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Gigantic things: Should Naoya Inoue and Tank Davis make a move?

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For the rest of us, adding four or five pounds might come as a result of a holiday weekend, a debauched night out with friends, or an invitation to dinner at the newest Italian restaurant in town.

For a world-class boxer, adding weight can alter his dominant form, alter his reputation and reduce his earning potential.

So in these days, as we think of Japan’s undisputed 122-pound champion, Naoya Inoue, receiving the 2023 Fighter of the Year award from the Boxing Writers Association of America and ready for Saturday’s defense of WBA 135-pound champion Gervonta “Tank” Davis against For Frank Martin in Las Vegas, the weight debate comes to the fore.

Inoue (27-0, 24 KO) has already cleared the junior featherweight division, and there are moves underway at featherweight to lure him to add four pounds and move up in class.

Last week, Premier Boxing Champions signed former 122-pound champion Brandon Figueroa to a multi-fight contract extension and awarded him a title shot against WBC titleholder Rey Vargas, with the winner poised for a unification fight against up-to-date WBA champion Nick Ball (which Vargas fought to a draw earlier this year).

On Monday’s episode of ProBox TV’s “Deep Waters,” the cast debated Inoue’s position.

Former Hall of Fame two-division champion Timothy Bradley Jr. said 31-year-old four-division champion Inoue may not need to be promoted again because his talented compatriot, WBC bantamweight titleholder Junto Nakatani (27-0, 20 KO), is ready to fight himself for a megafight in Japan.

“It’s this guy… he has a belt, he’s Japanese. A fight like that would be spectacular,” Bradley said.

Former welterweight titleholder Paulie Malignaggi confirmed this claim.

“If they just hang around, there will be rivals. If this guy [Inoue is drawing] 55,000 [to the Tokyo Dome on May 6] against [Mexico’s Luis] Nery, imagine what Inoue does against Nakatani,” Malignaggi said.

Inoue has a mandatory fight with the IBF against Australian Sam Goodman, although the director of his American promotional company Top Rank told BoxingScene on Monday that “everything is to be determined” with Inoue for now.

However, incentives to move up and take some fights in America are also available to escalate his fame and fortune.

“It’s not like he took a huge penalty,” Bradley said. “He can get promoted. He has time. He’s not tired.”

Inoue said over the weekend that it all depends on what his body allows him to do, and former 140-pound titleholder Chris Algieri said that’s a valid explanation.

“It’s difficult in these smaller weight classes. He’s running out of time to advance and get fit,” Algieri said.

And while Inoue is generating enormous wealth in Japan, there is the potential to do more by increasing his fame in the US.

Bradley said he saw Inoue appear at Top Rank at The Theater at Madison Square Garden on Saturday and was met with less attention than unbelted, powerful and powerful super middleweight Edgar Berlanga.

“Nobody knows who he is. No one cared about being around him. No photos,” Bradley said. “I think he should come to America and enter this market. It depends of him.”

Inoue fought in the US three times and expressed indifference on the matter, although Bradley thought this meant Inoue spoke English when accepting his award.

“He’s not interested in fame. He’s a laid-back guy who’s investing 55,000 in Tokyo Dome,” Algieri said.

“Why is it selling poorly?” Bradley asked. “He has the opportunity to come to the United States and make even more money.”

Meanwhile, Davis (29-0, 27 KO) begins his lightweight title defense against Frank Martin (18-0, 12 KO) on Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on Amazon Prime Video pay-per-view, and is also expected to calculate whether a return to junior welterweight is necessary.

Davis previously won the title there against current interim WBC welterweight titleholder Mario Barrios, and the plethora of popular and talented champions – Teofimo Lopez, Devin Haney, Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz and Subriel Matias – make the weight jump intriguing.

“I don’t see him going to 140 pounds. He makes money [at lightweight] and I don’t need these fights,” Algieri said.

Malignaggi said the Martin fight “will let us know where [Davis] is about.”

Bradley argued that Davis “hasn’t fought an A-level guy yet and he should take that fight [Martin] test because of your experience. … It puts the guys to sleep and puts them to sleep.”

