2011 Official Boxing Thread: 12/30 Jermain Taylor + Andre Dirrell return on ShoBox.

ESPN's Fighter of the Year.

Spoiler [+]
When Showtime's Super Six World Boxing Classic began in late 2009, Mikkel Kessler was the favorite to win the tournament featuring six of the best super middleweights in the world. Arthur Abraham was widely considered the second choice, with Carl Froch also expected to do well.

Andre Ward, despite a 2004 Olympic gold medal and a winning streak that stretched back to 1996, when he was just 12, was not a popular pick.

[h4]Dan Rafael's fighters of the year[/h4][table][tr][th=""]Year[/th][th=""]Fighter[/th][/tr][tr][td]2011[/td][td]Andre Ward[/td][/tr][tr][td]2010[/td][td]Sergio Martinez[/td][/tr][tr][td]2009[/td][td]Manny Pacquiao[/td][/tr][tr][td]2008[/td][td]Manny Pacquiao[/td][/tr][tr][td]2007[/td][td]Floyd Mayweather Jr.[/td][/tr][tr][td]2006[/td][td]Manny Pacquiao[/td][/tr][tr][td]2005[/td][td]Ricky Hatton[/td][/tr][tr][td]2004[/td][td]Glen Johnson[/td][/tr][tr][td]2003[/td][td]James Toney[/td][/tr][tr][td]2002[/td][td]Vernon Forrest[/td][/tr][tr][td]2001[/td][td]Bernard Hopkins[/td][/tr][tr][td]2000[/td][td]Felix Trinidad[/td][/tr][/table]

As Ward said, he was just a "young puppy" when the tournament began, even though he had high expectations for himself.

"I expected from the beginning to make it to the final," he said. "And slowly but surely we made believers out of a lot of people that doubted me."

Now, 26 months later, few doubt the Oakland, Calif., native, who stands alone atop the super middleweight mountain.

He was the only fighter to roll through the tournament undefeated, taking a title from Kessler with ease in an 11th-round technical decision in his opening bout and manhandling his 2010 opponents, Allan Green and Sakio Bika (in a fight outside the tournament), in lopsided decisions.

Those blowout victories set the stage for Ward's stellar 2011 campaign. This year he took apart Abraham for a no-doubt-about-it decision in the semifinals in May and then capped his tremendous tournament run in the Dec. 17 final, easily outpointing Froch in a masterpiece to unify two belts, win the vacant Ring magazine title and stamp himself as one of the best fighters on the planet.

Selecting Ward as the 2011 ESPN.com fighter of the year was an easy call. And it could be just the first of multiple such awards for Ward, 27, whose speed, skills, defense, smarts and fierce competitive spirit should make him a force for years to come.

"Andre is on a path for greatness," said Dan Goossen, who has promoted Ward for his entire professional career.

Going into the Super Six final, no clear-cut fighter of the year had emerged, but many viewed the winner of the tournament as the likely selection, which was made even easier when Ward beat Froch so easily.

[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/Rich SchultzAndre Ward, right, outclassed Carl Froch in the Super Six World Boxing Classic final with his superior speed and technique.

When asked before he faced Froch about the possibility of being named fighter of the year, Ward said it was one of his career dreams.

"One of my goals has always been for me to be fighter of the year and to get my coach [Virgil Hunter] trainer of the year. It's been a long time coming, almost 15 years of grinding and toiling when no one is around patting you on the back and there are no lights, camera, action. The lights and the cameras have just been coming around the last five, six, seven years, but we've been grinding for many, many years. [Winning fighter of the year] would be icing on the cake for winning this tournament."

And after he shut Froch down and hoisted the Super Six championship trophy, Ward was asked about it again at his postfight news conference.

"I heard some rumblings about that before the fight," Ward said. "Obviously, that's not something I could focus on before this fight, but if that comes true, that's unbelievable. You don't set out to do that when the year starts. You just put your head down and put in the work, and then you look up and hopefully you win an award like that. So if we can get that award on top of everything else we won tonight, it would just be an unbelievable year."

Guess what, Andre? It was an unbelievable year, indeed.

Honorable mention:

Miguel Cotto: The Puerto Rican star fought just once in 2010, winning a junior middleweight title from Yuri Foreman, but Cotto turned in a more memorable 2011 with a pair of knockout victories in action-packed defenses. In March, Cotto was a big favorite when he hooked up with Ricardo Mayorga, the faded former titleholder. As expected, it was an action fight that Cotto dominated. Cotto dropped him in the 12th round and then finished him moments later when Mayorga, who had suffered a severe thumb injury in the final round, quit while getting shellacked. But the real reason Cotto (37-2, 30 KOs) makes the list this year is the revenge he exacted on Antonio Margarito. Cotto had fumed for the past three years about his 11th-round TKO loss to Margarito in a 2008 welterweight title fight that was tainted because many believe Margarito wore loaded hand wraps in the fight. (The reason: Before his next bout, Margarito was caught trying to enter the ring with hand wraps containing illegal pads coated in a plasterlike substance.) Cotto took out all of his anger and frustration on Margarito, who had come into the fight with a bad right eye after being destroyed by Manny Pacquiao 13 months earlier. As promised, Cotto showed no mercy, targeting the surgically repaired eye -- which almost kept Margarito from being licensed in New York -- and did a number on it. With a raucous Madison Square Garden crowd of 21,239 mostly Puerto Ricans cheering him on, Cotto dominated Margarito, whose eye was busted up and swollen closed when the bout was stopped at the start of the 10th round. It was a glorious and memorable victory for Cotto, who has never had a more emotional victory.

Jorge Arce: At 32 and with numerous hard fights on his odometer, Arce was considered by many to be simply playing out the string of a fine career. Given his popularity in Mexico and all-action style, he certainly could milk a few more paydays. But a funny thing happened on the way to the retirement home: Arce (59-6-2, 45 KOs) had a resurgence and won belts at junior featherweight and bantamweight to become a four-division titlist (five, if you count the interim flyweight title he won). In 2011, Arce moved up two divisions from junior bantamweight to junior featherweight and made the most of a shot at then-undefeated titlist Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. in May. Vazquez was favored to handle his older, smaller and slower opponent, but Arce pulled the upset in impressive fashion in a terrific fight on the Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley undercard. Vazquez knocked Arce down in the fourth round, but Arce, with a cut over his left eye, stormed back to stop him in the 12th round. In a September defense, Arce avenged a 2009 decision loss to Simphiwe Nongqayi in a junior bantamweight title fight by knocking him out in the fourth round of the rematch. Arce finished his outstanding year in November by dropping down to bantamweight and winning a lopsided decision against Angky Angota to claim a vacant title in a rematch of a previous Arce victory.

Bernard Hopkins: Forget about Hopkins' miserable second-round no-decision against Chad Dawson in October, a bout that ended in Hopkins (52-5-2, 32 KOs) suffering a dislocated shoulder when Dawson lifted him up and shoved him down to the canvas. The result was originally ruled a knockout win for Dawson but was later overturned to a no-decision, as it should have been. Hopkins makes the list instead for his historic victory against Jean Pascal on his Montreal turf in May. In a rematch of their disputed draw from last December, Hopkins claimed a unanimous decision -- during which he famously did a set of pushups between rounds -- to become the oldest fighter in boxing history, at age 46, to win a world championship, breaking former heavyweight champion George Foreman's record.

[h4]Rafael's boxing blog[/h4]
rafael_dan_m.jpg
Get the latest scoop and analysis on the world of boxing from ESPN.com's Dan Rafael in his blog.

Lamont Peterson: The year didn't start out well for Peterson, who turned down a career-high payday of about $350,000 to travel to England for a junior welterweight title shot against Amir Khan because he was unhappy with the deal, including the terms of a rematch clause in the event he won. Instead, Peterson wound up taking a dangerous fight for $10,000 against Victor Cayo in July. Peterson (30-1-1, 15 KOs) looked terrific and knocked out Cayo with 14 seconds left in the bout, which was an eliminator, to become one of Khan's mandatory challengers. Peterson's rejection of the April offer looked mighty fine when he persuaded Khan to come to his hometown of Washington, D.C., for the fight on Dec. 10 -- and got Golden Boy, Khan's promoter, to pay him $650,000. It was an outstanding action battle and competitive all the way, but Peterson pulled the life-changing upset with a split-decision win, which went his way because of a pair of controversial point deductions from hometown referee Joe Cooper.

Nonito Donaire: The "Filipino Flash" was a dominant titleholder at flyweight and looked great in his brief stop at junior bantamweight, where he won an interim belt. But in 2011, Donaire (27-1, 18 KOs) rose another level toward stardom, as he rocketed up the pound-for-pound list by winning a pair of bantamweight titles in the most impressive way a fighter can: with an absolutely blistering knockout against a well-respected champion. In February, Donaire met Fernando Montiel, a three-division titleholder, and simply destroyed him in the second round with a massive left hook. Although Donaire then spent several months embroiled in a promotional dispute with Top Rank -- during which he tried to sign with rival Golden Boy and wound up missing a fight date because of the litigation -- the sides eventually settled, and he returned to action in October. Donaire met Omar Narvaez of Argentina, a long-reigning flyweight titlist who had won a junior bantamweight belt in 2010, defended it three times and then jumped up to bantamweight to challenge Donaire. It was a cakewalk, as Donaire pitched a clean 120-108 shutout on all three scorecards to embarrass Narvaez, who spent most of the fight petrified to engage.

Manny Pacquiao: The Filipino fighting congressman didn't have the kind of megayear he enjoyed when he won his three fighter of the year awards, but boxing's biggest star still had a fine campaign. In May, he dropped Shane Mosley in the third round and won a virtual shutout decision to retain his welterweight title. In November, Pacquiao (54-3-2, 38 KOs) finally hooked up with rival and fellow future Hall of Famer Juan Manuel Marquez, a three-division champion, for the third time. Once again, they waged a terrific fight. After fighting to a draw in their first meeting, Pacquiao won a split decision in the second fight. The third bout was another exciting and close fight that Pacquiao this time won via majority decision.

Brian Viloria: In 2010, Viloria lost his junior flyweight title by rough 12th-round knockout to Carlos Tamara in an upset and had to be briefly hospitalized after the fight. The "Hawaiian Punch" contemplated retirement but elected to carry on, and now those thoughts seem like a distant memory after his impressive 2011 campaign. In July, Viloria got a shot at flyweight titlist Julio Cesar Miranda. With a supportive crowd in Honolulu behind him, Viloria scored a first-round knockdown and won a comfortable decision to claim his third world title. In December, Viloria (30-3, 17 KOs) scored the biggest win of his career in a mild upset when he battered Giovani Segura, the junior flyweight world champion who had given up his title to move up in weight. Viloria swelled Segura's face near the temple area around his right eye, which grew larger and larger as the fight progressed, until the referee finally stopped it in the eighth round.

Hernan "Tyson" Marquez: Mexico's Marquez (32-2, 25 KOs) went to Panama in April and claimed a flyweight title with an 11th-round knockout of hometown fighter Luis Concepcion in an exceptional slugfest in which both men were knocked down. In July, Marquez impressively blew out Edrin Dapudong in his first title defense before hooking up with Concepcion again, this time in Mexico. With expectations running high for another great fight, Marquez nipped that in the bud by surprisingly dropping Concepcion three times in the first round for a stunning knockout victory.
 
ESPN's Fighter of the Year.

Spoiler [+]
When Showtime's Super Six World Boxing Classic began in late 2009, Mikkel Kessler was the favorite to win the tournament featuring six of the best super middleweights in the world. Arthur Abraham was widely considered the second choice, with Carl Froch also expected to do well.

Andre Ward, despite a 2004 Olympic gold medal and a winning streak that stretched back to 1996, when he was just 12, was not a popular pick.

[h4]Dan Rafael's fighters of the year[/h4][table][tr][th=""]Year[/th][th=""]Fighter[/th][/tr][tr][td]2011[/td][td]Andre Ward[/td][/tr][tr][td]2010[/td][td]Sergio Martinez[/td][/tr][tr][td]2009[/td][td]Manny Pacquiao[/td][/tr][tr][td]2008[/td][td]Manny Pacquiao[/td][/tr][tr][td]2007[/td][td]Floyd Mayweather Jr.[/td][/tr][tr][td]2006[/td][td]Manny Pacquiao[/td][/tr][tr][td]2005[/td][td]Ricky Hatton[/td][/tr][tr][td]2004[/td][td]Glen Johnson[/td][/tr][tr][td]2003[/td][td]James Toney[/td][/tr][tr][td]2002[/td][td]Vernon Forrest[/td][/tr][tr][td]2001[/td][td]Bernard Hopkins[/td][/tr][tr][td]2000[/td][td]Felix Trinidad[/td][/tr][/table]

As Ward said, he was just a "young puppy" when the tournament began, even though he had high expectations for himself.

"I expected from the beginning to make it to the final," he said. "And slowly but surely we made believers out of a lot of people that doubted me."

Now, 26 months later, few doubt the Oakland, Calif., native, who stands alone atop the super middleweight mountain.

He was the only fighter to roll through the tournament undefeated, taking a title from Kessler with ease in an 11th-round technical decision in his opening bout and manhandling his 2010 opponents, Allan Green and Sakio Bika (in a fight outside the tournament), in lopsided decisions.

Those blowout victories set the stage for Ward's stellar 2011 campaign. This year he took apart Abraham for a no-doubt-about-it decision in the semifinals in May and then capped his tremendous tournament run in the Dec. 17 final, easily outpointing Froch in a masterpiece to unify two belts, win the vacant Ring magazine title and stamp himself as one of the best fighters on the planet.

Selecting Ward as the 2011 ESPN.com fighter of the year was an easy call. And it could be just the first of multiple such awards for Ward, 27, whose speed, skills, defense, smarts and fierce competitive spirit should make him a force for years to come.

"Andre is on a path for greatness," said Dan Goossen, who has promoted Ward for his entire professional career.

Going into the Super Six final, no clear-cut fighter of the year had emerged, but many viewed the winner of the tournament as the likely selection, which was made even easier when Ward beat Froch so easily.

[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/Rich SchultzAndre Ward, right, outclassed Carl Froch in the Super Six World Boxing Classic final with his superior speed and technique.

When asked before he faced Froch about the possibility of being named fighter of the year, Ward said it was one of his career dreams.

"One of my goals has always been for me to be fighter of the year and to get my coach [Virgil Hunter] trainer of the year. It's been a long time coming, almost 15 years of grinding and toiling when no one is around patting you on the back and there are no lights, camera, action. The lights and the cameras have just been coming around the last five, six, seven years, but we've been grinding for many, many years. [Winning fighter of the year] would be icing on the cake for winning this tournament."

And after he shut Froch down and hoisted the Super Six championship trophy, Ward was asked about it again at his postfight news conference.

"I heard some rumblings about that before the fight," Ward said. "Obviously, that's not something I could focus on before this fight, but if that comes true, that's unbelievable. You don't set out to do that when the year starts. You just put your head down and put in the work, and then you look up and hopefully you win an award like that. So if we can get that award on top of everything else we won tonight, it would just be an unbelievable year."

Guess what, Andre? It was an unbelievable year, indeed.

Honorable mention:

Miguel Cotto: The Puerto Rican star fought just once in 2010, winning a junior middleweight title from Yuri Foreman, but Cotto turned in a more memorable 2011 with a pair of knockout victories in action-packed defenses. In March, Cotto was a big favorite when he hooked up with Ricardo Mayorga, the faded former titleholder. As expected, it was an action fight that Cotto dominated. Cotto dropped him in the 12th round and then finished him moments later when Mayorga, who had suffered a severe thumb injury in the final round, quit while getting shellacked. But the real reason Cotto (37-2, 30 KOs) makes the list this year is the revenge he exacted on Antonio Margarito. Cotto had fumed for the past three years about his 11th-round TKO loss to Margarito in a 2008 welterweight title fight that was tainted because many believe Margarito wore loaded hand wraps in the fight. (The reason: Before his next bout, Margarito was caught trying to enter the ring with hand wraps containing illegal pads coated in a plasterlike substance.) Cotto took out all of his anger and frustration on Margarito, who had come into the fight with a bad right eye after being destroyed by Manny Pacquiao 13 months earlier. As promised, Cotto showed no mercy, targeting the surgically repaired eye -- which almost kept Margarito from being licensed in New York -- and did a number on it. With a raucous Madison Square Garden crowd of 21,239 mostly Puerto Ricans cheering him on, Cotto dominated Margarito, whose eye was busted up and swollen closed when the bout was stopped at the start of the 10th round. It was a glorious and memorable victory for Cotto, who has never had a more emotional victory.

