Cody Crowley outworks Abel Ramos to win majority decision

Welterweight contender Cody Crowley outworked Abel Ramos to win a majority decision Saturday in Las Vegas.

Hard work often produces good results.

Welterweight contender Cody Crowley proved that once again against Abel Ramos, pressuring Ramos from beginning to end to win a majority decision on the David Benavidez-Caleb Plant show Saturday in Las Vegas.

The officials scores were 116-112, 115-113 and 114-114. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112, eight rounds to four.

Crowley (22-0, 9 KOs) pinned Ramos (27-6-2, 21 KOs) against the ropes and fired away round after round, simply outworking his more-experienced opponent.

Ramos also had success in a competitive fight, finding openings to land many of the cleanest shots of the fight.

That was particularly obvious in Round 11, in which Ramos landed a right hand that appeared to force Crowley to touch the canvas for a knockdown. However, a ringside official ruled before the start of Round 12 that the glove hadn’t hit the mat.

In the end, the fight seemed to come down to math: Crowley landed more punches, which generally wins fights.

The fight was billed as a WBC title eliminator. Crowley is ranked No. 3, Ramos No. 6.

Cody Crowley outworks Abel Ramos to win majority decision

Welterweight contender Cody Crowley outworked Abel Ramos to win a majority decision Saturday in Las Vegas.

Hard work often produces good results.

Welterweight contender Cody Crowley proved that once again against Abel Ramos, pressuring Ramos from beginning to end to win a majority decision on the David Benavidez-Caleb Plant show Saturday in Las Vegas.

The officials scores were 116-112, 115-113 and 114-114. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112, eight rounds to four.

Crowley (22-0, 9 KOs) pinned Ramos (27-6-2, 21 KOs) against the ropes and fired away round after round, simply outworking his more-experienced opponent.

Ramos also had success in a competitive fight, finding openings to land many of the cleanest shots of the fight.

That was particularly obvious in Round 11, in which Ramos landed a right hand that appeared to force Crowley to touch the canvas for a knockdown. However, a ringside official ruled before the start of Round 12 that the glove hadn’t hit the mat.

In the end, the fight seemed to come down to math: Crowley landed more punches, which generally wins fights.

The fight was billed as a WBC title eliminator. Crowley is ranked No. 3, Ramos No. 6.

David Benavidez, Caleb Plant make weight, throw more verbal shots

David Benavidez and Caleb Plant made weight for their pay-per-view fight Saturday in Las Vegas and took more verbal shots at one another.

David Benavidez and Caleb Plant on Friday made weight for their 168-pound pay-per-view fight Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and took advantage of one last opportunity to exchange trash talk.

Benavidez came in at 166.8 pounds, 1.2 under the division limit. Plant weighed 167.2.

Their obligatory stare down didn’t last long but it was dramatic. They were jawing back and forth when Plant stuck a finger in his opponent’s face, prompting Benavidez to push Plant backward.

At that point personnel on stage stepped between the fighters and separated them.

“We were just exchanging pleasantries, telling each other how much we like each other,” Plant said sarcastically during his interview. “He’s been talking a lot, saying how much he’s going to whoop my ass and this and that.

“We’re going to see tomorrow. You know what’s up.”

Benavidez then interjected something from across the stage. Plant (22-1, 13 KOs)  responded, “Shut up.”

“He tried to put his finger on my face,” Benavidez said. “I had to push his ass back. But he knows what’s up. When his [handlers] have to pick him up off the f—ing ground when he’s bleeding all that blood ….

“We’re ready for tomorrow, 100 percent ready.”

Benavidez (26-0, 23 KOs) was asked about coming in well below the division limit.

“It’s speaks for itself,” he said. “I’ve been on weight the whole week. And I”m ready. I’m ready to take this mother—er’s head off.”

