Floyd Mayweather BWAA Fighter of Decade, Canelo Fighter of Year

Floyd Mayweather has been named Fighter of the Decade by the Boxing Writers Association of America, which also named Canelo Alvarez Fighter of the Year for 2019. Mayweather beat out Alvarez, Manny Pacquiao, Wladimir Klitschko and Andre Ward for his …

Floyd Mayweather has been named Fighter of the Decade by the Boxing Writers Association of America, which also named Canelo Alvarez Fighter of the Year for 2019.

Mayweather beat out Alvarez, Manny Pacquiao, Wladimir Klitschko and Andre Ward for his award.

“Money” went 10-0 (2 KOs) in the decade and beat two of the Fighter of the Decade candidations, Alvarez and Pacquiao. Among his other victims were Shane Mosley, Miguel Cotto and Marcos Maidana (twice). Mosley has been elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame and Alvarez, Pacquiao and Cotto will join him one day.

Mayweather (50-0, 27 KOs) last fought in 2017, when he came out of retirement to stop MMA star Conor McGregor that August in Las Vegas.

“Thank you to the Boxing Writers Association of America for voting me Fighter of the Decade,” Mayweather said in a statement. “I am honored to be recognized by the media who covered my career throughout its’ many
decades.

“Boxing has been a part of my life since I was two years old and I dedicated my life to it and gave it my all. I trained hard, showed up for every one of my fights and did my job successfully each and every time. To retire undefeated and achieve what I did in the sport is not only a gift to myself, but to the fans and most importantly, my team and family. I certainly didn’t do it alone and I appreciate anyone who played a part in it.

“Hard work and dedication, something I did for my entire career. I am grateful and humbled by this honor. Thank you so very much.”

Alvarez, arguably the biggest star in the sport today, had his most successful year in 2019.

He unified two middleweight title by defeating highly respected Daniel Jacobs by a unanimous decision on May 4 in Las Vegas. He then went up two weight classes and stopped hard-punching Sergey Kovalev in 11 rounds on Nov. 2 in Las Vegas.

Alvarez, who received 81 percent of the votes, beat out Naoya Inoue, Pacquiao, Errol Spence Jr. and Josh Taylor to become the first Mexican to win the award since Julio Cesar Chavez in 1987.

Also, Alvarez’s trainer, Eddy Reynoso, was named Trainer of the Year.

“This is a great honor and privilege, and something that I’m very proud to accomplish,” Canelo said. “It’s something I’ve waited for a while to achieve. I’m so happy to be a part of history as the second Mexican to win this.

“I’m overwhelmed with the news that Eddy received Trainer of the Year. I’ve worked with Eddy since I was at a young age. All of the hard work and sacrifices got us to this point. I’m happy that we’ve accomplished this together.”

The other Trainer of the Year candidates were Jay Deas/Mark Breland, Derrick James, Brian McIntyre and Manny Robles.

“I don’t have the words to express what this means to me,” Reynoso said. “We’re going to continue working hard to get this award for a few more years in the future, God willing.”

The winners of other awards were: Female Fighter of the Year, Katie Taylor (announced in December); Fight of the Year, Naoya Inoue vs. Nonito Donaire; Manager of the Year, Keith Connolly; Excellence in Broadcast
Journalism, Ward; Long and Meritorious Service, Bob Canobbio; Good Guy Award (tie), Boxing Junkie writer Norm Frauenheim and Tim Smith; Courage Award (tie), Adonis Stevenson and Marc Abrams; Nat Fleischer Award for excellence in boxing journalism, Graham Houston.

The winners will be honored at the annual BWAA awards dinner at a venue and date to be determined later this year. Tickets to the awards dinner will be available to the public and can be purchased at BWAA.org.

My BWAA 2019 year-end votes and why I’m making them

The process of determining the best of a given year — or decade — isn’t easy but here are my choices for 2019 and the 2010s.

Year-end award debates always bring out the passion in boxing fans. And this year Fighter of the Decade is added to the mix, which ramps up the intensity even further.

The Boxing Writers Association of America has released it’s nominees for 2019 and the decade of the 2010s, which has kicked off the conversation.