Jorge Arce: At 32 and with numerous hard fights on his odometer, Arce was considered by many to be simply playing out the string of a fine career. Given his popularity in Mexico and all-action style, he certainly could milk a few more paydays. But a funny thing happened on the way to the retirement home: Arce (59-6-2, 45 KOs) had a resurgence and won belts at junior featherweight and bantamweight to become a four-division titlist (five, if you count the interim flyweight title he won). In 2011, Arce moved up two divisions from junior bantamweight to junior featherweight and made the most of a shot at then-undefeated titlist Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. in May. Vazquez was favored to handle his older, smaller and slower opponent, but Arce pulled the upset in impressive fashion in a terrific fight on the Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley undercard. Vazquez knocked Arce down in the fourth round, but Arce, with a cut over his left eye, stormed back to stop him in the 12th round. In a September defense, Arce avenged a 2009 decision loss to Simphiwe Nongqayi in a junior bantamweight title fight by knocking him out in the fourth round of the rematch. Arce finished his outstanding year in November by dropping down to bantamweight and winning a lopsided decision against Angky Angota to claim a vacant title in a rematch of a previous Arce victory.

Bernard Hopkins: Forget about Hopkins' miserable second-round no-decision against Chad Dawson in October, a bout that ended in Hopkins (52-5-2, 32 KOs) suffering a dislocated shoulder when Dawson lifted him up and shoved him down to the canvas. The result was originally ruled a knockout win for Dawson but was later overturned to a no-decision, as it should have been. Hopkins makes the list instead for his historic victory against Jean Pascal on his Montreal turf in May. In a rematch of their disputed draw from last December, Hopkins claimed a unanimous decision -- during which he famously did a set of pushups between rounds -- to become the oldest fighter in boxing history, at age 46, to win a world championship, breaking former heavyweight champion George Foreman's record.

[h4]Rafael's boxing blog[/h4]
rafael_dan_m.jpg
Get the latest scoop and analysis on the world of boxing from ESPN.com's Dan Rafael in his blog.

Lamont Peterson: The year didn't start out well for Peterson, who turned down a career-high payday of about $350,000 to travel to England for a junior welterweight title shot against Amir Khan because he was unhappy with the deal, including the terms of a rematch clause in the event he won. Instead, Peterson wound up taking a dangerous fight for $10,000 against Victor Cayo in July. Peterson (30-1-1, 15 KOs) looked terrific and knocked out Cayo with 14 seconds left in the bout, which was an eliminator, to become one of Khan's mandatory challengers. Peterson's rejection of the April offer looked mighty fine when he persuaded Khan to come to his hometown of Washington, D.C., for the fight on Dec. 10 -- and got Golden Boy, Khan's promoter, to pay him $650,000. It was an outstanding action battle and competitive all the way, but Peterson pulled the life-changing upset with a split-decision win, which went his way because of a pair of controversial point deductions from hometown referee Joe Cooper.

Nonito Donaire: The "Filipino Flash" was a dominant titleholder at flyweight and looked great in his brief stop at junior bantamweight, where he won an interim belt. But in 2011, Donaire (27-1, 18 KOs) rose another level toward stardom, as he rocketed up the pound-for-pound list by winning a pair of bantamweight titles in the most impressive way a fighter can: with an absolutely blistering knockout against a well-respected champion. In February, Donaire met Fernando Montiel, a three-division titleholder, and simply destroyed him in the second round with a massive left hook. Although Donaire then spent several months embroiled in a promotional dispute with Top Rank -- during which he tried to sign with rival Golden Boy and wound up missing a fight date because of the litigation -- the sides eventually settled, and he returned to action in October. Donaire met Omar Narvaez of Argentina, a long-reigning flyweight titlist who had won a junior bantamweight belt in 2010, defended it three times and then jumped up to bantamweight to challenge Donaire. It was a cakewalk, as Donaire pitched a clean 120-108 shutout on all three scorecards to embarrass Narvaez, who spent most of the fight petrified to engage.

Manny Pacquiao: The Filipino fighting congressman didn't have the kind of megayear he enjoyed when he won his three fighter of the year awards, but boxing's biggest star still had a fine campaign. In May, he dropped Shane Mosley in the third round and won a virtual shutout decision to retain his welterweight title. In November, Pacquiao (54-3-2, 38 KOs) finally hooked up with rival and fellow future Hall of Famer Juan Manuel Marquez, a three-division champion, for the third time. Once again, they waged a terrific fight. After fighting to a draw in their first meeting, Pacquiao won a split decision in the second fight. The third bout was another exciting and close fight that Pacquiao this time won via majority decision.

Brian Viloria: In 2010, Viloria lost his junior flyweight title by rough 12th-round knockout to Carlos Tamara in an upset and had to be briefly hospitalized after the fight. The "Hawaiian Punch" contemplated retirement but elected to carry on, and now those thoughts seem like a distant memory after his impressive 2011 campaign. In July, Viloria got a shot at flyweight titlist Julio Cesar Miranda. With a supportive crowd in Honolulu behind him, Viloria scored a first-round knockdown and won a comfortable decision to claim his third world title. In December, Viloria (30-3, 17 KOs) scored the biggest win of his career in a mild upset when he battered Giovani Segura, the junior flyweight world champion who had given up his title to move up in weight. Viloria swelled Segura's face near the temple area around his right eye, which grew larger and larger as the fight progressed, until the referee finally stopped it in the eighth round.

Hernan "Tyson" Marquez: Mexico's Marquez (32-2, 25 KOs) went to Panama in April and claimed a flyweight title with an 11th-round knockout of hometown fighter Luis Concepcion in an exceptional slugfest in which both men were knocked down. In July, Marquez impressively blew out Edrin Dapudong in his first title defense before hooking up with Concepcion again, this time in Mexico. With expectations running high for another great fight, Marquez nipped that in the bud by surprisingly dropping Concepcion three times in the first round for a stunning knockout victory.
 
ESPN's prospect of the year.

Spoiler [+]
When Gary Russell Jr. was a young boy, maybe age 5 or so, he began attending boxing cards in the Washington, D.C./Maryland region in the early '90s with his father, Gary Sr., a former pro fighter who now serves as his trainer. The precocious kid with the fast hands already was something of an entertainer.

Before the bouts would begin, Russell said, he was often invited into the ring to shadowbox for the crowd, which typically included the top fighters from the area.

[h4]Dan Rafael's prospects of the year[/h4]
[table][tr][th=""]Year[/th][th=""]Prospect[/th][/tr][tr][td]2011[/td][td]Gary Russell Jr.[/td][/tr][tr][td]2010[/td][td]Saul "Canelo" Alvarez[/td][/tr][tr][td]2009[/td][td]Daniel Jacobs[/td][/tr][tr][td]2008[/td][td]Victor Ortiz[/td][/tr][tr][td]2007[/td][td]Amir Khan[/td][/tr][tr][td]2006[/td][td]Andre Berto[/td][/tr][tr][td]2005[/td][td]Joel Julio[/td][/tr][tr][td]2004[/td][td]Samuel Peter[/td][/tr][tr][td]2003[/td][td]Jermain Taylor[/td][/tr][tr][td]2002[/td][td]Miguel Cotto[/td][/tr][tr][td]2001[/td][td]Francisco Bojado[/td][/tr][tr][td]2000[/td][td]Julio Diaz[/td][/tr][/table]

"I wanted to box, but I was too young to compete as an amateur, so at least I could go in the ring," Russell said. "The older guys, the pros, they knew I was good. Sharmba Mitchell, Keith Holmes, William Joppy, Sugar Ray Leonard, Mark 'Too Sharp' Johnson -- these guys would pay me money to get in the ring to shadowbox, maybe about $5, and I would shadowbox and the crowd would love it."

Russell said he wasn't allowed to box as an amateur until he was 8, so the family fudged his age, and he had his first bout when he was actually 7.

Now he is a rising, 23-year-old professional featherweight with a huge future and already earning a lot more than just $5 per performance.

"He's very charismatic," said Golden Boy's Richard Schaefer, who has a handshake deal with Al Haymon, Russell's adviser, to promote the fighter. "He's one of those handful of guys who have it all -- the talent; he's a good-looking kid; he can be funny, and he can fight."

Russell lost that first fight at age 7, but it was just the start of a decorated amateur career during which he had about 230 fights and, he said, "I know for sure I lost 11."

Russell, of Capitol Heights, Md., made sure to point out that a few years after losing that first fight, he avenged it by scoring a first-round knockout in the rematch.

He said he remembers each defeat (all but one avenged, because there was never a rematch), but there were also a ton of wins as Russell became the 2008 U.S. Olympic bantamweight, a junior Olympic champion, a two-time U.S. national champion and a National Golden Gloves champion. Russell is one of only two boxers to win a U.S. championship and National Golden Gloves title before age 17.

In 2005, a 17-year-old Russell won a bronze medal at the world amateur championships and was named USA Boxing's athlete of the year.

At the 2007 U.S. Olympic trials, Russell, a southpaw, became only the fourth fighter in history to lose his opening bout (to fellow prospect Roberto Marroquin) and rally through the losers bracket to earn an Olympic berth. You may have heard of the other three: Evander Holyfield, Roy Jones Jr. and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Russell (19-0, 11 KOs), of course, hopes to follow in those fighters' footsteps to a great professional career and is laying the foundation even after the bitter disappointment of not being able to compete in the Beijing Olympics in 2008, when he became ill and passed out during a weight check.

He ripped through 2011 with six wins -- granted, against modest competition -- and showed everything you could ask for from a young fighter: crazy hand speed (perhaps the best in boxing), power, skills, defense, smarts, poise, a dynamic style and a dash of showmanship.

[+] Enlarge
Media Inc/Staff PhotographerAmong his many precocious gifts, Gary Russell Jr. has some of the fastest hands in boxing.

"He is so advanced for such a young fighter," said Golden Boy Promotions matchmaker Eric Gomez. "He has offense and defense, and he takes his time. He throws beautiful punches, throws combinations. He's the best prospect I've seen in a long time. He is, by far, our best prospect."

Golden Boy's best prospect and the 2011 ESPN.com prospect of the year.

Although the level of opponents Russell has faced so far as a pro isn't overly impressive, the way he has beaten them has been. He has barely lost a round and wasn't touched in a pair of HBO fights, a domination of last-minute opponent Leonilo Miranda in an eight-round decision in September and a spectacular first-round knockout of faded former bantamweight title challenger Heriberto Ruiz.

"I think my year has gone good, and I am 100 percent blessed," said Russell, who is deeply religious. "I'm very grateful that I have a good team and my dad as my coach. Everything is going just the way we planned. We plan on it being a bigger year in 2012. I'm ready for whatever comes my way. I just love what I do. I definitely love my job. [After] every fight, I am back in the gym on Monday. That is no myth."

Russell will open his 2012 slate on Feb. 11 in a Showtime-televised bout on the undercard of the rematch between top welterweights Victor Ortiz and Andre Berto, both past prospects of the year, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Gomez believes Russell can get into position to win a world title in 2012.

"I believe he can," Gomez said. "It's fun to see guys who are very exciting, like James Kirkland, Alfredo Angulo, Marcos Maidana. Everybody loves guys like that. But when you combine that aggression with the technique and style that Gary has -- he can stand right in front of you and slip punches and throw combinations -- that is something I love to watch. If we can get Gary in position to fight the big names at 126 and 130 [pounds], it will be fun. He can fight guys like [featherweight titlist] Chris John or [former titlist] Juan Manuel Lopez, and he would beat them right now, or at least give them a good fight."

Said Schaefer: "He's only 23, and he's so complete. You see some prospects, and you see a diamond in the rough who needs polishing. There is not much to be polished with Gary."

Russell, who married his wife, Sapphire, three months ago, knows he is on the fast track but isn't overly concerned about any timetable.

"I feel like the competition will definitely get steeper, but I feel my hand speed and punching power will be a factor," said Russell, one of six brothers named Gary [five of whom box]. "But I am not in a rush. I'm still young. I got a lot of time."

The one fighter Russell wants a piece of is former featherweight titlist Yuriorkis Gamboa, a 2004 Cuban Olympic gold medalist who is moving up to junior lightweight. Russell said he is taking his time moving up the ladder but hopes Gamboa is there for him down the road.

"Everyone is big on Gamboa. We want him so bad," Russell said. "We see so many mistakes he makes, but his opponents don't act on it. I'm hoping and praying that nobody beats him. I want him to keep his hype going because I am the one who is coming for him."

Coming for Gamboa and, very likely, many other top fighters.

The rest of the Super 25 (in alphabetical order with age, division, promoter and record):

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MP ImagesDemetrius Andrade, right, has pound-for-pound potential, but he could stand to be busier.

Demetrius Andrade (23, junior middleweight, Banner Promotions/Star Boxing, 15-0, 10 KOs): Andrade, a southpaw from Providence, R.I., was a star amateur. He was a 2008 U.S. Olympian and won a world amateur championship, two U.S. national titles and two National Golden Gloves titles. He has excellent speed, ring smarts and, at 6-foot-1, good size for his division. Ideally, he would be more active. (He fought three times in 2010 and four times in 2011.) In August, he scored the best win of his career when he easily outpointed Grady Brewer, a former winner of "The Contender" and an upset specialist. Andrade isn't the most crowd-pleasing fighter, but he has pound-for-pound potential. He is due to headline ESPN2/ESPN3's "Friday Night Fights" against Derek Ennis on Feb. 10.

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Harry How/Getty ImagesJose Benavidez Jr., right, showed so much promise as an amateur that he was allowed to turn pro at 17.

Jose Benavidez Jr. (19, junior welterweight, Top Rank, 14-0, 12 KOs): Trained by Freddie Roach, Phoenix's Benavidez is a true blue-chipper. He began boxing at age 6 and has been viewed as a surefire future champion for several years. He is so gifted that Nevada officials gave him a special waiver to turn pro at 17 (the rule is 18). Benavidez went 120-5 as an amateur and, at 16, became a 2009 National Golden Gloves champion -- the youngest to accomplish that feat. Had he remained an amateur, he would have been as close to a slam dunk to make the 2012 U.S. Olympic team as there could be. He's the total package of size (5-foot-11, 140 pounds), speed and power, and he effectively switches between righty and lefty. He went 5-0 in 2011, and Top Rank, with matchmakers Brad "Abdul" Goodman and Bruce Trampler, is better than any other promoter when it comes to identifying young talent and grooming raw pro debuters into star world champions. The one thing that could hold Benavidez back is fragile hands.

Sharif Bogere (23, lightweight, Golden Boy, 21-0, 13 KOs): The Las Vegas-based Bogere has style and substance. Nicknamed "The Lion," he makes a stylish ring entrance wearing a lion's head. Inside the ring, the Uganda native and five-time African amateur champion is a bundle of energy, throws tons of punches and has an aggressive mentality that makes him a serious crowd-pleaser. Having left a difficult life in his home country for the United States, he turned pro in 2008 and has risen quickly. He was 3-0 in 2011, including back-to-back "ShoBox" appearances in which he defeated his two best opponents: Raymundo Beltran, in a bloody nip-and-tuck battle, and previously undefeated Francisco Contreras via third-round knockout.

Randy Caballero (21, junior featherweight, Golden Boy, 13-0, 7 KOs): The Coachella, Calif., native has gotten a lot of TV time on Telefutura's "Solo Boxeo" on cards for which he has drawn his fans in the region. He is a crowd-pleasing boxer-puncher who was a standout amateur with a 167-10 record. He won a 2008 U.S. national championship and a bronze medal at the 2008 world amateur championships, but he was too young to qualify for the 2008 U.S. Olympic team. A pro only since early 2010, Caballero continues to improve fight in and fight out. He is technically sound and patient, but he needs to gain strength. He has gotten excellent experience sparring with pound-for-pound star Nonito Donaire (with whom he shares manager Cameron Dunkin) and bantamweight titlist and Golden Boy stablemate Abner Mares.

Rakhim Chakhkiev (28, cruiserweight, Universum, 11-0, 9 KOs): Based in Germany, Chakhkiev was a star amateur in his native Russia, going 160-20 and winning the 2008 Olympic heavyweight gold medal. A professional since late 2009, "The Machine" has moved a bit slowly considering his amateur pedigree, but he has looked good. He's a southpaw with power and is built like a truck. He went 3-0 in 2011 -- he needs to be busier -- but made his American debut in April on the Marcos Maidana-Erik Morales undercard in Las Vegas. He is due to make his 2012 debut Jan. 28 in Germany.

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AP Photo/Isaac BrekkenPier-Olivier Cote, left, has a flashy style, fast hands and an early 2012 fight on Showtime.

Pier-Olivier Cote (27, junior welterweight, InterBox, 18-0, 12 KOs): Quebec City's Cote isn't just one of Canada's brightest prospects -- he's one of the most exciting up-and-comers in the sport, period. Considering he didn't begin boxing until age 20, he has come a long way, winning a Canadian national amateur title and now coming into his own as a professional. He turned pro in 2008 at junior lightweight and has grown into a solid junior welterweight. He has a flashy, dynamic, fan-friendly style and fast hands. He went 4-0 in 2011 and really opened eyes with a sensational performance on Showtime on the Lucian Bute-Glen Johnson undercard in November, when he annihilated one-time prospect Jorge Teron in the second round of an explosive performance. He'll kick off 2012 on Feb. 3 in a main event on Showtime's "ShoBox" against Mauricio Herrera in Quebec City.

