Devin Haney vs. Vasiliy Lomachenko: LIVE round-by-round updates, results, full coverage

Devin Haney vs. Vasiliy Lomachenko: LIVE round-by-round updates, results, full coverage.

Devin Haney defeated Vasiliy Lomachenko by a unanimous decision to retain his undisputed 135-pound championship.

The official scores were 116-112, 115-113 and 115-113.

A full report will be posted shortly.

***

ROUND 12

Haney wouldn’t give in. I think he edged that round. He was busier, he landed some good shots. He might’ve won the fight in the process. I have no idea how this fight is going to be scored. Great technical fight no matter who has his hand raised.

ROUND 11

Brilliant round for Lomachenko. He dominated Haney in that round, landing almost at will. Haney looks off. Maybe he’s just tired, maybe he just doesn’t have answers for what Lomachenko is throwing at him. Bottom line: It’s all Lomachenko now.

ROUND 10

Lomachenko has the momentum now. He’s the one landing the clean, eye-catching shots. And Haney is having trouble connecting. It’s as Lomachenko has solved whatever riddles Haney’s presents. Haney didn’t look good in his corner after the round; looked like he was worried.

ROUND 9

Another good round for Lomachenko, although once again the round was hard to score. He’s done a good job landing his straight left, something doubling it up. He’s letting his hands go. At the same time, Haney continues to connect on his share of accurate shots.

ROUND 8

Better round for Lomachenko? He was active, he landed some nice straight left hands. Haney matched him punch for punch, though. Another close round.

ROUND 7

Again, these rounds are competitive. Lomachenko actually had a good round; he was busy and relatively effective. Haney is still landing the cleaner, more-eye-catching shots, though. That obviously stands out to the judges.

ROUND 6

Haney is jabbing well, although he could be doing it more. And he could be winning the fight with his body work. He can’t miss to the gut. That said, it was another competitive round. Lomachenko had some good moments too.

ROUND 5

There isn’t much separating these guys but Haney is landing the cleaner shots, both the body and head. And he’s doing a really good defensively; Lomachenko is finding it difficult to land cleanly.

ROUND 4

I feel sorry for the judges. How the hell are you supposed to score these rounds. That said, Haney had a pretty good round. He continued to land to the body and connected on some good head shots. Again, though, it was close.

ROUND 3

Good round for Lomachenko, who was busier that round and landed some eye-catching blows. Let’s face it, though: Both of these guys will have to work extremely hard for everything they get. That’s what happens when the skill level is this high.

ROUND 2

Great, high-level, back-and-forth stuff. One guy lands a punch or combination and the other responds in kind, although neither is landing big shots. This is absolutely even at this moment.

ROUND 1

Good energy, pretty good pace but not many punches landed. Both guys are still trying to find their ranges. Opening round was hard to score.

***

We’re only a few minutes away. Enjoy the main event.

***

Former two-division titleholder Oscar Valdez defeated Adam Lopez by a unanimous decision in a 10-round lightweight bout, the winnerz’s first fight in more than a year.

The official scores were 98-91, 98-92 and 97-93.

Valdez (31-1, 23 KOs) survived an early knockdown to stop Lopez in 2019. Lopez survived on Saturday but the fight wasn’t close, as Valdez controlled the fight from the outset.

He stalked the elusive Lopez (16-5, 6 KOs) and landed hard, accurate shots throughout. Lopez did a good job of surviving but didn’t do enough offensively to make the fight competitive.

Lopez’s nose appeared to have been broken by an accidental head butt in the final round but he managed to hear the final bell.

***

Lightweight prospect Raymond Muratalla stopped Jeremia Nakathila in the second round of a scheduled 10-rounder. The official time of the stoppage was 2:48.

Muratalla (18-0, 15 KOs) hurt Nakathila (23-3, 19 KOs) with a straight right and then followed with a flurry of hard blows that prompted the referee to stop the fight.

Nakathila, a veteran from Namibia, had never been stopped before Saturday.

***

Junto Nakatani stopped Andrew Moloney with a massive left hand in the 12th round to the win the vacant WBO 115-pound title, giving the Japanese fighter a major belt in a second division.

The official time of the stoppage was 2:42 of the final stanza.

Nakatani (25-0, 19 KOs) put the game, but overmatched Moloney down three times but it was the last one that won’t soon be forgotten.

