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Campbell: Ryan Garcia Should Have Fought Haney, He Would Beat Him

April 23, 2021 by admin

2012 Olympic gold medal winner Luke Campbell is looking to rebuild his career after suffering a stoppage loss back in January at the hands of rising lightweight star Ryan Garcia.

In a battle for the WBC’s interim-title, Campbell (20-4, 16 KOs) drew first blood when he dropped Garcia hard in the second round.

Garcia recovered and then rallied to score a body shot knockout in the seventh, when he dropped Campbell for the full count with a hard hook.

Campbell, 33-year-old, is now regrouping and looking to the future.

“We have to stay focused and positive, we are constantly fighting against negativity. Mentally boxers go through a lot,” Campbell told Sky Sports.

The victory earned Garcia a mandatory crack at full WBC world champion Devin Haney.

But Garcia will first face dangerous veteran and former champion Javier Fortuna on July 9.

Campbell believes Garcia should went directly to a fight with Haney.

“I’m not sure why he went for that fight [with Fortuna] when he could have gone straight for the world title. He would beat Haney. Haney would try to make it a boring fight but Garcia would beat him,” Campbell said.

The loss to Garcia was the first loss for Campbell inside the distance.

Campbell is not discouraged. He still wants to face the best boxers possible and vows to fight his way to another world title fight.

“The same goal is still there but the path has changed,” Campbell said.

“I still want to fight the best – I’ve already fought two three-weight world champions and a potential pound-for-pound top fighter. I never shy away from the best fighters like a lot of other people do.”

Coronavirus: Japan declares virus emergency in Tokyo as Olympics near

April 23, 2021 by admin

The government says a “short and powerful” state of emergency will come into force in several areas.

Chris Eubank Jr credits Roy Jones Jr for his improved style

April 23, 2021 by admin

With Chris Eubank Jr set to make his boxing return on May 1st against Marcus Morrison, Eubank talks to Sky Sports about how he’s improved under the guidance of the legendary Roy Jones Jr, who he believes will help extend his professional fighting career due to better tactics and strategies. Eubank Jr specifically makes reference to mental approach to the game and says he had previously lost sight of some of boxing’s nuances as he was more focused on simply inflicting damage on his opponents.

“Some of those things I had lost focus on. I put that down to moving up to super-middleweight – knowing I was against guys who were naturally bigger, I got it into my head that I had to hurt them early so they didn’t bully me. I lost sight of the boxing. At middleweight nobody will bully me, nobody is bigger than me, so I can focus on the art and craft rather than the war aspect. I will still go to war – when there is an opportunity, these guys will get taken out! But there are new aspects to my game.”

Of course Eubank’s upcoming opponent isn’t exactly the caliber we’d probably like to see coming from someone who considers himself an elite middleweight, but after being out of action for well over a year I suppose it’s fair to get a chance to shake some of the ring rust off.

Eubank estimates that he has at least four to five solid years left in boxing and says fans can expect to see his developments once the first bell ring.

The Unfrozen BWF WORLD RANKING

April 23, 2021 by admin

According to announcement that published on 21 December 2020, the World Ranking will be re-opened on 2 February 2021 after the conclusion of Asian Leg in Bangkok => https://corporate.bwfbadminton.com/news-single/2020/12/21/tournament-calendar-2021/

Re-Opening BWF World Rankings

The BWF World Rankings will reopen following the HSBC BWF World Tour Finals 2020 being hosted in Week 4 2021. The calculation of the next BWF World Rankings list will be announced on Tuesday 2 February 2021, based on the following principles:

  • Tournaments already included in the BWF World Rankings list as of 17 March 2020 will remain.
  • Tournaments counting for the BWF World Rankings hosted after 17 March 2020 will be added to the BWF World Rankings list being calculated for 2 February 2021.
  • Tournaments sanctioned as world ranking tournaments going forward after 2 February 2021 will be added weekly.
  • No tournaments already included in the BWF World Rankings from 17 March 2020 will be dropped off the rankings until a date to be announced.
  • The BWF World Rankings will be in a transition period and will consist of tournaments from more than 52 weeks. The exact drop-off methodology to reestablish a 52-week World Rankings list is still to be determined and will be announced in due course, but with advance notification.

The BWF World Rankings from 2 February 2021 will thereafter be used for M&Q and seeding.

Here’s WR latest update after quite long time freezed by BWF since 17th March 2020.
https://www.tournamentsoftware.com/ranking/ranking.aspx?rid=70

*Kento Momota stays on top with huge margin distancing him from the #2 Viktor Axelsen. Wang Tzu Wei moves up 4 rungs to #9.

upload_2021-2-2_13-54-9.png

*Top-two WS remain the same, Carolina Marin jumps into #3.

upload_2021-2-2_13-54-36.png

*Lee/Wang reach highest ever ranking, thanks to THA hat-trick.

upload_2021-2-2_13-56-11.png

upload_2021-2-2_13-56-29.png

 

2008 Olympic Champion Giulia Quintavalle back to her roots

April 23, 2021 by admin

In 2008 Giulia Quintavalle took the Olympic title in Beijing. Again an Italian surprise. She will take us back to the historical days and tells us how she moved on in her live. Recently she was elected into the National council of CONI, The Italian Olympic Committee. Nicola Calzaretta takes us back.

At what age did you start dreaming?

