MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) _ Jermain Taylor's victory over Cory Spinks
was a forgettable one, so it was no surprise when attention quickly
turned to the middleweight champion's next fight.
Kelly Pavlik, anyone?
``Yeah, I'll fight him,'' Taylor said. ``It doesn't make a
difference. We can fight next month.''
Taylor looked like he could go 12 rounds again next week
following his tepid bout Saturday night. Spinks missed more punches
(457) than Taylor attempted (319), and Taylor's team conceded that
his latest title defence was not an aesthetic masterpiece.
Taylor's trainer, Emanuel Steward, said Spinks (36-4) was to
blame for that.
``Who's going to look good with Cory Spinks?'' Steward said.
``All you want to do is get the win and move on. Cory Spinks was
jabbing, and before the punch got out, he's running back already.''
When Taylor defeated Bernard Hopkins in 2005 to win the
middleweight title, he appeared to be the future of the middleweight
division _ and those expectations have affected the way people view
him. After winning a rematch with Hopkins, he escaped with a draw
against Winky Wright, but since then he's drawn criticism for
fighting two straight opponents up from the junior middleweight
ranks.
Taylor, of Little Rock, Ark., outpointed Kassim Ouma in December,
and his split decision against Spinks was even less decisive. Taylor
(27-0-1) had winning scores of 117-111 and 115-113 from two of the
judges, and the third had it 117-111 for the challenger from St.
Louis.
``I don't know what to say. It was highway robbery,'' said
Spinks, the IBF junior middleweight champion. ``I thought I gave a
great boxing display.''
The star of Saturday's show was Pavlik, who battered Edison
Miranda in an action-packed middleweight fight on the undercard.
Pavlik-Miranda was everything Taylor-Spinks wasn't _ both fighters
went at each other from the start, defending themselves only by
hitting back. Pavlik and Miranda combined to throw 191 punches in
the first round alone.
Pavlik (31-0) knocked Miranda down twice in the sixth, one round
before the fight was stopped.
Taylor's camp was respectful of Pavlik _ and had to enjoy his
victory over Miranda, who had taunted Taylor earlier in the week.
``I took care of that mouth,'' said Pavlik, who is from
Youngstown, Ohio.
Taylor's team is looking for an opponent the champion can look
good against. Ouma was supposed to be that type of fighter, but
Taylor appeared too impatient during that bout in his home state of
Arkansas. To his credit, Taylor didn't lose his composure against
Spinks despite an obviously restless crowd _ and he appears to have
kicked his dangerous habit of keeping his hands too low when he
fights.
Besides Pavlik, Taylor's most prominent option now appears to be
a move up in class to fight Joe Calzaghe, an undefeated super
middleweight champion.
``If he doesn't take the fight, at least I can say I made someone
run up a weight class,'' Pavlik said.
Saturday night, any opponent seemed preferable to Spinks.
``Kelly Pavlik is a solid fighter,'' Steward said. ``He's a
tough, solid, basic kid _ and if they fight ... it's going to be a
tough fight. But at least Jermain will get to fight and use his jab
and do basic stuff instead of chasing a guy all night.''