Congratulations to young
Timothy Bradley (22-0, 11 KO’s), who went to Nottingham,
England,
as the WBC’s #1 contender and took Junior Witter’s (36-2-2, 21
KO’s) WBC Super Lightweight Title by a Split Decision victory.
The twilight zone official scores were 115-113 for Witter,
114-113 and 115-113 for Bradley. I had it a blowout for
Bradley.
Bradley must have made
one hell of an impact on the WBC with his recent Decision wins
over Donald Camarena and Miguel Vasquez. Maybe it was his TKO
5 win over Nasser Athumani in April of last year because I
can’t figure what justifies Bradley being ranked number one by
the WBC.
Bradley’s never beaten
any of the top ten contenders. How did Bradley manage to pass
over Ricky Hatton, Devon Alexander, Jungbum Kim, Souleymane
M’Baye, Demetrius Hopkins, Lovemore N’Dou, Lamont Peterson,
Colin Lynes and Randall Bailey all of whom comprise the top of
the WBC’s Super Lightweight rankings, none of whom he’s
fought?
As an American, I don’t get
to see too many of Junior Witter’s fights, the last one I saw
was a long time ago, when Zab Judah floored him en route to
beating him convincingly (by UD 12) back in 2000. Since then,
Witter’s beaten De Marcus Corley (by UD 12, to win the vacant
WBC title) and Vivian Harris (KO 7), both of whom had quality
but have been past their best days for some time. He also beat
Lovemore N’dou (by UD 12) and Andreas Kotelnik (by UD 12) in
2005.
What I saw from Witter on Saturday wasn’t very impressive.
With all of his assets, he never put any offense together and
seemed reluctant to show any aggression, even after being
downed in the sixth. His whole approach was to run, counter
and clinch. That don’t win rounds, especially when those
counter punches are rarely thrown and when they are, they
don’t land.
In the first round,
Witter scored a left, switched from orthodox to southpaw, and
landed a nice counter after Bradley landed a right. Witter
looked big and Bradley looked small. I gave the first round to
Witter, since he landed the better punches.
After that, Bradley did
more scoring in every round and scored a knockdown in the
sixth, with an overhand right that cracked Witter on top of
his temple. Bradley did a good job pressuring Witter to make
it a fight, while Witter was content to pose, paw his jab and
clinch when Bradley got too close. Witter’s best punch of the
fight was a left cross that happened to be the only clean
punch he landed in the seventh round.
This was a very technical
fight that saw Witter and Bradley dance around the ring,
feeling each other out for way too long. Throughout the fight,
the commentators kept saying that the fight was close but all
I saw was Witter pawing his jab, backing up, clinching and
slipping. What I rarely saw him do was throw any punches.
This was a dream fight
for fans of technical boxers but hardly an entertaining fight
in my estimate. Outside of the sixth round knockdown, there
was hardly an exciting moment in this one. I prefer
boxer/punchers or sluggers than to watch two technical
boxers—unless they’re aggressive or at least fairly busy, they
can get real boring, real fast. To Bradley’s credit, he
provided most of the action.
Witter looked intimidated
by the more determined Bradley. Bradley missed a lot of shots
but he landed at least five times more than Witter did in any
round save the first. There were rounds where Witter landed
less than five punches.
For years I’ve been
hearing how Witter wants to fight Ricky Hatton, who has made
it clear that he will not fight Witter because, ‘he doesn’t
like him.’ Did he like Floyd Mayweather Jr.? I don’t think so.
I can’t imagine why Hatton wouldn’t want to fight Witter,
especially after what I saw Saturday, when Timothy Bradley,
the kid from out of nowhere, who is suddenly ranked number one
by the WBC over a host of more deserving fighters, managed to
go to Witter’s turf and win just about every round on my
scorecard over Junior. Witter showed no power, no offense and
no urgency to win, even after being floored in the sixth
round.
For Witter, this loss
could be a big step down. Witter has good boxing skills but
for some reason, he was offensively anemic Saturday. I’d love
to see him fight Ricky Hatton. It is the most logical match up
for both of them at this point. It would definitely sell
tickets. Witter can use some redemption after this lack luster
performance against Bradley. Ricky’s a brawler, Witter’s a
boxer, the one thing this fight wouldn’t be is boring.
For Bradley, this is the
beginning of a promising career. I hope his handlers don’t put
him in the, ‘Juan Diaz regimen’ by keeping him away from real
challengers and milking the title for two years or more before
defending it against a top notch, deserving fighter.
Now that Bradley is a
“World champion” he should fight the best guys in the division
and not hand picked has-beens or worse. Bradley has good
boxing skills, instincts, stamina, pretty fast hands and
showed good ring smarts. I’d like to see him fight Randall
Bailey or Demetrius Hopkins but Ricky Hatton is the top guy in
the division and is the top contender in the WBC now that
Bradley is the champion. Bradley vs. Hatton would be an
interesting clash of styles.
Too bad boxing isn’t
based on anything that resembles a merit system. If it was,
Bradley wouldn’t have been the WBC top contender until beating
the top guys in the division and proving his worthiness of
that status. It should be that in order to become the top
contender, you’d have to fight all the top ten guys in the
division and beat them in order to EARN a shot at a World
Title.
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Comments can be emailed to
Frank Gonzalez Jr.