Snippets On Arguably The Hottest Topics In The Sweet Science

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Prayers For Prichard
Prichard Colon was rabbit punched several times in his bout against Terrel Williams and as a result is in a coma after suffering a brain bleed and having surgery to relieve the pressure. Colon complained from the opening round about the rabbit punches and after being hit illegally a few more times throughout the fight a point was finally deducted. Punches that land illegally happen and points are taken; however, in this case although the punches did the damage,  it was the handling of the entire situation that is at fault. Colon had told the ringside physican that he was dizzy. If you were watching the fight like you should have been doing and saw the repeated blows to the back of the skull, it should have been taken a bit more serious when the reciever of the punches states that he is having issues with dizziness. Further, what of the corner? Did they see any signs from their fighter that caused concern? The only silver lining is the glove fiasco. Colon was DQ because his corner took the gloves off after the ninth thinking the fight was over. That action probably saved his life, had he gone out for the tenth, he may have been killed. This rising prospect had his whole carrer in front of him, now he’s fighting a diffrent kind of fight. Let’s hope and pray that he becomes the undisputed champion of that fight.

Going Great Guns
Gennady Golovkin ( 34-0 31KO), he of 21 straight stoppages, put on a brilliant performance Saturday night stopping David Lemieux (34-3 31 KO) by 8th round TKO to add Lemieux’s IBF strap to his middleweight collection. Lemieux is mostly a brawler and doesn’t possess the same skill set as GGG but he still posed one of the biggest threats ever to the man from Kazakhstan.  It was thought that he could possibly put Golovkin in uncharted waters by landing something so significant it would test him more than ever. While he did land some big shots, they were few and far between because Lemieux had to fight mostly defensive to keep Golovkin off of him. Since Lemieux could not match Golovkin in skill set, the outcome was a forgone conclusion. Make the call to the “bay area”, there’s a cat out there that surpasses GGG in the finer aspects of the sweet science but trails him in power and that will make for a great fight.

Hey, How About A Nice Hawaiian Punch?  No thanks, I’ll Have Chocolate
Roman Gonzalez (44-0 38 KO) stopped Brian Viloria (36-5 22 KO) in the 9th round to provide further proof why most pound for pound lists have anointed the Nicaraguan the new king. Gonzalez is simply dominant. Even in a fight where his opponent was having some success, they weren’t having successes. Gonzalez looks to provide a sense of false security and then closes the show.

A Few Dents In The Crown Of A King
Lamont Peterson (34-3-1 17 KO) defeated Felix Diaz (17-1 8 KO) by majority decision but quite frankly the scores of 117-111 and 116-112 were preposterous. “King Pete” had the height and reach advantage but failed to use them with any regularity. For a fighter who is working to get another title shot, he sure had his hands full with a prospect. Several ringside observers on press row believed Diaz may have even won the fight. At the very least, the fight should have been closer to a draw or split decision.

Alexander The Gate (keeper)
Devon Alexander (26-4 14 KO) was supposed to handle his business against Aaron Martinez (20-4 4 KO) but somebody forgot to tell Martinez, winner by UD.  The former IBF welterweight and WBC, IBF,super lightweight titlist has now lost three of his last four. It seems like forever since he defeated Lucas Matthysse and Marcos Maidana in back to back fights. Two out of his last three losses have come against two of the best in the division,in Amir Khan, and Shawn Porter. That said, a title shot may be out of reach and he may have a new role in the division.

Rock Em Sock Em Robots
Andrzej Fonfara (28-3 16 KO) beat Nathan Cleverly (29-3 15 KO) by unanimous decision and both set a CompuBox record for a light heavyweight fight, 2,524 total punches thrown, 936 landed. A good old fashioned donnybrook. 

PBC Recap- Peterson MD Diaz, Williams DQ Colon

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On Saturday, Lamont Peterson (34-3-1 17 KO) boasted before his fight that he had sparred 500 rounds in preparation for his opponent, Felix Diaz (17-1 8 KO), but at times during the bout it looked to have been a mistake.