The weights for the other fights on the pay-per-view portion of the card are as follows:

  • Jesus Ramos (153.2) vs. Joey Spencer (153.2), junior middleweights.
  • Jose Valenzuela (134.0) vs. Chris Colbert (134-6), lightweights.
  • Cody Crowley (145.2) vs. Abel Ramos (146.0), welterweights.

[lawrence-related id=36261,36250,36246,36241,36237,36175,36155]

David Benavidez, Caleb Plant make weight, throw more verbal shots

David Benavidez and Caleb Plant made weight for their pay-per-view fight Saturday in Las Vegas and took more verbal shots at one another.

David Benavidez and Caleb Plant on Friday made weight for their 168-pound pay-per-view fight Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and took advantage of one last opportunity to exchange trash talk.

Benavidez came in at 166.8 pounds, 1.2 under the division limit. Plant weighed 167.2.

Their obligatory stare down didn’t last long but it was dramatic. They were jawing back and forth when Plant stuck a finger in his opponent’s face, prompting Benavidez to push Plant backward.

At that point personnel on stage stepped between the fighters and separated them.

“We were just exchanging pleasantries, telling each other how much we like each other,” Plant said sarcastically during his interview. “He’s been talking a lot, saying how much he’s going to whoop my ass and this and that.

“We’re going to see tomorrow. You know what’s up.”

Benavidez then interjected something from across the stage. Plant (22-1, 13 KOs)  responded, “Shut up.”

“He tried to put his finger on my face,” Benavidez said. “I had to push his ass back. But he knows what’s up. When his [handlers] have to pick him up off the f—ing ground when he’s bleeding all that blood ….

“We’re ready for tomorrow, 100 percent ready.”

Benavidez (26-0, 23 KOs) was asked about coming in well below the division limit.

“It’s speaks for itself,” he said. “I’ve been on weight the whole week. And I”m ready. I’m ready to take this mother—er’s head off.”

The weights for the other fights on the pay-per-view portion of the card are as follows:

  • Jesus Ramos (153.2) vs. Joey Spencer (153.2), junior middleweights.
  • Jose Valenzuela (134.0) vs. Chris Colbert (134-6), lightweights.
  • Cody Crowley (145.2) vs. Abel Ramos (146.0), welterweights.

[lawrence-related id=36261,36250,36246,36241,36237,36175,36155]

Good, bad, worse: Return of Andy Ruiz Jr., Parker vs. Chisora, more

Good, bad, worse: A look back at the return of Andy Ruiz Jr., the grueling Joseph Parker-Derek Chisora fight and more.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NevvImyONeM

Andy Ruiz Jr. wasn’t perfect on Saturday.

The former heavyweight champ was knocked down and hurt in the second round and took more punishment early in his fight against Chris Arreola in Carson, Calif., which had viewers momentarily contemplating the possibility of an upset.

But Ruiz weathered the storm, settled into a groove and controlled the remainder of what turned out to be a one-sided fight. He won 118-109, 118-109 and 117-110.

It was a solid performance given his 17-month layoff, which he said played a role in his early problems.

Ruiz (34-2, 22 KOs) began to turn a competitive fight into his personal showcase in the fifth or sixth round, when he started to land super-quick two- and three-punch combinations and avoid Arreola’s biggest shots.

That was the pattern in the second half of the fight, which allowed Ruiz to run away with the decision.

Ruiz didn’t seem to be pleased with his performance afterward but he probably was being too hard on himself. He shed rust and took a solid step toward another shot at a world title, which was the objective going into the fight.

And he’ll probably look better going forward. He obviously is putting in the work under new trainer Eddy Reynoso, which is how he came in 27.5 pounds lighter than he weighed in the second Joshua fight. Reynoso, one of the hottest trainers in the world, also will continue to polish Ruiz’s already-solid skills.

Andy Ruiz is back.

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cexvsqGf7iU

You have to feel for Derek Chisora.

The longtime heavyweight contender has ended up on the wrong side of all four split decisions and one majority decision in his 14-year career, including his setback against Joseph Parker on Saturday in Manchester, England.

