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Amanda Serrano Makes History in Orlando, Whitewashes Gritty Danila Ramos

Not only did Amanda “The Real Deal” Serrano retain the featherweight championship against Brazil’s Danila Ramos by a dominant unanimous decision in 12 three-minute rounds on Friday, she also stamped herself as the leader of women’s sports.
Serrano (46-2-1, 30 KOs) plowed through the determined Ramos (12-3) in front of a sold-out crowd that included Hall of Fame fighters Christy Martin, Laila Ali and Holly Holm at the Caribe Royal Orlando in Orlando, Florida.
All were there to witness history.
“I’ve been so blessed the last two years,” said Serrano adding that her signing with Jake Paul and Most Valuable Promotions has allowed her to get paid well and help others in pursuit of better paydays and careers.
It had been 16 years since any female fighter fought in a scheduled 12 three-minute round championship fight. But on this Friday night Serrano and Ramos were the first to hear the final bell in the 12th round.
Barely.
Puerto Rico’s Serrano, as always, does not look to win by decision and the match against Ramos was no different. After an exploratory opening round, the Brooklyn-based fighter opened-up with a more concerted attack in the second round. She never slowed down after that.
Brazil’s affable Ramos showed her championship pedigree by attempting to counter every attack by the Boriqua southpaw slugger. Whenever Serrano would fire a blow Ramos looked to counter with counter jabs and rights. She just didn’t have the firepower to stave off Serrano’s attacks.
Though Serrano has not knocked out a foe since she knocked out Daniela Bermudez in March 2021, the word is out that standing toe-to-toe with Serrano is pure folly. Ramos rarely attempted it.
After allowing Serrano to buzzsaw through three rounds, Ramos connected with a right and then another right. It allowed Serrano to unload bludgeoning body shots followed by a double right hook that snapped the head of Ramos and left her eye slightly closed.
Serrano quickly realized the damage.
In the fifth round Serrano amped up the attack another notch and stalked the Brazilian fighter with shots to the body and head including a bludgeoning five-punch combination. Serrano smelled a knockout and stalked Ramos like a shark circles its prey in warm waters.
Ramos fought back furiously but was unsuccessful in slowing the assault.
Serrano bored into the firing zone shooting body shots and right hooks to the head that Ramos tried to parry with counter rights and left jabs. Nothing worked effectively. Even a stiff counter right on the button did not slow Serrano in the seventh round.
A look of weariness on the face of Ramos was visible but she kept on her toes just moving out of range of Serrano’s power shots, but not completely. The Brazilian fighter’s face was marked and left eye was beginning to shut.
Serrano continued to target the body and never allowed the Brazilian time to rest. The pounding by the Puerto Rican fighter was incessant and violent. Ramos was forced to hold or be the target of an all-out assault. She held tightly.
In the 12th and final round, a frame unknown to female world championship fighters, both sought to unload their best shots during an exchange Serrano connected with a hammering left that shook Ramos badly. She soon dropped down to the canvas but the referee ruled it a slip though it was clear that Serrano’s blow had hurt her. The fight continued until the final bell. Both fighters hugged at the end. Both seemed tired but pleased.
All three judges scored every round in favor of Serrano 120-108 who retains the featherweight titles, except the WBC which does not allow 12 rounds or three-minute frames.
No loss. History was made without the WBC.
Those engaging in history were the WBA, WBO, IBF and IBO organizations who supported the 12 three-minute round fight.
“I think we’re going to see a lot more of it,” said Holly Holm, who worked as an analyst for DAZN.
Despite going 12 furious three-minute rounds, Serrano was energetic after the fight.
“I still have energy to hold all of my belts,” said Serrano with a smile.
Asked why she sought out to accomplish the historic moment Serrano was precise.
“It’s not just for me its for the sport of women’s boxing,” Serrano said. “I hope this is just the beginning.”
Krystal Rosado Wins
Puerto Rico’s Krystal Rosado (2-0) showed off her hand speed and polish but could not avoid the constant head clashes from Hungary’s Kata Pap (1-1) who advances with a lowered head.
