USYK TAKES JOSHUA’S TITLES WITH UD12

Oleksandr Usyk boxed his way to a lead and then punished Anthony Joshua late to take a clear decision victory on Saturday night, earning a collection of heavyweight championship belts. Usyk (19-0, 13 KOs) overcame Joshua’s considerable height and reach advantages and handed the popular British fighter his second loss in front of over 60,000 partisan fans at Tottenham Hostspur Stadium.

Official scores were 117-112, 116-112 and 115-113, all for Usyk. InTheCorner.net had it 115-113 for Usyk.

From the opening bell, the Ukranian showed high-energy movement and punching, seemingly confusing Joshua (24-2, 22 KOs) who looked like he was trying to swat a fly. But Usyk was landing from time to time whereas Joshua was trying without success to find an opening. Ukyk had the slight edge in a tactical round one and a clear edge in round two.

The straight left found the mark a few times in round three for Usyk and then, near the end of the round, he wobbled Joshua. 3-0 Usyk going to the fourth round.

Joshua came out for round four with a better plan, moving forward and trying to get off first. It was another close round but Joshua had the edge as he finally appeared to be the bigger, more dangerous man. Usyk was not deterred but his attack wasn’t as effective as he was still on the move, but now going backwards a lot.

Two-way action in round five continued this pattern and in round six, AJ landed his best best shot of the fight, a straight right hand that caught Usyk flush on the face.

The next several rounds were back-and-forth. Usyk started to get his second wind and Joshua continued to press his own attack, having adjusted to the problem that he had in front of him. After 10 rounds, the fight was close, Usyk was cut over his right eye and Joshua had swelling under his right eye.

The championship rounds were where Usyk really shined. His relentless attack may have gassed Joshua and the Ukranian was energetic, peppering AJ with shots and landing cleanly on a consistent basis in round 11.

The final round turned out to be the crowning glory for Usyk, who left nothing to chance. He attacked from the opening bell and had the upper hand throughout. In the waning seconds of the fight he had Joshua in the most trouble he had been in all night, staggered against the ropes and taking clean shots. The bell prevented a knockdown or worse.

Oleksandr Usyk had his coming out party on Saturday night in a big way with a clear victory over a respected champion. Joshua is now faced with questions and, having been in this spot once already after losing to Andy Ruiz, the detractors are all in with the anti-AJ sentiment. Fair enough. Joshua’s been outworked twice when not everyone expected it. This loss to Usyk isn’t in the same category as the shocking beating he took from Ruiz, but it’s enough to question greatness.

Usyk, on the other hand, is the man of the hour. Outsized, in hostile territory, moving up from cruiserweight to take on a 240-lb champion, Usyk blew through every challenge and took home four titles.

DAZN broadcast the eye-popping spectacle and, as with many of their fight cards, it took place in the middle of the day in the States being that it originated from England. Despite this, DAZN continues to be money well spent. A fight of this magnitude dictates that a true boxing fan makes the fight a priority and watches it live or makes an effort to avoid hearing the decision before viewing the fight on demand later. Of course, the second option is an inconvenience. But the multi-belt heavyweight championship of the world, contested by fighters as significant as AJ and Usyk, should take priority over any early season college football game for a fan who has the commitment to pay the yearly fee. If you’re going to pay $100 for a year’s worth of fights, whenever they happen to be scheduled, this one was the one to plan your Saturday around.

GOLOVKIN RETURNS WITH DOMINANT STOPPAGE

Middleweight superstar Gennadiy Golovkin returned to the ring for the first time in 14 months and looked very sharp against overmatched Kamil Szeremeta on Friday night, stopping the previously undefeated fighter from Poland after seven rounds. GGG scored four knockdown and Szeremeta opted not to come out for the eighth round after getting battered and dropped in round seven.

Golovkin (41-1-1,36KOs) did damage with both hands on a variety of shots including uppercuts, overhand rights and his vaunted left jab. Szeremeta (21-1, 5KOs) did his best to keep punching in between barrages but he was clearly outclassed in this fight. He didn’t come close to winning a round and he did quite well to get through three of the rounds without getting knocked down.

https://twitter.com/DAZNBoxing/status/1340111278853992449?s=20

With the overpowering win, Golovkin looks to put the pressure on for a third fight with Canelo Alvarez, who is in action on Saturday night against Callum Smith. With a draw and a loss against Alvarez as the only blemishes on his record, Golovkin needed to make a statement tonight against his overmatched mandatory, and he did.

TYSON – JONES JR. PPV: A LITTLE BIT OF EVERYTHING

Boxing took centerstage on Saturday night as two of its all-time biggest stars squared off in a pay-per-view event that had the entire sports world’s attention. Even people outside of boxing took notice as Iron Mike Tyson stepped back into the ring to take on Roy Jones Jr.

