Villanueva Cucked Out

As I have said in past articles, I no longer watch the NFL.  This started long before this whole taking a knee nonsense.

I remember when the league was must see.  But socialistic salary caps and deterrence of defense lowered the level of play so I watched less and less, maybe just the postseason.

Then “me first” displays on the field, felonies off the field and announcers sacrificing practicality and integrity for hip lingo and pandering became the norm.  Now I don’t even watch the Super Bowl.

For years I have heard complaints from friends about the product.  But they continued to watch.

People often think they don’t make a difference.  “I’m only one man”.  “My vote doesn’t make a difference”.  Thank God the American Colonials didn’t think like that.

You can’t control what others think or do.  However, often times people think just like you but don’t act for the same reasons you don’t.

But the anti-NFL sentiment is growing.  Ratings are down again this season.

Last year they blamed the election.  What’s this year’s excuse?

Last week Pittsburg Steelers lineman Alejandro Villanueva did what was right in his heart.  The decorated Army Ranger went out and honored the flag during the National Anthem while his teammates sat in the locker room.

What happened as a result?  While many disgusted Americans were burning their NFL gear on social media over the anti-American demonstrations, Villanueva’s jersey became the top seller from what I heard on local sports radio.

But the hero apologized for his courageous actions.  I’d be pretty disappointed if I spent a couple hundred bucks on his jersey because I admired what he did.

Mr. Villanueva is 10 times the man I will ever be, but I can’t help but lose a little respect for him.  He cucked out.

In it’s attempt not to offend or to get some kind of acceptance from the left that will never come, the right is too often apologetic about their stance.  We avoid calling things like abortion what they are (murder) out of fear of offending.

Meanwhile, the left has woven their agenda so deep into our everyday PC culture because they NEVER apologize.  They fight for every inch; honorable or dishonorable.

Did Al Sharpton ever apologize for pushing the Tawana Brawley and Duke Lacrosse rape hoaxes?  F**k no!

Did Crooked Hillary Clinton ever apologize for getting Americans killed in Benghazi, then lying about it; or for laughing at a child rape victim after getting her perp off?  F**k no!

Did Michelle Obama ever apologize for saying she can “finally” be proud of her country after her husband was elected?  F**k no!

As Mike Cernovich (http://www.dangerandplay.com) has often pointed out, the reason President Donald J. Trump won is because he was unapologetic in his message.  When he offends he moves on.  In fact, the times Trump stumbles are when he tries to pander to his known enemies (known as opposed to General Kelly, General McMaster, Vice President Pence, etc.) and leaves his base feeling like they have fought and prayed so hard in vein.

So when you do or say something courageous and honorable, don’t apologize for it.  Did Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ ever apologize for offending the Pharisees?  Talk soon.

-Marksman

 

Good Fight Bad Night

Well, the boxing community was hoping for a great fight but had to settle for a good fight.  Middleweight Champion Gennady “GGG” Golovkin and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez gave us a valiant effort in a 12 round bout with a lot of action.

It was not the bloodbath I thought it may have been but both fighters threw meaningful punches and showed terrific chins.  Golovkin pushed the action most of the night with his jab keeping Alvarez (who landed his own sharp counters) on the ropes in what appeared to be a competitive but clear victory for the Kazakh warrior.

GGG is definitely showing his age; he is no longer the wrecking machine he was two years ago when he was the most avoided man in sports.  But he deserved better than the draw he was dealt by inept/corrupt judging.

I had the fight 118-110 (10 rounds to 2) for Golovkin.  That score doesn’t mean the fight was one-sided.  I admit I am a GGG fan, but I try to score as objectively as possible.

As I have said in prior articles, I favor the champ in rounds that could go either way.  If you want to be as generous to the Mexican stalwart as possible you could give him four rounds which would match HBO’s unofficial scorer, Harold Lederman’s 116-112 in GGG’s favor.

I was worried about the judges all week.  The Nevada State Athletic Commission has a horse in this race as Canelo is the new cash cow in the post-Mayweather/Pacquiao era.

Leading up to the decision, everyone I was watching with felt Golovkin won the fight.  A knowledgeable friend of mine text me that he felt a robbery coming.  Maybe it was because of HBO’s commentators who seemed to be enamored with anything Alvarez did.

When Adelaide Byrd’s score of 118-110 was read by Michael Buffer I felt a very brief feeling of relief until he said the score was for Canelo.  The entire room was disgusted.

