Connect with us

Featured Articles

Coachella Prospects Manny Flores, Grant Flores and Jose Sanchez All Win at Fantasy Springs

Published

on

Coachella-Prospects-Manny-Flores,-Grant-Flores-and-Jose-Sanchez-All-Win-at-Fantasy-Springs.jpg

Manny “Gucci” Flores and his two Coachella Valley compadres emerged victorious at Fantasy Springs Casino on Thursday. Two by knockout.

Flores (18-1, 14 Kos), a tall southpaw bantamweight, needed less than two minutes to collapse the hopes of Victor Olivo (21-5-1) in front of several hundred fans at Fantasy Springs Casino.

A sudden attack to the body that included a left to the liver ended Olivo’s fight at 1:50 of the first round. Referee Thomas Taylor counting out the fighter from Hermosillo, Mexico.

“As soon as I landed that punch, I saw his veins popping out,” said Flores who is trained by brothers Joel and Antonio Diaz.

Manny’s cousin Grant Flores (7-0, 5 Kos) battered Puerto Rico’s Luis Caraballo (7-5-1) for six rounds but could not break his spirit. A left hook to the body floored Caraballo in the fifth round, but he toughed it out

Despite sustaining heavy punishment in the super welterweight fight, Caraballo made it through all six rounds. Grant Flores, the cousin of Manny, was declared the winner by unanimous decision.

In the semi-main event Jose “Tito” Sanchez (14-0, 8 Kos) looked like he might be overrun by Mexico City’s Edwin Palomares (18-6-3) in the first two rounds of a featherweight match. He made a stand in the third round and things slowly turned around.

Sanchez sporting bleached blonde hair began to gain steam in the third round and matched the punch output of Palomares. Little by little the Coachella fighter began to sharpen his attack and forced the Mexico City fighter to re-think his strategy.

In the seventh round a perfect right cross by Sanchez stunned Palomares who could not avoid the accurate seven-punch volley that followed him and sent him through the ropes. The fight was stopped at 53 seconds of the seventh round.

Sanchez remains undefeated.

“My performance wasn’t great in the earlier rounds because I wasn’t letting go yet, but once I threw my right hand, it connected, and that’s what we were waiting for,” said Sanchez.

Other bouts

Coachella’s Cayden Griffith (2-0, 2 Kos) remained undefeated with a third round knockout over North Carolina’s Markus Bowes (3-7) in a welterweight scrap.

Colorado’s Daniel “Junebug” Garcia (10-0, 8 Kos) knocked out Oxnard’s Jorge Villegas (14-3, 13 Kos) in the second round in a battle between lightweight sluggers. Garcia knocked down Villegas twice.

Santa Ana’s Johnny “Sugarcane” Canas (6-0) defeated San Jose’s Pedro Cruz (3-6) by decision in a six-round lightweight match.

To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE

Share The Sweet Science experience!

Featured Articles

Notes and Nuggets from Thomas Hauser

Published

on

Notes-and-Nuggets-from-Thomas-Hauser.jpg

Notes and Nuggets from Thomas Hauser

Pete Rose was inappropriately named. His bulky torso blended into a thick neck at one end and heavy bulging thighs at the other. He had heavy eyebrows, dark piercing eyes, and a granite-like jutting jaw. “Pete Bulldog” would have been better nomenclature. He was not evocative of a rose.

Rose played baseball in an era when fans wanted their sports heroes to be good guys.

He wasn’t.

Rose was married twice and was an unrepentant philanderer throughout both marriages. When he was in his thirties – he later admitted – he had sexual relations with a 14-year-old girl. In 1990, he pled guilty to two charges of filing false income tax returns and was sentenced to five months in prison.

A report compiled for Major League Baseball by John Dowd in 1989 concluded that Rose made at least 412 wagers on baseball games in 1985, 1986, and 1987. Fifty-two of those wagers were on teams that Rose played on and/or managed. As a result, he was banned for life from Major League baseball – a ban that precluded his being employed by any major league team and also from being considered for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

The only thing Rose seemed sorry about was that he had been caught and punished. But as a baseball player, he was a legend.

Rose was born in 1941 – the year that Ted Williams batted .406 and Joe DiMaggio hit safely in 56 consecutive games. He played in the major leagues from 1963 through 1986. Baseball was more than a job to him. It was his way of life. Rose, it was said, was a baseball player first and a person second.