Courtesy of Ricardo RodriguezLuis Orlando Del Valle outclassed Dat Nguyen in a June decision in his stiffest test yet.

Luis Orlando Del Valle (24, junior featherweight, Lou DiBella/Gary Shaw, 14-0, 11 KOs): Puerto Rico's Del Valle, who lives in New York, lost his first amateur fight at age 14 but wound up going 112-14 and earning a National Golden Gloves title before turning pro in 2008. He has excellent hand speed and is efficient with his punches. He has a high knockout percentage but is more of a sharp puncher than a crushing puncher. He scores his knockouts with an accumulation of well-placed shots. In his most notable fight, which aired on "ShoBox" in June, he hammered credible Dat Nguyen in a lopsided 10-round decision with an excellent performance that stole the show.

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AP Photo/Michael DwyerCharismatic, aggressive and powerful, Thomas Dulorme, left, has all the makings of a future star.

Thomas Dulorme (21, welterweight, Lou DiBella/Gary Shaw/Javier Bustillo, 13-0, 10 KOs): Puerto Rico's Dulorme is an ultra-exciting prospect with Felix Trinidad-like charisma. When Dulorme comes to the ring, he has a smile on his face and seems to thoroughly enjoy the combat. He is a very aggressive puncher with tremendous power. He turned pro in 2008 but initially didn't fight very often. In 2011, he picked up the pace, winning five fights -- including spectacular second-round knockouts of Guillermo Valdes and Harrison Cuello on major undercards. Dulorme followed those fights with quality decision wins against former junior welterweight titlist DeMarcus "Chop Chop" Corley on "Friday Night Fights" and former welterweight title challenger Charlie Navarro. The sky is the limit for this kid. He has the look of a future star who just needs more experience. Dulorme will open his 2012 schedule by headlining "ShoBox" on Feb. 17.

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AP Photo/Michael DwyerJavier Fortuna, right, a speedy southpaw with power, is raw but should get the proper polishing.

Javier Fortuna (22, featherweight, Sampson Lewkowicz, 18-0, 13 KOs): Lewkowicz is one of the best in the business when it comes to finding diamonds in the rough and polishing them into top professionals. Fortuna, a southpaw with blazing speed (hands and feet) and good power, turned pro in 2009 and could be his promoter's next find. The Dominican Republic native, who fights out of the same stable as middleweight champion Sergio Martinez, is a bit raw and wild. He needs a lot of work cleaning up his defense, but he is aggressive and progressing well. Fortuna fought on the Dominican national team during his strong amateur career and has scored some sick knockouts as a pro, including a devastating eighth-round KO of decent opponent Derrick Wilson on a Martinez undercard. On Dec. 16, Fortuna scored his most notable win, a 10-round decision against former title challenger Miguel Roman.

Luis Franco (29, featherweight, Gary Shaw, 11-0, 7 KOs): The Miami-based Franco spent eight years on the powerhouse Cuban national team and was a 2004 Olympian. But he lost what would have been some prime professional years before defecting in mid-2009 and turning pro. After roughly 400 amateur fights (including wins against Yuriorkis Gamboa), Franco is adapting well to the pro game. He's a volume puncher with quickness and, because of his amateur experience and advanced age, is on the fast track. He has already defeated solid pros such as Wilton Hilario, Eric Hunter and Leonilo Miranda. There was serious talk of Franco facing 2011 ESPN.com prospect of the year Gary Russell Jr. on HBO on two different cards, but no deal ever came to fruition, as Franco was in position for a title eliminator in one of the alphabet organizations. He figures to get a significant fight in 2012.

Jonathan Gonzalez (22, junior middleweight, Leon Margules/Gary Shaw/Lou DiBella, 14-0, 13 KOs): Gonzalez was a 2007 Pan-American Games silver medalist and 2008 Puerto Rican Olympian who went 132-18 as an amateur. He's a strong volume puncher who loves to bull forward and look for knockouts. But he can also box and fights in a confident, relaxed manner. He picked up his most notable victory in June, when he broke down onetime contender Richard Gutierrez in impressive fashion to win a lopsided decision on Showtime's "ShoBox" in New York on the eve of the annual Puerto Rican Day parade.

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Julian Finney/Getty ImagesGeorge Groves, right, was a top amateur in England and has moved quickly since turning pro in 2008.

George Groves (23, super middleweight, Frank Warren, 14-0, 11 KOs): As one of England's top amateurs, he went 66-10 and has moved very quickly since turning pro in late 2008. He's a good boxer with good enough power and has already claimed the traditional British and Commonwealth titles. In the amateurs, Groves defeated James DeGale, who went on to win a 2008 Olympic gold medal for Great Britain. They met in a heavily hyped pro rematch in May, in which Groves did enough to claim a majority decision before scoring a sensational second-round knockout of experienced Paul Smith.

Badou Jack (28, super middleweight, Lou DiBella/Leon Margules, 9-0, 8 KOs): Jack, known as "The Ripper," is a little older than your average prospect and is a bit of a project, but he can fight and is a crowd-pleasing, come-forward fighter with solid power. Although born in Sweden and now living in Las Vegas, he was the first boxer to make the Olympics for the African country of Gambia (his father's native nation) in 2008. He turned pro in 2009 and fought in Europe but fought only once in 2010 before relocating to the United States, where he has won all four of his 2011 bouts, each by knockout.

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AP Photo/Julie JacobsonDiego Magdaleno, left, is a technician who has gained valuable experience against quality competition.

Diego Magdaleno (25, junior lightweight, Top Rank, 21-0, 7 KOs): The Las Vegas southpaw -- who boxed as a right-hander before an amateur trainer had him switch -- is a slick operator who has been brought along nicely by Top Rank. He began boxing at age 8 and won a 2007 U.S. national championship during an amateur career in which he went approximately 116-14. Even though he isn't a heavy hitter, he's a formidable technician. Facing fighters who possess excellent records, he went 4-0 in 2011, including a dominant decision against former contender Emmanuel Lucero.

Roberto Marroquin (22, featherweight, Top Rank, 21-1, 14 KOs): Marroquin's reputation took a hit in 2011 when he suffered a bloody 10-round split decision to Francisco Leal in an April fight that could have gone either way. Ultimately, it should be a learning experience for the talented Marroquin, who was originally supposed to face Leal in an eight-rounder but wound up in his first 10-rounder when it was bumped up to the main event (after the scheduled headliner dropped out because of illness). Dallas' Marroquin has a terrific left hook and quickly bounced back from the defeat, looking good in a pair of dominant decision wins against reasonable opposition. Fans should enjoy his crowd-pleasing style. As a teenager fighting in the amateurs, he was a 2007 U.S. Olympic trials finalist.

Al Bello/Getty ImagesSeth Mitchell, a former Michigan State linebacker, may well be America's best heavyweight hope.

Seth Mitchell (29, heavyweight, Golden Boy, 24-0-1, 18 KOs): The heavyweight division is dominated by Europeans and the pool of legitimate American prospects is weak, but Mitchell, of Brandywine, Md., is one of the few with a chance. At 29, he is older than your typical prospect, but he didn't begin boxing until his 20s. Mitchell was a Michigan State linebacker, but he turned to boxing after a knee injury snuffed out his NFL dreams. With hard work and intense focus, "Mayhem" has improved dramatically since turning pro. At 6-foot-2 and 243 pounds, Mitchell is solidly built and is well-schooled. He throws a textbook left-jab-right-hand combination. He needs a bit more seasoning, but he went 4-0 (all knockouts) in 2011, culminating the year with a superb performance in his HBO debut, a blowout of the very experienced Timur Ibragimov, by far Mitchell's best opponent, in two rounds.

Thomas Oosthuizen (22, super middleweight, Lou DiBella/Rodney Berman, 17-0-1, 12 KOs): One of South Africa's rising talents, Oosthuizen, a 6-foot-4 southpaw, is a crowd-pleaser who isn't afraid to take two to give one. He has advanced quickly in his four-year pro career and went 4-0 in 2011, including a pair of excellent victories: He outpointed Aaron Pryor Jr. in September in his American debut and stopped rugged Francisco Sierra in the 11th round in November. As physically strong as Oosthuizen is, DiBella believes he hasn't yet filled out with his "man strength." The fighter's father, Charles Oosthuizen, was a two-division national champion in South Africa.

Jose Pedraza (22, lightweight, Lou DiBella/Gary Shaw/Javier Bustillo, 5-0, 4 KOs): Pedraza, a 2008 Olympian and 2009 silver medalist at the amateur world championships, is perhaps the most heralded Puerto Rican prospect since Miguel Cotto came out of the 2000 Olympics. Nicknamed "The Sniper," Pedraza turned pro in February and has rolled through his first four (low-level) opponents. He has shown an educated jab and an excellent body attack, two elements that usually take time for a young fighter to develop. He has poise, is accurate with his punches and is very fluid. DiBella said Pedraza's fighting style reminds him of a young Oscar De La Hoya.

David Price (28, heavyweight, Frank Maloney, 11-0, 9 KOs): Price won a 2008 Olympic bronze medal for Great Britain in the super heavyweight division. At 6-8, 245 pounds, he has Klitschko-like size and good power. But he has moved rather slowly since turning pro in 2009, taking only four fights in each of his first two years and three in 2011 -- including a nice first-round knockout of American trial horse Raphael Butler (who lasted three rounds with Cristobal Arreola in November) and a second-round knockout of previously undefeated Tom Dallas. But Price, who owns an amateur win against Tyson Fury, has a good jab that he stays busy with. He will take another modest step up in competition when he faces countryman John McDermott on Jan. 21 in an eliminator for a shot at the British title.

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Marco PerezEdwin Rodriguez, left, is closing in on a notable fight after being slowed by an injury in 2011.

Edwin Rodriguez (26, super middleweight, Lou DiBella, 20-0, 14 KOs): Rodriguez, who was born in the Dominican Republic but lives in Worcester, Mass., is on the verge of getting a notable fight. Trained by Ronnie Shields, he fought only three times in 2011, but that was because of a left rotator cuff injury he suffered in a hard-fought decision win against Aaron Pryor Jr. on "Friday Night Fights" in January. In his two wins after the injury, including a good one against previously undefeated Will Rosinsky on "ShoBox" in October, his shoulder held up fine. In addition to his fights, Rodriguez has gained invaluable experience sparring with such notable fighters as former super middleweight titlist Carl Froch, former light heavyweight champion Jean Pascal and middleweight titlist Daniel Geale. As an amateur, Rodriguez was 84-9 and won the 2005 U.S. nationals and 2006 National Golden Gloves.

Leo Santa Cruz (23, bantamweight, Golden Boy, 18-0-1, 10 KOs): Los Angeles' Santa Cruz was only 18 when he turned pro in late 2006, after a standout amateur career during which he went 148-7 and won a world amateur youth championship. Eric Gomez, his matchmaker at Golden Boy, paid him high praise when he said Santa Cruz's style reminds him of the late, great Alexis Arguello's because of the precise way that he throws his punches. Santa Cruz also displays a sound jab, has a terrific body attack and is very busy. He can fight on the inside or the outside, and although his best punch is his left hook, he has an ever-improving right hand. He was 4-0 in 2011 and gained good experience in wins against ex-junior bantamweight titlist Jose "Carita" Lopez (KO5) and former title challenger Everth Briceno (TKO11). A title shot in 2012 is quite possible.

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Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty ImagesIsmayl Sillakh, left, has sparkled in recent action and may be in line for a title eliminator bout.

Ismayl Sillakh (26, light heavyweight, Square Ring, 17-0, 14 KOs): Sillakh, a native of Ukraine living in Southern California, was a decorated amateur. He won a silver medal at the 2005 world amateur championships and had a reported record of 302-16. He can box and punch, and has excellent coordination and good size. As a pro, he has moved quickly and looked exceptional in recent fights, including his biggest win -- a dominant 10-round decision win against former Cuban amateur standout Yordanis Despaigne in March on "Friday Night Fights." Sillakh's next fight is expected to be a title eliminator, possibly against former champion Jean Pascal.

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Chris Cozzone/Fightwireimages.comAggressive Cuban prospect Yordenis Ugas, right, "fights like a Mexican," according to his manager.

Yordenis Ugas (25, welterweight, Top Rank, 10-0, 5 KOs): Ugas, who has boxed since age 10, had a huge amateur career in which he fought roughly 400 times. He was a four-time Cuban national champion, a 2005 world amateur champion and a 2008 Olympic bronze medalist. Having defected in 2010, he now lives in Miami. Most Cuban fighters are very technical, but Ugas is more of a crowd-pleaser. As manager Luis DeCubas Jr. said, "He's a Cuban who fights like a Mexican." Ugas has excellent ring generalship (no surprise, given all his amateur experience) and fast hands, throws good combinations, goes to the body well and, though he isn't the biggest puncher, can break opponents down. He was 5-0 in 2011 and will open 2012 on Jan. 13 in the "Friday Night Fights" co-feature.

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Jim Everett/FightWireImages.comDeontay Wilder is a project, but he has size (6-foot-7) and upside in a thin heavyweight division.

Deontay Wilder (26, heavyweight, Golden Boy, 20-0, 20 KOs): Although Wilder, of Tuscaloosa, Ala., had a limited amateur career, he won the 2007 National Golden Gloves and U.S. National titles and saved the U.S. Olympic boxing team from a medal shutout by winning a bronze in 2008. He's a raw project, but he appears to have the work ethic to continue improving. At 6-7 and 215 pounds, he has great height but needs to bulk up, especially in his legs. His calling card is a booming right hand, and he has stopped all of his opponents inside four rounds. However, the power display might be a little exaggerated because Wilder has faced extremely weak opposition. He went 6-0 in 2011, and ideally Golden Boy will step him up at least a little bit in 2012.

ESPN's round of the year.

Spoiler [+]
You've heard the term "bull in a china shop," right? Now imagine if two bulls were actually let loose at the same time in said china shop.

The ensuing destruction would probably look pretty much like the first round of the James Kirkland-Alfredo Angulo fight. Wild, with heavy-duty contact. Violent. Total chaos in a small area. Easily the 2011 ESPN.com round of the year.

[h4]Dan Rafael's rounds of the year[/h4]
[table][tr][th=""]Year[/th][th=""]Fighter[/th][th=""]Round[/th][/tr][tr][td]2011[/td][td]James Kirkland-Alfredo Angulo[/td][td]1st[/td][/tr][tr][td]2010[/td][td]Juan Manuel Marquez-Michael Katsidis[/td][td]3rd[/td][/tr][tr][td]2009[/td][td]Juan Manuel Marquez-Juan Diaz[/td][td]1st[/td][/tr][tr][td]2008[/td][td]Kendall Holt-Ricardo Torres II[/td][td]1st[/td][/tr][tr][td]2007[/td][td]Israel Vazquez-Rafael Marquez II[/td][td]3rd[/td][/tr][tr][td]2006[/td][td]Somsak Sithchatchawal-Mahyar Monshipour[/td][td]9th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2005[/td][td]Diego Corrales-Jose Luis Castillo I[/td][td]10th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2004[/td][td]Marco Antonio Barrera-Erik Morales III[/td][td]11th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2003[/td][td]Acelino "Popo" Freitas-Jorge Barrios[/td][td]11th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2002[/td][td]Micky Ward-Arturo Gatti I[/td][td]9th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2001[/td][td]Micky Ward-Emanuel Burton[/td][td]9th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2000[/td][td]Erik Morales-Marco Antonio Barrera I[/td][td]5th[/td][/tr][/table]

No three-minute segment was filled with more sheer excitement -- not to mention a knockdown and a gargantuan momentum swing -- than the opening frame of this junior middleweight collision Nov. 5 on HBO in Cancun, Mexico.

Since 2008, when both fighters were becoming regulars on HBO, boxing fans looked forward to the day Kirkland and Angulo -- two of boxing's most exciting fighters and explosive punchers -- would someday meet. However, they both had issues that kept them out of the ring for long stretches. Kirkland went to prison for 18 months and Angulo was jammed up with promotional and immigration problems. But when they finally were back on track, Golden Boy, which had just signed Angulo, threw caution to the wind and matched them.

Kirkland was the clear underdog because he was going to Angulo's home country and still trying to rebuild himself after what had happened to him seven months earlier.

After Kirkland was released from prison, he won two quick fights in March and then was given a showcase fight against unheralded Nobuhiro Ishida on the Marcos Maidana-Erik Morales HBO PPV undercard. Ishida delivered a shocking first-round knockout when he dropped Kirkland three times in the biggest upset of the year.