Dave Moretti had it 115-113 for GGG.  Too close for my taste but at least he had the winner correct.

Then Buffer announced Don Trella’s inept/corrupt score of 114-114 leaving us with a draw.  One of my guests for the fight said this is why he no longer watches boxing which he said almost had him back.

I will always watch.  I love the fighters as much as I despise the way the sport is run.  However, how can I possibly argue with my friend who represents the casual fan?

Teddy Atlas (one of the few at ESPN who has integrity) blew a gasket after the fight.  He rightfully pointed out that both combatants left a piece of themselves in that ring that they will never get back, and GGG was screwed along with the fans.

The reason we love fighters is they do things and face things that the common man avoids.  This is why Rocky Balboa became a fictional American icon across generations.

Go back to your younger days.  Maybe you were meeting someone after school or outside a bar to physically settle a disagreement.

Now be honest with yourself; it’s okay.  Going into that situation you faced feelings of apprehension.  You faced dark moments of self doubt even if you were confident that you could/would come out on top.

Now imagine doing that for a living in your underwear in front of thousands or millions of people.  Scary right?  These guys experience all the emotions us everyday mutts face.

But they overcome it and perform on an elite level.  That’s what makes them extraordinary.

In Gennady Golovkin’s case he has done everything right.  He has given us action; he has given us the knockouts we want to see.

Nobody with name recognition would get near this guy, so he kept going about his knockout business.  As far as we know, he conducts himself like a gentleman outside the ring.

He finally gets his big moment at age 35.  Though he’s not quite the same, he rises to the occasion and wins clearly.  Then these minions steal it from him.

“Oh but maybe we get a rematch”.  The fight was good enough to justify a rematch anyway.  But by that time Canelo is 28 and GGG is 36.

You can make the argument that GGG left a bigger piece of himself in that ring on Saturday than Canelo did.  Canelo can still improve at his age.  GGG is never getting any better; if anything he is regressing with every fight and brutal training camp.

If GGG doesn’t win the rematch (legitimately or illegitimately) it completely changes how history will view him.  I can’t put him quite on the level of the all-time middleweights like Sugar Ray Robinson (best fighter ever), Carlos Monzon or Marvin Hagler.

I also think Bernard Hopkins in his prime would best a prime GGG as Golovkin’s style plays right into Hopkins’.  But this guy was way better than he may ever get credit for down the road.

When people are laying their lives on the line, bad calls in boxing are more dire than in team sports.  And they are becoming commonplace in this sport.

Since this blog began in Octorber, 2016 Sergey Kovalev (first fight with Andre Ward), Roman “Chocolatito” Gonzalez (first fight with Srisket Sor Rungvisai), Manny Pacquiao (against Jeff Horn in his home Australia) and Golovkin have all been the victims of poor decisions.

These are all guys who were ranked in the top ten pond-for-pound this year.  Imagine how poorly the pug brought in to lose to a local boy at a club show, but doesn’t cooperate gets treated on a regular basis?

As Satan’s hour goes along, honesty becomes harder and harder to come by.  Whether it’s politics, sports or just everyday life honest people must always be on guard for systemic dishonesty.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

GGG vs. Canelo Preview and Prediction

Well Straight Shooters, the circus tents from three weeks ago have been folded up and shipped out to make room for the arrival in Vegas of boxers who matter.  The overdue matchup for middleweight (160 lbs. limit) supremacy has been made between WBA, WBC and IBF Middleweight Champion Gennady “GGG” Golovkin (37-0, 33 KO) and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez (49-1-1, 34 KO).

Golovkin is the recognized middleweight king, while Canelo has some claim to the lineal title (the man who beat the man, who beat the man).  Unfortunately the powers-that-be in boxing have created confusion that I have to clarify every time I preview a big fight.

You see Miguel Cotto won the WBC strap and lineal title from Sergio Martinez in June, 2014.  Canelo lifted the title from Cotto by unanimous decision in November, 2015; the WBC declared GGG the mandatory challenger for the winner as he had cleaned out most of the division.

Canelo gave up the belt handing it to GGG rather than face him in September, 2016.  Canelo’s handlers stated that he had yet to grow into a full-fledged middleweight even though he was rehydrating to around 170 lbs. before his fights.

