Saturday, 13 June 2020

TOP TEN CURRENT BRITISH BOXERS



Tyson Fury victory parade call from his Morecambe home after WBC ...
It has been over a month now since Carl Froch’s rather impetuous criticism on Anthony Joshua being included in The Sun’s Top 10 list of British fighters over the last thirty years. Froch himself was a formidable three-time world super-middleweight champion in his own right. He held impressive wins over distinguished contemporaries such as Jean Pascal, Jermain Taylor, George Groves and Mikkel Kessler, in a stellar career and should go down as a future boxing Hall of Famer.

Nevertheless, what spurred Froch’s rant? Was he irked by the tabloid’s view that Froch’s fanciful nemesis and fellow legendary Welsh super-middleweight fighter, Joe Calzaghe, had topped their list? Was it that Froch was bemused and maybe even slightly aggrieved that Anthony Joshua was included in the list when his career is surely far from over (all the other fighters included in the list are fully retired)? Or, maybe it was because Froch, who was also known as ‘The Cobra’ during his 35-fight career, which included 33 wins, was upset that he himself was not included in the Sun’s top 10 list?

Either way, such opinions, and the ensuing yet brief social media disagreement between Froch and Joshua, in a sport as subjective as boxing, prompted me to draw up my very own list of Britain’s top ten current boxers, pound for pound.  

1)      Tyson Fury – Fight record – (30-0-1 with 21 K0s)
In February of this year, I witnessed probably the greatest and certainly the most ruthless performance by a heavyweight in my lifetime. Fury’s splendid victory over Deontay Wilder on a frenzied night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, not only confirmed him as both Britain and the world’s new number one heavyweight, it also confirmed Fury’s position as the best fighter along these shores. Lest it not be forgotten that Fury ended the dominant reign of Wladimir Klitschko in 2015 and has now done the same with Wilder.

Three years ago, ‘The Gypsy King’ was 24-stone, facing a serious battle with mental (and fitness) health and a return to boxing seemed highly in doubt. Today, the WBC kingpin is arguably the most talked about fighter in the world and will surely be lining up a fight next year with fellow Brit, Anthony Joshua, for official supremacy of the heavyweight division.

2)      Anthony Joshua – Fight record – (23-1-0 with 21 KOs)
Living in this planet probably seemed like the last place Anthony Joshua wanted to be in after his shock defeat to Andy Ruiz nearly a year ago. However, mental fortitude has always been one of AJ’s biggest and underappreciated strengths. Joshua could have decided to axe his long-time trainer Rob McCracken, and, he could have neglected his rematch clause with Andy Ruiz and decide to rebuild his career and confidence with fights against lesser known fighters.

Instead, Joshua accepted his defeat to Ruiz, dug deep and ignored most of his critics by retaining McCracken and activating his rematch clause. He analysed where he went wrong and trained immensely hard for the rematch (losing ten pounds in the process) with Ruiz, cruising to a unanimous decision win over Mexico’s first ever world heavyweight champion and reclaiming his WBA (Super), IBF, WBO and IBO world titles in December 2019. Joshua’s career had been fast tracked ever since winning his first world title against Charles Martin in April 2016. He was never the finished article and had always been made to learn the hard way despite his rollercoaster win over old foe Dillian Whyte, the barnstorming triumph over Wladimir Klitschko and the more measured approach to outpoint Joseph Parker.

However, because of his loss to Ruiz and Tyson Fury’s demolition of Deontay Wilder, Joshua drops to number two in my list, behind Fury. Defeating Fury for the undisputed fight would change this.

3)      Josh Taylor – Fight record – (16-0-0 with 12 KOs)
The ‘Tartan Tornado’ who hails from the small fishing town of Prestonpans, on the outskirts of Edinburgh, captured Scottish hearts in October of last year with an epic win over American, Regis Prograis, at The 02 Arena in London to become the unified champion of the 140-pound division. Victory for Taylor confirmed him as the winner of the inaugural World Boxing Super Series (WBSS): Light-Welterweight tournament and with that secured him the honourably named Muhammad Ali Trophy.

