Good, bad, worse: Viktor Postol’s inspiring performance

Viktor Postol gave an inspiring performance in defeat against Jose Ramirez on Saturday in Las Vegas.

A critical look at the past week in boxing.

GOOD

Viktor Postol (right) made a strong impression in defeat against Jose Ramirez on Saturday night. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

The sight of an aging former champion giving a hot young star all he can handle is always inspiring.

That’s what Viktor Postol did against junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez on Saturday in Las Vegas. He boxed beautifully, moved well, was tough when he had to be and nearly pulled off one of the bigger upsets in recent years.

The fact he came up short – losing a majority decision – had to be frustrating for the 36-year-old Ukrainian, who knows such opportunities are precious. However, he left the ring with the admiration of everyone who witnessed his effort.

In fact, his performance probably changed the perception of him to some degree. He has been seen as a good fighter but not quite at the level of such stars as Terence Crawford and Josh Taylor, both of whom defeated him by unanimous decisions.

On Saturday, he fought on even terms with that-level opponent. One judge and Boxing Junkie scored the fight 114-114. That’s a significant accomplishment, perhaps along the lines of Nonito Donaire’s strong performance against Naoya Inoue last year.

That has to provide Postol some gratification. After all, he did something special. That’s precious, too.

Ramirez?

He might be excused for a flat performance. He hadn’t fought in 13 months. The fight was postponed twice because of COVID-19 before it finally happened, meaning Ramirez and Postol had to endure three camps. He also cited personal problems.

And, in the end, he had his hand raised. No one said every fight was going to be easy.

Still, Ramirez didn’t look like a pound-for-pound fighter, which is the image of him that will stick for a while. Of course, you’re only as good as your last fight. His performance on Saturday will be forgotten if he fights and beats Taylor for all the 140-pound titles.

 

BAD

Could contender Oleksandr Usyk ultimately stand in the way of heavyweight title-unification fight. Scott Heavey / Getty Images

First, Dillian Whyte. Now Oleksandr Usyk?

Whyte entered his fight against Alexander Povetkin as the longstanding mandatory challenger to the WBC heavyweight title, held by Tyson Fury. Had he beaten Povetkin, the Fury-Deontay Wilder winner might’ve been forced to defend against Whyte or risk being stripped of the belt.

Thank goodness Povetkin won, which seemed to open the door to a fight between the winners of Fury-Wilder and Anthony Joshua-Kubrat Pulev for the undisputed heavyweight championship.

Now promoter Eddie Hearn is suggesting that Oleksandr Usyk could stand in the way of a title-unification fight. The former undisputed cruiserweight champion reportedly will become the WBO’s mandatory challenger to Joshua’s title if Usyk beats Derek Chisora this fall.

That, Hearn said, could put Joshua – if he beats Pulev – in a position where he must choose between the WBO belt and a fight with Fury or Wilder. So, if Hearn is right, we could be back where we were with Whyte.

What the hell is going on here?

I understand the purpose of mandatory challengers. In theory, the system forces titleholders to defend against the best possible opponents. However, you and I know better. Many times, fighters are maneuvered into the top position because it benefits greedy sanctioning bodies. And only occasionally does the system produce fights fans want to see most.

Are the alphabet organizations really going to be allowed to stand in the way of a fight that will produce an undisputed heavyweight champion, which is good for sport? Let’s hope not.

 

WORSE

Tim Tszyu (right) dominated Jeff Horn on Wednesday in Australia. Ian Hitchcock / Getty Images

Tim Tszyu’s breakthrough performance against Jeff Horn on Wednesday in Australia could’ve landed in the “good” category in this column. Instead, the actions of Jeff Horn’s trainer stole the focus.

The talented son of Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu was brilliant in his demolition of the former welterweight titleholder, who survived only eight of a scheduled 10 rounds. We might be witnessing the rise of a true star down under.

Of course, Tszyu was celebrated afterward. However, a conversation between Horn and trainer Glenn Rushton at the end of the fight dominated much of the conversation even days after the fact.

Horn was exhausted, beaten, unable to defend himself adequately, utterly spent as he sat on his stool after the eighth round. And everyone watching knew it – except Rushton, apparently.

