2022 Fighter of the Year: Dmitry Bivol couldn’t be a more obvious choice

Editor’s note: This is the last of four year-end awards. *** Who else? Dmitry Bivol dominated consensus pound-for-pound king Canelo Alvarez on May 7 and then easily outpointed previously unbeaten Gilberto Ramirez on Nov. 5, making the 32-year-old …

Editor’s note: This is the last of four year-end awards.

***

Who else?

Dmitry Bivol dominated consensus pound-for-pound king Canelo Alvarez on May 7 and then easily outpointed previously unbeaten Gilberto Ramirez on Nov. 5, making the 32-year-old Russian the obvious choice for 2022 Fighter of the Year.

Bivol’s victory over Alvarez in Las Vegas turned the sport upside down. The Mexican star hadn’t lost since way back in 2013, when he was outclassed by Floyd Mayweather. It seemed he couldn’t be beaten. Then Bivol did it … convincingly.

We shouldn’t have been shocked. Bivol had a strong track record, including a series of victories over elite opponents over the past half decade. He had universal respect. And the 175-pound titleholder had a natural size advantage over Alvarez, the undisputed 168-pound champ.

Still, it was difficult to imaging anyone topping the great Canelo. Until we witnessed it.

Bivol not only was bigger, he was much better. Bottom line: He outboxed one of the best boxers of the generation, using his jab and well-timed combinations to pick Alvarez apart from a distance and taking surprisingly few punches himself.

By mid-fight, Alvarez was frustrated and beginning to tire. By the championship rounds, it seemed his only hope was a big shot that never came.

All three judges had the same score, 115-113 for Bivol, seven rounds to five. Those with their eyes open had Bivol winning a wider decision. Boxing Junkie scored it 117-111, nine rounds to three.

Bivol had done what some were beginning to believe was impossible. And he wasn’t finished.

Ramirez wasn’t nearly as accomplished as Alvarez but he was unbeaten (44-0 at the time) and a former 168-pound titleholder with a number of quality victories. Yet he was overmatched against Bivol in his first shot at a 175-pound belt.

Bivol was better than Ramirez in every way en route to a unanimous decision victory, although his impenetrable defense stood out most. Ramirez landed only 1 in 10 punches he threw, according to CompuBox., clear evidence of the winner’s superiority.

Bivol was two for two in ’22: two fights, two dominating victories.

Dominating. That’s the best word to describe Bivol’s year, one in which he made history by taking down the biggest star in the sport in impressive fashion and then outclassing a proven veteran who had never tasted defeat.

Not many have had a better year.

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2022 Fighter of the Year: Dmitry Bivol couldn’t be a more obvious choice

Editor’s note: This is the last of four year-end awards. *** Who else? Dmitry Bivol dominated consensus pound-for-pound king Canelo Alvarez on May 7 and then easily outpointed previously unbeaten Gilberto Ramirez on Nov. 5, making the 32-year-old …

Editor’s note: This is the last of four year-end awards.

***

Who else?

Dmitry Bivol dominated consensus pound-for-pound king Canelo Alvarez on May 7 and then easily outpointed previously unbeaten Gilberto Ramirez on Nov. 5, making the 32-year-old Russian the obvious choice for 2022 Fighter of the Year.

Bivol’s victory over Alvarez in Las Vegas turned the sport upside down. The Mexican star hadn’t lost since way back in 2013, when he was outclassed by Floyd Mayweather. It seemed he couldn’t be beaten. Then Bivol did it … convincingly.

We shouldn’t have been shocked. Bivol had a strong track record, including a series of victories over elite opponents over the past half decade. He had universal respect. And the 175-pound titleholder had a natural size advantage over Alvarez, the undisputed 168-pound champ.

Still, it was difficult to imaging anyone topping the great Canelo. Until we witnessed it.

Bivol not only was bigger, he was much better. Bottom line: He outboxed one of the best boxers of the generation, using his jab and well-timed combinations to pick Alvarez apart from a distance and taking surprisingly few punches himself.

