Trout Stops Grajeda By TKO

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Austin Trout ( 28-2 15 KO ) defeated  Luis Grajeda (18-4-2 14 KO) by TKO after Grajeda’s corner stopped the fight at the conclusion of round seven. Good call, their fighter had been dominated and punch stats showed that he only landed on average, two punches a round.

After a close, slow, feel out round in the opening frame, Trout picked up the pace snapping his jab in Grajeda’s face, committing to the body, and landing power shots. Every round was a carbon copy of the next.  Trout was credited with a knockdown in round 5. As Trout landed a left hand to the body their feet got tangled as usually happens when a southpaw and orthodox fighter get togther and Grajeda went down, a knockdown nonetheless.

The journey back to elite status continues for Trout. This was a good performance and shades of the old Trout are beginning to show.

After the fight when asked how he would rate his performance, Trout stated, “It was good, it could be better, I was not the best, I would never give myself a ten. I know I can hit, the sooner I’m back, the better you’ll see me”

No Doubt.

Snippets On Arguably The Hottest Topics In The Sweet Science This Week

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Paying Homage  

This week’s first snippet is a big Standing-8 ovation to the 2015 International Boxing Hall of Fame class: Fighters, Riddick “Big Daddy” Bowe, Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini, “Prince” Naseem Hamed, Yoko “Fierce Eagle” Gushiken, manager Rafael Mendoza, referee Steve Smoger, journalist Nigel Collins, and broadcaster Jim Lampley. We simply couldn’t imagine the sport without you.

Making A Statement Eh?

Canadian David Lemieux (33-2 31 KO) defeated tough as nails Philadelphian Gabriel Rosado (21-9 13 KO) by tenth round TKO at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn on Saturday night. Lemieux pummeled a game Rosado and looked sharp throughout the fight landing solid left hooks, crip body shots, and overhand rights. As with most Rosado fights, you get a gallant warrior who is usually at a disadvantage when his face swells due to the scar tissue from his history of battles. Rosado did have plenty of moments landing sneaky uppercuts and straight rights, but he abandoned his jab early which may have allowed him to keep Lemieux off balance and decrease the repeated power shots that he received.  

Rosado’s left eye was just about closed shut in this one which prevented him from seeing the punches. In the tenth round, the ringside doctor seemed to come up on the ring apron and motion for the referee to stop the fight. After the fight, Rosado stated “I kept seeing three of him, fighting with one eye, just seems to be my luck”

Lemieux, fighting for the first time out of his native Canada had a statement win in this one and feels he is ready for increased competition, “I’m ready for whomever at 160, Gennady Golovkin, Cotto, Quilin, I want to fight the best”

I Said Break

Jean Pascal (29-2-1 17 KO) won via no-contest when Roberto Bolonti (35-3 24 KO) was knocked out by a Pascal punch as Bolonti was pushed into the ropes. The punch didn’t appear to be so devastating that it would require Bolonti to be carried out of the ring on a stretcher but apparently it was as that is exactly what happened. The referee was attempting to break the fighters when Pascal landed the punch. Bolonti dropped to the canvas and was checked by medical staff who removed Bolonti from the ring on a stretcher. The shot by Pascal was determined to be unintentional thus the “no contest” rather a disqualification.

Said Pascal, “I’m not a dirty fighter. I’ve never done that in my life. It was just an accident”

In any event, it looks like Pascal is going to get his “golden ticket” as he is rumored to be facing WBO, IBF, 175 lb. champion Sergey Kovalev.

Hype Of The Century

Manny Pacquiao has thrown down the gauntlet to Floyd Mayweather, well sort of. This back and forth is getting tiring. Several months ago, Mayweather stated that he had a big announcement for May, which is still forthcoming.  If this fight is not made next for both fighters, let’s just call it good.

Big Week

Starting on Thursday and ending on Saturday, some of the biggest names in the sport will be entering the ring. Thursday will see Austin Trout, Antonio Tarver, Edwin Rodriguez, and Dominic Breazeale, just to name a few, Friday, Erislandy Lara, Ishe Smith, Badou Jack, and others, with Saturday showcasing Timothy Bradley v. Diego Chaves, Amir Khan v. Devon Alexander, Keith Thurman, the Charlo brothers, Victor Ortiz, Abner Mares, any many more in action.