He lost split decisions to Dillian Whyte in England, Kubrat Pulev in Germany, Robert Helenius in Finland and now Parker. Plus, he lost a majority decision to Agit Kabayel in Monaco.

Of course, we can argue whether Chisora (32-11, 23 KOs) deserved his fate in those fights but we can agree he was competitive in all of them. You’d think one would’ve gone his way – he certainly does – but none did.

Hence his frustration after the fight on Saturday, which followed a close-decision loss to Oleksandr Usyk in his previous fight.

“I think they don’t like me,” he said.

The good news for Chisora is that he continues to get more opportunities, which should be the case again after a solid performance against the much younger and respected Parker.

He stalked the Kiwi from beginning to end, taking many of Parker’s quick, clean shots but also landing plenty of his own. In particular, Parker couldn’t seem to avoid Chisora’s right-handed bombs, one of which put him down in the opening seconds.

Two judges scored it for Parker (116-111 and 115-113) while the third had Chisora winning (115-113). Boxing Junkie scored it for Parker 115-112, eight rounds to four.

No matter how you saw it, Parker clearly was pushed to his limits.

“He brought the smoke,” Parker said. “If you want to feel it, jump into the ring with him.”

Parker offered Chisora a rematch. Saturday’s loser earned it.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S6Y5x4T9eko&t=37s

Omar Figueroa was excited about what amounted to a fresh start against Abel Ramos on the Ruiz-Arreola undercard.

The former lightweight champ spent a nearly two-year hiatus from boxing reassessing his priorities and letting his body heal from injuries. He seemed to come out the other side of the layoff in a good place both emotionally and physically.

He was in love with boxing again.

Then, when it came time to fight, he simply didn’t have it. Ramos, a rugged fringe contender, took some time to adjust to Figueroa’s awkward style and then proceeded to beat him up for six solid rounds.

Figueroa never stopped trying. He just wasn’t capable of doing anything to stop the assault.

I’ll never forget the image of him on his stool after the sixth round, his head hanging, spitting blood into a bucket. He was a beaten man. His trainer, Joel Diaz, did the right thing by instructing the referee to end the slaughter.

I know I’m not alone when I say that was difficult to witness.

Figueroa was once a good fighter. Between 2015 and 2019, he beat in succession Ricky Burns, Antonio DeMarco, Robert Guerrero and John Molina Jr. He was unbeaten until Yordgenis Ugas outpointed him in July 2019, which he said lifted the pressure of remaining undefeated.

Now he appears to be a shell. I don’t know whether Figueroa will get back into the ring – maybe he’d do better at 140 pounds – but it’s difficult to imagine after what we witnessed on Saturday.

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Arreola, one of the most-engaging fighters you’ll ever encounter, has acknowledged that he swears too much. But he pushed even his own boundaries when he expressed his frustration over the scoring in a profane, cringe-worthy manner for everyone to hear. We can excuse him, though. To fight your heart out — as he did — and then, from his perspective, receive no respect from the judges must be devastating. Arreola is a good man with a big mouth. … The fight of the night Saturday was Sebastian Fundora vs. Jorge Cota. The junior middleweights went to war from the opening bell and didn’t let up until Cota (30-5, 27 KOs) could take no more at 2:35 of Round 4 on the Ruiz-Arreola card. Fundora (17-0-1, 12 KOs) took more shots that we’re used to seeing but he absorbed them and delivered a beating. No one in boxing is more fun to watch. … Jesus Ramos, the 20-year-old welterweight prospect, easily outpointed former U.S. Olympian Javier Molina (22-4, 9 KOs) on the Ruiz-Arreola card. Ramos (16-0, 14 KOs) can punch and he can also box, as he demonstrated on Saturday. And he fights with poise beyond his years. His goal of winning a world title before he turns 22 doesn’t seem farfetched. … Erislandy Lara (28-3-3, 16 KOs) provided the knockout of the night, stopping Thomas Lamanna (30-5-1, 12 KOs) with a single left hand only 80 seconds into their middleweight fight on the Ruiz-Arreola show. Lara obviously has more to give at 38. … Light heavyweight titleholder Dmitry Bivol (18-0, 11 KOs) looked so-so in his unanimous-decision victory over Craig Richards (16-2-1, 9 KOs) on the Parker-Chisora card. He said afterward that he was satisfied with his performance given the fact he hadn’t fought in almost 19 months. That’s reasonable. … Katie Taylor (18-0, 6 KOs) and Natasha Jonas (9-2-1, 7 KOs) gave fans the most-exciting fight on the Park-Chisora show. Taylor, defending her lightweight titles, won a unanimous decision but she has looked better. Of course, Jonas played a role in that by giving a spirited performance. The Liverpudlian has lost her last two fights – she fell just short against Terri Harper in August – yet enhanced her reputation as one of the best in the business. … Chris Eubank Jr. (30-2, 22 KOs) easily outpointed capable Marcus Morrison (23-4, 16 KOs) on the Parker-Chisora card. Eubank was more solid than spectacular. One thing I liked was his patience, which he evidently learned under the tutelage of trainer Roy Jones Jr. I think Jones is going to bring out the best in Eubank.

