Wladimir Klitschko vs David Haye live online Boxing
Watch here http://boxing.sportzlivetv.com/ Wladimir Klitschko vs David Haye live online boxing video on Saturday July 2, 2011 from the Hamburg, Germany. IBF/WBO/WBA heavyweight unification Boxing team will be ringside for the event, which will be presented in HDTV .you can also Watch this super match live online on pc tv.
MATCH DETAILS
Date:Saturday July 2, 2011
Venue: Hamburg, Germany
Competition: IBF/WBO/WBA heavyweight unification
Live/Repeat: Live
Wladamir Klitschko has hit back at David Haye. He is obviously unhappy with the amount of trash talk Haye has been coming out with over the last few weeks. Haye was even seen to wear a t-shirt with the severed heads of the Klitschko brothers. Where he got that idea from, noone knows. The fight is this Saturday and will be streamed live from Germany. It is set to be a great fight and could be David Haye’s career defining moment.
You can watch David Haye v Wladimir Klitschko live online via a full HD stream on Sky Sports. If you do not have Sky Sports then check back to this site where we will give you a link where you can watch HAye v Klitschko fight live online.
At the final press conference Wladimir explained that he would teach the cocky Briton a lesson or two. Not only in the ring, but also give him a lesson in out of ring manners and respect.
“I see you are in great shape, you’re very confident and you’re ready for July 2nd – I’m so happy,” he said. “I’m going to get challenged in the ring, and that’s exactly what I’m looking for when I box.
“I’m giving you respect as a fighter, but I believe David Haye is not such a bad guy. He acts cocky, he carries himself very confident, very cool, and I believe since you beat Mormeck you got this attitude that is not so good for your life.
“Not only in the ring but outside of the ring. You are carrying it outside the ring as well. I think it’s going to be a good lesson for you in the ring on July 2nd. I know you’re in good shape, I know you’re prepared and I do respect you. As a fighter, not as a person.
“My name is Dr Klitschko – I am a therapist for you on July 2nd. I am going to give you treatment, it’s going to be reality rehab.
“I will knock you out into reality, which will be good for your life. You’re going to become a better person, a better man with better behaviours, and you’re going to be on time – to get up at the count of nine.
“You disgraced the 49 guys I have knocked out, saying they were b-u-m-s. You are going to be number 50, just out of respect to the other guys.”
Again, you can watch Haye v Klitschko live online via live streaming. Just check back here for the links. Enjoy the fight!
So continues our marathon coverage of one of the biggest fights of 2011, Wladimir Klitschko-David Haye on July 2. Previously: the stakes of the bout; the keys to the fight, part I. Next: a preview and prediction.
Mind. Matter. How do Wladimir Klitschko and David Haye stack up in those categories? In the second of two parts, we compare their more mental attributes.
Offense. There’s nothing very sophisticated about the Klitschko arsenal. There’s the jab, which is probably boxing’s meanest, best, effective jab. And usually, there’s more jabbing. Then, some more jabbing. And after a while, the occasional straight right hand and left hook. The safer it gets, the more of those straight rights and left hooks there are, often with any real urgency to throw more of them coming from Klitschko’s trainer, Manny Steward, who frequently grows irritated with Klitschko for not finishing off his opponent when the time is nigh. And yet, it’s astoundingly effective, all part of the plan to minimize all risk. He doesn’t throw body shots because it gives away his height. He doesn’t throw uppercuts because he’d rather fight from the outside. He throws the jab so much because it’s the quickest way to stunt the offense of his opponents and wears them down from distance. He sets the pace and controls the ring. Since 2004, this has been a winning formula, and since 2005, he’s rarely been tested in any way, shape or form.
