The Official BGOL Boxing Thread

Deontay Wilder (35-0) routs Johann Duhaupas, keeps WBC heavyweight title

Heavyweight titleholder Deontay Wilder delivered a massive beating to game Johann Duhaupas, who took enormous punishment but never went down before being stopped in the 11th round Saturday night at the Legacy Arena in Birmingham, Alabama.

With the partisan crowd of 8,471 roaring for him, Wilder, who is from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, took it to Duhaupas round after round. By the time the fight was stopped, Duaupas' face was a bloody, black-and-blue mess from taking so many clean punches as Wilder (35-0, 34 KOs) retained his world title for the second time in a Premier Boxing Champions main event that was the first heavyweight title bout on NBC in prime time in 30 years.

"It's tough fighting at home because you want to entertain the crowd. The people come out and they paid their hard-earned money, so they definitely want to see a show, and didn't you all get a show tonight? Oh, my God," an excited Wilder told the crowd from the ring after the fight.

Yes, he gave the crowd a show, albeit a one-sided one. He was a huge favorite against the unknown Frenchman. Although Duhaupas was dominated, got busted up and eventually was stopped for the first time, he showed tremendous grit and landed enough punches to raise noticeable swelling under Wilder's left eye in the second round.

Wilder, whose corner did a great job of controlling the swelling, cut Duhaupas on the bridge of the nose in the first round and things never got much better for him. He bulled forward against Wilder but took loads of clean punches for his trouble.

Wilder landed almost as many punches as Duhaupas threw. According to CompuBox punch statistics, Wilder connected on 326 of 587 blows (56 percent); Duhaupas landed only 98 of 332 (30 percent).

Duhaupas (32-3, 20 KOs), 34, the fourth fighter from France to fight for a heavyweight world title, continually walked into right hands and left hooks and ate numerous uppercuts in a fight that had plenty of action. Wilder had a big fifth round when he went uppercut crazy and had Duhaupas in trouble in the final minute.

Wilder was so dominant he found time to play to the crowd in the sixth round as he shuffled across the ring in the final seconds. He continued to dole out punishment in the seventh round, after which referee Jack Reiss went to Duhaupas' corner and told him he had to show something or he would stop the bout.

The 6-foot-7, 229-pound Wilder unleashed a sustained flurry late in the 10th round that drove the 6-foot-5, 236-pound Duhaupas back in another big round, after which Reiss had the ringside doctor go to Duhaupas' corner to examine him.
Punch statsPunches Wilder Duhaupas
Landed 326 98
Thrown 587 332
Percent 56% 30%
-- Courtesy of CompuBox

He was allowed to come out for the 11th round, and Wilder finished him off. He drove Duhaupas back toward the ropes as he landed about a dozen unanswered punches, forcing Reiss to step in at 55 seconds.

"Wilder's a strong puncher, but I was also ready to go the distance," Duhaupas said. "I don't think the referee should have stopped the fight. I was defending myself and moving. I don't know why he stopped the fight. Yes, I was bleeding but it was not affecting me in any way. I have never been stopped before in a fight and there's a reason for that. It was disappointing he choose to stop it.

"I trained hard for this fight but only trained five weeks, which for me is not enough time. I was still fighting a good fight and, again, I don't think the referee should have stopped it."

While the fight lasted perhaps a bit longer than most expected, the result was the expected Wilder blowout. He was ahead 100-90 on one scorecard while the two other judges had Wilder ahead 99-91, both having given Duhaupas only the fourth round.

But Wilder gave Duhaupas credit for his toughness.

"He did everything we expected him to do," Wilder said. "We knew he was tough. We knew he was mentally tough. We knew he was going to come. That's why you can't criticize nobody you don't know. ‎The most scariest people are the ones you don't know.

"He got a hell of chin. When [you're] fighting for a world title it brings a different kind of beast, a bit different animal out of fighters. They come to get it all whether they home or on the road. You got to give him credit. He definitely has my respect. He was very strong and I see why he's never been stopped before. I was prepared to go all 12 rounds."

