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Golden Boy Signs a Gift for Victor Ortiz…Here’s Paulie!

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    Golden Boy Signs a Gift for Victor Ortiz…Here’s Paulie!

    by Paul Magno



    Today, Golden Boy Promotions announced the signing of Paulie Malignaggi and just about everyone in the internet boxing community let out a collective, “Why??br />
    The Brooklyn native, who will turn 30 in November, is coming off a one-sided loss to Amir Khan and a tepid two-fight series with a bloated, used-up Juan Diaz. Before that, we all saw “The Magic Man?blown away by an aged Ricky Hatton and luckily escape with a win vs. Lovemore N’dou in a lackluster encounter best remembered for Malignaggi’s ill-conceived and distracting dreadlocks.

    Malignaggi has a recognizable name and he can still rock a microphone like no one else in boxing, but as a fighter, Paulie is little more than a name on a resume at this point.

    Malignaggi, himself, half-acknowledged the end of his run as a legit contender by talking about going on the road and competing on the much less demanding Euro-circuit. Realistically, from 140 to 147 lbs., you’d be hard-pressed to find a single top, world class fighter that Paulie, version 2010, could beat.

    So, why would Golden Boy sign a fighter with little upside and some heavy mileage under the hood?

    The answer may lie with Golden Boy’s dogged determination to make Victor Ortiz a star as well as in their simultaneous doubts regarding Ortiz’s mental toughness and grit.

    Back in 2009 when Vivian Harris was signed to Golden Boy, similar questions arose. Harris, while a talented and solid pro in his prime, had certainly seen better days. His punch resistance was virtually non-existent and he had struggled with club-level talent prior to being signed to the promotional deal.

    Despite a No Contest to pedestrian Noe Bolanos and a TKO loss to Lucas Matthysse, Harris was pushed forward and thrown into a bout with Victor Ortiz on the Shane Mosley-Sergio Mora undercard.

    Predictably, Harris would hit the canvas after each legit punch landed by Ortiz?a total of four times in the three-round blow-out.

    The win gave Ortiz a recognizable former world champ on his resume and, perhaps more importantly, it gave Golden Boy insurance against Ortiz having another meltdown, similar to the one he had when he waved off his slug-out with Marcos Maidana in June of 2009.

    Going into Ortiz-Harris, Golden Boy was a guaranteed winner. A nice name on Ortiz’s resume or, in the unlikely event of a Harris win, one more veteran to be fed to their other jr. welterweight star, Amir Khan.

    Prior to Vivian Harris, it was Nate Campbell, another veteran former world champ signed by Golden Boy and ultimately matched with Ortiz. Another win-win for Golden Boy as they gave their guy a respectable name to beat while covering their own backsides against any Ortiz psycho-drama.

    It’s easy to see why Golden Boy is so high on Ortiz. He’s a talented, marketable Mexican-American with an easy smile and likable demeanor. Oscar De le Hoya, especially, has to see the dollar signs in properly promoting someone like Ortiz. Notwithstanding some psychological baggage and lacking the Olympic Gold Medal push, Ortiz is Oscar De la Hoya and, because of this, Golden Boy is doing their best to fit a sometimes square peg into a round hole that has been left unplugged since De la Hoya retired.

    But the training wheels are not off. Golden Boy, like many of us looking in from the outside, still sees something not quite right in the eyes of Victor Ortiz. Even in decisive victory, Ortiz looks more prey than predator at times and it’s possible that the flaws exposed in the Maidana fight still weigh heavily on his psyche.

    Maybe Ortiz grows out of it, maybe not.

    In the meantime, Golden Boy will continue buying name opponents to be fed to their fighter. Minor promotional deals are a small price to pay in return for protecting their investment in Ortiz.

    Malignaggi seems to be the latest name on Golden Boy’s “Operation Victor Ortiz Security Blanket.?br />
    Hopefully, Paulie can get some good paydays out of the deal and then retire gracefully before his gift of gab turns into one long, muttered, run-on sentence.

    #2
    I hope Malinaggi makes Ortiz quit again.

    Comment


      #3
      Victor Ortiz is a fraud and a coward. He simply will not fight legitimate. If he fights Paulie Malignaggi, he is ducking Andreas kotelnik, Kaizer Mabuza, lamont Peterson, Juan Urango, and Paul McCloskey.

      Comment


        #4
        ortiz going to 147?

