SHOBOX WEIGHTS

ANGELO LEO – 123
NEIL TABANAO – 122.25

XAVIER MARTINEZ – 131.75
JOHN MORALDE – 131.5

ANDRE CORTES – 132.25
JAHMAL DYER – 130.5

The Showtime telecast begins at 10PM ET.

SPENCE JR. DOMINATES GARCIA

Errol Spence Jr. put on a dazzling display of boxing skills in whitewashing Mikey Garcia over 12 rounds on Saturday night. The welterweight title fight pitted two previously undefeated fighters against each other in a pay-per-view showdown, but the issue was decided early on. Official scores were 120-108, 120-108 and 120-107.

InTheCorner.net scored the fight 119-109 for Spence Jr. (25-0, 21 KO’s).

The defending welterweight champion gave Garcia (39-1, 30 KO’s) just about nothing to aim for from the opening bell. Garcia, a tactician and multi-division champion, had all kinds of problems getting off any attack as Spence Jr. worked a jab relentlessly and seemed to always be in an offensive posture. Garcia’s only success came in isolated moments where he rushed in and landed shots against the retreating champion.

But Spence Jr. quickly turned the tide back in his favor each time. Final punch stat numbers were absurd: 345 punches landed by Spence Jr. vs. just 75 by Garcia.

Errol Spence Jr. pumped his jab, threw precision shots with both hands and seemed to be an impossible target for Garcia for most of the fight. Garcia fell behind early and needed desperately to rally but Spence Jr. gave him very few opportunities. Behind on all the cards, Garcia spent more time in a defensive posture than firing off shots.

Mikey Garcia moved up two weight classes for this fight and really didn’t have much to lose. The biggest risk was serious injury, and it looked at times that the beating was going in that direction. But to suffer his first loss at the hands of a much bigger fighter who is one of the dominant fighters in the sport, his stock can’t be affected too badly.

Errol Spence Jr. may have had his true coming-out party tonight. Those who follow boxing know he is most likely the cream of the crop in a deeply talented welterweight division. But to headline an event with over 47,000 people in the seats at AT&T Stadium, including stars and legendary athletes, speaks to Spence Jr.’s standing as a star. Garcia certainly sold his share of tickets, but Spence Jr. owned the night.

It was a great night for boxing with Jerry Jones hosting, Cowboys QB Dak Prescott by his side, and a who’s-who of boxing legends including Evander Holyfield and Manny Pacquaio sprinkled throughout the expensive seats. Errol Spence Jr. capitalized to the fullest by showing his incredible repertoire of boxing skills for all of the 12 rounds and making a highly skilled opponent look completely lost.

GARCIA – SPENCE JR. WEIGHTS

Weigh-in results for Saturday night’s pay-per-view card in Dallas, Tx:

MIKEY GARCIA – 145.5
ERROL SPENCE JR. – 146.25

DAVID BENAVIDEZ – 167
J’LEON LOVE – 168.25

LUIS NERY – 118
MCJOE ARROYO – 117

CHRIS ARREOLA – 239.25
JEAN PIERRE AUGUSTIN – 226

EUBANK JR. BATTERS DEGALE

Chris Eubank Jr. won a unanimous decision over James DeGale on Saturday at the O2 Arena in London. The victory earned Eubank (28-2, 21 KO’s) the IBO 168-lb title and likely send DeGale (25-3-1, 15 KO’s) into retirement.

Official scores were 114-112, 115-112 and 117-109, all for Eubank Jr.

DeGale was knocked down in rounds two and 10 and looked to be under duress for most of the fight. Eubank Jr. had a point deducted in the 11th round as an awkward fight got all the way out of control with Eubank Jr. slamming DeGale to the canvas.

This fight wasn’t about clean punching action as much as it was about wrestling, holding and firing off shots out of clinches. DeGale looked very much on the down side of his career and Eubank Jr. took advantage of it.

MARES LIFTS CROWN FROM CUELLAR

Abner Mares floored defending champion Jesus Cuellar and won a split decision to earn the WBA featherweight title Saturday night in Los Angeles. Mares (30-2-1, 15 KO’s) had the upper hand in a fast-paced fight that thrilled the fans at the Galen Center on the USC campus.

Cuellar (28-2, 21 KO’s) put together a good stretch in the middle rounds where he was able to back Mares up at times and make it a close fight. But, the game-changer came in the 11th when Mares caught Cuellar on the way in with a big right hand the scored a knockdown.

Official scores were 117-110 and 116-111 for Mares while one judge scored it 115-112 for Cuellar. The Mares scores correctly reflected who won the fight and by how much.

SHOWTIME ANNOUNCES 2016/2017 TELECASTS

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The Showtime boxing telecasts have all but dried up recently, but this week the media outlet announced five shows that will run from the end of 2016 into March of 2017. Many familiar names are involved in some nice matchups:

December 10:
Jesus Cuellar (28-1, 21 KOs) vs. Abner Mares (29-2-1, 15 KOs)*
Jermall Charlo (24-0, 18 KOs) vs. Julian Williams (22-0-1, 14 KOs)*

January 14:
Badou Jack (20-1-2, 12 KOs) vs. James DeGale (23-1, 14 KOs)**

January 28:
Carl Frampton (23-0, 14 KOs) vs. Leo Santa Cruz (32-1-1, 18 KOs)*
Dejan Zlaticanin (18-0, 11 KOs) vs. Mikey Garcia (35-0, 29 KOs)*

February 11:
Adrien Broner (32-2, 24 KOs) vs. Adrian Granados (18-4-2, 12 KOs)

March 4:
Danny Garcia (32-0, 18 KOs) vs. Keith Thurman (27-0, 22 KOs)**

*World title bout
**World title unification bout

The announcement was accompanied by a one-minute video on the Showtime website.