Snippets On Arguably The Hottest Topics In The Sweet Science This Week

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Corn Husked

Terence Crawford (25-0 17 KO) dominated Ray Beltran (29-7-1 17 KO) in front of a raucous hometown crowd at the CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Nebraska on Saturday night. Crawford boxed beautifully switching stances with ease from orthodox to southpaw while keeping the slugging Beltran guessing all night. In the rare moments when Beltran was successful in landing a power shot, Crawford responded by coming back even harder and is so accurate in landing his own power counter shots that opponents have no choice but to pull back out of harm’s way and reset. Even though he was up by a large margin late in the fight, you have to love this guy’s warrior spirit as he continued to look for a stoppage. There are very few fighters in the game with the skill level and ring IQ of Crawford at the present time and he just may be the fighter of the year while entering all P4P lists. An amazing humble talent who will only get better.

Heavyweight Eliminated

Tyson Fury (23-0 17 KO) dominated Dereck Chisora (20-5 13 KO) in a WBO heavyweight eliminator bout and won by 10th round TKO when Chisora’s corner threw in the towel. Chisora was never in the fight. Fury dominated with his jab, fought from the southpaw stance at times, and landed multiple combinations when needed. For an eliminator fight for the right to knuckle up with undisputed champ Wladimir Klitshcko, this sure wasn’t what you’d expect from two heavyweights. Chisora could have benefitted from exhibiting a little “fury” and Fury could have made a statement by “personally” stopping an opponent who didn’t want to be there. The action got so dull it prompted Referee McDonnell to proclaim “ Either you fight or we go home”, not something you want to hear during a main event, especially one billed as “Bad Blood”. This was a rematch of their 2011 fight also dominated by Fury but not to the extent as was the case on Saturday. Thankfully, we will all be spared from a trilogy.

Sr. Was A Bit Off About Jr.

Leading into Chris Eubank Jr’s (18-1 13 KO) fight with Billy Joe Saunders (21-0 11 KO), Chris Eubank Sr. had made claims that Jr. could beat Gennady Golovkin, is comparable to Sugar Ray Leonard and will be better than Floyd Mayweather Jr. So on cue, Eubank Jr. promptly goes out and loses by split decision to Saunders. The fight was really a tale of two halves. Saunders did his best work early with Eubank coming on strong late, albeit not soon enough. Eubank has talent and may one-day achieve his father’s expectations but he has a ways to go. I believe Jr. will learn from this defeat and would win the rematch; however, he needs a solid trainer who will tell Sr. to leave the training business to the trainer and maybe, just maybe Jr. will achieve Sr.’s prophecy and be “simply the best”.  

2015, The Year Of The Sheep

Ever since Manny Pacquiao defeated Chris Algieri, the Pacquiao vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr. talk resurfaced and reached levels not seen in some time. Both sides are verbally jabbing through social media and all indications are this fight will happen in 2015.  If so, we will all be like sheep following the herd to the fight venue or the nearest PPV feed. Baaaa Game On!

Biased Based Commentary

On the undercard of Crawford v. Beltran, HBO aired Evgeny Gradovich v. Jayson Velez. This fight was declared a draw and this snippet is less about the decision but more so about the increasing effort by HBO staff to favor a specific fighter regardless of what is occurring in the ring. It was clear that the HBO staff favored Gradovich.  Velez was doing very well in the fight but you would never have known that had your screen went blank and you only had audio to carry you through. HBO’s ring side scorer Steve Weisfeld was actually unbiased until his counterparts kept hyping up Gradovich apparently indirectly pressuring him to change his mind on what he was seeing as evident by his scorecard. After the fight, the HBO crew had Gradovich winning comfortably only to find out that the fight had been declared a draw. This snippet is not to argue if the decision was correct or not correct, but only to comment that Velez did well in a close fight and deserved at the very least some credit from the ringside crew.

The Wrestler,,,Uh, Boxer

Mickey Rourke won an exhibition fight at 62 years of age against 29 year old Elliot Seymour. This fight was all hollywood and not to be confused with the sweet science. Rumors are flying that Seymour threw the fight, is possibly a homeless man, or has medical problems. Unsure the validity of any of those claims but let’s just take the fight at face value, it was an exhibition for entertainment nothing more nothing less.

