Connect with us

Featured Articles

YEAR IN REVIEW: Duva Shows P4P Toughness, Takes On Haymon In March Mayhem

Published

on

One of the ways the year in boxing 2014 will be remembered is for the…curious…choice-making employed by some of the best and brightest pugilists of the day. Andre Ward, Mikey Garcia and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. chose to not indulge in their vocation, but instead sit on the sidelines, and go on hiatus because of a disagreement in terms of existing contracts.

I managed to use the word, or should I say, make up the word “piranhic” in a March 4 story-column on Ward, in which I suggested, hopefully humbly, that it makes much sense for him to use these prime years of athleticism to their full extent, and that’s to be done by fighting not in court-rooms or mediation rooms, but in rings. He didn’t heed my advice then, but here’s hoping nearing a year later, he will finally put contractual issues behind him, and fight in the place he’s best suited for, the squared circle. My words then stand today, I think:

We never know how a man’s body ages, if his vessel will cooperate with him. It would be a tough break to have his fighting infrequency coat him with rust, leave him prone to more injuries, and have him irked, in a few years, that he wasted time on a task that didn’t need to be embraced.

Superstar Canelo Alvarez got back in the flow with a win on March 14, over graying shark Alfredo Angulo, who helped make Canelo look like the sort of boxer some figured might give Floyd Mayweather some issues when they tangled in 2013. Canelo landed 58% of his shots on a guy whose reflexes have slipped some, so it wasn’t a “best fighting the best” scrap; that was more the norm than not in 2014, sadly.

And how long could we go before “corruptitude,” a term I coined last year, reared it’s wicked fangs and nasty breath? On March 15, I wrote, “Mauricio Herrera impressed the heck out of everyone who watched him be slick, smart and pesky as all hell against Danny Garcia in the main event in Puerto Rico on Saturday night, and on Showtime. Everyone, except the most important people, the judges, who gave Garcia the nod. One card read 114-114 (Gustave Padilla), while the others said 116-112, 116-112 (Carlos Colon, Al Rochin). I didn’t. I though Herrera outboxed the champ, and so did the Showtime crew. Al Bernstein saw it 116-113, 116-112 for Steve Farhood and 116-113 from Paul Malignaggi, all for Herrera. I most agreed with the Farhood card, giving extra love to the ring generalship of Herrera, which impressed me more than the alleged power shot edge.”

Another black eye for our sport, some thundered. How can you tell the eye is black, as the whole of the body and the soul is tainted by such sad occurrences, I say. And yet we go another year with nobody in a change-making role attending to the regular abortions of reasoning which rear their heads just about every week, and lead Teddy Atlas dangerously close to stroking out territory.

On March 25, fight fans were reminded that one of the toughest beings in the sport, pound for pound, is Kathy Duva. The Jersey gal put uber advisor Al Haymon on mega-blast, saying what loads of people might think, but are afraid to say, for whatever reasons. She took Haymon to task for hurling a spitball/curveball and queering a planned Adonis Stevenson-Sergey Kovalev bout. “He’s the man best known for making sure the public doesn’t get to see the fights they want,” she told me. “It’s true, isn’t it? Ask Mayweather and Pacquiao.” She also said, “I think Adonis is scared to death of Kovalev. And the fans are getting screwed. And Al Haymon owns that.”

The viewing of Haymon as more hindrance than help to the sport, as someone whose actions and power enrich a select few, rather than the masses, was solidified heavily because of this development.

The month ended with another fight which did not feature the best fighting the best, with Kovalev stopping unbeaten but unknown Cedric Agnew in Atlantic City. Boxing continued to shoot itself in the foot, choke off it’s growth, and retarded the boosting of its fanbase with such matches, which occur because of a fractured political landscape, and power brokers seeking to keep all pieces of the pie on their own plates. We all hope 2015 sees a vast lessening of this greed-is-good reasoning…

Through it all, Haymon kept his head down, and the robot pen signing contracts: Rances Barthelemy, Chad Dawson Luis Collazo, the Peterson brothers, and Robert Guerrero all hopped aboard The H Train in March, leading us dolts to puzzle just what it was being worked for by the man behind the curtain. We still don’t truly know and he exists in a “need to know” basis…in other words, you don’t need to know nuthin, you will learn it on Al’s timeline..which he ain’t sharing with the masses.