The new champion appeared to be on his way to a wide unanimous decision victory when the southpaw landed a looping left that instantaneously rendered Moloney unconscious.

Moloney lay prone for several minutes before getting to his feet and congratulating Nakatani.

A full report will be posted shortly.

***

Nico Ali Walsh lost his perfect record.

The grandson of Hall of Famer Muhammad Ali and Danny Rosenberger fought to a split draw in an eight-round middleweight bout. One judge scored it for Ali Walsh 77-75, another had the same score for Rosenberger and the third scored it even.

The inexperienced Ali Walsh (8-0-1, 5 KOs) had difficulty coping with the movement of Rosenberger (13-9-5, 4 KOs).

***

Devin Haney is scheduled to defend his undisputed 135-pound championship against Vasiliy Lomachenko on pay-per-view Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las VEgas.

The featured bouts on the card begin at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in show.

Boxing Junkie will post the results of the main event and other featured bouts immediately after they end. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the day of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=37390,37385,37381,37376,37372,37361]

Devin Haney vs. Vasiliy Lomachenko: LIVE round-by-round updates, results, full coverage

Devin Haney vs. Vasiliy Lomachenko: LIVE round-by-round updates, results, full coverage.

Devin Haney defeated Vasiliy Lomachenko by a unanimous decision to retain his undisputed 135-pound championship.

The official scores were 116-112, 115-113 and 115-113.

A full report will be posted shortly.

***

ROUND 12

Haney wouldn’t give in. I think he edged that round. He was busier, he landed some good shots. He might’ve won the fight in the process. I have no idea how this fight is going to be scored. Great technical fight no matter who has his hand raised.

ROUND 11

Brilliant round for Lomachenko. He dominated Haney in that round, landing almost at will. Haney looks off. Maybe he’s just tired, maybe he just doesn’t have answers for what Lomachenko is throwing at him. Bottom line: It’s all Lomachenko now.

ROUND 10

Lomachenko has the momentum now. He’s the one landing the clean, eye-catching shots. And Haney is having trouble connecting. It’s as Lomachenko has solved whatever riddles Haney’s presents. Haney didn’t look good in his corner after the round; looked like he was worried.

ROUND 9

Another good round for Lomachenko, although once again the round was hard to score. He’s done a good job landing his straight left, something doubling it up. He’s letting his hands go. At the same time, Haney continues to connect on his share of accurate shots.

ROUND 8

Better round for Lomachenko? He was active, he landed some nice straight left hands. Haney matched him punch for punch, though. Another close round.

ROUND 7

Again, these rounds are competitive. Lomachenko actually had a good round; he was busy and relatively effective. Haney is still landing the cleaner, more-eye-catching shots, though. That obviously stands out to the judges.

ROUND 6

Haney is jabbing well, although he could be doing it more. And he could be winning the fight with his body work. He can’t miss to the gut. That said, it was another competitive round. Lomachenko had some good moments too.

ROUND 5

There isn’t much separating these guys but Haney is landing the cleaner shots, both the body and head. And he’s doing a really good defensively; Lomachenko is finding it difficult to land cleanly.

ROUND 4

I feel sorry for the judges. How the hell are you supposed to score these rounds. That said, Haney had a pretty good round. He continued to land to the body and connected on some good head shots. Again, though, it was close.

ROUND 3

Good round for Lomachenko, who was busier that round and landed some eye-catching blows. Let’s face it, though: Both of these guys will have to work extremely hard for everything they get. That’s what happens when the skill level is this high.

ROUND 2

Great, high-level, back-and-forth stuff. One guy lands a punch or combination and the other responds in kind, although neither is landing big shots. This is absolutely even at this moment.

ROUND 1

Good energy, pretty good pace but not many punches landed. Both guys are still trying to find their ranges. Opening round was hard to score.

***

We’re only a few minutes away. Enjoy the main event.

***

Former two-division titleholder Oscar Valdez defeated Adam Lopez by a unanimous decision in a 10-round lightweight bout, the winnerz’s first fight in more than a year.

The official scores were 98-91, 98-92 and 97-93.

Valdez (31-1, 23 KOs) survived an early knockdown to stop Lopez in 2019. Lopez survived on Saturday but the fight wasn’t close, as Valdez controlled the fight from the outset.

