Bob Arum said Julio Cesar Chavez could fight Brian Vera next, and eventually, Andre Ward.
Q&A: Bailey says Alexander will 'pay the piper' on Sept. 8
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IBF welterweight beltholder Randall Bailey has vowed to make former junior welterweight titleholder Devon Alexander "pay the piper" when they meet in Bailey's first defense of the crown on Sept. 8. The fight will be televised on Showtime from the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. Bailey (43-7, 37 knockouts) was last in the ring in June for a come-from-behind, 11th-round knockout of Philadelphia's Mike Jones on the undercard of Tim Bradley vs. Manny Pacquiao, also in Las Vegas at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. Against Jones (26-1, 19 KOs), Bailey won his fourth straight bout, having last suffered defeat by 11th-round stoppage against Juan Urango in a failed bid to earn the IBF's junior welterweight belt in August of 2009. In his next fight, Urango was knocked out in the eighth round by fellow southpaw Alexander, who has scoffed at Bailey's assertion that he already had taken the heart out of Urango. "That's really funny to me. I mean, that's the opposite. How can he say that when he got knocked out and got stopped by Urango. But that's what he's saying, that he softened him up for me?" said Alexander, laughing during an interview with RingTV.com. "But if he says that's what happened, oh well. But I got in there and took care of business and got Urango out of there, which is something that he couldn't do." In victory over Jones, Bailey earned his first title since a first-round knockout of Carlos Gonzalez to win the WBO's junior welterweight crown in May of 1999. Bailey's record at the time was 18-0, all by stoppage, and he has become known for the concussive, lights-out power in his right hand. The win over Gonzalez marked Bailey's 13th first-round knockout, after which he defended twice to improve to 20-0, all by knockout, before losing the title to Ener Julio by split-decision in July of 2000.
I dropped Urango one time, and, to tell you the truth, I was so weak for that fight, that I don't even know how I knocked him down. I was having so much trouble making that weight. I had worn out my welcome at 140 pounds and couldn't really make the weight any longer. That's why Urango was my last fight at 140 pounds. I couldn't be strong there any more, so that's why I'm a lot better at 147.
RingTV.com: Do you have a prediction for the Alexander fight?
Photo by Naoki Fukuda Photos by Chris Farina, Top Rank
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