Category Archives: Fight Reports

RAMIREZ GETS UP FROM KNOCKDOWN, EARNS UD

Unbeaten super lightweight Jose Ramirez (16-0, 12 KO’s) got up from a second-round knockdown and earned a unanimous decision over Johnny Garcia (19-4-1, 11 KO’s) Saturday night in Fresno, CA. The U.S. Olympian, fighting in front of a hometown crowd of 13,120 at the SaveMart Center, won comfortably by scores of 79-73, 79-73 and 77-74.

Ramirez was busy from the opening bell, but he turned it up a notch after taking a short right hand that sent him to the canvas in round two. The elite skills of Ramirez proved to be too much for the tough and willing Garcia.

Top Rank tweeted the following from boss Bob Arum:

UNDERCARD

Andy Vences KO2 over Manuel Rojas
Joe Louie Lopez KO3 over Dave Courchaine
Guy Robb UD8 over Juan Ruiz
Alex Rios KO2 over Emilio Hernandez
Saul Lomas KO1 over Eduardo Dominguez
Eric Altimirano KO4 over Ricardo Maldonado

 

ALVAREZ OUTPOINTS COTTO

Saul “Canelo” Alvarez defeated Miguel Cotto by unanimous decision Saturday night, further staking his claim to be the best fighter in the post-Mayweather world. Alvarez (46-1-1, 32 KO’s) turned back a strong attack from Cotto (40-5-0, 33 KO’s) and won by comfortable margins of 119-109, 118-110 and 117-111.

InTheCorner.net had it a little closer at 116-112 for Alvarez.

It was a very interesting fight, worthy of the pay-per-view buildup, with Cotto attacking and moving, at time controlling the fight, while Alvarez countered well. Neither fighter was in serious trouble but it was an action fight throughout.

Down the stretch, Cotto’s attack was unable to sustain any effectiveness and Alvarez finished well.

Both fighters’ resumes feature some of the biggest names in the sport. While Cotto has lost three of his last six fights, all against big-name opposition, Alvarez continues his run that was only slowed down by a decision loss to Mayweather in 2013. This was a fight where Alvarez was too young and strong for the aging Cotto, who did nothing to embarrass himself.

BRADLEY DOMINATES RIOS, SCORES 9TH RD KO

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Timothy Bradley, fighting with Teddy Atlas in his corner for the first time, looked extremely sharp in stopping Brandon Rios in the 9th round on Saturday night in Las Vegas. Bradley (33-1-1, 13 KO’s) was very busy and punished an out-of-shape Rios with clean shots to the body and head throughout.

Rios (33-3-1, 24 KO’s) looked out of shape and reportedly weighed 170 lbs. as he entered the ring for the welterweight title fight.

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WEEKEND RESULTS: BRONER SCORES TKO, POSTOL UPSETS MATTHYSSE

HBO and Showtime went head-to-head this weekend with a pair of good boxing telecasts featuring name fighters. The Showtime card featured Adrien “The Problem” Broner coming back from a loss to Shawn Porter and he looked pretty good against little-known Khabib Allakhverdiev. The fight was stopped at the 2:23 mark of the 12th and final round and Broner (31-2, 23 KO’s) was successful in looking good in front of his hometown Cincinnati fans.

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WILDER WORKS FOR TKO OF DUHAUPAS

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Deontay Wilder retained his WBC Heavyweight title with a punishing TKO in the 11th round over live challenger Johann Duhaupas Saturday night in Birmingham, AL. It wasn’t easy.

In his second title defense Wilder (35-0, 34 KO’s) came up against an unknown in Duhaupas, but the challenger got noticed in the early rounds for his attacking style that left its mark on the champion’s face. Duhaupas (32-3, 20 KO’s) ignored the partisan crowd and came right at Wilder, defending himself well and getting off a stiff left jab that couldn’t miss.

