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  • Current Pound 4 Pound Rankings

    This LB 4 LB ranks is according to BoxingScene.com

    1) Floyd Mayweather (41-0, 25 KO)
    Age: 33
    Current Title: World Welterweight
    Career Titles: World Jr. Lightweight champion (1998-2001); World Lightweight champion (2002-04); World Welterweight/147 lbs. (2007-09); additional alphabelts at 130, 135, 140, 147 & 154 lbs.
    Last Five Opponents: Shane Mosley, Juan Manuel Marquez, Ricky Hatton, Oscar De La Hoya, Carlos Baldomir
    Up Next: TBA

    2) Manny Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KO)
    Age: 31
    Current Titles: WBO Welterweight (147 lbs.); World Junior Welterweight (140 lbs.)
    Career Titles: World Flyweight/112 lb. champion (1998-99); World Featherweight/126 lb. champion (2003-2005); World Jr. Lightweight/130 lb. champion (2008); additional alphabelts at 112, 122, 130, and 135 lbs.
    Last Five Opponents: Joshua Clottey, Miguel Cotto, Ricky Hatton, Oscar De La Hoya, David Diaz
    Next Opponent: TBA

    Let’s hope these two make THE FIGHT before 2010 has expired.

    As to the rest of the list, Mosley exits. His exit is chosen due to a combination of factors. He had a strong two rounds against Mayweather but couldn’t compete much beyond that. The quick turn to retirement talk after the fight for the 38-year old was a strong indication of where he’ll likely be going forward. Mosley has had a great career and can take pride in his being elected to the Hall of Fame some day, but he’s probably not one of the ten best in the world anymore.

    Mosley’s exit elevates some of the men below him. Other recent activity and results since the previous update on April 7th make this a prime time for updating slots 3-10 of the BoxingScene Pound for Pound Top Ten.

    3) Paul Williams (38-1, 27 KO)
    Age: 28
    Current Title: None
    Career Titles: Two alphabelt reigns at Welterweight
    Last Five Opponents: Sergio Martinez, Winky Wright, Verno Phillips, Andy Kolle, Carlos Quintana (twice)
    Next Opponent: May 8, 2010 vs. Kermit Cintron (32-2-1, 28 KO)

    The Take: Williams may not have a notable title right now, but, if only for strict and slick promotional purposes, he should probably be calling himself the “uncrowned Middleweight Champion of the World.” After all, try as he might, he couldn’t quite get Kelly Pavlik in the ring for the title and the man who did, Sergio Martinez, beat Pavlik. Williams bested Martinez late in 2009 in a Middleweight classic and a rematch between the two is a must at some point. For now, Williams prepares for hard punching Kermit Cintron in what looks like a stay busy fight. With eye catching speed, volume punching, and speed, Williams presents match-up problems for everyone under 160 lbs. With wins over Antonio Margarito, a shutout of Winky Wright, and Sergio Martinez, he has evidence of the success those problems bring him.

    4) Chad Dawson (29-0, 17 KO)
    Age: 27
    Current Title: Interim WBC Light Heavyweight
    Career Titles: Another Alphabelt at 175
    Last Five Opponents: Antonio Tarver (twice), Glen Johnson (twice), Epifanio Mendoza, Jesus Ruiz, Tomasz Adamek
    Next Opponent: August 14, 2010 vs. Jean Pascal (25-1, 16 KO)

    The Take: This Light Heavyweight star in the making has put together an impressive run since toppling veteran Eric Harding in 2006. His win over Adamek was almost bell to bell control; Adamek has since established himself as the best Cruiserweight in the world and is now busting up Heavyweights. Johnson and Tarver give him wins over two recent, popular choices for Light Heavyweight champion of the World. Johnson was hell the first time around but Dawson showed his learning curve in a decisive technical victory in their November 2009 rematch. What Dawson has lacked is a compelling young opponent who can match his speed and play on his willingness to fight, sometimes to his own detriment. The Johnson rematch victory gave Dawson the interim WBC belt at 175 and now it’s the WBC’s regular titlist Jean Pascal. The two are headed for a clash and, given the speed and willingness to battle both men have, it should be a circled date on any boxing fan’s calendar. Should Dawson win, his claim to the Light Heavyweight crown is made complete.

    5) Sergio Martinez (45-2-2, 24 KO)
    Age: 35
    Current Titles: World Middleweight; alphabelt at Jr. Middleweight
    Last Five Opponents: Kelly Pavlik, Paul Williams, Kermit Cintron, Alex Bunema, Archak TerMeliksetian
    Next Opponent: TBA

    My Take: There were plenty of folks who thought Martinez deserved the decision against Paul Williams last year; more than plenty who saw him stop and then ultimately win more rounds against Cintron only to end up with a draw. Everyone watching saw him beat Pavlik and he was rewarded as such by the judges, allowing him to claim one of the most storied titles in all of sport. Since a stoppage loss to Antonio Margarito in February 2000, Martinez is a stellar 29-1-1. Regularly entertaining and among the best athletes in the sport, the southpaw Martinez came late to boxing and is making the most of a long learning curve with remarkable speed and the ability to fight moving forward or backwards. With potential rematches out there against both Pavlik and Williams, and a rising crop of young talent at Middleweight the likes of which not seen in more than a decade, Martinez will have plenty of chances to improve on his standing in the year, maybe even years, ahead.

