Scottish Daily Mail

THE YEAR BOXING GOT BACK UP OFF THE CANVAS

From fights in Eddie Hearn’s garden to Anthony Joshua’s destructiv­e return, 2020 was...

- By JEFF POWELL Boxing Correspond­ent

The abolitioni­sts almost had their way with boxing in t his t i me of Covid-19. Almost but not quite, despite the amateurs being plunged deeper into the dark than theatres and the noble art being denied so much as a penny of the billions in funding lavished by the UK Government on almost every other activity they could think of.

Did nobody in his adolescent Cabinet think to advise Bruiser Boris that boxing is the second most popular sport with the male population of this country? And with a growing following among women, too?

Getting behind King Football served the Prime Minister’s populist agenda but Mr Johnson missed a trick here. The evidence is still in front of him. Boxing has survived through lockdown after knockdown.

Leading promoters Frank Warren and eddie hearn kept punching away, often biting the bullet of financial loss simply because the shows must go on.

Their fighters kept climbing through the ropes whenever they had the chance, swallowing blood and purse cuts as they did so.

Fa s t eddie perched a ring in his essex back garden with i ts hill-top views of London. Frank hired the religious cloisters of Church house in the reverent shadow of Westminste­r Abbey, its august splendour posted with requests for us to refrain from swearing.

Around the country such valiants as Mick hennessy and Dennis hobson kept the flag flying, the l atter innovative­ly bringing the drive-in to ringside.

Robert Smith, general secretary of the British Boxing Board of Control, kept beavering away for his s port t o be gi ven t he same r i ght as others to stage events under strictly sanitised conditions.

Thus the hard old game fought on throughout a year ignited by Tyson Fury’s explosive beginning, to Anthony Joshua’s belated reappearan­ce.

For this correspond­ent 2020 began with a trip across the Black Warrior River in Tuscaloosa, home of the University of Alabama’s famed Crimson Tide college football team. There to meet t he most devastatin­g puncher since Mike Tyson.

Deontay Wilder’s dynamite power would not be e nough to deter Fury a few days later. On February 22 in Las Vegas, the Gypsy King stunned the world by fulfilling his own prediction that he would smash the also undefeated Bronze Bomber to smithereen­s. he did it inside seven blistering rounds, becoming world heavyweigh­t champion a second time as the towel fluttered in from the American’s corner. That should have given lift-off to a momentous year for British prize-fighting. There were a handful of looseners lower down the order but then, clang, down came the coronaviru­s curtain. Scott Quigg, whose absolute dedication made him Bury’s only world champion, heard it the loudest and retired. Not until August did the UK see anything approachin­g a major fight. And then Alexander Povetkin knocked Dillian Whyte into dreamland in hearn’s back yard — and off his nominal perch as No 1 contender f or Fury’s WBC heavyweigh­t title. We had to wait until September for the r eturn to action of Josh Taylor, the best Scottish fighter since Ken Buchanan, as he dismantled Apinun Khongsong in 161 seconds at a virtually empty York hall.

having already shown his class by beating Viktor Postol, Ivan Baranchyk and Regis Prograis, the stage is now set for Taylor’s mouthwater­ing cl ash with Jose Ramirez to become undisputed world champion at super-lightweigh­t.

There was a disturbanc­e of the force in the US early in October as Vasyl Lomachenko lost his unified world lightweigh­t titles to young sensation Teofimo Lopez.

On the last day of that month Oleksandr Usyk boxed the ears off Derek Chisora to put his spoke into the complexity of the world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip picture. Could Ukraine’s former undisputed cruiser weight champion yet be next for Joshua instead of Fur Fury in that long longawaite­d mega-fight? hopefully not.

November saw two Brits run into big trouble. Kell Brook’s fourth-round stop page by Terence Crawford seems to leave Sheffield’s Special K with nowhere worthwhile to go unless he can finally lure Amir Khan into the opposite corner.

Then potential heavyweigh­t star Daniel Dubois suffered the first defeat of his young career. The persistent jab of Joe Joyce forced him into a tenth-round retirement in their British title fight with a broken socket of his left eye. As Dubois headed into an abeyance of six months’ surgery for multiple fractures, so Joyce also edged closer to world heavyweigh­t contention.

Later that night the circus came to La-La town as two legends now fast approachin­g senior citizenshi­p came out of retirement. Tyson and Roy Jones Jr boxed to an eight- round draw which, although it was sold as an exhibition, drew a bigger pay-TV audience than anything else in these 12 months.

But it has to be said that these grand 50- somethings still look more like real boxers than the You Tube celebritie­s who also drew big virtual audiences. Sadly, Floyd Mayweather is trading into that farce by taking on one of those Paul brothers for a few million more in the New Year. Normal service resumed this month as Joshua came out of pandemic mothballs to treat the first live, albeit small, crowd allowed back into boxing halls to an eyecatchin­g knock-out of Kubrat Pulev.

Less happily for the UK the year’s action ended with Callum Smith, the youngest and best of Liverpool’s four boxing brothers, being overwhelme­d by Canelo Alvarez in the San Antonio Alamadome fight for the unified world super- middleweig­ht title. So much for a seven-inch height advantage, heavier natural weight and longer reach when coming up against the Mexican great who now stands atop the pound-for-pound world rankings.

So it ends as Canelo’s year. It has been the year of the pandemic. It has also been a year tarnished by farce.

But with t hat dramatic battering of Wilder, his ongoing campaign for mental health, his front- cover accolade as Ring Magazine’s fighter of 2020 and a personalit­y far bigger than that BBC award which he punched through the ropes, this is very much the year of Tyson Luke Fury.

 ??  ?? Gift of the jab: Joshua on his way to victory over Pulev
Packing a punch: Fury floors Wilder; and Hearn’s back garden (above)
Gift of the jab: Joshua on his way to victory over Pulev Packing a punch: Fury floors Wilder; and Hearn’s back garden (above)
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