Phantom punch or what? Klitschko knocked out Solis in the first round, 1:42 minutes into the 1st round.

Vitali interview after the fight (below video):

Source> BoxingScene.com/Mark Vester:
Solos’ right knee issue was pre-existing to Klitschko fall, so it is reported.
Pepper Roach stopped into Irongloves a few weeks back. Pepper is brother to famous Freddy Roach, Manny Pacquiao’s trainer/coach. Not too many people realize that Pepper too is a former professional fighter. see his> BoxRec-Pepper Roach

Irongloves T-shirt made it all the way over to the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood.
Source: ESPN Boxing News
Mayweather ‘negotiating with Pacquiao’
Steps are being taken to try and get Floyd Mayweather Jr and Manny Pacquiao into the ring later this year, according to Mayweather’s uncle Jeff.
Relations between the camps appeared to be permanently soured following the acrimonious breakdown of negotiations last year, with neither side able to find a resolution to a blood-testing dispute.
The waters were further muddied by the string of charges hanging above Mayweather Jr’s head, which could leave him facing a maximum of 34 years in jail.
But now it seems that the Mayweather camp are willing to reopen discussions over one of the most hotly-anticipated fights in boxing history, which could be set to take place in South Africa.
“I know that he [Floyd Mayweather] is talking to Nelson Mandela’s daughter because they are trying to put together something for his 93rd birthday,” Jeff Mayweather told fighthype.com.
“In the midst of that, they’re also trying to make the fight between Floyd and Manny. Right now they are working to basically get a letter of intent for the fight to possibly take place.
“I’m negotiating with both sides and it’s just a matter now of sending a letter of intent to Manny and one to Floyd through me and see where it can go.”
Bleacher Report/by Vitali Shaposhnikov
Who had the best jab in Heavyweight Jab in History?
Since the very beginning of boxing, trainers have always suggested and reminded their fighters of the significance of the jab. I have heard many current professional trainers say that if they could upgrade any attribute of their fighters, it would undoubtedly be their jab. The reason for the fanaticism of this seemingly weak-pecking punch is the wide spectrum of uses that it has in the ring.
An effective sharp jab has the following potential in any given fight: It creates space, it derails the opposition as they start throwing a combination, it gives a fighter an opportunity to take time and feel out the movement of their opponent without much risk, it sets up for an offense, and last but not least it provides a very efficient way of scoring points and breaking down the opponent via punch volume.
A jab is even more crucial in heavyweight boxing. As these very big and heavy men move, their energy is quickly drained. A combination can sometimes leave a heavyweight fighter gasping for oxygen for the remainder of the round. The boxers who were able to master their jab and find a way to use it resourcefully, were much more likely to succeed.
When looking to the past and the present, a lot of heavyweight dominating champions had this very attributes chiseled to perfection. Following, is my top 10 heavyweight jabs in boxing history:
1.) Riddick Bowe (43-1-0) had a very interesting jab. He would use his size along with his jab to tire out smaller opposition. While his jab was far from accurate, it was constant. For a man his size, he used his jab just the right amount, helping him last longer and stay consistent throughout the fight.
2.) Michael Moorer (52-4-1), the jab was essential. His jab was very consistent, and thrown with a piston-like motion. While it wasn’t a powerful jab, the volume and timing made it a big part of his game plan.
3.) Sonny Liston (50-4-0) can’t say too much about his jab as far as the technicality of it, but I can surely say that it was one of the most powerful jabs in boxing history. Thrown with a bad intention, it sometimes looked and felt like a powerful right hand. He had as much chance of knocking his opponent out with a jab, as most other heavyweights have with their fully fueled right hand.
4.) Joe Louis (66-3-0) his jab was very powerful, I would certainly call it crisp and exceedingly accurate. He would use his jab to snap his opponent’s head back so fast, that some of them were not even sure what they were hit with. It was almost as if his jab came from some Chinese Kung-Fu discipline. He would keep pecking from under his chin, frustrating his opponents, in turn causing them to make offensive mistakes.
5.) George Foreman (76-5-0) his reaching, pounding jab made for a very scary opponent to face in the ring. Foreman was like a wolf with his jab, using it to stun his opponents if only for a second, at which moment he would move in and grind them into oblivion with his knockout power.