Snippets On Arguably The Hottest Topics In The Sweet Science This Week

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Standing-8 Eats A Little Crow

Ok, we need to own up to our prediction from last night’s Manny Pacquiao vs. Chris Algieri scrap. We were in the minority who thought that Algieri would actually give the Pac Man a challenge. What we didn’t know was that Algieri would abandon one of his primary strengths,  his jab or that the game plan developed for him would be to give away the first four rounds…intentionally? Further, we didnt expect their game plan to ultimately be built on knocking out the future hall of famer. So, while we did pick Algieri, in our defense we never expected such a poor game plan.

Painted A Picasso

Pacquiao was brilliant in his win. He negated Algieri’s entire being in route to one of the most lopsided wins you will ever see in a championship fight. His speed and timing were spot on even though he was facing a younger opponent with excellent movement. Great performance. Of course as expected, the Pacquiao-Mayweather talks began almost immediately. It will happen next year without a doubt…..finally.

The Cage Comment Heard Round The World

When HBO’s Max Kellerman went into Algieri’s corner and spoke to trainer Tim Lane asking him if his comment meant that Algieri would be seeking a knockout, Lane stated “Yes, but i’ve still got him in a cage….I’m going to let him loose in another round or so”. At that exact moment, Pacquiao landed a left dropping Algieri…AWKWARD…….

The Cage Comment Heard Round The World Part 2

So, Tim Lane made a comment in the heat of the moment while being frustrated by the goings-on in the ring at the precise moment it all went terribly wrong. Big deal, the guys human. Social media took to ripping the guy, grow up people, don’t ever slip in your perfect world, karma’s watching.

The One Armed Man

Vasyl Lomachenko is arguably the best amatuer ever compiling a 396-1 record while winning two gold medals. He is tied for the fastest to ever win a world title as a pro and now you can add beat a guy with one hand to the list. On Saturday night he hurt his left hand half way through the fight and was forced to fight exclusively with his right…he did not lose a round. A fight with Nicholas Walters sometime in 2015 has been rumored. Lomachenko is going to be on many P4P lists soon and most likely before he reaches six or seven fights.

One Tough Dude

Zou Shiming looked good (defense still suspect as mentioned on Standing-8 after his last fight) in defeating Kwanpichit OnesongchaiGym but this snippet is not for Shiming. OnesongchaiGym was knocked from pillar to post and was dropped several times but never looked for a way out or looked to quit, he just came back stronger. A true blood and guts warrior.

Rubber Match Needed?

Tony Bellew defeated Nathan Cleverly by split decision on Saturday to avenge his majority decision loss to Cleverly back in 2011. We need a third fight here. Yes, it will probably mirror the first two but it will split the tie unless it’s a draw and even then we can call it good.

Standing-8’s Algieri vs. Pacquiao Fight Prediction

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If Algieri fights tall and does what he does best, establish his snapping jab, throw his punches from awkward angles, and work the body early and often, he is going to open up opportunities to land power shots. If this happens, Pacquiao may be stunned several times in this fight as he is surprised by Algieri’s punching power.  Don’t be surprised if Pacquiao is dropped once or twice. On the contrary, if Algieri fights small, he will limit his opportunities to score points and steal rounds as he will move into Pacquiao’s comfort zone. No matter what happens on Saturday night, we may be in for one of those rare nights when a classic breaks out. As the adage goes, styles make fights and this has all the makings of a chess match from the opening bell. We will probably get a combination of the aforementioned scenarios. That said, Standing-8’s  prediction is Algieri by majority decision. Algieri will be able to execute his game plan more effectively and we will see the second torched passed in less than a month from a future hall of famer to a rising star.

Super Middle’s Next Great Star

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Mexico’s Gilberto Ramirez Sanchez, 30-0 24 KO is on his way to becoming the next big star in the super middleweight division. On Saturday night from the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, he continued his rise with an eighth round TKO over hard punching Columbian Fulgencio Zuniga 27-10-1 24 KO.

Through the first seven rounds, Ramirez, battered Zuniga with constant pressure landing hard jabs, hooks, crosses, body shots, uppercuts and just about anything else he wanted. In the eighth, Ramirez stunned Zuniga with a chopping right hand and followed it up with a straight left/right combination, right uppercut and left hook, as Zuniga wobbled into the ropes. Ramirez jumped on the Colombian landing a six punch combination while Zuniga tried his best to avoid the onslaught even landing a solid right hand but it wasn’t enough to stop Ramirez causing the referee to jump in and stop the fight at 2:20 of the eighth. According to CompuBox, Ramirez outlanded Zuniga in total punches, 259 to 67,  jabs 57-8, and power shots 202-59.

