Adrien Broner's sometimes-mentor, Floyd Mayweather, likes to say
that there are levels in boxing. To Mayweather, it doesn't matter how much
heart or determination a fighter has; what's paramount is the innate collection
of skills and talent that a boxer possesses. In his view, the more talented
fighter, which of course would be him in any hypothetical construct, should
always win.
Mayweather's "levels" philosophy has been parroted
throughout boxing over the previous few years by many of his sycophants and
others who should know better. In truth, fighters with inferior talent win
bouts all the time. Boxing presents dozens of examples every year where, to
invert a hackneyed phrase from the sport, skills don't necessarily pay the
bills. It should also be mentioned that the two opponents who gave Mayweather
his most difficult fights, Jose Luis Castillo and Marcos Maidana, had innate
talent levels significantly beneath Mayweather's.
Nevertheless, the "levels" construct still persists in
boxing. It's not that Floyd's necessarily wrong in his beliefs and philosophies
but upsets happen all of the time in boxing. Talented fighters fail to reach
their potential. A top guy can struggle with a certain type of style.
Ultimately, the variation of boxing styles is one of the sport's draws. There
are ways to beat an expert boxer, a knockout artist or a supreme athlete.
Talent is and will continue to be crucially important but strategy,
preparation, execution and personal intangibles will always play a role in
determining who wins a given contest.
As for Adrien Broner, the essential disconnect with his career is
that many expected him to be fighting on the elite level, where rare breeds
like Mayweather reside. From a certain perspective, Broner can look at his
career to this point as a success. Winning titles in four divisions by the age
of 27 isn't an easy feat. However, there certainly is a "yes, but" to many of
Broner's accomplishments. Many of his title fights, especially above
lightweight, were cherry-picked encounters against lesser opponents. He's blown
weight a number of times and has lost two titles on the scales. At 140 and
above, Broner has never been regarded as the best in his division despite
securing championship belts.
Since leaving lightweight in 2013, Broner has amassed a record of
7-2. He lost to Maidana, who dropped him twice at welterweight, and Shawn
Porter, who thoroughly outworked him, despite a Broner-mandated catchweight of
144 (this was in hopes of draining Porter, who had spent most of his professional career
fighting at welterweight and above). Broner also eked out decision wins against
Paulie Malignaggi (for a title) and Adrian Granados on Saturday. With different
judges, it's certainly possible that Broner could be 5-4 in this run – that’s
no one's definition of an elite fighter.
Granados has a hard luck record of 18-5-2. All of his losses have
been either split or majority decisions against him. He certainly beat Kermit
Cintron in 2013 yet could only muster a draw on the scorecards. He knocked out
rising prospect Amir Imam in 2015. He recorded majority decision losses to
Frankie Gomez, who was one of the top prospects in boxing when they fought in
2011, and to Felix Diaz, a talented Olympian who beat Sammy Vasquez and many
felt bested Lamont Peterson. Granados has victories over five undefeated
fighters (an impressive number – Broner has only beaten two) and conceivably could've gotten notches over a few more. In short, Granados has been matched
tough and he's been competitive in all of his bouts.
What I'm getting at is that Broner and Granados, in fact,
fight at similar levels at 140 and above. Broner has been competitive but not
dominant against titleholders at these weight classes and Granados has exhibited the
same type of form. Thus, it wasn't shocking that Saturday's fight was as close
as could be. The final scores were 97-93, 96-94 (Broner) and 97-93 (Granados)
but even the split decision doesn't do the competitive nature of the fight
justice. Maybe seven or eight rounds of the bout were swing rounds where either
fighter had a legitimate case of winning.
The bout ultimately came down to Granados' aggression and punch
volume vs. Broner's accuracy and clean counters. I scored it a draw. It seemed that social media was fairly evenly split on the
fight's winner.
There are some who ripped Broner after the match for going
life-and-death against a fighter who had a number of blemishes on his
professional record. However, that contention diminishes both fighters.
Granados is one of those guys, like Orlando Salido, who is far better than his
record suggests. He almost always has been the B-side in major fights and has
been brought in to lose. We know how boxing works. The B-side is far less
likely to receive the benefit of the doubt in close bouts. Granados is a solid
B+ fighter. On the right night, he could give most top junior welterweights and
welterweights a run for their money, and maybe even beat them. And it's
certainly possible that he won on Saturday.
As for those who continue to disparage Broner, he fought as well
as he could on Saturday. He didn't dog it in the ring and he dug down to pull
out the last few rounds of the fight. Even when bested by Porter, he still got
a final-round knockdown. When Maidana beat him pillar-to-post early in their
fight, he staged a mid-round rally. He fights; he doesn't quit. Ultimately,
Broner's fiercest critics have failed to recalibrate his true talent level.
