Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
August 20, 2006
A New Power At Welterweight, “Paul "The Punisher”
Williams
Standing at six foot-one inch tall, southpaw
Welterweight Prospect, Paul “The Punisher” Williams
(31-0, 23 KO’s) lived up to his nick name Saturday
night in Reno Nevada, when he punished little five
foot-seven inch, Sharmba “Little Big Man” Mitchell
(57-6, 31 KO’s) for four rounds in a scheduled twelve
round mismatch.
The fight was a tale of two prizefighters going in
opposite directions, in a battle between a shop worn
Mitchell, a former Champion and current stepping-stone
fighter, descending into the twilight of his
career—against the young and relentless, Paul
Williams, a potential star on the way up.
From the opening moments, Williams’ long range and
aggressiveness enabled him to bang Mitchell from all
angles. To his credit, Mitchell was able to land a few
clean punches, but never enough to hurt, nor slow down
the relentless Williams.
Mitchell’s best moments came in the second round when
he managed to get in close and land a four-punch
combination flush onto Williams face. Williams hardly
noticed and continued to pepper Mitchell with an array
of punches, packing power in both hands.
Mitchell was dropped in the third round by an
uppercut, followed by a right, left combo. Mitchell
morphed into John Ruiz, holding more than hitting by
that point. Referee Vic Drakulich worked hard to break
the fighters apart as Mitchell continually clinched
after every Williams’ assault. At one point, Mitchell
threw a punch during a break that caused Drakulich to
issue a stern warning. But it wouldn’t matter.
In the fourth round, Williams continued to blast
Mitchell like a ragamuffin, putting him down three
times, after which, the ref stopped the fight. Though
Sharmba showed some bravery, he was in way over his
head, literally and figuratively, from the start.
* * *
Floyd Mayweather beat Mitchell in six but Williams did
it in four and in more convincing fashion. Sharmba was
already old when he fought Mayweather and he didn’t
get any younger for Williams. As weathered as Mitchell
is, he’s still a good boxer. This beat down provided a
good exhibition of what Williams brings to the table.
During the post fight interview, Williams called out
the man no one wants to fight at 147, WBO Champion,
Antonio Margarito (33-4, 24 KO’s). He said, “If you
want to be the best, you have to beat the best.”
Floyd, are you listening?
With only one big name on his resume so far, Paul
Williams gave the impression that with his size and
tenacity, he’ll be a handful for anyone in the top of
the division. His offensive is his defense and he
showed a decent chin in taking Mitchell’s best
punches.
Williams admits that with his style of fighting, he’s
going to get hit. Taking a shot to deliver his own
appears to be his modus operandi for now. Williams
would be wise to improve his defensive skills if he
plans on beating any of the best in the division. At
25 years old, Williams will only get better.
Beating a faded Sharmba Mitchell isn’t enough to put
Williams in league with the elite of the division just
yet. While Williams may be ambitious, he’s probably
better off taking on some top contenders like Kermit
Cintron, Carlos Quintana or Joel Julio before going
after the Champions. After all, you should have to
earn your way to the top.
Styles make fights and it would be interesting to see
how Williams' high work rate punching would fare vs. a
fighter like Margarito in the future. Margarito has
effective ring generalship, is an accurate puncher and
gets stronger as the rounds grow deeper. Margarito is
tall enough to handle Williams’ size and wise enough
to turn Williams wild aggression into a liability. Of
course, you never know what can happen. Margarito vs.
Williams could be a great fight someday.
The durable WBC Champion, Carlos Baldomir (42-9-6, 13
KO’s) would also be a big step up and a tough
proposition for Williams, as Baldomir brings his own
brand of hard working, blue collar pugilism to the
equation. Baldomir does have 9 losses on his record
but he hasn’t lost in seven years. Baldomir also has a
competent defense and is riding high on his last two
victories over Zab Judah and Arturo Gatti. How
Williams compares with Baldomir in terms of stamina
and ability to absorb punches might be the storyline
in that match up.
Ricky Hatton (41-0, 30 KO’s) would be wise to go back
to the 140-pound division, where he has the potential
to rule for a while, since Miguel Cotto will probably
move up to 147 soon. It would be nice to see them
fight each other at 147 before Hatton goes back to Jr.
Welterweight, where he belongs.
Hatton’s pressure style might not work well against
Williams, who is too tall, too fast and too strong for
the much shorter Hatton, who doesn’t appear to have
much power at 147. Williams’ long arms generate plenty
of power. Hatton would have to stay very close on the
inside to neutralize Williams’ size. If the fight goes
into the late rounds, Williams’ stamina is a question
mark, while Hatton’s is undeniable.
Floyd Mayweather Jr. (36-0,
24 KO’s), who passed on an eight million dollar purse
to fight Antonio Margarito, is slated to fight Carlos
Baldomir in November. If he wins that fight, he’ll
likely take the safest route to staying undefeated for
a couple of years. I’d love to see Floyd prove he’s
the best Pound-for-Pound fighter in boxing by handling
a strong, confidently dangerous guy like Margarito but
that’s not going to happen if Floyd can help it.
As for Williams, I doubt he’d be on Floyd’s short list
of safe opponents any time soon. For Floyd, there’s
easier money to be made fighting older, faded, brand
name fighters than a high risk, low reward fight
against Paul Williams, who doesn’t even own a major
Title…yet. If he gets one, maybe Floyd will move up to
154 in his never ending quest to fight Oscar De La
Hoya—before he retires. Time will tell.
* * *
Comments can be emailed to dshark87@hotmail.com
8-19-06