The trainer asked Horn whether he had one more minute in him, one more punch, the hope being that he could produce a miracle. That’s not Rushton’s job. His most important function is to determine whether his fighter is in danger of serious injury and save him from it.

In the end, it was another cornerman who told the referee to stop the fight and Horn remained on his stool.

Some observers have called for the revocation of Rushton’s license to work corners. That might be over the top. However, it’s particularly difficult to defend him when he refused to admit afterward that he had done anything wrong.

The fact is he did. He was willing to place his fighter in undue danger to give him a minuscule chance winning. Once again: We need to do a better job of protecting the fighters.

[lawrence-related id=13372,13280,13255,13130]

 

 

 

 

Good, bad, worse: Viktor Postol’s inspiring performance

Viktor Postol gave an inspiring performance in defeat against Jose Ramirez on Saturday in Las Vegas.

A critical look at the past week in boxing.

GOOD

Viktor Postol (right) made a strong impression in defeat against Jose Ramirez on Saturday night. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

The sight of an aging former champion giving a hot young star all he can handle is always inspiring.

That’s what Viktor Postol did against junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez on Saturday in Las Vegas. He boxed beautifully, moved well, was tough when he had to be and nearly pulled off one of the bigger upsets in recent years.

The fact he came up short – losing a majority decision – had to be frustrating for the 36-year-old Ukrainian, who knows such opportunities are precious. However, he left the ring with the admiration of everyone who witnessed his effort.

In fact, his performance probably changed the perception of him to some degree. He has been seen as a good fighter but not quite at the level of such stars as Terence Crawford and Josh Taylor, both of whom defeated him by unanimous decisions.

On Saturday, he fought on even terms with that-level opponent. One judge and Boxing Junkie scored the fight 114-114. That’s a significant accomplishment, perhaps along the lines of Nonito Donaire’s strong performance against Naoya Inoue last year.

That has to provide Postol some gratification. After all, he did something special. That’s precious, too.

Ramirez?

He might be excused for a flat performance. He hadn’t fought in 13 months. The fight was postponed twice because of COVID-19 before it finally happened, meaning Ramirez and Postol had to endure three camps. He also cited personal problems.

And, in the end, he had his hand raised. No one said every fight was going to be easy.

Still, Ramirez didn’t look like a pound-for-pound fighter, which is the image of him that will stick for a while. Of course, you’re only as good as your last fight. His performance on Saturday will be forgotten if he fights and beats Taylor for all the 140-pound titles.

 

BAD

Could contender Oleksandr Usyk ultimately stand in the way of heavyweight title-unification fight. Scott Heavey / Getty Images

First, Dillian Whyte. Now Oleksandr Usyk?

Whyte entered his fight against Alexander Povetkin as the longstanding mandatory challenger to the WBC heavyweight title, held by Tyson Fury. Had he beaten Povetkin, the Fury-Deontay Wilder winner might’ve been forced to defend against Whyte or risk being stripped of the belt.

Thank goodness Povetkin won, which seemed to open the door to a fight between the winners of Fury-Wilder and Anthony Joshua-Kubrat Pulev for the undisputed heavyweight championship.

Now promoter Eddie Hearn is suggesting that Oleksandr Usyk could stand in the way of a title-unification fight. The former undisputed cruiserweight champion reportedly will become the WBO’s mandatory challenger to Joshua’s title if Usyk beats Derek Chisora this fall.

That, Hearn said, could put Joshua – if he beats Pulev – in a position where he must choose between the WBO belt and a fight with Fury or Wilder. So, if Hearn is right, we could be back where we were with Whyte.

What the hell is going on here?

I understand the purpose of mandatory challengers. In theory, the system forces titleholders to defend against the best possible opponents. However, you and I know better. Many times, fighters are maneuvered into the top position because it benefits greedy sanctioning bodies. And only occasionally does the system produce fights fans want to see most.

Are the alphabet organizations really going to be allowed to stand in the way of a fight that will produce an undisputed heavyweight champion, which is good for sport? Let’s hope not.

 

WORSE

Tim Tszyu (right) dominated Jeff Horn on Wednesday in Australia. Ian Hitchcock / Getty Images

Tim Tszyu’s breakthrough performance against Jeff Horn on Wednesday in Australia could’ve landed in the “good” category in this column. Instead, the actions of Jeff Horn’s trainer stole the focus.