This was a nice win for Ramirez who has been sustaining impressive performances. In his last fight, he knocked out Junior Talipeau in the first round with one of the nicest long range uppercuts you will see. Prior to that, he stopped Giovanni Lorenzo who had only been stopped once in his previous 39 fights and in this one he dominated a tough fighter who hadn’t been stopped since 2009 when he was knocked out in four by Lucian Bute.

Ramirez, 40-6 as an amateur and nicknamed “Zurdo” due to his southpaw stance, is a tall (6’3) and solidly built fighter who throws hard punches from all angles, uses his jab well (77″ reach), commits to the body, and is an excellent counter puncher. With his frame and physical ability, he evokes shades of a young Tommy Hearns. His toughness can be traced to the mean streets of Mexico as Ramirez stated, “I started boxing when I was 12 years old. I used to fight a lot in the streets. The neighborhood where I used to live was like a ghetto, a very dangerous neighborhood”

If there was an area for critique, it would be in Ramirez’s tendency to fight “small” at times which has left him open for counter overhand rights which his opponents have been able to land from time to time. Although he has displayed a solid beard he would benefit by tightening up his defense a bit more.  He is still developing and his camp will surely identify and correct these areas which will make him that much tougher to deal with.

After the fight, Ramirez indicated that he would welcome a clash with either Carl Froch or Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

Top Rank has a potential Mexican megastar on their hands. With his fan friendly style, Ramirez may one day rival Saul “Canelo” Alvarez as Mexico’s darling.  Ramirez, currently ranked in the top five by all sanctioning bodies is definitely on the list of who to watch in 2015 which could very well be his breakout year.

This article contributed to Behind The Gloves.com

Klitschko Drops The Steel Hammer On A Cobra In Hamburg, Germany

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Wladimir Klitschko was hit with two of the cleanest punches that he has taken in some time in the fifth round against Kubrat Pulev but moments later it meant little as Dr. Steelhammer landed a fight ending left hook.

Pulev, 20-1 11KO, tried to set the tone by rushing Klitschko at the opening bell and roughing him up a bit. As the round progressed,  he was caught by a left hook and hit the canvas.  He got up and seemed a little wobbly as he received another left hook dropping him again.  He was able to beat the count and make it out of the round. The replays showed both were mostly flash knockdowns.

As the fight progressed, Klitschko, 63-3 54 KO, controlled each round by landing stiff jabs, solid right crosses, and crisp left hooks. Pulev continued to utilize all the roughness he could get away with like rabbit punching Klitschko and hitting on the break.  Pulev was down again in round three after taking a solid right hand and left hook combination courtesy of the champion. Pulev recovered and finished the round.

Pulev had some success in the fourth and although he lost the round, it was probably his best.  In the fifth, Pulev looked to continue his momentum, as he landed his best punches of the fight, a big left look followed by a right cross; however, as Klitschko responded, he landed a perfect left hook dropping The Cobra on his back. As Klitschko yelled at Pulev to stay down, he was counted out by referee Tony Weeks at 2:11 of the fifth round.  Give Pulev credit here, he came to win and landed some solid shots while making the champ uncomfortable with his rough tactics, he just couldn’t sustain his effort just as 62 other Klitschko opponents failed to do.

This was an impressive win by the undisputed champ, it’s been awhile since we’ve seen a Klitschko opponent come straight forward and he responded like he is supposed to, by bringing out the Steel Hammer.

True to his word, Shannon “Everywhere You Go, I Go” Briggs was at ringside watching and apparently attempted to start another public spectacle but was prevent by security. No Shannon, it’s not you we want to see Klitschko against next, it’s the winner of Bermane Stiverne and Deontay Wilder, or Luis Ortiz.

Don’t Underestimate Chris Algieri

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“Andddd newwww undefeated WBO light welterweight champion of the world, The Fighting Collegian, Chris Algieriiiiii” bellowed ring announcer Michael Buffer this past June as he informed all who watched that Algieri had just defeated Ruslan Provodnikov. Not many gave Algieri, 30, 20-0 8 KO of Huntington, Long Island, New York much of a chance to beat Provodnikov but that was nothing new for Algieri.

On November 22, Algieri will again be back in the role that he cherishes, that of the underdog, when he faces the pride of the Philippines, Manny Pacquiao 56-5-2 38 KO. This is classic David vs. Goliath only the roles are changed in that Algieri, the bigger man, is David in this scenario. With odds currently about 7-1 in Pacquiao’s favor, Algieri isn’t concerned stating, “I’ve been the underdog many times before in the past, so I think if I was the favorite I’d feel more uncomfortable. This is home for me.”

