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Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
May 10th, 2008
Mike Arnaoutis and Lanardo Tyner Star in,
“Being Unbeaten Is Over Rated”
Friday night in Atlantic City N.J., formerly unbeaten Light Welterweight,
Lanardo Tyner (19-1, 11 KO’s) saw his 0 go after stepping up and finally facing
his first respectable opponent (in his 20th professional fight) against “Mighty”
Mike Arnaoutis (19-2-2, 9 KO’s). This 12 round fight was for the USBA Light
Welterweight Title. Tyner had never been past ten rounds as most of his fights
ended by early KO’s.
In the first round, Tyner came out aggressively and forced Arnaoutis into the
ropes, where he peppered Arnaoutis with power shots that reddened Mike’s face
and got his attention right away. I thought Arnaoutis looked ripe for being
knocked out but he demonstrated good ring generalship, use of the jab and
ultimately, executed a logical plan for winning against a physically stronger
opponent.
Arnaoutis suffered a cut over his right eye but didn’t let it bother him. He
recognized that he needed to keep things in the center of the ring, where he
could use his jab to control the action. Tyner was wildly aggressive in the
first few rounds and landed stinging punches when he was able to pressure
Arnaoutis into the ropes. But by the later part of the third round, Arnaoutis
made some tactical adjustments and started finding a home for his feather fisted
jab and gentle combinations. Tyner landed some good shots in spots but his
output steadily declined by the middle rounds after wasting so much energy
winging nothing but power punches early in the fight. Had Tyner focused his
energies on attacking the body, Arnaoutis’ legs may not have served him so well
down the stretch.
Throughout the fight, Tyner’s strategy was limited to trying to land one big
shot to end it. At times, Tyner showboated, made faces, stuck out his tongue and
showed a real penchant for the things that don’t matter, while ignoring the
things that do. That big shot never came for Tyner and in the end it was
Arnaoutis’ workmanlike performance that won him the fight by a large margin.
Tyner’s unbeaten record is more a reflection of cautious match making than
anything else. It’s not Tyner’s fault that this is how contenders are created
these days. In a way, he’s a victim of a sport that has no credible rankings
system. How do you gauge the ability of a fighter who’s not fought any credible
opponents in 19 pro fights? If Arnaoutis had any power, chances are that Tyner
would have been either knocked out or seriously hurt. Is this how managers
protect their charges, by allowing them to develop a false sense of confidence?
Why not bring them up right, match them against increasingly better opponents
and truly discover a fighter’s potential by about the tenth fight?
After losing two of his last four fights, Arnaoutis may have been taken too
lightly. This match up intended to propel Tyner to legitimacy in spite of his
extremely limited resume, over a well recognized opponent in Arnaoutis, who is a
good boxer with zero threat of punching power. Arnaoutis proved that it’s better
to have little power and good boxing skills than to have big power without the
skills to consistently deliver it.
Out of 20 fights, only four of Tyner’s past opponents had winning records. One
of those three had a 3-1 record the other three had records of 22-6, 9-2 and
8-6. Of Arnaoutis’ past opponents, 14 of 21 had winning records. This is very
telling. When it comes to unbeaten records, what matters most is quality, not
just the quantity of wins. These days, being undefeated is way over rated.
If Tyner had the kind of talent his record suggests, he would have shown it in
the biggest fight of his career so far. Unlike Tyner’s previous opponents, Mike
Arnaoutis had some boxing skills, quality experience and actually came to win.
This victory is a good step in Arnaoutis’ campaign to regain the momentum he
lost after losing to Ricardo Torres and Kendall Holt. Guys I’d like to see
Arnaoutis fight include, Lamont Peterson (24-0, 11 KO’s), Henry Bruseles
(27-3-2, 15 KO’s) who fought Floyd Mayweather Jr. and particularly, Dmitri “Star
of David” Salita, who is 28-0 with 16 KO’s and has yet to fight a respectable
opponent.
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Comments can be emailed to dshark87@hotmail.com
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