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CRAWFORD – ALVAREZ PREDICTION

 

By Steven Cummings

We’re one week out from the high-profile fight between Terence “Bud” Crawford (41-0, 30 KOs) and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez (63-2-2, 39 KOs). With all of the variables going into this odd matchup, predictions for the outcome are all over the place. While there is nothing necessary about a matchup between these two, who come from weight classes that are far apart, the marquee value of each has made this fall into place. Here’s my expectation of how it’s going to go.

The records of each fighter and the belts they have won previously aren’t helpful in predicting a winner. That’s because of the age of each fighter and the divisions in which each has built his resume.

Terence Crawford will be 38 years old later this month. Canelo Alvarez is 35. Both fighters are squarely in the phase of their careers where those numbers might be very important.

Crawford won his first belt at lightweight and then went on to win multiple belts at 140 and 147. Alvarez won a title at 154 back in 2012 and then moved up, capturing belts at middleweight, super middleweight and light heavyweight.

For this encounter, Bud is jumping all the way up to super middleweight, this after just one fight as high as 154 pounds. And in that fight, Crawford had a struggle with Israil Madrimov, winning a close unanimous decision.

So, here we are, both fighters up in age, an eyebrow-raising weight situation and all of the visibility that comes with each of these fighters. It is difficult to look at their track records to figure out who will come out on top next Saturday, but what else do we have?

Doubts about the quality of Crawford’s opponents are legitimate, but there was little he could do about it along the way. Boxing politics froze the Omaha, NE native out of superfights and he had to force the issue himself to get a matchup with Errol Spence in 2023. With Spence thought to be a pound-for-pound candidate at the time, Crawford absolutely took him apart and left with three 147-pound titles.

Other notable names on Crawford’s resume include Shawn Porter, Kell Brook and Amir Khan. Bud stopped all three of them.

Alvarez,  meanwhile, enjoys all-time-great status which may or may not be deserved. But since 2023, he’s been on a Carnival Cruise victory lap that he should honestly be ashamed of. Since finishing off his trilogy with Gennadiy Golovkin in 2022, it’s been a series of pathetic choices for Canelo Alvarez. Furthermore, since stopping Caleb Plant in 2021, all of Alvarez’ fights have gone the distance.

Against uninspiring opposition such as Jaime Munguia and Edgar Berlanga, Canelo Alvarez didn’t have the kill shot in his arsenal. The star on the top of this Christmas tree is the shameful effort against no-hoper William Scull in his last outing. Scull didn’t belong in that ring and Canelo knew that when he hand-picked him.

Agreeing to face Crawford for the money that their names command may be another attempt at an easy windfall. After all, Canelo is obviously following the road map that Floyd Mayweather Jr. laid out in the waning years of his career. Canelo may think this is an easier payday than a matchup with Jake Paul, due to Crawford needing to jump two more weight classes after his difficult 154-pound debut.

Canelo and his camp can think whatever they want and show up with those expectations on fight night. Here’s what I think.

Terence Crawford has had to navigate an insane amount of bullshit in his career, being frozen out of major fights due to the promoter that he fights for and his elite, extremely skilled fighting style. Time went by and he went out on his own to force the fight with Spence before his career wound down completely and he won the fight and a bet on himself.

At this late stage of his boxing career, Terence Crawford is finally recognized as one of the greats in the game. With this fight, he seeks more than greatness and truly has nothing to lose under these circumstances.

Canelo Alvarez has impressive names on his resume with victories over Miguel Cotto, Golovkin, Khan, Danny Jacobs and Sergey Kovalev. Much of that trail is ancient history in boxing terms. Nevertheless, Alvarez has been tested and has passed against some notable names.

His two losses, however, were embarrassingly one-sided. Mayweather at super welterweight and Dimitri Bivol at light heavyweight made Canelo look like a rank amateur. He has excuses. But those performances are worth noting. Perhaps he feels he is putting Crawford into the position that he, himself, was in against Bivol, above his comfortable weight.

