Showing posts with label Klitschko Haye. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Klitschko Haye. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 July 2011

Haye Uncertain About Boxing Future

David Haye's broken toe

David Haye does not know what his future holds after insisting he has "put heavyweight boxing back on the map" despite his one-sided defeat by Wladimir Klitschko in Hamburg.

In what Klitschko claimed was "a victory for boxing" after some of Haye's distasteful pre-fight trash talk, the Ukrainian enjoyed a resounding points victory at a soaking Imtech Arena to add Haye's WBA title to his own IBF and WBO belts.

Haye immediately cited a broken toe for his uninspiring performance - showing the swollen digit to Klitschko and media in the post-fight press conference - but admits even taking that into account it is difficult to see where he goes now.

The Londoner had planned to retire in October after one more fight. Klitschko is not keen on a rematch and Haye hardly demanded one. The other Klitschko brother, Vitali, has other plans and fights Tomasz Adamek in September.

Crucially, Haye has no bargaining power with the Klitschkos because he has no title and is coming off a second career defeat and there is nobody else of real interest for him to fight instead.

"Listen, will he want to give me a rematch when I'm 100 per cent fit? I don't know," Haye said. "If not, then I don't know. I really don't know. I'd love him to give me a rematch. He said he can knock me out and I'd love him to give it a go.

"If he couldn't knock me out on one leg, pretty much, then how about when I'm fit? I think it would be interesting. I think I hurt him more than he hurt me but that's boxing. I'd love to knock him out but it wasn't happening in there for me, unfortunately."

As for his deadline of hanging up the gloves on October 13th - his 31st birthday - Haye hinted for the first time he could fight on.

"I'm not making any decisions yet on retirement," he said.

As a fight which had revived interest in the flagging heavyweight division the event was hugely disappointing. The tactical battle and nuances were interesting but the travelling fans and huge mainstream television audience will have been left cold by the scrap.

"I'm gutted I wasn't able to do what I needed to do out there (because of the injury)," Haye said. "I feel we've put heavyweight boxing back on the map because this fight got so many people excited. Wladimir's had more than 50 fights and this is the first one to have reached out to everybody and I think I played my part in that.

"Postponing was not an option. I pulled out of a fight with Wladimir two years ago and doing it again was not an option. No matter what happened in training I couldn't pull out. I genuinely believed I could win the fight."

For Haye, though, it had been the opportunity to establish a real legacy in the heavyweight division as the man to end Klitschko's dominance.

But after talking the talk he failed to walk the walk at a rain-sodden outdoor football stadium, unable or unwilling to produce the all-out savagery he had crudely promised.

Instead he boxed on the backfoot, using his advantage in speed and reflexes to avoid most of Klitschko's one-dimensional shots. In return he landed occasional winging right hands over the top and, after answering some questions about his own chin, he asked some of his own with an excellent 12th-round assault.

But his overall performance was sub-standard as he lost a wide decision with scores of 117-109, 118-108 and 116-110.

Klitschko, who acted the role of the gentleman perfectly in the build-up, remains angered by his opponent's pre-fight talk of decapitation and execution and suggested the difference on the night was simple.

"He could probably have continued success against certain types of heavyweight," said the 35-year-old. "But at the highest level I think it's going to be very difficult to challenge the true heavyweights."


Unanimous Klitschko Wins Haye Fight

Klitschko wins battle [Getty Images]

Wladimir Klitschko by a unanimous decision over David Haye, adding the WBA title to his heavyweight haul on Saturday.

Klitschko dominated almost from the opening bell against a smaller fighter who took few chances, winnning for the 14th straight time and improving to 17-2 in title fights. But he never knocked Haye down in a fight that did not live up to its advance hype.

"He was scared to fight me," Klitschko said. "I was expecting more of a challenge in the ring, but he was super defensive."

The victory in a rain-soaked football stadium in Hamburg means Klitschko and his older brother, Vitali, hold all three major heavyweight titles. Wladimir already had the IBF title (and minor WBO, IBO belts), while Vitali was the WBC champion.

All three judges gave it to Klitschko, scoring the 12-round showdown 117-109, 118-108 and 116-110.

Haye, who stirred most of the hype with often crass trash-talking, said he hurt a toe on his right foot in training and lost some of his explosive power because of it.

"I couldn't give everything I needed to, it was really frustrating," Haye said in the ring. "I had to knock him out and unfortunately I couldn't do it."

Haye slipped to the canvas repeatedly as he got into clinches with the heavier, taller and more experienced Ukrainian, who was fighting in his home base.

Referee Genaro Rodriguez finally had enough of it and gave Haye a count when he slipped in the 11th round. This time, Haye got quickly to his feet.

Haye came out slugging in the final round, landing a series of body punches and a good right hand to the head. But Klitschko came right back with some stinging jabs and right hands to take away one of the rare offensive threats of the night from the British fighter.

Klitschko (56-3) had wanted to knock Haye out, disgusted with the Brit's trash talking over the past few years. The fact that he didn't disappointed him, though he was happy to join the major titles with his brother, who he has said he will never fight.

"We're celebrating with my brother that we've collected all the belts in the heavyweight division," Klitschko said. "It wasn't as spectacular as I expected, but I was trying."

For most of the fight, Klitschko stayed behind his feared left jab. He landed a right on Haye's chin in the fifth but Haye recovered nicely, bouncing off the ropes to stay on his feet.

Haye (25-2) fought defensively for the most part, unwilling to risk going inside and catching a Klitschko right to the head. He took off his shoe in the ring to show off a toe he said he broke three weeks ago that bothered him the entire fight.

"He's big, strong and very effective at what he does," Haye said. "It was definitely subpar for me."


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