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BRADLEY FIGHTS, WINS, THERE’S CONTROVERSY

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Heard that one before?

Timothy Bradley Jr. won a unanimous decision over Jesse Vargas at the StubHub Center in Carson, CA, but it wasn’t that simple. It never is for Bradley.

Bradley (32-1-1, 12 KO’s) turned back a strong challenge from Vargas in the early rounds and pulled away over the second half of the fight to build a comfortable margin. But Vargas (26-1, 9 KO’s) landed the punch of the night in the waning seconds of the 12th round and had Bradley badly hurt. While Vargas was trying to capitalize, with Bradley holding on, referee Pat Russell thought he heard the final bell (it was the 10-second warning) and declared the fight over.

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PORTER OUTWORKS BRONER

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Shawn Porter pressured his way to a big lead over Adrien Broner in their 144-lb. fight on Friday night, then got up from a 12th-round knockdown to post a unanimous decision victory. The Premiere Boxing Champions show on NBC featured the two former champions in somewhat of a crossroads fight and Porter had the clear upper hand.

Official scores were 118-108, 115-111 and 114-112. InTheCorner.Net scored it 115-111 for Porter.

From the outset, Porter (26-1-1, 16 KO’s) pressured Broner and “The Problem” got off to his customary slow start. A pattern emerged where Porter’s activity and volume punching would meet Broner’s precise counter-punching in rounds that could possibly be difficult to score.

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48-0: MAYWEATHER OUTCLASSES PACQUAIO

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Over 12 rounds at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas Saturday night, Floyd Mayweather Jr.(48-0, 26 KO’s) took away the doubt of who is the best boxer in the world. By scores of 118-110, 116-112 and 116-112 Mayweather silenced the critics who said he could not beat Manny Pacquaio (57-6-2, 38 KO’s), and did so fairly comfortably in a less-than-scintillating fight.

InTheCorner.Net had it 116-112 for Mayweather.

What was expected to be Pacquaio’s chance at victory, frenetic two-handed offense from difficult angles, was snuffed out over and over by the brilliant defense of Mayweather. Manny did have his moments and rallied at times like few fighters have been able to do against Mayweather. But there was never a fight-changing moment for Pac Man.

It started right away, with Pacquaio throwing just 29 punches in the first round. He had his best moments in the fourth, rocking Mayweather with a left hand that sent Floyd back to the ropes in a cover-up posture.

But Mayweather didn’t sustain damage, like the Pacquaio camp thought he would, because the greatest ring skills of this boxing generation were no less sharp at age 38 than in any of his other fights. Floyd had everything he needed to get out of danger and keep Pacquaio at bay. The second half of this fight looked like the second half of most Mayweather fights. His opponent was in an aggressive posture, but firing very little. Hesitant. Calculating, but never coming up with the solution. Then getting popped by a sneak right hand, just before Mayweather circled away.

It went like that. Pacquaio’s fight plan…? Didn’t happen. Mayweather was much bigger and longer in the ring, but that never bothered Manny before. Tonight, it was too much to overcome. Pacquaio couldn’t get into scoring range for long. It was the same frustration that many of Mayweather’s opponents have felt.

And the frustration was there for the viewers as well. It wasn’t a great fight. It was tactical, and that’s not what a $100 pay-per-view event is expected to be. I guess. This is the first one.

But there was very little sustained offense that would get the fans on their feet. The pro-Pacquaio crowd at the MGM Grand was very animated, but boxing fans and sports fans wouldn’t have lost their voices reacting to these 12 rounds.

On the flip side, Mayweather is someone a lot of fans love to hate. They didn’t change their minds tonight. His supreme boxing skills don’t go over like a Mike Tyson massacre or a Hagler – Hearns attrition war. It just letter-perfect. If you didn’t like him before, nothing changed tonight.

But tonight Mayweather answered the only pressing question that still remained for him. Should this fight have happened sooner? It would likely have been more one-sided five years ago. He was even quicker then.

