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Comebacking Christian Carto Gives Credit to Bozy and Boots

The shooting star that lit up the Philadelphia boxing scene might seem to have flamed out following a vicious, one-punch knockout loss three years ago, but the time off just might have served to make a reconstructed Christian Carto a better version of who and what he had been prior to his sudden and unexpected fall from grace.
Not much visual evidence to the improvements Carto claims to have benefited from in working with trainer Derek âBozyâ Ennis could be detected in the 151 elapsed seconds it took for him to put away Argentinaâs Ernesto Sebastian Franzolini in Friday nightâs scheduled eight-round main event at Philadelphiaâs 2300 Arena. Carto (19-1, 13 KOs) went after Franzolini (14-13-2, 1 KO) as a famished lion might in attacking a stricken wildebeest, quickly flooring him in the first round and following up with a barrage along the ropes until referee Eric Dali stepped in at the 2:31 mark. Franzolini raised his arms in protest to what he apparently perceived as a too-quick stoppage, but his argument for being allowed to continue appeared as flimsy as his efforts at resistance had been to that point.
âI feel like Iâm way better than I was before,â Carto, a 25-year-old bantamweight, said after his second one-round quickie victory on the comeback trail. âIâm learning so much and getting so much better now.â
As his absence from the ring dragged on month after month, some might have presumed that Carto would never fight again due to the physical and perhaps psychological damage he incurred against Mexican southpaw Victor Ruiz on Feb. 8, 2019, also in the 2300 Arena. It wouldnât be the first time a boxer had retired following just such a devastating defeat. After getting nailed with an overhand left from a onetime world title challenger that landed flush in the second round, Carto was unconscious before he went down, his head bouncing off the canvas. His neck had to be immobilized and after a delay of several minutes had to be taken from the ring on a gurney for transport to nearby Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.
âWell, COVID happened,â Carto said of one of the reasons why he has fought only twice since his emphatic exit from the ranks of the undefeated, his only previous ring appearance since then a one-round knockout of Colombiaâs Yeison Vargas on Sept. 10 of 2021. But even a global pandemic only partially explains the lengthy layoff for which he now says he intends to make up for lost time.
âThat bad fight for me (against Ruiz) was almost like a blessing in disguise because I wasnât with Bozy then,â said Carto, who replaced previous trainer Billy Briscoe with the highly regarded father of welterweight sensation Jaron âBootsâ Ennis. âIf it wasnât for Bozy and (fellow cornerman Lawrence Small), I donât know if Iâd still be boxing now. I wasnât having fun then, but Iâm having fun every day with them now. Iâm learning so much and getting so much better, and itâs because of them.â
It also doesnât hurt that Carto trains alongside Boots Ennis, whom more than a few observers of the fight scene believe is not only as good as longtime division kingpins Errol Spence Jr. and Terence Crawford, but maybe better. Ennis (28-0, 26 KOs) attempts to further enhance his burgeoning reputation when he takes on Custio Clayton (19-0-1, 12 KOs) on May 14 in Carson, Calif.
âChristianâs always been a nice fighter, but he made the change by going with us,â Boots said in Cartoâs dressing room. âHeâs been working on his defense and it shows. Heâs ready, man. He will fight for a title before too long. I canât wait to see him really shine.â
Bozy Ennis also said much of the fine-tuning he has done with Carto involves defense, although some of his and Smallâs handiwork in that area might need more investigation given their new chargeâs pair of one-round routs that mostly showcased his offense.
âWe changed him,â the elder Ennis said. âChristian isnât fighting the same since he came with us. We really rearranged him. He moves different now, and heâs confident. Heâs got a nice tight defense now. Before, he just went out and boom, boom, boom. Now he slides in and moves at different angles. Thatâs the stuff that we work on. Itâs hard to touch him now.
âA couple more fights and heâll be right there for a title in that weight division. All he got to do is keep doing what heâs doing. The skyâs the limit for him.â
For once, the most enthusiastic noise in an arena headlined by a Carto bout wasnât for the 5-foot-5 local favorite (Carto, who lives in Deptford, N.J., but prefers to be introduced as being from South Philly), was fighting in Philadelphia for the 16th time in 20 pro bouts). Heavyweight Kristian Prenga (11-1, 11 KOs), an Albanian who now resides in Niagara Falls, Canada, had a large and very boisterous following cheering him on for his second-round knockout of DeShon Webster (12-5-3, 6 KOs), of Lenexa, Kan., who is affiliated with womenâs boxing legend Christy Martin, who was in the audience.