The 29-year-old Wilder, a 2008 U.S. Olympic bronze medalist and the first American heavyweight titleholder since Shannon Briggs lost his belt in 2007, has only gone the distance once before, and that was in January when he routed Bermane Stiverne to win the belt. Wilder made his first defense in June, also in Birmingham, and although he was badly hurt at one point, he knocked out heavy underdog Eric Molina in the ninth round.

Wilder has a mandatory defense due against former titlist Alexander Povetkin (29-1, 21 KOs), of Russia, in a bout that many expect to be Wilder's next fight, although Povetkin is risking his mandatory status with a fight against Mariusz Wach on Nov. 4 in Russia.

If Wilder can survive the mandatory bout, the heavyweight fight the world wants to see is a unification fight with recognized world champion Wladimir Klitschko (64-3, 54 KOs), the lineal champion who also holds the three other major belts. Klitschko, who easily beat Povetkin in a one-sided decision in 2013, has held a world title for 9½ years (second-longest in division history) and made 18 defenses (third-most in division history).

"Wilder is a good fighter. I think he is tough and hit me with some good shots, but I also think he should have more preparation to go to the next level," Duhaupas said. "He can compete with Klitschko and Alexander Povetkin, but he needs to train hard and have a strong game plan."

The fight with Klitschko is the one Wilder is asked about all the time, and one he said he wants.

"Hopefully, sometime end of next year," he said. "We got to get these mandatories out of the way.

"People gotta understand. They got to stay patient. This is a process and a business. But as long as I keep winning, which I will, and he keep winning, that should come around real soon, and we can have an undisputed heavyweight champ of the world, which is me, baby."
 
I like the way things are going with the HWs. I think Wilder is doing the exact right thing by defending his title here in America, and in his hometown. He's building an American fan base, the same way Fury and Joshua are doing in the U.K. Fury-Klitschko is a big deal now because Fury first built up a local fan base. Wilder is doing the same thing here in the U.S. He's slowly cooking up a superfight with Klitschko, Fury, and Joshua, and it's gonna be awesome.

Damn.... Did I just mention four elite heavyweights that could possibly produce superfights with each other? What year is this?
 


CHASING TYSON
Directed by Steven Cantor
Evander Holyfield knew he could never earn the respect he craved until he defeated Mike Tyson. When the two finally fought, the world witnessed not one, but two of the sport's most memorable fights.
NOV 10 @ 8:00 P.M. ET CHASING TYSON ON ESPN
 
Omg. Evander sounds EXTRA punchy. He's never been able to talk, but got damn he's worse than he's ever been. Hope the shit doesn't progress any further :smh:
 
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Fury ready to shake up boxing world by beating Klitschko

BOLTON, England (AP) — As Tyson Fury prowled the practice ring, stopping regularly for some shadow-boxing and imagining Wladimir Klitschko on the end of his punches, his father looked on with pride.

"They wrote him off, saying he wouldn't live," said John Fury, recalling the day — 27 years ago — when the second of his six sons was born three months early, weighing just one pound (.45 kg).

"I told them, 'It's his destiny to live, and I'll tell you one better than that — he'll end up nearly 7 feet (2.13 meters) tall, 20 stones (280 pounds/127 kg), and be the heavyweight champion of the world. And his name's going to be Tyson, after Mike Tyson.'"

It could turn out to be some prophecy.

Tyson Fury is now 2.09m (6-foot-9) tall, weighs 255 pounds (116 kg), is unbeaten in 24 professional fights, and says he is ready to shake up the heavyweight division by taking the WBA, WBO and IBF belts off Klitschko in a world heavyweight title fight in Duesseldorf, Germany, on Nov. 28.

If he wins, the boxing world had better watch out. Fury might be among the most colorful and interesting characters in sports.

Born in Manchester, he is of Gypsy heritage — he calls himself "Gypsy King" on Twitter — and comes from a bloodline of bare-knuckle champions on both sides of his family. Fury is deeply religious. He wears Ugg boots. He appeared at a recent news conference dressed up as Batman, and wrestled a man wearing a Joker costume to the floor. He's a wannabe politician. He has suffered from depression and successfully battled against bulimia. And then there's his eye-catching name.

"If I can't fight, nobody can," Fury told The Associated Press in an interview at his gym in Bolton, northwest England. "Like a racehorse is bred for racing, I'm bred for fighting. Nothing else. I'm what you call a pure-bred. Pure-bred fighter. Pure-bred idiot."

