Connect with us

Boxing

Boxing is approaching another Golden Era in Quebec

Published

on

Crowd view at the Videotron Centre for the Beterbiev vs. Smith fight. Photo by Vincent Ethier/EOTTM © 2024

QUEBEC CITY — The crowd was red-hot for the 12th round of the WBO bantamweight title fight in January between Jason Moloney and Saul Sanchez. The average fan at the Videotron Centre in Quebec City might have been surprised to learn that neither fighter was from Quebec, let alone Canada, but when passionate boxing fans come together to watch good fights, the atmosphere is stiff to beat in any sport.

The crowd wasn’t incensed at the first televised fight.

More than 10,000 fans gathered in the arena that night, and the main fight was the delicate heavyweight champion Artur Beterbiev vs. Callum Smith. When the fights started at 6:00 PM, more than 4,000 people were already in the arena. Usually, at American events, most of the audience shows up just before the main event.

Quebec, a French-speaking province in eastern Canada, has a long boxing tradition dating back to the earliest days of organized sport. A little over a decade ago, Quebec was one of the hottest boxing markets in the world, with local favorites like Lucien Bute, Jean Pascal and Adonis Stevenson generating a local buzz that rivaled the excitement of large fights in Las Vegas.

As the scene begins to heat up again, some are hoping that Quebec boxing will experience another golden era. A major catalyst in the recent surge in excitement surrounding the Quebec boxing scene is Eye of the Tiger Management, the Montreal-based company that will co-promote Saturday’s event at the Videotron Centre with Top Rank, and Christian Mbilli will headline the evening, fighting perennial contender Sergiy Derevyanchenko in the main event broadcast on ESPN/ESPN+.

Camille Estephan, who founded Eye of the Tiger in 2008, says the event will be their seventh this year to be broadcast live on ESPN or ESPN+. Although Eye of the Tiger acquired longtime Quebec promotional powerhouse Interbox in 2016, it didn’t immediately gain the successful times the company enjoyed, though he says that thanks to constant promotion, a novel generation of fans has started to tune in.

We have a sturdy market in Quebec that we have built. We have a sturdy fan base. They know boxing very, very well. They appreciate people who bring fireworks, they love offensive fighters who want to put on a show, who give it their all,” Estephan said.

“We need a world champion and if one of them can do it, we’re there.”

Estephan is hoping Mbilli (27-0, 23 knockouts) can lead the charge. The 29-year-old super middleweight contender, who was born in Cameroon and raised in France, represented France at the 2016 Olympics and became a top contender at 168 pounds in front of local fans, fighting 15 times in Canada.

Derevyanchenko (15-5, 10 KOs) represents the biggest test of his newborn career by far. The 38-year-old Brooklyn-based Ukrainian has pushed Jaime Munguia, Gennady Golovkin and Daniel Jacobs to their limits and could earn decisions in some of those fights. The winner could prove to be a compelling challenger to unified super middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez, who remains the most bankable boxer to face today.

The preliminary card will feature several local fighters from their roster, including Wilkens Mathieu (9-0, 6 KOs), a 19-year-old super middleweight who was born and raised in Quebec City, as well as Thomas Chabot (10-0, 8 KOs) from nearby Thetford Mines, and Leila Beaudoin (11-1, 1 KO), a junior lightweight from the more northern city of Riviere-du-Loup, who will face Bolivian Lizbeth Crespo (15-7, 4 KOs) for the WBO international belt in a ten-round fight.

Chabot, 24, who represented Canada in international tournaments as an amateur, believes the local scene will once again ignite like it did under Bute, a fellow left-hander Chabot admired as a kid, who he believes has the kind of invigorating style that will support usher in those days.

“I definitely think Quebec will go back to where it was. We have a lot of candidates who will get there, like Christian Mbilli, who is the number one contender in the world [with the WBC]so I expect more exposure from Quebec fighters on the international stage. We also have a lot of newborn prospects, like Wilkens Mathieu, who have a lot of potential, and me. I bring the same kind of emotion as Arturo Gatti, giving everything in the ring. That’s what makes boxing so popular and I believe I represent that too,” Chabot said.