The best fight of the night during the six-bout card, at least from a competitive standout, was a dandy six-rounder pitting Julian Gonzalez (6-0-1, 6 KOs), of Reading, Pa., against Ivan Jimenez (7-1-2, 4 KOs), of Marco Island, Fla., by way of his native Cuba. Jimenez led 58-56 on one judgeâs scorecard, but the other two saw it as a 57-57 standoff, resulting in a majority draw.
In other bouts, junior welterweight Quadir Albright (6-0, 6 KOs) of Philadelphia knocked out Argentinaâs Jorge Martin Garcia (13-9-1, 3 KOs) in two rounds; featherweight Jeremy Adorno of Allentown, Pa., stopped Jason Vera of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in three rounds and welterweight Thanjhae Teasley (2-0, 2 KOs) of Bethlehem, Pa., registered a third-round TKO of Dearon Alexander of Baltimore, an active member of the U.S. Air Force who was making his pro debut.
A scheduled eight-rounder pitting Philly welterweight Paul Kroll (9-0-1, 6 KOs), a former U.S. Olympic Trials champ, and Marklin Bailey (7-7, 4 KOs), of Durham, N.C., was canceled when Kroll failed to make weight.
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Alycia Baumgardner vs Elhem Mekhaled: Female Splendor at MSGÂ

Alycia Baumgardner vs Elhem Mekhaled: Female Splendor at MSG
Two bouts between women, which will turn the winners into undisputed champions in the featherweight and super featherweight divisions, will create an electrifying atmosphere this Saturday, February 4th at Madison Square Garden.
In the duel between the two southpaws, Puerto Rican Amanda Serrano (43-2-1, 30 KOs), based in Brooklyn), will defend her 126-pound WBC, IBF and WBO titles, while Mexican Erika Cruz (15-1, 3 KOs) will defend her WBA title.
Also, of great interest will be the fight between American Baumgardner (13-1, 7 KOs), 130-pound WBC, IBF and WBO champion and her opponent, French challenger Elhem Mekhaled (15-1, 3 KOs), who will try to snatch Baumgardnerâs titles and get the vacant WBA title, which belonged to the undefeated Korean Choi Hyun-Mi (20-1, 5 KOs).
Choi, who was born in Pyongyang, North Korea but left the country with her family at the age of 14 and settled in Seoul, South Korea, was declared “Champion in Recess”, as she suffers from a medical condition that prevents her from fighting. Once she fully recovers, she will have the possibility of facing, as a mandatory challenger, the winner between Baumgardner and Mekhaled.
For Baumgardner, who was born 28 years ago in Ohio, but now lives and trains in Michigan, the fight in New York will once again allow her to showcase her skills in the United States after three consecutive fights in the United Kingdom.
In her most recent bout, Baumgardner defeated her compatriot Mikaela Mayer (17-1, 5 KOs) in a difficult brawl, from whom she snatched the IBF and WBO belts, while retaining the WBC belt. The bout was October 15th of last year at the O2 Arena in London. Two of the officials, Steve Gray and John Latham, scored the fight 96-95 in favor of Baumgardner, but Terry O’Connor saw it 97-93 for Mayer.
Four days later, Choi unanimously defeated Canada’s Vanessa Bradford (6-4-2, 0 KOs) in Seoul, earning the Asian her ninth successful defense of the WBA super featherweight crown, which she has held since May 2014, when she anesthetized the now retired Thai, Siriwan Thongmanit.
The following month, in November, the WBA ordered Choi to defend her belt in a mandatory duel against Baumgardner, making the winner the undisputed queen of 130 pounds.
ELHEM MEKHALED FILLS THE VACANCY OF SOUTH KOREAN CHOI
To fill the vacancy of the South Korean Choi, the IBF Committee awarded the position to Mekhaled who ranks third in the women’s 130-pound rankings.
Former interim WBC titleholder, Mekhaled, 31 years old and born in Paris, has recently lost by unanimous decision to Belgian Delfine Persoon (47-3, 19 KOs) at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi where they disputed the vacant WBC silver belt.
The duel against Baumgardner not only allows Mekhaled to debut in the United States, but also provides her the opportunity to become the undisputed champion at 130 pounds.
Mekhaled emphasized that the February 4th event has great significance for women fighters and that this is a sign that the discipline is growing, with more and more fight cards in which women exhibit the leading role.
The French boxer said that after winning the interim title in 2015, she waited a long time for the opportunity to fight for the regular belt, but unfortunately it never materialized.
Mekhaled explained that after a long period of focusing on her personal life and not really training, she accepted the duel with Delfine Persoon with only two weeks of preparation, which led to the setback against the Belgian boxer.
