Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
November 29, 2009
“Joan Guzman vs. Ali Funeka
Star in, 'Enough Already with Bogus Decisions!' ”
It was another
black eye for boxing Saturday night in Quebec City, Canada,
where South African Lightweight Ali Funeka (30-2-3, 25 KO’s)
faced Joan Guzman (29-0-1, 17 KO’s) of the Dominican
Republic for the vacant IBF Lightweight title.
This fight
started with Guzman winning the first two rounds using a
slick, aggressive approach that involved some impressive
feints, great in and out movement and punches that were
landing. That lasted until near the end of the second round,
when a Funeka jab opened a small cut over Guzman’s right
eye. From round three on, it was all Ali
Funeka, who found his range and used his height to keep
Guzman at the end of his jab. Guzman was a bloody mess by
the fourth round, as the Funeka jab had busted up his nose
and pecked away at the small cut that grew larger and bled
more as the rounds progressed.
Guzman spent
rounds three through 12 trying to find a way to hit Ali
Funeka but had very little success. Funeka jabbed like a
maestro and dominated the action all the way to the finish.
If ever a boxing match looked easy to score, this was
it. Yet two of the Official Judges saw the fight as a Draw.
Funeka had outclassed a bloody faced Guzman for 10 out of 12
rounds.
Guzman had to be
a bit rusty, since he hadn’t fought in almost a year and
hadn’t done much in the last couple of seasons. Actually, I
don’t understand how Guzman even qualified for a shot at a
title.
From round three
on, Guzman missed often, got tagged plenty and grew more
frustrated as the fight wore on. Guzman changed his tactics
a bit and gave a good effort but the good big man with the
hammering jab was too much for the shorter Guzman. Ali
Funeka showed good footwork and timing, often countering
Guzman’s misses with clean shots. A few
times, I thought Guzman was going to get dropped but he held
on—literally and finally opted to fight in close, where he
might negate some of Funeka’s long armed offense. But that
didn’t work too well either, as Funeka was simply the better
boxer Saturday night.
Funeka was able
to neutralize Guzman’s aggressive offense and control the
tempo of the fight from rounds three until the final bell.
When it was over, the two Canadian Judges scored it the
same; 114-114. The American Judge had it closer to reality
at 116-112 for Funeka. The result was a
Majority Draw.
Whoever was
paying the Canadian Judges didn’t want Ali Funeka to be
their new “Champ.” You have to wonder why the IBF even
sanctioned this fight. A blind person could see that Funeka
won this fight by a landslide. A “bad decision” was how
HBO’s Harold Lederman generously described it.
If the IBF
didn’t want Funeka to pay them dues for owning their strap,
why did they let even him fight for it? Joan Guzman is a
crafty boxer who’s shown some quality in the past but hasn’t
really had his head in the game lately for whatever reasons.
I don’t see how he even qualified to fight for a title based
on what little he’s done lately. Guzman beat a fading Jorge
Barrios back in 2006, won a decision over Humberto Soto in
2007 and won another 12 rounder over a little known opponent
named Ameth Diaz in 2008. He was supposed to fight Nate
Campbell last year but came in overweight. The fight was
cancelled from Guzman’s end and even after Campbell said
he’d accept the fight with Guzman being overweight, Guzman
wasn’t interested. After taking that career path, Joan
Guzman gets a shot at the IBF Lightweight title?
At least Funeka
has fought two name brand fighters in his last two outings
and has built a good momentum in the process.
It’s unlikely
the Canadian Judges will ever be held to account for their
incompetence, corruption or both. This bogus officiating saw
Ali Funeka robbed of a title he really won. It makes Guzman
look bad too since that Draw on his record is really a loss.
The result of this fight is false and gives the impression
that someone was protecting Guzman’s undefeated status
Saturday night in Canada. Intelligent fans are insulted for
being treated like fools who’ll accept whatever nonsense
they throw at us and the sport suffers more criticism for
allowing corrupt officiating to go unchecked. I don’t
understand how the boxing commissions can claim any
legitimacy when they allow Official Judges to get away with
‘stealing’ from fighters right in front of the whole world.
And its not just
Canadian Judges or American or German Judges. It’s the same
business all over the world. There are a lot of good things
about boxing but there is a lot wrong with the crooked way
it is administered. There’s nothing encouraging about
following a sport that you can’t trust for honest
competition and officiating. If anyone is hurting boxing,
it’s all these crooked Official Judges. Send letters or
emails to the IBF and let them know that we do not approve
of the crooked decision that saw Funeka robbed of his
victory. We all know boxing is more business than sport but
good businesses do well because they build a good client
base. Bad businesses ultimately fail because no one wants to
buy what they’re selling. Pro Boxing only exists because of
us—the fans who keep them in business. They know that.
Enough is enough already! The head of the IBF should
overturn this hideous result immediately. It’s garbage like
this—that’s killing the legitimacy of boxing.
* * *
Comments can be
emailed to
dshark87@hotmail.com
==
Become a
BRC friend in Facebook==
For Fight Recaps between January and May 2009, click here...
Fight Recaps Part I
(January-May 2009)
For Fight Recaps starting June 2009, click here...
Fight Recaps Part
II
(June-December 2009)
Questions? Comments? Post them in BRC's new Message Board...