Who is the pound-for-pound ruler: April 2017 Edition

Who is the pound-for-pound ruler: April 2017 Edition

By: Kirk Jackson

Ever since September of 2015, there is a void in the landscape of boxing, as the reigning pay-per-view king and perennial pound-for-pound ruler Floyd Mayweather retired after defeating Andre Berto.

Forget numbers and pay-per-view buys, followers of boxing really want to know is who the best fighter ispound-for-pound?

Who is the pound-for-pound ruler: April 2017 Edition

Since Mayweather’s departure towards the end of 2015,Roman Gonzalez 46-1 (38 KO’s), who at the time was relatively unknown by many boxing observers, ascended towards the top of many pound-for-pound lists.

ESPN, Ring magazine and most notably, the HBO commentary teamjoyfully touted the exploits of the four division world champion from Nicaragua affectionately known as “Chocolatito.” And not without good reason.

Gonzalez is an impressive fighter, boasting extraordinary stamina and an offensive arsenal that would make even the high powered Golden State Warriors envious.

In spite of Gonzalez’s greatness and dominance of the lower weight divisions, his standing as pound-for-pound king was not on steady footing.

Other fighters could be argued as no.1 pound-for-pound.

Fighters such as Andre Ward, Gennady Golovkin, Sergey Kovalev, Terence Crawford, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Keith Thurman, along with a few others.

With Gonzalez recently tasting defeat in stunning and controversial fashion, the pound-for-pound ranking reflects the change and displays a new king on the mythical list.

Who steps up to fill the no.1 position?

First thing to establish is the criterion used to judge the qualities of a pound-for-pound fighter

If we are to abide by the “Bible of Boxing” fromRingmagazine,the metrics for analyzing the pound-for-pound list is as follows:

RATINGS POLICY

1. Results. This is the most objective criterion and takes precedence over all others.

2. Performance. How a fighter performs in a victory or defeat can be a factor to determine his place in the ratings.

3. Track record: A fighter’s accomplishments in the recent past can be a factor to determine his place in the ratings. That includes quality of opposition.

All bases are covered with this set of criteria. These are great bench marks to test the merit of fighters and to grade the selected few who make up the pound-for-pound list. The criteria can be subjective, just like with scoring a fight.

Scoring the fight ties in with performance. It is important to note the criterion for scoring a round, tallying up points round by round and ultimately scoring a fight.

Effective Aggression: Assuming the role of aggressor may leave an impression of dominance, but the aggressor must actually land punches and avoid counter-punches in return, in order to be effective.Chasing the opponent and throwing punches does not necessarily suggest fighter is effective with their aggression. Cutting off the ring is a sign of effective aggression.

Ring Generalship: The fighter who controls the pace of the fight; the fighter enforces his/her will and is the conductor of the action. Setting the range, establishing the distance in which the fight takes place, which can include clinching/in-fighting or lateral movement and cutting off the ring.

Defense: How well a boxer is blocking, parrying and slipping punches. Clinching/tying up the opponent, moving around the ring, moving from side to side, presenting different angles is considered defense.

It’s not running; there is nothing stated within the rules of boxing that suggests a boxer must only

step forward throwing punches. It’s important to keep in mind good defense is just as important as offense.

Clean/Effective Punches: To the untrained eye, it can appear as if a boxer is landing a lot of punches, when in fact, most are either blocked, not landing flush or grazing punches. A judge or observer needs to look for hard punches that land clean. Hard punches can definitely constitute as effective, but a boxer should not be penalized if he/she is not a powerful puncher.Again, it’s about clean, landed punches. Clean punches score points.

Now that we have a barometer on how to score rounds, fights, and a general consensus for how to analyze and format pound-for-pound lists, let us proceed with the pound-for-pound selection.

The pound-for-pound results post-Gonzalez loss:

My Rankings:

1: Andre Ward 31-0-0 (15 KO’s). Undisputed WBA, IBF and WBO light heavyweight champion.

2: Terence Crawford 30-0-0 (21 KO’s). WBC, WBO, The Ring and lineal junior welterweight champion.

3: Guillermo Rigondeaux 17–0 (11 KO’s). Super WBA and lineal super bantamweight champion.

4: Sergey Kovalev 30-1-1 (26 KO’s).

5: Manny Pacquiao 59-6-2 (38 KO’s).WBO and lineal welterweight champion.

6: Roman Gonzalez 46-1-0 (38 KO’s).

7: Keith Thurman 28–0–0–1 (22 KO’s). WBA and WBC unified welterweight champion.

8: Vasyl Lomachenko 7-1-0 (5 KO’s). WBO Super featherweight champion.