By mid-fight, Alvarez was frustrated and beginning to tire. By the championship rounds, it seemed his only hope was a big shot that never came.

All three judges had the same score, 115-113 for Bivol, seven rounds to five. Those with their eyes open had Bivol winning a wider decision. Boxing Junkie scored it 117-111, nine rounds to three.

Bivol had done what some were beginning to believe was impossible. And he wasn’t finished.

Ramirez wasn’t nearly as accomplished as Alvarez but he was unbeaten (44-0 at the time) and a former 168-pound titleholder with a number of quality victories. Yet he was overmatched against Bivol in his first shot at a 175-pound belt.

Bivol was better than Ramirez in every way en route to a unanimous decision victory, although his impenetrable defense stood out most. Ramirez landed only 1 in 10 punches he threw, according to CompuBox., clear evidence of the winner’s superiority.

Bivol was two for two in ’22: two fights, two dominating victories.

Dominating. That’s the best word to describe Bivol’s year, one in which he made history by taking down the biggest star in the sport in impressive fashion and then outclassing a proven veteran who had never tasted defeat.

Not many have had a better year.

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2022 Fight of the Year: Leigh Wood vs. Michael Conlan mayhem

2022 Fight of the Year: Leigh Wood vs. Michael Conlan mayhem.

Editor’s note: This is the third of four year-end awards. Fighter of the Year will follow.

***

The biggest fights aren’t always the best.

The featherweight meeting between Leigh Wood and Michael Conlan on March 12 at Nottingham Arena in Nottingham, England wasn’t a high-profile event, at least not internationally, but it was the most memorable.

It had non-stop action, which is an essential ingredient in a great fight. It had twists and turns, when added to the drama. And it had a surrealistic ending, which was the bow on top.

Conlan, the 31-year-old 2012 Olympic bronze medalist from Northern Ireland, kicked off the insanity by putting the hometown boy down and hurting him with a wide left to the head late in the opening round.

What followed was a breathtaking duel, which featured skill, athleticism and, most important, raw courage.

Conlan got the better of the back-and-forth in the first half of the fight, during which Wood, a secondary titleholder, had a number of harrowing moments and seemed to be on his way to a disappointing setback.

The 34-year-old Englishman refused to fold, however. And his perseverance paid off the second half of the fight, when he turned a one-sided beating into a full-fledged war and ultimately a defining victory in Boxing Junkie’s 2022 Fight of the Year.

By the 11th round it was Wood who was dishing out the majority of the punishment. He brought the crowd to its feet by putting Conlan down late in the penultimate round, although a still-alert Conlan protested that he had slipped.

Then, in the 12th and final frame, came arguably the year’s most dramatic moment.

Wood and Conlan, still firing away in the final minutes, were exchanging punches when Conlan stepped backward until his back was against the ropes. Wood then appeared to land the deciding punch, a straight right that made Conlan’s body to go limp.

Wood unloaded one more flurry of quick punches that sent his unconscious opponent through the ropes and onto the floor, which caused bedlam in the packed arena.

Referee Steve Gray had a look at Conlan over the top rope to determine whether there was any chance he could climb back into the ring and continue but realized immediately that he was out and stopped the fight at 1:25.

Conlan had a narrow lead after 11 rounds (105-102, 104-103 and 104-103), an indication that Wood had chipped away at his opponent’s early advantage before rendered the scorecards irrelevant in the most dramatic way possible.

The loser was rushed to a hospital immediately after the fight but recovered quickly. He bounced back to win consecutive fights before the end of the year, demonstrating his resilience once again.

Wood delivered a spectacular victory he’s unlikely to ever top, one that is expected to lead to more important fights.

The real winners? The fans, both those at Nottingham Arena that night and those watching around the world.

Sometimes a perfect matchup in perfect conditions produces a near perfect war. That’s what we saw on March 12.

Tomorrow: Fighter of the Year.

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2022 Fight of the Year: Leigh Wood vs. Michael Conlan mayhem

2022 Fight of the Year: Leigh Wood vs. Michael Conlan mayhem.

Editor’s note: This is the third of four year-end awards. Fighter of the Year will follow.