He stalked the elusive Lopez (16-5, 6 KOs) and landed hard, accurate shots throughout. Lopez did a good job of surviving but didn’t do enough offensively to make the fight competitive.

Lopez’s nose appeared to have been broken by an accidental head butt in the final round but he managed to hear the final bell.

***

Lightweight prospect Raymond Muratalla stopped Jeremia Nakathila in the second round of a scheduled 10-rounder. The official time of the stoppage was 2:48.

Muratalla (18-0, 15 KOs) hurt Nakathila (23-3, 19 KOs) with a straight right and then followed with a flurry of hard blows that prompted the referee to stop the fight.

Nakathila, a veteran from Namibia, had never been stopped before Saturday.

***

Junto Nakatani stopped Andrew Moloney with a massive left hand in the 12th round to the win the vacant WBO 115-pound title, giving the Japanese fighter a major belt in a second division.

The official time of the stoppage was 2:42 of the final stanza.

Nakatani (25-0, 19 KOs) put the game, but overmatched Moloney down three times but it was the last one that won’t soon be forgotten.

The new champion appeared to be on his way to a wide unanimous decision victory when the southpaw landed a looping left that instantaneously rendered Moloney unconscious.

Moloney lay prone for several minutes before getting to his feet and congratulating Nakatani.

A full report will be posted shortly.

***

Nico Ali Walsh lost his perfect record.

The grandson of Hall of Famer Muhammad Ali and Danny Rosenberger fought to a split draw in an eight-round middleweight bout. One judge scored it for Ali Walsh 77-75, another had the same score for Rosenberger and the third scored it even.

The inexperienced Ali Walsh (8-0-1, 5 KOs) had difficulty coping with the movement of Rosenberger (13-9-5, 4 KOs).

***

Devin Haney is scheduled to defend his undisputed 135-pound championship against Vasiliy Lomachenko on pay-per-view Saturday at the MGM Grand in Las VEgas.

The featured bouts on the card begin at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in show.

Boxing Junkie will post the results of the main event and other featured bouts immediately after they end. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the day of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=37390,37385,37381,37376,37372,37361]

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba defeated Stephan Shaw by a unanimous decision in a 10-round bout Saturday at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York.

All three judges had the same score, 96-94, six rounds to four.

Neither fighter landed many eye-catching punches but Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs) was the aggressor and outworked Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs), including dozens of jabs that kept Shaw at a distance for most of the fight.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Jonathan Rice defeated Guido Vianello by a technical knockout in the seventh round after the Italian couldn’t continue because of a cut over his left eye in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout.

Vianello (15-7-1, 10 KOs) seemed to have outworked Rice (15-7-1, 10 KOs) for most of the fight to build a lead on the cards.

However, in the sixth round, Rice landed a straight right that caused a gruesome cut below Vianello’s left eyebrow. The ring doctor, who was summoned after the seventh round had begun, said Vianello couldn’t continue.

The ending was bizarre. Referee Benjy Esteves initially ruled that the cut was caused by a clash of heads, which would’ve sent the fight to the scorecards. However, a member of the Oneida Indian Nation Athletic Commission essentially ordered Esteves to check the replay, which indicated the cut was caused by a punch.

Thus, Rice, who took the fight on a few weeks notice, was declared the winner.

***

Abraham Nova (22-1, 15 KOs) put Adam Lopez (16-4, 6 KOs) down twice and defeated him by a unanimous decision in a 10-round 130-pound fight.

The scores were 98-90, 98-92 and 97-91. Lopez went down in the fifth and sixth rounds.

***

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba is scheduled to take on Stephan Shaw tonight (Saturday) at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York on ESPN and ESPN+.

Also on the card, Guido Vianello will face Jonathan Rice in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout. And Adam Lopez will face Abraham Nova in a 10-round 130-pound bout.

The main portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the broadcast.

Boxing Junkie will post the result of the main event immediately afterward. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes. We’ll also post the results of other featured bouts.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=35145,35142,35138,35134]

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba defeated Stephan Shaw by a unanimous decision in a 10-round bout Saturday at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York.

All three judges had the same score, 96-94, six rounds to four.