The talented son of Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu was brilliant in his demolition of the former welterweight titleholder, who survived only eight of a scheduled 10 rounds. We might be witnessing the rise of a true star down under.

Of course, Tszyu was celebrated afterward. However, a conversation between Horn and trainer Glenn Rushton at the end of the fight dominated much of the conversation even days after the fact.

Horn was exhausted, beaten, unable to defend himself adequately, utterly spent as he sat on his stool after the eighth round. And everyone watching knew it – except Rushton, apparently.

The trainer asked Horn whether he had one more minute in him, one more punch, the hope being that he could produce a miracle. That’s not Rushton’s job. His most important function is to determine whether his fighter is in danger of serious injury and save him from it.

In the end, it was another cornerman who told the referee to stop the fight and Horn remained on his stool.

Some observers have called for the revocation of Rushton’s license to work corners. That might be over the top. However, it’s particularly difficult to defend him when he refused to admit afterward that he had done anything wrong.

The fact is he did. He was willing to place his fighter in undue danger to give him a minuscule chance winning. Once again: We need to do a better job of protecting the fighters.

[lawrence-related id=13372,13280,13255,13130]

 

 

 

 

Jose Ramirez survives scare against Viktor Postol, retains titles

Jose Ramirez defeated Viktor Postol by a majority decision to retain his 140-pound titles Saturday in Las Vegas.

Jose Ramirez was fortunate to leave the ring with his junior welterweight titles Saturday in Las Vegas.

Viktor Postol, the wily veteran from Ukraine, gave an inspired performance to push one of the top young stars to his limits but ultimately fell just short of scoring a major upset in the MGM Grand “bubble.”

Ramirez, relying as much on grit as skill, won a majority decision to retain his two belts and potentially set up a unification bout with Josh Taylor.

Postol (31-3, 12 KOs) performed particularly well in the first five rounds, using his long, stiff jab, occasional combinations and fleet feet to frustrate an aggressive, but relatively ineffective Ramirez.

However, by the sixth round, Ramirez, grasping the urgency of the moment, raised his level of aggressiveness and climbed back into the fight. Suddenly, with Ramirez firing to his head and body with ferocity, it was more difficult for Postol to jab, throw power shots and move.

Still, Ramirez (26-0, 17 KOs) was never able to take firm control of the fight. Postol continued to fight his fight, continued to land telling blows and continued to be an elusive target.

The challenger fought Ramirez on even terms in the final three rounds, when it seemed as if the fight was up for grabs. In the end, two of the judges apparently favored Ramirez’s aggression and power punching to Postol’s effective boxing.

Judge Dave Moretti scored the fight 114-114 but Tim Cheatham and Steve Weisfeld had it 115-113 and 116-112, respectively, for Ramirez. Boxing Junkie scored it 114-114.

By comparison, Taylor defeated Postol by a unanimous decision in June 2018. The scores were 119-108, 118-110 and 117-110.

Of course, that has no bearing on how Ramirez and Taylor would fare against one another. They’ll most likely get the opportunity to unify all four 140-pound titles if Taylor gets past Apinun Khongsong on Sept. 26.

Meanwhile, Postol, a former junior welterweight titleholder, proved at 36 that he can still fight at an elite level. He obviously will be heard from again.

Jose Ramirez survives scare against Viktor Postol, retains titles

Jose Ramirez defeated Viktor Postol by a majority decision to retain his 140-pound titles Saturday in Las Vegas.

Jose Ramirez was fortunate to leave the ring with his junior welterweight titles Saturday in Las Vegas.

Viktor Postol, the wily veteran from Ukraine, gave an inspired performance to push one of the top young stars to his limits but ultimately fell just short of scoring a major upset in the MGM Grand “bubble.”

Ramirez, relying as much on grit as skill, won a majority decision to retain his two belts and potentially set up a unification bout with Josh Taylor.

Postol (31-3, 12 KOs) performed particularly well in the first five rounds, using his long, stiff jab, occasional combinations and fleet feet to frustrate an aggressive, but relatively ineffective Ramirez.

However, by the sixth round, Ramirez, grasping the urgency of the moment, raised his level of aggressiveness and climbed back into the fight. Suddenly, with Ramirez firing to his head and body with ferocity, it was more difficult for Postol to jab, throw power shots and move.