6.) Mike Tyson (50-6-0) yes, I realize the criticism that I will be subjected to for Mike spot on my list. One thing that we can all appreciate and easily notice in Tyson’s jab is how he used it to measure out his opponents and get inside to deliver his hooks. For a very short heavyweight, Tyson’s success is largely due to his use of the jab. When we talk about the jab’s ability to make space, we are talking about Mike Tyson. Without the use of his jab, Tyson’s knockout rate would not even resemble what it looks like today.
7.) Lennox Lewis (41-2-1) knew just what to do with his long, reaching quick jab. For a boxer his size, he used his jab very accurately, respecting what it accomplished. He knew when to throw it for a prophylactic reason, and when to put real force behind it. With Lennox, the problem was turning that jab on, but when he did, it was something to behold.
8.) Muhammad Ali ( 56-5-0) Snap! This is the best word I can use to describe jab. If you combine speed, accuracy and snap, and judge them together as a whole, Ali’s jab gets a 10/10 from me. When talking about speed, there is no question that Ali’s jab was blindingly quick. “In the May 5, 1969 Sports Illustrated, Ali’s jab was measured with an omega scope. Ali’s jab, it was found, could smash a balsa board 16.5 inches away in 19/100 of a second. It actually covered the distance in 4/100 of a second, which is the blink of an eye.”
9.) Wladimir Klitschko (55-3-0) when seeing accurately executed jab connect with someone’s face, I think sledgehammer. Don’t you? Wlad’s jab is not only accurate and quick for his size, but it’s also a knockout punch. To sum it up, I would say Wlad has two power punches, the leading right hand, and his ordinary default jab. When any given opponent is gun-shy, they are doomed before they or anyone watching the fight realize it. Throwing a jab depletes much less stamina, and with Wlad’s extraordinary powerful jab, he can throw power shots all night long.
10.) Larry Holmes (69-6-0) had a jab, and that jab was the best jab in boxing history up to this date. The interesting thing is that many people could argue the rest of the list, moving names up and down, adding new names, but they hardly ever argue the No.1 spot. It was remarkably accurate, unbelievably sharp and surprisingly strong. He never relied on his jab to create an opportunity for a combination. Instead, he had a whole separate respect for his jab, and so do I!
Manny Pacquiao: Five Contenders who want a piece of him, to spoil his 20-Fight winning streak.
Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao recently announced he will continue fighting until he reaches the age of 35.
Pacquiao will be up against Shane Mosley on May 7 and if he wins over the Pomona slugger, he will have registered a 14-fight winning streak since losing to Erik Morales in 2005.
The pound-for-pound king has just celebrated his 32nd birthday last Dec. 17 and it follows he will have at least three more years and at least five more opponents before he calls it a career.
Assuming he fights once more due to an agreed rematch clause in his contract and after reaching his self-appointed retirement age, he will then be clocking a 20-fight winning streak. That assumes, of course, that he wins all his remaining fights.
He are five aspiring contenders who may try to spoil his possible 20-fight winning streak.1. Floyd Mayweather Jr., if he gets past his legal battle with a number of complainants in Nevada courts, he may later in the year or probably next year decide to finally face Manny Pacquiao.
2. Sergio Martinez, who recently demolished Paul Williams via a stoppage on the second round of their most recent fight, is a highly rated contender who could give Manny Pacquiao a difficult fight.
3. Timothy Bradley, although Bradley won over Devon Alexander in their most recent fight, they said Bradley is not yet on the level of Manny Pacquiao and it would take him few more fights before he gets a shot at the pound-for-pound king.
4. Andre Berto has long been groomed to be Pacquiao’s next opponent. The Haitian-American boxer was one whose name was in the short list presented by Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum to the Filipino boxer after the Pacquiao-Margarito fight.
5. Juan Manuel Marquez is not giving up. The dynamite from Mexico was scheduled to fight fellow Mexican Erik Morales but decided to back out for no apparent reason. It was earlier reported, Marquez will pursue his ultimate dream to face Pacquiao for the third time. Marquez, who lost once and drew a fight with Pacquiao claims he won both fights but the judges erred in their decisions.
Source: Bleacher Report by Johnny Walker
The Tuaman earned approximately $12 million from his 2000 loss to heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis. At one point, Tua owned a lavish penthouse apartment in Auckland, as well as other properties. But problematic investments and a protracted legal battle with two ex-managers have left Tua in dire straits.
Tua’s legal bills ballooned to $4.2 million, and to add to his woes, he was also hit by a $2.2 million tax bill from the New Zealand government, which froze the purses from his last three fights.