For Davis, the ideal lightweight fight: IBF titleholder Vasily Lomachenko (18-3, 12 KO).

“This is the fight everyone is waiting for. If these two get in the ring, my God,” Bradley said. “It’s going to be huge pay-per-view numbers. If we just saw Lomachenko’s version [in knocking out former champion George Kambosos shows up] and if “Tank” comes out neat on Saturday, they can match each other [this year]”

Algieri and Bradley said they would like to see Martin pressure Davis, and Bradley said he would like to know how Davis would fare if Martin took him down.

“I expect ‘Tank’ to win this fight,” Bradley said. “He has more experience and power.”

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Terence Crawford turned down a crossover fight with Conor McCregor

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Image: The Boxing Business: Money, Power, and Unfulfilled Promises

Terence Crawford claims that Conor McGregor offered him a fight in the Octagon, but he turned it down.

He spoke to former UFC champion McGregor (36) on the phone and told him he wouldn’t do it because he didn’t want anyone to kick or elbow him. Crawford says McGregor tried to convince him to take the fight, telling him they could make “a ton of money,” but he wasn’t interested.

McGregor has not competed in MMA since 2021. He lost his last two fights in the Octagon and has not won a single match since 2020. According to Celebrity Net Worth, McGregor’s net worth is estimated at $200 million. He made a lot of money from his boxing match with Floyd Mayweather Jr. in 2017, which attracted a total of 5.3 million PPV buys worldwide.

McGregor’s popularity has declined, but a match between them and Crawford would still be profitable thanks to both fighters’ fan bases.

The 37-year-old Crawford will win on August 3 after just 12 rounds by unanimous decision against WBA junior middleweight champion Israil Madrimov. He did not perform well in his debut at 154 against Madrimov, showing a combination of age, lack of power and ring rust. The only reason Crawford won the fight was because Madrimov passively fought the entire episode and allowed him to fight.

“They offered me the fight and me and Conor called on the phone. I just told him, ‘I’m not going into any octagon with you so you can kick me and elbow me,'” Terence Crawford told Bernie Tha Boxerrevealing that he was offered a fight against former UFC champion Conor McGregor.

This is another example of Crawford’s lack of ambition, as he would likely make more money fighting McGregor than in his next fight, which could be against WBC and WBO junior middleweight champion Sebastian Fundora.

“He just laughed and said, ‘Man, I respect that. But we would make a lot of money. Sometimes it’s not about the money. I can make money, but you don’t kick me, man,” Crawford said.

McGregor is a businessman who tries to raise fights with various fighters. Crawford would be no match for McGregor in the Octagon unless he was kicked or knocked down. When Crawford goes down, McGregor knows too many different submission techniques to get back up.

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Manny Pacquiao leads after the announcement of fresh names in the IBHOF voting

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Filipino icon Manny Pacquiao is leading the way for fresh fighters to be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2025.

Ballots have been mailed to voters around the world, and the candidates will be announced in December in advance of the annual introductory weekend held June 5-8 in Canastota and the nearby Turning Stone Casino in upstate Modern York.

In addition to Pacquiao, the names of Shawn Porter, Lucian Bute and Mikey Garcia were added to the list in the Current category.

In the women’s category, Mexican Yessica Chavez and Canadian Jessica Rakoczy appear on the ballot for the first time, and in the “delayed era” senior ballot, Italian Bruno Arcari, a junior welterweight with a record of 70-2-1 (38 K0) and former junior, was added flyweight champion Luis Estaba from Venezuela.

The women’s trailblazers list included undefeated bantamweight Shirley Tucker, 16-0 (10 KOs), and English fighter Owen Swift was on the trailblazer ballot.

As non-participants, there is now a chance that veteran trainer/executioner Russ Anber will have his plaque on the museum wall, as well as referee Kenny Bayless and Italian promoter Salvatore Cherchi, while among the observer ranks is Argentine journalist Ernesto Cherquis Bialo joined in the paper Randy Gordon and Kevin Iole.