After four rounds of head butts, Rosado emerged with cuts on both sides of the face but managed to unload some flashy combinations including a speedy double left hook combination. After four rounds all three judges scored in favor of Rosado 40-36.
Rosado is a protégé of Amanda Serrano who manages her.
Other Bouts
Cuba’s Damian Lescaille (6-0, 4 KOs) knocked out Atlanta’s Ray Barlow (7-4) in the ninth round with a right hook in their regional welterweight title fight. Lescaille had battered and battered Barlow who withstood rounds of punishment until getting caught by the southpaw Cuban fighter’s right hook.
Florida’s Damazion Vanhoutre (5-0, 3 KOs) defeated Philadelphia’s Nafys Anas (4-1, 3 Kos) by unanimous decision after four rounds in a cruiserweight match. After a slow start against the awkward southpaw Anas, the taller Vanhoutre used a body attack to open up the firing lanes and dominate the last round. All three judges scored it for Vanhoutre 40-36, 39-37 twice.
A lightweight battle saw Benigno Aguilar (11-0) win the battle of undefeated with a split decision win over Puerto Rico’s Alexander Rios (7-1) in a brutal back-and-forth war. The difference was a fifth-round knockdown that Aguilar scored with a five-punch combination the floored Rios.
Rios did some great body work through the six round match but Aguilar was able to counter and score with clear shots. One judge scored it 58-55 for Rios but two others saw it 57-56 twice for Aguilar.
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Bombs Away in Las Vegas where Inoue and Espinoza Scored Smashing Triumphs

Japan’s Naoya “Monster” Inoue banged it out with Mexico’s Ramon Cardenas, survived an early knockdown and pounded out a stoppage win to retain the undisputed super bantamweight world championship on Sunday.
Japan and Mexico delivered for boxing fans again after American stars failed in back-to-back days.
“By watching tonight’s fight, everyone is well aware that I like to brawl,” Inoue said.
Inoue (30-0, 27 KOs), and Cardenas (26-2, 14 KOs) and his wicked left hook, showed the world and 8,474 fans at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas that prizefighting is about punching, not running.
After massive exposure for three days of fights that began in New York City, then moved to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and then to Nevada, it was the casino capital of the world that delivered what most boxing fans appreciate- pure unadulterated action fights.
Monster Inoue immediately went to work as soon as the opening bell rang with a consistent attack on Cardenas, who very few people knew anything about.
One thing promised by Cardenas’ trainer Joel Diaz was that his fighter “can crack.”
Cardenas proved his trainer’s words truthful when he caught Inoue after a short violent exchange with a short left hook and down went the Japanese champion on his back. The crowd was shocked to its toes.
“I was very surprised,” said Inoue about getting dropped. ““In the first round, I felt I had good distance. It got loose in the second round. From then on, I made sure to not take that punch again.”
Inoue had no trouble getting up, but he did have trouble avoiding some of Cardenas massive blows delivered with evil intentions. Though Inoue did not go down again, a look of total astonishment blanketed his face.
A real fight was happening.
Cardenas, who resembles actor Andy Garcia, was never overly aggressive but kept that left hook of his cocked and ready to launch whenever he saw the moment. There were many moments against the hyper-aggressive Inoue.
Both fighters pack power and both looked to find the right moment. But after Inoue was knocked down by the left hook counter, he discovered a way to eliminate that weapon from Cardenas. Still, the Texas-based fighter had a strong right too.
In the sixth round Inoue opened up with one of his lightning combinations responsible for 10 consecutive knockout wins. Cardenas backed against the ropes and Inoue blasted away with blow after blow. Then suddenly, Cardenas turned Inoue around and had him on the ropes as the Mexican fighter unloaded nasty combinations to the body and head. Fans roared their approval.
“I dreamed about fighting in front of thousands of people in Las Vegas,” said Cardenas. “So, I came to give everything.”
Inoue looked a little surprised and had a slight Mona Lisa grin across his face. In the seventh round, the Japanese four-division world champion seemed ready to attack again full force and launched into the round guns blazing. Cardenas tried to catch Inoue again with counter left hooks but Inoue’s combos rained like deadly hail. Four consecutive rights by Inoue blasted Cardenas almost through the ropes. The referee Tom Taylor ruled it a knockdown. Cardenas beat the count and survived the round.
