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Thompson: The unfair worldony Thompson: The unfair rld
28.11.07 - Andrew Wake: A large portion of the boxing world
rejoiced last week when it was announced that Ukrainian IBF and IBO champion
Wladimir Klitschko will meet Russia’s WBO king, Sultan Ibragimov, at New York’s
Madison Square Garden
in late February. The match up, which is to be broadcast on HBO, is the first
unification in the heavyweight division since Lennox Lewis famously outpointed
Evander Holyfield, at the second time of asking, in November 1999 and, while
this partial joining of the world crown is much appreciated, there is one man
that has the right to feel aggrieved.
On the evening of Saturday Feburary 23rd Tony “The Tiger” Thompson will switch
on the TV at his Washington home and, as the two champions from the former
Soviet Union begin to trade punches, say to himself “I should be in that ring”..
It took right handed southpaw Thompson (31 – 1, 19 KOs) sometime to gravitate
towards the boxing gym. Like most of us, he was your average slave, working a
normal day job to pay his bills and, despite some bouts as a teenager, did not
consider himself a natural fighter. He had reached the ripe old age of 27 when
he felt the itch to put the gloves back on and have his first amateur contest as an
adult. He joined the paid ranks 12 months later and, in the eight years that
has passed since, he has remained focused and determined while working his way
gradually up the rankings. During that slow climb up boxing’s greasy pole he
has beaten competent opposition in Timor Ibragimov, former title challenger
Vaughn Bean, and the man who was once regarded as America’s premier heavyweight
prospect, Dominic Guinn but, due to a lack of major network exposure [he has
never fought on Showtime or HBO], he has remained a low-profile figure.
Personally I find it astounding that the TV giants haven’t picked up on his
ability, after all, with Holyfield now ten years past his prime and Tyson
retired, it has long been stated that the sport needs an American heavyweight
who is not fat, crap, or Hasim Rahman.
In July of this year it seemed Thompson’s stock would finally rise and a world
title shot was on the horizon, he had just been to possibly the toughest
country a fighter can travel to [Germany] and won a WBO eliminator by stopping Luan Krasniqi in
the fifth round. He felt that he now could not be ignored and was readying
himself for a tussle with Ibragimov. However, things have not panned out as he
anticipated, firstly he was overlooked in favour of a man only days shy of his
45th birthday, the aforementioned Holyfield, and now misses out again to
Klitschko.
“Boxing is such a political game that you never
know what can happen,” Thompson told the Washington Post recently, “You could
be fighting all your life and never get a title shot.”
While it seems that the big man, originally from Silver Spring in Maryland,
accepts that chances don’t always materialise, I feel that he should make a
stand and complain to the WBO. He has earned his shot and should get it.
The unification bout is, with doubt, good for the health of the division but it
begs the question, why are the WBO building up fighter’s hopes and making them
box eliminators (and probably charging sanctioning fees for the privilege) that
don’t amount to anything? In a fair world, Ibragimov would face Thompson first
and the victor would then face Wladimir. Unfortunately, as all boxing fans
know, the world is far from fair.