“Everybody wants a base hit when he goes up to bat,” Mickey Mantle observed. “But with Pete, you always had the feeling that he wanted it more.”

Rose was the National League Rookie of the Year in 1963 and its Most Valuable Player ten years later. With a lifetime batting baverage of .303, he was far from being baseball’s greatest hitter. But he was its most persistent and durable good one.

On September 11, 1985, Rose lined a single to centerfield off San Diego pitcher Eric Show for the 4,192nd base hit of his remarkable career. In so doing, he surpassed the “unbreakable” record emblazoned in baseball’s record book by Ty Cobb.

“Millions of Americans have fantasized about breaking Ty Cobb’s record,” Rose said. “But I’m the one who’s doing it.”

He finished his career with 4,256 base hits. Other MLB records that he holds to this day include most games played (3,562), most plate appearances (15,890), most career singles (3,215) and, less laudably, most career outs (10,328). He ranks second in career doubles (746), sixth in runs scored (2,165), and ninth in total bases (5,752).

“Statistics,” Rose once said, “are what let you look at a player who died before you were born and make him your hero.”

There was a time when Rose also tried his hand at boxing. When he was six years old, his father gave him a pair of boxing gloves and taught him the rudiments of self-defense. Later, Pete had two amateur fights and lost both of them.

“Just before my sixteenth birthday,” Rose reminisced years later, “Dad arranged for my first amateur match at the Finley Street neighborhood club. I fought Virgil Coles, an experienced boxer from the inner city who pretty much used me as his punching bag. But I took everything Coles dished out and on occasion landed a few wild punches myself. I was getting my brains beat out. Dad knew it but didn’t want me to see that he was concerned. I stood on my feet for the full three rounds and never once hit the canvas.”

And Rose’s second fight?

“The second one was against a guy who had five kids at ringside watching. I didn’t get knocked out. But I did say to myself, ‘I better go play ball.’”

Rose died from cardiovascular illness on September 30 at age 83. When I heard the news, my mind wandered back to two conversations that I had long ago.

The first conversation was with Rose shortly before he broke Ty Cobb’s record.

“I’ve won more games than any professional athlete ever,” Rose told me over lunch. “Baseball, football, basketball, you name it. That’s what it’s all about, isn’t it? I’ve walked off the field a winner more than nineteen hundred times. I’ve won more baseball games than forty-five Hall of Famers played in. I’m the winningest professional athlete ever.”

“What about Willie Shoemaker?” I queried. “He won more than six thousand races.”

That earned me a dirty look and the rejoinder, “Yeah; but jockeys have eight or nine shots at winning every day.”

The second conversation was with Tim McCarver fourteen years later. McCarver was an all-star catcher and World Series champion before becoming one of baseball’s great television commentators.

“Should Pete Rose be in the Hall of Fame?” I asked.

“That’s a difficult question,” McCarver answered. “It would be very awkward for Pete to be in the Hall of Fame until he’s reinstated by Major League Baseball. So here we are in a society that’s very forgiving, but the powers that be have yet to forgive Pete Rose.”

“If the powers that be asked you for a recommendation,” I pressed, “what would you say?”

“I’d say it’s time; that Pete has been punished enough.”

That conversation took place a quarter-century ago. My opinion at the time was that Rose should not be eligible for induction into the baseball Hall of Fame.

Now Rose exists only in memory and in baseball lore. To quote Tim McCarver, “It’s time. Pete has been punished enough.”

*         *         *

Lou DiBella promoted a club-fight card at Madison Square Garden’s Hulu Theater on Wednesday night. The opening and closing bouts call for comment.

In the first fight of the evening, Jerry Forrest (27-6-2, 20 KOs, 2 KOs by) was matched against Earl Newman (10-3, 7 KOs, 1 KO by).

Forrest has had eight step-up fights in his career and failed to win any of them. Forty-four months ago, he survived three knockdowns to salvage a draw when a grossly-out-of-shape Zhilel Zhang all but collapsed under his own weight. That made Forrest a bit of a name. Then, two years ago, he was beaten so savagely by Jared Anderson that hardened ringside observers cringed at the carnage.

