Frank Warren
Frank Warren, Britain’s premier and longest-serving boxing promoter, has been building champions in the professional sport for nearly 45 years and was acknowledged for his work across the industry in 2008 with his entrance into the International Hall of Fame.
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Gervonta Should Beware - The Underdogs Are Biting
By Queensberry Promotions
ALAN HUBBARD’S PUNCHLINES - 13.3.17
It was a real pleasure to be at the media conference in the packed Abraham Lincoln room at London’s swank Savoy Hotel last week where it was confirmed that boxing’s dynamic young slugger Gervonta Davis is to defend his newly-acquired IBF world super-featherweight title against redoubtable British battler Liam Walsh at the Copper Box in the Olympic Park on May 20.
No-one threw a wobbly - even less a table – or threatened to crack open his opponent's skull or otherwise hospitalise him; no-one cursed or spat out odious invectives in the name of manufactured ticket-selling hype; nor was there a four-letter word uttered though seven-letter one was clearly evident: Respect.
It was all conducted with decency and decorum. Just two immensely talented young men, both undefeated, knowing that some ten weeks hence they would be attempting to belt bits off each other but declining to brag about it. How refreshing it all was.
Ok, so Floyd Mayweather jnr, promoter and mentor of 22-year-old Davis kept us waiting - but then he always does.
But the Money Man’s eventual majestic presence added both lustre and gravitas to the occasion and we left with the gut feeling that this will be some night -and some fight!
Mayweather’s man certainly has the wow factor. Floyd reckons he is boxing’s next superstar and there is no doubt the boy from Baltimore whose seventh round right-hand piledriver brutally separated Jose Pedraza from his senses -and his title- in New York a couple of months back has one of the most absorbing ghetto-to-greatness stories in boxing.
Plucked from obscurity by Mayweather after just 10 professional fights and now currently the youngest world champion seven fights later at the age of just 22, he had the most harrowing of childhoods in Baltimore.
Indeed, the first instalment of the hit-television series 'The Wire' was based around the projects where Davis grew up in a neighbourhood riddled with copious drugs and gangland murders.
“It was like they say, like The Wire, or a little bit worse,” the softly--spoken Davis told us. “It was really hard, growing up in Baltimore. There as a lot of killing and things like that. A lot of distractions: it was 'I'm in the gym or I'm in the streets', and I chose the gym.
"Right now it's a little bad but they're locking down on major killings and bad people in Baltimore. I was supposed to be in The Wire but I was getting in trouble in school and on the streets."
He added: "When I was a young kid my mother and father were on drugs. My mother used to leave me and my brother in the house by ourselves. The authorities came and got us. It took a year or two to get us back with my grandmother."
“Baltimore - man, it made me the man I am today," he says. "It could have made me or killed me, but I'm here, in the UK, making another step for greatness.”
Davis, whose 16 stoppages from 17 professional wins have ensured his emergence as one of the world's finest young prospects, is a more aggressive front-foot fighter than his illustrious promoter.
“I always said if ever there was anybody I would sign for, it was Floyd Mayweather. Two or three years later it happened.”
“Gervonta Davis is very talented,” says Mayweather. “A fighter who had 10 fights, never seen on TV. As soon as I saw him walk in the room I said, ‘He’s going to be world champion’. I got him six fights and within 24 months he’s world champion. He has the potential to be the closest thing to Floyd Mayweather.”
Praise indeed from the fight game’s Caesar.
Davis reveals he has long been studying Walsh.
"I knew he was mandatory for Pedraza. I also watched a few of his fights, so I knew that he was a great fighter.
Meanwhile the 30-year-old Walsh, one of three brothers who box professionally, the mandatory challenger and unbeaten in 21 contests, accepts he will be the underdog.
But underdogs are not only barking loudly in sport these days – but biting too.
In boxing you need look no further than Haye v Bellew for that.
“I'm more than confident I'll win the fight," Walsh said. "I've got to be smart that's for sure. I've got to do the right job. I've watched a lot of his fights already. I'll adapt on the job round by round as I go. Good fighters have to adapt.
Frank Warren, Walsh's promoter, says the match up reminds him of Joe Calzaghe against Jeff Lacy. “The Americans were saying that Lacey was "the next Mike Tyson", but Joe have him a masterclass in boxing on a memorable night in Manchester. Liam is a very fine boxer, and I believe he can do the same as Calzaghe did ten years ago.”
Here’s hoping. I have a hunch this TV coup for BoxNation and BT wlll go right down to The Wire...