An hour in the company of Fury and his entourage — all family members — is entertaining. The conversation switches quickly from his pride at his Gypsy background to his faith, his future — he says he could become a pastor after retiring from boxing — his distaste for material goods, and his belief that he'll become a boxing legend.

"There has been no one like me," he says.

In his small gym, there are drawings of boxing greats on every wall: Sugar Ray Robinson, Joe Louis, Jack Dempsey, Harry Greb, Muhammad Ali. A drawing of Fury himself is just to the right of Louis.

One of the good-luck messages written by youngsters who train at the gym reads: "Hell Hath No Fury Like Tyson."

"As I'm in this room now, I'm like a fish in water," Fury said, with intensity in his eyes. "It's my place. It's where I'm supposed to be. I'm never happier than in a boxing ring."

Fury is in the best shape of his life and is about five pounds (2.2 kg) lighter than his usual fighting weight, according to his trainer and uncle, Peter Fury.

"He's' 110 percent prepared," Peter Fury said, shrugging off the fact that the fight against Klitschko was delayed five weeks after the Ukrainian was injured in training. "This is the stiffest test Wladimir has had in his career."

Tyson Fury describes Klitschko as "the ultimate in heavyweight history" because of his 26 title defenses, but says the heavyweight division needs a change after a decade of dominance from Klitschko and his brother Vitali.

"He's very good at boxing, not a very good entertainer," Fury said of his opponent. "Unfortunately, fans have had to put up with it for a long time. He's been able to get away with it because of his athleticism and size over the other victims. They go in there without a chance. But that's where I change it all. I'm taller, heavier, younger, fresher, faster."

It will be a huge step-up for Fury, who is a former British, Irish, European and Commonwealth champion.

He could also be inspired by the return of his father in his corner. John Fury — a former bare-knuckle fighter nicknamed "Gypsy John" and also a one-time British heavyweight contender — was sentenced to 11 years in jail in 2011 for gouging out a man's eye in a brawl.

He is out on parole and has been given special permission to travel to Germany

"We've been through a lot, you know," John Fury said. "But nothing is going to stop him now."
 
Aaaaaaand.....

Margarito is back...

http://espn.go.com/boxing/story/_/i...rito-end-4-year-retirement-face-jorge-paez-jr

Former welterweight champ Antonio Margarito to face Jorge Paez Jr.

Former welterweight titleholder Antonio Margarito is ending a more-than-four-year retirement.

Margarito will fight Jorge Paez Jr. on March 5 in a scheduled 10-round junior middleweight bout at the Mexico City Arena, Zanfer Promotions announced on Tuesday night.

Margarito has not been in the ring since his surgically repaired right eye was badly damaged in his December 2011 fight against Miguel Cotto, which Cotto won by 10th-round knockout to retain a junior middleweight world title and exact revenge in their animosity-filled rematch.

Margarito's eye had been initially damaged 13 months earlier in a one-sided decision loss to Manny Pacquiao. Margarito required surgery to repair a torn retina and to remove a cataract after that fight and nearly was not licensed to fight Cotto because of the eye.

Margarito also comes with the additional baggage of a 2009 incident at the Staples Center in Los Angeles in which he was caught in the dressing room with hand wraps that contained elements of plaster before his fight against Shane Mosley.

Margarito had his hands rewrapped and ultimately was knocked out in the ninth round of a one-sided fight in a huge upset as Mosley took his welterweight world title.

The California State Athletic Commission revoked Margarito's license, and he was not allowed to fight again for 16 months before returning to his native Mexico.

Now Margarito (38-8, 27 KOs), who turns 38 on March 18, will embark on another comeback in Mexico against countryman Paez (39-7-2, 23 KOs), the son of former lightweight titlist Jorge Paez Sr.

Paez Jr., a much smaller man than Margarito, is 1-2 in his past three fights, including a 12th-round knockout loss to Jose Benavidez Jr. challenging him for his interim junior welterweight belt in May 2015.

Margarito approached promoter Top Rank a few months ago about making a comeback. Top Rank chairman Bob Arum agreed to give him a chance as long as his eye passed a medical exam. Margarito will fight Paez on a card being put on by Fernando Beltran's Zanfer Promotions, which has very close ties to Top Rank.