Who is Fighter of the Year? The ageless Manny Pacquiao? Canelo Alvarez? What is the Fight of the Year? The five nominees were all thrilling. And Fighter of the Decade? That one takes some long, hard thinking.

Here are my winners in the main categories and the reasons I selected them.

FIGHTER OF THE DECADE

Andre Ward went 11-0 in a very productive decade. AP Photo / John Locher

This one is particularly important, in my opinion, because the winner will be seen as the best of something akin to an era. And once the decision is made, it’s etched in stone.

First, here are the records of the nominees during the decade (in alphabetical order):

Canelo Alvarez 23-1-1 (16 KOs)
Wladimir Klitschko 11-2 (7 KOs)
Floyd Mayweather 10-0 (2 KOs)
Manny Pacquiao 12-4 (1 KO)
Andre Ward 11-0 (3 KOs)

I think it comes down to two fighters: Floyd Mayweather and Andre Ward.

Canelo Alvarez? The Mexican superstar has faced more elite opponents in the decade than any of the other nominees and he has won consistently.

The problem is that he hasn’t given a great performance against any of his best opponents, he arguably lost to Erislandy Lara and Gennadiy Golovkin in their first of two fights, and he was thoroughly dominated by another nominee, Mayweather.

I have a lot of respect for Alvarez but he is not the fighter of the decade.

Klitschko? He finished the 2010s with an embarrassing, one-sided loss to Tyson Fury and a gallant effort in a knockout loss to Anthony Joshua. Pacquiao? The worst record among the nominees, a one-sided loss against Mayweather and a one-punch knockout loss to Juan Manuel Marquez eliminates him.

That leaves Mayweather or Ward.

A vote for “Money” makes sense. He handled each of his opponents easily, with the exception of his first of two fights with Marcos Maidana. And he won clearly even in that meeting.

The same can be said of Ward, who emerged as a star by cruising through the Super Six World Boxing Classic in 2009-11. He, too, had no trouble with subsequent opponents, his exception being Sergey Kovalev in his first fight. Ward knocked out Kovalev in their rematch.

So where do I land? I lean toward Ward. I think he faced his best opponents when they were younger and fresher than Mayweather’s top foes, although Mayweather’s victory over Alvarez might’ve been the most-dominating performance of the 2010s.

And, finally Mayweather’s victory over MMA star Conor McGregor to run his record to 50-0 probably shouldn’t hurt his standing. I’ll say this, though: It leaves a bad taste in the mouths of many to this day.

Again, my vote goes to Ward.

FIGHTER OF THE YEAR

Could this be the year Canelo Alvarez finally wins Fighter of the Year?

Here are the nominees and the opponents they defeated:

Canelo Alvarez – Daniel Jacobs (UD 12), Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Naoya Inoue – Emmanuel Rodriguez (KO 2), Nonito Donaire (UD 12)
Manny Pacquiao – Adrien Broner (UD 12), Keith Thurman (SD 12)
Errol Spence Jr. – Mikey Garcia (UD 12), Shawn Porter (SD 12)
Josh Taylor – Ivan Baranchyk (UD 12), Regis Prograis (MD 12)

I think this is Alvarez’s year. He defeated Daniel Jacobs by a unanimous decision in May, although the fight was close. And he closed out the year by moving up two divisions and knocking out Sergey Kovalev in the 11th round last month.

Alvarez’s performance against Kovalev wasn’t great – the fight was tight on the cards at the time of the stoppage – but the ending was spectacular.

I think Alvarez’s principal rival for the award is the ageless Pacquiao, who, at 40 years old, easily outpointed Adrien Broner and then defeated Keith Thurman by a unanimous decision.

That’s a fine year but, if we want to quibble, the smallish Broner has never performed well at welterweight and Thurman was still in the process of coming back from a long layoff, although the latter victory by Pacquiao was still special.

Errol Spence also had a good year, outpointing Mikey Garcia easily and then eking out a decision over an inspired Shawn Porter. In my opinion, though, Garcia was too small and the Porter fight was too close for Spence to get the award over Alvarez or Pacquiao.

Josh Taylor’s victories over Ivan Baranchyk and Regis Prograis were impressive enough to push him onto some pound-for-pound lists but he didn’t accomplish quite as much as the leaders here.