Still, Ramirez (26-0, 17 KOs) was never able to take firm control of the fight. Postol continued to fight his fight, continued to land telling blows and continued to be an elusive target.

The challenger fought Ramirez on even terms in the final three rounds, when it seemed as if the fight was up for grabs. In the end, two of the judges apparently favored Ramirez’s aggression and power punching to Postol’s effective boxing.

Judge Dave Moretti scored the fight 114-114 but Tim Cheatham and Steve Weisfeld had it 115-113 and 116-112, respectively, for Ramirez. Boxing Junkie scored it 114-114.

By comparison, Taylor defeated Postol by a unanimous decision in June 2018. The scores were 119-108, 118-110 and 117-110.

Of course, that has no bearing on how Ramirez and Taylor would fare against one another. They’ll most likely get the opportunity to unify all four 140-pound titles if Taylor gets past Apinun Khongsong on Sept. 26.

Meanwhile, Postol, a former junior welterweight titleholder, proved at 36 that he can still fight at an elite level. He obviously will be heard from again.

Jose Ramirez ready to pick up where he left off

Jose Ramirez defends his 140-pound titles against former champ Viktor Postol on Saturday in Las Vegas.

The momentum of many fighters was stopped cold by the coronavirus pandemic. That includes Jose Ramirez.

The junior welterweight titleholder is coming off arguably the most-impressive victory of his career, a sixth-round knockout of previously unbeaten Maurice Hooker in July of last year. Ramirez had taken the next step toward pound-for-pound status and an inevitable showdown with Josh Taylor, the second of two 140-pound titleholders.

Enter COVID-19.

Ramirez was originally scheduled to defend his titles against Vikto Postol on Feb. 1 in China but the fight was postponed as the coronavirus pandemic began to take hold. It was then targeted for May 9 but ultimately scrapped for the same reason.

Junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez is among the hottest fighters in the world. Ronald Martinez / Getty Images

Finally, Ramirez will defend against Postol on Saturday in the MGM Grand “bubble” in Las Vegas, his fourth title defense and a solid step toward the meeting with Taylor, assuming the Scot wins his next defense.

Taylor is scheduled to meet Apinun Khongsong on Sept. 26.

“I’m excited to finally be back,” said Ramirez, who will be fighting on ESPN+. “It’s always an honor stepping into the ring, fighting a guy like Postol and defending my belts. God knows that my goal is to become the undisputed champion, and this gets me one step closer to my goal.”

Ramirez is confident that he will have Robert Garcia in his corner on Saturday. The veteran trainer has been out of action since testing positive for COVID-19 recently but, after negative tests, has been cleared to return to work.

The champion seems to be less certain that the fight will actually come off given the previous postponements.

Viktor Postol made an international splash with his KO of Lucas Matthysse but that was five years ago. Photo by Jeff Gross / Getty Images

“We just want to get there Wednesday night, Thursday morning for everyone to get tested,” Ramirez told BoxingScene.com. “We want to make sure we get the results that both teams are good to go, and that we can finally say the fight is here.

“I just want to be able to breathe that sigh of relief now that the fight is so close.”

Ramirez (25-0, 17 KOs) will be heavily favored to beat Postol (31-2, 12 KOs) when they step into the ring, but the Ukrainian is no pushover.

Postol, 36, is best known for stopping Lucas Matthysse to win a vacant junior welterweight title in October 2015 only to lose it the following July in his first defense against Terence Crawford, who won by a wide decision.

He has fought only four times since, including a unanimous-decision loss to a fast-rising Taylor in June 2018. He won his two fights after that.

Postol might no longer be the fighter who upset Matthysse five years ago but he remains a solid, experienced veteran who has never been stopped. Plus, he knows he won’t get many more opportunities like this one.

That will serve as added motivation.

“I’m just looking forward to fighting,” Postol said. “I’m coming to win those world titles. I have been training since this fight was first announced, so I’m focused and ready to go.”

[lawrence-related id=12619,12312,8381,8210]

Jose Ramirez ready to pick up where he left off

Jose Ramirez defends his 140-pound titles against former champ Viktor Postol on Saturday in Las Vegas.