Arum said that if Margarito looks good, he would then work to get him licensed in the United States with the aim of getting him a bigger fight.

"Let's see how he does with Paez first before we make a big effort to get him licensed in the United States," Arum told ESPN.com. "Paez is a good test for a guy who's been out of action as long as Margarito has been."

Arum said he has already spoken informally with the California commission about relicensing Margarito despite the infamous hand-wrapping scandal there seven years ago.
 
And GGG STILL can't get nobody to fight him... Billy Joe Saunders' people just turned that fight down.
 
It's about damned time!



Angel Garcia, Ruben Guerrero exchange words before their sons exchange punches
JAN 21, 2016 BY JASON SCAVONE

From the moment the fight between Danny Garcia and Robert Guerrero was announced, everyone knew this was coming.

Danny Garcia and Robert Guerrero have that classic fighter persona going on, where they might be beasts in in the ring, but outside the ropes they're laid back like cats in a sunbeam.

Their respective father-trainers? Not so much.

Angel Garcia and Ruben Guerrero have both been known to engage in the ancient and subtle art of furious trash-talking. And it's not JV-level stuff, either.

These are two guys who elevate the jawing game to a snarling poetry of loud-mouthed ego stomping. So naturally, along the promotional trail for their sons' 147-pound title fight in Los Angeles on Saturday (Fox, 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT), it was only a matter of time before they got into it with each other.

Ruben Guerrero fired the first shots at Thursday's press conference, but Angel Garcia was rather disinclined to stand down. Put in your headphones and hide the kids, as the language here gets saltier than olive brine potato chips.

Seeing as how we're just two days removed from the big show, there's not much of a wait to see which son will back up his father's words. Words like "Little girls like that, you can't slap them," from Ruben about Angel. Or "You know how when you play with dog s**t, it starts stinking more? That's what he's doing," from Angel to Ruben.

It's too bad the undercard is full, but it's never too early to start thinking about who might be available should a rematch happen.

For complete coverage of Garcia vs Guerrero, head on over to our fight page.
 

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Rising star and 2012 U.S. Olympian Errol “The Truth” Spence Jr. (19-0, 16 KOs) will take on former world champion Chris Algieri (21-2, 8 KOs) in a 10-round welterweight showdown that headlines a night that features three exciting matchups on Premier Boxing Champions at Barclays Center on Saturday, April 16.

PBC on NBC coverage begins at 8:30 p.m. ET and will see unbeaten world champion Krzysztof Glowacki (25-0, 16 KOs) of Poland squaring-off against former two-time cruiserweight world champion Steve “U.S.S.” Cunningham (28-7, 13 KOs) plus 2012 U.S. Olympian and unbeaten light heavyweight “Sir” Marcus Browne (17-0, 13 KOs) of Staten Island takes on undefeated Radivoje “Hot Rod” Kalajdzic (21-0, 14 KOs) in a 10-round battle.
 



Gennady Golovkin and Dominic Wade tipped the scales Friday afternoon at The Forum in Los Angeles. Golovkin-Wade happens Saturday at 10 PM ET, 7 PM PT on HBO World Championship Boxing.
 
Golovkin stops Wade in 2nd round for 22nd straight KO win

Less than six minutes after the opening bell, Gennady Golovkin left another contender for his middleweight belts crumpled on the canvas.

Golovkin appears determined to keep on brutalizing overmatched opponents and racking up knockouts until no 160-pound fighters remain upright.

Golovkin defended his middleweight titles in devastating fashion again Saturday night, finishing Wade in the second round for his 22nd straight stoppage victory.

Golovkin (35-0, 32 KOs) knocked down Wade three times in the short fight, punishing the previously undefeated challenger before ending the bout on a right to the chin with 23 seconds left in the second. A sold-out Forum roared for its adopted champion in his 16th consecutive title defense.

"This is a big present for my fans," Golovkin said. "I'm here now and I'm here to stay. I'm not going anywhere."

Roman "Chocolatito" Gonzalez also defended his WBC 112-pound title with a unanimous decision over McWilliams Arroyo.