You would think that a win over one of the most feared men in the sport in Provodnikov would have garnered Algieri a little respect. Freddie Roach, Pacquiao’s trainer was quoted as saying that Algieri isn’t in Pacquiao’s class, he’s jumping a bit too soon while insinuating that the sparring partners in camp will pose more of a threat. Recently on HBO’s 24/7, Roach finally gave “credit” to Algieri calling him a “tough kid” in one breath but then condescendingly stating “tough kids don’t win big fights” in the next.  It is nothing new for Roach to play mind games with a Pacquiao opponent but this time there is an edge here that seems personal. Maybe it’s because Roach is from Massachusetts, said Roach, “Remember, I’m from Dedham, Massachusetts. There is no love lost when Boston plays New York in any sport. I live for beating a New Yorker”

Truth is, Algieri is a tough kid and has won big fights as evident by the world kickboxing titles he won prior to making the switch to the sweet science. Undefeated as both an amateur and a pro, he collected a USKBA Championship and WKA and ISKA Championships respectively. While he has the resume of an MMA fighter, it’s the sweet science that he cherishes, entrenched in him from an early age while watching the sport with his grandfather on many occasions. Looking for bigger fame, paydays, and the national exposure that the world of kickboxing could not give him, he switched sports. It wasn’t moving quickly enough at the beginning as Algieri was fighting exclusively on local cards. As he stated on HBO’s 24/7, “It was extremely, extremely frustrating; I felt that I wanted to be on bigger stages, fighting on different cards, fighting on TV, I wanted national exposure, “I really wanted people to see what I brought to the table”.

Enter the Provodnikov fight, Algieri, down twice in the first round, weathered the storm and fought basically with one eye throughout the fight. Algieri showed the poise and ring generalship of a fighter well beyond his years and experience. Using excellent movement and showcasing blinding speed, he peppered Provodnikov with solid jabs, sneaky uppercuts and power shots while adding timely body shots keeping Provodnikov off balance.

Again, a tough kid winning a big fight confirming Roach may be a bit off in his assessment of the WBO Champion. I know, I know, some detractors will say that Algieri “ran” against Provodnikov but Algieri landed 83 more punches, threw 217 more, landed at a higher connect percentage, and beat Provodnikov at his own game landing 13 more power shots. Pretty hard to do all of that when you are “running” away from your opponent.

Thing is, Algieri is a new breed of fighter, 2.0 if you will, a strategic thinker with a personal approach to training and nutrition. A gym rat with a bachelor’s degree in health science and a master’s degree in clinical nutrition, Algieri prepares all his own food unlike most fighters in the game which allows him to fuel adequately and appropriately at all the right times. As Algieri put it, “I don’t eat anything crazy. I just eat the foods most people should eat: eggs, oatmeal, chicken, broccoli, sweet potatoes, fish and steaks.”  While most fighters loathe the nutrition and training aspects of the preparation, Algieri is energized by it. In fact, his training meals mirror his every day eating habits, a disciplined approach that doesn’t need to change due to a fight.

He trains six days a week and most times, twice a day, combining the typical sparring and bag work with exhaustive cardio sessions, explosive power movements, and mental conditioning. He chooses to watch little tape of his opponents before a fight believing it could be counterproductive, “It’s all about rhythm and you can’t find out a man’s rhythm on tape, I’ll find out in the first round”, said Algieri, the strategic thinker.

Algieri’s mental preparation may be his biggest strength. It would explain his resolve against Provodnikov when most fighters would have looked for a way out. Agieri is a big believer in visualization exercises when preparing for a fight. He will visualize everything about what fight night will be like, the packing of his bags, the ring walk, and the action in the ring. The mind is more powerful than the body. Algieri’s mind believes he is supposed to be here, supposed to win, critics be dammed. When having to dig deep, the mind will not let him fail empowering the body to carry on.

Continue to underestimate Algieri by making the betting odds lopsided against him, think that sparring partners provide a more formidable challenge, and call him names like “The Long Island Long shot”. Algieri doesn’t care; he’s just here to fight for the love of the game. It’s his passion; he could simply walk away and pursue his goal of becoming a doctor but there will be time for that later, he has business to attend to and goals to attain. Don’t expect Algieri to be intimidated by facing Manny Pacquiao, his confidence is unwavering, his mindset unmatched, and his nutrition and conditioning at the highest of levels.