In perfect 2020 form, Mike is 54 years old and Roy is 51 and this was an exhibition of eight two-minute rounds. The ground rules were quite restricting with safety measures in place to ensure no one would get seriously hurt. But with Tyson slimmed down and looking lethal, a one-punch demolition was still on the table.

The exhibition went the full eight rounds, Tyson clearly had the edge despite unofficial scoring that had it a draw, and the whole spectacle was quite entertaining. Snoop Dogg performed and then did ringside commentary. A lot of people could have gotten their $50s worth from the main event alone.

But this was a five-bout card that featured four other fights of varying degrees of quality. The opener was a barnburner between featherweights Irvin Gonzalez and Edward Vazquez, a split-decision win for Vazquez. Lightweight Jamaine Ortiz scored a TKO7 over Sulaiman Segawa before light heavyweight Badou Jack rolled all over an overmatched Blake McKernan for a UD8.

The co-main is the most talked-about part of this card besides Tyson-Jones Jr. YouTube sensation Jake Paul took his 1-0 record into the ring against former NBA star Nate Robinson, who was climbing through the ropes for the first time as a professional. It went spectacularly bad for Robinson who went down on his face three times, the last time completely unconscious. Paul probably wouldn’t have any business being in the ring against a trained professional boxer, but Robinson clearly had no business in the ring with Paul.

Knockdown #1 came in the first round, Robinson had no idea where the right hand came from, went down hard and only beat the count because the ref slowed down his pace. Clearly hurt, Robinson survived the onslaught but the beginning of round two saw Paul land another haymaker that put the slam-dunk champion down again. Robinson got up but not for long and the last knockdown/KO was scary. He went down flat, motionless, asleep.

Are you not entertained?

Boxing is a tough business for the pros. When a guy gets in there without the proper preparation and it goes like that, some people are appalled while others think it was the best thing that could have happened. I’d rather not see it again, but I’m willing to bet that I am waaaaaaayyyyyy outnumbered.

Then came Tyson vs. Jones Jr. Both guys breathed heavily but Mike looked more like his old self than Roy did. They Tyson menace was clearly there as an in-shape Tyson, even at age 54, stalked Jones Jr. and let fly with eye-popping combinations. Jones Jr. had just enough of his old movement and all of his ring smarts to tie up his attacker or move away from danger. It wasn’t a great boxing contest. It wasn’t very competitive and there was no doubt who was winning. But just like the late 80s and early 90s, it was all about if Tyson’s opponent could get out of this without getting his head knocked off.

It’s two days later and there is still a buzz around this event, but what does that mean in the grand scheme of things for boxing? The sport is cranking back up in the face of the pandemic and there have been some very enjoyable shows on the calendar. The Charlo twins’ doubleheader that ran $80 and went on for most of a day was a bold step for boxing-starved fans. The huge fights haven’t happened yet but we’ve got Errol Spence Jr. vs. Danny Garcia this coming weekend. Canelo Alvarez is back at it in a couple of weeks and Anthony Joshua is scheduled for later in December.

In the middle of all that, we had this. Middle-aged boxing fans as well as Gen Z fans wanted to see Iron Mike Tyson in the ring and they got it. The Paul/Robinson fight probably brought an insane number of fans due to Paul’s popularity. The other three bouts were about the same as you could expect on any fight card, a blowout, a back-and-forth war and a seventh-round stoppage.

What do you want for your $50? The rap performances, the Paul/Robinson show and Snoop Dogg as an announcer probably won’t work on a conventional boxing card. Or would they? Tyson himself said yesterday that boxing owes these YouTubers for bringing their fans to the sport.

This event was fun. I didn’t pay to see it but I enjoyed it and, while I wouldn’t want one of these every month or two, I’d be interested in seeing more. Rather than have Oscar De La Hoya do something embarrassing in a comeback fight at his age, why not do what Julio Cesar Chavez and Jorge Arce have been doing? You could fill up the undercard however you want and this Tyson-Jones Jr. show gave some pretty good suggestions. The key to the whole thing is for people to understand, or even not understand, what they are buying insofar as a competitive fight, a YouTube attraction or an exhibition. Mixed together like they were on Saturday night, the show was a roller coaster and the whole world took notice.

CRAWFORD STOPS BROOK IN 4TH ROUND

Terence Crawford improved to 37-0 (28 KOs) with a sudden finish to a tactical match against Kell Brook on Saturday night in Las Vegas. Brook was badly hurt by a counter right hand and staggered to the ropes where referee Tony Weeks called for a standing eight count. Crawford pounced on his dazed opponent and Weeks waved it off at the 1:14 mar,

Brook (39-3, 27 KOs) had the upper hand in the first round as Crawford started slowly as is his norm. Brook wasn’t much more active, but he won the round and the second round was more of the same with the action increasing slightly.