9: Mikey Garcia 36-0 (30 KO’s). WBC Lightweight champion.

10: Gennady Golovkin 36-0-0 (33 KO’s). Super WBA, WBC and IBF middleweight champion.

ESPN Rankings:

Note: Results are through March 23

1. GENNADY GOLOVKIN

RECORD: 37-0, 33 KOs

DIVISION: Middleweight (unified champion)

LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Daniel Jacobs, March 18

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

2. ANDRE WARD

RECORD: 31-0, 15 KOs

DIVISION: Light heavyweight (unified titleholder)

LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Sergey Kovalev, Nov. 19, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

3. VASYL LOMACHENKO

RECORD: 7-1, 5 KOs

DIVISION: Junior lightweight (titlist)

LAST FIGHT: W (TKO7) Nicholas Walters, Nov. 26, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: Jason Sosa, April 8

4. SERGEY KOVALEV

RECORD: 30-1-1, 26 KOs

DIVISION: Light heavyweight

LAST FIGHT: L (UD12) Andre Ward, Nov. 19, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

5. ROMAN GONZALEZ

RECORD: 46-1, 38 KOs

DIVISION: Junior bantamweight

LAST FIGHT: L (MD12) SrisaketSorRungvisai, March 18

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

6. TERENCE CRAWFORD

RECORD: 29-0, 20 KOs

DIVISION: Junior welterweight (unified champion)

LAST FIGHT: W (TKO8) John Molina Jr., Dec. 10, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: Felix Diaz, May 20

7. CANELO ALVAREZ

RECORD: 48-1-1, 34 KOs

DIVISION: Junior middleweight (titlist)

LAST FIGHT: W (KO9) Liam Smith, Sept. 17, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., May 6

8. MANNY PACQUIAO

RECORD: 59-6-2, 38 KOs

DIVISION: Welterweight (titlist)

LAST FIGHT: W (UD12) Jessie Vargas, Nov. 5, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

9. KEITH THURMAN

RECORD: 28-0, 22 KOs

DIVISION: Welterweight (unified titlist)

LAST FIGHT: W (SD12) Danny Garcia, March 4

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

10. GUILLERMO RIGONDEAUX

RECORD: 17-0, 11 KOs

DIVISION: Junior featherweight (titlist)

LAST FIGHT: W (TKO2) James Dickens, July 16, 2016

NEXT FIGHT: TBA

Ring Magazine Rankings:

Rank Fighter Record Weight Class Title(s)

1 United States:

Andre Ward 31–0 (15 KO) Light heavyweight Undisputed WBA, IBF and WBO light heavyweight champion

2 Russia:

Sergey Kovalev 30–1–1 (26 KO) Light heavyweight WBC Diamond Champion, WBO Super Champion

3 Kazakhstan:

Gennady Golovkin 37–0 (33 KO) Middleweight Super WBA, WBC, IBF and IBO middleweight champion

4 Nicaragua:

Román González 46–1 (38 KO) Super Flyweight N/A

5 United States:

Terence Crawford 30–0 (21 KO) Junior welterweight WBC, WBO, The Ring and lineal junior welterweight champion

6 Ukraine:

Vasyl Lomachenko 7–1 (5 KO) Super featherweight WBO Super featherweight champion

7 Cuba:

Guillermo Rigondeaux 17–0 (11 KO) Junior featherweight Super WBA and lineal super bantamweight champion

8 Mexico:

SaúlÁlvarez 48–1–1 (34 KO) Junior middleweight The Ring/Lineal middleweight champion, WBO junior middleweight champion

9 Shinsuke Yamanaka 27-0-2 (19 KO) Bantamweight WBC and The Ring bantamweight champion

10 Naoya Inoue 12-0 (10 KO) Super flyweight WBO super flyweight champion

Transnational Board Rankings:

Rank Name Nationality Record Division

1 Andre Ward USA 31-0-0 (15) Light Heavyweight

2 Sergey Kovalev RUS 30-1-1 (26) Light Heavyweight

3 Roman Gonzalez NIC 46-1-0 (38) Jr. Bantamweight

4 Manny Pacquiao PHI 59-6-2 (38) Welterweight

5 Terence Crawford * USA 30-0-0 (21) Jr. Welterweight

6 Gennady Golovkin KAZ 36-0-0 (33) Middleweight

7 Vasyl Lomachenko UKR 7-1-0 (5) Jr. Lightweight

8 Naoya Inoue JPN 12-0-0 (10) Jr. Bantamweight

9 Leo Santa Cruz USA 33-1-1- (18) Featherweight

10 Shinsuke Yamanaka JPN 27-0-2 (19) Bantamweight

ElieSeckbach Rankings:

P4P #boxing

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