Golovkin and Gonzalez combined to pack the famous arena south of downtown Los Angeles for the second time in a year, attracting 16,353 savvy boxing fans who understand the sublime brutality of the Kazakh 160-pound champion and the Nicaraguan flyweight.

Wearing blue-and-gold trunks to celebrate the Los Angeles Rams' NFL return to a future stadium across the street from the Forum, Golovkin opened his bout in his new hometown with the crowd repeatedly chanting "Triple G!"

And Golovkin was relentless from the bell, knocking down Wade (18-1) with a punch to the ear in the final seconds of the opening round. After absorbing a few punches from Wade with negligible impact, Golovkin landed a dynamite combination in the second round, flooring Wade with a left uppercut and a right to the body.

"I was not able to get comfortable once he started hitting me," Wade said. "He's a great champion, and he does everything well. His power is real."

Golovkin finished his woozy opponent with a right hand that left Wade face-down on his knees. Golovkin, who idolizes the same Mexican boxers beloved in Los Angeles, got another enormous cheer when he greeted the fans with "Muchas gracias!"

Golovkin was an enormous favorite to beat Wade, his mandatory challenger for one of his belts. Although Golovkin has dominated the middleweight division, he still covets a superfight with Canelo Alvarez, who holds the WBC version of the 160-pound belt after beating Miguel Cotto at a 155-pound catch weight last year.

Alvarez has said he is willing to fight Golovkin, but Alvarez's promoter, Oscar De La Hoya, appears less interested in making it happen right away. Alvarez will be forced to vacate the WBC belt if he doesn't take the fight later this year, giving three of the four major titles to Golovkin.


When asked if he had a message for Alvarez, Golovkin said: "Give me my belt! Hey, I need my belt! I'm ready!"

Gonzalez (45-0) is widely considered the world's top pound-for-pound fighter since the retirement of Floyd Mayweather, and the 112-pound dynamo put on another impressive display in his fourth straight title defense.

Yet the Nicaraguan champion's streak of 10 consecutive stoppage victories was ended by Arroyo (16-3), whose gritty effort on a damaged shoe earned him respect from a crowd supporting Gonzalez.

Nobody had gone the distance with Gonzalez since Juan Francisco Estrada in November 2012. Two judges scored the bout 119-109 for Gonzalez, and a third gave every round to the champion, 120-108. The Associated Press scored it 119-109 for Gonzalez.

"This shows that I can win either by knockout or by going the distance," Gonzalez said through a translator. "It was a very difficult fight, but McWilliams moves very well, and he knows how to avoid the punches."
 
Wilder-Povetkin called off after failed drug test

Heavyweight titleholder Deontay Wilder's defense against mandatory challenger Alexander Povetkin was called off Sunday in the wake of Povetkin's positive test for the banned substance meldonium.

Wilder and Povetkin were scheduled for their much-anticipated fight on May 21 at the Khodynka Ice Palace in Moscow, but in a Voluntary Anti-Doping Association urine test conducted April 27 in Chekhov, Russia, Povetkin tested positive for meldonium. The test results came to light Friday when the VADA sent letters to both camps and the WBC, whose title Wilder holds, disclosing them.

Wilder and his team have been in Sheffield, England, for the past two weeks training and adjusting to several hours of time difference. They were scheduled to fly to Moscow on Sunday afternoon but did not board their flight and were making plans to return to the United States despite having not heard from the WBC on the matter, a member of Wilder's team told ESPN.com.

Hours after Wilder and his team skipped their flight, the WBC, having little choice with the titleholder preparing to return home, announced the fight was off and called it a postponement.

"The World Boxing Council is diligently addressing the positive test result from the [WBC's] clean boxing program for mandatory challenger Alexander Povetkin," WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman said in a statement. "Keeping the priority of safety and also the principle of justice, the WBC will continue the investigation into the case. Consequently, the event scheduled for May 21 in Moscow is hereby officially postponed. The WBC will be releasing more information in the coming days regarding the final ruling on the matter."

Wilder, who embraced going to foreign territory to defend his title, was upset that the fight was called off.

"I'm very disappointed that due to Povetkin's failed drug test the fight is not going to happen on May 21 in Moscow," Wilder said in a statement. "I had worked very hard to prepare myself for this important title defense, spending the last two weeks training in England to get accustomed to fighting in Europe. I wanted to give the fans a great show, but we understand the WBC's position that the fight occur on an even playing field.

