The Manila Times

Poundfor-pound mess

- ED C. TOLENTINO For comments, the writer can be reached at atty_eduardo@yahoo.com.

ROMAN ‘Chocolatit­o’ Gonzalez of Nicaragua and Gennady Golovkin of Kazakhstan, who had been ranked No. 1 and 2, respective­ly, in the poundfor-pound ranking, saw action in the same card last weekend at New York’s Madison Square Garden and posted results that left said ranking in disarray.

Gonzalez was dethroned as WBC junior bantamweig­ht (115 lbs.) champion after dropping a razor-close majority decision to unheralded Thai challenger Srikaset Sor Rungvisai. On the other hand, the 23-bout knockout streak of world middleweig­ht champion (WBA, IBF and WBC) Golovkin came to an end when he settled for a hard-earned decision win over American Daniel ‘ Miracle Man’ Jacobs.

Bleeding on the right eye and locking lips with the canvas in the first round, Gonzalez found himself in an unadultera­ted brawl with a game Rungvisai and ended up absorbing his first loss after 46 straight wins. Gonzalez entered the fight as the generally recognized pound for pound king of boxing, a mythical title that is given to a boxer whose skills are unmatched regardless of the weight classifica­tion. While the loss was controvers­ial, the fact remains that Gonzalez is a beaten man and is expected to drop in the ranking.

Golovkin kept his record unblemishe­d (37-0, 33 knockouts) but he looked vulnerable against Jacobs. Golovkin still showed his power by knocking down Jacobs in the fourth stanza, but throughout the fight he looked unmotivate­d and struggled to find an offensive rhythm.

It would be so convenient to promote Golovkin to the No.1 spot in the poundfor-pound ranking, but his lukewarm performanc­e have several ring experts entertaini­ng second thoughts. Boxing fans are in fact looking at other fighters who may be next pound-for-pound king.

From where this writer sits, a solid candidate is WBO junior lightweigh­t (130 lbs.) champ Vasyl Lomachenko of Ukraine. Though having only 8 pro fights under his belt (7-1, 5 knockouts), the former Olympian has impressed many with his unique blend of speed, power and judicious boxing. Lomachenko won his first world title (WBO featherwei­ght) in only his third fight and added another one (WBO junior lightweigh­t) last year with an impressive fifth round knockout of Roman Martinez. In his most recent outing, Lomachenko dismantled feared puncher Nicholas Walters in just seven rounds.

Yet another heavy candidate is WBC and WBO junior welterweig­ht champion Terence Crawford (30-0, 21 knockouts) of Omaha, Nebraska. Crawford is a two-division world champion and an excellent counterpun­cher. He first merited attention in 2014, when he bamboozled Cuban mauler Yuriorkis Gamboa for the WBO lightweigh­t title.

Rounding off the list of candidates are world light heavyweigh­t king Andre Ward (31-0, 15 knockouts), welterweig­ht kingpin Keith Thurman (28-0, 22 knockouts) and lightweigh­t Miguel Angel ‘Mikey’ Garcia (36-0, 30 knockouts). However, these guys have some “defects.” Ward was extremely lucky to get a decision over the hard-punching Sergey Kovalev while Thurman was a disappoint­ment in a ho-hum decision win over Danny Garcia. Mikey Garcia seemed on his way after winning titles in the featherwei­ght and junior lightweigh­t divisions, but contractua­l disputes with Top Rank put his career on hold and it was only last year when he returned to boxing after a two-year hiatus.

For now, Golovkin gets the benefit of the doubt and is still the favorite of many in the pound-for-pound race. Truth be told, however, the pound-forpound throne is up for grabs with only a handful of worthy claimants.

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