Haye is a much more diverse in his attack. His best weapon is his overhand/straight right, which knocks fools out. His left hook is pretty powerful, too, and can score knockouts on occasion. His jab is decent-to-good, and he often uses it to set up 1-2s. He’ll throw uppercuts on the inside, which could be important against a Klitschko who is very adept at tying up his opponents, and he’ll throw body shots, which could be key to wearing down Klitschko. Haye can fight going backward or forward, and he can counter or lead. I’m not sure which he’ll do against Klitschko, but it’s good for him to have options. The most concerning aspect of Haye’s offense is that he’s often wild with it. He’ll lunge in and get out of position, or throw looping shots that leave him open to straight counters. Overall, Klitschko has an effective offense, one that works well for him, but Haye is the more versatile, complete — if flawed — offensive specimen. Edge: Haye
Defense. Klitschko’s gotten very good at defending himself. Besides an offensive style that minimizes risk, he’s also pretty on the ball about taking a step back or leaning back just enough for his 6’7″ frame to get out of harm’s way. Then there’s the illegal stuff. He leaves his left hand out like he’s jabbing, but really he’s using it to stay in the way of his opponents’ offense. He holds a lot, and because he’s bigger and stronger than anyone he fights, no one can escape his vice-like clinch until he lets go, which keeps his opponents from doing any damage on the inside. You can count the number of times he gets hit flush in any given fight on one hand. Some have argued that’s because his opponents have sucked, but all evidence to date points to Klitschko being an excellent defensive fighter.
Haye has usually been awful on defense, but he’s shown the capacity for defense. His poor D starts with a low dangling left hand, which leaves him completely open. His tendency to get carried away on offense leaves him open, too. But there are times when he’s focused on it where you can see he has the ability to do a kind of in and out/step away at angles Manny Pacquiao act, or use a lot of elusive head and upper body movement to avoid attacks, since he has good reflexes. Even still, John Ruiz — who has a good jab, but isn’t in Klitschko’s class there — landed plenty of jabs on a Haye who was pretty defensive-minded. When people say David Haye, “defense” isn’t a phrase that often comes to mind. Edge: Klitschko
Intelligence. Together, Klitschko and Steward have drafted up a pretty smart routine for the big man. His style has beaten fast opponents like Eddie Chambers; tall opponents like Tony Thompson; big punchers like Samuel Peter; and well-schooled boxers like Ruslan Chagaev. It’s so simple, yet it has worked so efficiently with every one of Klitschko’s foes since 2005. The basic gameplan is one that Klitschko has proven he can implement against everyone so far. It’s unclear how well Klitschko is at making adustments should anyone disrupt that gameplan, since it hasn’t happened.
Although Haye comes off as all physical aggression all the time, there’s smarts there. He’s a master trash-talker, and at times he appears to have gotten under Klitschko’s skin, which could be vital to throwing Klitschko out of his pattern. Haye’s also a better boxer than the wild man he often appears. And Adam Booth, his trainer, has now proven he can draw up savvy gameplans for more than just Haye, since he led George Groves to a counterintuitive, counterpunching win over James DeGale. It’s a nice team, one that’s been together for a long time, but it’s not one that has created a seemingly unbeatable scheme the way Klitschko and Steward have.Edge: Klitschko
Willpower. The knock on Klitschko for a long time is that he was mentally weak. I’m not sure how much it applies anymore. He’s submitted so many opponents to his will in recent years, and he no longer appears jittery in the ring, the way he did for several fights after his last knockout loss. He’s always wanted to take on the best available opponent, and rather than run from a big puncher who could test his chin in Haye, he’s actively chased the Brit to make the fight. On the other hand, Klitschko simply hasn’t been hit flush by anyone who can hit very hard in a long, long time. You wonder whether the confidence problems have been glossed over, or if they’ve actually gone away.