Similar to Granados, he's a B+ fighter above 140. He doesn’t have the power to
hurt top fighters and his punch volume remains paltry. He's susceptible to
anyone with a decent work rate and self-belief. That's his level.
So if Broner's only an entertaining B+ fighter, what's the crime?
The sport needs big personalities and fighters who bring in viewers. Does
Broner have too high an opinion of himself and his talents? Probably, but
that's certainly not a unique trait among professional athletes. People tune in
to his fights. Maybe they like his flamboyant antics. Others really want to see
him lose. Pure boxing fans love to watch his clean counters. It's not as if
Broner isn't a real fighter in the ring. He just hasn't reached the lofty
perch that many expected for him half-a-decade ago.
Ultimately, many talented fighters don't reach their potential. And although Broner hasn't lived up to expectations, he certainly has provided
many entertaining fight nights. Yes, his out-of-the-ring lifestyle has
contributed to his professional shortcomings, but again, that's not exactly a
unique position in or out of boxing. Broner continues to compete and entertain
and as long as he remains in this position (and is matched carefully), he'll be
an asset to the sport.
The problem that Broner and his team face at welterweight is that
there are very few easy fights for him. With his low-volume punch output and
defensive lapses, he's a threat to lose to any top-15 guy in the division, and
Broner's only relevant if he continues to win more often than not. There are
some good fights out there for him at his level, such as Amir Khan, Andre Berto
and Lamont Peterson, but he could lose at any time. Still only 27, Broner's
going to need Al Haymon to do his best work to stay relevant into his
30s.
Finally, after the fight, I had a little spat with Mark Kriegel, a
sportswriter who contributed taped interviews with Broner and Granados to the
Showtime broadcast. Kriegel tweeted out after the bout that Granados essentially lost the
fight at the negotiating table. The match was originally scheduled
for 142 lbs. but Broner insisted on moving the fight up five pounds to 147.
Granados also wanted a 12-round fight but Broner and his team demanded it be
for 10.
What's so rich about Kriegel's tweet is that he knows that
Granados had no leverage. Granados has been a B-side opponent fighting for
scraps his whole career. Was he suddenly going to walk away from a career-high
payday of $250,000 so he could fight in six months for $30,000 at a club show
in Chicago? Was Granados an Al Haymon favorite? Did he bring the TV date?
Essentially, Granados had no bargaining power. The deal was 10 rounds and 147
lbs., take it or leave it. Granados did what 99% of boxers would've done in his
position – he accepted the fight, even if conditions were less than
ideal.
Kriegel's been around boxing long enough to know that Granados had
no good choices. To pretend that Granados and/or his team somehow failed
because they negotiated poorly is a startling misrepresentation of the
realities of the sport. Granados’ situation leading up to the fight provides
another example of the “Plight of the B-Side.”
Furthermore, Kriegel's position is incomplete. One main reason
why Granados lost is because judge Steve Weisfeld scored it 97-93 for Broner.
Now, I can assure you that Weisfeld is one of the best officials in the sport.
I'm not saying that I agreed with his card on Saturday, but he's been one of
the most consistent and accurate judges in professional boxing over the last 20
years. He's not a "Haymon judge" or a guy happy to be earning a few
extra bucks and getting a room. He's a pro. Somehow he found seven rounds to
give to Broner. He’s not on the take; he just saw a particular fight one way.
Perhaps a judge like Dave Moretti, who favors aggression more, would see the
fight differently.
Granados lost because of the “Plight of the B-side” AND the
mechanics of the sport. Yes, he faced a screwjob in negotiations leading up to
the fight but also, a fair, out-of-state judge preferred Broner's cleaner work.
That's boxing. Saturday's result wasn't a robbery. Legitimately,
both fighters had a case to be the victor. Unfortunately, the loss was
a(nother) case of bad luck for Granados.
Hopefully U.S. networks won't abandon Granados because he has
talent and makes for good TV. And at worst, he fought one of boxing's Golden Geese on
essentially even terms in a headlining fight. Less than two years ago, he was still appearing in six-rounders. So, Saturday was a disappointing loss, but
now he's on the map. That's progress.
Adam Abramowitz is the head writer and founder of saturdaynightboxing.com.
Adam Abramowitz is the head writer and founder of saturdaynightboxing.com.
He is also a member of the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board.
@snboxing on twitter
SN Boxing on Facebook
SN Boxing on Facebook
Contact Adam at:
saturdaynightboxing@hotmail.com
saturdaynightboxing@hotmail.com
Spot on. Love the point about Granados really having no choice but to accept the changes Broner wanted leading up to the fight. I also agree, Broner is a fighter, but he will need to be matched very carefully because I don't see any favorable matchups at 147 or even 140.
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