[lawrence-related id=19893,19880,19888,19883,19864,19862,19858,19860]

Good, bad, worse: Return of Andy Ruiz Jr., Parker vs. Chisora, more

Good, bad, worse: A look back at the return of Andy Ruiz Jr., the grueling Joseph Parker-Derek Chisora fight and more.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NevvImyONeM

Andy Ruiz Jr. wasn’t perfect on Saturday.

The former heavyweight champ was knocked down and hurt in the second round and took more punishment early in his fight against Chris Arreola in Carson, Calif., which had viewers momentarily contemplating the possibility of an upset.

But Ruiz weathered the storm, settled into a groove and controlled the remainder of what turned out to be a one-sided fight. He won 118-109, 118-109 and 117-110.

It was a solid performance given his 17-month layoff, which he said played a role in his early problems.

Ruiz (34-2, 22 KOs) began to turn a competitive fight into his personal showcase in the fifth or sixth round, when he started to land super-quick two- and three-punch combinations and avoid Arreola’s biggest shots.

That was the pattern in the second half of the fight, which allowed Ruiz to run away with the decision.

Ruiz didn’t seem to be pleased with his performance afterward but he probably was being too hard on himself. He shed rust and took a solid step toward another shot at a world title, which was the objective going into the fight.

And he’ll probably look better going forward. He obviously is putting in the work under new trainer Eddy Reynoso, which is how he came in 27.5 pounds lighter than he weighed in the second Joshua fight. Reynoso, one of the hottest trainers in the world, also will continue to polish Ruiz’s already-solid skills.

Andy Ruiz is back.

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cexvsqGf7iU

You have to feel for Derek Chisora.

The longtime heavyweight contender has ended up on the wrong side of all four split decisions and one majority decision in his 14-year career, including his setback against Joseph Parker on Saturday in Manchester, England.

He lost split decisions to Dillian Whyte in England, Kubrat Pulev in Germany, Robert Helenius in Finland and now Parker. Plus, he lost a majority decision to Agit Kabayel in Monaco.

Of course, we can argue whether Chisora (32-11, 23 KOs) deserved his fate in those fights but we can agree he was competitive in all of them. You’d think one would’ve gone his way – he certainly does – but none did.

Hence his frustration after the fight on Saturday, which followed a close-decision loss to Oleksandr Usyk in his previous fight.

“I think they don’t like me,” he said.

The good news for Chisora is that he continues to get more opportunities, which should be the case again after a solid performance against the much younger and respected Parker.

He stalked the Kiwi from beginning to end, taking many of Parker’s quick, clean shots but also landing plenty of his own. In particular, Parker couldn’t seem to avoid Chisora’s right-handed bombs, one of which put him down in the opening seconds.