Peterson did get the win via majority decision in a 144 pound catchweight fight with scores of 114-114, 117-111, and 116-112 but the latter two not indicative of his performance. The fight was very close and went back and forth not only throughout but also with little swings within several of the rounds making it difficult to score.  

The fight started innocently enough with both men tactical and landing jabs but as the round progressed it became evident that Diaz was here to win and this was not going to be easy for “King Pete”.  

Diaz countered and worked the body while shooting from his compact stance and landing solid combinations. Peterson countered by landing straight rights and left hooks and also committed to the body.  

As we moved in the next few rounds, Peterson negated his own physical advantages by fighting small and not utilizing his length. He did this throughout most of the fight and moved into Diaz’s power zone. When Peterson attacked, Diaz would answer just enough to make Peterson defensive and have to reset his offense.

Both men worked the body throughout the fight with Diaz using it as a counter tactic at times and Peterson, when he did use his length, knowing it would allow him to be out of harm’s way.

Diaz was a 2008 Olympic gold medalist for a reason; this kid can flat out box. Diaz exhibited excellent lateral movement and the ring generalship of a seasoned pugilist through the course of the fight. Diaz would throw slick combinations and use excellent footwork to escape, pivoting away from Peterson’s counters.  

When Peterson did use his jab, he would set up his combinations and back Diaz up. The fight was fought in close quarters where both men did good work, not surprising for Peterson, but surprising that Diaz was able to outwork the former champion at times. Through the first four rounds, you could argue that Peterson held a 3-1 advantage but an even fight would not have been out of the question.

Surprisingly, it appeared that Peterson took the fifth round off. All of the pre-fight sparring work may have taken its toll. In this round, Diaz was the clear aggressor landing to the body and while not fully sitting down on his punches, landing hard enough to keep Peterson guessing.   

In the sixth Peterson was more active, stalking his shorter opponent jabbing his way in and setting with tight combinations. Diaz was able to make the round close with good body work and left hooks as both men landed to the bell.

Over the next two rounds, Diaz was the aggressor landing combinations while Peterson started to show frustration landing individual punches or a few combinations very economically.

In the ninth, Diaz looked to be wearing Peterson down. A relentless Diaz used the ring exceptionally well, while landing body shots, left hooks, and a big uppercut. Peterson got Diaz to the ropes and had brief success before Diaz showed he could fight off the ropes when needed.

The tenth had the ebb and flows of an ocean under duress. Fought in a phone booth, advantage Peterson early and late landing jabs and power shots to the body, advantage Diaz in the middle landing high and low, in and out.

In the championship rounds, Diaz appeared to want it more. The aggressor of the two, a relentless Diaz backed Peterson up attacking to the body, landing left hooks and timely rights while looking like the guy who sparred 500 rounds. While Peterson did very little in the eleventh he had a few moments in the twelfth.

After the fight, Peterson was asked if he had another Danny Garcia moment of a majority decision loss after hearing the first score card of 114-114.

“Kind of, anytime you hear close scores, you kind of get nervous, I thought I controlled the fight, I thought I was ahead, I thought I won the fight, having that majority decision kind of shocked me a little bit” said Peterson

On Diaz’s performance-

“He (Diaz) didn’t really surprise me because I knew he would be difficult, like I said in the fighter’s meeting, I’d rather fight taller fighters and he’s a southpaw and you know he has great experience. He showed up, I knew he was going to come tough, with this big opportunity and he wanted to win”

Diaz gave a good account of himself, so much so that with his southpaw style and strong boxing skill set he may have trouble finding an opponent.  He was a hard luck loser on a majority decision, he did enough to win the fight and at the very least, a draw.

With the win, Peterson can continue his quest for another title shot; however, had he been in the ring with a more seasoned contender, he may not have left with a victory.  

Williams-Colon

Before getting into the specifics of the co-feature which saw Terrel “Tyger” Williams (15-0 13 KO) defeat rising prospect Prichard “Digget” Colon (16-1 13 KO) by ninth round disqualification, it would be thoughtless to not send prayers and well wishes to Colon and his family. It was reported after the fight that Colon had been taken to an area hospital after fainting and experiencing prolonged dizziness and vomiting. Additional reports have surfaced reporting that Colon may have experienced a brain bleed.

The ten round welterweight bout was expected to produce fireworks and most likely no need for score cards as both men entered with an 80% knockout rate.  Williams eight years Colon’s senior imposed his will throughout the fight.

In the first round, Williams landed a left hook on Colon that seemed to stop him in his tracks and provide a level of doubt about his strategy. In this round, Williams landed a rabbit punch that Colon was quick to tell referee Joe Cooper about. At first glance it didn’t appear to be intentional but it would continue throughout.

In the second, Colon went to the body and landed a solid uppercut while Williams looked to land his left hook. Both fighters did good work; Colon was tighter in his guard and more accurate while Williams pressed the action.

In the third, Colon established his jab looking to throw his right behind it. Williams again hit Colon on the back of his head. This actually would occur several times in the fight as Colon would turn away from Williams when coming in, exposing the back of his head while Williams was already sending a punch his way; however, Williams never attempted to pull any of the felonious swings. Colon went down in this round, which was correctly ruled a slip/push.

The fourth round saw accurate combination punching from Colon, fighting well off of his back foot as Williams walked him down. Williams landed a big right in this round which looked to really affect Colon.

To start the fifth, Williams attacked Colon landing a series of huge rights. As they begin to throw flurries in close, Colon lands a big punch south of the border which drops Williams immediately writhing in pain. Williams gets up and drops down still not recovered. Colon is deducted two points for an intentional low blow. It is suggested by the broadcast team that the punch probably was intentional as Colon was hurt badly by the right hands that began the round. To finish out the round, Williams’s lands a series of nice combinations as Colon looked to work the body.

The fight gets a bit rough in the sixth as both men are warned for their tactics. Williams controls the round with body work and backs up Colon making him uncomfortable and not giving him a chance to get into a rhythm.

Williams continues his onslaught in the seventh. Williams is very physical and is wearing Colon down. Williams lands an uppercut hurting Colon. As Colon is trying to clinch, Williams again hits him with a rabbit punch. This time Colon hits the canvas. Colon gets up a bit wobbly and is checked by the ringside physician. The replay showed the punch hit Colon very hard at the base of the skull. Colon told the physician he was dizzy. Williams is deducted a point and the fight continues to the bell.

Colon is much better to start the eighth, snapping his punches in combinations. Williams continues to make the fight very physical, raking Colon over the face with his glove. Colon lands an uppercut; colon outboxes Williams getting back to what made him successful early.

In the ninth, Williams lands a big left and right to the head hurting Colon. Williams attacks with a flurry as Colon goes down. As Colon gets to his feet, Williams attacks and lands a big uppercut. As Colon is falling away towards the canvas, Williams lands a punch to the back of Colon’s head as Colon hits the mat. Colon up again and makes it to the bell.

After the ninth, Colon’s corner begins taking their fighter’s gloves off. Referee Joe Cooper, confused asks what they are doing and if they are stopping the fight. Colon’s corner states that they thought the fight was over. After some mass confusion and due to their actions, Colon is disqualified.

It is assumed that they took the gloves in a delay tactic as their fighter was badly hurt after the ninth.  

After the fight, Williams was asked what fans have learned about him after his performance-

“I’m here, I’ve been fighting years, smaller cards been my résumé, now I’m with the right team, Al Haymon and I’m going straight to the top” said Williams

On what he thought was going on prior to the stoppage between rounds-

 “I thought he quit, technical knockout, I thought he quit, I don’t know what happened but it’s all good, I got the victory”

Williams was extremly physical, rough, and slightly dirty in this fight. Outside of the rabbit punches he added an occasional elbow and would add a few sneaky fouls inside on the clinch.

Cooper should have taken better control from the opening round.

The only silver lining is the glove fiasco. Colon was DQ because his corner took the gloves off after the ninth thinking the fight was over. That action probably saved his life, had he gone out for the tenth, he may have been killed.

On Saturday morning, Colon was the highly touted undefeated prospect who had his whole career in front of him. By Saturday night, it was no longer about the game and only about battling in life. Our thought and prayers are with you Mr. Colon; you were a warrior in defeat and a champion.  

 

Garcia By Majority Decision Over Peterson, Lee-Quillin Battle To A Split Draw

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Lamont Peterson (33-3-1 17 KO) almost had a perfect game plan on Saturday night from Brooklyn, almost. Peterson lost to Danny Garcia (30-0 17 KO) by majority decision, 115-113 X2 and 114-114; however, we may have seen a different outcome had Peterson been a bit more active in the early rounds.

I saw what you did Peterson, I saw the game plan, it took a few moments but it became clear. Give away rounds early, frustrate and wear down Garcia, come on late and apply pressure, Garcia will fade.

Fact is, Garcia did fade and looked almost befuddled in the championship rounds but it was the early rounds that did Peterson in. Peterson stayed away so much early that Garcia had to stop in his tracks pound his gloves and motion him to fight. Garcia was frustrated throughout the fight as Peterson moved away utilizing the steps of a dancer, looked away not respecting what may be coming his way, shuffled his feet, and faked bolo punches.

Garcia was the rightful winner if only by the slightest of margins. The fight was Peterson’s had he chosen to begin his plan a bit sooner.

Post fight quotes-

Garcia-

“I feel great. I prepared for a war. He was moving a lot. I thought it was close, not going to lie,”

“It was definitely close the whole way through. I did enough to win and I’m happy with my performance.

Peterson-

“I did my part. I’m not calling it a robbery but it was a good fight, I don’t expect an easy journey for me to get where I’m going. I feel great. That’s probably the least contact I’ve ever had in a fight.”

Lee-Quillin

The co-feature on the Garcia-Peterson card was a hotly contested middleweight donnybrook between Andy Lee (36-2-1 24 KO) and Peter Quillin (31-0-1 22 KO) which resulted in a split draw, 113-113, 113-112 Lee, 113-112 Quillin.

Early, Quillin was landing solid shots coming out of an extremely tight guard. Towards the end of the first, he dropped Lee with an overhand right. Lee wobbled to his feet as Quillen moved in for the kill buckling Lee again with a left as the bell sounded.

Lee recovered enough to have a competitive second but was dropped again in the third; however, as usually happens between a southpaw and orthodox fighter, their feet being tangled may have contributed to Lee hitting the canvas.

Over the next three rounds, both fighters were giving as good as they were getting. In the seventh, Lee dropped Quillin for the first time in his career with right hook. Quillin wasn’t overly hurt by the shot and fought to the bell.

For the remainder of the fight, there were a lot of close rounds which could have gone either way.

Post Fight Quotes-

Andy Lee-

“It was a tough fight. I got dropped early because I was lazy, but I got the momentum late in the fight and boxed consistently,” Lee said. “I understand with two knockdowns, people felt he won. The decision was fair. I could have done better tonight.”

Peter Quillin-

“There’s a reason why judges are judges, they see it their way,” Quillin said afterward. “I respect the decision. There is a first time for everything. I’m grateful that I was going to get dropped that I was able to get back up and fight. I came here to fight and I was able to go 12 rounds. I could have kept going. I took a year off, and the motivation of losing my title got me going.”

PBC on NBC Garcia- Peterson Workout Quotes

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-Release

BROOKLYN (April 7, 2015) – Fighters competing on Saturday’s Premier Boxing Champions on NBC night of fights participated in a media workout today at Barclays Center in anticipation of their upcoming bouts.

PBC on NBC main event bouts at Barclays Center feature undefeated superstar Danny “Swift” Garcia (29-0, 17 KOs) facing Lamont Peterson (33-2-1, 17 KOs) and the middleweight championship bout between “Irish” Andy Lee (34-2, 24 KOs) and undefeated Peter “Kid Chocolate” Quillin (31-0, 22 KOs). The second installment of PBC on NBC begins at 8:30 p.m. ET.

Tickets for the live event, which is promoted by DiBella Entertainment, are priced at $300, $200, $150, $100, $80 and $50, not including applicable service charges and taxes, and are on sale now.Tickets are available at http://www.barclayscenter.com, http://www.ticketmaster.com and at the American Express Box Office at Barclays Center. To charge by phone, call Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000. For group tickets, please call 800-GROUP-BK.

Here are what the fighters had to say at Tuesday’s workout:

DANNY GARCIA

“I just want to give the fans a great fight. I want them to see the best Danny Garcia. At the end of the day, this is the fight the fans want to see. My main focus is putting on a great show for the fans.

“I’ve faced a lot of skillful boxers in my career and I’m still undefeated. That should tell the fans around the world who has more skill. Come April 11 when he’s feeling these two bombs on his face he’s going to forget about his skill.

“I just want to give fans a great fight. I’m not too worried about the ‘0’ on my record. I fight hard to protect it but my main focus is to go in there and get the job done one fight at a time.

“Everything I’ve done in my career is for a reason. Now I’m here on NBC fighting on this big playing field. This is great for boxing and a breath of fresh air for the sport.

“I just want to be confident and humble at the same time. I want the fans to love me because I’m being myself. It’s very important for a young champion.

“I’m going to try to dictate the pace, be smart, move my head, use my feet and land good punches. I can’t try to chase him down.

“I used to love other great Puerto Rican boxers like Felix Trinidad, Miguel Cotto and Hector Camacho. I feel like I’m definitely working my way up into the ranks with them and following their footsteps.

“I have to be smart in the ring. I have to go in there and be Danny Garcia. I’m here because I’m a smart fighter. Everyone knows that. I have power. I’m going to find my opening and capitalize on his mistakes.”

LAMONT PETERSON

“This is just another fight for me. I’m not worried about being the main event. I just love to fight. As long as I’m fighting I’m happy.

“A lot of people see us fight and see us take punches, but that’s just the easy part. The sacrifice in the gym and putting my body through punishment is the rough part.

“I’m not trying to prove anyone wrong, but this fight is important to me and I want to win it. I want to be the top guy and that means beating the top guy.

“People talk about him beating Matthysse and Matthysse beating me, but anyone who knows about boxing knows that doesn’t mean anything. Come Saturday night I will prove to everyone that I’m a better fighter than Danny Garcia.

“Angel Garcia has his opinion on this fight, and I respect it. He can go on record and say anything he wants, but if he says Danny Garcia is stronger than me, I’ll tell you that’s a lie.

“We’re not worried about Danny’s power. A lot of people have asked me about that but I’m not worried. Danny Garcia had a split decision with Kendall Holt, who I knocked out. No one seems to mention that.

“I’m comfortable with whatever way this fight goes. I’m almost guaranteeing the win.

“I don’t think they’re taking me lightly. At the end of the day, Garcia knows this is a fight and he knows he hasn’t fought anyone like me. I’m expecting a big victory Saturday night.

“You never know what you’re going to see with me. Whatever I feel like I need to do to win, that’s what I’ll do. I’m prepared 100 percent. I’m in shape for 30 rounds and I’ll be ready for anything. ”

ANDY LEE

“We’ve made unbelievable progress in the last year on my skills and everything has really just clicked for me and my team and now we’re seeing the results in the ring.

“I’m very proud to be an Irishman from Limerick defending his world championship in New York, it doesn’t get much better than that.

“There’s been a huge weight lifted off my shoulders since winning the world-title. It’s what I always wanted to do and I’ve been touted as a champion for years and if I never got it I would have been disappointed. Now the monkey is off my back and I can just box and show people who I am.

“We’ve made physical and tactical improvements in the gym since the last fight and hopefully they’ll show up in the ring on Saturday.

“I think this could be a technical fight or it could be a bit of a fire fight. It’s going to be a little of both at times. There will be moments where we’re looking at each other, figuring each other out, but once we exchange it could be explosive.

“Quillin is sure of himself, but he has to be, I have the same mentality. You have to be to compete in this sport.

“Fighting at home like Quillin is on Saturday, brings a different kind of pressure to the table, it’s the pressure of expectations and people you know coming to the fights. That’s also pressure and I know all about that.

“I haven’t needed to build up my confidence for this fight. It’s not time to think. It’s time to do what I’ve been doing every day in the gym.”

PETER QUILLIN

“I never trailed in a fight and came back and won like Lee. I’ve just won all the time right out of the gate. Those other guys aren’t ‘Kid Chocolate’ so I think that’s why this fight was made.

“It’s a big fight for him and a big fight for me. He’s a smart fighter when he’s in trouble so I have to watch out for that. Most importantly I just need to be true to myself.

“A lot of people had Lee as the underdog in his last fight but he came out and did great. That’s the thing about boxing; one punch can change the fight.

“I’m getting paid for 12 rounds so I’m preparing for 12 rounds but if I can get him out of there early I will.

“My whole life has been struggles and I’ve had to overcome every single one of those struggles. This is going to be no different from that.

“Being a father of course made me more inspired and watching my uncle pass has made me more motivated than ever to accomplish everything I want.

“When I gave up the belt I learned that I can be a bigger man and make tough decisions like that all of the time. People think losing is easy, but winning all the time is a different kind of pressure.”

ERROL SPENCE JR.

“I am the best young prospect in the game. I’m on the borderline of contender status and I believe I’m one fight away from being a contender.

“I’m a little bit of a mix style-wise. I’m a boxer, I can punch and I can fight if I have to.

“The fight I learned the most from was with Emanuel Lartey, he was undefeated along with me and it was my first real fight and first time going the distance.

“I see myself fighting all the top guys in the welterweight division. I see myself with Keith Thurman, Amir Khan and any top welterweight.

“I’m going to look good as always on Saturday night, It’s going to be fantastic and I’m going to come out with the victory.”

MARCUS BROWNE

“I’m just blessed to have this opportunity to fight at Barclays Center for the eighth time in front of my hometown fans.

“I love performing in in Brooklyn. The fans here are fantastic and they know when I get in the ring they’re going to see something special.

“I have a tough opponent in front of me. He’s experienced, very lanky fighter but we’ve trained very hard and I’m ready for anything he’s got.

“Saturday is going to be a great night for Team Browne, Staten Island and all of my fans. Don’t blink cause you might miss it!”

LUIS COLLAZO

“I’ve spent some time with the family, regrouping and making sure I still have the same passion for this sport. I’m excited to be back and I jumped at the opportunity to be on this card.

“This is what I live for. Boxing is my life.

“After the Khan fight I took about a month off and then I went straight to the gym. I couldn’t go out like I did against Khan. No excuses, but it was time to go back to the drawing board and stay motivated throughout the whole year.

“The fans can expect the same excitement I always bring. I’m more motivated now and hopefully after this fight I can get a big fight and give the fans what they want.”

HEATHER HARDY

“I have the same mindset going into every fight. I train to fight my fight and make adjustments when get in there.

“I feel strong and I feel capable of whatever needs to be done.

“I’ve only been boxing for four years so I’m still learning a lot of boxing technique in camp plus working three or four days a week with my strength and conditioning coach.

“Fans can expect a good show and a big win out me on Saturday.”

# # #

For more information visit http://www.premierboxingchampions.com http://www.nbcsports.com/boxing,www.BarclaysCenter.com and http://www.dbe1.com, follow on Twitter @PremierBoxing, @LouDiBella, @DannySwift, @KingPete26, @KidChocolate, @AndyLeeBoxing, @RealLuisCollazo, @NBCSports and @BarclaysCenter and become a fan on Facebook at http://www.Facebook.com/PremierBoxingChampions,www.facebook.com/NBCSports and http://www.facebook.com/DiBellaEntertainment. Follow the conversation using #PremierBoxingChampions and #BKBoxing.

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

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A Swift Return And Exit
Danny Garcia returned to the ring on Saturday night from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York and did what he was supposed to do, make quick work of opponent Rod Salka. Garcia knocked Salka silly by second round knockout by way of his money maker, the left hook. Not a whole lot can be made of the victory. “The Lighting Rod” was rated so poorly by the alphabet soup that the fight was not sanctioned, thus not putting Garcia’s WBC and WBA belts on the line. Even though Garcia wasn’t fighting a serious threat, he looked sharp and extremely quick. Prior to this fight, his last eight opponents were or had been former title holders. That is quite a run of top level competition so it’s not inexcusable to cut “Swift” a break here for choice of opponent. That said, his next defense better be against a legitimate threat (insert Lamont Peterson here) or his strong run will be for naught. Even with the victory, he moves down one on the Standing 8 P4P List.

Doctor’s Orders
Like Garcia, Lamont Peterson also did what was expected of him by thoroughly defeating 35 year old Edgar Santana by tenth round TKO. Peterson looked in top form using all phases of the sweet science in out landing Santana 281-94 in total punches. He worked the body like a madman recalling memories of Mike McCallum. Peterson dominated so thoroughly that the ringside doctor stopped the fight in the tenth, he had seen enough. A Peterson Garcia matchup would be a purist’s dream. This would be a matchup on the highest of levels. A boxing match that would see each fighter look to land their power shots. Let’s hope it’s made next.

Live Strong
Danny Jacobs kicked cancer in its ass. “The Miracle Man” has been an inspiration to many during his journey, but Saturday night he took it to another level when he defeated Jarrod Fletcher by fifth round TKO and captured the vacant WBA middleweight title. He is absolutely one of the nicest guys in the sport and a champion for a cause that is bigger than the sport.

Game On!
The bout between Tyson Fury and Dereck Chisora is back on and scheduled for November 22 in London. Previously, they were set to meet on July 26 in Manchester, England but Chisora injured his left hand and had to pull out of the fight. This fight is a rematch of their July 2011 bout which saw Fury decision Chisora and give him his first loss. These two have had an entertaining war of words going on for a few years, so let’s just hope that it carries over into the ring.

Follow Me Into The Thunder(Dome)
The StubHub Center, or as I like to affectionately refer to as The Thunderdome, is known for classic slugfests and fights of the year candidates, most recently the Robert Guerrero vs. Yoshihiro Kamegai battle and April’s Lucas Matthysse vs. John Molina Jr. respectively. It should be no different this Saturday when the venue form Carson, California will be rocking once again with excellent matchups and intriguing story lines.
This card is ABSOLUTELY STACKED!!! Shawn Porter will be facing Kell Brook for Porter’s IBF welterweight title, an intriguing matchup that will not disappoint. The co-feature is a rematch between Sakio Bika and Anthony Dirrell who fought to a draw last December. If those two fights don’t get pumped, then add in Omar Figueroa vs. Daniel Estrada for Figueroa’s belt. WOW. Oh, and just for good measure, Deontay Wilder will be on the card to face an opponent not yet named but rumored to be Jason Gavern.