From what I’ve seen, Crawford’s greatness is legitimate and Alvarez’ resume has some serious question marks. How could Alvarez be comfortable at 175 to beat Kovalev for a championship, yet be completely schooled at that weight by Bivol?

And this list of suspects that Alvarez has faced in lieu of taking on challenges from real prospects is important and telling. So were his performances in these hand-picked, easy matchups.

On fight night, Terence Crawford will bring all of the skills he’s carried with him over the course of his career, plus the additional weight that he needed to pack on, which some say will be to his detriment.

He will still be Terence Crawford.

That will be the difference in this fight. Terence Crawford will bring more of his pedigree into the ring than his opponent.

The struggles that Crawford had with Madrimov are most notable because they weren’t expected. Bud Crawford got tagged. He switched stances and employed all of his elite weapons, but he got hit more than we’re used to seeing. Yet, it was close to a 50-50 fight, not a night where Crawford got worked over and exposed.

At the end of the fight, both guys were marked up. It was a great battle and Crawford was right there in it. He won. In current boxing analysis, that is portrayed as a misstep. In this case, the reality is that it was a tune up. Crawford passed the test and got valuable experience.

Meanwhile, Alvarez has been coasting.

After a few rounds Canelo Alvarez is going to realize what he has in front of him. When the middle rounds arrive, he is going to realize that he checked out on this level of competition a while ago and it is more than he can overcome.

Canelo Alvarez is going to quit.

Bud may stop him, but Canelo will likely call it a day before that happens. Frustration will shift Canelo’s attention from the task at hand to the size of the check he will be cashing. Embarrassment will lead him to bail out. It will almost certainly be on the stool.

And then the bullshit will really start. The same bullshit that Crawford has had to deal with his whole career will appear right on schedule after his career-defining victory.

First, it will be a phantom injury. Something allegedly out of Alvarez’ control. Excuses.

Then, it will be an exercise in detracting from Crawford’s achievement. He beat a guy that was hurt. Maybe there will be something about HOW Canelo got hurt. Wait, I know. He got hurt in training and didn’t tell anybody. But he’s too much of a warrior to not go ahead with the fight.

That kind of bullshit.

Don’t listen to the noise. Give Crawford his flowers. He’s earned them already and will have earned them more than most fighters have had to with this victory.

 

DUARTE DECISIONS SIMS JR. OVER 12

By Steven Cummings

# 5 Junior welterweight Oscar Duarte (30-2-1, 23 KOs) won a WBA eliminator over #4 Kenneth Sims Jr. (22-3-1, 8 KOs) via majority decision on Saturday night in Chicago. One judge scored it a draw at 114-114 but was overruled by scores of 115-113 and 116-112. InTheCorner.net scored it 116-112 for Duarte.

The styles played out true to form as Duarte came with relentless pressure throughout, while Sims attempted to stick and move to score points while disrupting Duarte’s attack. Sims was successful in stretches and managed to counter effectively at times throughout the fight.

But Duarte’s non-stop pressure carried the day, despite Sims’ tactical excellence. Online scoring was all over the place but it was a very hotly contested battle, even if you had it 8-4 for Duarte as I did.

The 29-year old from Mexico came to Sims Jr.’s hometown and fought in front of the Chicago fans the same way he always fights. It resulted in his fourth victory since being stopped by Ryan Garcia in December of 2023. The WBA champion at 140 is Gary Antuanne Russell.

Kenneth Sims Jr. had won nine straight fights going back to 2018.

Earlier, the surprise of the DAZN telecast was Regis Prograis outlasting Joseph Diaz over 10 rounds in a fight-of-the-night thriller. The veterans went back and forth for all 10 rounds with Prograis (30-3, 24 KOs) getting the edge behind a consistent jab and bouncing back from Diaz’ intense attacks. Jo Jo rocked Prograis a few times throughout the fight, but Prograis managed to get past the big shots and outwork him for the win. Diaz’ record now stands at 34-8-1 with 15 KOs.