Kirkland then reunited with trainer Ann Wolfe, from whom he had split after exiting prison, before winning two nothing fights and being thrown in with Angulo.

After so much anticipation, it appeared the fight might be over in nearly an instant. The fighters came out bombing right away, and Kirkland did the unthinkable: He forced Angulo, who probably had never taken a backward step in his career, into retreat and had him cornered. But Angulo freed himself and, just 30 seconds into the fight, landed a ferocious right hand dead on Kirkland's chin. Kirkland crumpled to his backside, and suddenly memories of the Ishida fight came flooding back. Would he make it out of the round?

But Wolfe had Kirkland in phenomenal condition. He was up quickly, calmly took the count from referee John Callas and was ready to wade into battle again.

Angulo was ready and continued to press the attack. He went hard after the knockout. For more than a minute, he teed off on Kirkland with thudding left hooks and searing right hands. Kirkland absorbed the shots and stayed on his feet, but although he was throwing back, he simply had no answers to deter the free-swinging Angulo.

With about a minute left in the round, Angulo looked exhausted after throwing so many punches in relentless pursuit of the knockout following the knockdown. While Angulo was losing steam, Kirkland surprisingly looked fresh, despite the battering he had taken to that point.

[+] Enlarge
Roberto Fernandez/Hoganphotos/Golden Boy PromotionsAlfredo Angulo had James Kirkland in trouble almost from the start in their Nov. 5 bout, but Kirkland rallied and launched a brutal assault in a violent first round.

They were unloading on each other with punch after punch, prompting HBO announcer Jim Lampley to express sympathy for the punch counters at ringside.

"What a CompuBox punch festival here," he exclaimed.

With 45 seconds left, Kirkland (30-1, 27 KOs) landed a hard straight left hand that sent Angulo (20-2, 17 KOs) backward into the ropes. During the ensuing flurry, Kirkland landed two flush right hands and a left that badly hurt Angulo.

"What an amazing comeback in this round," Lampley barked as Kirkland had clearly turned the fight around and gained momentum.

Kirkland continued the assault, raining down more than a dozen punches, including some heavy right hands, until Angulo dropped to the canvas on his rear end. It was the first time he had been down in his career. Although a bit unsteady, a woozy Angulo, with the help of the ropes to steady himself, scrambled to his feet before Callas could even begin his count.

There were only a few seconds remaining, and the round ended before either man could get off another good shot, but what an amazing battle it had already been.

"What an incredible round," Lampley bellowed as the bell sounded.

And then HBO analyst Max Kellerman said what many of us were surely thinking: "They'll be talking about this round for years!"
[h3]Other scorchers:[/h3]
[+] Enlarge
AP Photo/Shizuo KambayashiStrawweights Akira Yaegashi and Pornsawon Porpramook provided big action throughout their October title bout, but the eighth round was especially breathtaking.

Akira Yaegashi-Pornsawon Porpramook (eighth): Really, you could pick any of a number of rounds from this epic fight as a candidate for the year's best. You want to go with the seventh? Cool. The 10th? No sweat. And there are others that were terrific, but we'll take the eighth round of this all-action strawweight title bout from Japan. The scene was just ridiculous as these little guys plowed into each other (again) at an inhuman pace right from the bell to start the round. They met at the center of the ring and began firing missiles. Yaegashi caught Porpramook with a left uppercut that blunted his progression and forced him back into the ropes, prompting Porpramook to motion for his rival to come and get him. Yaegashi took him up on the offer and began teeing off on the wide-open Porpramook with uppercuts and right hands. Porpramook's defense at this point amounted to using his face to block punches. Yaegashi landed an absolutely brutal right hand, and Porpramook barely flinched. But Yaegashi kept swinging away in violent fashion. With two minutes still to go, Porpramook already had taken probably a few rounds of punishment. But out of nowhere he rallied, landing a blistering right hand that buckled the knees of Yaegashi, who barely stayed upright. At this point, the fighters were in the middle of the ring simply trading shots, the action resembling a video game or a "Rocky" movie, while the crowd went berserk. Porpramook refused to hold his hands up, and Yaegashi continued to plant right hands on his face while Porpramook also got in his own brutal shots to the head and body. The incredible round was like an entire fight rolled into three minutes -- that's how utterly barbaric it was.

Hernan "Tyson" Marquez-Luis Concepcion I (first): The opening round, during which Marquez and Concepcion exchanged knockdowns, set the tone for this fabulous flyweight title fight. There was no feeling-out process as the fireworks began erupting in the first 30 seconds, the fighters trading blows. Concepcion, a bit more of the aggressor, broke through with a right hand that sent Marquez down against the ropes as Concepcion's hometown fans in Panama City, Panama, went wild. Marquez made it to his feet by eight, but he looked hurt and there were still 80 seconds to go in the round. Concepcion rushed to him, and the battle was back in full swing immediately. Concepcion was throwing with abandon. Marquez was throwing back while trying to stay on his feet. He then landed a huge overhand left that sent Concepcion reeling toward the ropes, swinging the momentum. Then it changed again when Concepcion nailed Marquez with two right hands and a body shot as the round wound down. But then it changed yet again as Marquez came off the ropes and smashed Concepcion with a left hook that landed on the chin and dropped him with two seconds left in an absolutely fantastic round of what would prove to be a classic fight.

[+] Enlarge
Marty Rosengarten/RingsidePhotos.comAndre Berto and Victor Ortiz exchanged vicious blows and knockdowns in the best round of their April fight of the year candidate.

Victor Ortiz-Andre Berto (6th): Just before the sixth round of this terrific slugfest between young welterweight stars began, HBO's Lampley offered an overview: "If you've just tuned in, it's been blazing and thrilling so far," he said. Both fighters had already been knocked down once each, but as good as the first five rounds were, the action elevated to another level in the dramatic sixth round. To be honest, the first two minutes were fairly slow compared to what had already taken place. But that last minute? Whoa. Berto landed a perfect right hand to the chin and Ortiz went down for the second time in the fight. He got up quickly, but his legs were shaky and saliva was dripping from his mouth. After Ortiz took the count from referee Michael Ortega, Berto went for the knockout. Ortiz's legs still weren't all there, and after eating a flush right hand, he grabbed on to Berto, who continued to chase him and land punches. Out of nowhere, Ortiz cracked Berto on the chin with a clean left hand that sent him to the canvas with five seconds left in the round. HBO analyst Emanuel Steward lost it: "Ohhhhhh, maaaaaah gawwwwwwd," he shrieked. The round came to an end before either fighter could land another solid punch, but holy moly, what a round. "Unbelievable! What a fight! George Foreman and Ron Lyle, stand aside. We've got an amazing slugfest in Connecticut," exclaimed Lampley, referring to the all-time great heavyweight slobberknocker. How good was the round, or at least the final minute? Even Floyd Mayweather Jr. -- who sat ringside and would go on to face Ortiz (who claimed a title from Berto) -- was smiling and cheering.

Delvin Rodriguez-Pawel Wolak I (ninth): You could pick one of several rounds from this "Friday Night Fights" instant-classic main event, but the ninth round was just enthralling. Part of the reason was the overall action, which was nonstop, and part was because of the incredible courage Wolak showed to keep fighting through the pain of a massive hematoma over his right eye. It was very badly swollen, but with the fight seemingly dead even, he wouldn't submit, even as Rodriguez's corner was telling its fighter to target the eye before the round began. When it did begin, Wolak buried his head in Rodriguez's chest and tried to manhandle him on the inside. It worked briefly, until Rodriguez exploded a combination to get Wolak off of him. Rodriguez was having a big round, but the perseverance Wolak showed was awe-inspiring, and the crowd was on its feet and cheering wildly for both guys. Rodriguez landed a fast three-punch combination on Wolak's face and then hammered the right eye with a left hook that Wolak could not possibly have seen out of the sealed-shut eye. But Wolak simply shook off the blow and ripped off punch after punch in an exhausting round that hurt to watch.

Antonio DeMarco-Jorge Linares (11th): In a fight for a vacant lightweight belt, Linares was dominating DeMarco through 10 rounds despite having suffered some bad facial cuts. DeMarco's trainer, Romulo Quirarte, knew it and told his man after the 10th round that he needed a knockout to win. So what did DeMarco do? He gave his corner exactly that, as he launched a rally for the ages. It began subtly enough, with DeMarco taking control when he landed a straight left that forced Linares to the ropes. At that point you could sense the momentum of the fight changing, as DeMarco pressured a fading Linares and cracked him with a left-right combination midway through the round, the blood flowing freely from the nasty cut on the bridge of Linares' nose. Another cut was bleeding into Linares' right eye as DeMarco continued to attack, including landing a clean right hand that rattled his rival. But Linares wouldn't go easily. While DeMarco continued to hammer him, Linares was throwing back, and they exchanged in toe-to-toe fashion while the blood flew. "One of the best rounds you could see," HBO analyst Max Kellerman said just as Linares ate another straight left hand. Although Linares was badly hurt, he was fighting back. But DeMarco was relentless. He landed about eight more punches as the blood-soaked Linares retreated to the ropes and referee Raul Caiz Sr. stopped the fight with 28 seconds left in the tumultuous round.

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Chris Farina/Top RankBrandon Rios and Urbano Antillon seemed to drag their prefight enmity into the ring for their July bout, taking turns teeing off on each other from the opening bell.

Brandon Rios-Urbano Antillon (first): Expectations for an action fight were sky-high for this lightweight title bout between Southern California rivals. And, not surprisingly, that's what folks got -- especially in the thrilling opening round. The fighters had talked a lot of smack in the buildup, and they tried to back it up right away. Antillon began digging to the body and Rios was firing left hooks and uppercuts. After Rios stung Antillon with one of those uppercuts and appeared to gain the advantage, suddenly Antillon answered with his own uppercut. This round could have been fought in a phone booth as the fighters stood at close range and wailed away. The final 30 seconds were awesome as they went toe-to-toe and landed heavy shots on each other and whipped the crowd into a frenzy.

Brandon Rios-Miguel Acosta (ninth): This was the best round of a terrific fight as Rios, challenging for a lightweight belt, and Acosta traded with reckless abandon in pursuit of a knockout. Already, Acosta had been down in the sixth and eighth rounds and Rios had rallied from an early deficit as they continued to blast away at close range. Acosta, who was fading, showed huge heart to go punch for punch with Rios, who lives to pressure opponents. Rios stuck his head in Acosta's chest for long portions of the round and blasted away. He had Acosta pinned on the ropes and was firing with both hands and going to the body while Acosta, who had lost some steam on his shots, was nonetheless answering as best as he could. They traded punches on the ropes seemingly for an eternity, prompting Showtime's Steve Albert to cry, "No letup here! Nonstop action!" There were still 40 seconds left in the round at that point, and the fighters didn't disappoint as the rock 'em-sock 'em round came to an end the same way it had begun.

Carl Froch-Glen Johnson (eighth): When super middleweight titlist Froch met former light heavyweight champ Johnson in the semifinals of the Super Six World Boxing Classic, they produced an excellent fight, the second best of the tournament, behind Mikkel Kessler-Froch in 2010, whose 12th round was also the best of the tournament. But this round wasn't far behind, as Froch and Johnson banged away to the delight of the crowd. They started by digging hard shots at each other on the inside while standing in the middle of the ring. Johnson, who fought like a man a lot younger than his 42 years, hurt Froch with a flush right hand that backed him up. Froch was undeterred. He fired back. Johnson responded. And on and on it went. As they continued to trade, Showtime's Al Bernstein was on the money when he said, "You can press this round in your memory book. It's a good one!" Said excitable blow-by-blow man Gus Johnson: "What a round, this eighth round!"

Teon Kennedy-Jorge Diaz (sixth): It's a damn shame that this bout between undefeated junior featherweight prospects wasn't televised (although it was streamed on Top Rank's website), because it was sensational. And no round in the fight was more outstanding than No. 6. The pace was fast throughout the bout and continued into the sixth when, in the final minute, Kennedy landed a massive right hand to Diaz's head, sending him to his knees. Although he was hurt, Diaz -- who has a lot of Arturo Gatti in him -- showed a big heart and continued to fight hard even though Kennedy was hammering him. After another left hand rocked Diaz, referee Steve Smoger looked very closely at stopping the fight. Diaz wasn't badly dazed, but his legs were gone. Smoger, one of the best referees in the business, has an uncanny knack for knowing when to stop a fight and when not to. He let this one continue, and it was the right call as Diaz got himself together and grabbed on to Kennedy before they fell to the canvas as the wild round came to a close.

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Al Bello/Getty ImagesThe third round of Amir Khan-Lamont Peterson raised the stakes from quality action fight to classic.

Lamont Peterson-Amir Khan (third): The first two rounds of this junior welterweight title bout were really good, but you had an inkling that you were watching a truly memorable fight unfold during the fast-paced third round. Khan was on the attack early, nailing Peterson with fast punches and moving away. Although Peterson's punches weren't nearly as flashy as Khan's, he landed some hard right hands and digging body punches that Khan definitely felt. This was the epitome of a round between fast and skilled boxers who also liked to mix it up, delighting the crowd -- especially when the fighters traded power shots in the center of the ring. Every time Khan would land -- and he landed a lot -- Peterson was right there to return fire. Khan, after taking a body shot, was in retreat in the final 40 seconds. He went to the ropes, and Peterson followed and landed some stiff blows. But Khan came back immediately with a right and a left just before the round ended.

Manny Pacquiao-Juan Manuel Marquez III (ninth): Great rivals Pacquiao and Marquez have thrown down in many excellent rounds during the course of their all-time great trilogy, and this was one of the best of them. Late in their welterweight title bout, which was seemingly still hanging in the balance, they produced a terrific round of quality boxing and clean punching. Marquez caught Pacquiao early with a shot that strayed to the back of the head, but he also landed a couple of solid combinations that fired up the largely Mexican crowd. Then came some excellent exchanges, Pacquiao landing with his left, Marquez with his right. They continued to swap shots through the final minute, as Marquez cracked Pacquiao with an uppercut and Pacquiao returned fire to knock Marquez off-balance. There were fierce exchanges down the stretch in an incredibly close round in a typically close Pacquiao-Marquez fight. When the ninth was over, HBO's Jim Lampley knew it had been outstanding: "What a tremendous round! The crowd's on its feet. We've got a fight in Vegas!"

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John Gurzinski/AFP/Getty ImagesFloyd Mayweather Jr. stunned Victor Ortiz, referee Joe Cortez and viewers everywhere in a wild fourth round in the fighters' September title tussle.

Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Victor Ortiz (fourth): Mayweather, returning from a 16-month layoff, was a heavy favorite to beat Ortiz and reclaim a welterweight title. The fight had gone as expected through three rounds, with Mayweather in command. But things turned wild in the fourth round. Ortiz began to enjoy his best moments of the fight when he clipped Mayweather with a few stinging shots and bulled him into a corner. But rather than continue to throw punches, which were beginning to get through, Ortiz instead turned into a human battering ram and intentionally head-butted Mayweather in the face, busting open a cut on the inside and outside of his opponent's mouth. Later, Ortiz would admit that he was trying to break Mayweather's nose in retaliation for what he believed were purposeful elbows. After the head-butt, referee Joe Cortez called time and docked a point from Ortiz for the blatant foul. An apologetic Ortiz hugged and kissed Mayweather, who did not appear remotely interested in the goodwill gesture after being purposely bashed in the face by Ortiz's head. Cortez restarted the bout and motioned the fighters together and was looking away while Ortiz was trying to touch gloves with Mayweather yet again. Perhaps not realizing time was back in, Ortiz glanced over to Cortez, and Mayweather, fully aware the fight had restarted, blasted him with a left and right to knock out Ortiz and end a round that was crazy even by boxing's crazy standards.

Hank Lundy-David Diaz (fourth): The best round of this "Friday Night Fights" shootout featured tremendous action between the talented and slick Lundy and the slower (but fully determined) Diaz, a former lightweight titlist struggling to keep his career afloat. Lundy was in control when they got to the fourth round, but Diaz was still going after him when he landed a combination, including a booming right hand to the temple that sent Lundy staggering across the ring and down to the canvas. Diaz was all over him when the fight resumed, as they traded toe-to-toe in a brutal exchange, during which Diaz suffered a horrible cut over his right eye. The blood flowed like a faucet, but they continued to exchange with abandon for the rest of a frenetic frame. As ESPN's Joe Tessitore barked when the session ended, "What a round! Unbelievable action in round No. 4!"