Newman was winless in his last four bouts dating back to 2016.

Forrest wasn’t in fighting shape. And Newman (who has fought at weights as low as 177 pounds) weighed in at 252 pounds.

Both men looked tired when the fight began and more tired as the eight-round contest dragged on. Boxing is hard. I understand that. And each fighter gave an honest effort. But it was a painfully slow, sluggish encounter with the fighters moving as though they were in waist-high water. Forrest won a unanimous decision and did a back-flip in the ring after the decision was announced. If only he’d been that active during the fight.

Forrest-Newman was sad. The closing fight of the evening featured the outrageous.

Women’s boxing is erratic. At one end of the spectrum, Madison Square Garden has hosted legitimate championship fights like Katie Taylor vs. Amanda Serrano and Sandy Ryan vs. Mikaela Meyer that enobled the sport. But a study by John Sheppard of BoxRec.com several years ago noted that there were more available women’s “championship” belts than active women boxers.

Miyo Yoshida (17-4 with zero knockouts either way) had one of those belts – the IBF 118-pound strap. She won it last year by outboxing Ebanie Bridges (a paper champion whose greatest notoriety stemmed from having ample breast implants and appearing at weigh-ins dressed like a lingerie model). Yoshida was defending her belt at the Hulu Theater against 39-year-old Shurretta Metcalf (13-4-1, 2 KOs) who beat Mio by decision last year.

Yoshida-Metcalf looked like a club fight, not a “championship” bout. Metcalf had a huge advantage in height and reach, and Yoshida didn’t know how to bob and weave to get inside. Meanwhile, Shurretta threw wild punches from long range all night. When she landed, it seemed almost by accident.

The decision could have gone either way. I thought each fighter clearly won three rounds with four rounds up for grabs. Then the judges’ verdict was announced: 96-94, 97-93, and an abominable 99-91 for Metcalf.

97-93 was a stretch. 99-91 reeked of being an agenda-driven scorecard.

Matt Delaglio was recently named executive director of the New York State Athletic Commission and inherited a job that has long been marked by incompetence and neglect. Delagio is conscientious and well-qualified for the position. But he has a lot of work to do. One of the things on his “to-do list” should be an overhaul of ring judging in New York. Right now, the judging in New York is unacceptable.

*         *         *

Earlier this year, the IBF was in the spotlight for fragmenting the heavyweight title by virtue of its decision to strip Oleksansr Usyk of his belt and recognize Daniel Dubois as heavyweight champion of the world. On December 7, the WBA will outdo that absurdity by sanctioning a fight between Mahmood Charr and Kubrat Pulev for its “regular” heavyweight championship of the world.

Charr, age 40, has not fought since 2022 and is best known for being knocked out twelve years ago by Vitali Klitschko. He is the current WBA “champion” and, according to Wikipedia, underwent double hip replacement surgery in 2017.

Pulev, 43, has won two fights in the past three years (against Ihor Shevadzutskyi and Andrzaj Wawrzyk) and is best known for being knocked out by Wladimir Klitschko and Anthony Joshua.

This is the environment boxing has created that turns off fans and drives them to other sports.

*         *         *

World in My Corner (1956) is one of those hokey, old, black-and-white boxing movies that’s fun if you like hokey, old, black-and-white boxing movies.

Audie Murphy plays Tommy Shea, a poor kid from New Jersey struggling to make it as a fighter. There’s a crooked promoter (the reprehensible Harry Cram), an honest trainer (the saintly Dave Bernstein), and a love interest (the beautiful Dorothy Mallinson, who suffers under the thumb of her wealthy controlling father). The real Jimmy Lennon Sr plays ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Sr. Chico Vejar (a veteran of 116 fights in the 1950s) plays welterweight champion Al Carelli.

More on Cram: You know a promoter is a bad guy when, almost always, he’s smoking a cigar.

Audie Murphy is unconvincing as a hard-luck tough from the wrong side of the river. Think Tom Cruise in a boxing ring. The love story is trite, but so is the rest of the film.

Dorothy: Can I ask you something?

Tommy: Sure

Dorothy: Why do you fight?

Tommy: You’re not asking me something. You’re asking me everything.

Tommy agrees to throw a fight against Carelli to get the money to marry Dorothy. Then he changes his mind.