âSince my WBC interim 2019 title, Iâve been waiting for this moment,â said Mekhaled. âMaybe fate has played well; instead of one belt, theyâre all on the line. I am super excited to fight on February 4th at the legendary MSG in New York. God knows how determined I am! Itâs my time to shine. Thank you to my advisor Sarah Fina.”
Article submitted by Jorge Juan Ălvarez in Spanish.
Please note any adjustments made were for clarification purposes and any errors in translation were unintentional.
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How good is Jake Paul? Shane Mosleyâs Answer May Surprise You

Few celebrities in the world today are as polarizing as Jake Paul. The 26-year-old Cleveland native who fights Tommy Fury in an 8-round match on Feb. 26 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, has fervent fans and equally fervent detractors. To long-time aficionados of boxing, especially those born before the arrival of the internet, Jake Paul and his ilk are widely looked upon as a scourge.
Paul first entered the squared circle on Aug. 25, 2018, at the Manchester Arena in England. He fought fellow YouTube star Deji Olatunji in the co-feature to a match between their respective older brothers, Logan Paul and the âinfluencerâ known as KSI. The combatants promoted the event on their social media platforms
These were exhibitions fought with headgear. Jake Paul stopped Olatunji whose corner pulled him out after five rounds. However, the results wouldnât appear on boxrec, the sportâs official record-keeper.
No serious boxing fan paid this curious event any heed, but the folks that profit from the sport without taking any punches stood up and took notice. The on-site gate reportedly exceeded $3 million. The event reportedly generated 1.3 million pay-per-view buys worldwide (youtube charged $10 a pop) with nearly as many beholders catching a free ride on a pirate stream. A new era was born, or at least a new sub-set of a heretofore calcified sport.
Jake Paul had his first professional fight on Jan. 30, 2020, in Miami. In the opposite corner was a British social media personality of Saudi Arabian lineage who took the name AnEsonGib. Paul stopped him in the opening round.
Paul fought once more that year, knocking out former NBA star Nate Robinson, and three times in 2021, opposing Ben Askren and then Tyron Woodley twice. Askren and Woodley were former MMA champions who had fabled careers as U.S. collegiate wrestlers, but both were newcomers to boxing.
According to Forbes, Jake Paul made $31 million from boxing in 2021. And therein lies the rub. While thousands of would-be future champions, many with deep amateur backgrounds, toiled away in boxing gyms honing their craft while hoping to attract the eye of an important promoter, a guy like Jake Paul came along and jumped the queue. It just ainât fair.
In preparation for his pro debut against AnEson Gib, Paul spent time in Big Bear, California, training at the compound of Shane Mosley. A first ballot Hall of Famer (class of 2020), Mr. Mosley needs no introduction to readers of this web site. And when he says that Jake Paul is legit, one is inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt.
âI taught him the fundamentals,â says Mosley, âbut Jake was a good listener and a hard worker. Heâs a good athlete and he has a boxerâs mentality. We took him down the street to Abel Sanchezâs gym and had him spar with real professional fighters. He would spar with anybody and when he got caught with a hard punch he wouldnât back down. He loves the sport and he relished the competition.â
Mosley stops short of saying that Jake Paul could hold his own with Canelo Alvarez â Paul preposterously called out Canelo after out-pointing 47-year-old MMA legend Anderson Silva in his most recent fight â but with so many titles up for grabs in this balkanized sport, it wouldnât  surprise Mosely if the self-styled âProblem Childâ latched hold of one before this phase of his life was over.
A three-time national amateur champion and a world champion at 135, 147, and 154 pounds as a pro, Shane Mosley put Pomona, California on the boxing map. He represented that city in LA county throughout his illustrious career. His son of the same name was born there.
Mosley fought twice in his hometown as he was coming up the ladder and will be back there again on Feb. 18 when Shane Mosley Jr appears on the undercard of a Golden Boy Promotions card at Pomonaâs historic Fox Theater. Itâs not official yet so we wonât divulge the name of Shaneâs opponent, but the main event will pit Luis Nery against Azat Hovhannisyan in a WBC Super Bantamweight Eliminator, a match that shapes up as an entertaining skirmish as both have fan-friendly styles.

Shane Mosley Jr & Sr
Shane Mosley Jr, who turned 31 in December, will never replicate his fatherâs fistic accomplishments; his dad set the bar too high. But the younger Mosley is a solid pro who is on a pretty nice roll, having won five of his last six since losing a 10-round decision to Brandon Adams in the finals of season 5 of The Contender series. In his last outing, he out-slicked rugged Gabriel Rosado to win a regional super middleweight title.
