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TSS Writers David Avila and Ted Sares to be Honored at Upcoming Events

David Avila, the West Coast Bureau Chief for this web site, and Ted Sares, a regular contributor, will be honored at upcoming events for their contributions to the sport of boxing. Avila will be inducted into the International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame in the non-boxer category at the organization’s sixth Induction Ceremony/Dinner on Aug. 30 at the Hilton Doubletree San Francisco Airport Hotel in Brisbane, CA. Sares will receive the inaugural Harold Lederman Award at the 9th annual Ring 10 Fundraiser and Awards Banquet at Marina Del Rey in Throggs Neck, NY, on Sunday, Sept. 29.
Avila
Although he never fought professionally, David Avila (pictured without his trademark Panama hat) has boxing in his blood. His great grandfather on his mother’s side was Battling Ortega who fought seven world title-holders (and likely a few more in undocumented fights) during the years straddling World War I. David’s father boxed as a pro and had several fights at LA’s fabled Olympic Auditorium. Moreover, there is branch of his family tree wherein lies the late, great bantamweight champion Manuel Ortiz, a member of the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
Avila graduated in 1978 from UCLA with a degree in history. He was headed toward a career in education when he was bitten by the journalism bug. He first covered boxing for a small weekly in San Diego. There followed stints at the LA Times and Riverside Press-Enterprise. In 1995 he co-founded Uppercut magazine, a periodical that is still in existence. Several other web sites carried his byline before he joined The Sweet Science in 2005.
Avila recalls that he first became intrigued with women’s boxing in May of 1999 when he attended a show staged in a tent on the grounds of the Pechanga Indian Casino in the town of Temecula. A 20-year-old light flyweight named Wendy Rodriguez made her pro debut on the undercard.
Avila was impressed with her level of skill. He has been a staunch supporter of women’s boxing ever since. In 2016, his role at TSS was expanded when he was named the editor of a new TSS sister site called The Prizefighters , a web site devoted to women’s boxing. (Wendy Rodriguez, who went on to win a world title, is joining Avila in the IWBHF class of 2019; how fitting!).
When it comes to the SoCal prizefighting culture, no boxing writer is more attuned to it than David Avila. Whereas many established boxing writers only turn up for the big fights, David, who resides in Riverside, attends all the little shows, sometimes driving several hours each way, and prowls the gyms for stories when he isn’t at ringside working on a deadline. He estimates that he has been inside nearly 200 boxing gyms, most of which have come and gone. That might be a record worthy of entry in the Guinness book.
Sares
A Chicago native who now resides in the White Mountain area of Northern New Hampshire, Ted Sares has followed boxing with a passion for more than 60 years. At age 82, he still competes in powerlifting and strongman competitions and has won multiple national titles.
Sares, who traveled the world during his days as a labor relations specialist for a Fortune 500 company, contributed to several other boxing web sites and magazines before joining the TSS family of writers. A prolific writer, he has self-published two boxing books under the iUniverse imprimatur and authored a True Crime book, “Shattered,” a compendium of essays released through a traditional publisher.
Sares is a member of Ring 4, the New England branch of the Veteran Boxers Association, which honored him with the Humanitarian of the Year Award in 2012. The various Veteran Boxers Associations — the very first was organized in Philadelphia in 1935 – were established for the purpose of supporting former boxers that had fallen on hard times. Ring 10, of which Sares is a lifetime member, reportedly devotes every penny it receives to this purpose. Former professional boxer and NYSAC inspector Matt Farrago (pictured with Ted) founded the 503(c) charity in 2011 and remains the driving force.
The award that Sares will receive honors the memory of his friend Harold Lederman who died on May 11 of this year at age 79 after a long battle with cancer. Lederman judged more than 1000 fights before joining the HBO Boxing team in 1986. Known for his passionate love of boxing and his cheery personality, Lederman was eulogized as the greatest global ambassador for boxing that the sport has ever known.
For more information about the International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame and Ring 10 fundraisers, please go to their respective web sites:
Iwbhf.com
Ring10.org
Check out more boxing news on video at The Boxing Channel
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Alexis Rocha KOs Brave but Overmatched George Ashie on DAZN.

