Winky is ready to rumble with Hopkins

Vows fight won't be boring

The Associated Press
Boxers Bernard Hopkins, left, and Ronald "Winky" Wright, right, pose with Oscar De La Hoya after a news conference at the Mandalay Bay hotel-casino in Las Vegas, Thursday, July 19, 2007. Hopkins and will fight in a 12-round light heavyweight boxing match in Las Vegas, Saturday, July 21. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Las Vegas — Winky Wright says he has never really been hurt or even stunned in a boxing ring — unless you count that triangle-shaped bruise beneath his left eye from sparring last week.

Yet when Wright hears that his fight with Bernard Hopkins tomorrow represents much of what fans have grown to dislike about boxing, it's enough to send this dominant puncher scrambling into a defensive crouch.

"Somebody has got to explain to me how this can be a boring fight," says Wright, who will move up to 170 pounds for the first time in his career to take on the unretired Executioner.

"Whenever I fight, whoever I fight, it's an exciting fight. You can't take your eyes off me, man, not for a second. I punch. I hurt people. I go all-out."

In a windowless room deep inside the Mandalay Bay casino, Wright's eyes bulge and his words tumble out in bursts. He takes the pre-emptive criticisms of his latest fight personally, unable to understand why so many people perceive him as a defensive, safety-first boxer who's unwilling and unable to please them.

"They say I'm a defensive fighter, but I'm throwing 80, 90 punches a round," he says. "Why am I not offensive then? All people talk about is my defense, but it's just because my defense is that good."

His words carry a slight tinge of desperation, and a bigger element of frustration. After a stellar 51-3-1 career, several titles and millions in earnings, Wright has everything — except the respect and love that only goes to his sport's greatest brawlers or its most courageous veterans, such as the 42-year-old Hopkins.

"I believe Winky Wright doesn't lack talent, but nobody cares about his style," says Hopkins, who also has been criticized for being a passive tactician. "He wasn't exciting. It's not fair to Winky, but that's how it is."

Yet Wright's résumé is sparkling, his talent unquestioned. The 35-year-old boxer has taken the long road to respect in two weight classes, fighting contenders from Luxembourg to South Africa before finally getting elite paydays after beating Sugar Shane Mosley twice in 2004.

But two lengthy streaks underline everything that's good and bad about Wright to the paying public. He hasn't lost since 1999, enduring only one sketchy draw with Jermain Taylor last year — but Wright hasn't knocked out an opponent in nine straight fights since February 2002, either.