Round three saw Crawford firing more shots from his southpaw stance with Brook answering with his own right hand. The fourth round followed this same form until Crawford landed the fight-changing counter right hand.

With the win Crawford retained the WBO welterweight title.

ON THIS DATE IN 1976

WEIGHTS FOR SATURDAY FIGHTS

Official weights for Saturday’s TV fights:

WBA/IBF Super Lightweight Title on DAZN
REGIS PROGRAIS – 140
JOSH TAYLOR – 139.75

WBO Featherweight Title on ESPN+
SHAKUR STEVENSON – 126
JOET GONZALEZ – 125.2

SHOWTIME
ERICKSON LUBIN – 152.25
NATHANIEL GALLIMORE – 152.75

ROBERT EASTER JR. – 140.5
ADRIAN GRANADOS – 141.5

USYK – WITHERSPOON WEIGHTS

Here are the weigh-in results for Saturday night’s heavyweight fight airing on DAZN starting at 7PM ET:

Oleksandr Usik (16-0, 12 KO’s) – 215
Chazz Witherspoon (38-3, 29 KO’s) – 242

Dimitry Bivol (16-0, 11 KO’s) – 174.3
Lenin Castillo (20-2, 15 KO’s) – 175

SPENCE OUTLASTS PORTER IN A THRILLER

Errol Spence Jr. continued staking his claim as the best fighter in the world with a thrilling SD12 over Shawn Porter on Saturday night to add the WBC welterweight title to his own IBF belt. Spence (26-0, 21 KO’s) was pressed hard throughout the fight by a very determined Porter (30-3, 17 KO’s). An 11th round knockdown likely sealed the deal for Spence as he won by scores of 116-111, 116-111 and 112-115.

Most observers had it closer than 116-111, at worst seven rounds to five for Spence with the two-point round for the knockdown.

The welterweight division is the class of boxing and this matchup of champions was highly charged and lived up to all of the hype. A boisterous crowd at the Staples Center in Los Angeles got its money’s worth and more.

As Spence continues to establish himself as the absolute best at 147, Terence Crawford looms as the WBO champion and, in the minds of some observers, the best pound-for-pound fighter in boxing. Manny Pacquaio holds the WBA belt and Danny “Swift” Garcia is the WBC’s #1 contender. That’s a lot of star power for one division.

Here’s hoping all these titans can ultimately meet like Leonard, Duran, Hagler and Hearns did in the 1980’s.

J-ROCK DETHRONES HURD

Julian “J-Rock” Williams took the fight to unified super welterweight champion Jarrett Hurd on Saturday night and won a majority decision, taking the WBA, IBF and IBO belts. Williams (27-1-1, 16 KO’s) floored Hurd in the second round and forced the action all night in an entertaining contest in front of Hurd’s hometown supporters in Farifax, VA.

Official scores were 116-111, 115-112 and 115-112. InTheCorner.Net scored the fight 116-111 for Williams.

Hurd (23-1, 16 KO’s) is a notoriously slow starter and J-Rock was waiting for him and took advantage early. After winning the first round on the basis of more activity, Williams stunned the now-former champ with a combination that sent Hurd to the canvas in the second round. Hurd heated up after the first few rounds but Williams didn’t give an inch.

Williams asserted himself in this training camp as he tried to bounce back from a previous title challenge loss to Jermall Charlo in 2016. That loss put Williams on a path of comeback fights and when he got another title shot he poured his heart and soul into his preparation.

Hurd presents a matchup problem for just about anybody in the 154-lb division with long arms and power in both hands. He’s known as a volume puncher once he gets into gear. Williams neutralized all of these points and came back with his own sharp attack. Both fighters were marked with Hurd bleeding from his right eye while Williams had swelling around his left eye. When Hurd let his hands go, he was able to get strong power shots in and uppercuts on the inside. But Williams never let him get any momentum. For every Hurd action, there was a counter by Williams.

An emotional J-Rock addressed the intensity of his training and the respect he has for Hurd and his family in the ring after the fight. The fighters praised each other in post-fight interviews, a show of mutual respect. There is a rematch clause but Williams didn’t commit to an immediate sequel.

ANGELO LEO UD12 OVER NEIL JOHN TABANO

Angelo Leo improved to 17-0 (8 KO’s) with a lopsided 10-round unanimous decision victory over Neil John Tabano (17-5, 11 KO’s) Friday night. The super bantamweight contest headlined a live ShoBox telecast from Las Vegas, NV.

Leo won all 10 rounds on each of the three judges’ scorecards with winning margins of 100-90, 100-90 and 100-89.

More info on the undercard matches on FightNews.com.