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Monday, July 20, 2009

BOXING HISTORY MADE!


July 20th, 2009 will go down as one of the most historic days in boxing, as more than thirty of the United States top promoters met at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City to discuss the current state of boxing and the need to establish a unified boxing promoters association. After an all day meeting the promoters unanimously formed a trade association. The organizational structure and name will be released after the next meeting in September.



DECLARATION OF BOXING PROMOTERS ASSOCIATION

Those in attendance included:

Alfredo Marchio
Aaron Jacobs
Banner Promotions
Classic Entertainment and Sports
DiBella Entertainment
Don Chargin Productions
Don King Productions
Fight Factory
Gary Shaw Productions
Golden Boy Promotions
Goosen-Tutor Promotions
Gotham Boxing
Hirsch-Borao Promotions
Hitz Boxing
Kea Boxing Promotions
Let's Get It On Promotions
Main Events
Maryland Boxing Club
Mike Acri Promotions
One Punch Productions
Peltz Boxing
Ring Promotions
Roy Englebrect Events
Seminole Warriors Boxing

Gatti remembered as a fighter with a big heart


By AMY LUFT, Associated Press Writer

MONTREAL (AP)—
Arturo Gatti was remembered as a big-hearted, star fighter at his funeral Monday, drawing a standing ovation from mourners when his mother received a championship belt from the World Boxing Council.

More than 1,000 mourners packed Notre Dame de la Defense church in the heart of Montreal’s Italian community to pay respects to the 37-year-old boxer who was found dead July 11 at a Brazilian resort.

“He had the same personality when he was boxing the ring, and in his life he gave it his all,” said Canadian boxing promoter and former national boxing coach Yvon Michel, who has known Gatti for 30 years.

Gatti’s wife, Amanda Rodrigues, is being held as the prime suspect. She has been accused, but not charged, of strangling her husband with a purse strap as he slept.

A coroner’s report last weekend in Brazil indicates Gatti died of asphyxiation after his body was “suspended and hanged,” opening the possibility he may have committed suicide, authorities said.

“Nobody believes whatsoever that there’s even a one percent chance of a suicide. He lived life to the fullest,” said Ivano Scarpa, a close family friend who spoke during the funeral service.

Gatti lived in Montreal with his wife and family. Scarpa said family and friends are suspicious of Rodrigues, adding the couple had a tumultuous relationship.

Gatti retired in 2007 with a 40-9 record and two world titles in his 16-year professional career.

“We never knew he would be such a great fighter. I was always happy to see his success, to see him walk in the gym a boy and become a great man,” said a letter from former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson. The letter was sent to Gatti’s family and read by family friend Mario Costa.

When his mother, Ida Gatti, received the posthumous championship belt in the fighter’s honor, mourners stood and applauded.

“I don’t think we’ll see another fighter like this,” boxing trainer Howard Grant said. “You have to go back to the old days and guys like Rocky Graziano or Jake La Motta.”

Pacquiao-Cotto showdown set for November in Vegas

LAS VEGAS (AFP) - Filipino superstar Manny Pacquiao and three-time world champion Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico will meet in Las Vegas on November 14, promoter Bob Arum announced on Monday.

Pacquiao, considered the pound-for-pound world champion after flattening England's Ricky Hatton in the second round in May, will meet Cotto after failed overtures from US veterans Shane Mosley and Floyd Mayweather Jnr.

"Manny Pacquiao and Miguel Cotto have reached an agreement to fight at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on November 14," said Arum, the promoter for both fighters.

Cotto agreed to contesting the fight at a weight limit of 145 pounds, two pounds below the welterweight maximum.

Pacquiao, 49-3 with two drawn and 37 knockouts, has won world titles in a record-tying six weight classes from 112 to 140 pounds.

Last year, the flashy Filipino defeated Juan Manuel Marquez, David Diaz and Oscar de la Hoya. Pacquiao then continued his win streak to 10 fights by stopping Hatton in the second round.