The momentum of many fighters was stopped cold by the coronavirus pandemic. That includes Jose Ramirez.

The junior welterweight titleholder is coming off arguably the most-impressive victory of his career, a sixth-round knockout of previously unbeaten Maurice Hooker in July of last year. Ramirez had taken the next step toward pound-for-pound status and an inevitable showdown with Josh Taylor, the second of two 140-pound titleholders.

Enter COVID-19.

Ramirez was originally scheduled to defend his titles against Vikto Postol on Feb. 1 in China but the fight was postponed as the coronavirus pandemic began to take hold. It was then targeted for May 9 but ultimately scrapped for the same reason.

Junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez is among the hottest fighters in the world. Ronald Martinez / Getty Images

Finally, Ramirez will defend against Postol on Saturday in the MGM Grand “bubble” in Las Vegas, his fourth title defense and a solid step toward the meeting with Taylor, assuming the Scot wins his next defense.

Taylor is scheduled to meet Apinun Khongsong on Sept. 26.

“I’m excited to finally be back,” said Ramirez, who will be fighting on ESPN+. “It’s always an honor stepping into the ring, fighting a guy like Postol and defending my belts. God knows that my goal is to become the undisputed champion, and this gets me one step closer to my goal.”

Ramirez is confident that he will have Robert Garcia in his corner on Saturday. The veteran trainer has been out of action since testing positive for COVID-19 recently but, after negative tests, has been cleared to return to work.

The champion seems to be less certain that the fight will actually come off given the previous postponements.

Viktor Postol made an international splash with his KO of Lucas Matthysse but that was five years ago. Photo by Jeff Gross / Getty Images

“We just want to get there Wednesday night, Thursday morning for everyone to get tested,” Ramirez told BoxingScene.com. “We want to make sure we get the results that both teams are good to go, and that we can finally say the fight is here.

“I just want to be able to breathe that sigh of relief now that the fight is so close.”

Ramirez (25-0, 17 KOs) will be heavily favored to beat Postol (31-2, 12 KOs) when they step into the ring, but the Ukrainian is no pushover.

Postol, 36, is best known for stopping Lucas Matthysse to win a vacant junior welterweight title in October 2015 only to lose it the following July in his first defense against Terence Crawford, who won by a wide decision.

He has fought only four times since, including a unanimous-decision loss to a fast-rising Taylor in June 2018. He won his two fights after that.

Postol might no longer be the fighter who upset Matthysse five years ago but he remains a solid, experienced veteran who has never been stopped. Plus, he knows he won’t get many more opportunities like this one.

That will serve as added motivation.

“I’m just looking forward to fighting,” Postol said. “I’m coming to win those world titles. I have been training since this fight was first announced, so I’m focused and ready to go.”

[lawrence-related id=12619,12312,8381,8210]

WBC president willing to lower sanctioning fees, relax some rules

WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman is willing to lower sanctioning fees and relax some rules to help boxing get restarted.

If lowering sanctioning fees will help boxing get rolling again, WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman is willing to do it.

Sulaiman also suggested he will relax mandatory challenge regulations and allow boxers to fight at higher weights than they normally would if they need to.

The boxing business, like most businesses during the coronavirus pandemic, has taken a significant financial hit after it went on the shelf in March. Many in the sport has lost income.

“I feel like there is going to be an effect that we all have to participate in,” Sulaiman told ESPN Deportes. “It will be necessary to have flexibility, make adjustments to what situations are coupling, adjust fees.

“… What I directly announce is that we are all going to have to be flexible, the sanctioning fees will go down and we will try to cut expenses for everyone.”

Sulaiman said his champions can’t necessarily be expected to face mandatory challengers when boxing restarts. Some can’t travel because of the pandemic. Others might have difficulty making weight after the layoff.

“We are going to see case by case,” he said. “For example, Jose Ramirez was going to defend the super lightweight title against Viktor Postol. It was going to be in China in February and it was suspended. Then it was going to be in California in May and it was suspended.

“Today Postol is in Ukraine, and if he cannot travel, we cannot punish Ramirez. We are going to look at things, case by case.”

He said of the weight issue: “It is a very important point. No one is training at a high level for obvious reasons. This time everything is possible … when we are all living during something unexpected.”