Tommy: I’m not throwing the fight.

Cram: I don’t like your sense of humor.

If you’re a fan of old-time boxing movies, World in My Corner is fun.

Photo (c) Wojtek Urbanek

Thomas Hauser’s email address is thomashauserwriter@gmail.com. His most recent book – MY MOTHER and me – is a personal memoir available at Amazon.com. https://www.amazon.com/My-Mother-Me-Thomas-Hauser/dp/1955836191/ref=sr_1_1?crid=5C0TEN4M9ZAH&keywords=thomas+hauser&qid=1707662513&sprefix=thomas+hauser%2Caps%2C80&sr=8-1

In 2004, the Boxing Writers Association of America honored Hauser with the Nat Fleischer Award for career excellence in boxing journalism. In 2019, Hauser was selected for boxing’s highest honor – induction into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE

Share The Sweet Science experience!
Continue Reading

Featured Articles

Murtazaliev KOs Tszyu to Keep IBF World Title

Published

on

Murtazaliev-KOs-Tszyu-to-Keep-IBF-World-Title.jpg

IBF super welterweight titlist Bakhram Murtazaliev wrecked Tim Tszyu’s championship dreams with a one-sided knockout win in his first title defense on Saturday.

Russia’s Murtazaliev (23-0, 17 KOs) wasted no time in proving Australia’s popular Tszyu (24-2, 17 KOs) could not match his firepower at hurricane-ridden Orlando, Florida. They’re expecting another hurricane soon.

The Amazon Prime streamed event promoted by PBC and TGB Promotions was jammed with punishing fights. None excelled more than Murtazaliev’s destruction of Tszyu.

Both super welterweights came out smoking and both had predicted a firefight.

It was quickly evident that each packed power. The taller Murtazaliev erupted with punishing jabs and vicious rights while Tszyu pumped in rockets rights immediately in the first round.

A snapping left hook by the champion caught Tszyu while firing a right and down he went for the count. The Aussie immediately went to work to avenge the knockdown and once again ran into another left hook to the chin. Down Tszyu went for a second time. Once again he rose and once again he attempted to avenge the knockdowns and for a third time he was caught flush by Murtazaliev for a third knockdown.

After returning to his corner shakily after round two ended, little was expected. But the fight continued.

Tszyu was bent on winning a world title and was not about to shy away from the thunder.

The former world titlist Tszyu zeroed in on Murtazaliev and during an exchange was caught by a counter left hook. Once again that same punch delivered the Aussie to the ground for the count. Once again he got up. Murtazaliev moved in to end the show and delivered a three-punch combo that sparked the referee to move in and stop the fight.

Murtazaliev was deemed the winner by technical knockout at 1:55 of the third round and remains the IBF world titlist.

“We worked on these combinations for 10 weeks,” said Murtazaliev who trains in Oxnard, Calif.

Tszyu seemed stunned by the ending.

“Anytime I step in the ring I’m ready to die,” said Tszyu. “I did my best, the better man won.”

Murtazaliev is ready for the best.

 

Other bouts

Cuba’s Yoenis Tellez (9-0, 7 KOs) started slowly against knockout artist Johan Gonzalez (35-4, 34 KOs) but after the third round began to rain combinations on the Venezuelan fighter in their super welterweight fight.

It was clear Tellez realized that Gonzalez could not match his speed and unveiled a two punch combo that sent the hard-hitting Venezuelan to the mat. He beat the count at the end of the sixth round.

Early in the seventh round a counter left hook sent Gonzalez down for a second time. Though he beat the count Tellez did not allow him to breathe and unleashed a four-punch combination the forced the end of the fight at 1:57 of the round.

Tellez said he started slowly because Gonzalez is trained by master trainer Ismael Salas. But once he figured out the Venezuelan he slipped into another gear.

“I didn’t think it would be easy,” said Tellez.

A vicious battle of middleweights ended in a majority draw between Mexico’s Endry Saavedra (16-1-1) and Mexico’s Cesar Tapia (17-0-1) after 10 rounds.

Both fighters took turns knocking down each other with Saavedra scoring three knockdowns of Tapia who trains in Australia. Saavedra used body shots to drop Tapia whose right hand blasts kept him in the fight.