Thomas Chabot stands over Armando Ramirez in his second-round TKO victory in 2022. Photo: Vincent Ethier/EOTTM©2022

It’s not just the professional scene that’s on the rise in Quebec. After a lull in 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19 pandemic closures, the number of registered amateur boxers in Quebec has rebounded to near pre-pandemic levels. According to statistics provided to The Ring by Boxing Quebec, which oversees amateur boxing in the province, there were 5,108 registered boxers in 2024, up from 4,125 in 2023 and slightly down from the 5,454 who boxed in 2019. Those boxers represented 132 different clubs, the highest number of registered gyms in a decade of data sharing.

Two of the boxers who represented Canada at the Paris Olympics, Wyatt Sanford and Tammara Thibeault, live in Quebec. Sanford won the country’s first boxing medal – a bronze in the men’s 63.5 kg division – in 28 years.

The region also has no shortage of world-class boxing coaches, including Marc Ramsay, who trains Montreal-based Russian Artur Beterbiev, as well as Russ Anber, cutman Oleksandr Usyk, owner and operator of Rival Boxing Gear, and the Grant brothers, Howard and Otis, former top pros who now run Grant Brothers Boxing just outside Montreal.

Quebec’s passion for boxing isn’t confined to boxers born or raised in Canada. The Eye of the Tiger roster is a United Nations of boxing talent, and includes boxers like Venezuelan left-hander Albert Ramirez (18-0, 15 KOs) and Osleys Iglesias (11-0, 10 KOs), a super middleweight from Cuba who will face former world title challenger Sena Agbeko at Mbilli-Derevyanchenko.

Estephan says Quebec fans are willing to accept fighters from abroad, provided they can connect with local fans. He adds that the key has been to introduce fans to the boxers, from the opening boxers to the main participants, through the media and in the documentaries they produce.

“If the fighters are talented, they support them. Of course, it always helps if they’re local, but it’s not confined to that. They want to see the champions, they want to see the good guys and they want to hear their stories. Grassroots is about selling tickets one person at a time, getting them involved, making them a real part of the team,” said Estephan, who promotes The Ring’s No. 1 contenders (Mbilli), No. 3 contenders (Iglesias) and No. 6 contenders (Erik Bazinyan) at 168 pounds.

If anyone knows how to assimilate into a novel culture, it’s Estephan. Born in Beirut, Lebanon, Estephan and his family left a comfortable life to move to Quebec in 1986 to escape the violence of the Lebanese civil war. Estephan began considering a career in boxing in the 2000s after a sparring session with Montreal-based weightlifter Bermane Stiverne.

Makhmudov scored a second-round knockout of Miljan Rovcanin in May. Photo by Vincent Ethier/Eye of the Tiger

“I shouldn’t have done it. I was getting back into shape and wanted to spar, and I realized how good this guy is,” Estephan said with a laugh. He became Stiverne’s manager around 2008 and began promoting his own shows to keep Stiverne busy before leading him to the WBC heavyweight title in 2014.

Arslanbek Makhmudov, a 6’5”, 260-pound heavyweight from Russia, is one of the Eye of the Tiger boxers who have been embraced by Quebecers. Makhmudov, 35, moved to Montreal to pursue his professional career in 2017. Makhmudov said he consulted with Beterbiev, a Russian transplant who flourished after moving to Montreal, about following in his footsteps there. Although Makhmudov said he hasn’t had a chance to learn much French yet, his children already speak it.

“Honestly, in Quebec, they love boxing. Even if you’re not Canadian or Quebecer, they love boxing. They understand boxing,” Makhmudov (19-1, 18 KOs) said in English, a language he learned after moving to North America.

Makhmudov will have a pivotal fight this Saturday when he faces Italian puncher Guido Vianello (12-2-1, 10 KOs) in a ten-round co-main event. The two previously faced off in the amateurs, in a World Series of Boxing bout in 2015, but the fight ended prematurely due to an injury to Vianello.

Makhmudov is hoping the victory will support him regain the momentum he lost last December when he was stopped in the fourth round by Agit Kabayel in a fight in which Makhmudov says he was plagued by a broken right hand and a compact training camp that kept him from getting into proper shape.

“I know that this fight didn’t change me. It changed me, but in a good way. I became hungrier, more professional and more disciplined. I want to show the whole world that I’m still here,” Makhmudov said.

A key ingredient in a boxing renaissance is a star who connects with the larger boxing world and makes the region a destination for fight fans near and far. If one or more of those figures emerge, Quebec is poised to celebrate like it was 2010 again.

