Griffin takes one more shot
Mark E. Ortega
Freelance
March 8, 2013
It is interesting sometimes to think
about how different a career could've gone if one thing went
different.
If Zab Judah hadn't done the funky
chicken against Kostya Tszyu in 2001, his career wouldn't have been
taken off course by a suspension he earned for grabbing referee Jay
Nady by the throat.
Prince Naseem Hamed probably wouldn't
have opted for an early retirement if Marco Antonio Barrera hadn't
handily embarrassed him just a few months later.
If Felix Trinidad had done what was
expected and disassembled Bernard Hopkins towards the end of 2001,
surely he wouldn't have taken a hiatus from the ring, giving away
prime years of his career.
Though it is on a much slimmer scale,
that moment in the career of Griffin came in April of 2009, when he
was chosen as the comeback opponent for former 168 pound titlist Jeff
Lacy, once thought of as one of America's brightest young future
stars before Joe Calzaghe ruined him in their 2006 contest—that
bout being Lacy's “what if things went different” moment.
Saturday night, Sacramento,
Calif.-based light heavyweight Griffin (24-11-2, 10 KOs) takes on
once-beaten Cornelius White (20-1, 16 KOs) of Houston, Texas at The
Hangar in Costa Mesa, Calif. headlined by the HBO-Latino televised
IBF 130-pound rematch between Juan Carlos Salgado and Argenis Mendez.
The fight won't be televised, but it
could turn out to be the end of the road for the longtime contender
Griffin, who has tangled with a pretty good crop of fighters from
super middleweight all the way up to cruiserweight.
Through often traveling to his
opponent's hometowns, Griffin has often found himself on the losing
side of close decisions. The most heartbreaking of these came at the
hands of Lacy in Tampa, Flo., where again Griffin would have the deck
stacked against him as the road team.
Lacy was a co-promoter of the card, his
first foray into that side of the sport. Griffin had put together
perhaps his best training camp as a pro, training in high altitude at
Lake Arrowhead, Calif. with then trainer John Tandy of the United
Kingdom.
Lacy was hoping to use Griffin as a
steppingstone to a profitable matchup with fellow Florida native Roy
Jones Jr., something that was contractually guaranteed to the winner
of the Lacy-Griffin fight according to Griffin.
“It was in the contract, we were
fighting for the right to fight RJJ,” said Griffin on Thursday
evening.
Griffin proved to be up to the task, as
he outboxed and countered Lacy to death over ten pretty clear rounds.
Unfortunately for Griffin, none of the three judges gave him the
fight. Judges Alex Levin and Ged O'Connor had it 96-94 and 97-93,
which were absolute jokes of scorecards. Judge Mike Ross had it a
more acceptable 95-95, giving Lacy a majority decision.
“After the second, I beat that boy
from pillar to post, his eyes were closed. But lately, that's the
theme,” surmised Griffin.
“I can still hear John Tandy telling
me at the bell of the 10th round, three minutes and you're
fighting Roy Jones Jr. on pay-per-view.”.
Lacy called out an in attendance Roy
Jones Jr. in the ring after the fight while Griffin traveled back to
California to lick his wounds.
Most unfortunate for Griffin was that
the fight was not televised, meaning him and his team's claims of
robbery fell on mostly deaf ears. Unless a fight takes place on
television that can be seen widely, for the most part, it is as if
the fight didn't happen.
Being a writer from Northern
California, this writer was keen to find out how the Lacy-Griffin
fight went and if it was indeed a robbery.
After inquiring about footage of the
fight from Lacy's co-promoter, a week later a DVD arrived. After
watching the bout closely, it was clear that Griffin was in fact
robbed. At best, you could find three rounds to give to Lacy who was
extremely slow and got countered by Griffin almost at will throughout
the bout.
The full fight can now be found on
YouTube in multiple clips, starting with this
one, if you don't want to take my word for it.
For a fighter like Griffin to suffer a
defeat like that, it can often derail a career completely. When you
get robbed and it is shown on major television, usually a career can
be resuscitated because there is video evidence of the thievery. Ask
Erislandy Lara and Richard Abril, two fighters who have rebounded
from two of the worst seen robberies in recent years in order to
maintain themselves on the top level.