It was one of the better fights of the year that could have used two more rounds to decide the winner. Instead, due to only 10 rounds the fight ended in a majority draw.

Share The Sweet Science experience!
Continue Reading

Featured Articles

Avila Perspective Chap 301: The Wrath of Tszyu and More

Published

on

Avila-Perspective-Chap-301:-The-Wrath-of-Tszyu-and-More.jpg

Tszyu!

That name strikes fear among mere mortals.

For three decades and more the Tszyus have burned and pillaged the hopes and dreams of the best fighters since the 1990s.

Now it’s Tim Tszyu’s turn.

Australia’s Tszyu (24-1, 17 Kos) faces IBF super welterweight titlist Bakhram Murtazaliev (22-0, 16 Kos) on Saturday Oct. 19, at Caribe Royale Orlando at Orlando, Florida. Amazon Prime will stream the TGB Promotions card.

“I’m a young kid living his dream. It’s a big honor for me,” said Tszyu the son of the great Kostya Tszyu.

The last time out Tszyu’s plans to scorch the earth were stymied by a head clash with Sebastian Fundora back in March. It’s the only pimple on his record. It also wrestled the WBO title from him and the WBC belt too.

That’s boxing.

Now facing Tsyzu is Russia’s Murtazaliev a tough customer from Grozny located near Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan and the Caspian Sea.

Murtazaliev, 31, hasn’t encountered any of the elite fighters so far. But he hasn’t been fed the bottom feeders either. The opposition he’s faced have been the gate-keepers that most avoid. Those step children of the super welterweight division that can make a protected fighter fall flat on his face.

Not that Tszyu has been protected, but he’s on the fast track.

The Aussie slugger came to America with thoughts of grandeur like a Mongolian invader saw Asia in the 12th century. Sometimes the littlest things can topple the egg cart.

Tszyu, 29, will have his neck in a noose with Murtazaliev ready to tighten it when they meet in Florida, just weeks after a slew of hurricanes. This will not be an easy fight.

“This is a vengeance fight. It’s for a world title,” said Tszyu at the press conference on Thursday. “One by one, I’m going to get rid of each (world titlist) and every one of them.”

The Australian challenger acknowledges that Murtazaliev is not an easy foe.

Murtazaliev has few words but a hungry look to retain his place in the super welterweight top of the heap.

“We’re going to have a good bout,” was all the words Murtazaliev uttered.

The TGB Promotions boxing card is available on Amazon Prime. Free for subscribers. Those wishing to subscribe can apply and get the streaming network for 30 days free.

 

Autumn in New York

Aside from the Major League Baseball playoffs taking place in the Bronx and Queens, a boxing event interrupts in the middle of the week.

Female IBF bantamweight titlist Miyo Yoshida (17-4) defends the title against Shurretta Metcalf (13-4-1) on Wednesday Oct. 23, at the Theater in Madison Square Garden in Manhattan. ProBoxTV will stream the DiBella Entertainment fight card.

It’s a rematch between Yoshida and Metcalf who fought a year ago with the Texan winning their initial encounter.

 

Golden Boy in Indio, Calif.

Manny “Gucci” Flores (18-1, 14 Kos) faces Victor Olivo (21-4-1, 9 Kos) in the main event on Thursday Oct. 24, at Fantasy Springs Casino in Indio, CALIF. DAZN will stream the Golden Boys Promotion fight card.

Flores is based in nearby Coachella and has been a fan favorite at Fantasy Springs Casino.

Others on the card are undefeated fighters Grant Flores, Cayden Griffith and Gael Cabrera.

For more information go to www.GoldenBoy.com.

 

San Jacinto – Battle of the I.E.

A large fight card called “Battle of the I.E.” featuring bantamweights to light heavyweights takes place at Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, Calif. on Friday Oct. 25.

I.E. stands for Inland Empire, which is the area east of Los Angeles County and has become the hot bed for boxing in areas like Riverside, San Bernardino, Indio and San Jacinto.

Soboba Casino has long been a bastion for boxing since the late 1990s and has seen fighters like Israel Vazquez, Jorge Arce, and Mia St. John in historic bouts.

For more information call (1-866) 476-2622.