VERON OUTPOINTS HERNANDEZ ON PROBOXTV

By Steven Cummings

Photo: Steven Cummings/InTheCorner.net

Junior middleweight Francisco Veron improved to 15-1-1 (10 KOs) with an impressive UD10 over WBC #15 Vladimir Hernandez in Fresno, CA on Saturday night in the main event of ProBoxTV’s telecast. Official scores: 99-91, 98-92 and 98-92. InTheCorner.net scored it 98-92.

In the opening round, as Hernandez (17-7, 7 KOs) rushed Veron, he got caught with a right hand and had to fight out of a corner. The local favorite (Hernandez fights out of Stockton) successfully got the fight back where he wanted it as he was able to pressure Veron and force back-and-forth exchanges.

In the third round Veron was cut around the right eye from an accidental headbutt. Maybe it was the cut that prompted a change in strategy, but whether it was or not, Veron began to use his height and reach to pepper Hernandez from the outside and moved away from the pressure.

The second half of the fight saw Veron control the distance and put rounds in the bank. Nevertheless, there was plenty of two-way action as Hernandez’ relentless pressure would get him in range to land clean shots. But most of the eye-catching shots were landed by Veron.

It was another highly competitive ProBoxTV fight, despite the wide scores.

 

ERIK BADILLO UD10 over GERARDO ZAPATA

Junior Flyweight Erik Badillo earned a title shot with a clean unanimous decision over Gerardo Zapata. Badillo (18-0, 8 KOs) outworked Zapata (15-3-1, 5 KOs) for most of the bout, earning the win by scores of 98-91, 98-91 and 97-92.

After three competitive rounds, Badillo floored Zapata in the fourth. Zapata slowed down over the second half of the fight while Badillo maintained his steady, two-fisted attack.

The win gives Badillo a shot at the winner of the rematch between Panya Pradabsri and Carlos Canizales.

 

FIGHT DAY: VLADIMIR HERNANDEZ vs. FRANCISCO DANIEL VERON

 

Today’s ProBox TV fight card from the Save Mart Center in Fresno, CA will air live at 3PM pacific. BoxingScene.com has posted a How To Watch article with particulars on the main event fighters and an overview of the undercard.

 

 

MEDIA WORKOUT FOR PROBOXTV SHOW IN FRESNO

The main event fighters and some VIPs will be present on Friday afternoon at a media workout for Saturday night’s ProBoxTV card in Fresno, CA. Friday’s event takes place at the Aleman Boxing Gym at 3310 E. Belmont Ave in Fresno.

Per the release below, Vergil Ortiz will be among the guests and fans who get there early will benefit from a ticket voucher giveaway:

Saturday night’s card at the SaveMart Center will be headlined by super welterweights Vladimir Hernandez (17-6, 7 KOs) and Francisco Daniel Veron (14=1=1, 10 KOs) and will air on ProBoxTV. The Co-main will feature unbeaten Erik Badillo (17-0, 8 KOs) vs. Gerardo Zapata (15-2-1, 5 KOs) in a WBC light flyweight eliminator.

Tickets for the show are available HERE

CATTERAL WINS TD OVER EUBANK

Jack Catterall (31-2, 13 KOs) stepped up to welterweight and came away with a technical decision win after cuts from a clash of heads in round six. Catterall was ahead on the scorecards and defeated previously unbeaten Harlem Eubank by scores of 69-66, 69-66 and 69-65.

The fight was beginning to heat up when the cuts occurred and chaos ensued after the bell rang to end round six. There was discussion with the ringside physician who concluded that round seven could start. But just one second into the round, the bout was halted and they went to the scorecards. Eubank suffered his first defeat and is now 21-1 with 9 KOs.

LESTER MARTINEZ – PIERRE DIBOMBE HEADLINE PROBOX CARD JULY 12 IN FRESNO

Unbeaten super middleweight Lester Martinez (19-0, 16 KOs) takes on veteran Pierre Dibombe (22-2-1, 12 KOs) on Saturday, July 12th at the SaveMart Center in Fresno, CA as headliners for a ProBoxTV card promoted by House Of Champions. Junior flyweight contender Erick Badillo (17-0, 8 KOs) takes on Gerardo Zapata (15-2-1, 5 KOs) on the undercard which is filled with evenly matched fights.