“When I was five I started practicing judo with my twin Michel, in the footsteps of our older brother Manuel. I was terrible as a child, it was my mother who enrolled us at the Kodokan, the gymnasium of maestro Renato Cantini, in Cecina. From Rosignano, where we lived, it is ten minutes by car”.

Did you play other sports too?

“Yes, but I never gave up judo and it took me completely. At 16 I was in the national team. At 19 I entered the Fiamme Gialle and moved to Ostia.”

How much did the separation from your family weigh on you? Who helped you in your growth path?

“In addition to maestro Cantini, I owe a lot to Giorgio Vismara and his wife Jenny Gal, two former athletes who treated me like a daughter. They have been fundamental for my growth. Jenny used to take me to the gym in Slovenia. With them I got my car license and I made the real leap in quality from a sporting point of view.”

What were your strengths?

“The technique. The balance. The height. And then the sensitivity: I “feel” the opponent a lot. I read his body, his movements and these have always helped me in choosing the move to do.”

The defects instead?

“Sometimes I ‘fell asleep’, I lost my lucidity. I could do a lot, but I was also able to destroy a lot at the same time.”

The prestigious results arrived immediately.

“In 2004 and 2005 I was Italian champion. In 2007 fifth at the World Championships in Rio de Janeiro and fifth again at the European Championships in Lisbon in 2008, before Beijing. The good international performances have allowed me to have the pass for the Olympics in which the top 14 of the world ranking participate. And anyway, only one per nation is admitted to the Games. And I left for China with the utmost determination.”

Can you tell us the exciting journey to gold in Beijing?

“For the first race, the draw had given me the outgoing German Olympic champion Boenisch. But I was not scared, quite the contrary. I loaded myself further. I was aware of my strength. Before getting on the tatami I said “today I’ll kill everyone”. I knew I was strong, I was fine. I won. In the next round I overtook the Erdenet-Od Khishigbat, third in the 2005 World Championships, then the French Barbara Harel.”

And we are in the semifinal.

“The opponent is Maria Pekli, bronze medal in Sydney 2000. It was tough. I was afraid of a problem in my right arm. The race was interrupted for a while. But he certainly couldn’t stop an elbow. I went back to the mat and I won!”

11 August 2008. The final against the Dutch Gravenstijn, bronze medal in Athens 2004. A complicated opponent.

“Before the race the only thought was for gold. I had to and wanted to win. I was afraid of the Dutch, even if I had beaten her at the World Cup. But I was looking at me. To my desire to win. And I drove the race well.”

A few seconds before the end, during a pause in the fight, you made the sign of the cross.

“I believe in God, maybe I’m not a model practitioner, I turned to him. And then at that moment I also addressed a thought to my grandfather Giovanni, who flew to heaven in 2003 and to whom I was very attached.”

The race is over. You are Olympic champion.

“A magnificent, indescribable sensation. I made the gesture of the three fingers spinning near the ear, I ran towards the coach and the teammates. On the podium, during the national anthem, I danced. At the age of 25, gold at the first Olympic participation and for the first time in history. Reality has surpassed even the dream.”

What gave you that success and what it took from you.

“Gold matters. It gave visibility to me and to Judo. It allowed me to be the standard-bearer at the Baku European Championships in 2015. But it also took away a lot of serenity from me. At first I felt suffocated. I was not happy, on the psychological level it weighed me down. It took me some time to get back to my standards.”

What bothered you the most?

“The lack of attention that in general there is for minor sports. Only when there are events like this do the flashes and cameras arrive. All together, but for a short time. Then, the shadow returns. But it is also true that, over time, the positive aspects of that success emerge.”

After Beijing there was the great achievement of the team gold at the European Championships in 2010. “An important success, also in this case for the first time in the history of Italian women’s judo. For me, other prestigious results have also arrived, so much so that I have once again qualified for the 2012 London Olympics.”

Where, however, you arrive fifth.

“The” curse “of my surname (laughs). That “condemnation” that led me to Beijing to scream like that after the gold, now call me “Primavalle!””

What happened after London?

“I have thought about retirement. In September I was going to get married, I was about to become a mother. I no longer felt like it. But there was the goal of the Olympics in Brazil that pulled me. I tried, but a lot had changed around me. In Judo you don’t have a coach for you, he belongs to the team. I have not found that complicity of previous years. No Rio. I struggled to accept, but I didn’t give up. I held up until I was 33, then I said enough>.

What plans did you have for your post career?

“Remain in the environment as a coach. I believe that the contribution of experience and competence that former athletes can give is fundamental for each discipline. But there was no possibility.”

In 2017 you were elected to the Coni National Council.

“And for this I thank Giovanni Malagò who wanted me to apply. The president has always focused on former athletes.”

And now you have another four years of commitment.

“I am very happy with the re-election. I like being able to contribute to the growth of sport in this capacity. It is a stimulating and formative experience »

Also in 2017 you returned to your hometown.

“I left Rome and now I live in Rosignano. I am a mother twice. I no longer belong to the sports group, I am a “financier” in all respects and I dedicate myself to the boys in the Cecina gym with my old teacher Renato Cantini and with my husband Orazio D’Allura, also a former judo champion with the Fiamme Gialle, in addition to Andrea Falso, who grew up with me and also a former Fiamme Gialle and his partner Mara Laici former National team who collaborate with us.”

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