Columnist Dean Juipe: Hopkins: Trinidad will prevail in bout vs. Joppy
Thursday, May 10, 2001 | 9:25 a.m.
Dean Juipe's boxing notebook appears Thursday. His sports column appears Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday. Reach him at juipe@lasvegassun.com or 259-4084.
Bernard Hopkins admits he won't be an impartial observer.
The International Boxing Federation and World Boxing Council middleweight champion will be ringside Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York City when World Boxing Association 160-pound champ William Joppy defends against Felix Trinidad. The winner of the Joppy vs. Trinidad fight, which will be available on pay-per-view and at several closed-circuit sites in Las Vegas, is scheduled to meet Hopkins Sept. 15 in New York.
For reasons related to money and prestige, Hopkins hopes it's Trinidad he'll face in September. And, wishful thinking or not, he feels it will be Trinidad.
"You'll be surprised when Trinidad walks through Joppy so easy," Hopkins said during a conference call this week. "I'm expecting a long, tedious, back and forth fight until Joppy figures he needs a knockout to win.
"Trinidad is eventually going to make Joppy fight. Joppy is then going to have to sit down and fight and that's when Trinidad will show he's the better puncher."
Trinidad, who will be fighting for the first time at 160 pounds after winning world championships at 147 and 154, is 39-0 with 32 knockouts.
Joppy, the WBA champion since regaining his title from Julio Cesar Green in 1998, is 32-1-1 with 24 KOs.
Wednesday at Caesars Palace, Trinidad was a minus 300 betting favorite. Joppy was a plus 220. It's a minus 160 that the fight will not go its 12 scheduled rounds and a plus 120 that it will.
For those interested in watching on pay-per-view, the fee is $45. At least eight Las Vegas casinos -- including Caesars, the MGM Grand, the Flamingo Hilton, The Beach, the Monte Carlo, the Luxor, the San Remo and the Excalibur -- will have the fight available on closed circuit, with a $40 fee.
Telecast time is 6 p.m.
"I'm the underdog because he's the marquee fighter," Joppy said at the final pre-fight press conference. "I've been in this situation before. I'm used to it. I'm going to take his crowd away from him."
A large Puerto Rican contingent of fans is expected at the Garden to cheer for their native son, Trinidad.
"I appreciate the consideration and love people have for me," he said. "I'm going to win a good fight."
Trinidad, 28, has the better experience, having competed in 19 previous title fights and having defeated a number of excellent champions including Pernell Whitaker, Oscar De La Hoya and Fernando Vargas.
Joppy, 30, has no such names on his ring resume.
"I have bad memories about the Garden," he also said, referring to his 1997 loss to Green at the fabled site. "I want to get back here and get a win."
Hopkins, whose stock is up after taking the WBC title from Keith Holmes last month, doesn't think Joppy will do it.
"Joppy's more of a cutie-pie," he said. "Trinidad is going to come in bigger than Joppy and he's going to manhandle him.
"It's in Trinidad's best interests to trap Joppy in any corner or on the ropes and let his hands go (and) get into a war.
"I do care who wins and I expect Trinidad to do what he says he'll do."
The fact that Trinidad has been down six times in his career may be a plus, Hopkins added.
"He's fought on guts and heart since the Maurice Blocker days," he said, referring to Trinidad's first world title fight, in 1993. "He's a straightforward, determined fighter.
"He knows what to do when he gets in trouble and isn't having his way. He weathers that storm, which he's known for."
While the 39-2-1 Hopkins anticipates a Trinidad victory, he isn't certain the Sept. 15 date is ironclad.
"Don't be surprised if Trinidad finds a way to get out of the (middleweight) tournament and fight Roy Jones instead," he warned.
But if there is a showdown to unify the middleweight titles, Hopkins, as you may be able to guess, believes he will win.
"Come on, I want to beat Trinidad," he said. "I've been a great fighter who didn't have a dance partner to prove it to you. Now I'm in a position to make three or four million (dollars) and, business-wise, I've got my Puerto Rican flag.
"I see myself winning the tournament."
Hopkins knows that a Joppy victory over Trinidad would lessen the significance of the proposed Sept. 15 fight.
"I've been around a long time," he said. "But now the middleweight division is ready to give birth and I'll get a chance to get the respect I deserve, which is why I need Trinidad to do his job.
"It'll be an upset if Joppy beats Trinidad and me and becomes the undisputed champion."
His advice for Saturday's combatants?
"Punch each other as hard as you can," Hopkins replied.
Diego "Chico" Corrales, the former IBF junior lightweight champion who has trained and fought regularly in Las Vegas, is being held in an interim facility for evaluation before being sent to a jail in the Sacramento area. Corrales pleaded guilty to a spousal abuse charge last Friday and was sentenced to two years in prison. He has one fight remaining on a contract with HBO and is expected to resume his career upon his release. (In a slightly related matter, Corrales' arbitration with his managers has been settled by the Nevada State Athletic Commission. Corrales agreed to retain Barrett Silver as his manager, albeit at a lesser percentage of his gross earnings, while dropping Cameron Dunkin as his agent.)
Another prominent fighter, former IBF junior middleweight champ Fernando Vargas, entered a no-contest plea Monday in Los Angeles to a felony conspiracy charge related to the beating of a man in Santa Barbara. Vargas, who came off the floor to defeat Wilfredo Rivera by sixth-round knockout last Saturday in El Paso, is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 24. Prosecutors will recommend he spend time in jail, but judge Thomas R. Adams Jr. will make that determination. The charges against Vargas stem from an incident in which four friends of the fighter beat a man who was the former boyfriend of a woman Vargas was visiting. Vargas' friends also entered no-contest pleas.
And Wednesday in Montreal, deposed WBC super middleweight champ Davey Hilton Jr. was sentenced to seven years in prison for sexually assaulting two teenage sisters. He was convicted on all nine counts, although an appeal is expected. Hilton had been living at an alcohol rehab center during the trial and was jailed immediately thereafter. His accusers, now 16 and 18, said he repeatedly assaulted them between 1995 and '98. Hilton only shook his head as the judge read the sentence.
Four other local fighters participated, with mixed results. Mario Gaxiola, 106, lost his opening-round bout; Avelino Chavez was given a walk-over victory (when his opponent, from the Kronk Gym in Detroit, withdrew along with his teammates in a dispute over what shirts they could wear in the ring) and then lost his second-round match; Jesse Feliciano, 139, won three fights but lost in the semi-final round; and Alvaro Morales, 178, lost his opening-round bout.
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