Golden Boy Promotions’ potted their first offering of 2023 at the recently opened YouTube Theater, a 6,000-seat venue situated inside the stadium built to house LA’s two NFL franchises. The main event was a scheduled 12-round welterweight match between Alexis Rocha, a southpaw from nearby Santa Ana and George Ashie, a 38-year-old Ghanaian making his U.S. debut. Ashie was a late substitute for Anthony Young who reportedly suffered a nose injury in training. The match and supporting bouts were live-streamed on DAZN.
Ashie, who was fighting above his normal weight class and carried a career-high 146 pounds, was brave but out-gunned. Rocha knocked him down in the third frame with a right hook and hurt him several more times as the fight progressed although Ashie never stopped trying. In round six, an accidental clash of heads left Rocha with a nasty cut on his left eyebrow. He fought with more urgency after this incident and knocked Ashie out cold in the next round. The official time was 2:08 of round seven.
It was the fifth straight win for Rocha who improved his ledger to 22-1 (14 KOs). After the bout, he expressed an interest in fighting Terence Crawford. Ashie fell to 33-6-1 (25).
Other Bouts of Note
Floyd “Austin Kid” Schofield, a precocious 20-year-old lightweight, had Albert Mercado on the canvas in the second round but was unable to put him away despite hurting him multiple times and went 10 rounds for the first time in his young career.
Schofield, the 2022 TSS Prospect of the Year, improved to 13-0 (11), winning 100-89 on all three cards. Mercado, a 35-year-old Connecticut-born Puerto Rican, declined to 17-5-1 but retained his distinction of having never stopped.
Super middleweight Bektemir Melikuziev, a 2016 Olympic silver medalist for Uzbekistan who lives and trains in Indio, California, overpowered San Diego’s Ulises Sierra who was on the deck twice from body punches before the fight was waived off at the 2:59 mark of round three. It was the fourth straight victory for Melikuziev (11-1, 9 KOs) after suffering a stunning one-punch knockout at the hands of seemingly shopworn Gabriel Rosado with whom he is pursuing a rematch. Sierra was 17-2-2 heading in with eight of his wins coming in Mexico.
In a match framed as a WBO minimumweight title eliminator, Oscar Collazo (6-0, 4 KOs) scored an impressive fifth-round stoppage of Yudel Reyes. Collazo knocked Reyes down twice in the fifth round, the second with a vicious right hand that put Reyes down so hard that the referee didn’t bother to count. The official time was 2:59 of round five.
In theory, Collazo’s next fight will come against the Filipino Melvin Jerusalem who won the title earlier this month with a second-round stoppage of Masataka Taniguchi in Osaka. Reyes, a 26-year-old Mexican making his U.S. debut, declined to 15-2.
Photo credit: Al Applerose
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Artur Beterbiev TKOs Anthony Yarde in a London Firefight

The presumption, echoed by ESPN boxing commentator Bernardo Osuna, was that tonight’s bout at Wembley Arena in London between Artur Beterbiev and Anthony Yarde would be explosive and entertaining for as long as it lasted. That proved to be true and when the smoke cleared, Beterbiev, the rugged Montreal-based Russian had retained his three light heavyweight title belts and had added another knockout to his ledger, his nineteenth as a pro in as many opportunities.
Both men landed hard shots during the fight and both were marked up at the finish. Yarde had a cut under his right eye and Beterbiev had a cut on his left eyelid.
A chopping right hand from Beterbiev late in the first minute of the eighth round marked the beginning of the end for Yarde, the muscular 31-year-old Londoner who entered the contest sporting a record of 23-2 with 22 knockouts. The punch sent him reeling backward toward his corner where he landed on his knees. He beat the count, but turned toward his corner rather than referee Steve Gray.
Gray let the bout continue, but Beterbiev pressed his advantage and after a few more unanswered punches Yarde’s trainer Tunde Ajayi stepped up on the ring apron and summoned Gray to stop it. The official time was 2:01 of round eight.
Beterbiev hasn’t lost since losing a decision to amateur nemesis Oleksandr Usyk in the quarter finals of the 2012 London Olympics. At age 38, he shows no signs of slowing down.
In his post-fight interview, the self-effacing Russian said, “I hope some day I will be a good boxer,” and acknowledged that he would welcome a unification fight with fellow Russian Dmitry Bivol, the WBA title-holder.
WBA Title Fight
In a bout that was in theory the co-feature but went off during the earlier portion of the ESPN+ livestream, Artem Dalakian (21-0, 15 KOs) retained his WBA world flyweight title with a unanimous and somewhat controversial 12-round unanimous decision over Costa Rica’s David Jimenez (12-1). The judges had it 116-112 and 115-113 twice.
An Azerbaijan-born Ukrainian, Dalakian was making the sixth defense of the title he won in 2018 with a 12-round decision over Brian Viloria in Los Angeles in his lone previous appearance at a venue in the English-speaking world. His five title defenses were in Kiev. Jimenez was coming off a 12-round majority decision over Ricardo Sandoval in what ranked as one of the bigger upsets of 2021.
A Split for the Itauma Brothers
Promoter Frank Warren’s newest signee, 18-year-old heavyweight Moses Itauma, made a big splash in his pro debut, blasting out Czechoslovakia’s Marcel Bode (2-2) in 23 seconds. Moses and his older brother Karol Itauma are sons of a British citizen of Nigerian ancestry and a Slovakian mother.
In a shocking upset, Ezequiel Osvaldo Maderna, a 36-year-old Argentine who had lost six of his previous eight fights, forged a fifth-round stoppage of well-touted Karol Itauma who was 9-0 (7 KOs) as a pro coming in. Itauma ate numerous straight right hands before a straight right hand knocked him down for the count. The official time was 1:04 of round five. Maderna improved to 29-10 (11).
Also
The Frankham cousins, super welterweight Joshua and super featherweight Charles, improved their ledgers to 7-0 with 6-round shutouts over their respective opponents. The cousins are grandsons of John “Gypsy Johnny” Frankham, a former British light heavyweight champion.
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Jake Paul vs Tommy Fury on Feb. 26 in a Potential Pay-Per-View Blockbuster