Neither fighter landed many eye-catching punches but Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs) was the aggressor and outworked Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs), including dozens of jabs that kept Shaw at a distance for most of the fight.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Jonathan Rice defeated Guido Vianello by a technical knockout in the seventh round after the Italian couldn’t continue because of a cut over his left eye in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout.

Vianello (15-7-1, 10 KOs) seemed to have outworked Rice (15-7-1, 10 KOs) for most of the fight to build a lead on the cards.

However, in the sixth round, Rice landed a straight right that caused a gruesome cut below Vianello’s left eyebrow. The ring doctor, who was summoned after the seventh round had begun, said Vianello couldn’t continue.

The ending was bizarre. Referee Benjy Esteves initially ruled that the cut was caused by a clash of heads, which would’ve sent the fight to the scorecards. However, a member of the Oneida Indian Nation Athletic Commission essentially ordered Esteves to check the replay, which indicated the cut was caused by a punch.

Thus, Rice, who took the fight on a few weeks notice, was declared the winner.

***

Abraham Nova (22-1, 15 KOs) put Adam Lopez (16-4, 6 KOs) down twice and defeated him by a unanimous decision in a 10-round 130-pound fight.

The scores were 98-90, 98-92 and 97-91. Lopez went down in the fifth and sixth rounds.

***

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba is scheduled to take on Stephan Shaw tonight (Saturday) at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York on ESPN and ESPN+.

Also on the card, Guido Vianello will face Jonathan Rice in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout. And Adam Lopez will face Abraham Nova in a 10-round 130-pound bout.

The main portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the broadcast.

Boxing Junkie will post the result of the main event immediately afterward. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes. We’ll also post the results of other featured bouts.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=35145,35142,35138,35134]

Video: Efe Ajagba weighs in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½

Video: Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½ for their heavyweight fight Saturday on ESPN and ESPN+.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼ pounds for his scheduled 10-rounder against Stephan Shaw on Saturday in Verona, New York (ESPN, ESPN+). Shaw came in at 239½.

The fighters’ have fought at similar weights in recent fights.

Ajagba (16-1, 13 KOs) rebounded from his unanimous-decision loss to Frank Sanchez in October 2021 to stop Jozsef Darmos in two rounds this past August. Shaw (18-0, 13 KOs) last fought in November, when he outpointed Rydell Booker.

In other featured bouts on the card, heavyweights Jonathan Rice and Guido Vianello weighed 274¼ and 239, respectively. And Adam Lopez and Abraham Nova both came in at 129 for their junior lightweight matchup.

[lawrence-related id=35138,35134,35106]

Video: Efe Ajagba weighs in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½

Video: Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½ for their heavyweight fight Saturday on ESPN and ESPN+.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼ pounds for his scheduled 10-rounder against Stephan Shaw on Saturday in Verona, New York (ESPN, ESPN+). Shaw came in at 239½.

The fighters’ have fought at similar weights in recent fights.

Ajagba (16-1, 13 KOs) rebounded from his unanimous-decision loss to Frank Sanchez in October 2021 to stop Jozsef Darmos in two rounds this past August. Shaw (18-0, 13 KOs) last fought in November, when he outpointed Rydell Booker.

In other featured bouts on the card, heavyweights Jonathan Rice and Guido Vianello weighed 274¼ and 239, respectively. And Adam Lopez and Abraham Nova both came in at 129 for their junior lightweight matchup.

[lawrence-related id=35138,35134,35106]

Richard Commey bounces back with KO of Jackson Marinez

Richard Commey bounced back from his knockout loss to Teofimo Lopez by stopping Jackson Marinez on Saturday.

Richard Commey is back.

The hard-punching Ghanaian, coming off a second-round knockout loss to Teofimo Lopez that cost him his 135-pound title in December 2019, took out his frustration on Jackson Marinez on Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Commey broke Marinez down, put him on the canvas with a right hand and then ended the show with another, more-brutal right 2:35 into Round 6 of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout.

“When I first started,” Commey said, “I started very slow because I’ve been away for more than a year, so I had to take my time a little bit just to get my rhythm.

“My corner was telling me to do something. They saw that punch that took him down.”

Commey (30-3, 27 KOs) was devastated by the loss to Lopez, which put an instantaneous stop to momentum that had built over years.

However, he didn’t fight like a man who was gun shy. He started firing off his vaunted right hand from the beginning of the fight.