“Everybody has this picture of David Tua, that he lives a life [of luxury]… but no,” Tua told the Sunday News. “I have sat down and really confirmed and put things into perspective. I have written things [goals] down and now want to make sure I stand by them.”
Uppermost on Tua’s mind is finding security and stability for his family. ”The short-term goal is [hopefully] to put my family into a home,” Tua vowed. ”That is the important goal for this year.”
Perhaps the most talented heavyweight on the current scene who has never won a world title belt, Tua is all too aware that time is not on his side. The Tuaman plans a 5-year effort to win a heavyweight title. “The reality is that I am not going to be a fighter forever,” Tua declares. ”If I get another opportunity of fighting for the title, and hopefully winning it, it would be fantastic.” “But if not, in five years that will be it.”
In the meantime, Tua insists that the loss of material possessions has its upside. “Money doesn’t make you happy. So I don’t miss it… no,” the Tuaman says. “To be honest, I am a lot happier now than I was back in the days.”
Tua sees his struggles philosophically as part of the roadblocks we all face in getting where we want to go. “Sometimes you go through certain journeys in life,” Tua reflects.
“Sometimes they are simple, sometimes you get tested in ways where some people get through to the other side and others don’t.
“I thank God each day that I got through to the other side.”
Kelly Pavlik may return on undercard of Pacquiao & Mosley.
The four-city media tour to promote pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao’s welterweight title defense against Shane Mosley kicks off Feb. 10 in Los Angeles, followed by stops on Feb. 12 in Las Vegas, Feb. 14 in New York and Feb. 15 in Washington, D.C.
But while the tour details are being finalized, Top Rank is also working on the Showtime PPV undercard, which could include a rematch of the 2010 ESPN.com fight of the year, the return of former middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik and a Puerto Rico vs. Mexico rivalry title bout.
Here’s the whole story as reported at ESPN Boxing
-cbnNEWS.comThe 39-year-old American boxer said he want to disprove claims that he’s already past his peak by knocking out Pacquiao on May 7.
“It’s great. A lot of times, people, they see that I might look vulnerable, and that maybe, I look like I’m on my way out,” he said in Boxing Fanhouse.com.
“You know, my response is that some of those guys don’t really know boxing… They don’t understand how I’m going to knock him (Pacquiao) out,” he added.
Mosley plans to go toe-to-toe against the 32-year-old Pacquiao when they meet in Las Vegas, Nevada for the Filipino champ’s World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight crown.
“I’m definitely going to be in shape. You can expect Sugar Shane to be in great shape,” he said.
Mosley (46-6-1) is coming off two disappointing matches in 2010.
Last September, he was held to a controversial draw by Sergio Mora. Months earlier, he lost a unanimous decision to Floyd Mayweather Jr., who was considered as Pacquiao’s closest rival.
On the other hand, Pacquiao (52-3-2) has been undefeated 13 straight times since 2005.
“Manny is a top, tough fighter. He’s very fast and moves very well, punches very well, and he’s very explosive, that will probably be his downfall,” he said.
The American boxer said most of Pacquiao’s opponents went head on against the Filipino champ, and “some point with their hands up.”
“But I think that my speed, and my hitting power and my physical strength are going to be a factor in the fight,” he said.
He cited as an example Pacquiao’s fight against “Tijuana Tornado” Antonio Margarito.
Mosley said the Filipino sustained a lot of bruises because of Margarito’s shots.
“Watching the fight between Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito, I was kind of surprised at how many times Margarito was able to hit Manny Pacquiao… When me and Margarito fought, he didn’t land that many shots on me,” he said.
Mosley said that if he was the one in Margarito’s place, he would have already knocked out the Filipino champion.
“I know that Margarito, being able to land those types of shots, I should be able to land some good shots as well, being that I’m a lot faster,” he said.
Mosley fought Margarito in January 2009, halting the Mexican in the 9th round.
Mosley said that unlike Pacquiao, he didn’t get many bruises from Margarito.
“I didn’t get that many bruises or lumps or anything. That was just very surprising,” he said.
‘An exciting fight’
Nevertheless, Mosley expects an exciting fight from Pacquiao.
“You can expect a great fight. Manny Pacquiao is an explosive and very exciting fighter. Just like me. He loves to fight, and I love to fight,” he said.
“When you have two guys like that in there together, it’s like a head-on collision. It’s going to be one night to remember,” Mosley added.