Edgar Lopez-Felix Rivera (second): This one is for all those club fighters we've never heard of but who duke it out for our entertainment. Lopez was 1-0 when he faced fellow Puerto Rican Rivera, who was 0-2, in a junior lightweight filler bout on the undercard of a Telefutura "Solo Boxeo Tecate" telecast. Famous or not, these guys waged a sensational round and deserve their props. Rivera opened the round by going right after Lopez, eventually dropping him in a corner with a right hand to the jaw. Lopez was in huge trouble but dragged himself up with the help of the ropes. He managed to survive Rivera's onslaught of winging shots, many of which connected, and slowly got his head and legs together. He began to sink shots into Rivera's body and then came upstairs with a clean right hand that prompted Rivera to stick his tongue out. Rivera was hurt but continued to trade with Lopez in an exciting display. Finally, with 47 seconds left in the round, Lopez landed a flush right-left combination and knocked Rivera down and out, face first. He had to leave the ring on a stretcher.
 
ESPN's prospect of the year.

Spoiler [+]
When Gary Russell Jr. was a young boy, maybe age 5 or so, he began attending boxing cards in the Washington, D.C./Maryland region in the early '90s with his father, Gary Sr., a former pro fighter who now serves as his trainer. The precocious kid with the fast hands already was something of an entertainer.

Before the bouts would begin, Russell said, he was often invited into the ring to shadowbox for the crowd, which typically included the top fighters from the area.

[h4]Dan Rafael's prospects of the year[/h4]
[table][tr][th=""]Year[/th][th=""]Prospect[/th][/tr][tr][td]2011[/td][td]Gary Russell Jr.[/td][/tr][tr][td]2010[/td][td]Saul "Canelo" Alvarez[/td][/tr][tr][td]2009[/td][td]Daniel Jacobs[/td][/tr][tr][td]2008[/td][td]Victor Ortiz[/td][/tr][tr][td]2007[/td][td]Amir Khan[/td][/tr][tr][td]2006[/td][td]Andre Berto[/td][/tr][tr][td]2005[/td][td]Joel Julio[/td][/tr][tr][td]2004[/td][td]Samuel Peter[/td][/tr][tr][td]2003[/td][td]Jermain Taylor[/td][/tr][tr][td]2002[/td][td]Miguel Cotto[/td][/tr][tr][td]2001[/td][td]Francisco Bojado[/td][/tr][tr][td]2000[/td][td]Julio Diaz[/td][/tr][/table]

"I wanted to box, but I was too young to compete as an amateur, so at least I could go in the ring," Russell said. "The older guys, the pros, they knew I was good. Sharmba Mitchell, Keith Holmes, William Joppy, Sugar Ray Leonard, Mark 'Too Sharp' Johnson -- these guys would pay me money to get in the ring to shadowbox, maybe about $5, and I would shadowbox and the crowd would love it."

Russell said he wasn't allowed to box as an amateur until he was 8, so the family fudged his age, and he had his first bout when he was actually 7.

Now he is a rising, 23-year-old professional featherweight with a huge future and already earning a lot more than just $5 per performance.

"He's very charismatic," said Golden Boy's Richard Schaefer, who has a handshake deal with Al Haymon, Russell's adviser, to promote the fighter. "He's one of those handful of guys who have it all -- the talent; he's a good-looking kid; he can be funny, and he can fight."

Russell lost that first fight at age 7, but it was just the start of a decorated amateur career during which he had about 230 fights and, he said, "I know for sure I lost 11."

Russell, of Capitol Heights, Md., made sure to point out that a few years after losing that first fight, he avenged it by scoring a first-round knockout in the rematch.

He said he remembers each defeat (all but one avenged, because there was never a rematch), but there were also a ton of wins as Russell became the 2008 U.S. Olympic bantamweight, a junior Olympic champion, a two-time U.S. national champion and a National Golden Gloves champion. Russell is one of only two boxers to win a U.S. championship and National Golden Gloves title before age 17.

In 2005, a 17-year-old Russell won a bronze medal at the world amateur championships and was named USA Boxing's athlete of the year.

At the 2007 U.S. Olympic trials, Russell, a southpaw, became only the fourth fighter in history to lose his opening bout (to fellow prospect Roberto Marroquin) and rally through the losers bracket to earn an Olympic berth. You may have heard of the other three: Evander Holyfield, Roy Jones Jr. and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Russell (19-0, 11 KOs), of course, hopes to follow in those fighters' footsteps to a great professional career and is laying the foundation even after the bitter disappointment of not being able to compete in the Beijing Olympics in 2008, when he became ill and passed out during a weight check.

He ripped through 2011 with six wins -- granted, against modest competition -- and showed everything you could ask for from a young fighter: crazy hand speed (perhaps the best in boxing), power, skills, defense, smarts, poise, a dynamic style and a dash of showmanship.

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Media Inc/Staff PhotographerAmong his many precocious gifts, Gary Russell Jr. has some of the fastest hands in boxing.

"He is so advanced for such a young fighter," said Golden Boy Promotions matchmaker Eric Gomez. "He has offense and defense, and he takes his time. He throws beautiful punches, throws combinations. He's the best prospect I've seen in a long time. He is, by far, our best prospect."

Golden Boy's best prospect and the 2011 ESPN.com prospect of the year.

Although the level of opponents Russell has faced so far as a pro isn't overly impressive, the way he has beaten them has been. He has barely lost a round and wasn't touched in a pair of HBO fights, a domination of last-minute opponent Leonilo Miranda in an eight-round decision in September and a spectacular first-round knockout of faded former bantamweight title challenger Heriberto Ruiz.

"I think my year has gone good, and I am 100 percent blessed," said Russell, who is deeply religious. "I'm very grateful that I have a good team and my dad as my coach. Everything is going just the way we planned. We plan on it being a bigger year in 2012. I'm ready for whatever comes my way. I just love what I do. I definitely love my job. [After] every fight, I am back in the gym on Monday. That is no myth."

Russell will open his 2012 slate on Feb. 11 in a Showtime-televised bout on the undercard of the rematch between top welterweights Victor Ortiz and Andre Berto, both past prospects of the year, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Gomez believes Russell can get into position to win a world title in 2012.

"I believe he can," Gomez said. "It's fun to see guys who are very exciting, like James Kirkland, Alfredo Angulo, Marcos Maidana. Everybody loves guys like that. But when you combine that aggression with the technique and style that Gary has -- he can stand right in front of you and slip punches and throw combinations -- that is something I love to watch. If we can get Gary in position to fight the big names at 126 and 130 [pounds], it will be fun. He can fight guys like [featherweight titlist] Chris John or [former titlist] Juan Manuel Lopez, and he would beat them right now, or at least give them a good fight."

Said Schaefer: "He's only 23, and he's so complete. You see some prospects, and you see a diamond in the rough who needs polishing. There is not much to be polished with Gary."

Russell, who married his wife, Sapphire, three months ago, knows he is on the fast track but isn't overly concerned about any timetable.

"I feel like the competition will definitely get steeper, but I feel my hand speed and punching power will be a factor," said Russell, one of six brothers named Gary [five of whom box]. "But I am not in a rush. I'm still young. I got a lot of time."

The one fighter Russell wants a piece of is former featherweight titlist Yuriorkis Gamboa, a 2004 Cuban Olympic gold medalist who is moving up to junior lightweight. Russell said he is taking his time moving up the ladder but hopes Gamboa is there for him down the road.

"Everyone is big on Gamboa. We want him so bad," Russell said. "We see so many mistakes he makes, but his opponents don't act on it. I'm hoping and praying that nobody beats him. I want him to keep his hype going because I am the one who is coming for him."

Coming for Gamboa and, very likely, many other top fighters.

The rest of the Super 25 (in alphabetical order with age, division, promoter and record):

box_andrade_b1_576.jpg
MP ImagesDemetrius Andrade, right, has pound-for-pound potential, but he could stand to be busier.

Demetrius Andrade (23, junior middleweight, Banner Promotions/Star Boxing, 15-0, 10 KOs): Andrade, a southpaw from Providence, R.I., was a star amateur. He was a 2008 U.S. Olympian and won a world amateur championship, two U.S. national titles and two National Golden Gloves titles. He has excellent speed, ring smarts and, at 6-foot-1, good size for his division. Ideally, he would be more active. (He fought three times in 2010 and four times in 2011.) In August, he scored the best win of his career when he easily outpointed Grady Brewer, a former winner of "The Contender" and an upset specialist. Andrade isn't the most crowd-pleasing fighter, but he has pound-for-pound potential. He is due to headline ESPN2/ESPN3's "Friday Night Fights" against Derek Ennis on Feb. 10.

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Harry How/Getty ImagesJose Benavidez Jr., right, showed so much promise as an amateur that he was allowed to turn pro at 17.

Jose Benavidez Jr. (19, junior welterweight, Top Rank, 14-0, 12 KOs): Trained by Freddie Roach, Phoenix's Benavidez is a true blue-chipper. He began boxing at age 6 and has been viewed as a surefire future champion for several years. He is so gifted that Nevada officials gave him a special waiver to turn pro at 17 (the rule is 18). Benavidez went 120-5 as an amateur and, at 16, became a 2009 National Golden Gloves champion -- the youngest to accomplish that feat. Had he remained an amateur, he would have been as close to a slam dunk to make the 2012 U.S. Olympic team as there could be. He's the total package of size (5-foot-11, 140 pounds), speed and power, and he effectively switches between righty and lefty. He went 5-0 in 2011, and Top Rank, with matchmakers Brad "Abdul" Goodman and Bruce Trampler, is better than any other promoter when it comes to identifying young talent and grooming raw pro debuters into star world champions. The one thing that could hold Benavidez back is fragile hands.

Sharif Bogere (23, lightweight, Golden Boy, 21-0, 13 KOs): The Las Vegas-based Bogere has style and substance. Nicknamed "The Lion," he makes a stylish ring entrance wearing a lion's head. Inside the ring, the Uganda native and five-time African amateur champion is a bundle of energy, throws tons of punches and has an aggressive mentality that makes him a serious crowd-pleaser. Having left a difficult life in his home country for the United States, he turned pro in 2008 and has risen quickly. He was 3-0 in 2011, including back-to-back "ShoBox" appearances in which he defeated his two best opponents: Raymundo Beltran, in a bloody nip-and-tuck battle, and previously undefeated Francisco Contreras via third-round knockout.

Randy Caballero (21, junior featherweight, Golden Boy, 13-0, 7 KOs): The Coachella, Calif., native has gotten a lot of TV time on Telefutura's "Solo Boxeo" on cards for which he has drawn his fans in the region. He is a crowd-pleasing boxer-puncher who was a standout amateur with a 167-10 record. He won a 2008 U.S. national championship and a bronze medal at the 2008 world amateur championships, but he was too young to qualify for the 2008 U.S. Olympic team. A pro only since early 2010, Caballero continues to improve fight in and fight out. He is technically sound and patient, but he needs to gain strength. He has gotten excellent experience sparring with pound-for-pound star Nonito Donaire (with whom he shares manager Cameron Dunkin) and bantamweight titlist and Golden Boy stablemate Abner Mares.

Rakhim Chakhkiev (28, cruiserweight, Universum, 11-0, 9 KOs): Based in Germany, Chakhkiev was a star amateur in his native Russia, going 160-20 and winning the 2008 Olympic heavyweight gold medal. A professional since late 2009, "The Machine" has moved a bit slowly considering his amateur pedigree, but he has looked good. He's a southpaw with power and is built like a truck. He went 3-0 in 2011 -- he needs to be busier -- but made his American debut in April on the Marcos Maidana-Erik Morales undercard in Las Vegas. He is due to make his 2012 debut Jan. 28 in Germany.

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AP Photo/Isaac BrekkenPier-Olivier Cote, left, has a flashy style, fast hands and an early 2012 fight on Showtime.

Pier-Olivier Cote (27, junior welterweight, InterBox, 18-0, 12 KOs): Quebec City's Cote isn't just one of Canada's brightest prospects -- he's one of the most exciting up-and-comers in the sport, period. Considering he didn't begin boxing until age 20, he has come a long way, winning a Canadian national amateur title and now coming into his own as a professional. He turned pro in 2008 at junior lightweight and has grown into a solid junior welterweight. He has a flashy, dynamic, fan-friendly style and fast hands. He went 4-0 in 2011 and really opened eyes with a sensational performance on Showtime on the Lucian Bute-Glen Johnson undercard in November, when he annihilated one-time prospect Jorge Teron in the second round of an explosive performance. He'll kick off 2012 on Feb. 3 in a main event on Showtime's "ShoBox" against Mauricio Herrera in Quebec City.

Courtesy of Ricardo RodriguezLuis Orlando Del Valle outclassed Dat Nguyen in a June decision in his stiffest test yet.

Luis Orlando Del Valle (24, junior featherweight, Lou DiBella/Gary Shaw, 14-0, 11 KOs): Puerto Rico's Del Valle, who lives in New York, lost his first amateur fight at age 14 but wound up going 112-14 and earning a National Golden Gloves title before turning pro in 2008. He has excellent hand speed and is efficient with his punches. He has a high knockout percentage but is more of a sharp puncher than a crushing puncher. He scores his knockouts with an accumulation of well-placed shots. In his most notable fight, which aired on "ShoBox" in June, he hammered credible Dat Nguyen in a lopsided 10-round decision with an excellent performance that stole the show.

box_a_tdults_576.jpg
AP Photo/Michael DwyerCharismatic, aggressive and powerful, Thomas Dulorme, left, has all the makings of a future star.

Thomas Dulorme (21, welterweight, Lou DiBella/Gary Shaw/Javier Bustillo, 13-0, 10 KOs): Puerto Rico's Dulorme is an ultra-exciting prospect with Felix Trinidad-like charisma. When Dulorme comes to the ring, he has a smile on his face and seems to thoroughly enjoy the combat. He is a very aggressive puncher with tremendous power. He turned pro in 2008 but initially didn't fight very often. In 2011, he picked up the pace, winning five fights -- including spectacular second-round knockouts of Guillermo Valdes and Harrison Cuello on major undercards. Dulorme followed those fights with quality decision wins against former junior welterweight titlist DeMarcus "Chop Chop" Corley on "Friday Night Fights" and former welterweight title challenger Charlie Navarro. The sky is the limit for this kid. He has the look of a future star who just needs more experience. Dulorme will open his 2012 schedule by headlining "ShoBox" on Feb. 17.

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AP Photo/Michael DwyerJavier Fortuna, right, a speedy southpaw with power, is raw but should get the proper polishing.

Javier Fortuna (22, featherweight, Sampson Lewkowicz, 18-0, 13 KOs): Lewkowicz is one of the best in the business when it comes to finding diamonds in the rough and polishing them into top professionals. Fortuna, a southpaw with blazing speed (hands and feet) and good power, turned pro in 2009 and could be his promoter's next find. The Dominican Republic native, who fights out of the same stable as middleweight champion Sergio Martinez, is a bit raw and wild. He needs a lot of work cleaning up his defense, but he is aggressive and progressing well. Fortuna fought on the Dominican national team during his strong amateur career and has scored some sick knockouts as a pro, including a devastating eighth-round KO of decent opponent Derrick Wilson on a Martinez undercard. On Dec. 16, Fortuna scored his most notable win, a 10-round decision against former title challenger Miguel Roman.

Luis Franco (29, featherweight, Gary Shaw, 11-0, 7 KOs): The Miami-based Franco spent eight years on the powerhouse Cuban national team and was a 2004 Olympian. But he lost what would have been some prime professional years before defecting in mid-2009 and turning pro. After roughly 400 amateur fights (including wins against Yuriorkis Gamboa), Franco is adapting well to the pro game. He's a volume puncher with quickness and, because of his amateur experience and advanced age, is on the fast track. He has already defeated solid pros such as Wilton Hilario, Eric Hunter and Leonilo Miranda. There was serious talk of Franco facing 2011 ESPN.com prospect of the year Gary Russell Jr. on HBO on two different cards, but no deal ever came to fruition, as Franco was in position for a title eliminator in one of the alphabet organizations. He figures to get a significant fight in 2012.

Jonathan Gonzalez (22, junior middleweight, Leon Margules/Gary Shaw/Lou DiBella, 14-0, 13 KOs): Gonzalez was a 2007 Pan-American Games silver medalist and 2008 Puerto Rican Olympian who went 132-18 as an amateur. He's a strong volume puncher who loves to bull forward and look for knockouts. But he can also box and fights in a confident, relaxed manner. He picked up his most notable victory in June, when he broke down onetime contender Richard Gutierrez in impressive fashion to win a lopsided decision on Showtime's "ShoBox" in New York on the eve of the annual Puerto Rican Day parade.

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Julian Finney/Getty ImagesGeorge Groves, right, was a top amateur in England and has moved quickly since turning pro in 2008.

George Groves (23, super middleweight, Frank Warren, 14-0, 11 KOs): As one of England's top amateurs, he went 66-10 and has moved very quickly since turning pro in late 2008. He's a good boxer with good enough power and has already claimed the traditional British and Commonwealth titles. In the amateurs, Groves defeated James DeGale, who went on to win a 2008 Olympic gold medal for Great Britain. They met in a heavily hyped pro rematch in May, in which Groves did enough to claim a majority decision before scoring a sensational second-round knockout of experienced Paul Smith.

