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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Haye hopes to revitalize heavyweight division

By DAVE SKRETTA, AP Sport Writer


NEW YORK (AP)—One of heavyweight boxing’s harshest critics could end up being its savior.

His name is David Haye, and although he has virtually no following in the United States—what heavyweight does these days?—he’s well enough known in Europe that 47,000 tickets were sold in the first two days for his June fight against IBF and WBO champion Wladimir Klitschko.

Haye combines the knockout power of a young Joe Frazier with the bravado of a young Muhammad Ali, his mouth usually moving just as fast as his hands. He was the undisputed cruiserweight champion before moving up to heavyweight, where he quickly lined himself up for a shot at the long-reigning champion.

A shot at putting some drama back in a stale division, too.

“It’s up to me to come in and shake it up,” Haye said, spicing up his description of the heavyweights with some choice expletives. “Nobody knows what the hell is going on in this division, ever since Lennox Lewis hung it up.”

That said, about the only thing Lewis and Haye have in common is that they’re Brits.

Lewis, who retired in 2003 after stopping Vitali Klitschko in Los Angeles, chose his words carefully and never got too riled up. He was a model of English etiquette, the noble champion with a big following who left a gaping void in the sport when he walked away in his prime.

The 28-year-old Haye (22-1, 21 KOs) speaks without a censor, sometimes without thinking. In just a matter of weeks he’s gone from relatively unknown challenger to the big reason more than 60,000 are expected at Schalke’s soccer stadium in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, on June 20.

At news conferences from Germany to London to New York’s Times Square, where he met with reporters Thursday, Haye has been wearing T-shirts that depict him standing in the ring with the dismembered heads of Klitschko and his brother, WBC champion Vitali—promotional ploys intended to get under the champion’s thick skin.

“It’s for shock,” Haye said, rocking back in a chair. “Twenty years from now, they’re not going to remember the T-shirt. They’re going to remember how I destroyed Wladimir Klitschko in Germany in front of 60,000 of his fans.”

The needling has evidently been working.

The usually mild-mannered Klitschko (52-3, 46 KOs) has taken offense at the grisly T-shirts. The only time he’s been this upset before a fight, he confided, was back in 2001, when Klitschko knocked out Derrick Jefferson to defend his title the same weekend as his birthday.

“He said my birthday party was going to be a funeral party. That really upset my brother,” Klitschko said, smiling at the memory. “But he paid the price for it.”

Klitschko is smart enough to understand the marketing element to the sport, that it sometimes takes over-the-top publicity stunts to drum up intrigue. It’s one of the reasons the two fighters also planned a trip to the top of the Empire State Building for photo ops.

The pensive champion thinks the big-punching Haye has gone too far, though, and for the first time Klitschko can remember he is predicting a knockout. In the 12th round, so that he can punish the young challenger as long as possible.

“I think David Haye is an immature fighter and person,” Klitschko said. “I’ll make sure David Haye, after the fight, is going to eat his words. Then he’s going to eat his T-shirt with the words on it.”

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