***

The biggest fights aren’t always the best.

The featherweight meeting between Leigh Wood and Michael Conlan on March 12 at Nottingham Arena in Nottingham, England wasn’t a high-profile event, at least not internationally, but it was the most memorable.

It had non-stop action, which is an essential ingredient in a great fight. It had twists and turns, when added to the drama. And it had a surrealistic ending, which was the bow on top.

Conlan, the 31-year-old 2012 Olympic bronze medalist from Northern Ireland, kicked off the insanity by putting the hometown boy down and hurting him with a wide left to the head late in the opening round.

What followed was a breathtaking duel, which featured skill, athleticism and, most important, raw courage.

Conlan got the better of the back-and-forth in the first half of the fight, during which Wood, a secondary titleholder, had a number of harrowing moments and seemed to be on his way to a disappointing setback.

The 34-year-old Englishman refused to fold, however. And his perseverance paid off the second half of the fight, when he turned a one-sided beating into a full-fledged war and ultimately a defining victory in Boxing Junkie’s 2022 Fight of the Year.

By the 11th round it was Wood who was dishing out the majority of the punishment. He brought the crowd to its feet by putting Conlan down late in the penultimate round, although a still-alert Conlan protested that he had slipped.

Then, in the 12th and final frame, came arguably the year’s most dramatic moment.

Wood and Conlan, still firing away in the final minutes, were exchanging punches when Conlan stepped backward until his back was against the ropes. Wood then appeared to land the deciding punch, a straight right that made Conlan’s body to go limp.

Wood unloaded one more flurry of quick punches that sent his unconscious opponent through the ropes and onto the floor, which caused bedlam in the packed arena.

Referee Steve Gray had a look at Conlan over the top rope to determine whether there was any chance he could climb back into the ring and continue but realized immediately that he was out and stopped the fight at 1:25.

Conlan had a narrow lead after 11 rounds (105-102, 104-103 and 104-103), an indication that Wood had chipped away at his opponent’s early advantage before rendered the scorecards irrelevant in the most dramatic way possible.

The loser was rushed to a hospital immediately after the fight but recovered quickly. He bounced back to win consecutive fights before the end of the year, demonstrating his resilience once again.

Wood delivered a spectacular victory he’s unlikely to ever top, one that is expected to lead to more important fights.

The real winners? The fans, both those at Nottingham Arena that night and those watching around the world.

Sometimes a perfect matchup in perfect conditions produces a near perfect war. That’s what we saw on March 12.

Tomorrow: Fighter of the Year.

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2022 Knockout of the Year: Leigh Wood delivers out-of-ring experience

2022 Knockout of the Year: Leigh Wood delivered an out-of-ring experience against Michael Conlan.

Editor’s note: This is the second of four year-end awards. Fight of the Year and Fighter of the Year will follow.

***

The fight itself was a wild, back-and-forth war that had the spectators at Nottingham Arena in England screaming their approval from beginning to end.

Make no mistake, though: It was the improbable ending on an unforgettable March 12 that will be etched in boxing lore.

Leigh Wood, fighting in his hometown, defended a secondary featherweight title against Irishman Michael Conlan. And the action started early, Conlan putting Wood down with a sweeping overhand left to seize the advantage and set the tone of the wild fight.

The 2012 Olympic bronze medalist from Belfast controlled the first half of the fight only to see the courageous Wood storm back down the stretch to set up Boxing Junkie’s 2022 Knockout of the Year.

Wood brought the crowd to its feet by putting Conlan down late in Round 11, although Conlan protested that he had slipped. Then, in the 12th and final round, came the ultimate drama.

The fighters, tapping into every ounce of their collective energy, were exchanging punches at a furious rate when Conlan stepped backward into the ropes midway through the round. At that moment Wood measured Conlan with his left and appeared to hurt him with a right, causing Conlan to drop his arms.

Wood then unloaded a flurry of quick punches that sent his unconscious opponent through the ropes and onto the floor. One second Conlan was fighting, the next he was gone, which caused disbelief and then euphoria throughout the pulsating arena.