“I think we as a boxing community have really relied on television. That’s great, but you have to have fans who are behind you, who are true die-hard fans. They become die-hards when they know the story, when they know the people, it’s not just about the boxer and whether he wins or loses, but how he got there, what motivates him, what his weaknesses are, what his strengths are,” Estephan said. They want champions, champions in the ring and champions outside the ring.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Boxing

Mike Tyson had absolutely no chance of knocking out Jake Paul

Published

on

Mike Tyson comeback black

One of the hottest topics surrounding Mike Tyson’s return at the age of 58 was the possibility of the boxing legend scoring a knockout of Jake Paul.

WBN has weighed in on this topic several times, questioning the validity of five-second training clips that revealed nothing about Tyson’s abilities at this overdue age. One of the most intriguing observations during the preparations was the opinion of UFC commentator Daniel Cormier.

Speaking on his show “Funky and the Champ,” Cormier reflected on Tyson’s social media videos and offered an informed opinion on the meaning of the clips.

“I understand that [he is in amazing shape at 58]and I understand what he is saying [he feels as though he can compete]– Cormier said. “And I agree that when he hits the pads with Rafael Cordeiro, it looks like there’s still something left in him.

“But then I watch Jake Paul fight Mike Perry. I saw Jake Paul get overwhelmed to the point where he started to feel uncomfortable. It looked like Mike Perry had a chance. But Jake has a reserve tank he can go to and benefit from because he’s 28 years ancient. Then he comes back and finally finishes Mike Perry.

“At the beginning of the fight, Mike Perry gets beaten up and dropped. He looks trained and unmatched. This worries me because what if it looks like a 58-year-old man fighting a 28-year-old man while Mike can’t employ the backup tank to stay and compete with this newborn kid? I think it’s a failure for Jake Paul because if you beat Mike Tyson, everyone will love him.

He added: “What if Mike knocks him out? It’s over. Everything is ready. This would be the backfire of all time. If he gets knocked out, nothing like that has ever happened in the history of the sport.”

Unfortunately for Tyson, this revenge backfired spectacularly, as the former heavyweight champion’s return was the only event that bombed. Tyson had nothing left twenty years after he had nothing left in his tank and no desire to box in his mind.

Paul parlayed this into a money-making scheme that would forever be a success for him and his company, but would be poorly received by the die-hard boxing fraternity.

Cormier’s words resonate, especially after what happened in the ring when Mike Tyson struggled to shift into first gear, warning former fighters thinking about returning after 50.

Continue Reading

Boxing

Lauren Price looks to win Jonas vs Habazin with an undercard victory

Published

on

Lauren Price

Lauren Price MBE will defend her world title for the first time on Saturday, December 14 at the Exhibition Center in Liverpool, while the Welsh champion plans to stage an all-British unification clash with welterweight rival Natasha Jonas, which will headline the Collision Course that night.

Price defends her WBA welterweight title against undefeated Colombian challenger Bexcy Mateus on the same night as Jonas attempts to unify the IBF and WBC titles with Ivana Habazin as part of BOXXER’s ‘Collision Course’ fight night, which can be seen live and exclusively on Sky Sports in the UK UK and Ireland and Peacock in the US.

Price MBE (7-0, 1 KO) made history with an excellent performance, defeating former undisputed welterweight world ruler Jessica McCaskill in front of her fans in Cardiff in May.

Price, the first Welsh boxer to win Olympic gold, once again entered the record books by becoming the country’s first world champion in just her seventh professional fight. The 30-year-old from Ystrad Mynach, who has yet to lose a round as a professional, will now defend her world titles for the first time as she focuses on dominating the welterweight division.

Mateus (7-0, 6 KO), ranked No. 5 in the WBA rankings, is undefeated in the professional ranks and has won all but one of her seven fights by knockout. The 29-year-old from Bogota, fighting outside her native Colombia for the first time, will now have her first chance at global fame, with her goal to dethrone Price and take the top spot in the welterweight division.

Lauren Price said: “I’m excited to defend my belts and complete what has been an crucial year for me. I have full respect for Mateusz. I will prove that I am the best in the division and I will not let anything or anyone stand in my way of being undisputed.”

BOXXER Founder and CEO Ben Shalom said: “It’s a massive night for the women’s welterweight division with three world champions competing. Natasha Jonas returns to her hometown for a mandatory unification fight against Ivana Habazin, and Lauren Price defends her world titles against undefeated challenger Bexcy Mateus. The fight for the undisputed continues. If Natasha and Lauren win on December 14, it will set the stage for a massive “Battle Of Britain” world title unification fight next year.