Two judges scored it for Parker (116-111 and 115-113) while the third had Chisora winning (115-113). Boxing Junkie scored it for Parker 115-112, eight rounds to four.

No matter how you saw it, Parker clearly was pushed to his limits.

“He brought the smoke,” Parker said. “If you want to feel it, jump into the ring with him.”

Parker offered Chisora a rematch. Saturday’s loser earned it.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S6Y5x4T9eko&t=37s

Omar Figueroa was excited about what amounted to a fresh start against Abel Ramos on the Ruiz-Arreola undercard.

The former lightweight champ spent a nearly two-year hiatus from boxing reassessing his priorities and letting his body heal from injuries. He seemed to come out the other side of the layoff in a good place both emotionally and physically.

He was in love with boxing again.

Then, when it came time to fight, he simply didn’t have it. Ramos, a rugged fringe contender, took some time to adjust to Figueroa’s awkward style and then proceeded to beat him up for six solid rounds.

Figueroa never stopped trying. He just wasn’t capable of doing anything to stop the assault.

I’ll never forget the image of him on his stool after the sixth round, his head hanging, spitting blood into a bucket. He was a beaten man. His trainer, Joel Diaz, did the right thing by instructing the referee to end the slaughter.

I know I’m not alone when I say that was difficult to witness.

Figueroa was once a good fighter. Between 2015 and 2019, he beat in succession Ricky Burns, Antonio DeMarco, Robert Guerrero and John Molina Jr. He was unbeaten until Yordgenis Ugas outpointed him in July 2019, which he said lifted the pressure of remaining undefeated.

Now he appears to be a shell. I don’t know whether Figueroa will get back into the ring – maybe he’d do better at 140 pounds – but it’s difficult to imagine after what we witnessed on Saturday.

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Arreola, one of the most-engaging fighters you’ll ever encounter, has acknowledged that he swears too much. But he pushed even his own boundaries when he expressed his frustration over the scoring in a profane, cringe-worthy manner for everyone to hear. We can excuse him, though. To fight your heart out — as he did — and then, from his perspective, receive no respect from the judges must be devastating. Arreola is a good man with a big mouth. … The fight of the night Saturday was Sebastian Fundora vs. Jorge Cota. The junior middleweights went to war from the opening bell and didn’t let up until Cota (30-5, 27 KOs) could take no more at 2:35 of Round 4 on the Ruiz-Arreola card. Fundora (17-0-1, 12 KOs) took more shots that we’re used to seeing but he absorbed them and delivered a beating. No one in boxing is more fun to watch. … Jesus Ramos, the 20-year-old welterweight prospect, easily outpointed former U.S. Olympian Javier Molina (22-4, 9 KOs) on the Ruiz-Arreola card. Ramos (16-0, 14 KOs) can punch and he can also box, as he demonstrated on Saturday. And he fights with poise beyond his years. His goal of winning a world title before he turns 22 doesn’t seem farfetched. … Erislandy Lara (28-3-3, 16 KOs) provided the knockout of the night, stopping Thomas Lamanna (30-5-1, 12 KOs) with a single left hand only 80 seconds into their middleweight fight on the Ruiz-Arreola show. Lara obviously has more to give at 38. … Light heavyweight titleholder Dmitry Bivol (18-0, 11 KOs) looked so-so in his unanimous-decision victory over Craig Richards (16-2-1, 9 KOs) on the Parker-Chisora card. He said afterward that he was satisfied with his performance given the fact he hadn’t fought in almost 19 months. That’s reasonable. … Katie Taylor (18-0, 6 KOs) and Natasha Jonas (9-2-1, 7 KOs) gave fans the most-exciting fight on the Park-Chisora show. Taylor, defending her lightweight titles, won a unanimous decision but she has looked better. Of course, Jonas played a role in that by giving a spirited performance. The Liverpudlian has lost her last two fights – she fell just short against Terri Harper in August – yet enhanced her reputation as one of the best in the business. … Chris Eubank Jr. (30-2, 22 KOs) easily outpointed capable Marcus Morrison (23-4, 16 KOs) on the Parker-Chisora card. Eubank was more solid than spectacular. One thing I liked was his patience, which he evidently learned under the tutelage of trainer Roy Jones Jr. I think Jones is going to bring out the best in Eubank.

[lawrence-related id=19893,19880,19888,19883,19864,19862,19858,19860]

Tony Harrison, Bryant Perrella fight to unsatisfying split draw

Tony Harrison and Bryant Perrella fought to unsatisfying split draw on Saturday in Los Angeles.

Tony Harrison took a small step backward while Bryant Perrella probably moved ahead somewhat. Neither fighter left the ring satisfied on Saturday.

Harrison, the former junior middleweight titleholder, and Perrella fought to a split draw in a 12-round fight that was difficult to score at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in downtown Los Angeles.

The wide disparity in the scoring was evidence of that. Judge Max DeLuca had Harrison winning 116-112, eight rounds to four. Lou Moret scored it for Perrella 117-111. And Zachary Young had it 114-114. Boxing Junkie scored it 115-113 for Perrella.

Harrison (28-3-1, 21 KOs) hadn’t fought since December 2019, when he lost his title by knockout to Jermell Charlo. That was the last time Harrison had in his corner his father/trainer Ali Salaam, who died of COVID-19 a year ago.

And perhaps the layoff and absence of a familiar voice played a role in his performance, which was so-so at best. He threw a lot of jabs but relatively few power shots, only 14 per round, according to CompuBox.

Perrella was the busier fighter overall, outpunching Harrison 692-453 overall and 396-171 in power shots. That obviously impressed Moret. However, Perrella outlanded Harrison only 150-138 and Harrison might’ve landed the cleaner punches, which apparently swayed DeLuca.

Perrella probably had to two biggest rounds in the fight, Nos. 3 and 6, during which the underdog clearly outworked and outlanded Harrison. One could argue that the remainder of the rounds could’ve gone either way.

Thus, the result was anyone’s guess in the period between the final bell and the announcement of the result. The fighters, both of whom hoped to move up in the line for a shot at a major title, were expressionless when they heard the words “split draw.”

No one seemed to object to the result, at least not openly immediately after they learned their fate.

The fighters shared more than a draw after all was said and done: The both are now winless in consecutive fights. Harrison was coming off the setback against Charlo, Perrella from his last-second knockout loss to Abel Ramos in February of last year.

Well, at least they didn’t lose back-to-back fights.

Tony Harrison, Bryant Perrella fight to unsatisfying split draw

Tony Harrison and Bryant Perrella fought to unsatisfying split draw on Saturday in Los Angeles.

Tony Harrison took a small step backward while Bryant Perrella probably moved ahead somewhat. Neither fighter left the ring satisfied on Saturday.

Harrison, the former junior middleweight titleholder, and Perrella fought to a split draw in a 12-round fight that was difficult to score at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in downtown Los Angeles.

The wide disparity in the scoring was evidence of that. Judge Max DeLuca had Harrison winning 116-112, eight rounds to four. Lou Moret scored it for Perrella 117-111. And Zachary Young had it 114-114. Boxing Junkie scored it 115-113 for Perrella.

Harrison (28-3-1, 21 KOs) hadn’t fought since December 2019, when he lost his title by knockout to Jermell Charlo. That was the last time Harrison had in his corner his father/trainer Ali Salaam, who died of COVID-19 a year ago.

And perhaps the layoff and absence of a familiar voice played a role in his performance, which was so-so at best. He threw a lot of jabs but relatively few power shots, only 14 per round, according to CompuBox.

Perrella was the busier fighter overall, outpunching Harrison 692-453 overall and 396-171 in power shots. That obviously impressed Moret. However, Perrella outlanded Harrison only 150-138 and Harrison might’ve landed the cleaner punches, which apparently swayed DeLuca.