March took a turn toward the ugly, and the year would feature much more of that, as more fighting was found outside the rings as inside.

Follow Woods on Twitter; Is that not one of your resolutions? https://twitter.com/Woodsy1069

WATCH RELATED VIDEOS ON BOXINGCHANNEL.TV

Featured Articles

International Brotherhood of Prizefighters Rankings: Week of September 24, 2023

Published

on

By

International-Brotherhood-of-Prizefighters-Rankings:-Week-of-September-24,-2023.jpg
International Brotherhood of Prizefighters Rankings: Week of September 24, 2023

 

What’s in a nickname, you ask?  Zhilei “Big Bang” Zhang exhibited shades of the legendary Brown Bomber, Joe Louis; the exception being he conducts business from the port side.  Zhang’s 3rd round stoppage of Joe Joyce sees Joyce exiting the top 10 in the heavyweight division.  Also exiting due to inactivity is Andy Ruiz and Luis Ortiz, who last fought each other on September 4, 2022.  Gaining entries are Daniel Dubois, Dillian White and Derek Chisora, at 8, 9 and 10 respectively.

At 140, Richardson Hitchins earned his asterisk with a one sided decision over Jose Zepeda.  Hitchins enters the top 10 in the 7th slot, while Zepeda falls to 8th.  Zhankosh Turarov drops to 9th in the world and immediately underneath him, rounding out the top 10, is Elvis Rodriguez. Scotland’s Josh Taylor gets bumped from the 10th slot.

At 108, World Champion Kenshiro Teraji defended his title with a stoppage of 4th ranked Hekkie Budler in round 9 of a scheduled 12.  Budler drops to 7th, see list for reshuffle.

*Please note that when the fighter’s name appears with an asterisk it represents a movement in ranking from the previous week.

105lbs

 Vacant

1            Thammanoon Niyomtrong (Knockout CP Freshmart) (Thailand)

2            Panya Pradabsri (Petchmanee CP Freshmart) (Thailand)

3            Oscar Collazo (USA)

4            Ginjiro Shigeoka (Japan)

5            Daniel Valladares (Mexico)

6            Yudai Shigeoka (Japan)

7            Melvin Jerusalem (Philippines)

8            Masataka Taniguchi (Japan)

9            Rene Mark Cuarto (Philippines)

10          Yudai Shigeoka (Philippines)

 

108lbs

 Kenshiro Teraji (Japan)

1            Jonathan Gonzalez (Puerto Rico)

2            Masamichi Yabuki (Japan)

3            Sivenathi Nontshinga (South Africa)

4            Elwin Soto (Mexico)*

5            Regie Suganob (Philippines)*

6            Shokichi Iwata (Japan)*

7            Hekkie Budler (South Africa)*

8            Carlos Canizales (Venezuela)

9            Daniel Matellon (Panama)

10          Miel Fajardo (Philippines)

 

112lbs

 Vacant

1            Sunny Edwards (England)

2            Artem Dalakian (Ukraine)

3            Julio Cesar Martinez (Mexico)

4            Angel Ayala Lardizabal (Mexico)

5            David Jimenez (Costa Rica)

6            Jesse Rodriguez (USA)

7            Ricardo Sandoval (USA)

8            Felix Alvarado (Nicaragua)

9            Seigo Yuri Akui (Japan)

10          Taku Kuwahara (Japan)

 

115lbs

 Juan Francisco Estrada (Mexico)

1            Roman Gonzalez (Nicaragua)

2            Kazuto Ioka (Japan)

3            Fernando Martinez (Argentina)

4            Junto Nakatani (Japan)

5            Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (Thailand)

6            Kosei Tanaka (Japan)

7            Andrew Moloney (Australia)

8            Francisco Rodriguez Jr. (Mexico)

9            Pedro Guevara (Mexico)

10         Donnie Nietes (Philippines)

 

