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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Hopkins aging well in ring


Howard Eastman of England, left, does some bantering with Bernard Hopkins while they pose for photographers after their news conference Wednesday.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Tim Dahlberg Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Bernard Hopkins has a thing for numbers. He’ll talk to anyone who will listen about being a middleweight champion at the age of 40, and will gladly tell you that his purse for his last fight with Oscar De La Hoya was an even $10 million.

The number Hopkins is most proud of, though, is 20. That’s how many title defenses he will have made when he climbs into the ring tonight against Howard Eastman.

“This is very important to me to be in position for 20 defenses in one weight division,” Hopkins said. “Very important to me.”

Hopkins’ 20th title defense puts him in rare company among some boxing greats. He’ll match Larry Holmes, who defended the heavyweight title 20 times, and draw closer to the great Joe Louis, who had 25 defenses.

The fight with Eastman isn’t drawing the attention his last fight with De La Hoya did, but Hopkins remains focused even as the middleweight champion becomes middle-aged.

“I approach fights like it’s my last fight and I have to make a statement,” Hopkins said. “It’s just maintaining my body, maintaining my mental state. That’s what is important.”

Hopkins (45-2-1, 32 knockouts) is a 6-1 favorite to retain his undisputed 160-pound titles when he meets Eastman in a scheduled 12-round bout at Staples Center (HBO, 6:45 p.m. PST). In an ironic twist, the fight is being promoted by De La Hoya’s Golden Boy Promotions, which signed Hopkins after he beat De La Hoya.

Also on the card is a fight between unbeaten middleweights Jermain Taylor (22-0, 16 knockouts) and Daniel Edouard (16-0-2). Taylor, a member of the 2000 U.S. Olympic boxing team, is being touted as a possible opponent for Hopkins in the near future.

The fight is the first for Hopkins since stopping De La Hoya in the ninth round Sept. 18, and his first since turning 40 on Jan. 15.

Hopkins didn’t get a pushover for his 20th defense. Eastman’s (40-1, 24 knockouts) only loss was in November 2001 when he dropped a title fight to William Joppy by a majority decision even though he had knocked Joppy down in the fight.

Like Hopkins, Eastman has a favorite number of his own to bring into the fight. He believes he will knock out Hopkins in the fifth round.

“The number five is in my head and I don’t know how it got there,” Eastman said. “Well, actually I do. I got the word from God himself. That’s why the number five is just in my head.”