Perrella probably had to two biggest rounds in the fight, Nos. 3 and 6, during which the underdog clearly outworked and outlanded Harrison. One could argue that the remainder of the rounds could’ve gone either way.

Thus, the result was anyone’s guess in the period between the final bell and the announcement of the result. The fighters, both of whom hoped to move up in the line for a shot at a major title, were expressionless when they heard the words “split draw.”

No one seemed to object to the result, at least not openly immediately after they learned their fate.

The fighters shared more than a draw after all was said and done: The both are now winless in consecutive fights. Harrison was coming off the setback against Charlo, Perrella from his last-second knockout loss to Abel Ramos in February of last year.

Well, at least they didn’t lose back-to-back fights.

Tony Harrison ‘fired up’ to start new chapter in his career

Tony Harrison said he’s “fired up” to start a new chapter in his career.

Tony Harrison will be fighting on Saturday without someone who has been his corner from day one: his father.

Ali Salaam, who has trained the junior middleweight contender for almost his entire career, died of complications related to COVID-19 in April of last year. LJ Harrison, his brother, has taken over the training duties.

Of course, the loss of his dad and mentor was difficult for Tony Harrison. However, he feels emotional fit entering his fight with Bryant Perrella at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in Los Angeles (Fox).

“I wouldn’t [fight] if I wasn’t ready,” said Harrison, who is coming off an 11th-round knockout loss to Jermell Charlo that cost him the title he won by outpointing Charlo a year earlier. “He taught me how to fight. All I can do now is relive what he told me in my mind to keep me going.

“Trust me, I wouldn’t be in the ring if I wasn’t ready to fight. It’s always hard losing a father but I’m ready.”

Jermell Charlo (right) stopped Tony Harrison in their rematch. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Tony Harrison said he has confidence in his brother, a mainstay at Salaam’s SuperBad Boxing Gym in Detroit since he retired as a pro basketball player overseas in 2014. He has specialized in strength and conditioning but also learned the technical ropes from his father.

Salaam was an old-school disciplinarian, which obviously worked in his son’s case. LJ is a more modern, more subtle coach. Tony is comfortable with that approach.

“Our chemistry is good,” the fighter said, referring to LJ. “Just having youth on our side, just having him understand how times are rolling. My dad was a little strict in everything he did. My brother is a little more lenient. He was a professional athlete himself.

“He understands what I need and when I need it. He’s not so head strong that things be done his way.”

The brothers have a significant task in front of them: rebuilding after the loss against Charlo.

Harrison said he doesn’t think much about the setback but acknowledged that it gnaws at him when he does. He tells himself that he was doing well – the fight was close on the cards – and that victory was within his grasp.

And then it was over. A left hook led to two knockdowns and ultimately a stoppage.

Can Harrison bounce back from that kind of loss? Setbacks – even brutal ones – are part of the sport, he said. As long a fighter accepts that and focuses on what got him there in the first place, he should be just fine.

Can Harrison bounce back from his disappointment? Frank Micelotta / Fox Sports / Picture Group

“The fight game sometimes is a game of inches, like football,” said Harrison, whose cousin is former San Diego Chargers tight end Antonio Gates. “A wrong inch one way or another can cost you a fight. That’s how it is.

“You just have to stay fundamentally sound, you just have to stay disciplined. And, at 30, I’m the most disciplined I’ve ever been.”

The comeback starts against Perrella (17-3, 14 KOs), a capable southpaw who is coming off a last-second knockout loss to Abel Ramos in February of last year. And it comes after a 16-month haitus, the longest of Harrison’s career.

He respects Perrella, who is moving up in weight to face him. And he’s as curious as everyone else about whether he’ll be rusty after the layoff, although he said he worked hard and felt during his first training camp with his brother as head trainer.

The only thing he knows for sure going into the fight? He’s excited, excited to get back into the ring, excited to have his hand raised again, excited to get back on a path toward a world title.

