http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID=37220298&blogID=366768710&Mytoken=42C032BF-29B5-4C36-9F049E728D46143F974710 This content is protected After months of preparation and years of talk, the real number one cruiserweight in Great Britain and the world was decided in the early hours of Sunday, March 9. It took only five minutes and five seconds for me to dispatch my nearest domestic and world rival, Enzo Maccarinelli, in the second round of our WBC/WBA/WBO and Ring Magazine title fight. I said I’d do the job in the first minute and that prediction was about the only thing I got wrong on the night. <SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 11pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">
'If you watch heavyweight boxing nowadays you’ll either see two guys stand across the ring from each other throwing sloppy jabs out of fear or you’ll see two obese human beings hug each other for 12 rounds like two brothers who’ve just returned from war.' :rofl So true. I also noticed that he said this: 'People will doubt me – but they’ll probably be the same people who believed my "career was in tatters" four years ago. If you don’t take risks you’ll never win. On Sunday morning I took a risk and won. So did British boxing.' Isn't the 'career in tatters' quote taken directly from the commentator who was screaming that when Haye was KO'd after he punched himself out ages ago? Doubt Haye is going to forget that moment anytime soon.
In October or November, as he says in the blog. Give him a chance, he's only just finished cleaning up the cruiserweights.