th round? What do they say about a picture telling a thousand words?When they face each other again, Taylor will be fighting to legitimize his claim as THE middleweight champion of the world. Hopkins will be seeking to cement his status as an all-time great.So, much is still in dispute.MY PREDICTION?I see the same kind of fight. The reality is that Hopkins will turn 41 in mid-January, so he knows he can only fight in short, contained spurts. But one thing I do expect Hopkins to do when he's not counter-punching is to at least give the impression that he's busier on the outside by at least flashing his jab more consistently.There's a psychology of winning rounds that exists with many judges. If nothing is really happening between the two fighters to really separate them, most judges will tab the boxer who at least looks busier. In the first fight, that was Taylor in the early rounds.Many have speculated that Hopkins will have to make the first round of their rematch round 13. I agree to an extent, but again, he's 40 years old. Hopkins in recent years has had an innate feel of when to push the gas pedal and when to put it into cruise control. Compared to the sports car that Taylor is, Hopkins isnow the fuel efficient sedan.On the flipside, Taylor will do what he always does, which is come out fast and look to establish his hard, jackhammer jab to set up his right cross. The real question is, can he do it better, and has he improved technically and fundamentally from July? For all his physical tools, he makes a lot of mistakes. While Hopkins might look to be a bit busier in the early rounds, I don't expect him to be that much more offensive. Why? Because it's in those rounds where Taylor is most dangerous and the last thing Hopkins wants to do then is to get into serious exchanges with Taylor, given that Taylor does have significant advantages in hand speed and reflexes.I actually forecast a fight that will look a lot like their initial encounter. And I'm not sure that the same Hopkins and Taylor that showed up in July won't be the ones we see this weekend.So who wins???

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