Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Marco Huck vs Ola Afolabi Live Streaming PPV Boxing Preview, Tickets & More On Fox.TV - 08Th,Jun!

Marco Huck vs Ola Afolabi Live Streaming PPV Boxing Preview & More!
[~*~] The Boxing News Spot Line
What's Up Worldwide Boxing Viewers ? Please Come To Join With Us For Watching All Exclusive 2013 Pay Par View Boxing Events Live Here. Now The PPV Odds Fight Go To Between Marco Huck vs Ola Afolabi Live Streaming On [PPV SHOWTIME TV]. It’s a - [12 Rounds - Cruiserweight Division (For Huck's WBO Title) Championship], At - [Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin, Germany]. The Times/When Start - 07:00 PM [ET] / 04:00 PM [PT],Saturday, 08Th,Jun,2013. All Boxing Lover's & Supporter's Don't Miss To Watch Live Streaming PPV Odds Fight Tonight. Every Second You Can Watch Here Blue Ray Quality Video By Signing Up, The Live Sports Network From Direct Satellite TV, You Can Get Here All Times 100% HD/LED Quality Video. So, Don't Waste Your Time, Just Click The Live Streaming Link Then One Or Two Step You Must Grab This Opportunity To Watch This Live Streaming PPV Fight On Your Mobile TV, iPhone, iPod, iPad, Laptop, Net book, Mac, Or PC From Boxing 24/7 Live.!

[~*~]BOXING EVENTS UPDATE[~*~]
UPCOMING INFO : Marco Huck vs Ola Afolabi
COMPETITION NAME : Huck's WBO Title 2013
COMPETITOR : Huck vs Afolabi
DATE : Saturday, 08Th,Jun,2013
TIME/WHEN START : 07:00 PM [ET] / 04:00 PM [PT]
VENUE : Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin, Germany.
STATUS : LIVE ON

[~*~] All PPV Odds Fight Spot News!
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[~*~] Marco Huck vs Ola Afolabi Live Spot News!
A few days from now on Saturday the eighth of June, Marco Huck and Ola Afolabi will meet for a third and in all likelihood final time in Berlin, Germany, completing what may very well be one of the better trilogies completed so far in this millennium. Flying firmly under the radar of many boxing fans it is a fight made between the generally unpopular world’s number one cruiserweight, the Serbian Marco Huck, a homeboy who has not fought outside of his adopted Germany since 2007, and Ola Afolabi, an unheralded, under-schooled road warrior born in Britain who lives in Los Angeles.

Like Chris Eubank before him, Afolabi found petty crime an easy out when he spurred his family and turned to the streets of London for his living before leaving for America and a fresh start. Afolabi went further than Eubank, bouncing past New York and all the way out to LA and an older brother. Things did not improve for him, however, until, like so many other troubled young men before him, he stepped into a boxing gym—The Wild Card, no less, where he went to work picking up around the place in the employ of one Freddie Roach. Whilst his life was turned around, his boxing career still had no real lift. Unlike Eubank, he didn’t have a Watson or a Benn to return home to, but knocking out Enzo Maccarinelli earned him something called the interim WBO cruiserweight title and a shot at Marco Huck.

Afolabi’s rootlessness has denied him the solid fan base a fighter of his heart, determination and punch resistance might readily have earned himself in London. On the other hand, the unspectacular Huck has stuck to “home” with a determination perhaps only an immigrant could understand. The combination makes this weekend’s clash a regional affair rather than the international showcase it perhaps ought to be. The first fight was even more unheralded.

Fought in a basketball arena in the boxing backwater of Ludwigsburg, Baden-Wurttemberg, it was the first time Afolabi had fought over a scheduled twelve and the first time Marco Huck was to defend the cruiserweight strap he earned against Victor Ramirez. Although the fight contained too many clinches and petty fouls to be considered a classic, it was a desperate, knife-edge encounter from which Huck emerged victorious by the narrowest of margins. My card read 115-113 in the Serbian’s favor which saw me in agreement with two of three judges, the other finding the extra round for Huck and a 116-112 card. Afolabi won the first frame with one of the division’s most interesting jabs, a punch he throws from as low as his waist, a single shot that is blessed with solid variety, often planted in his opponent’s chest or stomach, or lifting all the way into a disturbing up jab. Certainly it disturbed Huck and in truth it is a punch that the Transnational Boxing Board’s number one cruiserweight is yet to solve. Huck explained to Afolabi what his own problem would be that night in no uncertain terms in the second third and fourth. That problem is violence. Huck allowed Afolabi the illusion of control, allowing himself to be moved and jabbed but when he attacked it was with sudden and surging aggression,  carpet-bomb combinations designed to hurt, disorientate and catch the eye of the judges. These scything punches were often clumsy looking and many of them landed upon glove and elbow as Afolabi covered up with the certainty of a much more experienced boxer, but they also redefined the fight. To win, Afolabi would need to win at least some of the exchanges Huck was initiating. He could not go to Germany and win on the jab.