118lbs

 Vacant

1            Emmanuel Rodriguez (Puerto Rico)

2            Alexandro Santiago (Mexico)

3            Jason Moloney (Australia)

4            Vincent Astrolabio (Philippines)

5            Gary Antonio Russell (USA)

6            Takuma Inoue (Japan)

7            Nonito Donaire (Philippines)

8            Ryosuke Nishida (Japan)

9            Keita Kurihara (Japan)

10          Paul Butler (England)

 

122lbs

 Vacant

1            Naoya Inoue (Japan)

2            Marlon Tapales (Philippines)

3            Stephen Fulton (USA)

4            Luis Nery (Mexico)

5            Murodjon Akhmadaliev (Uzbekistan)

6            Sam Goodman (Australia)

7            Azat Hovhannisyan (Armenia)

8            Kevin Gonzalez (Mexico)

9            Ra’eese Aleem (USA)

10          Liam Davies (England)

 

126lbs

 Vacant

1            Luis Alberto Lopez (Mexico)

2            Leigh Wood (England)

3            Brandon Figueroa (USA)

4            Rey Vargas (Mexico)

5            Mauricio Lara (Mexico)

6            Robeisy Ramirez (Cuba)

7            Mark Magsayo (Philippines)

8            Josh Warrington (England)

9            Reiya Abe (Japan)

10          Otabek Kholmatov (Uzbekistan)

 

130lbs

 Vacant

1            Emanuel Navarrete (Mexico)

2            Joe Cordina (Wales)

3            Hector Garcia (Dominican Republic)

4            O’Shaquie Foster (USA)

5            Oscar Valdez (Mexico)

6            Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov (Tajikistan)

7            Otar Eranosyan (Georgia)

8            Lamont Roach (USA)

9            Eduardo Ramirez (Mexico)

10          Kenichi Ogawa (Japan)

 

135lbs

 Devin Haney (USA)

1            Gervonta Davis (USA)

2            Vasily Lomachenko (Ukraine)

3            Isaac Cruz (Mexico)

4            William Zepeda Segura (Mexico)

5            Frank Martin (USA)

6            Shakur Stevenson (USA)

7            Maxi Hughes (England)

8            George Kambosos Jr (Australia)

9            Keyshawn Davis (USA)

10          Raymond Muratalla (USA)

 

140lbs

♛ Teofimo Lopez (USA)

1            Regis Prograis (USA)

2            Jose Ramirez (USA)

3            Jack Catterall (England)*

4            Subriel Matias (Puerto Rico)*

5            Arnold Barboza Jr. (USA)*

6            Gary Antuanne Russell (USA)*

7            Richardson Hitchins (USA)*

8            Jose Zepeda (USA)*

9            Zhankosh Turarov (Kazakhstan*)

10          Elvis Rodriguez (Dominican Republic)*

 

147lbs

 Terence Crawford (USA)

1            Errol Spence (USA)

2            Jaron Ennis (USA)

3            David Avanesyan (Russia)

4            Cody Crowley (Canada)

5            Alexis Rocha (USA)

6            Rashidi Ellis (USA)

7            Souleymane Cissokho (Senegal)

8            Roiman Villa (Venezuela)

9            Egidijus Kavaliauskas (Lithuania)

10          Shakhram Giyasov (Uzbekistan)

 

154lbs

 Jermell Charlo (USA)

1            Tim Tszyu (Australia)

2            Brian Mendoza (USA)

3            Jesus Alejandro Ramos (USA)

4            Sebastian Fundora (USA)

5            Erickson Lubin (USA)

6            Michel Soro (Ivory Coast)

7            Magomed Kurbanov (Russia)

8            Tony Harrison (USA)

9            Israil Madrimov (Uzbekistan)

10          Bakhram Murtazaliev (Russia)

 

160lbs

 Vacant

1            Gennady Golovkin (Kazakhstan)

2            Carlos Adames (Dominican Republic)

3            Zhanibek Alimkhanuly (Kazakhstan)

4            Chris Eubank Jr. (England)

5            Liam Smith (England)

6            Sergiy Derevyanchenko (Ukraine)*

7            Vincenzo Gualtieri (Germany)

8            Felix Cash (England)

9            Michael Zerafa (Australia)

10          Esquiva Falcao (Brazil)

 

168lbs

 Canelo Alvarez (Mexico)