And I probably wouldn’t have included Naoya Inoue as a nominee because he struggled against a fighter (Donaire) whose best days are far behind him. I’m sure the Japanese star earned points by fighting through injuries against an inspired veteran, which to me was impressive but not enough to make him Fighter of the Year.

FIGHT OF THE YEAR

Shawn Porter (left) and Errol Spence Jr. gave everything they had in their memorable welterweight title fight. AP Photo / Ringo H.W. Chiu

Gennadiy Golovkin UD 12 Sergiy Derevyanchenko
Naoya Inoue UD 12 Nonito Donaire
Manny Pacquiao SD 12 Keith Thurman
Andy Ruiz KO 7 Andy Joshua I
Errol Spence Jr. SD 12 Shawn Porter
Josh Taylor MD 12 Regis Prograis

I’m voting for Errol Spence vs. Porter. Again, all of these fights were entertaining. And I think the most dramatic of the bunch was the first Ruiz vs. Joshua meeting because of stunning nature of the upset and Ruiz’s domination.

However, in terms of sustained, back-and-forth action in what could’ve been a draw, nothing topped Spence vs. Porter. Porter was at his very best, pushing Spence to his absolute limit from beginning to end. Neither fighter could’ve fought harder than they did, which is all we can expect in any matchup.

TRAINER OF THE YEAR

Jay Deas/Mark Breland
Derrick James
Brian McIntyre
Eddy Reynoso
Manny Robles

I think this is Eddy Reynoso’s year, too.

I have to admit that I reserved judgment on Reynoso for years because he didn’t have a track record before Alvarez. Finally, however, I have to acknowledge that Reynoso has done a good job with primary protege.

He also trains Ryan Garcia and Oscar Valdez, who went 2-0 and 3-0, respectively, in 2019.

All in all, 2019 was very kind to Reynoso. And he deserves to be recognized.

BWAA announces nominees for its 2019 year-end awards

The Boxing Writers Association of America has announced its nominees for its 2019 year-end awards.

The Boxing Writers Association of America has announced its nominees for its 2019 year-end awards.

The categories are: Fighter of the Year, Fight of the Year, Trainer of the Year, Manager of the Year, Most Courageous, Long and Meritorious Service, Excellence in Broadcast Journalism and the Good Guy Award.

The BWAA also will select a Fighter of the Decade, which has been dubbed the Joe Louis Fighter of the Decade Award.

The nominees and winners are selected by a vote of BWAA members. The winners will be announced at noon ET on January 17.

Here are the nominees (in alphabetical order):

Joe Louis Fighter of the Decade

Canelo Alvarez
Wladimir Klitschko
Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Manny Pacquiao
Andre Ward

Sugar Ray Robinson Fighter of the Year

Canelo Alvarez
Naoya Inoue
Manny Pacquiao
Errol Spence Jr.
Josh Taylor

Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier Fight of the Year

Gennadiy Golovkin-Sergiy Derevyanchenko
Naoya Inoue-Nonito Donaire
Manny Pacquiao-Keith Thurman
Andy Ruiz-Andy Joshua I
Errol Spence Jr.-Shawn Porter
Josh Taylor-Regis Prograis

Eddie Futch Trainer of the Year

Jay Deas/Mark Breland
Derrick James
Brian McIntyre
Eddy Reynoso
Manny Robles

Cus D’Amato Manager of the Year

Keith Connolly
Luis DeCubas Jr.
Peter Kahn
David McWater
Rick Mirigian

Marvin Kohn Good Guy Award

Anthony Dirrell
Norm Frauenheim
Jose Ramirez
Tim Smith
Mauricio Sulaiman

Sam Taub Excellence in Broadcast Journalism Award

Tim Bradley Jr.
David Dinkins
Jim Gray
Mauro Ranallo
Andre Ward

Barney Nagler Long and Meritorious Service Award

Teddy Atlas
Michael Buffer
Bob Canobbio
Henry Hascup
John Sheppard

John McCain-Bill Crawford Courage Award

Marc Abrams
Brian Custer
Mauro Ranallo
Jose Santa Cruz
Adonis Stevenson