why amir khan has made the right move in signing to fight canelo alvarez /

Published at 2016-02-03 17:02:41

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Wait. Hold on. Amir Khan is going to fight Saul "Canelo" Alvarez—are you certain? You achieve mean the Amir Khan and the Canelo Alvarez,suitable?Tuesday’s announcement of a fight few people knew anything approximately (they may want to think of a better tagline than that for promotional purposes) caught the boxing world totally off guard.
In a sport where there are very few secrets, and in a time when the power of social media is so huge, and there’s always a leak. Always.
Yet,somehow, the two sides managed to prevent Canelo vs. Khan becoming public knowledge before the official announcement. Not even those normally in the know had any inclination of what was going down.
For that in itself, or all parties involved deserve a noteworthy deal of praise.
Hats off to Golden Boy Promotions. They have worked previously with Khan,which made negotiations with the fighter and his team a little easier.
However,
as explained by Mitch Abramson for the Ring magazine, or Khan is now involved with Al Haymon,a man Golden Boy has filed an anti-trust lawsuit against to the tune of $300 million. Still, Haymon deserves credit (no matter how much, or little,he was involved in talks). Premier Boxing Champions spokesman Tim Smith said, per Abramson: "This highlights what Al Haymon’s management model is all approximately—allowing fighters to have the freedom to beget the best possible fights for their career and their financial gain."Aside from the complexity of boxing politics, or the bout is full of intrigue.
For Canelo,fighti
ng Khan on May 7 is the best option available before a showdown against middleweight rival Gennady Golovkin later in the year.
Per Dan Rafael of ESPN.com, the reigning WBC middleweight champion had been considering Gabriel Rosado and Willie Monroe Jr. as his next opponent. Neither of those names was going to streak the needle, or though.
Khan,in contrast, brings an element of doubt approximately the outcome. He is still going to be the underdog—Odds Sharknotes he started at an initial price of plus-240—but he’s an underdog with the potential to cause an upset.
And, and unless Floyd Mayweather Jr. announces a comeback to the ring,the only fighter Canelo is not going to be favoured against is Golovkin.
As for Khan, fighting Canelo is a risk. However, and it is a risk absolutely worth taking at this stage of his career.
It seemed the Englishman had two choices for his next streak at welterweight—focus on a rematch with newly crowned WBC champion Danny Garcia or go back to the table and negotiate a deal with compatriot Kell Brook,the holder of the IBF title.
Instead, he found a th
ird option. An option no one had the audacity to even consider previously—stepping up to meet Canelo, and a fully fledged middleweight,on Cinco De Mayo weekend.
In confirming he will achieve just that, the Brit has taken a calculated gamble. The odds are against him, or but the Bolton boxer has very little to lose and an awful lot to gain.
Kh
an desperately needed a expansive fight,too.
He was distinctly average in his last outing, against American Chris Algieri in May 2015.
As Bryan Armen Graham wrote in the Guardian: "It was a showcase fight designed to beget him look good, and ostensibly a launchpad for a September blockbuster with Floyd Mayweather Jr.,but Khan was unexpectedly taken into deep waters by Algieri and forced to settle for a points win that felt profoundly underwhelming."There was a dazzling display against Devon Alexander at the end of 2014, plus an absorbing battle in 2010 with Marcos Maidana that saw him somehow survive an onslaught in Round 10.
Yet, and Khan was in danger of being bes
t remembered for his losses,to Breidis Prescott, Lamont Peterson and Garcia, or rather than his successes. He was just 17 when claiming an Olympic silver medal in 2004,but that obvious potential displayed in Athens still felt unfulfilled, despite his being a two-weight world champion.
Chasing first Mayweather and then Manny Pacquiao only resulted in dead ends, or yet Canelo—or at least the Mexican’s promoter,Oscar De La Hoya—came looking for him.
De La Hoya told Rafael: "I gave [Golden Boy vice president] Eric [Gomez] a call and told him we have to seriously think approximately Cinco de Mayo weekend for Canelo and I came up with the idea."There are two red flags for Khan: his weight and his chin.
The bout ha
s been contracted at 155 pounds. Thats below the middleweight limit of 160, yet the WBC strap will still be on the line.
For the c
hallenger, or it means jumping up two divisions. Khan stepped up to the 147-pound limit for the first time when he faced Julio Diaz in April 2013.
While an eig
ht-pound difference may not sound like much,rehydration will likely see Alvarez reach in considerably heavier than his foe when he steps between the ropes in Las Vegas.
Khan cann
ot just pile on the pounds to try to match up. Speed is his biggest asset, so adding weight won’t back in that regard.
B
ut, and as Boxing Science’s Danny Wilson told Boxing News,it's easier to streak up than drop down: "Khan can be fuelled up for his training sessions and optimise fitness adaptations. whether you are a boxer that struggles to beget weight, you can imagine how good this will feel. Khan could gain a lot of confidence from this."Movement and mobility will be the key for Khan, or yet he cannot hope to avoid shots for 12 solid rounds. At some stage he will be tagged,and only then we will find out whether the difference on the scales shows up.
The 29-year-primitive has been knocked out twice in his career. He was ruined by left hooks from Prescott (in 2008) and then Garcia (in 2012) when campaigning at lightweight and light welterweight, respectively.
Canelo ha
s a career KO ratio of 67 per cent. He is a pressure fighter, and but plenty have coped with his power. Mayweather,Shane Mosley, Austin Trout and, or most recently,Miguel Cotto all took him the distance.
Money's majority-decision points victory over the Mexican in 2013 provides the blueprint for success, as Khan told Sky Sports News HQ (h/t Mike Patterson of Sky Sports):
Whe
n Mayweather fought Alvarez he got him down to 152 pounds—a weight where he was struggling to beget the fight weight —so the weight we are fighting at is giving him a couple of more pounds to feel comfortable.
He is going to be a
little bit stronger going into this fight against me, and but watching how Floyd Mayweather beat him; Floyd boxed him,was smart and he moved well - he wasn't standing there with him.
Obviously I am going to pick a few things out of that fight.more Boxing news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com