1            David Benavidez (USA)

2            Caleb Plant (USA)

3            Christian Mbilli (France)

4            David Morrell (Cuba)

5            John Ryder (England)

6            Pavel Silyagin (Russia)

7            Vladimir Shishkin (Russia)

8            Carlos Gongora (Ecuador)

9            Jaime Munguia (Mexico)

10          Demetrius Andrade (USA)

 

175lbs

 Artur Beterbiev (Canada)

1          Dmitry Bivol (Russia)

2          Joshua Buatsi (England)

3          Callum Smith (England)

4          Joe Smith Jr. (USA)

5          Gilberto Ramirez (Mexico)

6          Anthony Yarde (England)

7          Dan Azeez (England)

8          Ali Izmailov (Russia)

9          Michael Eifert (Germany)

10        Igor Mikhalkin (Germany)

 

200lbs

 Jai Opetaia (Australia)

1            Mairis Breidis (Latvia)

2            Chris Billam-Smith (England)

3            Richard Riakporhe (England)

4            Aleksei Papin (Russia)

5            Badou Jack (Sweden)

6            Arsen Goulamirian (France)

7            Lawrence Okolie (England)

8            Yuniel Dorticos (Cuba)

9            Mateusz Masternak (Poland)

10          Ilunga Makabu (So. Africa)

 

Unlimited

 Oleksandr Usyk (Ukraine)

1            Tyson Fury (England)

2            Zhilei Zhang (China)

3            Deontay Wilder (USA)

4            Anthony Joshua (England)

5            Filip Hrgovic (Croatia)

6            Arslanbek Makhmudov (Russia)*

7            Frank Sanchez (Cuba)*

8            Daniel Dubois (England)*

9            Dillian White (England)*

10          Derek Chisora (Zimbabwe)*

To comment on this story in the Fight Forum, CLICK HERE.

Continue Reading

Featured Articles

Canelo-Charlo Gets All the Ink, but Don’t Overlook the Compelling Match-up of Gassiev-Wallin in Turkey

Published

on

Canelo-Charlo-Gets-All-the-Ink-but-Don't-Overlook-This-Compelling-Match-in-Turkey

Canelo-Charlo Gets All the Ink, but Don’t Overlook the Compelling Match-up of Gassiev-Wallin in Turkey

The eyes of the boxing world will be on Las Vegas this Saturday where Mexican superstar Saul “Canelo” Alvarez risks his four super middleweight title belts against unified 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo. Earlier that day at a luxury resort hotel in the city of Antalya on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey, there’s a heavyweight match sitting under the radar that may prove to be the better fight. It’s an intriguing match-up between former world cruiserweight title-holder Murat Gassiev and Swedish southpaw Otto Wallin, a bout with significant ramifications for boxing’s glamour division.

Gassiev (30-1, 23 KOs) and Wallin (25-1, 14 KOs) have only one loss, but those setbacks came against the top dogs in the division. Gassiev was out-boxed by Oleksandr Usyk back in the days when both were cruiserweights. Wallin gave Tyson Fury a world of trouble before losing a unanimous decision.

Since those fights, both have been treading water.

Gassiev

Gassiev was inactive for 27 months after his match with Usyk while dealing with legal issues and an injury to his left shoulder. He is 4-0 (4 KOs) since returning to the ring while answering the bell for only eight rounds. The only recognizable name among those four victims is German gatekeeper Michael Wallisch. After stopping Wallisch, Gassiev was out of action for another 13 months while reportedly dealing with an arm injury.

A first-round knockout of Carlouse Welch, an obscure 40-something boxer from the U.S. state of Georgia on Aug. 26, 2022, in Belgrade, Serbia, was promoted as a title fight. The sanctioning body was the Eurasian Boxing Parliament (insert your own punchline here). Gassiev followed that up with a second-round knockout of former NFL linebacker Mike Balogun who came in undefeated and was seemingly a legitimate threat to him.

Although he has yet to fight a ranked opponent since leaving the cruiserweight division, Gassiev — a former stablemate of Gennady Golovkin who has been living in Big Bear, California, training under Abel Sanchez – is one of the most respected fighters in the division because he has one-punch knockout power as Balogun and others can well attest. The rub against the Russian-Armenian bruiser is that he is somewhat robotic.