"This is a huge disappointment and a setback to my goals in boxing. I want to be an active heavyweight champion and it is still my goal to collect all the belts and become the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world."

Meldonium is the same drug for which tennis star Maria Sharapova and many other athletes recently tested positive. It was approved to be added to the banned substance list by the World Anti-Doping Agency in September, and the ban went into effect Jan. 1. Meldonium is used to increase blood flow and carry more oxygen to muscles, thereby enhancing stamina, a trait boxers would want in a long fight.

"The guy tested positive for a dangerous drug and the health and safety of Deontay was paramount, so the fight could not take place on May 21," Wilder promoter Lou DiBella told ESPN.com. "Deontay would have fought King Kong without any regard for what substance was being used, but Povetkin's use of this banned substance and the breach of the contract deprived Deontay of an opportunity to defend his title on a fair playing field. As a result, Deontay has suffered significant damages.

"He has gone through his entire training camp and expended a tremendous amount of time and money and energy. It's awful."

Andrey Ryabinsky of World of Boxing, Povetkin's promoter, said the fight would be rescheduled while the rest of the card will go forward. A cruiserweight world title unification bout between Russia's Denis Lebedev (28-2, 21 KOs) and Victor Emilio Ramirez (22-2-1, 17 KOs), of Argentina, has been moved from the co-feature to the main event.

"Any talk from Ryabinsky of a rescheduled date is both unfounded and premature," DiBella said. "We need to sit back and await further rulings from the WBC, but we will weigh all of our options."

There is a lot of money at stake. Based on Ryabinsky's winning purse bid of $7.15 million, Wilder was due $4,504,500 to Povetkin's $1,930,500 with the remaining 10 percent -- $715,000 -- going to the winner. With no fight, the purses won't be paid and a lawsuit is likely to ensue; Wilder's purse is sitting in escrow in a United States bank, according to his camp.


If there is a lawsuit, Ryabinsky could have issues mirroring a 2014 situation he was in.

Lebedev, who is promoted by Ryabinsky, was due to face Guillermo Jones in a rematch in Russia, but with the fighters in their dressing rooms hours before the fight, Jones tested positive for a banned diuretic, which is typically used as a masking agent for steroids. The fight was canceled, and Ryabinsky later won a judgment against Jones promoter Don King for the money he and Lebedev were owed for the bout.

Ryabinsky said Povetkin's levels of meldonium were very low and that the traces in his system were left over from when he took it in September, before the ban.

"He has not taken it since Jan. 1. The situation is ambiguous," Ryabinsky told Russia's TASS news agency before the fight was called off. "The blood sample was taken in April this year."

However, Povetkin was tested by the VADA on April 7, 8 and 11, and each of those tests came back negative for any banned substances, according to two letters ESPN.com obtained in which the VADA disclosed those test results to both sides and the WBC. Those results indicate that meldonium apparently entered Povetkin's system after the ban was in place.

Wilder (36-0, 35 KOs), 30, a 2008 U.S. Olympic bronze medalist from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, was supposed to make his fourth title defense against Russia's Povetkin (30-1, 22 KOs), 36, a 2004 Olympic gold medalist. Povetkin loomed as Wilder's most significant opponent, and the fight is one of the significant bouts that could be made in the heavyweight division.

 
Which U.S. boxers have the best pro potential?
25499781332c5ccf64cf36585ca5408a

RIO DE JANEIRO — The best professional prospect on the U.S. Olympic boxing team is, without a doubt, women’s middleweight Claressa Shields.

The reigning gold medalist, who makes her 2016 debut on Wednesday, is an overwhelming favorite to repeat and become the first American boxer, male or female, to win gold in back-to-back Olympics.

And Shields will be a great professional boxer, if that’s the path she chooses.

Unfortunately for Shields, boxing promoters and American television networks don’t treat women fighters anywhere near as equally as the UFC does, as an example.

There aren’t nearly as many opportunities for women’s boxers as there are for men. NBC Sports Network is going to broadcast on Sunday a women’s fight between Heather Hardy and Shelly Vincent that figures to be entertaining, but those shows are very few and far between.