    6) Juan Manuel Marquez (50-5-1, 37 KO)
    Age: 36
    Current Title: World Lightweight/135 lb. Champion (2008-Present)
    Career Titles: Alphabet titles at 126, 130 lbs.
    Last Five Opponents: Floyd Mayweather Jr., Juan Diaz, Joel Casamayor, Manny Pacquiao, Rocky Juarez
    Next Opponent: July 31, 2010 vs. Juan Diaz (35-3, 17 KO)

    The Take: Marquez’s last outing, the ill fated move to Welterweight to try Floyd Mayweather, could obscure what Marquez got done in the fights preceding to earn acclaim. He gave Pacquiao everything he could handle, gave Casamayor and Diaz more than that. Now it appears Marquez and the younger Diaz will do it again for the Lightweight crown. Both will come in off of losses, above 135 lbs., but still are among the very best Lightweights in the world. How the 36-year old Marquez performs will say much about whether and where he remains on this list; so too will pending performances from those around him on the list. Marquez at his best was a special technician and his accomplishments provide him a measure of a benefit of the doubt for now, bumping him up a slot in the wake of the Hopkins removal.

    7) Fernando Montiel (41-2-2, 31 KO)
    Age: 31
    Current Title: WBO Bantamweight (2009-Present); WBC Bantamweight (2010-Present)
    Career Titles: additional alphabelts at Flyweight and Jr. Bantamweight
    Last Five Opponents: Hozumi Hasegawa, Ciso Morales, Alejandro Valdez, Diego Oscar Silva, Juan Alberto Rosas
    Next Opponent: TBA

    My Take: Bantamweight is one of the four best weight classes in boxing both in terms of depth and quality…and it has a new leader. There is sometimes a separation between pound for pound thinking within a given moment and against the stretch of history. Some fighters are better regarded when viewed as bodies of work rather than as performers from fight to fight. Mexico’s Montiel is proving to be one of them. Traveling to Japan to face the red hot Hozumi Hasegawa, Montiel landed an impaling pair of left hands to hurt his man and finished him along the ropes to win the first unification match at Bantamweight in almost forty years. Hasegawa left with a broken jaw and Montiel arrived, finally, at the sort of accolades predicted for him many years ago. Montiel, who is 9-0-1 since his last defeat, might have crashed the ratings even higher were it for the “draw” in that run two fights ago. A non-title fight against Alejandro Valdez which saw both men on the floor probably should have ended in a stoppage loss on a cut after round three, a reminder of why Montiel has been on the pound-for-pound fringes for so long: he’s had a tendency to have bad night at the wrong times. A titlist in three weight classes whose record in title fights now stands at 17-2 with 13 stops, Montiel has finally found a way to get his body of work and the moment to line up.

    8) Timothy Bradley (25-0, 11 KO)
    Age: 26
    Current Title: WBO Jr. Welterweight
    Career Titles: Additional alphabelt at Jr. Welterweight
    Last Five Opponents: Lamont Peterson, Nate Campbell, Kendall Holt, Edner Cherry, Junior Witter
    Next Opponent: TBA

    My Take: Bradley is the best active fighter in arguably boxing’s deepest pool of talent today. There are some divisions which struggle to field more than five real candidates for the top of the class. Jr. Welterweight has a top ten which isn’t big enough for all of the talent swimming around. Bradley burst from the pack in 2008 with an upset win, on the road, over the long avoided Brit Junior Witter to win the WBC belt. Since then, he’s only faced one fighter (Cherry) who would be considered a softer touch and through 2009, Bradley found ways to look better in each outing. He came off the floor to win a unification battle with Holt and was dominating veteran former Lightweight titlist Nate Campbell before an accidental cut shortened their affair in the third. Perhaps most impressive, Bradley bested the unbeaten Lamont Peterson while showing off a fully developed toolbox. Bradley began aggressively, dropping Peterson, and then met him in the trenches for sustained warfare as Peterson willed himself back into the fight. As Peterson got close, Bradley changed tactics again, moving and boxing to contain the affair. He has become a genuine jack of all trades, a combination of elite speed, footwork, defense, and offensive activity who reminds that the application of the sweet science need not be dull.