Wallin

Otto Wallin, a 32-year-old southpaw from Sweden who trains in New York under former world lightweight champion Joey Gamache, fought Tyson Fury on Sept. 14, 2019 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. There was a general feeling that the Swede would be a stroll in the park for Fury, but to the contrary, he gave the Gypsy King a hard tussle while losing a unanimous decision.

Wallin is 5-0 since that night beginning with victories over Travis Kauffman (KO 5) and Dominic Breazeale (UD 12), but his last three opponents were softer than soft and all three lasted the distance. In order, Wallin won an 8-round decision over Kamil Sokolowski, who was 11-24-2 heading in, won a 10-round decision over ancient Rydell Booker, and won an 8-round decision over Helaman Olguin. His bout with Utah trial horse Olguin was at a banquet hall in Windham, New Hampshire.

It isn’t that Wallin has been avoiding the top names in the division; it’s the other way around. His promoter Dmitriy Salita reportedly came close to getting Wallin a match with Anthony Joshua whose team had second thoughts about sending Joshua in against another southpaw after back-to-back setbacks to Oleksandr Usyk.

Gassiev vs Wallin is a true crossroads fight. Both are in dire need of a win over a credible opponent. At last look, Gassiev, who figures to have the crowd in his corner, was a 3/1 favorite.

To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE

 

 

Continue Reading

Featured Articles

Skavynskyi and Bustillos Win on a MarvNation Card in Long Beach

Published

on

Skavynskyi-and-Bustillos-Win-on-a-MarvNation-Card-in-Long-Beach

Skavynskyi and Bustillos Win on a MarvNation Card in Long Beach

LONG BEACH, Ca.-A cool autumn night saw welterweights and minimumweights share main events for a MarvNation fight card on Saturday.

Ukraine’s Eduard Skavynskyi (15-0, 7 KOs) experienced a tangled mess against the awkward Alejandro Frias (14-10-2) but won by decision after eight rounds in a welterweight contest at the indoor furnace called the Thunder Studios.

It was hot in there for the more than 600 people inside.

Skavynskyi probably never fought someone like Mexico’s Frias whose style was the opposite of the Ukrainian’s fundamentally sound one-two style. But round after round the rough edges became more familiar.

Neither fighter was ever damaged but all three judges saw Skavynskyi the winner by unanimous decision 79-73 on all three cards. The Ukrainian fighter trains in Ventura.

Bustillo Wins Rematch

Applerose2

In the female main event Las Vegas’ Yadira Bustillos (8-1) stepped into a rematch with Karen Lindenmuth (5-2) and immediately proved the lessons learned from their first encounter.

Bustillos connected solidly with an overhand right and staggered Lindenmuth but never came close to putting the pressure fighter down. Still, Bustillos kept turning the hard rushing Lindenmuth and snapping her head with overhand rights and check left hooks.

Lindenmuth usually overwhelms most opponents with a smothering attack that causes panic. But not against Bustillos who seemed quite comfortable all eight rounds in slipping blows and countering back.

After eight rounds all three judges scored the contest for Bustillos 78-74 and 80-72 twice. Body shots were especially effective for the Las Vegas fighter in the fifth round. Bustillos competes in the same division as IBF/WBO title-holder Yokasta Valle.

Other Bouts

In a middleweight clash, undefeated Victorville’s Andrew Buchanan (3-0-1) used effective combination punching to defeat Mexico’s Fredy Vargas (2-1-1) after six rounds. Two judges scored it 59-55 and a third 60-54 for Buchanan. No knockdowns were scored.

A super lightweight match saw Sergio Aldana win his pro debut by decision after four rounds versus Gerardo Fuentes (2-9-1).

