— 19th April 2016
IT’S been seven months since Floyd
Mayweather announced his retirement, and now it’s Manny Pacquiao’s turn.
Both dominated the boxing scene for at least the last 10-12 years, and
they’re leaving a big void that fight fans are hoping some other stars
can fill.
With the departure of the No. 1 and No. 2 pound-for-pound fighters of
the last 25 years, according to an ESPN. com voting panel, there are
several names who could fill the void and who have the charisma and
talent to become stars.
Currently considered the top pay-per-view star, the middleweight
champion’s popularity knows no limits, and he’s shown his quality in the
ring. At just 25 years old, he has a 46-1-1 record. He faces Amir Khan
next and is one of HBO’s top draws, in addition to being Golden Boy
Promotions’ main draw. A fight against middleweight titlist Gennady
Golovkin is on the horizon.
One of the most, if not the most feared boxer on the planet. He’s 34
years old and has a record of 34-0 (31 KOs). He’s the best middleweight
in a long time, and while he’s expected to fight Alvarez, he could also
move up to 168 pounds in search of bigger challenges after cleaning up
his division.
With Pacquiao’s farewell, Crawford looks to be Top Rank’s next big
star. Top Rank promoter Bob Arum knows that Crawford is talented enough
to achieve great things, but he may lack popularity. Nevertheless, he’ll
headline his first pay-per-view event on July 23 in Las Vegas against
Viktor Postol in a junior welterweight unification bout. At just 28
years old, he has 28 victories and 20 knockouts. He is yet to be
defeated.
Chocolatito is the current No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter in ESPN’s
rankings. If he continues dominating fighters the way he has been so
far, he will soon reach 49-0, like Mayweather did. Gonzalez is only 28
and has a record of 44-0 with 38 knockouts. After dominating the
strawweight and flyweight divisions, Gonzalez recently had his HBO
debut, and fight fans have fallen in love with him. The three-time world
titlist returns to the ring on April 23 against Puerto Rico’s
McWilliams Arroyo.
Thurman is considered the best in the welterweight division after the
departures of Mayweather and Pacquiao. His knockout power, charisma
and boxing ability place him high above many others, including Danny
Garcia, Kell Brook and Shawn Porter. He fights Porter on June 25, and
that’s when he’ll have to prove that he has star power. At 27, he has a
26-0 record with 22 KOs.
At 30 years old, with a record of 36-0 and 35 knockouts, the “Bronze
Bomber” is the best American heavyweight and one of the best in the
division. Wilder has brought the heavyweight division back by winning a
title in 2015, as talented European competitors also make a stand, and
everything is lined up to give Wilder the chance to become a successor
to the great heavyweights of the past. His next test is a mandatory
fight against former titleholder Alexander Povetkin on May 21 in
Russia.
Ward, the 32-year-old former super middleweight champion, came close
to being the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, but trouble with
promoters and the presence of Mayweather and Pacquiao kept him from
topping the list. Ward (29-0, 15 KOs) currently fights in the light
heavyweight division and has everything it takes to be the next big
star, including talent, popularity and support from HBO. To make the
next leap forward, he has to fight Sergey Kovalev, a powerful Russian
considered the division’s top fighter.
Former four-division titleholder Adrien Broner was taken into custody
Tuesday morning and began serving a 10-day jail sentence for violating
terms of his probation in his hometown of Cincinnati.
Broner was incarcerated at the Hamilton County (Ohio) Jail at 10:19
a.m. for reckless driving and is due to be released on April 22,
according to the jail’s website. TMZ initially reported on Broner’s
sentencing.
In July 2015, Broner was sentenced to six months’ probation in
connection to a drunken driving arrest. Broner later entered a plea of
no contest to reckless driving and was given probation.
Broner, 26, appeared in court Tuesday morning, pleaded guilty to the probation violation and began serving his sentence.
The case Tuesday is not related to Broner’s arrest on charges of
felony assault and aggravated robbery in connection to an incident
during the early-morning hours of Jan. 21, when he allegedly assaulted a
man and robbed him of $12,000 at gunpoint outside a Cincinnati bowling
alley.
He was indicted for that incident Thursday, the next step in prosecutors’ case.
Broner allegedly lost the money to the victim during a night of
high-stakes betting on bowling games, knocked him unconscious outside
the bowling alley after a confrontation and took the money.
With two outstanding felony warrants for his arrest, Broner still
boxed in Washington, D.C., in a nationally televised fight on April 1.
He knocked out Ashley Theophane one day after being stripped of his
junior welterweight title for failing to make weight.
Broner (32-2, 24 KOs) returned to Cincinnati and turned himself in on
April 4, as had been arranged between his attorney and Hamilton County
officials. Broner was released later that day on $100,000 bond and
pleaded not guilty at his arraignment on April 5.