    9) Pongsaklek Wonjongkam (75-3-1, 39 KO)
    Age: 32
    Current Title: World Flyweight/112 lb. Champion (2010-Present)
    Career Titles: World Flyweight (2001-07)
    Last Five Opponents: Koki Kameda, Rodel Tejares, Takahisa Masuda, Julio Cesar Miranda, Shahram Toradide

    Next Opponent: TBA

    The Take: Thailand’s Wonjongkam walked onto undefeated Koki Kameda’s home turf in Tokyo, a little slower and a little more reserved than he was in his prime, but with all the education that his many rounds have given him. He left the ring having regained lineal and WBC Flyweight honors, added recognition from Ring Magazine, and probably sealing his eventual induction to the Hall of Fame. The Kameda win also allowed for a new perspective on Wonjongkam. He was built and continued through an increasingly disappearing approach, lots of activity against lesser lights keeping him sharp for the taxing fights he would take. In recent vintage, since losing the title to rival Daisuke Naito in their third fight in 2007, he’s gone 10-0-1, made a strong case to having reclaimed the title in the fourth Naito fight, and bested solid contender Julio Cesar Miranda. Across his career, since the lone stoppage loss of his career in 1996, Wonjongkam has gone 66-1-1; he’s broken Hall of Famer Miguel Canto’s consecutive title defense record at 112 lbs. by three with seventeen; and now he has masterfully outboxed the biggest young star in the world below Bantamweight to reclaim his title. It all adds up to earned recognition as one of the best fighters in the world.

    10) Ivan Calderon (33-0-1, 6 KO)
    Age: 35
    Current Title: World Jr. Flyweight/108 lb. Champion (2007-Present)
    Career Titles: Additional alphabelts at 105 & 108 lbs.
    Last Five Opponents: Rodel Mayol (twice), Hugo Cazares (twice), Nelson Dieppa, Juan Esquer, Ronald Barrera
    Next Opponent: June 12, 2010 vs. Jesus Iribe (16-6-5, 10 KO)

    The Take: Calderon’s hold on the number ten spot is tenuous and he could be gone by the summer. A June tune-up sets up a mandatory with Johnriel Casimero (14-0, 8 KO). It’s probably not enough. Casimero is a decent young contender but others like Ward, Lopez, and Gamboa all have more meaningful fare coming up. For now, like Marquez, he retains some benefit of the doubt. He’s been inactive for less than a year and his last two opponents have gone on to impress. Mayol followed two competitive, if cut shortened, challenges of Calderon by winning a major title at 108 lbs. The man who, to date, has been Calderon’s defining rival, Hugo Cazares, has emerged as a legitimate force in the talented Jr. Bantamweight class. Combine that with an undefeated mark, quality title reigns in two weight classes, and Calderon’s standing as one of the, if not the, best pure boxer of his time and he remains rated for now.
    sigpicNEVER SAY DIE PILIPINAS!

  • #2
    Pound For Pound
    All Weights
    1. Manny Pacquiao
    Country: Philippines (General Santos City) Record: 51-3-2 (38 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #1 | Last Week: #1 | Weeks On List: 337 Titles: WBO, The Ring

    2. Floyd Mayweather Jr.
    Country: USA (Las Vegas, Nevada) Record: 41-0-0 (25 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #2 | Last Week: #2 | Weeks On List: 35

    3. Juan Manuel Marquez
    Country: Mexico Record: 50-5-1 (37 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #3 | Last Week: #3 | Weeks On List: 166 Titles: WBA, WBO, The Ring

    4. Nonito Donaire
    Country: USA (San Leandro, Calif.) Record: 23-1-0 (15 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #4 | Last Week: #4 | Weeks On List: 55

    5. Shane Mosley
    Country: USA (Las Vegas, Nevada) Record: 46-6-0 (39 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #5 | Last Week: #5 | Weeks On List: 69 Titles: WBA
    6. Chad Dawson
    Country: USA (New Haven, Conn.) Record: 29-0-0 (17 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #6 | Last Week: #6 | Weeks On List: 28

    7. Paul Williams
    Country: USA (Augusta, Ga.) Record: 38-1-0 (27 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #7 | Last Week: #7 | Weeks On List: 28

    8. Sergio Martinez
    Country: Argentina Record: 44-2-2 (24 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #8 | Last Week: #8 | Weeks On List: 3 Titles: WBC, The Ring

    9. Pongsaklek Wonjongkam
    Country: Thailand Record: 75-3-1 (39 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #9 | Last Week: #9 | Weeks On List: 3 Titles: WBC, The Ring

    10. Celestino Caballero
    Country: Panama Record: 34-2-0 (23 KOs)Ranking: This Week: #10 | Last Week: #10 | Weeks On List: 69 Titles: WBA


    from a much better source http://www.ringtv.com/ratings/
    you know why I am happy

    Comment


    • #3
      I would have thought that they would put Pacquiao above Mayweather, but I guess Mayweather has that Shane Mosley fight and the Juan Manuel Marquez pretty recently.

      Pacquiao/Mayweather have to fight. They've got to make it happen. These are the two best boxers of the past decade, so it's got to happen.
      "I really like the attitudes of eagles. They never give up. When they grab a fish or something else, they never let it go. It doesn't matter. In a book, they write they find a skeleton of [an] eagle and there is no fish. It means that the fish beat him and killed him, but he didn't let go." -- Donatas Motiejunas

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