So as I examine the pro prospects of this U.S. team, I’ll skip Shields and lightweight Mikaela Mayer, who was 1-1 in her two fights, because they won’t have the same kind of opportunities as a pro that women in mixed martial arts do.

If, as expected, Shields repeats, she might be best served by staying in the Olympic program and going for three consecutive gold medals.

Only three boxers, Hungary’s Laszlo Papp and Cubans Teofilo Stevenson and Felix Savon, have won three gold medals in Olympic boxing. Doing that would brand Shields as one of the greatest Olympic boxers of all-time, and she’d still only be 25, or younger than Mayer is right now.

For this exercise, I’m going to judge the fighters on two categories: One, strictly how good they will be as athletes in the pros. And two, how much star power will they bring? Can they sell tickets? Will they become a pay-per-view star? Will they generate huge television ratings?
Full Article:http://sports.yahoo.com/news/which-u-s-boxers-have-the-best-pro-potential-161548735.html
 
There aren’t nearly as many opportunities for women’s boxers as there are for men. NBC Sports Network is going to broadcast on Sunday a women’s fight between Heather Hardy and Shelly Vincent that figures to be entertaining, but those shows are very few and far between.






Just listening to an interview with her now on the MMA Dude Bro podcast. The ITunes version of the podcast has her come on just after the 57-min' mark so listen for it around there on Soundcloud.




https://soundcloud.com/mmadudebro

https://twitter.com/mmapod?lang=en

https://www.instagram.com/heathertheheat/?hl=en

https://twitter.com/HeatherHardyBox/media





























 
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Kauffman-Mansour collide March 17


By Togorashi

Kings Promotions has announced a March 17 card featuring a really interesting heavyweight clash between Travis Kauffman (31-1, 23 KOs) and Amir Mansour (22-2-1, 16 KOs), taking place at the Santander Arena in Reading, Pennsylvania.
 
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Manny Pacquiao vs. Jeff Horn Fight to Air on ESPN July 1
Manny Pacquiao (59-6-2) will next step in the ring against Jeff Horn (16-0-1) in Brisbane, Australia, on July 2 locally, and July 1 in the United States.

On Monday, it was officially announced that the fight will air on ESPN rather than on pay-per-view.

"Working with Top Rank on a match normally seen on pay-per-view is a significant moment for ESPN and for boxing fans," ESPN president John Skipper said, per Dan Rafael of ESPN.com. "This fight, along with ESPN's in-depth programming surrounding the fight, joins Wimbledon, Home Run Derby and the ESPYS in a stellar early July programming lineup."

Pac-Man will defend his welterweight world title in the bout.

"The world has followed amazing Manny since he burst onto the scene in his U.S. debut in 2001, where he knocked out Lehlo Ledwaba to win his second of a record eight division world titles," Arum said. "We are excited that ESPN will air this fight throughout the U.S. in both English and Spanish. It's going to be an unbelievable event."

Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times noted there was an initial push from Pacquiao and his manager, Michael Koncz, to fight Amir Khan, but there was never a financial agreement put in place. Promoter Bob Arum did grant a fight against Khan could still happen in November.

Pacquiao will have to deal with a home crowd for Horn, who was an Australian Olympian in 2012.

Arum discussed Horn matching up with the Philippine native, per Rafael, "He's a good fighter. Does he beat Manny? Probably not, but he's going to give him a good fight. He has a very pleasing personality."

While Pacquiao famously lost to Floyd Mayweather in a long-awaited clash in 2015, he has returned from a brief retirement and handled Jessie Vargas with relative ease in November.

The 38-year-old, who is the only eight-division world titleholder, will look to replicate that form in July against Horn.
 


BRONER VS. GARCIA

SATURDAY, JULY 29, 2017
MAIN CARD
July 29, 2017 at 9 PM on SHOWTIME
Two of boxing's biggest stars go head-to-head in a 140-pound super lightweight showdown: brash and flashy four-division champ Adrien "The Problem" Broner (33-2, 24 KOs) faces undefeated three-division world champion Mikey Garcia (36-0, 30 KOs), who's moved up in weight for the challenge. Live from Brooklyn's Barclays Center.
 