Marinez, a good boxer who was coming off a disputed loss to Rolando Romero, coped fairly well for five-plus rounds. He used his jab, movement and slick defense to avoid taking a shot that could hurt him and landed enough of his own punches to keep it close.

Commey led on two cards after five rounds (48-47 and 49-46) while Marinez led on the third (48-47). Boxing Junkie had Commey leading 48-47.

All that became moot in Round 6, when Marinez (19-2, 7 KOs) seem to begin wilting under Commey’s pressure and power.

The Dominican went down the first time with around 45 seconds remaining in the round. He was able to get up and continue. However, moments later, Commey darted across the ring and landed a second vicious right hand that sent Marinez crashing into the ropes and down, prompting referee Kenny Bayless to end the fight.

One of the happiest onlookers was Lopez, who was standing near the ring at the time of the knockout. The two apparently became friends during their promotion and the aftermath.

Commey said he fed off the undisputed lightweight champion’s presence.

“After our fight, I saw him in the lobby and we chatted and hugged,” Commey said. “He always liked me, and it’s pure love. For him to come down to my corner, it was motivating. It showed tremendous love, and that’s how it’s supposed to be.

“We gotta love each other, regardless of where you’re from or who you are. I appreciated [his support].”

Commey’s goal is earn an opportunity to fight for another title. He took a significant step in that direction with a vintage performance on Saturday.

In other fights, 21-year-old heavyweight prospect Jared Anderson (8-0, 8 KOs) turned in a knockout-of-the-year candidate.

The gifted 6-foot-4, 249-pounder was in the process of dominating Kingsley Ibeh when he landed a monstrous left hook that knocked Ibeh (5-2-1, 4 KOs) flat on his back and out at 2:19 of the sixth and final round.

Anderson won the first five rounds on all three cards.

“We worked day and night for this,” said an excited Anderson, who is barely old enough to be in the MGM Grand casino. “While they sleep, we’re working. We will keep fighting prospects and people who say they can’t be beat. I am here to fight the best. Since everyone wants it, why not give it to them?

“I wanted the Ibeh fight because I saw him push many prospects. The knockout came, and I made a statement.”

And, in a 10-round featherweight fight, prospect Adam Lopez (15-2, 6 KOs) defeated Jason Sanchez (15-3, 8 KOs) by a majority decision.

Richard Commey bounces back with KO of Jackson Marinez

Richard Commey bounced back from his knockout loss to Teofimo Lopez by stopping Jackson Marinez on Saturday.

Richard Commey is back.

The hard-punching Ghanaian, coming off a second-round knockout loss to Teofimo Lopez that cost him his 135-pound title in December 2019, took out his frustration on Jackson Marinez on Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Commey broke Marinez down, put him on the canvas with a right hand and then ended the show with another, more-brutal right 2:35 into Round 6 of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout.

“When I first started,” Commey said, “I started very slow because I’ve been away for more than a year, so I had to take my time a little bit just to get my rhythm.

“My corner was telling me to do something. They saw that punch that took him down.”

Commey (30-3, 27 KOs) was devastated by the loss to Lopez, which put an instantaneous stop to momentum that had built over years.

However, he didn’t fight like a man who was gun shy. He started firing off his vaunted right hand from the beginning of the fight.

Marinez, a good boxer who was coming off a disputed loss to Rolando Romero, coped fairly well for five-plus rounds. He used his jab, movement and slick defense to avoid taking a shot that could hurt him and landed enough of his own punches to keep it close.

Commey led on two cards after five rounds (48-47 and 49-46) while Marinez led on the third (48-47). Boxing Junkie had Commey leading 48-47.

All that became moot in Round 6, when Marinez (19-2, 7 KOs) seem to begin wilting under Commey’s pressure and power.

The Dominican went down the first time with around 45 seconds remaining in the round. He was able to get up and continue. However, moments later, Commey darted across the ring and landed a second vicious right hand that sent Marinez crashing into the ropes and down, prompting referee Kenny Bayless to end the fight.

One of the happiest onlookers was Lopez, who was standing near the ring at the time of the knockout. The two apparently became friends during their promotion and the aftermath.

Commey said he fed off the undisputed lightweight champion’s presence.

