Miranda gets shot while Brinkley has to wait
Mark E. Ortega
FightFanNation.com
February 18, 2010
When Jesse Brinkley gutted out a twelve
round unanimous decision victory over Curtis Stevens a few weeks ago
in an exciting headlining bout televised by ESPN's Friday Night
Fights in Reno, Nevada, it was supposed to be enough to earn him a
title shot against IBF 168-pound champion Lucian Bute in April.
And it should have been.
Instead, it will be world title retread
Edison Miranda who will meet Bute in Montreal on April 17th
in a bout that will be televised by HBO, likely as the co-featured
bout to a Kelly Pavlik-Sergio Martinez middleweight title fight that
will take place in Youngstown as part of a split-site telecast.
This is the same Edison Miranda who has
already been vanquished by Arthur Abraham, Kelly Pavlik, and Andre
Ward in previous step-up opportunities. Granted, those are all world
class names but Miranda has failed to beat a legitimate top ten
contender since his 2007 unanimous decision victory over Allan Green,
which was also televised by HBO and was by most accounts an
uninteresting bout.
Speaking of Allan Green, he has earned
[or more appropriately, has been awarded] a spot in the Showtime
Super Six World Boxing Classic when Jermain Taylor pulled out
following his twelfth round knockout loss to Abraham in the first
stage of the tournament last October. Green has yet to beat a
legitimate top ten contender, although he was supposed to meet Sakio
Bika this month in a box off to earn his spot before Bika pulled out
citing visa problems.
Bika is another guy that hasn't beaten
a contender in years yet he is someone whose name is being thrown
around concerning bigger fights at 168 pounds. He was being
considered as an opponent for Bute for that April date, which is
ludicrous considering Bika was thoroughly outclassed by a much less
polished Bute back in a 2007 ESPN televised bout. Obviously HBO brass
missed that one.
What Miranda and Bika lack in
impressive recent credentials they make up for in juice in the sport.
Miranda has Goossen-Tutor Promotions behind him, as they are perhaps
the next biggest promoter in the States behind Top Rank and Golden
Boy. Since signing with Goossen, Miranda has fought one bout since
being shutout by Andre Ward last May, an untelevised one-round
knockout of an unheralded Mexican Francisco Sierra. That victory was
enough to earn Miranda a title shot against WBO champion Robert
Stieglitz in January, but Miranda pulled out with little more than a
week to go because of a flu. Now Miranda will get another shot, this
time under the bright lights of HBO.
Many will argue that Miranda is also a
more recognizable name than Brinkley, which definitely can be
debated. Miranda has fought on the big stage a number of times. His
first appearance was a December 2006 first-round knockout of Willie
Gibbs on Boxing After Dark. Three months later he bested Green by
decision on BAD again. In his next appearance he was brutalized by
Pavlik in seven rounds on HBO World Championship Boxing, but the
fight was exciting enough that after putting together two victories
on ESPN he got a shot at redemption against Arthur Abraham on
Showtime. He was never really in that fight as King Arthur demolished
Pantera in four. Two more victories against C-level opponents
followed and he got a shot against Andre Ward on Showtime. Miranda
didn't win a round in most people's eyes as Ward outclassed him en
route to a twelve-round decision. That's three times that Miranda has
failed on the big stage since December of 2006 yet here he is again
with a chance to pull a victory off.
A Miranda victory is something very few
people expect, including Miranda himself. Always the brashest of
fighters, at a press conference to announce the fight with Bute,
Miranda was much more reserved and sounded like a challenger with no
shot:
“I
come to fight. I come to win. I have nothing against Bute. I will
prepare myself. I may not win, but I guarantee you will all be very
happy (ticket purchasers).”
As
far as Sakio Bika goes, what he has going for him the most lies in
his advisor, Al Haymon. Haymon is perhaps the most influential person
on what fights HBO accepts, as he currently guides the careers of
many of the top fighters in the world and has earned notoriety for
landing them fights on big networks against low-risk opponents.
Brinkley
has neither a big time promoter or advisor, but has instead grinded
his way to the top the old fashioned way, by winning. Brinkley is on
a nine bout win streak and has rarely lost a round in any of those
contests. He has done most of it out of the limelight of mainstream
television, with bouts against Mike Paschall and Joey Gilbert being
televised by Comcast Sportsnet. His victory over Stevens was his
first foray into ESPN television since his loss to Robin Reid in
2007, so many of those familiar with Brinkley heading into his
January bout were predicted an early exit. Brinkley proved to be a
higher class fighter than the one who came straight out of The
Contender as he thoroughly outclassed Stevens in a fight that he was
a two-to-one underdog at the venue that hosted the bout.
Brinkley
and his team will likely sit on their ranking until an opportunity
arises where they get a shot at a world title. If the wait doesn't
take too long, it could prove advantageous to Brinkley as it will
allow him more time to recoop from a hard-fought victory two weeks
ago. An April date may have been too soon, but one of Brinkley's
biggest advantages during his current streak has been a busy
schedule. Forced to wait too long and it could prove to be a
negative.
The
question remains: Will Jesse Brinkley get his deserved shot at a
world title? Many think the answer is yes, but he'll be waiting in
the wings while Edison Miranda gets another shot on HBO against Bute.
If recent credentials have any creedence in the sport, then Brinkley
should be getting a shot soon because there really isn't anyone left
outside of the Super Six that has a resume as good as his. But with
HBO calling the shots, too often that doesn't seem to matter.
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