Haye rarely seems to lack confidence, if ever. He doesn’t seem to mind getting knocked down or wobbled — he just fights back harder. There’s a lot of outward unflappability in his makeup. There have been occasional causes for concern. For instance, it’s never a good thing when a boxer spends so much time talking about retirement prior to the most important bout of his career. There were times where he looked a little intimidated in that famous HBO “Face Off” clip. And some of his trash talking has been fanciful to the point of appearing desperate, such as when he claimed that Steward offered to train him to defeat Wlad’s brother Vitali. Still, I have a feeling Haye’s brash act is more than an act, and Klitschko’s confidence is ready to be rattled if he gets hit cleanly by Haye. Edge: Haye
The Rest. The fight will be in Hamburg, Germany, which is Klitschko’s turf. In the rare event this fight goes to a decision and it’s close, that could matter. The crowd won’t get to Haye, I don’t think, as he’ll have a nice contingent from England, and Haye doesn’t mind playing the villian; he beat Jean-Marc Mormeck in Paris, on Mormeck’s home turf. But the crowd could be important to influencing the scorecards… Booth is wildly concerned about the referee, Genaro Rodriguez, whom Booth claims let Klitschko get away with 32 offenses in the first five rounds of one fight. I don’t know if there’s any validity at all to the claim, but the referee could be huge in this bout. Klitschko gets away with that pawing jab move and excessive holding all the time. If Haye’s corner is worried about this particular referee, and doesn’t get him switched — and at this hour, it appears unlikely — then mark this one as a Klitschko advantage… How rough Haye is willing to get with Klitschko on the inside could be important to his ability to counteract any illegal activity from the jab-and-grabber. Haye has shown a willingness to club his opponent on the back of the head, but he’ll need to figure out a way to jam his forearm in Klitschko’s neck or hit low on the inside to dislodge himself from Klitschko, since ref warnings potentially only go so far. I’ve not seen any indicator that Haye can or will do enough of this, though, because he’s usually been strong enough to separate from an opponent trying to avoid his offense and I’m not sure that’ll be the case here…
Haye is the better and more enthusiastic finisher of his opponents when he has them hurt, although some have gotten off the hook lately as he’s become more cautious of return fire from such powerful opponents, compared to the cruiserweights he used to fight. Klitschko will wobble his opponent and let him off the hook pretty often, but then, he also knows that he’ll usually get him the next round with one shot if need be. I give Haye the advantage here, but I think it’s largely academic… Neither man has had much trouble with mid-fight cuts or injuries that badly affect their chances of winning, but Haye did injure his right hand against Valuev and have to gut out a win, while Klitschko has spent long stretches out of the ring dealing with abdominal strains of late. I’m not sure if the strains were legit, or if they were like Haye’s back injury that he used as an excuse to pull out of the first fight with Wlad. I doubt Klitschko would be in this fight if he was at less than full health, however… Edge: Klitschko
David Haye v Wladimir Klitschko: Klitschko is a Miss World Contestant
David Haye has recently spoken to the Telegraph and has claimed that Wladimir Klitschko is like a miss world contestant.
The trash talk continues…
David Haye feels that Klitschko is ignoring the fact that the pair of them are soon to go into the ring together and punch the living daylights out of each other.
“If that’s how he wants to come across, up to him. I’m just focused on trying to knock him unconscious. If I look good, bad, terrible, horrendous before it, it doesn’t affect me.
Whatever I have said before becomes irrelevant, null and void, academic. That is all that matters to me.”
Haye believes that he must stop Klitschko from getting into his groove. He knows that he has a very strong jab and is a very efficient fighter.
In summing up the plan for the fight Haye said, “Similar to the Nikolai Valuev fight, although we have refined things. I’m two years older, fitter and bigger, a different fighter altogether. I’ll get him out of his comfort zone pretty quick.
Then he panics. I am doing everything I can to make sure this fight is exciting and that Wladimir Klitschko ends up on his back. I’ll be surprised if it goes to round six.”
This is Haye’s first stadium fight and he will be fighting in front of 50,000 fans.
The coverage starts at 2000GMT, with the fight predicted to start at 2200GMT.
Wladimir “Dr. Steelhammer” Klitschko (55-3, 49 KO’s) is too big, too strong but (not) too fast for David “the Hayemaker” Haye (25-1, 23 KO’s). Two out of three key factors ain’t too bad though!
Klitschko’s sizable (pun intended) advantages will overshadow whatever “the Hayemaker” brings to the ring on July 2.
Take a gander below at the detailed fight breakdown based on theboxing predictor at the bottom of this post.
At 6’7″ inches tall, with an 81″ reach and routinely weighing anywhere between 245-250 pounds, “Dr. Steelhammer” is one helluva mountain to climb for any opponent.
But he’s not just a big man, he’s a skilled man. A man who will be far more skilled than anyone that Haye has ever seen in his career.
David Haye will probably be the fastest man that Klitschko has faced in the ring. He will be one of the hardest-hitting ones as well. Like Klitschko however, his Achilles heal is his porcelain chin (but even more so here, since he’s the smaller guy).
A boxing sage once said that “a good big man will beat a good little man any time of the day.” Well, July 2 will be one of those times and one of those days. Look for Wladimir Klitschko to stop David Haye by about round eight, continuing the Klitschko sibling reign at heavyweight.
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