Two-time Olympic champ Claressa Shields says Cris Cyborg would be a 'monster’ if she focuses only on boxing

One of the few fighters to ever win two Olympic gold medals in boxing, Claressa Shields, visited UFC star Cris Cyborg in Los Angeles over the weekend, and was impressed by her boxing skills.

The Brazilian veteran invited Shields over to her gym as she prepares to face Megan Anderson for the vacant UFC featherweight championship at UFC 214on July 29, and “T-Rex”, now undefeated as a professional boxer with three wins, talked about her training on Cyborg’s social media.

"I looked at (Cyborg’s films) and I was like 'ok, I see a few things that I wanna tell her to work on,' and then, the best way to learn is from experience,” Shields said. "From today, she’d be a great transition in over to boxing. It would be not be hard for you. A year of just training in boxing, six months, you’ll able to take on some of the top girls.
Full article:https://www.mmafighting.com/2017/6/...hields-cris-cyborg-monster-focuses-boxing-ufc
 
RING RATINGS - NOV. 11 2018

Vasyl-Lomachenko-ratings-270x270.jpg

VASILIY LOMACHENKO
RING, WBA LIGHTWEIGHT; WBO JR. LIGHTWEIGHT
COUNTRY: UKRAINE
11-1-0 (9 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 129

TerenceCrawford-ratings-270x270.jpg

TERENCE CRAWFORD
WBO WELTERWEIGHT
COUNTRY: U.S.
34-0-0 (25 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 187
canelo-e1473365393257-270x270.jpg

CANELO ALVAREZ
RING, WBA, WBC
COUNTRY: MEXICO
50-1-2 (34 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 10

Oleksandr-Usyk_ratings-270x270.jpg

ALEKSANDR USYK
RING, IBF, WBA, WBC, WBO
COUNTRY: UKRAINE
16-0-0 (12 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 24
gennady-golovkin-ratings-fukuda-270x270.jpg

GENNADY GOLOVKIN
COUNTRY: KAZAKHSTAN
38-1-1 (34 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 198
Naoya-Inoue-ratings-270x270.jpg

NAOYA INOUE
COUNTRY: JAPAN
17-0-0 (15 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 66
Mikey_Garcia-ratings-_esther-lin-showtime-270x270.jpg

MIKEY GARCIA
IBF, WBC LIGHTWEIGHT
COUNTRY: U.S.
39-0-0 (30 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 69
srisaket-sor-rungvisai-ratings-wbc-270x270.jpg

SRISAKET SOR RUNGVISAI
RING, WBC
COUNTRY: THAILAND
47-4-1 (41 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 61
Errol-Spence-ratings-270x270.jpg

ERROL SPENCE JR.
IBF WELTERWEIGHT
COUNTRY: U.S.
24-0-0 (21 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 63

donnie-nietes-270x270.jpg

DONNIE NIETES
COUNTRY: PHILIPPINES
41-1-5 (23 KOS)
WEEKS ON LIST: 24
 



SHIELDS VS. HAMMER

SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 2019
MAIN CARD
April 13, 2019 at 9:10 PM ET on SHOWTIME
Undefeated champions Claressa Shields (8-0, 2 KOs) and Christina Hammer (24-0, 11 KOs) go head to head in a long-awaited unification battle for the undisputed women's middleweight title. Plus, top heavyweight prospect Jermaine Franklin (17-0, 13 KOs) takes on former No. 1-ranked amateur Rydell Booker (25-1, 12 KOs) in a 10-round co-feature. Live from Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, NJ.
 



WILDER VS. BREAZEALE
SATURDAY, MAY 18, 2019
Heavyweight champion Deontay "The Bronze Bomber" Wilder (40-0-1, 39 KOs) puts his undefeated record on the line against hard-hitting challenger Dominic "Trouble" Breazeale (20-1, 18 KOs) in an explosive matchup between two knockout artists. In co-features, champions Gary Russell Jr. (29-1, 17 KOs) and Kiko Martinez (39-8-2, 28 KOs) battle it out for the world featherweight title plus, super lightweights Juan Heraldez (16-0, 10 KOs) and Argenis Mendez (25-5, 12 KOs) in a 10-round bout. Live from Brooklyn's Barclays Center.
 
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