There’s reason to celebrate as BOXXER delivers a Christmas cracker to end the year. In addition to the world championship fights between Natasha Jonas and Lauren Price, fight fans can expect a gala full of drama and entertainment.

Undefeated Irishman Stephen McKenna (15-0, 14 KO) will face English champion Lee Cutler (14-1, 7 KO) in an invigorating super welterweight fight for the silver WBC International title.

McKenna impressed fans in his three-round fight against Joe Laws last August at Oakwell Stadium in Barnsley. The two struck out in the first round, then McKenna began to apply the pressure, losing Laws three more times and maintaining his undefeated record after a third-round stoppage.

English cruiserweight champion Viddal Riley (11-0, 6 KO) returns to action from a rib injury that has kept him out of the ring since a career-best victory over Mikael Lawal in March. Riley will be looking to shake off the ring rust as he takes on high-profile opponents in the recent year.

Undefeated Chorley super middleweight Mark Jeffers (18-0, 5 KO) scored an explosive fifth-round knockout victory over Darren Johnston in May and will be looking to bring more drama to Liverpool’s Exhibition Center as he goes in search of his 19th professional win.

Mason Cartwright (20-4-1, 8 KO) from Cheshire, a former two-time British title challenger from Ellesmere Port, will be counting on local support as he returns to the title track.

After signing a promotional contract with BOXXER, local star Frankie Stringer (8-0, 1 KO) can achieve his third victory in 2024, when he returns in front of his fans in Liverpool. The 23-year-old lightweight fighter is a player of the notable city team Rotunda ABC, and his manager is former world champion Liam Smith.

Continue Reading

Boxing

Heavyweight who knocked out Lewis to break Tyson’s record days after the feat

Published

on

Heavyweight Oliver McCall returns 2024

Mike Tyson will miss his final record-breaking days after becoming the oldest former heavyweight champion to walk through the ring.

“The Baddest Man on the Planet” reached an all-time high in Texas on Friday night, returning from a two-decade absence. However, Tyson gave the achievement five days later to former Lennox Lewis conqueror Oliver McCall.

On Tuesday night at The Troubadour in Nashville, Tennessee, the former WBC heavyweight champion returns to action and will face veteran Stacy Frazier in a fight scheduled for four rounds. At age 59, McCall will set the record for a sanctioned fight, beating Tyson by fourteen months.

McCall was born in April 1965, and Tyson’s mother gave birth to him in June 1966. “The Atomic Bull” hopes to score his 60th career victory tonight. He enters the fight with a record of 59-14, including 38 knockouts.

The Chicago native believes his continued activity over the last 19 years will be what separates his performance on Tuesday night from what Tyson looked like on Friday.

“I’m ready. I’ve been training here in Nashville for a few weeks now, but I’m always in shape,” McCall said. “It will be a completely different match than what the fans saw on Friday.

“I think being lively has a lot to do with it. I haven’t fought in five years because of the pandemic and a few things that didn’t work out.

“If you look at my record, since 2005 I have fought 25 times, of which I have won 19-6 times against quality fighters and won various regional titles.

McCall fights without financial motivation. He sees his fighting days approaching and is already planning his post-retirement plans.

“I want to do this for another year. This means I will be 40 years into my career as a professional boxer. Then I want to train and become a manager. I want to return the favor and assist the next generation of players try to become world champions.

“I came here to Nashville and contacted the manager who took me to the title [Country Box] promoter Jimmy Adams. I’m learning a lot about this aspect of the sport. I love the players here and everything that happens with Country Box.”

The Country Box 25 gala will also feature eight-round fights between super bantamweight Elon DeJesus (8-1-2, 7 KO) and Dominique Griffin (5-7-2, 2 KO), as well as super middleweight fighters. Sean Hemphill (16-2, 10 KO) fights Bryant McClain (6-5-2, 1 KO).

Airy heavyweight Isaac Carbonell (8-0, 5 KO) will face Antonio Louis Hernandez (7-19-4, 4 KO) in six-round fights; Joel Mutombo (6-0, 4 KO) vs. Kevin Torian (3-2, 3 KO) in a cruiserweight fight.

In a four-round fight, Ryan Zempoaltecatl (2-0, 1 KO) will face Raymond Chacon (10-64-1, 2 KO).

Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending