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Female Fighter of the Year 2014, And More!
Female fighters, especially in boxing, do not get the recognition of their male counterparts. Televised female bouts are almost nonexistent in the U.S. and get little attention from the boxing media. But we at Thesweetscience.com pay attention and here is a list of the best for the year 2014.
Fighter of the Year
Delfine Persoon
Belgium’s Persoon defeated two female fighters that belong in the Pound for Pound listing this year. First, she handed Argentina’s Erica Farias the first loss of her career back in April by unanimous decision. She followed that with a win over Judy Waguthii of Kenya by decision and the kicker was a technical knockout win of Australia’s hard-hitting Diana Prazak. Persoon hasn’t lost a fight since 2010.
Fight of the Year
Delfine Persoon vs. Erica Farias
Persoon, the WIBF lightweight titlist, hosted Argentina’s undefeated WBC female lightweight champion Farias and the two scrapped it out for 10 rounds in Belgium. It’s one of those title fights which are seldom held in female world class bouts. At the end it was Persoon edging Farias to become the queen of the female lightweight division.
Knockout of the Year
Amanda Serrano, who fights out of Brooklyn, traveled to Argentina in August to meet WBO lightweight titlist Maria Elena Maderna. In round six the hard-hitting Boricua Serrano fired a short right hook and floored Maderna 54 seconds into the round. Maderna could not beat the count and shook her head to the referee giving the count.
Round of the Year
Round 8 of Arely Mucino vs. Shindo Go for the flyweight world title. In round eight, Mexico’s Mucino withstood a shellacking from the Japanese boxer. After a right cross nearly took her head off, Mucino hung on against the barrage from Japan’s Go. She traded blows and looked like Mucino fought on instinct as Go fired blow after blow. Mucino survived and won the fight on points. The pivotal round was the eighth; if she goes down she loses, but she stayed on her fight somehow and won the fight.
Biggest Upset
Carolina Rodriguez defeats Janeth Perez
The mysterious Carolina Rodriguez of Chile traveled to Mexico to face IBF bantamweight champion Janeth Perez and handed her a defeat by majority decision in May 10. They had a rematch in December that took place in Chile and again Rodriguez won by majority decision.
Best Pure Boxer
Layla McCarter
The Las Vegas lightweight the “Amazing” Layla McCarter has not lost a fight since April 2007. She’s won multiple world titles beginning at featherweight, all the way up to junior middleweight. She’s really a lightweight but her skill set is so amazing it’s possible she could defeat a heavyweight if necessary. McCarter is women’s boxing’s most skilled boxer.
Best Knockout Puncher
Amanda Serrano
The Puerto Rican from Brooklyn has power in either fist. She fights as a southpaw but can stop a girl with a right hook or left cross. Of the 24 opponents she’s faced 17 have been knocked out at the hands of Serrano. She’s female boxing’s version of Gennady Golovkin and has some boxing skills too. Her knockout of Maria Maderna to win the lightweight title was impressive.
Most exciting fighter
Shindo Go
The Japanese flyweight lost her WBC flyweight title to Mexico’s Arely Mucino but once again she brought the crowd to their feet with another hair-raising toe-to-toe clash in Mexico. Go starts slow but once she gets in gear, it’s non-stop punching. She’s never been stopped in a fight and has nine knockouts on her resume. She almost made Mucino victim number 10 but started too slow against the Mexican flyweight.
Fastest rising young fighter
Kenia Enriquez
The Tijuana girl seemed to zoom from out of nowhere and now has the WBO flyweight world title. She has speed, agility and power for her size. Enriquez, 21, also has an effervescent personality to go with her tremendous boxing skills. She could become the new queen of boxing in Mexico.
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Najee Lopez Steps up in Class and Wins Impressively at Plant City
Garry Jonas’ ProBox series returned to its regular home in Plant City, Florida, tonight with a card topped by a 10-round light heavyweight match between fast-rising Najee Lopez and former world title challenger Lenin Castillo. This was considered a step-up fight for the 25-year-old Lopez, an Atlanta-born-fighter of Puerto Rican heritage. Although the 36-year-old Castillo had lost two of his last three heading in, he had gone the distance with Dimitry Bivol and Marcus Browne and been stopped only once (by Callum Smith).
Lopez landed the cleaner punches throughout. Although Castillo seemed unfazed during the first half of the fight, he returned to his corner at the end of round five exhibiting signs of a fractured jaw.
In the next round, Lopez cornered him against the ropes and knocked him through the ropes with a left-right combination. Referee Emil Lombardo could have stopped the fight right there, but he allowed the courageous Castillo to carry on for a bit longer, finally stopping the fight as Castillo’s corner and a Florida commissioner were signaling that it was over.
The official time was 2:36 of round six. Bigger fights await the talented Lopez who improved to 13-0 with his tenth win inside the distance. Castillo declined to 25-7-1.
Co-Feature
In a stinker of a heavyweight fight, Stanley Wright, a paunchy, 34-year-old North Carolina journeyman, scored a big upset with a 10-round unanimous decision over previously unbeaten Jeremiah Milton.
Wright carried 280 pounds, 100 pounds more than in his pro debut 11 years ago. Although he was undefeated (13-0, 11 KOs), he had never defeated an opponent with a winning record and his last four opponents were a miserable 19-48-2. Moreover, he took the fight on short notice.
What Wright had going for him was fast hands and, in the opening round, he put Milton on the canvas with a straight right hand. From that point, Milton fought tentatively and Wright, looking fatigued as early as the fourth round, fought only in spurts. It seemed doubtful that he could last the distance, but Milton, the subject of a 2021 profile in these pages, was wary of Wright’s power and unable to capitalize. “It’s almost as if Milton is afraid to win,” said ringside commentator Chris Algieri during the ninth stanza when the bout had devolved into a hugfest.
The judges had it 96-93 and 97-92 twice for the victorious Wright who boosted his record to 14-0 without improving his stature.
Also
In the TV opener, a 10-round contest in the junior middleweight division, Najee Lopez stablemate Darrelle Valsaint (12-0, 10 KOs) scored his career-best win with a second-round knockout of 35-year-old Dutch globetrotter Stephen Danyo (23-7-3).
A native Floridian of Haitian descent, the 22-year-old Valsaint was making his eighth start in Plant City. He rocked Danyo with a chopping right hand high on the temple and then, as Danyo slumped forward, applied the exclamation point, a short left uppercut. The official time was 2:17 of round two.
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Japanese Superstar Naoya Inoue is Headed to Vegas after KOing Ye Joon Kim
Japan’s magnificent Naoya Inoue, appearing in his twenty-fourth title fight, scored his 11th straight stoppage tonight while successfully defending his unified super bantamweight title, advancing his record to 29-0 (26 KOs) at the expense of Ye Joon Kim. The match at Tokyo’s Ariake Arena came to an end at the 2:25 mark of round four when U.S. referee Mark Nelson tolled “10” over the brave but overmatched Korean.
Kim, raised in a Seoul orphanage, had a few good moments, but the “Monster” found his rhythm in the third round, leaving Kim with a purplish welt under his left eye. In the next frame, he brought the match to a conclusion, staggering the Korean with a left and then finishing matters with an overhand right that put Kim on the seat of his pants, dazed and wincing in pain.
Kim, who brought a 21-2-2 record, took the fight on 10 days’ notice, replacing Australia’s Sam Goodman who suffered an eye injury in sparring that never healed properly, forcing him to withdraw twice.
Co-promoter Bob Arum, who was in the building, announced that Inoue’s next fight would happen in Las Vegas in the Spring. Speculation centers on Mexico City’s Alan Picasso (31-0-1, 17 KOs) who is ranked #1 by the WBC. However, there’s also speculation that the 31-year-old Inoue may move up to featherweight and seek to win a title in a fifth weight class, in which case a potential opponent is Brandon Figueroa should he defeat former Inoue foe Stephen Fulton next weekend. In “olden days,” this notion would have been dismissed as the Japanese superstar and Figueroa have different promoters, but the arrival of Turki Alalshikh, the sport’s Daddy Warbucks, has changed the dynamic. Tonight, Naoya Inoue made his first start as a brand ambassador for Riyadh Season.
Simmering on the backburner is a megafight with countryman Junto Nakatani, an easy fight to make as Arum has ties to both. However, the powers-that-be would prefer more “marination.”
Inoue has appeared twice in Las Vegas, scoring a seventh-round stoppage of Jason Moloney in October of 2020 at the MGM Bubble and a third-round stoppage of Michael Dasmarinas at the Virgin Hotels in June of 2021.
Semi-wind-up
In a 12-round bout for a regional welterweight title, Jin Sasaki improved to 19-1-1 (17) with a unanimous decision over Shoki Sakai (29-15-3). The scores were 118-110, 117-111, and 116-112.
Also
In a bout in which both contestants were on the canvas, Toshiki Shimomachi (20-1-3) edged out Misaki Hirano (11-2), winning a majority decision. A 28-year-old Osaka southpaw with a fan-friendly style, the lanky Shimomachi, unbeaten in his last 22 starts, competes as a super bantamweight. A match with Inoue may be in his future.
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Eric Priest Wins Handily on Thursday’s Golden Boy card at the Commerce Casino
Model turned fighter Eric Priest jabbed and jolted his way into the super middleweight rankings with a shutout decision win over veteran Tyler Howard on Thursday.
In his first main event Priest (15-0, 8 KOs) proved ready for contender status by defusing every attack Tennessee’s Howard (20-3, 11 KOs) could muster at Commerce Casino, the second fight in six days at the LA County venue.
All ticket monies collected on the Folden Boy Promotions card were contributed to the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation as they battle wildfires sprouting all over Los Angeles County due to high winds.
Priest, 26, had never fought anyone near Howard’s caliber but used a ramrod jab to keep the veteran off-balance and unable to muster a forceful counter-attack. Round after round the Korean-American fighter pumped left jabs while circling his opposition.
Though hit with power shots, none seemed to faze Howard but his own blows were unable to put a dent in Priest. After 10 rounds of the same repetitive action all three judges scored the fight 100-90 for Priest who now wins a regional super middleweight title.
Priest also joins the top 15 rankings of the WBA organization.
In a fight between evenly matched middleweights, Jordan Panthen (11-0, 9 KOs) remained undefeated after 10 rounds versus DeAundre Pettus (12-4, 7 KOs). Though equally skilled, Panthen simply out-worked the South Caroliina fighter to win by unanimous decision. No knockdowns were scored.
Other Bouts
Grant Flores (8-0, 6 KOs) knocked out Costa Rica’s David Lobo Ramirez (17-4, 12 KOs) with two successive right uppercuts at 2:59 of the second round of the super welterweight fight.
Cayden Griffith (3-0, 3 KOs) used a left hook to the body to stop Mark Misiura at 1:43 of the second round in a super welterweight bout.
Jordan Fuentes (3-0) floored Brandon Badillo (0-3-1) in the third round and proceeded to win by decision after four rounds in a super bantamweight fight.
A super featherweight match saw Leonardo Sanchez (8-0) win by decision over Joseph Cruz Brown (10-12) after six rounds.
Photo credit: Cris Esqueda / Golden Boy
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