Referee Steve Gray had a look at Conlan over the top rope to determine whether he could continue but realized quickly that he was finished and stopped the fight at 1:25.

There was some concern for Conlan for a time. A gracious Wood even tried to silence the crowd as doctors tended to the fallen warrior and then transported him to a hospital, although he had only modest success.

“I hit him with everything, but he’s so tough,” Wood said in the ring. “I’m just thinking about Mick now. It was a bad knockout.”

Conlan was OK. He tweeted later, “Im all good folks, cheers for the messages. Ill be back, good shot and congrats to Leigh and his team.”

Congrats to everyone who was fortunate enough to see the riveting fight and incredible ending. They’ll never forget it.

Tomorrow: 2022 Fight of the Year

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2022 Knockout of the Year: Leigh Wood delivers out-of-ring experience

2022 Knockout of the Year: Leigh Wood delivered an out-of-ring experience against Michael Conlan.

Editor’s note: This is the second of four year-end awards. Fight of the Year and Fighter of the Year will follow.

***

The fight itself was a wild, back-and-forth war that had the spectators at Nottingham Arena in England screaming their approval from beginning to end.

Make no mistake, though: It was the improbable ending on an unforgettable March 12 that will be etched in boxing lore.

Leigh Wood, fighting in his hometown, defended a secondary featherweight title against Irishman Michael Conlan. And the action started early, Conlan putting Wood down with a sweeping overhand left to seize the advantage and set the tone of the wild fight.

The 2012 Olympic bronze medalist from Belfast controlled the first half of the fight only to see the courageous Wood storm back down the stretch to set up Boxing Junkie’s 2022 Knockout of the Year.

Wood brought the crowd to its feet by putting Conlan down late in Round 11, although Conlan protested that he had slipped. Then, in the 12th and final round, came the ultimate drama.

The fighters, tapping into every ounce of their collective energy, were exchanging punches at a furious rate when Conlan stepped backward into the ropes midway through the round. At that moment Wood measured Conlan with his left and appeared to hurt him with a right, causing Conlan to drop his arms.

Wood then unloaded a flurry of quick punches that sent his unconscious opponent through the ropes and onto the floor. One second Conlan was fighting, the next he was gone, which caused disbelief and then euphoria throughout the pulsating arena.

Referee Steve Gray had a look at Conlan over the top rope to determine whether he could continue but realized quickly that he was finished and stopped the fight at 1:25.

There was some concern for Conlan for a time. A gracious Wood even tried to silence the crowd as doctors tended to the fallen warrior and then transported him to a hospital, although he had only modest success.

“I hit him with everything, but he’s so tough,” Wood said in the ring. “I’m just thinking about Mick now. It was a bad knockout.”

Conlan was OK. He tweeted later, “Im all good folks, cheers for the messages. Ill be back, good shot and congrats to Leigh and his team.”

Congrats to everyone who was fortunate enough to see the riveting fight and incredible ending. They’ll never forget it.

Tomorrow: 2022 Fight of the Year

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2022 Upset of the Year: Dmitry Bivol stunned Canelo Alvarez, boxing world

2022 Upset of the Year: Dmitry Bivol stunned Canelo Alvarez and the boxing world in May.

Editor’s note: This is the first of four year-end awards. Knockout of the Year, Fight of the Year and Fighter of the Year will follow.

***

The experts had respect for Dmitry Bivol going into his fight against Canelo Alvarez on May 7 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

The 175-pound titleholder was seen as an excellent boxer with a string of quality victories over the previous four, five years. He and Artur Beterbiev were the unquestioned class of the division.

But could Bivol actually defeat Alvarez?

C’mon. The Mexican superstar was unbeatable, having overwhelmed one elite opponent after another since he suffered his lone loss to Floyd Mayweather in 2013. The only exceptions were tough fights against another star, Gennadiy Golovkin.

Alvarez, about a 4-1 favorite, couldn’t lose. And then he did.