In the eighth round Inoue looked eager to attack and at the bell launched across the ring and unloaded more blows on Cardenas. A barrage of 14 unanswered blows forced the referee to stop the fight at 45 seconds of round eight for a technical knockout win.
“I knew he was tough,” said Inoue. “Boxing is not that easy.”
Espinoza Wins
WBO featherweight titlist Rafael Espinosa (27-0, 23 KOs) uppercut his way to a knockout win over Edward Vazquez (17-3, 4 KOs) in the seventh round.
“I wanted to fight a game fighter to show what I am capable,” said Espinoza.
Espinosa used the leverage of his six-foot, one-inch height to slice uppercuts under the guard of Vazquez. And when the tall Mexican from Guadalajara targeted the body, it was then that the Texas fighter began to wilt. But he never surrendered.
Though he connected against Espinoza in every round, he was not able to slow down the taller fighter and that allowed the Mexican fighter to unleash a 10-punch barrage including four consecutive uppercuts. The referee stopped the fight at 1:47 of the seventh round.
It was Espinoza’s third title defense.
Photo credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank
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Undercard Results and Recaps from the Inoue-Cardenas Show in Las Vegas

The curtain was drawn on a busy boxing weekend tonight at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas where the featured attraction was Japanese superstar Naoya Inoue appearing in his twenty-fifth world title fight.
The top two fights (Inoue vs. Roman Cardenas for the unified 122-pound crown and Rafael Espinoza vs. Edward Vazquez for the WBO world featherweight diadem) aired on the main ESPN platform with the preliminaries streaming on ESPN+.
The finale of the preliminaries was a 10-rounder between welterweights Rohan Polanco and Fabian Maidana. A 2020/21 Olympian for the Dominican Republic, Polanco was a solid favorite and showed why by pitching a shutout, punctuating his triumph by knocking Maidana to his knees late in the final round with a hard punch to the pit of the stomach.
Polanco improved to 16-0 (10). Argentina’s Maidana, the younger brother of former world title-holder Marcos Maidana, fell to 24-4 while maintaining his distinction of never being stopped.
Emiliano Vargas, a rising force in the 140-pound division with the potential to become a crossover star, advanced to 14-0 (12 KOs) with a second-round stoppage Juan Leon. Vargas, who turned 21 last month, is the son of former U.S. Olympian Fernando Vargas who had big money fights with the likes of Felix Trinidad and Oscar De La Hoya. Emiliano knocked Leon down hard twice in round two – both the result of right-left combinations — before Robert Hoyle waived it off.
A 28-year-old Spaniard, Leon was 11-2-1 heading in.
In his U.S. debut, 29-year-old Japanese southpaw Mikito Nakano (13-0, 12 KOs) turned in an Inoue-like performance with a fourth-round stoppage of Puerto Rico’s Pedro Medina. Nakano, a featherweight, had Medina on the canvas five times before referee Harvey Dock waived it off at the 1:58 mark of round four. The shell-shocked Medina (16-2) came into the contest riding a 15-fight winning streak.
Lynwood, California junior middleweight Art Barrera Jr, a 19-year-old protégé of Robert Garcia, scored a sixth-round stoppage of Chicago’s Juan Carlos Guerra. There were no knockdowns, but the bout had turned sharply in Barrera’s favor when referee Thomas Taylor intervened. The official time was 1:15 of round six.
Barrera improved to 9-0 (7 KOs). The spunky but outclassed Guerra, who upset Nico Ali Walsh in his previous outing, declined to 6-2-1.
In the lid-lifter, a 10-round featherweight affair, Muskegon Michigan’s Ra’eese Aleem improved to 22-1 (12) with a unanimous decision over LA’s hard-trying Rudy Garcia (13-2-1). The judges had it 99-01, 98-92, and 97-93.
Aleem, 34, was making his second start since June of 2023 when he lost a split decision in Australia to Sam Goodman with a date with Naoya Inoue hanging in the balance.