        Comment


          #5
          all you guys saying ortiz is a fraud and coward and all that ****. manyou guys aint **** period. do nothing but sit on your fat asses and critisize boxers who have the heart to get in the ring and fight. yet you wana call yourselves fans gimmie a break. ortiz was young and just wasnt ready for that type of war and being young he pulled out. you wasnt feeling the shots you dont know how he felt or what was going through his mind. ive been in a fight where first round i was hit and my vision was blurry the rest of the fight. vitor was hurting marcos the whole fight but marcos is a knockout guy and power puncher and is tough and he was hurting victor as well. ortiz was like 24 and who knows if he just never recovered and was getting hrut by everyshot. its no shame u pull out instead of taken the damage and then never ever recovering form a fight like that just like a young fernando vargas.

          so **** what you fake ass fans have to say or think its his career and he has to make decisions. just like vargas is done now and noone gives a **** if ortiz stayed in that fight and slug it out to the end and never been the same after yall still wouldnt give a ****.

          Comment


            #6
            Ortiz would demolish Paulie. I'd love to see that little b*tch get his face pounded by Victor.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by boxer2k5 View Post
              all you guys saying ortiz is a fraud and coward and all that ****. manyou guys aint **** period. do nothing but sit on your fat asses and critisize boxers who have the heart to get in the ring and fight. yet you wana call yourselves fans gimmie a break. ortiz was young and just wasnt ready for that type of war and being young he pulled out. you wasnt feeling the shots you dont know how he felt or what was going through his mind. ive been in a fight where first round i was hit and my vision was blurry the rest of the fight. vitor was hurting marcos the whole fight but marcos is a knockout guy and power puncher and is tough and he was hurting victor as well. ortiz was like 24 and who knows if he just never recovered and was getting hrut by everyshot. its no shame u pull out instead of taken the damage and then never ever recovering form a fight like that just like a young fernando vargas.

              so **** what you fake ass fans have to say or think its his career and he has to make decisions. just like vargas is done now and noone gives a **** if ortiz stayed in that fight and slug it out to the end and never been the same after yall still wouldnt give a ****.
              I think people are pissed when certain fighters get coddled while others who dont have the promotional team get thrown to the wolves and still rise to the occasion..just boxing is becoming less of a sport if every move you make is to build up a name fighter on low risk opposition..

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Crazylegs77 View Post
                I think people are pissed when certain fighters get coddled while others who dont have the promotional team get thrown to the wolves and still rise to the occasion..just boxing is becoming less of a sport if every move you make is to build up a name fighter on low risk opposition..
                its been like that. the problem is people follow and worry about what the big names are doing instead of focus on the whole sport. theres alot of boxing going on lately def in nov.

                but to call ortiz a coward or any box who fights and puts his life on the line but decides hes had enough for the night is a ****ing loser. only coward boxers are ones who throw fights. or dont even try. victor isnt in controll of his career hes a figther and will be brought up the way they feel. arum did it with oscar he did it with manny and othersoscar doing it with his fighters. yall want ever good prospect and future to be finished early like vargas? thats what happen when your thrown and not ready. this is a hard sport and if you want to make it and make it far and long you have to be smart and worry about yourself.

                you will never please the fans unless your a wolf in sheeps clothing

                Comment


                  #9
                  I still don't see Paulie as being that bad... surely beating Diaz twice is decent enough? And surely losing to the likes of Hatton and Khan isn't that bad? Khan is, after all, a very talented boxer with only one serious weakness... a weakness that Paulie, of all people, wasn't able to exploit.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by boxer2k5 View Post
                    its been like that. the problem is people follow and worry about what the big names are doing instead of focus on the whole sport. theres alot of boxing going on lately def in nov.

                    but to call ortiz a coward or any box who fights and puts his life on the line but decides hes had enough for the night is a ****ing loser. only coward boxers are ones who throw fights. or dont even try. victor isnt in controll of his career hes a figther and will be brought up the way they feel. arum did it with oscar he did it with manny and othersoscar doing it with his fighters. yall want ever good prospect and future to be finished early like vargas? thats what happen when your thrown and not ready. this is a hard sport and if you want to make it and make it far and long you have to be smart and worry about yourself.

                    you will never please the fans unless your a wolf in sheeps clothing


                    I say that all the time to people on here. Calling Pro's "quitters" n shlt like that. You guys aint in that position in the ring amongst thousands of viewers and taking shots from the hardest puncher in the division. Yeah, the boxers know the risks but at the same time its best not to be ****in dead in the ring or mentally handicap for some fickle fans. Who was gonna feed Ortiz's family financially if he kept on for the 12 rounds fighting the wrong fight against Maidana and end up with brain trauma. Not you guys

                    Comment

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