 

360 Promotions in Commerce, Ca.

Featherweight hotshot Omar Trinidad (16-0-1, 13 Kos) meets Hector Sosa (17-2, 9 Kos) in the main event on Saturday Oct. 26, at Commerce Casino, in Commerce, Calif. The 360 Promotions fight card will be streamed on UFC Fight Pass.

Sosa has the IBO featherweight title after defeating Keenan Carbajal this past June.

It’s a loaded fight card and includes undefeated Lupe Medina in tough against Katherine Lindenmuth in a minimumweight fight.

For more information including tickets go to www.360Promotions.us.

 

Fights to Watch

(All times Pacific Time)

Sat. Amazon Prime 5 p.m. Tim Tszyu (24-1) vs Bakhram Murtazaliev (22-0).

 

Photo Credit: Al Applerose

Share The Sweet Science experience!
Continue Reading
Advertisement
I-Still-Think-Anthony-Joshua-Should-Retire-from-Boxing
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

I Still Think That Anthony Joshua Should Retire From Boxing

Notes-on-the-Atlantic-City-Boxing-Hall-of-Fame-The-Return-of-;Boots'-and-More
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Notes on the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame, the Return of ‘Boots’ and More

Japan's-Budding-Superstar-Junto-Nakatani-KOs-'Petch'-Chitpattana-in-Tokyo
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Japan’s Budding Superstar Junto Nakatani KOs ‘Petch’ Chitpattana in Tokyo

Resukts-and-Recaps-from-Riyadh-where-Artur Beterbiev-Unified-the-175-Pouns-Title
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Results and Recaps from Riyadh where Artur Beterbiev Unified the 175-Pound Title

Bygone-Days-Muhammad-Ali-at-the-Piano-in-the-Lounge-at-the-Tropicana-Hotel
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Bygone Days: Muhammad Ali at the Piano in the Lounge at the Tropicana

The-Hauser-Report-James-Earl-Jones-and-More
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

The Hauser Report: James Earl Jones and More

Murtazaliev-KOs-Tszyu-to-Keep-IBF-World-Title.jpg
Featured Articles6 days ago

Murtazaliev KOs Tszyu to Keep IBF World Title

WBA-Feather-Champ-Nick-Ball-Chops-Down-Rugged-Ronny-Rios-in-Liverpool
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

WBA Feather Champ Nick Ball Chops Down Rugged Ronny Rios in Liverpool

Boxing-Odds-and-Ends-Paint-Gate-the-Haney-Garcia-lawsuit-and-More
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Boxing Odds and Ends: ‘Paint-Gate,’ the Haney-Garcia lawsuit and More

Alycia-Baumgardner-os-Legit-but-her-Title-Defense-vs-Persoon-was-a-Weird-Artifice
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Alycia Baumgardner is Legit, but her Title Defense vs Persoon was a Weird Artifice

Avila-Perspective-Chap-300-Eastern-Horizons-Bivol-Beterbiev-and-Japan
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 300: Eastern Horizons — Bivol, Beterbiev and Japan

Mikaela-Mayer-Wins-WBO-World-Title-in-Firefight-with-0Sandy-Ryan
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Mikaela Mayer Wins WBO World Title in Firefight with Sandy Ryan

Avila-Perspective-Chap-298-Female-World Title-Fights-and-More.jpg
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 298: Female World Title Fights and More

Avila-Perspective-Chap-299-Golden-Boy-in-Saudi-Arabia-and-More
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 299: Golden Boy in Saudi Arabia and More

Junto-Nakatani's-Road-to-a-Megafight-plus-Notes-on-the-Best-Boxers-from Thailand
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Junto Nakatani’s Road to a Mega-fight plus Notes on the Best Boxers from Thailand

Terri-Harper-Wins-Third-Division-World-Title
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Terri Harper Wins Third Division World Title

Alimkhanuly-TKOs-Mikhailovich-and-Motu-TKOs-O'Connell-in-Sydney
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Alimkhanuly TKOs Mikhailovich and Motu TKOs O’Connell in Sydney

Avila-Perspective-Chap-301:-The-Wrath-of-Tszyu-and-More.jpg
Featured Articles6 days ago

Avila Perspective Chap 301: The Wrath of Tszyu and More

Notes-and-Nuggets-from-Thomas-Hauser.jpg
Featured Articles1 day ago

Notes and Nuggets from Thomas Hauser

Coachella-Prospects-Manny-Flores,-Grant-Flores-and-Jose-Sanchez-All-Win-at-Fantasy-Springs.jpg
Featured Articles9 hours ago

