Amir Khan proves too much for Judah  

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LAS VEGAS -- Amir Khan made it look easy.
He used his speed and his height advantage and thoroughly dominated Zab Judah. And that was before he landed a hard right hand on the beltline and knocked him out in the fifth round to unify junior welterweight titles Saturday night at the Mandalay Bay Events Center.
Amir Khan and Zab Judah

Amir Khan made short work of Zab Judah Saturday.
Ever since England's Khan stormed the American shores in May 2010, he has said he wanted to fight the best the 140-pound division had to offer.
It's not just lip service. He's doing it.
He got warm with a dominant knockout of former titlist Paulie Malignaggi in Malignaggi's hometown of New York. Then he came to the same Mandalay Bay ring in December and survived a grueling battle with Marcos Maidana in the 2010 Boxing Writers Association of America fight of the year.
After a stay-sharp defense back home in England in April, Khan returned to the United States and was determined to fight the best fighter the division had to offer.
He was supposed to face two-belt titleholder Timothy Bradley Jr., but Bradley had a change of heart and declined the fight despite a generous 50-50 offer from Khan -- including 50 percent of British television money, an almost unheard of concession. That's how much Khan wanted to fight the one 140-pounder widely ranked ahead of him.
With Bradley out of the picture, that left the resurgent Judah, a three-time 140-pound titlist and a former undisputed welterweight champion. After tough times in recent years at welterweight, Judah moved back to junior welterweight last summer and claimed a vacant belt in March by knocking out Kaizer Mabuza. When Bradley declined to fight Khan, Judah -- with Hall of Famer Pernell Whitaker in his corner -- to got the call.
But Judah looked every bit of his 33 years. He had nothing for Khan, who peppered him with hard shots to the head and body and boxed circles around him.
The first round had not even ended and already Judah's face was beginning to get marked up, in part from an accidental head butt that left him blinking his right eye.
But Khan did not let up. He really turned it up in the fifth round, snapping Judah's head back with a left hand. He continued to pound Judah during the round.
Finally, Khan nailed Judah with a right hand to the face and followed with a body shot. The right hand landed directly on the belt line in the middle of Judah's waistband and he dropped to his knees near the ropes.
Judah seemed to indicate that it was a low blow and made no serious attempt to rise as referee Vic Drakulich counted. And counted. And counted. He reached 10 at 2 minutes, 47 seconds and Judah looked surprised to be counted out as he jumped up.
It was too late.
"Zab is a great fighter, but he was a little awkward," Khan said. "I knew he was getting hurt and moving away and ducking. I kept hitting him right on the face and the shot that took him down hit him right on the belt. If it had gone another few rounds, I would have knocked him out with a clean shot. I saw I was hurting him and it was only a matter of time."
Replays showed the knockout punch was clearly a clean shot, even if Judah and Main Events promoter Kathy Duva did not agree.
"It was a low blow," Judah said. "I was trying to get myself together [when I was down] and that was self defense there [going down]. He jabbed my cup. It was an uppercut and it lifted the belt and that really hurt."
While Judah (41-7, 28 KOs), who earned $500,000, believes it was a low blow and, therefore, a controversial ending, nothing could be further from the truth because Khan (26-1, 18 KOs) dominated.
He was leading by a 40-36 shutout on all three scorecards at the time of the knockout. It looked as though Judah was in for a beating had he stayed on his feet.
Still, there was the low-blow defense.
"The punch was clearly below his belt," Duva said.
Actually, it wasn't. They can go watch the replays while Khan will move on to bigger business.
At 24, he is one of the rising stars of boxing and continues to prove it fight after fight by taking tough opponents.
"I think my speed overwhelmed him along with my power," Khan said. "I built it up from the beginning and took my time. I could've gone with the plan to knock him out sooner, but I wanted to work my way up. I'm No. 1 in the division. Now I will go back and see who my team is going to line up for me next."
He has said repeatedly he wants to fight the best and that is what he is doing. So when he says he wants to move up to welterweight, probably next year, and fight Floyd Mayweather Jr., it sure sounds legitimate.
He won't fight pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao because they are training partners and friends under the guidance of trainer Freddie Roach, but there are lots of options.
But it probably won't be Bradley, who ultimately rejected a 50-50 deal that would have paid him perhaps as much as $1.8 million.
"If Bradley didn't want to fight then, he probably doesn't want to fight him now after seeing what he just did to Zab Judah," Golden Boy promoter Richard Schaefer said.
Bradley, however, did not close the door on fighting Khan, despite being in the midst of a lawsuit filed by co-promoters Gary Shaw and Ken Thompson for breach of contract related to him turning down the fight with Khan. It could keep him on the sideline for some time.
"He's not ready for the 'Storm,'" Bradley said after the fight, referring to his nickname "Desert Storm."
"I'm not impressed," Bradley continued. "I know the comments that are going to be made about this, but I'm not stressing over what everyone else is saying. When we do get in the ring everyone will see who the best 140-pounder in the world is."
Whether Khan faces Bradley next or not, the plan calls for Khan -- whose official purse filed with the Nevada commission was $1,072,500, although he will make more from British television revenue -- to fight again in the United States in December. That is under the terms of his deal with HBO, Schaefer said.
"We'll see who will be available," Schaefer said. "It might be the winner of [the Aug. 27] Robert Guerrero-Marcos Maidana fight. It might be Erik Morales. But I really don't think Bradley wants to have anything to do with Amir Khan. It was a great performance. The combinations, what a talented fighter.
"One more fight at 140 and then in the spring move up to 147 and go get one of the big boys."
It sure would be nice to see Bradley first, but welterweight -- and even bigger fights -- beckon.