PORTER, THURMAN MAKE WEIGHT

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Official weights for Saturday night’s WBA welterweight title fight in Brooklyn, NY:

KEITH THURMAN – 146
SHAWN PORTER – 147

Undercard weights:

JAERRETT HURD – 153.8
OSCAR MOLINA – 154.8

ADAM KOWNACKI – 264.2
JESSE BARBOZA – 242.8

HEATER HARDY – 123.2
KIRSTIE SIMMONS – 122.8

DAVID BENAVIDEZ – 168.6
FRANCY NTETU – 170

JONATHAN ALONSO – 141.6
BRIAN JONES – 142

REGIS PROGRAIS – 139.8
LUIS FLOREZ – 140

JOSUE VARGAS – 140.8
RYAN PICOU 140.8

NICKLAUS FLAZ – 150.6
MACK BABB – 150.8

Weights courtesy of  Fightnews.com, Photo courtesy of Esther Lin/Showtime

ANDRE WARD RETURNS WITH ONE-SIDED DECISION

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Andre Ward returned to the ring on Saturday night and earned a 12-round unanimous decision win over Sullivan Barrera in front of Ward’s hometown crowd in Oakland, CA. Ward (29-0, 15 KO’s) dropped Barrera in the third round of the IBF light heavyweight title eliminator with a left hook and had a point deducted for a low blow, finishing ahead on the scorecards by wide margins: 119-109, 117-109 and 117-108.

Barrera (17-1, 12 KO’s) lost for the first time and really didn’t present Ward with too much in the way of offense. The bigger Barrera did land some solid shots on Ward, but no damage was done and Ward was able to mount an offense throughout the fight.

It wasn’t vintage Ward and there was definitely rust. The HBO commentary said otherwise, but if you watched the fight objectively, Andre Ward took a long time to get going and didn’t finish strong over the final rounds. It was a good exercise for Ward, but a fight with Sergey Kovalev should be a couple of fights away, at least.

CRAWFORD, SANTA CRUZ STAY UNBEATEN

HBO and Showtime went head-to-head tonight with a pair of undefeated champions defending their titles in the respective main events. Terence “Bud” Crawford and Leo Santa Cruz both passed their tests with stoppage wins.

Crawford (28-0, 20 KO’s), had a live challenger in Hank Lundy to deal with and the Omaha, NE native thrilled the fans at Madison Square Garden with a TKO5 to retain the WBO super lightweight title.

Likewise, Santa Cruz (32-0-1, 18 KO’s), sent his Southern California fans home happy with a fifth-round knockout of Kiko Martinez (35-7, 26 KO’s) to keep the WBA super title at featherweight.

Crawford got a stiff test from Lundy (26-6-1, 13 KO’s) in the first round as the challenger threw heavy shots, sometimes from wild angles and postures. Crawford quickly switched to a southpaw stance and fought that way till the end. Lundy got some solid power shots in during that first round, but the fight changed at the start of round two.

The pace slowed to a more measured battle and Crawford gained the upper hand due to his precise boxing skills.

In the final round, Crawford hurt Lundy with a flush right hand to the  jaw and he followed up to score a brutal knockdown. Lundy was able to continue but the fight was waved off moments later with Crawford landing at will and Lundy covering up against the ropes.

Official time of the stoppage was 2:09 of round five.

Out west, Santa Cruz started very quickly and dropped the hard-charging Martinez twice in the first round. It was pinpoint punching from Santa Cruz landing flush on the challenger, who came in willing to take a few shots.

He got them, as Santa Cruz nearly ended the fight in the first round.

But Martinez rebounded and fought well over the next few rounds, backing the champion up and landing solid shots of his own. It was a spirited fight until the fifth round when Santa Cruz got his man in trouble again with power shots and closed the show with a lethal barrage of unanswered shots. This fight also ended at the 2:09 mark of round five.

ARUM: PACQUIAO-BRADLEY III SET FOR APRIL 9

Manny Pacquiao and Timothy Bradley will have a rubber match on April 9, according to Top Rank boss Bob Arum. Bradley won a disputed split-decision in 2012, then Pacquiao notched a more convincing unanimous decision in the 2014 rematch.

Pacquiao (57-6-2, 38 KO’s) is coming off of his disappointing performance against Floyd Mayweather and may be appearing for the last time. Bradley (33-1-1, 13 KO’s) stopped Brandon Rios in his last fight in November.

IBEABUCHI LOOKS TO RETURN

Possibly appearing on the undercard is long-ago heavyweight contender Ike Ibeabuchi, recently freed from a prison sentence for sexual assault. Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports has a full story on the fighter once known as “The President.”

In the late 1990’s, Ibeabuchi built up a record of 20-1 with 15 KO’s and was one of the division’s most spectacular power punchers. His last fight was a brutal TKO5 over Chris Byrd in March of 1999.