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Boxing: Arthur Abraham V Jermaine Taylor- Iron Man Abraham Can Prove

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  • Boxing: Arthur Abraham V Jermaine Taylor- Iron Man Abraham Can Prove

    ARTHUR ABRAHAM V JERMAINE TAYLOR- IRON MAN ABRAHAM CAN PROVE HIS CLASS DAN HUNTER

    Bettingpro.com
    13 Oct 2009

    "King" Arthur can be Froch's biggest rival

    Unless you are a serious fight fan, you might not be familiar with
    the name Arthur Abraham, but this Saturday night the Armenian Iron
    Man can move one step closer to being ranked among the modern greats
    of the middleweight and super-middleweight divisions.

    He takes on American Jermaine Taylor at the 02 World Arena in Berlin
    in what will be his first fight in what is being billed as Showtimes
    Super Six, a tournament created by Showtime TV to crown the king of the
    ultra-competitive super-middleweight division. Abraham has previously
    defended the IBF version of the middleweight title no less than ten
    times since winning it in 2005.

    While not quite ready to be mentioned in the same breath as Monzon,
    Hagler and Hopkins, the undefeated Abraham (30 - 0, 24 ko´s) has
    been relentlessly plying his craft in his adopted Germany building
    a reputation as a super-tough, super-fit boxer-puncher. In this age
    of superstar boxers that fight only when it suits them and damn
    the title, Abraham is a throwback to fighters of the 1930´s and
    1940´s He averaged three defenses of his title a year, unheard
    of today. And although in 2008 he only managed two defenses of his
    title, sandwiched in between was a tough rematch with Edison Miranda
    at super-middleweight.

    The very fact that Abraham dispatched the dangerous Miranda in just
    four rounds, when two years earlier the same Miranda had broken his
    jaw in two places and taken him the distance in a title defense showed
    us three things;

    a) Abraham's vast improvement as a fighter, b) Despite the threat
    provided by the vicious punching Miranda, his incredible belief in
    his own abilities, c) Again against Miranda, how impossibly strong
    and powerful Abraham will be at super-middleweight.

    While his American rival Kelly Pavlik made the news and stole the
    headlines in the middleweight division, despite losing a his unbeaten
    record in last year, in many experts minds Abraham had moved to the
    top of the list of the best middleweights in the world, this writer
    included.

    He will convince many more that he is ready to dominate the twelve
    stone division with an impressive win against the former undisputed
    middleweight champion Jermaine Taylor (28 - 3 - 1 (17 ko´s).

    Will he add to his reputation with an emphatic win? Or might Taylor
    just pull off the upset of the year?

    If you were to place a bet on Taylor you would get odds of 12/5 at
    bet365, which to the uneducated means if Taylor were to win, you would
    earn 12 quid back on a five pound bet. That same fiver would only
    earn you £1.50 if you were to back ´´King" Arthur. The bookies
    seldom get it wrong, and they are obviously going by Taylor´s last
    four fights that tally up to a less than impressive W1- L3 KO by 2.

    Taylor is still only 31 but his back to back middleweight title
    victories over the seemingly invincible Hopkins in 2005 seem such a
    long time ago, and were in retrospect the pinnacle of his career. After
    that were a succession of frustrating performances by a fighter
    who appeared to have the world at his feet. Handsome, clean cut,
    articulate, and by the way, he could actually fight. We forgave him his
    draw against Winky Wright because Winky was on a streak that included
    big wins over Shane Mosely (twice) and Felix Trinidad, and nobody
    looked good against Winky, so a draw was almost as good as a win.

    But the alarm bells began ringing when he struggled to a split decision
    win against blown up welterweight Cory Spinks, and his world came
    crashing down against the vicious punching Kelly Pavlik. Ironically,
    he looked back to his best in the first few rounds of the Pavlik
    fight and came within a whisker of a sensational two round blowout,
    only for Pavlik to come roaring back to kayo Taylor in the seventh
    round in my contender for Fight of the Year 2007.

    He took a rematch with Pavlik in 2008 and lost a close but unanimous
    decision. He followed up this with a surprisingly one side p

    This win gave him a shot at the new WBC super-middleweight champion,
    Nottingham´s own Iron Man, Carl Froch.

    Taylor boxed beautifully for large parts of the fight, and in
    truth made the limited Froch looked amateurish. He floored Froch
    in the third, and built up a huge lead before fading down the
    stretch. Froch will never be mistaken for Sugar Ray Robinson, but he
    is freakishly strong and has a will and resilience seldom seen in a
    British fighter. Froch finally floored and stopped Taylor with just
    14 seconds remaining of the twelfth and final round.

    At 6ft 2 inches tall, Taylor was a very tall middleweight. Ironically,
    he looked slighter and lighter than Froch, when if anything he should
    have looked bulkier. Abraham stands 5´10´´ and packs a lot of
    muscle and power into his frame. Taylor will have to produce the
    fight of his life to beat Abraham in front of his adopted home crowd.

    Boxing history is littered with upsets, and Hopkins recent schooling
    of Pavlik was a classic example of a quality fighter written off
    prematurely.

    But it is hard to see anything other than a win for the relentless
    Abraham this Saturday.
    From: Baghdasarian
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