Pavlik on the outside looking in
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 1, 2011
It was the middle of July of 2009 and
Kelly Pavlik, despite two fights previously where he was battered by
Bernard Hopkins, was sitting pretty atop the middleweight division as
the unified champion and his sights set on a possible fight with
fellow pound-for-pound ranked fighter Paul Williams.
Around the same time, Showtime
announced their groundbreaking Super Six World Boxing Classic for the
super middleweight division, a shortened round robin style tournament
featuring six of the best 168 pounders in the world.
When the list of fighters participating
was released, one name was curiously omitted in Kelly Pavlik of
Youngstown, Ohio. Pavlik had accomplished all what seemed feasible at
160 not counting a Williams fight, as it seemed unlikely that a
proposed fight with WBA champion Felix Sturm would come to fruition
due to the low purse being offered by HBO to televise the event.
Fellow middleweight champion Arthur Abraham was locked into the Super
Six and would thus be unavailable.
The tournament risked taking away many
of Pavlik's potential high class opposition for the next few years,
as the tournament was not laid out to finish up until potentially
2012, a span of three years where Pavlik would have to look elsewhere
for challenges.
Pavlik, in an interview with Joe Scalzo
of the Youngstown News, first sounded as if he had interest in
participating before doing his research and saying that it was a dumb
idea.
“Let them beat each other up, let
them ruin their career for peanuts,” cried Pavlik. “Why would I
be in that tournament when I am a middleweight? They never asked me
and I never wanted to join.”
Pavlik did not stop there.
“They're going to burn their whole
career and for what? Nobody watches Showtime. Trust me, when the
winner of the tournament fights his next fight, it will be on HBO.”
Pavlik looks like he couldn't quite
hypothesize the future, as Showtime has locked up the other major 168
pounder Lucian Bute for a multi fight deal that will likely conclude
with a showdown with the tournament's winner.
As far as burning up their careers?
Nobody that has suffered a loss in the tournament has really seen
their career diminish, or at least diminish in a way that otherwise
not have occurred, like Jermain Taylor's knockout loss against Arthur
Abraham [whom was rumored to have been offered a severance package to
bow out after the defeat] or Allan Green getting beaten twice [Green
earned two paydays he otherwise wasn't entitled to due to his
previous credentials]. Mikkel Kessler and Andre Dirrell bowed out due
to conspicuous reasons but are looking to bounce back in 2011, both
having been rumored as possible opponents for Bute in the interim
timeframe where the Super Six is running.
Instead, it's Kelly Pavlik who is
sitting on the outside looking in. Pavlik, only 28 years old, was
once seen as the next big middleweight champion that was going to
carry the baton for HBO over the course of the next few years. A
humiliating loss to Bernard Hopkins close to the light heavyweight
limit seemed to sap the young fighter's confidence and bring to light
some heavier problems that would be much more difficult to overcome.
There was the alleged and later
confirmed problem with alcohol. Prior to that, there were the
terrible injuries that delayed and canceled fights a number of times
with Paul Williams among others. Following the Hopkins loss, Pavlik
fell out of favor quickly with HBO who declined to televise his fight
with Marco Antonio Rubio which instead ended up on independent PPV.
The only fights HBO expressed interest in were fights with Williams
and Sergio Martinez, who himself was positioning himself to become an
unlikely star out of South America following his close controversial
loss to Williams in a Fight of the Year candidate in December of
2009.
Pavlik maintained that he was an HBO
fighter. Instead, his problems with the bottle would derail him,
according to some close to him, possibly for good.
“I don't know if he'll ever fight
again,” said co-manager Cameron Dunkin in an interview last
November. Surprisingly, it was stated to be the second time Pavlik
was in rehab for alcoholism that year, the first reportedly being a
two week stint just ten days prior to his middleweight title defense
against Sergio Martinez, a fight in which he was beaten up pretty
good in over twelve tough rounds.
Father Mike Pavlik made it known that
it was an ongoing problem since he became middleweight champion with
a shocking and exciting stoppage of Jermain Taylor in September of
2007 on HBO in one of the year's best fights.
“The kind of kid Kelly is, he doesn't
want to say no to anyone. It was kind of like Mickey Mantle syndrome
here. Everywhere he went, everyone wanted to buy the champ a beer. He
didn't want to disappoint anyone or say no and it wound up causing
him a pretty serious problem.”
Nobody in Kelly's team did him any
favors by allowing the problem to grow and grow over his reign. It's
quite apparent that Kelly wasn't equipped to handle the fame that he
earned by fulfilling that role of blue collared white kid that
America desperately craves.
One hopes that the once bright career
of such a talented and marketable fighter doesn't go to waste. Pavlik
returns to the ring on the undercard of Manny Pacquiao against Shane
Mosley on May 7th against lightly regarded Alfonso Lopez
[21-0, 16 KOs] who is seeing big time action for the first time in
his career.
For Pavlik, a win would be lucky enough
to earn him a shot on Showtime, the network he criticized only a few
years ago and who now controls a lot of the cards that would make
Pavlik a viable opponent. He was linked to Lucian Bute for a possible
fight and he would be lucky to get that one. He still carries a name
but one more destructive loss could send his career spiraling into
the gutter.
Some fighters forget how once you're at
the top its much easier to fall on your face and when you do it hurts
much harder. Pavlik is on the brink of becoming irrelevant when only
a few years ago his career seemed to be one of the most promising in
the sport. The talent is still there at just 28 years old. The time
off from world class opponents could serve him well and help him get
his confidence back, which is something he will need in spades if he
is to ever compete with the best ever again.
For his and his family and for all of
Youngstown's sake, let's hope he can find it again.
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