Mantequilla
04-09-2009, 05:18 PM
Did anyone see much of him in his prime?.
Though destined to be totally forgotten, i found him to be a very talented fighter-certainly one of the prime examples of someone that wasted their career in recent years.
He was an excellent technician with good mobility and excellent handspeed.Had a terrific one-two and lead left, with an excellent right uppercut at medium\close range.Could fight at any range well.Just a very fluid efficient fighter in general.
Defensively was well schooled and a lot slicker than the other ex-Russian\soviet amatuer products like Tszyu and arbachakov, though his reflexes didn't quite seem to match his fundamentals here and he was not safety-first.Before or after countering he would often linger in punching range looking to slip 2 or 3 punches in whitaker or Locche-esque fashion and end up taking some punches he could have avoided.That may have been an issue against better fighters that would make rounds closer than they needed to be.
Main knock against him woud obviously be his mostly sub-par competition which makes it tough to judge him overall.He also had a lot of injury problems and a relatively short prime because of turning pro quite late.The injuries meant he ended up slapping\pushing a lot more wiht his punches nearer the end of his reign, not unlike Calzaghe.
Forget the Freitas cash-in fight btw.He was totally shot by that point, coming off more surgery and a long layoff, plus some outright gifts and struggles previously that showed he was finished.
johnston, Mosley and him could have been in some very interesting fights.I've always viewed that period as a missed oppurtunity for the lightweights.
The gift decision he got against Zegan in the fight before Freitas is up on youtube by the way, though it's hardly worthwile footage of the prime version.
Though destined to be totally forgotten, i found him to be a very talented fighter-certainly one of the prime examples of someone that wasted their career in recent years.
He was an excellent technician with good mobility and excellent handspeed.Had a terrific one-two and lead left, with an excellent right uppercut at medium\close range.Could fight at any range well.Just a very fluid efficient fighter in general.
Defensively was well schooled and a lot slicker than the other ex-Russian\soviet amatuer products like Tszyu and arbachakov, though his reflexes didn't quite seem to match his fundamentals here and he was not safety-first.Before or after countering he would often linger in punching range looking to slip 2 or 3 punches in whitaker or Locche-esque fashion and end up taking some punches he could have avoided.That may have been an issue against better fighters that would make rounds closer than they needed to be.
Main knock against him woud obviously be his mostly sub-par competition which makes it tough to judge him overall.He also had a lot of injury problems and a relatively short prime because of turning pro quite late.The injuries meant he ended up slapping\pushing a lot more wiht his punches nearer the end of his reign, not unlike Calzaghe.
Forget the Freitas cash-in fight btw.He was totally shot by that point, coming off more surgery and a long layoff, plus some outright gifts and struggles previously that showed he was finished.
johnston, Mosley and him could have been in some very interesting fights.I've always viewed that period as a missed oppurtunity for the lightweights.
The gift decision he got against Zegan in the fight before Freitas is up on youtube by the way, though it's hardly worthwile footage of the prime version.