From what it seems so far, the key to Taylor building a legacy would be to avoid getting involved in any non-sensical events such as the one that unfolded towards the end of last year. Continuing contractual disputes with his former Manager, Barry McGuigan, and Taylor’s former trainer, Shane McGuigan, Barry’s son, must also be resolved. His amateur pedigree (winning gold at the 2014 Commonwealth games in Glasgow and silver at the same event in Dehli four years earlier), technical skills, and determination are certainly not in question. A scheduled fight with Thailand's Apinun Khongsong was cancelled due to the Covid-19 outbreak and a future undisputed match-up with unified WBC and WBO champion, Jose Ramirez, eagerly awaits.

4)      Josh Warrington – Fight record – (30-0-0 with 7KOs)
Arguably the most underrated fighter in this list, Josh Warrington, emerged onto the world scene with a fabulous victory over the then IBF Featherweight World Champion, Lee Selby, in front of a partisan Elland Road crowd in May 2018. Warrington was a massive underdog ahead of the fight against the more naturally talented Welshman Selby.

However, buoyed by a 25,000 strong crowd, Warrington’s high-octane style proved too much for Selby and evoked memories of Ricky Hatton’s fervent victory over Kostya Tszyu at the MEN arena back in 2005. Since then, Warrington has gone on to defeat former two-weight world champion, Carl Frampton, Sheffield's Kid Galahad and the Frenchman, Sofiane Takoucht. A fight with fellow 126-pound world champion, Shakur Stevenson, has been mooted.  

5)      Callum Smith – Fight record – (27-0-0 with 19 KOs)
Things have not quite turned out as planned for ‘Mundo’ since landing the WBA (Super) and Ring magazine super-middleweight title with a stunning stoppage of George Groves which, like Josh Taylor, also saw Smith get hold of the Muhammad Ali Trophy at the 168-pound edition of the WBSS back in September 2018.

Since then, Smith has recorded a TKO victory over the durable but limited Hassan N’Dam, and, a very contentious points victory over London’s John Ryder. In fact, prior to the Groves fight, the Liverpudlian’s defeats of Erik Skoglund and Nieky Holzken, at the quarter-final and semi-final stages of the WBSS, were also lacklustre performances against relatively unknown fighters.

Nevertheless, the suggestion has always been that Smith, would need to fight someone with a reputable name to fully motivate himself and demonstrate his vaunted skillset. Future dust-ups with one of the pound-for-pound kings, Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez, or, a unification fight with WBO champion, Billy Joe Saunders, should incentivise Mundo.

6)      Billy Joe Saunders – Fight record – (29-0-0 with 14 KOs)
On his day, Saunders can be described as a true pugilist specialist. A whirl of hand speed, ring craft, fantastic footwork, and beautiful balance. This was showcased in the two-weight world champion’s punch-perfect performance in Canada against the hard-hitting Canadian, David Lemieux, in front of the latter’s home crowd in the city of Laval, Quebec.

The Lemieux fight took place in December 2017 and Saunders has only fought three times since – picking up the vacant WBO Super-Middleweight championship and becoming a two-weight champion against German, Shefat Isufi, in front of his hometown fans in Stevenage in May 2019 in the process. You feel as though Saunders, who other than Lemieux, also holds respectable wins over the likes of Chris Eubank Jr, Andy Lee and John Ryder, needs both a challenging and career-defining fight against someone of the ilk of Gennady Golovkin, Canelo Alvarez (an agreement was apparently made but cancelled due to the Coronavirus outbreak), or, the aforementioned domestic duel with Callum Smith. However, keeping active and staying out of trouble outside the ring (as his activities earlier on this year suggest), may possibly be Billy Joe’s biggest challenge.

7)      Carl Frampton – Fight record – (27-2-0 with 15 KOs)
Going into 2017 and ahead of a rematch with four-weight world champion, Leo Santa Cruz, there was arguably a case that Carl Frampton was Britain’s best fighter pound-for-pound. He had defeated Santa Cruz in a Fight of the Year contender in July 2016 to win the WBA (Super) Featherweight championship, thus becoming a two-weight world champion. Prior to that, Frampton, who was undefeated at the time, had also conquered arch-rival, Scott Quigg, via split decision to unify the super-bantamweight division in front of a raucous crowd in Manchester, and also overcame the wily Spaniard, Kiko Martinez, to win his first world title belt back in September 2014.

