Originally Published: November 1, 2007
Calzaghe still has a lot to prove in underachieving career
Joe Calzaghe has ruled the super middleweight division for 10 years and is undefeated in a 14-year career. So why is Glyn Leach not impressed with the Welshman's career so far?
There's something about Joe
I'd be lying if I told you that Joe Calzaghe had made a big impression on me early in his career. I was at ringside outdoors in Cardiff Arms Park, a ramshackle old rugby football ground in Wales, when Calzaghe made his professional debut with a first-round stoppage of Paul Hanlon in October 1993. But do I remember that fight? Not exactly. On that chilly evening my mind was full of Lennox Lewis defending his WBC heavyweight title against British icon Frank Bruno (as are my memories of the event today). "Joe who?" Not quite. I was aware of Calzaghe. I'd been at London's Royal Albert Hall months earlier when he'd won his third consecutive Amateur Boxing Association championship in a third weight division -- a feat that had been achieved only once before in over 100 years. I'd been told to look out for Calzaghe, that he was going to be something special. But my overriding memory is of a tall, rather flailing southpaw with a style that didn't appeal to me. You know what they say about first impressions? For me, something just didn't click from Day One, and my opinion of Calzaghe just hasn't really improved with time. Why?
Joe Calzaghe's career has been plagued by brittle hands, as well as inconsistent -- and sometimes lackluster -- results.
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Ed Mulholland/FightWireImages.comJoe Calzaghe, left, had better show more fire in the ring than he did in the news conferences leading up to his fight with Mikkel Kessler.