The truth is that they were waiting out Golovkin’s ticking age.  But now GGG is 35, Canelo’s people have run out of lucrative alternatives risking their fighter’s credibility with his own Mexican fan base, and the event true boxing fans have been demanding for two years is here.

The meshing of these styles SHOULD (nothing is ever guaranteed in boxing) make for an action-packed night of violence.  You have an accurate and powerful counterpuncher with quick hands, good head movement but slow feet in Canelo taking on a tremendously conditioned pressure fighter who cuts off the ring impeccably while carrying historic punching power in Golovkin.

Gennady Golovkin of Kazakhstan was an Olympic Silver Medalist in 2004.  He then began a professional path of international destruction to the United States collecting all the belts he could get his hands on, but being avoided by big name/big money fighters.

However, Golovkin has shown some slippage in his last two fights.  He looked sloppy before stopping former welterweight champ Kell Brook a year ago and was given all he could handle on his way to a unanimous decision victory over Daniel Jacobs in March, 2017.

In all fairness Jacobs is probably the second best middleweight in the world behind GGG.  Some say GGG also may have become slightly disinterested continuing to be forced to fight largely unknown opponents.

Some say age has caught up to him.  I suspect a little of both.

He now has the dance partner he’s been waiting for in the red-haired Mexican.  Canelo (Spanish for cinnamon) looks more like the perfect Notre Dame mascot than the Mexican badass he is.

Admittedly I, like many other hardcore boxing fans have taken a while to warm up to the idea of Canelo being a star.  He began fighting as a pro in Mexico at age 15; that’s right, 15 against grown men.

When he broke in with the US audience it was clear he had talent, but the networks and boxing media seemed to give him the same treatment ESPN once gave a young female golfer named Michelle Wie.  They were determined to manufacture a star before the athlete proved himself to be a true champion (major problem in sports today).

Alvarez was rushed into a fight with Floyd Mayweather at age 23.  He fought with hesitance and was taken to school by a boxing savant (not the version many of you may have watched 3 weeks ago).

It was similar to when a young powerful heavyweight with the right complexion named Gerry Cooney was rushed into a bout with a peak all-time great champion in Larry Holmes.  But unlike Cooney who fell apart mentally after his loss to Holmes, Canelo has used his Maywether boxing lesson as a building block to a career now on a hall-of-fame trajectory.

If this fight took place when it should have, I think the Mexican goes to the hospital after three rounds.  But Canelo has looked sharper and stronger with each passing fight.

Part of that has been a product of being matched with undersized and/or stylistically made-to-order opponents.  But combine his improvements with GGG’s age and you have a different fight.

The advantages for Canelo are youth, hand speed and head movement.  The advantages for GGG are punching power (though Canelo can punch), strength and conditioning.

Both fighters have shown solid chins, but I will put this in the Kazakh’s favor as Canelo has not tasted power like Golovkin’s.  Golovkin has been in with punchers comparable to Canelo.

Both have very underrated jabs (it just may be GGG’s best punch).  The one who better established theirs’ will be at a great advantage; both are fierce body punchers.

Neither are fleet of foot which makes for more carnage.  Though GGG is the champ, Canelo is the star and I would expect the Nevada State Athletic Commission is leaning heavily on the judges behind the scenes (unfortunate reality in this sport) to favor Canelo in close rounds.

Kenny Bayless is the appointed referee.  That works in Canelo’s favor as Bayless is quick to break fighters working inside and on the ropes which is GGG’s usual sweet spot.

I think GGG needs to win rounds convincingly or knock Alvarez out and I think he knows this.  The footage and photos I have seen of them together tell me Golovkin feels this is his moment.  I sense a relaxed focus.

Canelo doesn’t appear intimidated (and probably never was personally) but I like Golovkin’s mental makeup better.  I also think Golovkin has the superior gas tank; I have seen Canelo tire in deep waters.

GGG got away from his body attack against Jacobs and I think it cost him in the form of a very tough night.  He will need to get back to that on Saturday; I believe he will.

I believe there will be blood on both these combatants pale faces.  But I think Golovkin comes through with a stoppage about round 9.

There are fights every year that produce fireworks.  But slugfests are more rare at the elite level; that’s why Ali-Frazier III and Hagler-Hearns are landmark fights.

These two elite throwbacks have the POTENTIAL to give boxing and it’s fans a well-deserved present.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

PS:  Mr. President, no wall-no base.  No base, no re-election.