Photos credit: Al Applerose

To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE

 

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Christian-Mbilli-IDemolishes-Demond-Nicholson-to-Inch-Closer-to-a-Title-Shot
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Christian Mbilli Demolishes Demond Nicholson to Inch Closer to a Title Shot

Results-from-Manchester-where-Chris-Eubank-Jr-Avenged-a-KO-Loss-in-a-Dominant-Fashion
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Results from Manchester where Chris Eubank Jr Avenged a KO Loss in a Dominant Fashion

Tedious-Fights-and-a-Controversial-Draw-Smudge-the-Matchroom-Boxing-Card-in-Orlando
Featured Articles4 days ago

Tedious Fights and a Controversial Draw Smudge the Matchroom Boxing Card in Orlando

Avila-Perspective-Chap-250-Liam-Smith-vs-Chris-Eubank-Jr-in-Manchester
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 250: Liam Smith vs Chris Eubank Jr II in Manchester

Skavynskyi-and-Bustillos-Win-on-a-MarvNation-Card-in-Long-Beach
Featured Articles3 days ago

Skavynskyi and Bustillos Win on a MarvNation Card in Long Beach

Derby's-Sandy-Ryan-Poised-to-Unify-the-Welterweight-Title-in-Her-US-Debut
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Derby’s Sandy Ryan Poised to Unify the Welterweight Title in Her U.S. Debut

William-Zepeda-Wins-by-KO-Yokasta-Valle-Wins-Too-at-Commerce-Casino
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

William Zepeda Wins by KO; Yokasta Valle Wins Too at Commerce Casino

Ruben-Villa-The-Pride-of-Salinas-Returns-to-the-Ring-on-Friday
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Ruben Villa, the Pride of Salinas, Returns to the Ring on Friday

Luis-Alberto-Lopez-Retains-His-IBF-Title-Upends-Joet-Gonzalez-in-Corpus-Christi
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Luis Alberto Lopez Retains his IBF Title, Upends Joet Gonzalez in Corpus Christi

From-Palookaville-to-the-Pinnacle-A-Closer-Look-at-Elite-Trainer-Bomac
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

From Palookaville to the Pinnacle: A Closer Look at Elite Trainer ‘Bomac’

Fierro-Nips-Zamarripa-in-Tujuana-Erika-Cruz-and-Sjye-Nicholson-Win-Too
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Fierro Nips Zamarripa in Tijuana; Erika Cruz and Skye Nicholson Win Too

Ricky-Burns-Seeks-C;losure-on-a-Card-with-A-Father-Son-Duo
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Ricky Burns ‘Seeks Closure’ on a Card with a Father/Son Duo

An-Ods-to-the-Polo-Grouns-on-the-Belated-100th-Anniversary-of-Dempsey-Firpo
Featured Articles5 days ago

An Ode to the Polo Grounds on the (Belated) 100th Anniversary of Dempsey-Firpo

Zhilei-Zhang-KOs-Joe-Joyce-Calls-Out-Tyson-Fury
Featured Articles4 days ago

Zhilei Zhang KOs Joe Joyce; Calls Out Tyson Fury

Avila-Perspective-Chap-251-Golden-Boy-Returns-to-Roots
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap, 251: Golden Boy Returns to Roots

International-Brotherhood-of-Prizefighters-Rankings:-Chris-Eubank-Jr
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

International Brotherhood of Prizefighters Rankings: Week of September 3, 2023

Avila-Perspective-Chap-251-Raul-Curiel-vs-Courtney-Pennington-Ignites-September
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 251: Raul Curiel vs Courtney Pennington Ignites September

Raul-Curiel-Wins-by-Stoppage-in-Kast-Seconds-at-Fantasy-Springs
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Raul Curiel Wins by Stoppage in Last Seconds at Fantasy Springs

Kenshiro-Teraji-TKOs-Hekkie-Budler-on-a-Monday-Night-in-Tokyo
Featured Articles1 week ago

Kenshiro Teraji TKOs Hekkie Budler on a Monday Night in Tokyo

Hot-Rod-Kalajdzic-TKOs-Mickey-Ellison-on-a-Garry-Jonas-Promotion-in-Florida
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

‘Hot Rod’ Kalajdzic TKOs Mickey Ellison on a Garry Jonas Promotion in Florida

International-Brotherhood-of-Prizefighters-Rankings:-Week-of-September-24,-2023.jpg
Featured Articles19 hours ago