So, Algieri wasn’t supposed to beat Ruslan Provodnikov, now he’s not supposed to beat Pacquiao. What if? What if he beats Pacquiao and it is him not the Pacman who is rewarded with a Floyd Mayweather fight? Of course, he will not be expected to win that fight either, but what if……….. What an epic run that would be.

This article contributed to Behind The Gloves.

The Krusher Throws A Complete Game Shutout In AC

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Sergey Kovalev ( 26-0-1, 23 KO) dominated Bernard Hopkins (55-7-2, 32 KO) in Atlantic City tonight with scores of 120-107 X2 and 120-106 in route to a unanimous decision victory. Kovalev now owns the WBA, WBO, and IBF light heavyweight belts.

Kovalev knocked down Hopkins in the opening round with a crisp right hand to the side of the Alien’s head but Hopkins was able to recover quickly and make it a non issue. It did however, set the tone for the rest of the fight as Hopkins fought cautiously throughout.

Kovalev proved he could do more in the ring than just look for the knockout. He boxed brilliantly using a lot of feints to keep Hopkins off balance while going to the body and using excellent movement. “I wanted to show boxing fans how I could do boxing, and I did it” said Kovalev.

Of course he lived up to his reputation of being “The Krusher” by landing huge power shots on Hopkins. The veteran showed his mettle as he always does by taking the shots better than fighters half his age would or have done against Kovalev. This wasn’t lost on Kovalev as he stated, “I tried to knock him out but he has good defense, the best in my division”

When Hopkins was asked by HBO’s Max Kellerman how, at the age of 49, he was able to withstand Kovalev’s power, he replied, “Because I’m crazy, the fans want to see fights, they don’t want to see a guy running, I wanted to engage because he was engaging”

Kovalev was very disciplined in his approach. When he appeared to have stunned Hopkins on a few occasions, he didn’t get careless and start swinging wildly choosing to move back, evaluate the damage, reset, and continue to stick to the mission.  Hopkins agreed, ” The better man was Kovalev, he had a good game plan, fought a great technical fight, used his reach and distance, has mechanics, has patience, every time he got hit by me, he stepped back and made me reset” “He traded punches with me on his terms”

A lot had been made about the age of Hopkins. At the age of 49 he was doing things in the sport that were unprecedented. He showed both ends of the spectrum in this one. While he landed and took some decent shots, he looked slow and overmatched as the older fighter.

Hopkins tried his best and has nothing to be ashamed of here. Even with a lopsided loss, his legacy is strengthened by the heart he exhibited against the best in the division.

All that awaits Kovalev now for a chance to unify the division entirely is a matchup with WBC champion Adonis Stevenson. Something that Superman hasn’t been overly excited about making happen. Maybe it has something too do with the Krusher’s kryptonite.

On the televised undercard bout, Brooklyn’s Sadam Ali boxed beautifully while landing perfectly timed power shots in route to stopping Carlos Abregu by TKO at 1:54 of round 9 in Atlantic City. From the opening bell, Ali used excellent lateral movement and quick combinations to consistently dominate Abregu round after round. Ali landed a perfect counter right cross to drop Abregu in the sixth round. Abregu never seemed to fully recover from the shot and looked weary as the rounds went on. In the ninth, Ali closed the show by knocking down Abregu and even though Abregu was able to get up, Ali unloaded on him causing the referee to jump in and stop the fight. No contreversy here, the right call was made. Abregu had been hurt since the sixth round and was outclassed.

The Lion King

Scott Leapai

Malik “King”Scott 37-2-1 13KO, defeated Alex “The Lionheart” Leapai 30-6-3 24 KO  over in Queensland, Australia on Friday evening.

From the onset, Scott’s speed dominated the fight, along with some timely uppercuts. He turned Leapai into a one dimensional fighter who continued to look for one shot, mostly the overhand right.

Scott won a lopsided points decision with scores of 100-90, 99-91, and 98-92.

Great win for Scott coming off of the Deontay Wilder fight. I’d like to see Scott get a rematch with Dereck Chisora so he can avenge that loss which was an injustice.

Scott had vowed to retire had he lost. Glad he didn’t, we need entertaining cats like this in the game.

Welcome back Mr. Scott