Cotto, 34-1 with 27 knockouts, has defeated a host of top fighters including Mosley, Zab Judah and Joshua Clottey. Cotto's only loss came last year to Mexico's Antonio Margarito.

The announcement comes as a disappointment for World Boxing Association welterweight champion Mosley, 46-5 with 39 knockouts.

Mosley said he was willing to take only 40 percent of the purse and would agree to fight at the light-welterweight limit in order to strike a deal with Pacquiao.

Mayweather, 39-0 with 25 knockouts, will make his return from a 21-month layoff in September when he fights Mexico's Marquez. The fight was delayed from last weekend after Mayweather suffered a rib injury.

A Mayweather-Pacquiao showdown is the mega-fight most boxing fans would want to see, matching the past and current pound-for-pound ring kings, but now both men must overcome a difficult opponent simply to set the stage for such a bout.

Mayweather said last week it was unlikely he would fight Pacquiao because both camps were insistent on the lion's share of a 60-40 fight purse split. Mayweather also has bitter feelings toward Arum, his former promoter.

Gatti’s wife remains in jail, police backtracking

By BRADLEY BROOKS, Associated Press Writer

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)—
Arturo Gatti’s wife will remain in jail pending a judicial decision despite the release of an autopsy report casting doubt on whether the former champion boxer was killed.

Police, meanwhile, are backing off strong statements that Gatti’s wife was unquestionably responsible for his death. Earlier they said she undoubtedly strangled him with her purse strap as he drunkenly slept.

The lawyer for Amanda Rodrigues—whom police have said is the only suspect in the fighter’s July 11 death—petitioned for her release through two legal channels.

Pernambuco state judge Fausto Campos on Monday denied the request that she be released because she was cooperating with police. He ruled, though, that her writ of habeas corpus must be examined by a three-judge panel, leaving open the possibility she will be freed. The panel meets each Tuesday, but the court did not say when Rodrigues’ request would be heard.

The judge’s decision came on the same day about 1,000 people turned out for Gatti’s funeral in his adopted hometown of Montreal.

Gatti was found dead in the apartment he was renting with Rodrigues in the seaside resort of Porto de Galinhas in Brazil’s northeast. The pair, who had a tumultuous marriage, had arrived there a few days before Gatti’s death for a second honeymoon. The couple brought their 10-month-old son, who was unhurt and is in the care of Rodrigues’ family in Brazil.

On Saturday, authorities released an initial autopsy report that said Gatti could have died in an unexplained accident, been murdered, or committed suicide. The report indicated Gatti died of asphyxiation after his body was “suspended and hanged.”

Police said from the beginning they think Rodrigues strangled Gatti as he slept—and they have said they think the crime scene was altered before Rodrigues reported Gatti’s death. Her attorney, however, said the fact Gatti’s body was found suspended proved his client’s innocence.

“The report was telling the truth,” Rodrigues’ attorney, Celio Avelino, told The Associated Press. “The report said he was hanged. She could never suspend and hang a man that size.”

But a Gatti family friend rejected out of hand the chance the fighter committed suicide.

“Nobody believes whatsoever that there’s even a one percent chance of a suicide. He lived life to the fullest,” said Ivano Scarpa, a close family friend who spoke during the funeral service in Canada.

Rodrigues, in a handwritten note given to the AP last week, proclaimed her innocence and said it would be proved within days.

Police inspector Paulo Alberes said he could no longer comment on the case until the investigation was complete—an abrupt reversal from many detailed statements investigators have given about Gatti’s death.

“I cannot confirm that she is a suspect,” Alberes said. “I can tell you that she is still imprisoned as of right now. That is it.”

The investigator said police hope to have their final report prepared by next week. The initial investigation report was legally required to be handed over to prosecutors by Wednesday, but police received an extension on that deadline.

Associated Press Writer Tales Azzoni in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.

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