Since the Jackal’s razor thin loss to Santa Cruz in their second fight, the Belfast fighter’s star has waned a little. Similarly, to Josh Taylor, Frampton decided to part way with the McGuigan’s following the Santa Cruz rematch. Do not get me wrong, Frampton is still a world class operator. Backed by an ardent crowd in his hometown, he outclassed the fading legend Nonito Donaire in April 2018, and followed this up with a TKO win over Australian, Luke Jackson, four months later. Despite the mini renaissance, Frampton came up short against Josh Warrington in their clash for the IBF featherweight strap and it seems as though Frampton has gone off the boil since. A win over his predicted next opponent, the American WBO junior lightweight titleholder, Jamel Herring, could get the Frampton bandwagon going once again.

8)      Dillian Whyte – Fight record – (27-1-0 with 18 KOs)
What more can the Body Snatcher from Brixton do to get a world-title fight? He has been mandatory challenger for the WBC Heavyweight belt for over three years now - surely the longest in the history of the sport. Since his lost to Anthony Joshua in their grudge fight in December 2015, Whyte has improved immeasurably as a fighter mentally, physically, and technically. Under the guidance of Mark Tibbs, Whyte has become a student of the sport and possesses the necessary boxing fundamentals to mix it with the best in the game. He has an underrated yet piercing jab, an accurate right hand, crunches shots to the body and has the best left hook in the heavyweight division.

Furthermore, Whyte has been involved in various crowd-pleasing fights. His resume is highly impressive and on paper is better than former world champion, Deontay Wilder. He holds wins over former world champions Lucas Browne and Joseph Parker, the uncompromising Colombian, Oscar Rivas, and two victories over former world-title challenger, Dereck Chisora. Whyte is still expected to fight the experienced former WBA (Regular) heavyweight holder, Alexander Povetkin, after lockdown. A win over the Russian and a successful world-title challenge which has been forecasted for February 2021, will surely see Whyte rise the British and world rankings.

9)      Kal Yafai – Fight record – (26-1-0 with 15 KOs)
The least recognised fighter in this list, in December 2016, Yafai stormed to a wide points victory over Panamanian fighter, Luis Concepcion, to capture the WBA super-flyweight championship, thus becoming Birmingham’s first ever world boxing champion. Yafai went on to defend his belt five times with comfortable, if not, glamorous defences which also included trips to the United States and Monaco. Yafai eventually lost his belt to the four-weight world champion and another future Hall of Famer, Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez, as he was stopped in the ninth-round of their contest last February.  

At only 30 years of age, Yafai who has fought 27 times so far in the professional ranks has time on his side to become a world champion once again and he is a quality operator. He had a decorated amateur career representing Great Britain at the 2008 Summer Olympics (along with future world champions Billy Joe Saunders and James DeGale) and won a silver medal at the 2010 European Championships as a flyweight. For British boxing fans, the most intriguing fight we would like to see Yafai in would be a domestic battle with former WBC flyweight champion, Charlie Edwards.

10)  Kell Brook – Fight record – (39-2-0 with 27 KOs)
Since losing his IBF welterweight belt to Errol Spence in front of his own crowd in Sheffield back in May 2017, Special K has become somewhat of a peripheral figure in British boxing. He only fought twice in 2018 and did not fight at all last year. There was a combination of reasons behind this: injuries (he suffered two fractured eye sockets to each eye in his only two losses to Spence and Gennady Golovkin), lifestyle (Brook usually blows up in weight between fights) and of course the failed pursuit of a grudge match with his old adversary, Amir Khan.

In February, Brook returned to the ring for the first time in 14 months, stopping American, Mark DeLuca, and performing admirably. Brook has acknowledged that in the past, he did not live the right lifestyle as a professional boxer and acceptance is always a positive sign before improvement. Going forward, Brook would need to decide which weight category he will choose to fight in, either welterweight or light-middleweight, and that could determine whether he can climb this ranking or drop out of this list. All his last three fights since losing to Spence have come at the 154-division where an interesting fight with Liverpool’s former WBO champion, Liam Smith (older brother of Callum), surely awaits. Despite this, Brook’s great rival Amir Khan suggested in an interview last month with Sky Sport’s Craig Slater, that if a famous fight were to take place between him and Brook, it would have to be at 147 pounds. Brook has stated that with his new approach to life, he can make both weight classes easily. Over to you now Kell.  

* This was written before Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury agreed financial terms for a two-fright deal, three days ago