It’s now official. The twice-postponed “grudge match” between Jake Paul and Tommy Fury will come to fruition on Sunday, Feb. 26, at Riyadh in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. An 8-rounder contested at a catch-weight of 185 pounds, the match and several supporting bouts will air in the U.S. on ESPN+ PPV at a cost of $49.99.
The hook for this promotion – a come-hither that will be hammered home incessantly in the coming weeks – is that Jake Paul will finally touch gloves with a legitimate professional boxer. Paul’s previous opponents were a fellow YouTube influencer (AnEsonGib), a retired NBA player (Nate Robinson), and three former MMA champions: Ben Askren, Tyron Woodley, and Anderson Silva. He fought Woodley twice.
Tommy Fury, the half-brother of reigning WBC world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury, made his pro debut in December of 2018 in a four-round bout in his hometown of Manchester. He was two fights into his pro career when he became a contestant on the TV reality show “Love Island.” An enormously popular show in Great Britain, especially among the coveted 18-34 demographic, “Love Island” was in its fifth season.
Fury was paired with supermodel Molly-Mae Hague with whom he finished second. They developed a great chemistry, on and off the set, became engaged, and purportedly welcomed a baby girl this week.
What about Tommy Fury the boxer? How legitimate is he?
Fury’s record currently stands at 8-0 (4 KOs). His first opponent was a professional loser from Latvia whose current ledger reads 10-113-3. His next six opponents were a combined 4-73-2. Finally, in his last fight, which occurred in April of last year, he met an opponent with a good record, Poland’s Daniel Bocianski, who was 10-1. But look closer and one discovers that all but one of Bocianski’s 10 triumphs came against opponents with losing records. The exception was a 6-round decision over a fellow Pole whose record currently stands at 18-16-1 and who has been stopped 13 times.
Fury bloodied Bocianski and won a wide 6-round decision, but his performance was underwhelming. “Fury had the Hollywood teeth, tan, and diamante-colored shorts,” wrote Chasinga Malata of the London Sun, “leaving only his performance without sheen and sparkle.”
There is nothing in Tommy Fury’s background, aside from his biological pedigree, to suggest that he has the tools to become a world-class boxer. If he were a member of the Three Stooges, he would be Shemp.
Jake Paul, by contrast, may actually be legit. Those in the know that have watched him train have come away impressed. It says here that Paul isn’t moving up in class on Feb. 26; it’s the other way around.
In the co-feature, Ilunga Makabu (29-2, 25 KOs) will make the third defense of his WBC world cruiserweight title against Badou Jack (27-3-3, 16 KOs). A Congolese-South African, Makabu is the older brother of heavyweight contender Martin Bakole. Jack, four years older than Makabu at age 39, formerly held world titles at 168 and 175 pounds.
Although Badou Jack was born in Sweden and keeps a home in Las Vegas where he has long been affiliated with the Mayweather Boxing Club, he will have the home field advantage in Saudi Arabia where he has cultivated a loyal following. A devout Muslim, Jack will be making his fourth straight start in the Persian Gulf Region. In his last outing, he outpointed Richard “Popeye” Rivera at Jeddah, winning a 10-round split decision.

Badou Jack
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