“To be honest I am itchy to get back in there,” he said. “Sparring has been tough, losing the weight has been tough. All in all, the journey has been worthwhile. I’m looking forward to getting back into the ring.

“I’m really fired up. I’m ready to do this for everyone, for me, for [my brother], for Ali. I’m ready to showcase what I can do.”

[lawrence-related id=19398,19259,8404,4362,6231]

Tony Harrison ‘fired up’ to start new chapter in his career

Tony Harrison said he’s “fired up” to start a new chapter in his career.

Tony Harrison will be fighting on Saturday without someone who has been his corner from day one: his father.

Ali Salaam, who has trained the junior middleweight contender for almost his entire career, died of complications related to COVID-19 in April of last year. LJ Harrison, his brother, has taken over the training duties.

Of course, the loss of his dad and mentor was difficult for Tony Harrison. However, he feels emotional fit entering his fight with Bryant Perrella at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in Los Angeles (Fox).

“I wouldn’t [fight] if I wasn’t ready,” said Harrison, who is coming off an 11th-round knockout loss to Jermell Charlo that cost him the title he won by outpointing Charlo a year earlier. “He taught me how to fight. All I can do now is relive what he told me in my mind to keep me going.

“Trust me, I wouldn’t be in the ring if I wasn’t ready to fight. It’s always hard losing a father but I’m ready.”

Jermell Charlo (right) stopped Tony Harrison in their rematch. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Tony Harrison said he has confidence in his brother, a mainstay at Salaam’s SuperBad Boxing Gym in Detroit since he retired as a pro basketball player overseas in 2014. He has specialized in strength and conditioning but also learned the technical ropes from his father.

Salaam was an old-school disciplinarian, which obviously worked in his son’s case. LJ is a more modern, more subtle coach. Tony is comfortable with that approach.

“Our chemistry is good,” the fighter said, referring to LJ. “Just having youth on our side, just having him understand how times are rolling. My dad was a little strict in everything he did. My brother is a little more lenient. He was a professional athlete himself.

“He understands what I need and when I need it. He’s not so head strong that things be done his way.”

The brothers have a significant task in front of them: rebuilding after the loss against Charlo.

Harrison said he doesn’t think much about the setback but acknowledged that it gnaws at him when he does. He tells himself that he was doing well – the fight was close on the cards – and that victory was within his grasp.

And then it was over. A left hook led to two knockdowns and ultimately a stoppage.

Can Harrison bounce back from that kind of loss? Setbacks – even brutal ones – are part of the sport, he said. As long a fighter accepts that and focuses on what got him there in the first place, he should be just fine.

Can Harrison bounce back from his disappointment? Frank Micelotta / Fox Sports / Picture Group

“The fight game sometimes is a game of inches, like football,” said Harrison, whose cousin is former San Diego Chargers tight end Antonio Gates. “A wrong inch one way or another can cost you a fight. That’s how it is.

“You just have to stay fundamentally sound, you just have to stay disciplined. And, at 30, I’m the most disciplined I’ve ever been.”

The comeback starts against Perrella (17-3, 14 KOs), a capable southpaw who is coming off a last-second knockout loss to Abel Ramos in February of last year. And it comes after a 16-month haitus, the longest of Harrison’s career.

He respects Perrella, who is moving up in weight to face him. And he’s as curious as everyone else about whether he’ll be rusty after the layoff, although he said he worked hard and felt during his first training camp with his brother as head trainer.

The only thing he knows for sure going into the fight? He’s excited, excited to get back into the ring, excited to have his hand raised again, excited to get back on a path toward a world title.

“To be honest I am itchy to get back in there,” he said. “Sparring has been tough, losing the weight has been tough. All in all, the journey has been worthwhile. I’m looking forward to getting back into the ring.

“I’m really fired up. I’m ready to do this for everyone, for me, for [my brother], for Ali. I’m ready to showcase what I can do.”

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