Check back shortly for David Avila’s recaps of the two world title fights.
Photo credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank
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Canelo Alvarez Upends Dancing Machine William Scull in Saudi Arabia

Saul “Canelo” Alvarez, who has acquired a new nickname – “The Face of Boxing” – is accustomed to fighting on Cinco De Mayo weekend, but this year was different. For the first time, Canelo was fighting outside the continent of North America and entering the ring at an awkward hour. His match with William Scull started at 6:30 on a Sunday morning in Riyadh.
In the opposite corner was 32-year-old William Scull, an undefeated (23-0) Cuban by way of Germany, whose performance was better suited to “Dancing With the Stars” than to a world title fight. Constantly bouncing from side to side but rarely letting his hands go, Scull frustrated Canelo who found it near-impossible to corner him, but one can’t win a fight solely on defense and the Mexican superstar was returned the rightful winner in a bout that was a fitting cap to a desultory two days of Saudi-promoted prizefighting. The scores were 115-113, 116-112, and 119-109. In winning, Canelo became a fully unified super middleweight champion twice over.
Terence Crawford was in attendance and HE Turki Alalshikh made it official: Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) and Canelo (63-2-2, 39 KOs) will meet in the Fight of the Century (Alalshikh’s words) on Sept. 12 in Las Vegas at the home of the city’s NFL team, the Raiders. For whatever it’s worth, each of Canelo’s last seven fights has gone the full 12 rounds.
Semi-wind-up
In a match between the WBC world cruiserweight title-holder and the WBC world cruiserweight “champion in recess” (don’t ask), the former, Badou Jack, brought some clarity to the diadem by winning a narrow decision over Noel Mikaelian. One of the judges had it a draw (114-114), but the others gave the fight to “Jack the Ripper” by 115-113 scores.
A devout Muslim who is now a full-time resident of Saudi Arabia, the Sweden-born Jack, a three-division title-holder, had the crowd in his corner. Now 41 years old, he advanced his record to 29-3-3 (17). It was the first pro loss for Mikaelian (27-1), a Florida-based Armenian who was subbing for Ryan Rozicki.
The distracted CompuBox operator credited Mikaelian with throwing 300 more punches but there was no controversy.
Tijuana’s Jaime Munguia, a former junior middleweight title-holder, avenged his shocking loss to Bruno Sarace with a unanimous 12-round decision in their rematch. This was Munguia’s first fight with Eddy Reynoso in his corner. The scores were 117-111 and 116-112 twice.
Surace’s one-punch knockout of Munguia in mid-December in Tijuana was the runaway pick for the 2024 Upset of the Year. Heading in, Munguia was 44-1 with his lone defeat coming at the hands of Canelo Alvarez. Munguia had won every round against Surace before the roof fell in on him.
Surace won a few rounds tonight, but Munguia was the busier fighter and landed the cleaner shots. It was the first pro loss for Surace (26-1-2) and ended his 23-fight winning streak. The Frenchman hails for Marseilles.
Heavyweights
In a 10-round heavyweight match fought at a glacial pace, Martin Bakole (21-2-1) and Efe Ajagba (20-1-1) fought to a draw. One of the judges favored Ajagba 96-94 but he was outvoted by his cohorts who each had it 95-95.
Bakole, a 7/2 favorite, came in at 299 pounds, 15 more than he carried in his signature win over Jared Anderson, and looked sluggish. He was never able to effectively close off the ring against the elusive Ajagba who fought off his back foot and failed to build on his early lead.
The fight between the Scotch-Congolese campaigner Bakole and his Nigerian-American foe was informally contested for the heavyweight championship of Africa. That “title” remains vacant.
In a 6-rounder, heavy-handed Cuban light heavyweight Brayon Leon, a stablemate of Canelo Alvarez, was extended the distance for the first time while advancing his record to 7-0 at the expense of Mexico’s Aaron Roche (11-4-1). Leon knocked Roche to the canvas in the fourth round with a right-left combination, but the Mexican stayed the course while eating a lot of hard punches.
Photo credit: Leigh Dawney / Queensberry Promotions
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