For Griffin, it is interesting to
wonder where his career could've gone had he gotten the rightful
decision over Lacy. How would he have fared against a fading Roy
Jones Jr.?
“I feel like if I had gotten the Lacy
decision, I would have gotten a title by now,” says Griffin.
“I beat Lacy, and at the age Roy was
at, I would have been too much for him. The world would have seen
their names on my resume and it would have opened a lot of doors.”
Griffin was fighting in order to put
his name in the mix with the top guys. The Lacy loss set him back
nearly two years. After running off four victories against modest
opposition, highlighted by an eighth-round TKO of Byron Mitchell in
May 2010, Griffin had climbed up the IBF rankings and landed an
eliminator with Yusaf Mack for the right to face titlist Tavoris
Cloud, who fights this weekend against Bernard Hopkins for that very
same title.
An interest subplot to the Mack-Griffin
eliminator was that the two had worked closely together in the past.
The previously mentioned John Tandy trained the both of them
simultaneously, and both were in camps together in the Lake Arrowhead
high altitude. It was almost a real life version of the boxing comedy
“Play It To The Bone”, where two sparring partners get the call
to fight each other in an important bout and have to make the drive
to Las Vegas together.
Mack and Griffin would take separate
rides to Woodland Hills, Calif. in March of 2011 to meet. Mack would
earn a twelve-round split decision over Griffin in a difficult to
score fight, and in turn, a right to fight Tavoris Cloud on HBO.
For his next three fights, Griffin
would go on the road. He was stopped in the 11th against
Karo Murat in Germany, split-decisioned by Shawn Hawk in Idaho
despite having his opponent down, and decisioned in Dallas, Texas by
unbeaten but unknown Cedrig Agnew.
Griffin would finally get his own
homecoming, an easy TKO win over Adam Collins last August. It
wouldn't be long before Griffin would get the call to go into enemy
territory again, this time against well-regarded contender Will
Rosinsky on a Broadway Boxing show last December in New York.
Most ringside accounts saw the bout as
really close, or tougher than expected for Rosinsky, who was fighting
in a weight division he really didn't belong. Still, for the fourth
time in five losses, Griffin had acquitted himself well, but still
didn't get the decision.
For Otis Griffin, who is 35 years old,
it isn't about the money. He made boatloads in winning the Fox
reality show The Next Great Champ. He was making the kind of money in
four-rounders that many fighters don't see until they reach
championship levels.
For fighters like Griffin who always
feel as though they've been on the wrong side of an unjust decision,
at some point it takes a toll.
“If they continue to rob me, I will
bow out and manage,” said Griffin when predicting his future plans.
There are a good number of fighters out
there who would trade places with Griffin in a heartbeat. Yes, he has
yet to reach that spot on the ladder that would leave him totally
content with how his career finished up. But there are fighters who
reached the top who would probably trade it away for the kind of
security Griffin has obtained. He's got money in the bank and still
works a full-time job as a correctional counselo at a prison in
Northern California.
For Griffin, Saturday could be the
final opportunity to crack into the big time. His opponent Cornelius
White has put together a decent string of victories after being
starched in less than a round by Don George in February 2011. Wins
have come at the hands of always tough journeyman Dhafir Smith, Cuban
former amateur standout Yordanis Despaigne, and former title
challenger Dmitry Sukhotsky.
A win for Griffin would largely wipe
out his recent streak of losing five of his last six, and put him
back in the rankings for some of the major alphabet organizations.
But at 35, it is safe to say this is the last rebuild for the former
reality TV star. Another loss could spell the end of title
aspirations, and if he decided he wanted to continue to fight, the
beginning of gatekeeper status.
“I was robbed in three of my last
five outings. It's safe to say you're not going to outbox Otis
Griffin or outwork him. So I have faith this will change on Saturday.
At the same time, I'm so blessed with success and money in this
sport, can I really be mad?”
Mark
Ortega is the boxing columnist for the Martinez News-Gazette and is a
member of the Boxing Writers Assoc. of America and the RING Ratings
Advisory Panel. He can be reached via e-mail at markeortega@gmail.com
as well as followed on Twitter @MarkEOrtega.
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