Alexandro Santiago spoils Nonito Donaire’s bid to win title at 40

Nonito Donaire fell short of winning a world title at 40, losing a unanimous decision to Alexandro Santiago on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Nonito Donaire finally looked his age.

Alexandro Santiago outworked the 40-year-old former four-division beltholder to win a unanimous decision and the vacant WBC 118-pound title on the Terence Crawford-Errol Spence Jr. card Saturday in Las Vegas.

The official scores were 116-112, 116-112 and 115-113. Boxing Junkie also scored it 116-112 for Santiago, eight rounds to four.

Donaire (42-8, 28 KOs) was hoping to win his 10th major title and become the oldest current champion. However, he’s not what he was.

The Filipino-American was competitive but he was a step behind his Mexican opponent for most of the fight. The first several rounds were roughly even but Santiago began to dominate from around the fifth round on, fighting behind his jab and landing combinations consistently while taking little in return.

Santiago (28-3-5, 14 KOs) simply beat Donaire to the punch over and over again and outlanded him.

Donaire’s best moment came  in Round 3, when he rocked Santiago with his legendary left hook. However, Santiago also proved to be resilient: He survived that punch and was never seriously hurt afterward.

Thus, no one was surprised when it was announced that Santiago had become a world titleholder for the first time by a unanimous decision.

Donaire was coming off a second-round knockout loss against Naoya Inoue in June of last year, meaning he has now lost back-to-back fights for the first time in his decorated career.

He said afterward that he would consult with his team before deciding whether to fight again but he didn’t sound like a fighter who intends to quit.

“I love the sport so much,” he said. “I told my wife, who has the word (on whether he will fight again). We just have to go back to the locker room, talk about it and see where we go from there. There were just some times there where I didn’t pull the trigger. That was my biggest problem.

“I was trying to counter so much and put so much power into it. I tried to fight like a warrior, which was something we didn’t train.”

Meanwhile, Santiago, who turned pro at 16 years old, was emotional after finally claiming a major belt in his second title fight. He fought to a draw against then-115-pound champion Jerwin Ancajas in 2018.

“It is so hard to explain this moment right now,” Santiago said. “All the work we put in for just this moment. It’s great just to win this title.”