“After our fight, I saw him in the lobby and we chatted and hugged,” Commey said. “He always liked me, and it’s pure love. For him to come down to my corner, it was motivating. It showed tremendous love, and that’s how it’s supposed to be.

“We gotta love each other, regardless of where you’re from or who you are. I appreciated [his support].”

Commey’s goal is earn an opportunity to fight for another title. He took a significant step in that direction with a vintage performance on Saturday.

In other fights, 21-year-old heavyweight prospect Jared Anderson (8-0, 8 KOs) turned in a knockout-of-the-year candidate.

The gifted 6-foot-4, 249-pounder was in the process of dominating Kingsley Ibeh when he landed a monstrous left hook that knocked Ibeh (5-2-1, 4 KOs) flat on his back and out at 2:19 of the sixth and final round.

Anderson won the first five rounds on all three cards.

“We worked day and night for this,” said an excited Anderson, who is barely old enough to be in the MGM Grand casino. “While they sleep, we’re working. We will keep fighting prospects and people who say they can’t be beat. I am here to fight the best. Since everyone wants it, why not give it to them?

“I wanted the Ibeh fight because I saw him push many prospects. The knockout came, and I made a statement.”

And, in a 10-round featherweight fight, prospect Adam Lopez (15-2, 6 KOs) defeated Jason Sanchez (15-3, 8 KOs) by a majority decision.

Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez: time, how to watch, background

Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez: time, how to watch, background

Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez became the main event tonight on ESPN after a bout between Joe Smith Jr. and Maxim Vlasov fell out after the latter tested positive for COVID-19.

***

RICHARD COMMEY (29-3, 26 KOs) VS.
JACKSON MARINEZ (19-1, 7 KOS)

Most people seem to think that Jackson Marinez (right) did enough to beat Rolando Romero. Amanda Westcott / Showtime
  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 13
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: MGM Grand, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Commey 2½-1
  • Also on the card: Adam Lopez vs. Jason Sanchez, 10 rounds, featherweights
  • Prediction: Marinez UD
  • Background: Both main event fighters are trying to bounce back from disappointments, although they came in different forms. Commey was brutally stopped in the second round by Teofimo Lopez in December 2019 at Madison Square Garden in New York, which cost him his lightweight title and some respect in the boxing community. The 33-year-old puncher from Ghana, who is ranked by two of the four major sanctioning bodies, can’t afford a second consecutive setback if he hopes to remain an elite fighter. Marinez is a 30-year-old from the Dominican Republic who works with trainer Robert Garcia. He is coming off a disputed unanimous-decision loss to contender Rolando Romero for an “interim” title this past August at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn. Many believe Marinez, a slick boxer, deserved the decision. A victory over Commey would solidify his position as a player at 135 pounds. He’s ranked No. 6 by the WBA.

[lawrence-related id=17713,17705,4072,17692]

 

Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez: time, how to watch, background

Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez: time, how to watch, background

Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez became the main event tonight on ESPN after a bout between Joe Smith Jr. and Maxim Vlasov fell out after the latter tested positive for COVID-19.

***

RICHARD COMMEY (29-3, 26 KOs) VS.
JACKSON MARINEZ (19-1, 7 KOS)

Most people seem to think that Jackson Marinez (right) did enough to beat Rolando Romero. Amanda Westcott / Showtime
  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 13
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: MGM Grand, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Commey 2½-1
  • Also on the card: Adam Lopez vs. Jason Sanchez, 10 rounds, featherweights
  • Prediction: Marinez UD
  • Background: Both main event fighters are trying to bounce back from disappointments, although they came in different forms. Commey was brutally stopped in the second round by Teofimo Lopez in December 2019 at Madison Square Garden in New York, which cost him his lightweight title and some respect in the boxing community. The 33-year-old puncher from Ghana, who is ranked by two of the four major sanctioning bodies, can’t afford a second consecutive setback if he hopes to remain an elite fighter. Marinez is a 30-year-old from the Dominican Republic who works with trainer Robert Garcia. He is coming off a disputed unanimous-decision loss to contender Rolando Romero for an “interim” title this past August at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn. Many believe Marinez, a slick boxer, deserved the decision. A victory over Commey would solidify his position as a player at 135 pounds. He’s ranked No. 6 by the WBA.

[lawrence-related id=17713,17705,4072,17692]