 

KLITSCHKO OUTPOINTS JENNINGS

Wladimir Klitschko improved to 64-3 (53 KO’s) with a clear 12-round decision over Bryant Jennings (19-1, 10 KO’s) at Madison Square Garden in New York Saturday night. Official scores were 118-109, 116-111 and 116-111.

A bunch of heavyweight title belts were on the line.

Though the scoring was clearly in Klitschko’s favor, Jennings mounted a spirited attack throughout and had his moments against the much-bigger champion. The Klitschko era has been the biggest snoozer in the history of the heavyweight division, including both Wlad and his brother Vitali. This fight was another in a long line of wins for the oversized brothers.

But Jennings showed that this champion can be beaten. Yes, he lost by five points on the closest cards, but Jennings rocked the Ukrainian a couple of times and used movement to frustrate the heavy-handed Klitschko.

The opponents that the Klitschko brothers have beaten have been weak, at best. The likes of Lamon Brewster and Chris Byrd have been able to force a stoppage or flatten one or the other.

America’s best athletes in this weight class play football and basketball.  Deontay Wilder, for one, is a great athlete. Will he challenge and beat Wlad? We’ll see.

But Jennings showed how limited this champion is. Lennox Lewis pulverizes this guy. (In shape, focused Lennox Lewis, of course. Not the guy that got knocked out by Hasim Rahman or struggled against Vitali). Riddick Bowe, Evander Holyfield, Larry Holmes…they mop the floor with Wladimir Klitschko.

Bryant Jennings gave him a tough fight. Wlad clearly won, but he’s hardly invincible. The names on Klitschko’s resume recently are laughable. I’ll take my chances with Wilder. I’d like to see that fight.

KOVALEV STOPS PASCAL IN THRILLER

Sergey Kovalev improved to 27-0-1 with his 24th KO on Saturday night as he stopped Jean Pascal in the 8th round of a wildly entertaining light heavyweight fight in Pascal’s hometown of Montreal. The main event of HBO’s World Championship Boxing telecast turned out to be more of a slugfest than was expected as Pascal responded to a third-round knockdown with several heavy-handed rallies.

Kovalev retained several world title belts with the stoppage which came at the 1:03 mark of round eight.

Kovalev imposed his will early, culminating in the knockdown late in the third round. As Pascal (29-3-1, 17 KO’s) wobbled to his corner, it didn’t look like the fight would progress very far into the fourth round.

But Pascal showed his moxie by surviving the in-for-the-kill assault of Kovalev and started landing surprising power shots on the Russian’s face. In the fifth round, Pascal served notice that this was a fight. A back-and-forth struggle that didn’t seem possible just two rounds earlier was on.

Kovalev slowed his attack, mindful of the power shots coming from the suddenly-dangerous Pascal. The hometown crowd got involved as Pascal landed clean shots to the face of Kovalev and seemed to turn the tide.

The end came with some controversy, as Pascal was punished in a corner before Kovalev tripped to the canvas, causing a stoppage. When action resumed, Kovalev landed a picture-perfect right hand that jacked the jaw of Pascal and prompted referee Luis Pabon to wave it off.

I have newfound respect for Pascal, whom I didn’t think had the game to take part in a slugfest like this, especially against Kovalev. But I think the stoppage was probably right.

Pascal has an awkward posture that makes it hard to see on television just exactly how badly he is hurt. He surprised Kovalev numerous times by throwing meaningful shots after taking blows that looked to wobble him. But at the point when Kovalev tripped in the eighth round, just before the stoppage, he was teeing off and had hurt Pascal.

The shot that landed when the fight resumed was clean and damaging and it showed that Pascal wasn’t in any shape to defend himself. In that light, it looks like a good stoppage by Pabon. It may not have looked good on television with the partisan crowd supporting Pascal. But the third man in the ring has insight that no one else has and on this occasion I believe he acted appropriately.