International Brotherhood of Prizefighters Rankings: Week of September 24, 2023

Canelo-Charlo-Gets-All-the-Ink-but-Don't-Overlook-This-Compelling-Match-in-Turkey
Featured Articles1 day ago

Canelo-Charlo Gets All the Ink, but Don’t Overlook the Compelling Match-up of Gassiev-Wallin in Turkey

Skavynskyi-and-Bustillos-Win-on-a-MarvNation-Card-in-Long-Beach
Featured Articles3 days ago

Skavynskyi and Bustillos Win on a MarvNation Card in Long Beach

Tedious-Fights-and-a-Controversial-Draw-Smudge-the-Matchroom-Boxing-Card-in-Orlando
Featured Articles4 days ago

Tedious Fights and a Controversial Draw Smudge the Matchroom Boxing Card in Orlando

Zhilei-Zhang-KOs-Joe-Joyce-Calls-Out-Tyson-Fury
Featured Articles4 days ago

Zhilei Zhang KOs Joe Joyce; Calls Out Tyson Fury

An-Ods-to-the-Polo-Grouns-on-the-Belated-100th-Anniversary-of-Dempsey-Firpo
Featured Articles5 days ago

An Ode to the Polo Grounds on the (Belated) 100th Anniversary of Dempsey-Firpo

Avila-Perspective-Chap-253-Oscar-De-La-Hoya-Reloading-in-LA-and-More
Featured Articles6 days ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 253: Oscar De La Hoya Reloading in LA and More

Conor-Benn-A-Lightning-Rod-for-Controversy-Returns-to-the-Ring-on-Saturday
Featured Articles1 week ago

Conor Benn, a Lightning Rod for Controversy, Returns to the Ring on Saturday

International-Brotherhood-of-Prizefighters-Rankings-Week-Ending-September-17,-2023.jpg
Featured Articles1 week ago

International Brotherhood of Prizefighters Rankings: Week of September 17, 2023

Kenshiro-Teraji-TKOs-Hekkie-Budler-on-a-Monday-Night-in-Tokyo
Featured Articles1 week ago

Kenshiro Teraji TKOs Hekkie Budler on a Monday Night in Tokyo

William-Zepeda-Wins-by-KO-Yokasta-Valle-Wins-Too-at-Commerce-Casino
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

William Zepeda Wins by KO; Yokasta Valle Wins Too at Commerce Casino

Fierro-Nips-Zamarripa-in-Tujuana-Erika-Cruz-and-Sjye-Nicholson-Win-Too
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Fierro Nips Zamarripa in Tijuana; Erika Cruz and Skye Nicholson Win Too

Luis-Alberto-Lopez-Retains-His-IBF-Title-Upends-Joet-Gonzalez-in-Corpus-Christi
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Luis Alberto Lopez Retains his IBF Title, Upends Joet Gonzalez in Corpus Christi

Avila-Perspective-Chap-251-Golden-Boy-Returns-to-Roots
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap, 251: Golden Boy Returns to Roots

Derby's-Sandy-Ryan-Poised-to-Unify-the-Welterweight-Title-in-Her-US-Debut
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Derby’s Sandy Ryan Poised to Unify the Welterweight Title in Her U.S. Debut

International-Brotherhood-of-Prizefighters-Rankings:-Week of September-23.jpg
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

International Brotherhood of Prizefighters Rankings: Week of September 10, 2023

Ruben-Villa-The-Pride-of-Salinas-Returns-to-the-Ring-on-Friday
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Ruben Villa, the Pride of Salinas, Returns to the Ring on Friday

Christian-Mbilli-IDemolishes-Demond-Nicholson-to-Inch-Closer-to-a-Title-Shot
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Christian Mbilli Demolishes Demond Nicholson to Inch Closer to a Title Shot

Raul-Curiel-Wins-by-Stoppage-in-Kast-Seconds-at-Fantasy-Springs
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Raul Curiel Wins by Stoppage in Last Seconds at Fantasy Springs

Hot-Rod-Kalajdzic-TKOs-Mickey-Ellison-on-a-Garry-Jonas-Promotion-in-Florida
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

‘Hot Rod’ Kalajdzic TKOs Mickey Ellison on a Garry Jonas Promotion in Florida

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Trending

Advertisement