Coachella Prospects Manny Flores, Grant Flores and Jose Sanchez All Win at Fantasy Springs

Coachella-Prospects-Manny-Flores,-Grant-Flores-and-Jose-Sanchez-All-Win-at-Fantasy-Springs.jpg
Featured Articles9 hours ago

Coachella Prospects Manny Flores, Grant Flores and Jose Sanchez All Win at Fantasy Springs

Notes-and-Nuggets-from-Thomas-Hauser.jpg
Featured Articles1 day ago

Notes and Nuggets from Thomas Hauser

Murtazaliev-KOs-Tszyu-to-Keep-IBF-World-Title.jpg
Featured Articles6 days ago

Murtazaliev KOs Tszyu to Keep IBF World Title

Avila-Perspective-Chap-301:-The-Wrath-of-Tszyu-and-More.jpg
Featured Articles6 days ago

Avila Perspective Chap 301: The Wrath of Tszyu and More

Japan's-Budding-Superstar-Junto-Nakatani-KOs-'Petch'-Chitpattana-in-Tokyo
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Japan’s Budding Superstar Junto Nakatani KOs ‘Petch’ Chitpattana in Tokyo

Resukts-and-Recaps-from-Riyadh-where-Artur Beterbiev-Unified-the-175-Pouns-Title
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Results and Recaps from Riyadh where Artur Beterbiev Unified the 175-Pound Title

Avila-Perspective-Chap-300-Eastern-Horizons-Bivol-Beterbiev-and-Japan
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 300: Eastern Horizons — Bivol, Beterbiev and Japan

Junto-Nakatani's-Road-to-a-Megafight-plus-Notes-on-the-Best-Boxers-from Thailand
Featured Articles2 weeks ago

Junto Nakatani’s Road to a Mega-fight plus Notes on the Best Boxers from Thailand

Bygone-Days-Muhammad-Ali-at-the-Piano-in-the-Lounge-at-the-Tropicana-Hotel
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Bygone Days: Muhammad Ali at the Piano in the Lounge at the Tropicana

WBA-Feather-Champ-Nick-Ball-Chops-Down-Rugged-Ronny-Rios-in-Liverpool
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

WBA Feather Champ Nick Ball Chops Down Rugged Ronny Rios in Liverpool

Alimkhanuly-TKOs-Mikhailovich-and-Motu-TKOs-O'Connell-in-Sydney
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Alimkhanuly TKOs Mikhailovich and Motu TKOs O’Connell in Sydney

Avila-Perspective-Chap-299-Golden-Boy-in-Saudi-Arabia-and-More
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 299: Golden Boy in Saudi Arabia and More

Boxing-Odds-and-Ends-Paint-Gate-the-Haney-Garcia-lawsuit-and-More
Featured Articles3 weeks ago

Boxing Odds and Ends: ‘Paint-Gate,’ the Haney-Garcia lawsuit and More

Alycia-Baumgardner-os-Legit-but-her-Title-Defense-vs-Persoon-was-a-Weird-Artifice
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Alycia Baumgardner is Legit, but her Title Defense vs Persoon was a Weird Artifice

The-Hauser-Report-James-Earl-Jones-and-More
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

The Hauser Report: James Earl Jones and More

Terri-Harper-Wins-Third-Division-World-Title
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Terri Harper Wins Third Division World Title

Mikaela-Mayer-Wins-WBO-World-Title-in-Firefight-with-0Sandy-Ryan
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Mikaela Mayer Wins WBO World Title in Firefight with Sandy Ryan

Notes-on-the-Atlantic-City-Boxing-Hall-of-Fame-The-Return-of-;Boots'-and-More
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Notes on the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame, the Return of ‘Boots’ and More

Avila-Perspective-Chap-298-Female-World Title-Fights-and-More.jpg
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

Avila Perspective, Chap. 298: Female World Title Fights and More

I-Still-Think-Anthony-Joshua-Should-Retire-from-Boxing
Featured Articles4 weeks ago

I Still Think That Anthony Joshua Should Retire From Boxing

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Trending

Advertisement