
-Photo Credit: Jose Hernandez/BRC-
Sharkie's Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
November 27, 2010
"Carl Froch Shuts Out Arthur Abraham"
"King" Arthur Abraham (31-2, 25 KOs) learned the hard way
that you can't be a one trick pony in boxing. Having big KO
power is great but boxing is by definition, the art of self
defense, hitting without being hit. It's not just going in
and trying to land the haymaker that ends the fight or
waiting till the late rounds to try it. That may work
sometimes but you can't build your boxing career around it.
There's just too much a good defensive fighter can do to
nullify that approach and make you pay. Carl Froch (27-1, 20
KO's), is a tough guy known for his own late round knockouts
and being more of a banger than a boxer. Froch put on a
workmanlike performance and stuck to his game plan to out
box the slower Abraham and in my view, Froch won every round
against the man who at the start of the Super Six
Tournament, was considered by many (myself included) to be
one of the favorites to win the whole thing.
Abraham built a mystique with his own late round knockouts,
after giving away the first half of fights. Abraham fights
cocky because he packs a big punch and has a good chin but
we saw how easily Andre Dirrell out boxed him all the way
into the tenth round, where Abraham was finally starting to
land some shots. Dirrell slipped to the canvas in the
eleventh. Stupidly, Abraham hit him while he was down. The
result was a DQ loss for Abraham, and in his opinion, the
beginning of a new acting career for Dirrell. It sure did
seem like a delayed reaction, the way Dirrell looked
conscious and then suddenly laid down with his eyes closed
and legs fluttering a bit. But rules are rules and Abraham
knows the rules and deserved the DQ for crossing the line.
The Super Six Tournament is the best thing in all of boxing
these days because all the fighters must fight each other.
There's no ducking, no manipulating your way out of a fight
that you think you might lose. That is the way boxing should
be across the board, not just at Super Middleweight and for
only six fighters. But hey, for a "sport" like modern day
boxing, it's a start and maybe the rest of the sport will
benefit if fans demand real competition instead of fighters
facing hand picked opponents in predictable fare, week after
week.
Out of six original fighters, only three of the original
contestants remain, as Jermain Taylor was the first to opt
out after being KO'd by Abraham in the first series of
fights. He was followed later by Mikkel Kessler, who opted
out after winning a very close one against Carl Froch in
Kessler's home country. I thought Froch did more to win that
one but got jobbed in Denmark. And recently Andre Dirrell
opted out too, after out easily out boxing Abraham for ten
rounds and then winning by DQ, after Abraham hit him while
he was down.
One of the replacements, Allan Green, who talked a big game,
proved too green' to win a fight against top level comp.
Glen Johnson came in as a replacement fighter and he beat
Allan Green, amounting to his second loss, which saw Green
exit. Suddenly, with only one fight under his belt in this
tourney, Glen Johnson is in the semi finals. As a fan, I
wonder how much a role the official Judges will play in who
wins the tournament. Boxing is a violent sport and knockouts
are clearly the surest way to win, even if the Judges were
paid to say otherwise. Taking out the Judges is the best way
to insure victory in boxing. It always has been.
The Fight:
Round 1
Froch jabs, Abraham keeps guard up inside the center of the
ring. Froch lands a right and a right to the body. Abraham
right. Froch lands his jab frequently. Froch lands a few
before the bell. 10-9 Froch.
Round 2
As is typical, Abraham is a slow starter. Froch is busier
and lands in spots. Abraham comes on late in the round.
Froch punches laterally, to Abraham's sides, since AA's
guard is vertical. 10 -9 Froch.
Round 3
AA lands a jab. CF circles outside, punching high and low in
spots. A boring fight so far as Abraham simply doesn't do
enough. AA lands three punch combo and then stops throwing.
Froch misses a big shot as Abraham moves out of the way but
then Froch pursues him into the corner and lands a variety
of punches before the bell. 10 "“ 9 Froch.
Round 4
More of the same. Froch continues to throw more, land more
and control the tempo. Abraham seems to be waiting for a KO
opportunity that he isn't setting up. AA presses without
punching much. Froch far busier. AA comes on late but it was
too little too late. 10-9 Froch
Round 5
Froch busy, Abraham not doing much of anything. Abraham's
strategy of waiting until his opponent is tired and ripe for
a KO didn't seem to be working at all in this fight, where
Froch is simply outworking him. Froch stuns AA on the ropes
with combos and lands a lunging left at the bell. 10-9
Froch.