The elder Mosely has been working with his son at Bones Adams gym in Las Vegas and will be in juniorâs corner on Feb. 18. It will be a double-homecoming for Pomonaâs favorite sons.
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Arne K. Langâs third boxing book, titled âGeorge Dixon, Terry McGovern and the Culture of Boxing in America, 1890-1910,â has rolled off the press. Published by McFarland, the book can be ordered directly from the publisher or via Amazon.
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Amanda Serrano Seeks Undisputed Status at 126 with Katie Taylor on the HorizonÂ

After becoming the boxing icon of Puerto Rico last year, Amanda Serrano will try to make history again when she faces the Mexican southpaw Erika Cruz on February 4th at the Hulu theater in Madison Square Garden.
Promoter Eddie Hearn stated, âPuerto Rico vs Mexico fights always deliver fireworks, and we can expect nothing less when Amanda and Erika meet. Their clash of styles will make for a brilliant spectacle as Amanda and her army of fans return to the scene of her history-making fight of the year with Katie, and we can expect a similar atmosphere to one of the greatest nights the sport has ever seen.â
Champion in several sanctioning bodies, Serrano (43-2-1, 30 KOs) will put her WBC, IBF and WBO featherweight belts on the line, while Cruz (15-1, 3 KOs) will be defending the WBA belt. If she succeeds, the thirty-four-year-old Serrano, a native of Puerto Rico who has lived in Brooklyn, New York since childhood, will become the first boxer from Puerto Rico to hold the four most recognized belts in boxing.
âThis is a pivotal moment, not just for me and my own career but for my home island of Puerto Rico,â said Serrano. âEarning the opportunity to be an undisputed lineal champion is something most fighters only dream about but becoming the first boxer from Puerto Rico to be an undisputed champion would make it even more special. I look forward to entering the ring in my hometown of NYC back at Madison Square Garden, taking on a Mexican champion in Erika Cruz and making Puerto Rican history. I encourage all my fans to turn up and tune in!â
The Puerto Rican boxer, who has won 30 of her 46 fights within the distance, said that if Cruz has a tactical plan in place that consists of exchanging punches, the bout will not go the 10 scheduled rounds.
Last September, Serrano unanimously defeated then-undefeated Dane Sarah Mahfoud (11-1, 3 KOs, in Manchester, England. Previously, in April, Serrano lost a split decision to Ireland’s Katie Taylor (22-0, 6 KOs) who successfully defended her four lightweight belts. Two judges scored the fight (97-93) for Taylor and the other (96-94) in favor of Serrano.
Taylor and Serrano became the first female boxers to headline a boxing match at Madison Square Garden. The two ladies also made history by each receiving a check for more than a million dollars which had an increase from pay-per-view earnings.
Referring to a possible rematch against Taylor, Serrano commented that if she beats Cruz, as expected, and if/when she meets Taylor for the second time (possibly in May in Ireland), it would be an epic duel between two undisputed champions: Serrano at 126 pounds and Taylor at 135.
Even though Serrano longs for a rematch with Taylor, she realizes that her immediate challenge is Cruz and has assured us that she is in excellent shape physically, technically, and mentally. She has increased the amount of sparring in camp, focusing on aggressiveness and explosiveness. Sheâs also added a sports massage therapist to her team which has helped with recovery.
In regard to a second confrontation between Serrano and Taylor, promoter Eddie Hearn stated, “For Serrano to become undisputed at 126 and then fight Katie again for the undisputed at 135 at Croke Park in Dublin, it would make that rematch even bigger if you can imagine that.”
Cruz, 32 years old and born in Mexico City, has put together a win streak of 14 following her loss to compatriot Alondra GonzĂĄlez on June 25, 2016, in Puebla, Mexico. Cruz conquered the WBA world belt on April 22, 2022, when she defeated Canadian Jelena Mrdjenovich who was unable to continue in the seventh round due to a cut caused by an accidental headbutt.

Erika Cruz
Five months later, on September 3, Cruz faced Mrdjenovich for a second time and again came out with her arm raised, this time winning by unanimous decision in Hermosillo, Mexico, where she retained the WBA title for the second time.
Cruz is looking forward to the matchup with Serrano. âI am grateful that this opportunity was finally given to me after many years of work,â said Cruz. âI have always gone against everything, but God is on my side, and he has given me the strength to achieve my goals. Itâs time to make history and give Mexico its first unified champion at 126 lbs.â
Article submitted by Jorge Juan Ălvarez in Spanish.
Please note any adjustments made were for clarification purposes and any errors in translation were unintentional.
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