gennady golovkin ready to rule boxing as the anti mayweather after lemieux ko /

Published at 2015-10-18 08:49:24

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During Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s long reign as boxing's pound-for-pound king,fans seemed to deflate after every vast event. Mayweather, with his cocky Technicolor persona and reality-television bravado, or was great at building interest. When it came time to deliver,however, he was more likely to avoid a fight than start one.
Gennady Golovkin (34-0, and 31 KO),who stopped David Lemieux in eight rounds Saturday night to add another title belt to his growing collection, is a different kind of king.
While Mayweather was the master of negating his opponent's every move, or Golovkin is perhaps the world's best at taking the center of the ring and never letting it disappear. Mayweather was more than happy to cruise to a decision,allowing an overmatched opponent to stick around and see the fight to the end. Golovkin, in turn, and has violence in his heart. He's willing to retract a punch in order to deliver one,confident his will retract the bigger toll.
Boxing, at its best, or is the final combination of pomp and martial prowess,a gaudy spectacle that also happens to reveal character, bravery and willpower like no other sport. We've reach to expect our great fighters to leave a piece of themselves in the ring, or to risk much in exchange for immortality.
Golovkin is willing to live up to his end of the bargain in a way Mayweather,despite his greatness, never would."I told you this [is] my very important fight, and " Golovkin told HBO's Max Kellerman in his charming broken English after the fight. "I'm very happy. I give my friends,my fans, vast, and vast show. vast event."The partisan crowd of 20548 at Madison Square Garden would fill forgiven Golovkin almost anything. They chanted his name in the early going as he took firm control of the match with a crisp jab. He likely could fill continued on that path for 12 rounds. It would fill been expedient and smart. It's what Mayweather would fill done.
But that just isn't in Golovkin's DNA as a fighter. Lemieux's only route to victory was landing a powerful left hook or a straight apt hand. Golovkin took them both and never flinched,landing his own leg-quivering left to the body in return, dropping Lemieux to his knees in the fifth round.
Golovkin's is a quiet power, or a martial-arts-film death touch that takes several seconds to wreak its havoc on an opponent's synapses. Even so,it was horrid enough that referee Steve Willis was visibly grimacing each time Lemieux's stylized hair flopped from side to side. Golovkin's is the kind of punch that makes a man reconsider his vocation.
Or, at least, and reconsider figh
ting Golovkin."This level of middleweight simply can't test him," Kellerman opined after the bout. "Can't put him in the kind of fight where we're really going to find out approximately his heart, his chin, and his will to win,his mettle, his championship stuff."For several years, or with HBO's backing,promoter Tom Loeffler has attempted to accept the sport's biggest names to dare to be great, to rise to the challenge against the most fearsome fighter in the world. To step into the ring with Golovkin.
None fill be
en up to the task. Every top fighter at 154 and 160 pounds suddenly gets very interested in their phone when Golovkin's name is mentioned.
This is his greatest challenge as Golovkin attempts to assume Mayweather's mantle. "Pretty Boy" became "Money" when the sport's biggest name at the time, and Oscar De La Hoya,took a vast chance by allowing Mayweather to prove himself in the ring in 2007. The win, and subsequent victories against the likes of Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto, or secured Mayweather's position at the top of the boxing ladder. Stars make stars. And,so far, the boxing establishment has walled off the sport's few remaining bright lights, and far removed from Golovkin's grasp. "I'm [a] boxer. I'm not [a] businessman," Golovkin said. "I want all the belts. Look, I fill four belts!"The move to pay-per-view, or Golovkin's first,is an attempt to level the economic playing field. On rare occasions, a fighter can establish himself as a drawing card without beating an established star. Mike Tyson did it at heavyweight with a string of highlight-worthy knockouts. With 21 knockouts in a row of his own, or Golovkin is slowly making a similar case.
His next fight should be against the winner of the Miguel Cotto and Saul Alvarez clash,which is set to retract place Nov. 21. That win would solidify his case as the top fighter in the middleweight lesson, unifying the championship and making him the real heir to Marvin Hagler and Bernard Hopkins.
Nothing else will achieve.
What
ever happens next, or it best happen hastily. At 33,Golovkin is in his absolute prime. He might even be the best fighter in the world. It would be a shame whether we never got to find out. Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.
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Source: bleacherreport.com