Round 6
More of the Matador vs. the Bull as the Matador, Froch,
lands his jab and throws power shots in between. Froch
presses but without punching. Abrahams' eyes started
swelling from Froch's jabs. All Froch, who's the better
boxer and fighter. AA threw a shot but Froch counted him and
AA slipped into the ropes. Froch landed a clean left to
face. Ding! 10-9 Froch
Round 7
Froch does all the work. AA blocks and comes forward for
more. This is a mismatch! Abraham hasn't won a single round
and don't look like he's going to get any better. Abraham's
offense is predictable and Froch nearly always makes him
miss. Froch lands a few at the bell. 10-9 Froch.
Round 8
Abraham taking a licking. Abraham threw a forearm and was
warned by the ref. Froch works the center ring, looking to
outbox Abraham till the twelfth. 10-9 Froch.
Round 9
Froch left to face, jab, jab. Still, Abraham doesn't turn it
up, only offering up a jab here and there, trying to lure
Froch in, where Froch's not going. Froch is fighting smart,
employing the fundamentals and being careful not to fall
into any traps Abraham's been waiting on all night. Abraham
lands a right at the bell. 10-9 Froch.
Round 10
Froch jabs and keeps it a fight. AA blocks and comes
forward. Froch lands his jab and AA is
completely outclassed. Froch has his way as AA starts
backing up and finally luring Froch in but Froch landed the
better shots when the fire started. 10-9 Froch.
Round 11
Abraham landed a jab. Froch retakes the tempo and presses
the issue with his jab, which is often followed up with
power shots. Froch landed a right hook that landed and moved
Abraham. Abraham appears as one dimensional as can be. Froch
landed a jab to the stomach. Abraham complained that it was
low. It was border line. Froch outworks and out boxes
Abraham, like a bleeping ballet! 10-9 Froch.
Round 12
Abraham comes on strong but misses wildly. Abraham hits
Froch behind the head with a right. Froch retakes the center
ring and boxes outside, waiting for Abraham to come in so he
can jab and keep him where he wants. Froch rendered Abraham
ineffective. Froch landed a shot that hit AA behind the
head. Abraham made a fuss. Abraham rallies ineffectively and
the bell rang to end things. 10-9 Froch. A total shutout on
my card.
The official scores were: Burt Clements 119-109, Oren
Shellenberger 120-108 and Max De Luca 120-108 all for Carl
Froch, who wins back the WBC Super Middleweight Title.
* *
During the post fight interview, Froch was gracious and when
asked how he executed his strategy against Abraham, he said
he did what his trainer asked him to do and though he was
tempted to go toe to toe at certain points, he heard his
trainer's voice, reminding him to stick to the plan.
This was an impressive win for Carl Froch, who fought a
disciplined fight that showed he recognized Abraham's
tactics and devised the perfect plan to out box him and win
every round.
Abraham's stock appears to be waning, after losing two in a
row after knocking out Jermain Taylor to win the first Super
Six fight by Knockout. Andre Dirrell exposed Abraham's lack
of boxing skills and Froch furthered that point Saturday in
Finland. Maybe Abraham has learned that he has to try to win
every round and not just try for a late round knockout.
Abraham is still in it and is scheduled to fight Andre Ward
in the semi finals.
Unfortunately, there isn't a single "Champion" in all of
boxing these days as there are too many "titlists" that won't fight the other titlists. A titlist is just a
contender these days and since they don't fight the other
top contenders, there are no Champions. A Champion is the
ONE who beats all the top fighters in a division.
But there is a new kind of titlist these days, the so
called, Best Pound for Pound title, which really isn't a
reflection of the best boxer in the sport so much as the
most "marketable" fighter in the sport. Manny Pacquiao is
the current P4P titlist and as such, he only fights past
their prime big names, always on Pay-Per-View.
As 2010 comes to a close, let's hope the promoters come to
their senses and realize there is more money to be made by
putting out a quality product that is based on merit instead
of hype. Pay-Per-View fights are okay if they have quality
undercard matches and the main event is between two of the
absolute best in the sport. Short of that, it's just a
charade that's killing what's left of this sport.