Arab News

Klitschko was dominant but never really got his due

- TIM DAHLBERG

LOS ANGELES: Wladimir Klitschko had to lose before he finally became accepted by most fight fans.

Now that he is retiring, maybe it is time to fully appreciate the former heavyweigh­t champion who never seemed to get his due.

Klitschko was as dominant as he was boring, holding pieces of the heavyweigh­t title for the better part of a decade in a reign not seen since the days of Joe Louis. His fights were not always works of art, but they were the work of a boxer who understood how to control space and distance in the ring.

American boxing fans never warmed to him, but he could fill soccer stadiums in Germany. Fans there did not complain about his cautious style, instead reveling in his ability to dominate an opponent from the first bell to the last.

His brother Vitali — now the mayor of Kiev — came first and between them the two Ukrainians raised in the old Soviet athletic system pretty much dispatched anyone in their path. Vitali Klitschko came within a bad cut of beating Lennox Lewis in 2003, and Wladimir did not lose for 11 years after suffering a shocking knockout loss to Lamon Brewster in 2004.

Outside the ring there was a lot to like about both of them. They held advanced college degrees, spoke four languages and refused to talk trash about their opponents or anyone else.

I remember meeting them for the first time at an extended stay motel off the Las Vegas Strip, where they were staying. It was the early 2000s and they were trying to establish themselves in the US even as the heavyweigh­t division was teetering on life support.

We talked some boxing, sure, but it was clear right away that these two behemoths were comfortabl­e discussing anything — and in almost any language. They also liked to tell jokes, and were eager to see if they could do it well enough in English to make me laugh.

I reminded Wladimir of the meeting when we talked before his loss to Anthony Joshua in April and he not only remembered it, but also the name of the motel they were staying in. Two unpretenti­ous brothers, two heavyweigh­ts who made it clear right away they would never fight each other because they promised their mother they would not.

That they also sucked up most of the air of a heavyweigh­t division with few contenders was a regrettabl­e legacy. Wladimir Klitschko could have fought more in the US, and the defensive style he developed with the late trainer Emanuel Steward after being knocked out by Brewster was never going to be pleasing to boxing fans who like their heavyweigh­ts to trade punches.

Klitschko himself admitted before his final fight that he had been boring even while beating everyone who was put in front of him.

Ironic, then, that in his last fight Klitschko not only put on the show of his career against Joshua but won a lot of new fans doing it. Among them were the 90,000 people packed into Wembley Stadium in London who came to cheer for the fearsome English slugger but left with new respect for Klitschko.

He had Joshua down in that fight and appeared on his way to a win before Joshua stopped him in the 11th round in a wild slugfest. The fight was a classic, so good that there were plans to do it again in Las Vegas in November.

That is not going to happen now, but it is not necessaril­y a bad thing. At the age of 41, Klitschko is ancient by heavyweigh­t standards, and he is made more than enough money to lead a comfortabl­e life with his fiancee, American actress Hayden Panettiere, and their young daughter.

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