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THE CALM BEFORE THE STORM: TSZYU vs MITCHELL Sharkie's Machine by Frank Gonzalez Jr. |
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Flash back to February of 2001. WBA Light Welterweight Champion Sharmba Mitchell
taking on WBC Champion Kostya Tszyu at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, the Mecca
Big-time Boxing showdowns.
Brought to you by Saratogamist
copyright 2001-2004
“The Calm Before The Storm”
Kostya Tszyu Vs. Sharmba Mitchell
(30-1-0-24 KO’s) (55-3-0-30 KO’s)
Tszyu hadn’t lost since May of 1997 when “Cool” Vince Philips TKO’d him in 10 in
a fight considered the “upset of the year.” Mitchell hadn’t lost a fight since
1994; a TKO 9 loss to Stevie Johnston and prior to that was KO’d by Leavander
Johnson in eight rounds at Lightweight. Since then, Mitchell has carefully
stayed away from fighters with the last name Johnson.
On a cold day in February of 2001, two great technical fighters fought a sloppy,
somewhat dirty fight. Tszyu even got a point deducted by ‘fair but firm’ Referee
Joe Cortez for pushing in the fourth round. There were no knockdowns but
Mitchell went down about five times—wrestling out of clinches. Overall, Kostya
landed the better punches and was ahead (on my scorecard) leading into the
seventh round, when Mitchell tore a ligament in his left knee and couldn’t
continue. It was deemed a TKO 7 win for Kostya Tszyu.
In the wake of that fight Mitchell became obsessed with getting a rematch with
Tszyu. I can’t say I blame him but for a long time, he was annoying to listen
to. I think anytime a fight ends because of injury a rematch should be
mandatory, that only makes sense. Boxing is not like other sports that have
uniform rules and regulations. What’s ultimately fair is rarely a consideration
in Boxing match ups. This is unless there’s big money to be made.
Life went on.
Four months later, Kostya fought the rugged Oktay Urkal, who was 28-0 at the
time. Tszyu won a UD 12 in a much tougher fight than he expected. Five months
after that, Tszyu took on the loud talking, flamboyant Zab Judah and knocked him
out in the second round with a well timed punch as Judah was going backwards
with his hands down in showboating fashion. The dance Judah did trying to get up
off the canvas is one of Boxing’s funniest highlight reels.
Thirteen months after facing Tszyu, Sharmba Mitchell re-entered the ring to
fight a soft touch in Bernard Harris (21-15) and won a ten round decision. Four
months later, Mitchell laced ‘em up again, this time to face journeyman, Frank
Houghtaling, again going the distance and winning a decision.
While the mirror of both fighters consequent outings may look favorable towards
Tszyu so far, Mitchell pulled an ace move by taking on “Cool” Vince Philips in
November of 2002 and winning a Majority Decision over the man who had TKO’d
Kostya Tszyu. It must be fairly noted that Phillips was past his peak at the
time.
Every time Mitchell spoke to the press, he was saying the same thing…that he
wanted a rematch with Kostya Tszyu. He seemed consumed and obsessed with Kostya
Tszyu. Always calling him out and implying that Tszyu didn’t want a rematch
because he was scared. Mitchell always says he was winning their fight before
the stoppage. I don’t remember it that way. But take nothing away from Mitchell;
he’s a very skillful and slick boxer.
I suspect that DeMarcus Corley is Mitchell’s secret fashion designer. Sharmba’s
ring attire (those are not shorts, they are skirts!) could do with an overhaul
but otherwise; he’s a top-notch fighter.
I thought Mitchell got a gift decision over Lovemore N’Dou back in February of
this year. Mitchell was outworked and out scored in that one but as is often the
politics in “Professional” Boxing, the winner sometimes loses and the loser
sometimes wins.
Mitchell sort of made up for (his loss to N’Dou) last April by going to England
and putting a complete beat down on the scrappy but not quite ready for prime
time, Michael Stewart. He did this in the MENS Arena; house of Ricky Hatton, on
a night Hatton was the featured attraction against no hoper, Dennis Pedersen,
who Hatton beat by TKO 6.
The underlying notion in that event was that Hatton and Mitchell would soon meet
in the ring against each other. Of course we know THAT will not happen. Hatton
is an exciting fighter—but he’s far too over-protected by his promoter to risk a
loss against a truly capable and proven fighter like Mitchell. I hope Hatton is
satisfied with his WBU Title belt. (WB Who?...WBU) By the way, instead of
fighting Mitchell, Hatton went on to fight Michael Stewart, winning TKO
5. Ironic? Not really.
Mitchell’s last fight was a quick TKO 2 victory over Moises Pedroza (I know, I
never heard of him either). But Mitchell has been a busy bee.
Outside of being TKO’d by one of the coolest cats in Boxing (Vince Phillips),
Kostya Tszyu has impressed me as one of the most complete fighters I’ve ever
seen. Good stamina, heart, patient boxing skills, defense, power, ring
generalship, the works. When he fought Ben Tackie, two fights after Mitchell
(and Tackie was still very good then) he was flawless. Eight months after Tackie,
Tszyu fought Jesse James Leija, who I consider the Gatekeeper of the division. I
was disappointed that he was fighting Leija instead of some of the other top
guys in the division but what can you do? You tune in and watch, no?
Well, I expected Leija to get cut so badly from Kostya that it would be a short
fight. Leija is a tough customer but he’s a bleeder. Surprisingly, it was Leija
taking it to Kostya with aggressive punching and slicker boxing, scoring well
for the first few rounds. I had Leija winning the first few rounds and was
pretty shocked. Kostya looked very rusty. But by the fourth round, Tszyu got
oiled up and started landing the more telling blows.
Then all of a sudden in the fifth round, Leija’s right ear starts to bleed.
Kostya must have busted his eardrum with a punch. At the start of the sixth, the
fight was called off and Tszyu won by TKO 6.
I thought it was too weird. It almost seemed like a fix. Leija was doing so well
against the Champion when suddenly, the always tough, Jesse James Leija threw in
the towel? Hey, it wasn’t my ear so I don’t know how painful it was but Jesse
didn’t look to be in agonizing pain after the stoppage. But in previous fights,
Leija’s age had been showing him slowing after five rounds.
After the Leija fight, Tszyu disappeared from the Ring. With a rematch against
Mitchell in the works, Tszyu suffered a training injury, further postponing his
rematch with Mitchell, which wasn’t necessarily going to happen until Mitchell
had earned it. Since Mitchell HAS earned it—Tszyu has given the appearance of
avoiding the rematch with all his training injuries.
Mitchell has been active and looking good. For over 20 months—Tszyu has been
holding the 140-pound Titles hostage. Mitchell has fought five times in that
span. And now, almost two years after the Leija fight—Kostya Tszyu returns. He
is 35 years old now and has already accomplished all he could have dreamed in
his Boxing career. Mitchell is 34 himself—but he’s been active. If Tszyu had
ring rust after only eight months last time up against Leija, his return after
20 months should be real interesting.
Outside of the return of Felix Trinidad in his slugfest with Ricardo Mayorga
early in the month, October has not been so kind to Boxing Fans.
I can’t wait for the arrival of November 6th 2004. It’s going to be ‘put up or
shut up’ time for Sharmba Mitchell. If Tszyu is in the kind of shape he says he
is in—I expect him to win in impressive style. If Tszyu is rusty—expect Mitchell
to jump all over him and try to take his revenge. The Tszyu I recall has the
ability to neutralize flashy fighters with excellent technical boxing skills,
timing and finding a home for his big punches. If he’s not in tiptop shape,
Sharmba will outbox him and win by points. I’m leaning towards Kostya Tszyu
coming back strong and possibly winning by knock out in the late rounds.
If Kostya decides not to retire after facing Mitchell, I’d love to see him mix
it up with Floyd Mayweather Jr. so there can be no doubt as to who is the best
fighter at 140. Can anyone think of a more intriguing match up at 140-pounds?
* * *
Comments can be emailed to dshark87@hotmail.com
10-27-2004