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Opetaia is not the next Usyk, says Chris Billiam-Smith

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Image: Opetaia is Not the Next Usyk, Says Chris Billiam-Smith

Chris Billiam-Smith says IBF cruiserweight champion Jai Opetaia is not the next Oleksandr Usyk as some fans claimed. He says he never created any hype for Australia’s Opetai (25-0, 19 KO) and felt that “humanized” in his last fight against 39-year-old Mairis Briedis.

It is unclear who claimed Opetaia was the next Usyk, as the Australian rival was extremely delicate until he fought the aging Briedis. The opponent Opetaia faced were lower-level guys like Elias Zorro, Mark Flanagan, and Jordan Thompson.

Usyk on another level

Casual fans might have naively called Opetaia the next Usyk, but fans familiar with the sport saw him as a product of supple matchmaking. He fought bad opponents throughout his nine-year career. Usyk is the gold standard of what a cruiserweight should be, and Opetaia is far from it. It is a more coppery variety.

There is no comparison between Oleksandr Usyk’s talent when he fought in the cruiserweight division and Opertai’s talent. Usyk could do it all, showing incredible skills and beating a quality opponent. In contrast, Opetaia has only fought one good opponent in his entire career, and that was an older version of Briedis.

The first fight between the two made Opetaia look better than it actually was, as Briedis was returning after a long break. In the second fight last May, Briedis exposed Opetaia, putting him under constant pressure and showing he was not good at absorbing punishment.

Opetaia looked scared, dealing with the pressure, getting hurt on its beak, and facing Briedis’ withering fire. The fight showed that Opetaia is not built for combat combat and prefers to stay on the outside taking shots.

In the Riyad rematch, Opetaia looked like a bigger version of Shakur Stevenson against Briedis and it was a real eye opener.

Opetaia will defend his IBF cruiserweight title against recently defeated Jack Massey (22-2, 12 KO) in Artur Beterbiev vs. Dmitry Bivol on October 12 at the Kingdom Arena in Riyad, Saudi Arabia.

This is another example of Opetai fighting an underdog instead of a talented cruiserweight. Surprisingly, His Excellency Turki Alalshikh did not insist that Opetaia fight someone talented for him to appear at the October 12 event.

“He is extremely talented, Opetaia. It does a lot of things really well. He’s got quick hands, good feet, good shot selection and can hit,” said Chris Billiam-Smith. Second exit about IBF cruiserweight champion Jai Opetai.

“I think people say he’s like the next Usyk, which I don’t agree with. I think Usyk is a much, much better fighter than Opetaia,” Billiam-Smith said. “I think Briedis had a long break before the first fight [with Opetaia] and had a long layoff before his second fight near the end of his career, but he showed glimpses of what he was capable of.

Opetaia is just a one-dimensional pony who only throws potshots and doesn’t like to take difficult shots in her fights. Let me repeat: he has only fought one notable fighter in his entire career, Briedis, and in their second fight he did not look good.

By now, Opetaia should have fought the following cruiserweights:

– Chris Billiam-Smith
– Richard Riakporhe
– Lawrence’s setting
– Isaac Chamberlain
– Gilberto Ramirez
– Noel Mikaelyan

“I think hObadiah is humanized when it comes to hype. For me, I see fighters for who they are. I think Opetaia is a fantastic player, but I never believed he was unbeatable,” said Billiam-Smith.

Years ago, it was obvious that Opetaia was facing marginal opposition, and it was surprising that it was only now, in his slow thirties, that his managers finally briefly pitted him against quality opposition against Briedis. However, now they are bringing him back to the same destitute matchmaking by putting him face to face with Massey.

“He is a fantastic champion; Briedis was a good player, but he had a bit of an edge,” Billiam-Smith said. He knew it and that’s why he retired. He probably didn’t have the same thing in him. He fought many difficult fights. He had two Super Series back to back.

“Of course he lost to Usyk in the first one and won in the second one [against Yuniel Dorticos]. He had some tough fights during that time and he boxed everyone over the years, and that will wear you down.

“I was at his training camps and I think he overdid it. He had three sparring sessions a week, at one point 15 rounds. You won’t get the best rounds in these 15 rounds. He just kept going through it,” Billiam-Smith said of Briedis.

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