Badou Jack (28, super middleweight, Lou DiBella/Leon Margules, 9-0, 8 KOs): Jack, known as "The Ripper," is a little older than your average prospect and is a bit of a project, but he can fight and is a crowd-pleasing, come-forward fighter with solid power. Although born in Sweden and now living in Las Vegas, he was the first boxer to make the Olympics for the African country of Gambia (his father's native nation) in 2008. He turned pro in 2009 and fought in Europe but fought only once in 2010 before relocating to the United States, where he has won all four of his 2011 bouts, each by knockout.

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AP Photo/Julie JacobsonDiego Magdaleno, left, is a technician who has gained valuable experience against quality competition.

Diego Magdaleno (25, junior lightweight, Top Rank, 21-0, 7 KOs): The Las Vegas southpaw -- who boxed as a right-hander before an amateur trainer had him switch -- is a slick operator who has been brought along nicely by Top Rank. He began boxing at age 8 and won a 2007 U.S. national championship during an amateur career in which he went approximately 116-14. Even though he isn't a heavy hitter, he's a formidable technician. Facing fighters who possess excellent records, he went 4-0 in 2011, including a dominant decision against former contender Emmanuel Lucero.

Roberto Marroquin (22, featherweight, Top Rank, 21-1, 14 KOs): Marroquin's reputation took a hit in 2011 when he suffered a bloody 10-round split decision to Francisco Leal in an April fight that could have gone either way. Ultimately, it should be a learning experience for the talented Marroquin, who was originally supposed to face Leal in an eight-rounder but wound up in his first 10-rounder when it was bumped up to the main event (after the scheduled headliner dropped out because of illness). Dallas' Marroquin has a terrific left hook and quickly bounced back from the defeat, looking good in a pair of dominant decision wins against reasonable opposition. Fans should enjoy his crowd-pleasing style. As a teenager fighting in the amateurs, he was a 2007 U.S. Olympic trials finalist.

Al Bello/Getty ImagesSeth Mitchell, a former Michigan State linebacker, may well be America's best heavyweight hope.

Seth Mitchell (29, heavyweight, Golden Boy, 24-0-1, 18 KOs): The heavyweight division is dominated by Europeans and the pool of legitimate American prospects is weak, but Mitchell, of Brandywine, Md., is one of the few with a chance. At 29, he is older than your typical prospect, but he didn't begin boxing until his 20s. Mitchell was a Michigan State linebacker, but he turned to boxing after a knee injury snuffed out his NFL dreams. With hard work and intense focus, "Mayhem" has improved dramatically since turning pro. At 6-foot-2 and 243 pounds, Mitchell is solidly built and is well-schooled. He throws a textbook left-jab-right-hand combination. He needs a bit more seasoning, but he went 4-0 (all knockouts) in 2011, culminating the year with a superb performance in his HBO debut, a blowout of the very experienced Timur Ibragimov, by far Mitchell's best opponent, in two rounds.

Thomas Oosthuizen (22, super middleweight, Lou DiBella/Rodney Berman, 17-0-1, 12 KOs): One of South Africa's rising talents, Oosthuizen, a 6-foot-4 southpaw, is a crowd-pleaser who isn't afraid to take two to give one. He has advanced quickly in his four-year pro career and went 4-0 in 2011, including a pair of excellent victories: He outpointed Aaron Pryor Jr. in September in his American debut and stopped rugged Francisco Sierra in the 11th round in November. As physically strong as Oosthuizen is, DiBella believes he hasn't yet filled out with his "man strength." The fighter's father, Charles Oosthuizen, was a two-division national champion in South Africa.

Jose Pedraza (22, lightweight, Lou DiBella/Gary Shaw/Javier Bustillo, 5-0, 4 KOs): Pedraza, a 2008 Olympian and 2009 silver medalist at the amateur world championships, is perhaps the most heralded Puerto Rican prospect since Miguel Cotto came out of the 2000 Olympics. Nicknamed "The Sniper," Pedraza turned pro in February and has rolled through his first four (low-level) opponents. He has shown an educated jab and an excellent body attack, two elements that usually take time for a young fighter to develop. He has poise, is accurate with his punches and is very fluid. DiBella said Pedraza's fighting style reminds him of a young Oscar De La Hoya.

David Price (28, heavyweight, Frank Maloney, 11-0, 9 KOs): Price won a 2008 Olympic bronze medal for Great Britain in the super heavyweight division. At 6-8, 245 pounds, he has Klitschko-like size and good power. But he has moved rather slowly since turning pro in 2009, taking only four fights in each of his first two years and three in 2011 -- including a nice first-round knockout of American trial horse Raphael Butler (who lasted three rounds with Cristobal Arreola in November) and a second-round knockout of previously undefeated Tom Dallas. But Price, who owns an amateur win against Tyson Fury, has a good jab that he stays busy with. He will take another modest step up in competition when he faces countryman John McDermott on Jan. 21 in an eliminator for a shot at the British title.

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Marco PerezEdwin Rodriguez, left, is closing in on a notable fight after being slowed by an injury in 2011.

Edwin Rodriguez (26, super middleweight, Lou DiBella, 20-0, 14 KOs): Rodriguez, who was born in the Dominican Republic but lives in Worcester, Mass., is on the verge of getting a notable fight. Trained by Ronnie Shields, he fought only three times in 2011, but that was because of a left rotator cuff injury he suffered in a hard-fought decision win against Aaron Pryor Jr. on "Friday Night Fights" in January. In his two wins after the injury, including a good one against previously undefeated Will Rosinsky on "ShoBox" in October, his shoulder held up fine. In addition to his fights, Rodriguez has gained invaluable experience sparring with such notable fighters as former super middleweight titlist Carl Froch, former light heavyweight champion Jean Pascal and middleweight titlist Daniel Geale. As an amateur, Rodriguez was 84-9 and won the 2005 U.S. nationals and 2006 National Golden Gloves.

Leo Santa Cruz (23, bantamweight, Golden Boy, 18-0-1, 10 KOs): Los Angeles' Santa Cruz was only 18 when he turned pro in late 2006, after a standout amateur career during which he went 148-7 and won a world amateur youth championship. Eric Gomez, his matchmaker at Golden Boy, paid him high praise when he said Santa Cruz's style reminds him of the late, great Alexis Arguello's because of the precise way that he throws his punches. Santa Cruz also displays a sound jab, has a terrific body attack and is very busy. He can fight on the inside or the outside, and although his best punch is his left hook, he has an ever-improving right hand. He was 4-0 in 2011 and gained good experience in wins against ex-junior bantamweight titlist Jose "Carita" Lopez (KO5) and former title challenger Everth Briceno (TKO11). A title shot in 2012 is quite possible.

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Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty ImagesIsmayl Sillakh, left, has sparkled in recent action and may be in line for a title eliminator bout.

Ismayl Sillakh (26, light heavyweight, Square Ring, 17-0, 14 KOs): Sillakh, a native of Ukraine living in Southern California, was a decorated amateur. He won a silver medal at the 2005 world amateur championships and had a reported record of 302-16. He can box and punch, and has excellent coordination and good size. As a pro, he has moved quickly and looked exceptional in recent fights, including his biggest win -- a dominant 10-round decision win against former Cuban amateur standout Yordanis Despaigne in March on "Friday Night Fights." Sillakh's next fight is expected to be a title eliminator, possibly against former champion Jean Pascal.

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Chris Cozzone/Fightwireimages.comAggressive Cuban prospect Yordenis Ugas, right, "fights like a Mexican," according to his manager.

Yordenis Ugas (25, welterweight, Top Rank, 10-0, 5 KOs): Ugas, who has boxed since age 10, had a huge amateur career in which he fought roughly 400 times. He was a four-time Cuban national champion, a 2005 world amateur champion and a 2008 Olympic bronze medalist. Having defected in 2010, he now lives in Miami. Most Cuban fighters are very technical, but Ugas is more of a crowd-pleaser. As manager Luis DeCubas Jr. said, "He's a Cuban who fights like a Mexican." Ugas has excellent ring generalship (no surprise, given all his amateur experience) and fast hands, throws good combinations, goes to the body well and, though he isn't the biggest puncher, can break opponents down. He was 5-0 in 2011 and will open 2012 on Jan. 13 in the "Friday Night Fights" co-feature.

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Jim Everett/FightWireImages.comDeontay Wilder is a project, but he has size (6-foot-7) and upside in a thin heavyweight division.

Deontay Wilder (26, heavyweight, Golden Boy, 20-0, 20 KOs): Although Wilder, of Tuscaloosa, Ala., had a limited amateur career, he won the 2007 National Golden Gloves and U.S. National titles and saved the U.S. Olympic boxing team from a medal shutout by winning a bronze in 2008. He's a raw project, but he appears to have the work ethic to continue improving. At 6-7 and 215 pounds, he has great height but needs to bulk up, especially in his legs. His calling card is a booming right hand, and he has stopped all of his opponents inside four rounds. However, the power display might be a little exaggerated because Wilder has faced extremely weak opposition. He went 6-0 in 2011, and ideally Golden Boy will step him up at least a little bit in 2012.

ESPN's round of the year.

Spoiler [+]
You've heard the term "bull in a china shop," right? Now imagine if two bulls were actually let loose at the same time in said china shop.

The ensuing destruction would probably look pretty much like the first round of the James Kirkland-Alfredo Angulo fight. Wild, with heavy-duty contact. Violent. Total chaos in a small area. Easily the 2011 ESPN.com round of the year.

[h4]Dan Rafael's rounds of the year[/h4]
[table][tr][th=""]Year[/th][th=""]Fighter[/th][th=""]Round[/th][/tr][tr][td]2011[/td][td]James Kirkland-Alfredo Angulo[/td][td]1st[/td][/tr][tr][td]2010[/td][td]Juan Manuel Marquez-Michael Katsidis[/td][td]3rd[/td][/tr][tr][td]2009[/td][td]Juan Manuel Marquez-Juan Diaz[/td][td]1st[/td][/tr][tr][td]2008[/td][td]Kendall Holt-Ricardo Torres II[/td][td]1st[/td][/tr][tr][td]2007[/td][td]Israel Vazquez-Rafael Marquez II[/td][td]3rd[/td][/tr][tr][td]2006[/td][td]Somsak Sithchatchawal-Mahyar Monshipour[/td][td]9th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2005[/td][td]Diego Corrales-Jose Luis Castillo I[/td][td]10th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2004[/td][td]Marco Antonio Barrera-Erik Morales III[/td][td]11th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2003[/td][td]Acelino "Popo" Freitas-Jorge Barrios[/td][td]11th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2002[/td][td]Micky Ward-Arturo Gatti I[/td][td]9th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2001[/td][td]Micky Ward-Emanuel Burton[/td][td]9th[/td][/tr][tr][td]2000[/td][td]Erik Morales-Marco Antonio Barrera I[/td][td]5th[/td][/tr][/table]

No three-minute segment was filled with more sheer excitement -- not to mention a knockdown and a gargantuan momentum swing -- than the opening frame of this junior middleweight collision Nov. 5 on HBO in Cancun, Mexico.

Since 2008, when both fighters were becoming regulars on HBO, boxing fans looked forward to the day Kirkland and Angulo -- two of boxing's most exciting fighters and explosive punchers -- would someday meet. However, they both had issues that kept them out of the ring for long stretches. Kirkland went to prison for 18 months and Angulo was jammed up with promotional and immigration problems. But when they finally were back on track, Golden Boy, which had just signed Angulo, threw caution to the wind and matched them.

Kirkland was the clear underdog because he was going to Angulo's home country and still trying to rebuild himself after what had happened to him seven months earlier.

After Kirkland was released from prison, he won two quick fights in March and then was given a showcase fight against unheralded Nobuhiro Ishida on the Marcos Maidana-Erik Morales HBO PPV undercard. Ishida delivered a shocking first-round knockout when he dropped Kirkland three times in the biggest upset of the year.

Kirkland then reunited with trainer Ann Wolfe, from whom he had split after exiting prison, before winning two nothing fights and being thrown in with Angulo.

After so much anticipation, it appeared the fight might be over in nearly an instant. The fighters came out bombing right away, and Kirkland did the unthinkable: He forced Angulo, who probably had never taken a backward step in his career, into retreat and had him cornered. But Angulo freed himself and, just 30 seconds into the fight, landed a ferocious right hand dead on Kirkland's chin. Kirkland crumpled to his backside, and suddenly memories of the Ishida fight came flooding back. Would he make it out of the round?

But Wolfe had Kirkland in phenomenal condition. He was up quickly, calmly took the count from referee John Callas and was ready to wade into battle again.

Angulo was ready and continued to press the attack. He went hard after the knockout. For more than a minute, he teed off on Kirkland with thudding left hooks and searing right hands. Kirkland absorbed the shots and stayed on his feet, but although he was throwing back, he simply had no answers to deter the free-swinging Angulo.

With about a minute left in the round, Angulo looked exhausted after throwing so many punches in relentless pursuit of the knockout following the knockdown. While Angulo was losing steam, Kirkland surprisingly looked fresh, despite the battering he had taken to that point.

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Roberto Fernandez/Hoganphotos/Golden Boy PromotionsAlfredo Angulo had James Kirkland in trouble almost from the start in their Nov. 5 bout, but Kirkland rallied and launched a brutal assault in a violent first round.

They were unloading on each other with punch after punch, prompting HBO announcer Jim Lampley to express sympathy for the punch counters at ringside.

"What a CompuBox punch festival here," he exclaimed.

With 45 seconds left, Kirkland (30-1, 27 KOs) landed a hard straight left hand that sent Angulo (20-2, 17 KOs) backward into the ropes. During the ensuing flurry, Kirkland landed two flush right hands and a left that badly hurt Angulo.

"What an amazing comeback in this round," Lampley barked as Kirkland had clearly turned the fight around and gained momentum.

Kirkland continued the assault, raining down more than a dozen punches, including some heavy right hands, until Angulo dropped to the canvas on his rear end. It was the first time he had been down in his career. Although a bit unsteady, a woozy Angulo, with the help of the ropes to steady himself, scrambled to his feet before Callas could even begin his count.

There were only a few seconds remaining, and the round ended before either man could get off another good shot, but what an amazing battle it had already been.

"What an incredible round," Lampley bellowed as the bell sounded.

And then HBO analyst Max Kellerman said what many of us were surely thinking: "They'll be talking about this round for years!"
[h3]Other scorchers:[/h3]
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AP Photo/Shizuo KambayashiStrawweights Akira Yaegashi and Pornsawon Porpramook provided big action throughout their October title bout, but the eighth round was especially breathtaking.

Akira Yaegashi-Pornsawon Porpramook (eighth): Really, you could pick any of a number of rounds from this epic fight as a candidate for the year's best. You want to go with the seventh? Cool. The 10th? No sweat. And there are others that were terrific, but we'll take the eighth round of this all-action strawweight title bout from Japan. The scene was just ridiculous as these little guys plowed into each other (again) at an inhuman pace right from the bell to start the round. They met at the center of the ring and began firing missiles. Yaegashi caught Porpramook with a left uppercut that blunted his progression and forced him back into the ropes, prompting Porpramook to motion for his rival to come and get him. Yaegashi took him up on the offer and began teeing off on the wide-open Porpramook with uppercuts and right hands. Porpramook's defense at this point amounted to using his face to block punches. Yaegashi landed an absolutely brutal right hand, and Porpramook barely flinched. But Yaegashi kept swinging away in violent fashion. With two minutes still to go, Porpramook already had taken probably a few rounds of punishment. But out of nowhere he rallied, landing a blistering right hand that buckled the knees of Yaegashi, who barely stayed upright. At this point, the fighters were in the middle of the ring simply trading shots, the action resembling a video game or a "Rocky" movie, while the crowd went berserk. Porpramook refused to hold his hands up, and Yaegashi continued to plant right hands on his face while Porpramook also got in his own brutal shots to the head and body. The incredible round was like an entire fight rolled into three minutes -- that's how utterly barbaric it was.

Hernan "Tyson" Marquez-Luis Concepcion I (first): The opening round, during which Marquez and Concepcion exchanged knockdowns, set the tone for this fabulous flyweight title fight. There was no feeling-out process as the fireworks began erupting in the first 30 seconds, the fighters trading blows. Concepcion, a bit more of the aggressor, broke through with a right hand that sent Marquez down against the ropes as Concepcion's hometown fans in Panama City, Panama, went wild. Marquez made it to his feet by eight, but he looked hurt and there were still 80 seconds to go in the round. Concepcion rushed to him, and the battle was back in full swing immediately. Concepcion was throwing with abandon. Marquez was throwing back while trying to stay on his feet. He then landed a huge overhand left that sent Concepcion reeling toward the ropes, swinging the momentum. Then it changed again when Concepcion nailed Marquez with two right hands and a body shot as the round wound down. But then it changed yet again as Marquez came off the ropes and smashed Concepcion with a left hook that landed on the chin and dropped him with two seconds left in an absolutely fantastic round of what would prove to be a classic fight.

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Marty Rosengarten/RingsidePhotos.comAndre Berto and Victor Ortiz exchanged vicious blows and knockdowns in the best round of their April fight of the year candidate.

Victor Ortiz-Andre Berto (6th): Just before the sixth round of this terrific slugfest between young welterweight stars began, HBO's Lampley offered an overview: "If you've just tuned in, it's been blazing and thrilling so far," he said. Both fighters had already been knocked down once each, but as good as the first five rounds were, the action elevated to another level in the dramatic sixth round. To be honest, the first two minutes were fairly slow compared to what had already taken place. But that last minute? Whoa. Berto landed a perfect right hand to the chin and Ortiz went down for the second time in the fight. He got up quickly, but his legs were shaky and saliva was dripping from his mouth. After Ortiz took the count from referee Michael Ortega, Berto went for the knockout. Ortiz's legs still weren't all there, and after eating a flush right hand, he grabbed on to Berto, who continued to chase him and land punches. Out of nowhere, Ortiz cracked Berto on the chin with a clean left hand that sent him to the canvas with five seconds left in the round. HBO analyst Emanuel Steward lost it: "Ohhhhhh, maaaaaah gawwwwwwd," he shrieked. The round came to an end before either fighter could land another solid punch, but holy moly, what a round. "Unbelievable! What a fight! George Foreman and Ron Lyle, stand aside. We've got an amazing slugfest in Connecticut," exclaimed Lampley, referring to the all-time great heavyweight slobberknocker. How good was the round, or at least the final minute? Even Floyd Mayweather Jr. -- who sat ringside and would go on to face Ortiz (who claimed a title from Berto) -- was smiling and cheering.

Delvin Rodriguez-Pawel Wolak I (ninth): You could pick one of several rounds from this "Friday Night Fights" instant-classic main event, but the ninth round was just enthralling. Part of the reason was the overall action, which was nonstop, and part was because of the incredible courage Wolak showed to keep fighting through the pain of a massive hematoma over his right eye. It was very badly swollen, but with the fight seemingly dead even, he wouldn't submit, even as Rodriguez's corner was telling its fighter to target the eye before the round began. When it did begin, Wolak buried his head in Rodriguez's chest and tried to manhandle him on the inside. It worked briefly, until Rodriguez exploded a combination to get Wolak off of him. Rodriguez was having a big round, but the perseverance Wolak showed was awe-inspiring, and the crowd was on its feet and cheering wildly for both guys. Rodriguez landed a fast three-punch combination on Wolak's face and then hammered the right eye with a left hook that Wolak could not possibly have seen out of the sealed-shut eye. But Wolak simply shook off the blow and ripped off punch after punch in an exhausting round that hurt to watch.

Antonio DeMarco-Jorge Linares (11th): In a fight for a vacant lightweight belt, Linares was dominating DeMarco through 10 rounds despite having suffered some bad facial cuts. DeMarco's trainer, Romulo Quirarte, knew it and told his man after the 10th round that he needed a knockout to win. So what did DeMarco do? He gave his corner exactly that, as he launched a rally for the ages. It began subtly enough, with DeMarco taking control when he landed a straight left that forced Linares to the ropes. At that point you could sense the momentum of the fight changing, as DeMarco pressured a fading Linares and cracked him with a left-right combination midway through the round, the blood flowing freely from the nasty cut on the bridge of Linares' nose. Another cut was bleeding into Linares' right eye as DeMarco continued to attack, including landing a clean right hand that rattled his rival. But Linares wouldn't go easily. While DeMarco continued to hammer him, Linares was throwing back, and they exchanged in toe-to-toe fashion while the blood flew. "One of the best rounds you could see," HBO analyst Max Kellerman said just as Linares ate another straight left hand. Although Linares was badly hurt, he was fighting back. But DeMarco was relentless. He landed about eight more punches as the blood-soaked Linares retreated to the ropes and referee Raul Caiz Sr. stopped the fight with 28 seconds left in the tumultuous round.

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Chris Farina/Top RankBrandon Rios and Urbano Antillon seemed to drag their prefight enmity into the ring for their July bout, taking turns teeing off on each other from the opening bell.

Brandon Rios-Urbano Antillon (first): Expectations for an action fight were sky-high for this lightweight title bout between Southern California rivals. And, not surprisingly, that's what folks got -- especially in the thrilling opening round. The fighters had talked a lot of smack in the buildup, and they tried to back it up right away. Antillon began digging to the body and Rios was firing left hooks and uppercuts. After Rios stung Antillon with one of those uppercuts and appeared to gain the advantage, suddenly Antillon answered with his own uppercut. This round could have been fought in a phone booth as the fighters stood at close range and wailed away. The final 30 seconds were awesome as they went toe-to-toe and landed heavy shots on each other and whipped the crowd into a frenzy.

Brandon Rios-Miguel Acosta (ninth): This was the best round of a terrific fight as Rios, challenging for a lightweight belt, and Acosta traded with reckless abandon in pursuit of a knockout. Already, Acosta had been down in the sixth and eighth rounds and Rios had rallied from an early deficit as they continued to blast away at close range. Acosta, who was fading, showed huge heart to go punch for punch with Rios, who lives to pressure opponents. Rios stuck his head in Acosta's chest for long portions of the round and blasted away. He had Acosta pinned on the ropes and was firing with both hands and going to the body while Acosta, who had lost some steam on his shots, was nonetheless answering as best as he could. They traded punches on the ropes seemingly for an eternity, prompting Showtime's Steve Albert to cry, "No letup here! Nonstop action!" There were still 40 seconds left in the round at that point, and the fighters didn't disappoint as the rock 'em-sock 'em round came to an end the same way it had begun.

Carl Froch-Glen Johnson (eighth): When super middleweight titlist Froch met former light heavyweight champ Johnson in the semifinals of the Super Six World Boxing Classic, they produced an excellent fight, the second best of the tournament, behind Mikkel Kessler-Froch in 2010, whose 12th round was also the best of the tournament. But this round wasn't far behind, as Froch and Johnson banged away to the delight of the crowd. They started by digging hard shots at each other on the inside while standing in the middle of the ring. Johnson, who fought like a man a lot younger than his 42 years, hurt Froch with a flush right hand that backed him up. Froch was undeterred. He fired back. Johnson responded. And on and on it went. As they continued to trade, Showtime's Al Bernstein was on the money when he said, "You can press this round in your memory book. It's a good one!" Said excitable blow-by-blow man Gus Johnson: "What a round, this eighth round!"

Teon Kennedy-Jorge Diaz (sixth): It's a damn shame that this bout between undefeated junior featherweight prospects wasn't televised (although it was streamed on Top Rank's website), because it was sensational. And no round in the fight was more outstanding than No. 6. The pace was fast throughout the bout and continued into the sixth when, in the final minute, Kennedy landed a massive right hand to Diaz's head, sending him to his knees. Although he was hurt, Diaz -- who has a lot of Arturo Gatti in him -- showed a big heart and continued to fight hard even though Kennedy was hammering him. After another left hand rocked Diaz, referee Steve Smoger looked very closely at stopping the fight. Diaz wasn't badly dazed, but his legs were gone. Smoger, one of the best referees in the business, has an uncanny knack for knowing when to stop a fight and when not to. He let this one continue, and it was the right call as Diaz got himself together and grabbed on to Kennedy before they fell to the canvas as the wild round came to a close.

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Al Bello/Getty ImagesThe third round of Amir Khan-Lamont Peterson raised the stakes from quality action fight to classic.

Lamont Peterson-Amir Khan (third): The first two rounds of this junior welterweight title bout were really good, but you had an inkling that you were watching a truly memorable fight unfold during the fast-paced third round. Khan was on the attack early, nailing Peterson with fast punches and moving away. Although Peterson's punches weren't nearly as flashy as Khan's, he landed some hard right hands and digging body punches that Khan definitely felt. This was the epitome of a round between fast and skilled boxers who also liked to mix it up, delighting the crowd -- especially when the fighters traded power shots in the center of the ring. Every time Khan would land -- and he landed a lot -- Peterson was right there to return fire. Khan, after taking a body shot, was in retreat in the final 40 seconds. He went to the ropes, and Peterson followed and landed some stiff blows. But Khan came back immediately with a right and a left just before the round ended.

Manny Pacquiao-Juan Manuel Marquez III (ninth): Great rivals Pacquiao and Marquez have thrown down in many excellent rounds during the course of their all-time great trilogy, and this was one of the best of them. Late in their welterweight title bout, which was seemingly still hanging in the balance, they produced a terrific round of quality boxing and clean punching. Marquez caught Pacquiao early with a shot that strayed to the back of the head, but he also landed a couple of solid combinations that fired up the largely Mexican crowd. Then came some excellent exchanges, Pacquiao landing with his left, Marquez with his right. They continued to swap shots through the final minute, as Marquez cracked Pacquiao with an uppercut and Pacquiao returned fire to knock Marquez off-balance. There were fierce exchanges down the stretch in an incredibly close round in a typically close Pacquiao-Marquez fight. When the ninth was over, HBO's Jim Lampley knew it had been outstanding: "What a tremendous round! The crowd's on its feet. We've got a fight in Vegas!"

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John Gurzinski/AFP/Getty ImagesFloyd Mayweather Jr. stunned Victor Ortiz, referee Joe Cortez and viewers everywhere in a wild fourth round in the fighters' September title tussle.

Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Victor Ortiz (fourth): Mayweather, returning from a 16-month layoff, was a heavy favorite to beat Ortiz and reclaim a welterweight title. The fight had gone as expected through three rounds, with Mayweather in command. But things turned wild in the fourth round. Ortiz began to enjoy his best moments of the fight when he clipped Mayweather with a few stinging shots and bulled him into a corner. But rather than continue to throw punches, which were beginning to get through, Ortiz instead turned into a human battering ram and intentionally head-butted Mayweather in the face, busting open a cut on the inside and outside of his opponent's mouth. Later, Ortiz would admit that he was trying to break Mayweather's nose in retaliation for what he believed were purposeful elbows. After the head-butt, referee Joe Cortez called time and docked a point from Ortiz for the blatant foul. An apologetic Ortiz hugged and kissed Mayweather, who did not appear remotely interested in the goodwill gesture after being purposely bashed in the face by Ortiz's head. Cortez restarted the bout and motioned the fighters together and was looking away while Ortiz was trying to touch gloves with Mayweather yet again. Perhaps not realizing time was back in, Ortiz glanced over to Cortez, and Mayweather, fully aware the fight had restarted, blasted him with a left and right to knock out Ortiz and end a round that was crazy even by boxing's crazy standards.

Hank Lundy-David Diaz (fourth): The best round of this "Friday Night Fights" shootout featured tremendous action between the talented and slick Lundy and the slower (but fully determined) Diaz, a former lightweight titlist struggling to keep his career afloat. Lundy was in control when they got to the fourth round, but Diaz was still going after him when he landed a combination, including a booming right hand to the temple that sent Lundy staggering across the ring and down to the canvas. Diaz was all over him when the fight resumed, as they traded toe-to-toe in a brutal exchange, during which Diaz suffered a horrible cut over his right eye. The blood flowed like a faucet, but they continued to exchange with abandon for the rest of a frenetic frame. As ESPN's Joe Tessitore barked when the session ended, "What a round! Unbelievable action in round No. 4!"

Edgar Lopez-Felix Rivera (second): This one is for all those club fighters we've never heard of but who duke it out for our entertainment. Lopez was 1-0 when he faced fellow Puerto Rican Rivera, who was 0-2, in a junior lightweight filler bout on the undercard of a Telefutura "Solo Boxeo Tecate" telecast. Famous or not, these guys waged a sensational round and deserve their props. Rivera opened the round by going right after Lopez, eventually dropping him in a corner with a right hand to the jaw. Lopez was in huge trouble but dragged himself up with the help of the ropes. He managed to survive Rivera's onslaught of winging shots, many of which connected, and slowly got his head and legs together. He began to sink shots into Rivera's body and then came upstairs with a clean right hand that prompted Rivera to stick his tongue out. Rivera was hurt but continued to trade with Lopez in an exciting display. Finally, with 47 seconds left in the round, Lopez landed a flush right-left combination and knocked Rivera down and out, face first. He had to leave the ring on a stretcher.
 
Forgot about that. Update the thread title.

BTW, Sergio is getting %%$+$+ with this JCC Jr. situation. I truly hope Rubio knocks him out cold.
 
Forgot about that. Update the thread title.

BTW, Sergio is getting %%$+$+ with this JCC Jr. situation. I truly hope Rubio knocks him out cold.
 
Here's a couple articles on the Martinez situation if you guys haven't kept up.  Think he's going to Showtime.

Spoiler [+]
In December 2010, then WBC Middleweight Champion Sergio Martinez opted to forego his mandatory defense against Sebastian Zbik after HBO refused to broadcast Martinez vs Zbik due a supposed lack of public interest. HBO, however, was interested purchasing the rights to broadcast a fight between Martinez and Ukrainian-born southpaw WBO junior middleweight king Sergei Dzinziruk (then 37-0, 23 KOs). As a result, Martinez signed to face Dzinziruk, relinquishing his title for a more lucrative, higher-profile bout that would give him added exposure.

WBC Diamond (Emeritus) Designation
In January 2011, the WBC declared Sergio Martinez its Diamond (Emeritus) Champion. At the time and according to sources, Martinez 's "emeritus" status served as an agreement between Martinez and the WBC, promising the Argentinian an immediate title shot against its available champion should he wish to pursue it.
[h4]In essence, Sergio Martinez was allegedly assured he'd be the mandatory opponent for the winner June's WBC Middleweight Championship bout that pitted Julio Cesar Chavez Jr against Sebastian Zbik.[/h4]
Sergio 'Maravilla' Martinez, fighting on HBO, knocked out Dzinziruk in March and Chavez won a majority decision over Zbik in June so, according to the agreement allegedly reached in January by the WBC and Martinez, Martinez vs Chavez should have been all but signed, sealed and delivered.

Not so fast...

World's Most Avoided Fighter
After Chavez lifted the title from Zbik, Martinez was set to finalize a fight deal face the WBC's newly-crowned champion before learning Chavez would be fighting Peter Manfredo instead. Incensed, Martinez has been lobbying on and off for a fight against Chavez ever since, insisting it was promised to him as a result of the emeritus status bestowed upon him by the WBC itself.

After widespread allegations by many in the traditional media and in boxing's blogosphere that Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. was ducking Sergio Martinez, Team Martinez attempted to lure superstars Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather and Miguel Cotto into fight deals but their efforts were to no avail.

Quick, deceptively powerful and very awkward, the 36 year old southpaw became boxing's most avoided fighter.

Although universally credited as a top pound-for-pound fighter by boxing experts, Martinez didn't have enough mainstream appeal to generate massive paydays.
[h4]Couple his perceived inability to generate sales with his array of skills and the level of danger he presents in the ring and Sergio Martinez was believed to be 'too much risk for the reward' for superstar fighters who thought they'd have more to lose than gain by fighting him.[/h4]
WBC Announces Martinez vs Chavez in 2012
Having exhausted all other options, Martinez had come full circle by December and once again chose to exercise his emeritus status by demanding a fight with Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

In response to 'Maravilla's demands, WBC President Jose Sulaiman announced earlier this month at the WBC's 49th Annual Convention that Sergio Martinez (48-2-2, 27 KO) had officially been slotted as Chavez's immediate, mandatory opponent. Feeling vindicated, the Martinez camp believed their man would finally get the opportunity to fight for the title he once held against a relatively popular opponent in a highly-publicized bout.

Not so fast...

Shortly after the announcement, reports surfaced that Julio Cesar Chavez Jr (44-0-1, 31 KO) would be fighting Marco Antonio Rubio – not Sergio Martinez - on February 4th. According to Team Chavez, they had received Sulaiman's blessings to confirm the Rubio bout. However, in stark contrast, Sulaiman announced yesterday the Rubio fight had yet to be sanctioned by the WBC and that a written formal petition had not been submitted.

Following the announcement of Chavez vs Rubio, Martinez's advisor, Sampson Lewkowicz, pulled no punches in his interview with FightSaga.com late last week.
[h4]"Chavez (Sr) and his son are cowards and you can quote me on that," he asserted. "When you're the champion you fight the best. The way he's handling his son is so against what he stands for."[/h4]
Earlier this week, the Martinez camp confirmed their fighter would face rugged Irishman Matthew Macklin on St. Patrick's Day. This bout is also not without controversy as Hall of Fame trainer Emanuel Steward later hopped on the warpath insisting Martinez should face his fighter, Andy Lee.

Martinez's End Game
Given that bouts with Pacquiao, Mayweather, Cotto and Alvarez may not in Martinez's immediate future, a fight with Julio Cesar Chavez Jr is the next best thing. Chavez is the son of a boxing legend and a garners a lot of attention when he fights. A win over Chavez would not only give Martinez a small financial lift, it would undoubtedly elevate his mainstream appeal and give him more leverage when attempting to secure high money bouts in the future.

According to most in the media, Chavez's team wants no part of 'Maravilla' and has been looking for ways to sidestep Sergio by any means necessary. If Chavez Jr fights Rubio in February, the 25 year old Mexican would 1) benefit by earning another payday as WBC Champion and 2) perhaps be stripped of his title afterwards for not fighting his mandatory.

If Chavez is stripped or loses his title against Rubio, the WBC's mandated appeal for him to fight Martinez becomes mute because Chavez would no longer have a title and Sulaiman couldn't threaten to take away something Chavez no longer had.

Even if title-less, its widely accepted the popular Julio Cesar Chavez Jr would still have many options and would likely get a quick title shot against one of the other champions – especially if he remains unbeaten. And Martinez, should he defeat Macklin, would probably be relegated to fighting Andy Lee for Chavez's vacated title.

While Martinez vs Lee would be considered an intriguing match-up by the standards of most pugilist purists and the boxing faithful, it's not as amenable to the masses as Martinez vs Chavez Jr and a Martinez victory would probably fail to greatly enhance Sergio's marketability in the mainstream.

[h4]Rated as high as No. 3 on some publications' pound-for-pound list, it's not respect the 2010 Ring "Fighter of the Year" is seeking. He seemingly seeks the fruits that usually come with being a top fighter. What elite athlete wouldn't seek the endearment and accolades of the masses and the riches that accompany them?[/h4]
Despite his high ranking, there are multiple fighters rated beneath him who generate more revenue because they have entered public conciousness while Martinez is still an unknown quantity to casual fans.

Ring Champion
Of note, Sergio Martinez is the Ring Middleweight Champion - a distinction that carries more prestige than any of the titles awarded by sanctioning bodies. But even Ring titles bear little consequence or consolation when a fighter lacks the mainstream name recognition necessary to captivate the masses. To become a superstar, Sergio must generate mainstream interest and he sees Chavez Jr as his ticket to mainstream acceptance and appreciation, and bigger and better opportunities as a result.

A Tale of Two Contradictory Fighters?
Can the ongoing "fight saga" between Sergio Martinez and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr be summed up as the 'Tale of Two Contradictory Fighters?' One man's stock is rising for who he is instead of what he's accomplished while the other man toils in relative obscurity because of who he isn't and for what he's accomplished.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr vs Sergio Martinez in 2012?

Spoiler [+]
THE RING middleweight champion Sergio Martinez renounced his WBC "Diamond" belt, publicly denounced comments attributed to WBC president Jose Sulaiman that he believes are insensitive to women, and said that he may pursue Showtime over HBO, which he feels has mistreated him, at a press conference on Thursday in his native Argentina.

Martinez (48-2-2, 27 knockouts), rated No. 3 in THE RING's pound for pound, also said that he would entertain rising to 168 pounds to face THE RING super middleweight champion Andre Ward, who is contracted to Showtime.

Saying that he is a "boxer for the WBC," and, "not a hostage," Martinez said that he must "step aside," for "my dignity, for my pride and for my manhood."

"For Sergio to stand up in this way, the way that he did it, that took big balls, because he's playing with his future," said Martinez's advisor, Sampson Lewkowicz.

"Sergio is fighting just like he does in the ring. He's fighting for his life, just like a warrior, and the boxing world should salute him for that as a great champion, inside and outside of the ring. We'll sit down and talk about all of this probably in the beginning of January."

During the press conference, which he organized, Martinez expressed disappointment in what he feels is the WBC's failure to follow through with last week's mandate that WBC middleweight beltholder Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. face him in his next bout.

Top Rank Inc., the promoter of Chavez, announced on Wednesday that the popular 25-year-old fighter will defend his belt against Marco Antonio Rubio on HBO on Feb. 4 at Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas.

"They're are not honoring their own decision," said Martinez, who is coming off an 11th-round knockout of Darren Barker in October while Chavez scored fifth-round stoppage of Peter Manfredo Jr. last month.

"I won't ever represent the WBC again until they make the fight that is obligatory, the fight which was voted on by unanimous decision to happen at the WBC's convention."

In the absence of a bout against Chavez, Martinez is scheduled to face THE RING No. 3-rated middleweight Matthew Macklin (28-3, 19 KOs) on March 17 at New York's Madison Square Garden.

Martinez said that the WBC's "Diamond" belt will not be on the line against Macklin, but it is unclear whether or not that means he will not be paying a sanctioning fee.

"I'm not planning on defending the WBC Diamond belt anymore," said Martinez, who won the undisputed middleweight title with a unanimous decision over Kelly Pavlik in April of last year. "The only title that I'm going to defend from now on is the one that I conquered by defeating Kelly Pavlik, which is the Ring magazine title."

In a new development, Sulaiman appears to be holding off for now on his sanctioning Chavez-Rubio. Top Rank Inc. CEO Bob Arum, who promotes Chavez, is on vacation and could not be reached for comment. Top Rank Vice President Carl Moretti declined comment on the situation with Rubio.

Top Rank media director Lee Samuels said Arum would address the situation during a January 3 press conference at the Alamodome at 11:30 a.m.
 
Here's a couple articles on the Martinez situation if you guys haven't kept up.  Think he's going to Showtime.

Spoiler [+]
In December 2010, then WBC Middleweight Champion Sergio Martinez opted to forego his mandatory defense against Sebastian Zbik after HBO refused to broadcast Martinez vs Zbik due a supposed lack of public interest. HBO, however, was interested purchasing the rights to broadcast a fight between Martinez and Ukrainian-born southpaw WBO junior middleweight king Sergei Dzinziruk (then 37-0, 23 KOs). As a result, Martinez signed to face Dzinziruk, relinquishing his title for a more lucrative, higher-profile bout that would give him added exposure.

WBC Diamond (Emeritus) Designation
In January 2011, the WBC declared Sergio Martinez its Diamond (Emeritus) Champion. At the time and according to sources, Martinez 's "emeritus" status served as an agreement between Martinez and the WBC, promising the Argentinian an immediate title shot against its available champion should he wish to pursue it.
[h4]In essence, Sergio Martinez was allegedly assured he'd be the mandatory opponent for the winner June's WBC Middleweight Championship bout that pitted Julio Cesar Chavez Jr against Sebastian Zbik.[/h4]
Sergio 'Maravilla' Martinez, fighting on HBO, knocked out Dzinziruk in March and Chavez won a majority decision over Zbik in June so, according to the agreement allegedly reached in January by the WBC and Martinez, Martinez vs Chavez should have been all but signed, sealed and delivered.

Not so fast...

World's Most Avoided Fighter
After Chavez lifted the title from Zbik, Martinez was set to finalize a fight deal face the WBC's newly-crowned champion before learning Chavez would be fighting Peter Manfredo instead. Incensed, Martinez has been lobbying on and off for a fight against Chavez ever since, insisting it was promised to him as a result of the emeritus status bestowed upon him by the WBC itself.

After widespread allegations by many in the traditional media and in boxing's blogosphere that Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. was ducking Sergio Martinez, Team Martinez attempted to lure superstars Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather and Miguel Cotto into fight deals but their efforts were to no avail.

Quick, deceptively powerful and very awkward, the 36 year old southpaw became boxing's most avoided fighter.

Although universally credited as a top pound-for-pound fighter by boxing experts, Martinez didn't have enough mainstream appeal to generate massive paydays.
[h4]Couple his perceived inability to generate sales with his array of skills and the level of danger he presents in the ring and Sergio Martinez was believed to be 'too much risk for the reward' for superstar fighters who thought they'd have more to lose than gain by fighting him.[/h4]
WBC Announces Martinez vs Chavez in 2012
Having exhausted all other options, Martinez had come full circle by December and once again chose to exercise his emeritus status by demanding a fight with Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

In response to 'Maravilla's demands, WBC President Jose Sulaiman announced earlier this month at the WBC's 49th Annual Convention that Sergio Martinez (48-2-2, 27 KO) had officially been slotted as Chavez's immediate, mandatory opponent. Feeling vindicated, the Martinez camp believed their man would finally get the opportunity to fight for the title he once held against a relatively popular opponent in a highly-publicized bout.

Not so fast...

Shortly after the announcement, reports surfaced that Julio Cesar Chavez Jr (44-0-1, 31 KO) would be fighting Marco Antonio Rubio – not Sergio Martinez - on February 4th. According to Team Chavez, they had received Sulaiman's blessings to confirm the Rubio bout. However, in stark contrast, Sulaiman announced yesterday the Rubio fight had yet to be sanctioned by the WBC and that a written formal petition had not been submitted.

Following the announcement of Chavez vs Rubio, Martinez's advisor, Sampson Lewkowicz, pulled no punches in his interview with FightSaga.com late last week.
[h4]"Chavez (Sr) and his son are cowards and you can quote me on that," he asserted. "When you're the champion you fight the best. The way he's handling his son is so against what he stands for."[/h4]
Earlier this week, the Martinez camp confirmed their fighter would face rugged Irishman Matthew Macklin on St. Patrick's Day. This bout is also not without controversy as Hall of Fame trainer Emanuel Steward later hopped on the warpath insisting Martinez should face his fighter, Andy Lee.

Martinez's End Game
Given that bouts with Pacquiao, Mayweather, Cotto and Alvarez may not in Martinez's immediate future, a fight with Julio Cesar Chavez Jr is the next best thing. Chavez is the son of a boxing legend and a garners a lot of attention when he fights. A win over Chavez would not only give Martinez a small financial lift, it would undoubtedly elevate his mainstream appeal and give him more leverage when attempting to secure high money bouts in the future.

According to most in the media, Chavez's team wants no part of 'Maravilla' and has been looking for ways to sidestep Sergio by any means necessary. If Chavez Jr fights Rubio in February, the 25 year old Mexican would 1) benefit by earning another payday as WBC Champion and 2) perhaps be stripped of his title afterwards for not fighting his mandatory.

If Chavez is stripped or loses his title against Rubio, the WBC's mandated appeal for him to fight Martinez becomes mute because Chavez would no longer have a title and Sulaiman couldn't threaten to take away something Chavez no longer had.

Even if title-less, its widely accepted the popular Julio Cesar Chavez Jr would still have many options and would likely get a quick title shot against one of the other champions – especially if he remains unbeaten. And Martinez, should he defeat Macklin, would probably be relegated to fighting Andy Lee for Chavez's vacated title.

While Martinez vs Lee would be considered an intriguing match-up by the standards of most pugilist purists and the boxing faithful, it's not as amenable to the masses as Martinez vs Chavez Jr and a Martinez victory would probably fail to greatly enhance Sergio's marketability in the mainstream.

[h4]Rated as high as No. 3 on some publications' pound-for-pound list, it's not respect the 2010 Ring "Fighter of the Year" is seeking. He seemingly seeks the fruits that usually come with being a top fighter. What elite athlete wouldn't seek the endearment and accolades of the masses and the riches that accompany them?[/h4]
Despite his high ranking, there are multiple fighters rated beneath him who generate more revenue because they have entered public conciousness while Martinez is still an unknown quantity to casual fans.

Ring Champion
Of note, Sergio Martinez is the Ring Middleweight Champion - a distinction that carries more prestige than any of the titles awarded by sanctioning bodies. But even Ring titles bear little consequence or consolation when a fighter lacks the mainstream name recognition necessary to captivate the masses. To become a superstar, Sergio must generate mainstream interest and he sees Chavez Jr as his ticket to mainstream acceptance and appreciation, and bigger and better opportunities as a result.

A Tale of Two Contradictory Fighters?
Can the ongoing "fight saga" between Sergio Martinez and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr be summed up as the 'Tale of Two Contradictory Fighters?' One man's stock is rising for who he is instead of what he's accomplished while the other man toils in relative obscurity because of who he isn't and for what he's accomplished.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr vs Sergio Martinez in 2012?

Spoiler [+]
THE RING middleweight champion Sergio Martinez renounced his WBC "Diamond" belt, publicly denounced comments attributed to WBC president Jose Sulaiman that he believes are insensitive to women, and said that he may pursue Showtime over HBO, which he feels has mistreated him, at a press conference on Thursday in his native Argentina.

Martinez (48-2-2, 27 knockouts), rated No. 3 in THE RING's pound for pound, also said that he would entertain rising to 168 pounds to face THE RING super middleweight champion Andre Ward, who is contracted to Showtime.

Saying that he is a "boxer for the WBC," and, "not a hostage," Martinez said that he must "step aside," for "my dignity, for my pride and for my manhood."

"For Sergio to stand up in this way, the way that he did it, that took big balls, because he's playing with his future," said Martinez's advisor, Sampson Lewkowicz.

"Sergio is fighting just like he does in the ring. He's fighting for his life, just like a warrior, and the boxing world should salute him for that as a great champion, inside and outside of the ring. We'll sit down and talk about all of this probably in the beginning of January."

During the press conference, which he organized, Martinez expressed disappointment in what he feels is the WBC's failure to follow through with last week's mandate that WBC middleweight beltholder Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. face him in his next bout.

Top Rank Inc., the promoter of Chavez, announced on Wednesday that the popular 25-year-old fighter will defend his belt against Marco Antonio Rubio on HBO on Feb. 4 at Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas.

"They're are not honoring their own decision," said Martinez, who is coming off an 11th-round knockout of Darren Barker in October while Chavez scored fifth-round stoppage of Peter Manfredo Jr. last month.

"I won't ever represent the WBC again until they make the fight that is obligatory, the fight which was voted on by unanimous decision to happen at the WBC's convention."

In the absence of a bout against Chavez, Martinez is scheduled to face THE RING No. 3-rated middleweight Matthew Macklin (28-3, 19 KOs) on March 17 at New York's Madison Square Garden.

Martinez said that the WBC's "Diamond" belt will not be on the line against Macklin, but it is unclear whether or not that means he will not be paying a sanctioning fee.

"I'm not planning on defending the WBC Diamond belt anymore," said Martinez, who won the undisputed middleweight title with a unanimous decision over Kelly Pavlik in April of last year. "The only title that I'm going to defend from now on is the one that I conquered by defeating Kelly Pavlik, which is the Ring magazine title."

In a new development, Sulaiman appears to be holding off for now on his sanctioning Chavez-Rubio. Top Rank Inc. CEO Bob Arum, who promotes Chavez, is on vacation and could not be reached for comment. Top Rank Vice President Carl Moretti declined comment on the situation with Rubio.

Top Rank media director Lee Samuels said Arum would address the situation during a January 3 press conference at the Alamodome at 11:30 a.m.
 
Pretty meh night on ShoBox.

The first fight was unbearable to watch, the second was quick and dirty, and the third was boring.

The Garcia fight was pretty damn bad. Johnson looked like crap out there, barely threw anything, and was just sitting as a punching bag all night.

It was good to see Andre get a quick knockdown, at least something was exciting on this card, but that whole ordeal with the ref was really weird. He seemed way too sweet to be a referee, the dude seemed like a grandpa.
laugh.gif
. And then him not allowing his team to throw in the towel, to the cameraman going into the ring prematurely, it was just weird. I hope Andre can get back on track quickly though, he's a talented kid.

I've always really liked Jermain, let's hope this is just the beginning of a comeback. This was pretty predictable. Jab, jab, jab, jab, jab, while Nicklow just rushed in with his head the entire fight. Like I said, pretty boring. I thought it was hilarious after the 6th that Jermain bopped Nicklow after the bell.
laugh.gif


Was hoping that we'd end 2011 with a bit more of a bang, but whatever, got good wins for the guys on comeback trails.
 
Pretty meh night on ShoBox.

The first fight was unbearable to watch, the second was quick and dirty, and the third was boring.

The Garcia fight was pretty damn bad. Johnson looked like crap out there, barely threw anything, and was just sitting as a punching bag all night.

It was good to see Andre get a quick knockdown, at least something was exciting on this card, but that whole ordeal with the ref was really weird. He seemed way too sweet to be a referee, the dude seemed like a grandpa.
laugh.gif
. And then him not allowing his team to throw in the towel, to the cameraman going into the ring prematurely, it was just weird. I hope Andre can get back on track quickly though, he's a talented kid.

I've always really liked Jermain, let's hope this is just the beginning of a comeback. This was pretty predictable. Jab, jab, jab, jab, jab, while Nicklow just rushed in with his head the entire fight. Like I said, pretty boring. I thought it was hilarious after the 6th that Jermain bopped Nicklow after the bell.
laugh.gif


Was hoping that we'd end 2011 with a bit more of a bang, but whatever, got good wins for the guys on comeback trails.
 
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