Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Irish Boxing Review: 2011 Edition


DIRECT PURCHASE LINK: http://tinyurl.com/5v9ytuf

The Irish Boxing Review: 2011 edition is now available wth the first batch of copies available from www.irishboxingreview.com.

The review has been put together by Steve Wellings as a means of cataloguing the rise of Irish boxing. It includes fight reports, reviews and previews, interviews, feature pieces, photographs and a variety of other articles of interest to the boxing enthusiast across Ireland and beyond. From Irish title contests to world title showdowns, the review focuses on Irish boxers past and present, with expert opinion from some of the sport’s most respected managers, trainers and promoters across the amateur and professional circuit. It looks at the proud tradition of Irish boxers seeking fame and fortune in the United States, the controversial role of the world sanctioning bodies, the growing voice of online boxing news providers, a review of the popular National Boxing Awards and concludes by celebrating the striking re-growth of the sport in Ireland after a period in the wilderness.

It also follows some of the biggest domestic names. The likes of Paul McCloskey, Andy Lee, Brian Magee, Martin Lindsay, Matthew Macklin, Martin Rogan, John Duddy, the Hyland trio and more. It catalogues the rise of Willie Casey and the new breed of talent coming through including Carl Frampton, Anthony Fitzgerald, Jamie Kavanagh, Michael Sweeney, Stephen Ormond, Andy Murray, Jamie Conlan and Luke Wilton. We relieve great moments from the careers of Michael Carruth, Gerry Storey, Neil Sinclair and Darren Corbett, discuss Bernard Dunne’s retirement with Harry Hawkins and travel to shows in all manner of locations to spot the next big talent.

The Irish Boxing Review will also be stocked by Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Please refer to the website for regular updates.

For more information log on to www.irishboxingreview.com

Setanta Beefs up its Boxing coverage


Setanta Beefs up its Boxing coverage

Setanta Sports is presenting fight fans with exclusively live coverage of some of March’s biggest nights in professional and amateur boxing as well as a second chance to relive some of the greatest fights of all time.

Setanta’s Marketing Director Brian Quinn commented, “Setanta are keen to show some great boxing at a great price throughout March and then see how the boxing public responds. In March we currently have 3 World title fights lined-up including Brian Magee v Bute. We are also showing three live nights of the World Series of Boxing featuring some of Ireland’s finest amateurs. It all starts this weekend with Zab Judah’s title fight live from New Jersey. The good thing is that the fights are all included in a monthly Setanta subscription so there are no expensive pay per view nights. New subscribers can join Setanta from as little as €8.49 per month (£5.99 in NI) so it’s great value for a lot of boxing.”

5th March Zab Judah v Kaizer Mabuza

Vacant IBF light-welterweight title

Prudential Center, Newark, New Jersey

New York’s ‘Super’ Zab Judah will have one eye on April 16’s Amir Khan v Paul McCloskey WBA light-welterweight title fight when he goes head-to-head with South Africa’s Kaizer Mabuza for the vacant IBF title on Saturday night. For the ever controversial 33-year-old, it is one last chance to show that he belongs at boxing’s top table. If Judah prevails and reclaims the title he first held in February 2000 he will have his sights set on a major unification battle with the likes of Khan or division number one Timothy Bradley.

19th March Lucian Bute v Brian Magee

IBF super-middleweight title

Bell Centre, Montreal

After 12 years as a professional, in a career that has yielded British, European and IBO honours, Lisburn’s Brian Magee finally gets a crack at a recognised World title when he faces Canadian-based, Romanian IBF super-middleweight champion Lucian Bute on March 19. Magee’s shot at the big time was to have come much sooner, indeed he was scheduled to challenge Welsh legend Joe Calzaghe for the WBO title at Belfast’s King’s Hall as far back as March 2005, but the bout was called off at 24 hours notice due to a legal challenge from Calzaghe’s then No1 challenger Mario Veit.

But with 35-year-old Magee now enjoying an Indian summer to his career, which saw the southpaw claim the European title in January 2010, he has forced his opportunity and is confident of taking it.

The challenge that awaits Magee is substantial. Bute is tall (6’2”), like Magee is a southpaw, and as his unbeaten 27-0 (22KO) record implies he can punch a bit as well. What’s more, Bute’s record highlights that he can stop opponents early and late. For many fight fans, Bute is the best super-middleweight in the World – indeed Boxrec, the independent online ranking system ranks him ahead of all other 12st stars, including Carl Froch, Mikkel Kessler, Andre Dirrell, Andre Ward and WBO champion Robert Stieglitz, who Magee had initially been rumoured to be challenging. Going into Bute’s adopted hometown is unlikely to faze Magee especially on St Patrick’s weekend when a large Irish support is expected to make their way to the arena.

26th March Dmitry Pirog v Javier Francisco Maciel

WBO middleweight title

DIVS, Ekaterinburg, Russia

Big, strong and unbeaten, there are many who believe that Russia’s WBO champion Dmitry Pirog may well be the best 11st 6lb boxer on the planet.

That, despite the 30-year-old having boxed all but two of his 17 professional contests in his home country. The bout that made the outside world sit up and take note was last July, when boxing in Las Vegas for the first time, Pirog blasted out the talented and then unbeaten American Daniel Jacobs in five rounds, claiming the vacant WBO title in the process.

Pirog now returns to Russia, where he will be dealing with Argentinean challenger Javier Francisco Maciel, 18-1 (12KO) on March 26.

World Series Boxing
In the past boxing may have been the most individual of sports, but World Series Boxing (WSB) has changed all that. What’s more, WSB has blurred the growing lines between boxing’s amateur and professional codes.

The boxers retain their Olympic status but the boxing is done without headguards or vests and contests embrace professional style scoring in 5x3 minute bouts.

In WSB, ten teams (LA, Memphis, Mexico City, Miami, Astana, Baku, Beijing, Pohang, Istanbul, Milan, Moscow and Paris) are divided into three conferences (Americas, Asia and Europe) to battle it out in league matches from November until March. A WSB match consists of five bouts in five weight divisions, namely bantamweight (54kg), lightweight (61kg), middleweight (73kg), light-heavyweight (85kg) and heavyweight (91+kg).

The top four teams (three conference winners and best runner up) then progress to the semi-final and final stages which take place in April and May and the overall champion is crowned.

Individual finals between the two highest ranking boxers in each of the five weight divisions are also contested in May.

Each team consists of between 10 and 20 boxers with at least three and up to six foreign boxers on each team. As such, although Ireland is not home to a team, there is considerable Irish interest in WSB - with Olympians Kenny Egan and John Joe Joyce representing Miami and Paris respectively whilst Ulstermen Eamon O’Kane and Tommy McCarthy are signed to Milan.

In March, Setanta will televise three WSB fixtures live with McCarthy and O’Kane’s Milan and John Joe Nevin’s Paris clashing in a St Patrick’s special on March 18.

Live fixtures in March

Friday 11th March 8pm Paris v Moscow

Friday 18th March 8 pm Milan V Paris

Saturday 19th March 3am Mexico City v Memphis

All this great live boxing content plus classic fights every week on Fight Sports Greatest Classics.