Martinez, ranked #3 by the WBA,  and #9 by the WBC, is coming off of a fourth round KO of Joeshon James in March and has stopped six of his last seven opponents.

The Martinez – Dibombe clash headlines a solid night of boxing in Fresno that will feature everything from crucial fights with title implications to local stars and a chance to meet well-known stars of the sport.

 

Tickets are reasonably priced and available through the SAVE MART CENTER WEBSITE.

EVENT DETAILS

PAUL DECISIONS CHAVEZ JR.

Jake Paul (12-1, 7 KOs) won a comfortable decision over a sluggish Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (54-7-1, 34 KOs) at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA on Saturday night. The headline of a stellar PPV card on DAZN was disappointing as Chavez Jr. failed to let his hands go for much of the fight as Paul built up a big lead. Though Chavez Jr. turned it up late in the fight and rallied against the tiring Paul, the 10-round decision went to Paul by scores of 99-91, 98-92 and 97-93.

Chavez Jr. fit the profile of opponents for Paul, a social media star who is building a boxing career that he says will lead him to a legit championship fight. The son of legend Julio Cesar Chavez checked in at 39 years of age and well past his prime. Paul fired away in the early rounds while Chavez Jr. did very little.

The last couple of rounds saw Chavez Jr. score with some left hooks while Paul was breathing heavily. Too little, too late. It was an easy decision for Paul.

On the undercard, WBA/WBO cruiserweight champion Zurdo Ramirez (48-1, 30 KOs) won a 10-round unanimous decision over Yuniel Dorticos (27-3, 25 Kos) by scores of 115-112, 115-112 and 117-110.

Floyd Schofield (19-0, 13 KOs) blasted Tevin Farmer (33-9-1, 8 KOs) in just 1:18 of the first round. Schofield scored and early knockdown and then followed up with another which prompted the ref to wave it off.

MBILLI STOPS SULECKI IN 1

Super middleweight Christian Mbilli (29-0, 24 KOs) jumped on Maciej Sulecki (33-4, 13 KOs) and scored a knockdown with an uppercut that ended the fight at the 2:28 mark of round 1 on Friday night in Quebec City, Canada. It was the third stoppage in his last five fights for Mbilli, who is listed as interim champion by the WBC while Canelo Alvarez continues to be recognized as the full champion.

HITCHINS STOPS KAMBOSOS JR. IN 8

By Steven Cummings

IBF junior welterweight champion Richardson Hitchins (20-0, 8 KOs) punished George Kambosos Jr. (22-4, 10 KOs) for seven rounds with precise shots, mostly from distance, and closed the show in round eight with a brutal body shot. Kambosos Jr. got up at 10 but was in great pain and the fight was waved off. Official time of the stoppage was 2:33.

You can’t do much better for sticking to the game plan than Hitchins did, keeping Kambosos Jr. at distance and peppering him with left jabs and right hand power shots. Kambosos Jr. tried to get inside and fired off some good body shots but they were few and far between. Hitchins was like a metronome.

Kambosos Jr. was hurt by a body shot in the fifth and Hitchins jumped on him but wasn’t able to end the fight at that point. Still, it was just a matter of time.

The punch stat numbers were incredibly lopsided. Kambosos Jr. was marked up early and took repeated clean shots throughout the fight.

The end came when Hitchins buried a left hand in Kambosos Jr.’s right side and the pain was obvious. When he got up, he didn’t look like he was in any condition to survive the remaining 30 seconds.

There was incredible theater in the final round as Hitchins asked Kambosos Jr. in the middle of the ring if he still wanted more of this. Then he turned to Kambosos Jr.’s corner and told Sr. if he loved his son he would stop the fight. After the knockdown, Hitchins looked over again as he walked to the neutral corner and said that he had told them to stop it.

After the fight, with WBO 140-pound champion Teofimo Lopez in the ring, Richardson Hitchins called out Devin Haney. Lopez then said he would be agreeable to a unification match.