Amy Winehouse Lost Her Battle with Drug and Alcohol Addiction  

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Amy Winehouse was found dead in her apartment today. The death is listed as unexplained. In the end, Winehouse was better known for her brushes with the law and drug addiction than she was for her talent, and she was talented. She had a wonderful voice and a great musical style.

Winehouse had the ability to bring soul music back to the mainstream, and for awhile, she did. "Back to Black" was a massive hit. The album won the singer five Grammies and propelled her into stardom. Her success as a singer was short lived.

Within a matter of a few months, her drug addled tabloid lifestyle would take center stage. Her fans watched as she was arrested for assault, warned and featured doing drugs in a home video.

Her spiral continued until 2008, when she was hospitalized with lung disease and covered in nicotine patches in order to break her from the worst of her addictions. We hoped she'd recover. We hoped to see another album just as good as "Back to Black," but more importantly, we wanted to see her beat her addiction and survive. We wanted Winehouse to divorce Blake Feder-Civil and become a success story.

Shortly after her hospitalization, Winehouse did divorce Blake Feder-Civil and the news stopped. There were no more tabloids pictures of a disoriented, bloody or beaten Winehouse. Was she getting better? Creating another album? We hoped.

News arrived in June. Winehouse underwent a brief stint in rehab to prepare her for an upcoming comeback tour. She even performed an impromptu concert in London at the 100 Club. She was sober. She talked to the fans, and everyone cheered. It looked like the old Amy was back.

She appeared well prepared for her concert in Belgrade. She wasn't. It was a disgrace. The singer stumbled, muttered and forgot the lyrics to her own songs. She went home. We wondered what happened between the 100 Club and Belgrade. The tour spent about a day in limbo before the remaining dates were canceled.

We, again, hoped Winehouse would recover; that this was just a brief bump on her road to becoming drug free. Unfortunately, that bump in the road turned out to be a mountain, and Winehouse was too sick to climb it. She was found dead in her apartment earlier today. The cause of death is unknown.

Gay Marriage in NY a Huge Stride for Civil Liberties  

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FIRST PERSON | On Sunday, the Marriage Equality Act will take effect in New York, thus far the largest state in the country to expand marriage rights to its gay residents. That's the day when I will head down to the Manhattan City Clerk's office to pick up my marriage license with my fiancee, Katie Marks. We won't marry right away. Instead, we'll say our vows with 23 other couples at the Pop Up Chapel in Central Park on July 30.
To say that we are ecstatic would be an understatement of epic proportions. I will finally have the opportunity to marry my favorite person, my best friend. She is my perfect complement; she fills in my gaps. We've named our future children, and love our pets as if they were people.
For me, the ability to marry is about all of the obvious things: love, trust, and creating a new family. More than any of those things, it's an insurance policy, of sorts. It means that I'll get to put a long-held worry to rest.
I realized I was gay early, as a teenager. Around that time, I saw the 2000 film If These Walls Could Talk 2, which follows three lesbian stories taking place in three different time periods, all in the same house. In the first vignette, we meet an elderly lesbian couple,Abby and Edith, in the early 60s. Abby takes a nasty fall and dies in the hospital, where Edith worries in the waiting room all night. She is told the next morning that her partner has died. She is not allowed any more information, or even the ability to see Abby, because she isn't "family."
This has been one of my greatest fears for over a decade. The very basic right of having access to a loved one when disaster strikes is something I think many take for granted. It has been my main talking point on the subject of gay marriage for years. In many cases, I've found that, even if a person doesn't agree with my "lifestyle choices," they don't think anyone should be denied the ability to comfort a loved one in a time of dire need. They can't fathom the idea that these things can and do happen in this country.
Last April, President Barack Obama sent a memo to the Department of Health and Human Services, pointing out that the LGBTQ community is "uniquely affected" by visitation policies in hospitals, and asked that they put a stop to it. That was one step. On Sunday, I'll be able to say that the chances of us meeting the same fate as Edith and Abby will be reduced nearly to zero -- as long as we stay in New York and a handful of other states. It's another step, and a huge one at that.
I am overcome with happiness and gratitude. I am so grateful for Gov. Andrew Cuomo's efforts; for everyone who wrote a letter or made a call for rallying on our behalf; and especially for those who stood in the halls outside the senate chamber in Albany, fighting for our rights. I think we've gained a powerful momentum with the gay marriage victory here in New York, with the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell, and Obama's recent statement that he would work to repeal the Defence of Marriage Act. From here on out, I think we will experience something akin to a domino effect. Of course, as with all civil rights movements, there will continue to be resistance, and we will continue to fight for our equality.
When I think about the amazing strides we've made, I remember that joy must be tempered. I think about the losses of Matthew Shepard, Tyler Clementi, and the countless others whose names we never heard who died because of who they loved, or even who they thought they could love. They lived in fear, never knowing the support to be gained by the It Gets Better Project or Live Through This. They never got a chance to grow, to succeed, to love and marry. This victory is for them, too. They were martyrs to a noble cause that's finally making huge strides. I wish they could be here to see it.
PHOTOS FOR GAY MARRIAGES: