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Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
October 12th, 2008
“Dawson Beats Tarver by a Mile”
Former IBF/IBO titlist Antonio Tarver (27-5, 19 KO’s) met the
future of the Light Heavyweight division Saturday night in Las
Vegas and his name is Chad Dawson. Dawson (27-0-1 NC, 17
KO’s), who now holds two title belts in the IBF and IBO titles
is about as close to being a unified champion as one can be in
pro boxing these days.
Dawson didn’t just beat Tarver, he took him to school,
out-boxing Tarver and capping things off in the twelfth round
with a knockdown, when a Dawson left hand set Tarver off
balance and his glove touched the canvas in trying not to
fall. The final scores were 118-109 and 117-110 twice, all in
favor of “Bad” Chad Dawson, who was just too good for Antonio
Tarver.
This was the busiest I’ve ever seen Antonio Tarver; he was the
aggressor most of the fight and threw far more punches than
I’ve seen him throw in a long time, as he was forced to fight
every moment of every round. Dawson countered very well and
may have been moving backwards a lot but was always
controlling the action. After 12 rounds, there was no blood,
no cuts and no mice under eyes or swollen faces. Both fighters
looked fine after 12 rounds were completed but minus any blood
or bruises of proof, this was a one sided blow-out in favor of
Dawson, who was the faster and stronger of the two.
In the lead up to this fight, Tarver typically did a lot of
talking and Dawson got annoyed listening to Tarver run his
mouth about how great he is and how he’s the best LHW in the
world and so on and so forth, ad nausea.
As Dawson demonstrated by the end of the night, talk is cheap.
Arguments can be made that Dawson won every round except for
the sixth, where Dawson gave the round to Tarver by going into
total defensive mode to show Tarver that he couldn’t hit him
or hurt him, even with Dawson not punching back. He gave
Tarver the opportunity to prove his boasts but Tarver came up
real short. If you could win a round by being the better
defender, Dawson would have won that sixth round too.
For all his talk, Tarver simply didn’t have enough to keep up
with the far busier Dawson, who certainly landed more punches
all night. I thought Tarver actually stole the third round
with a good late rally that backed Dawson up some. But in
every round, Dawson beat Tarver to the punch, defended pretty
well and controlled the tempo of the action. Both showed good
defense but since Dawson threw more, he landed more. Tarver
had a few moments where he’d score a couple of shots or block
something from Dawson but for the most part, this fight was
all Chad Dawson.
There were some interesting little ironies, like Tarver’s
rants outside the ring and Chad being the talker throughout
the fight inside the ring, taunting Tarver and showing who the
better fighter was, without a doubt. Dawson’s self-assuredness
was too powerful for Tarver to unravel. The ‘Force’ was with
Dawson big time Saturday night. Outside the ring, Dawson tends
to be the stoically quiet type. He doesn’t brag about himself
and really does his talking in the ring, like dignified
champions do.
I thought it was kind of silly having the wives interviewed
together before the fight. Was it supposed to be a question of
whose wife looked better? It must’ve been a quiet ride home
for the Tarvers, after the way Dawson owned him in the ring,
leaving little for Tarver to talk about, except to admit the
truth, that he gave it his best but Dawson fought the better
fight.
At 39, Tarver is still a decent fighter, much as he’s always
been. Just because he beat a past his prime Roy Jones Jr.
doesn’t really make Tarver a legend. Light Heavyweight has not
been a particularly deep division for a long time. Though I
must confess how much I enjoyed watching Tarver put Jones to
sleep in their second fight. For that, I’ll always remember
Tarver with special respect.
I thought Glen Johnson won a close fight against Chad Dawson
last April. I didn’t like Dawson’s answers during that post
fight interview, where he avoided answering if he would fight
Johnson again. I think that if Dawson believes that he is the
best in the division, he’d do well to fight a rematch against
the very deserving Glen Johnson. Johnson has a tune up
caliber fight set for next month. Should he win that fight, a
rematch with Dawson would make for an exciting and highly
anticipated rematch, sure to fill the seats at whatever venue
is lucky enough to sign that fight.
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Comments can be emailed to Frank Gonzalez Jr.
10-11-2008
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