Bivol’s combination of refined technique, natural size advantage over the 168-pound champion and an abundance of confidence was too much for Alvarez to handle in a unanimous decision setback and Boxing Junkie’s 2022 Upset of the Year.

The former Russian amateur star was brilliant, calmly, coolly controlling distance with his jab and quick, hard combinations while maintaining a tight guard that Alvarez couldn’t penetrate. By mid-fight, Alvarez was frustrated, tired and out of options.

No one – not even Golovkin – had been able to do that to him since Mayweather schooled him, which is why it was so stunning to witness.

“I proved myself today,” Bivol said in the ring afterward. “I’m the best in my [division]. I keep my belt.”

Alvarez was gracious immediately after his defeat, giving his conqueror credit for a strong performance. He changed his tune, however, later insisting that he lost only four or five rounds and should’ve had his hand raised.

We know better.

The fact all three judges had Bivol winning 115-113 – seven rounds to five – was ridiculous enough. Boxing Junkie scored 117-111 for the winner, which reflected reality. Alvarez’s suggestion that he should’ve won 116-112 or 115-113 is absurd.

Bivol won fairly and conclusively, exposing Alvarez as human and bolstering his own reputation as one of the best fighters in the world pound for pound.

Alvarez has said he wants a second shot at Bivol. And, with his ability and determination, no one would be shocked if he finds a way to turn the tables. If nothing else, it could end up being a closer fight.

No matter what, Bivol will always have May 7, 2022, the best night of his career and one of the most significant upsets in recent years.

Tomorrow: 2022 Knockout of the Year

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2022 Upset of the Year: Dmitry Bivol stunned Canelo Alvarez, boxing world

2022 Upset of the Year: Dmitry Bivol stunned Canelo Alvarez and the boxing world in May.

Editor’s note: This is the first of four year-end awards. Knockout of the Year, Fight of the Year and Fighter of the Year will follow.

***

The experts had respect for Dmitry Bivol going into his fight against Canelo Alvarez on May 7 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

The 175-pound titleholder was seen as an excellent boxer with a string of quality victories over the previous four, five years. He and Artur Beterbiev were the unquestioned class of the division.

But could Bivol actually defeat Alvarez?

C’mon. The Mexican superstar was unbeatable, having overwhelmed one elite opponent after another since he suffered his lone loss to Floyd Mayweather in 2013. The only exceptions were tough fights against another star, Gennadiy Golovkin.

Alvarez, about a 4-1 favorite, couldn’t lose. And then he did.

Bivol’s combination of refined technique, natural size advantage over the 168-pound champion and an abundance of confidence was too much for Alvarez to handle in a unanimous decision setback and Boxing Junkie’s 2022 Upset of the Year.

The former Russian amateur star was brilliant, calmly, coolly controlling distance with his jab and quick, hard combinations while maintaining a tight guard that Alvarez couldn’t penetrate. By mid-fight, Alvarez was frustrated, tired and out of options.

No one – not even Golovkin – had been able to do that to him since Mayweather schooled him, which is why it was so stunning to witness.

“I proved myself today,” Bivol said in the ring afterward. “I’m the best in my [division]. I keep my belt.”

Alvarez was gracious immediately after his defeat, giving his conqueror credit for a strong performance. He changed his tune, however, later insisting that he lost only four or five rounds and should’ve had his hand raised.

We know better.

The fact all three judges had Bivol winning 115-113 – seven rounds to five – was ridiculous enough. Boxing Junkie scored 117-111 for the winner, which reflected reality. Alvarez’s suggestion that he should’ve won 116-112 or 115-113 is absurd.

Bivol won fairly and conclusively, exposing Alvarez as human and bolstering his own reputation as one of the best fighters in the world pound for pound.

Alvarez has said he wants a second shot at Bivol. And, with his ability and determination, no one would be shocked if he finds a way to turn the tables. If nothing else, it could end up being a closer fight.

No matter what, Bivol will always have May 7, 2022, the best night of his career and one of the most significant upsets in recent years.

Tomorrow: 2022 Knockout of the Year

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