Canelo Alvarez vs. Avni Yildirim: time, how to watch, analysis, prediction

Canelo Alvarez vs. Avni Yildirim: time, how to watch, analysis, prediction

CANELO ALVAREZ
VS. AVNI YILDIRIM

THE MEXICAN STAR DEFENDS HIS TITLES AGAINST HIS MANDATORY CHALLENGER ON SATURDAY IN MIAMI

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Start time: 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • How to watchDAZN (download app) and pay-per-view
  • Cost: DAZN is $19.99 per month or $99 annually. PPV is $49.99 in U.S. Includes DAZN subscription through the end of April 2021 with purchase.
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Alvarez’s WBA and WBC titles
  • Odds: Alvarez 21-1 (BetMGM)

***

CANELO ALVAREZ BIO

Canelo Alvarez speaks to the media at the news conference to kick off the promotion for his fight against Avni Yildirim. AP Photo / Marta Lavandier
  • Record: 54-1-2, 36 KOs
  • Current titles: WBA and WBC super middleweight
  • Other titles: WBC junior middleweight (2011-13), WBC middleweight (2015-16), WBO junior middleweight (2016-17), WBA and WBC middleweight (2018-20), IBF middleweight (2019), WBO light heavyweight (2019-20), WBA and WBC super middleweight (2020-present)
  • Home country: Mexico (Guadalajara)
  • Age: 30
  • Pro debut: 2005
  • Pro rounds: 414
  • Height: 5 feet, 8 inches (173 cm)
  • Reach: 70½ inches (179 cm)
  • Stance: Orthodox
  • Trainer: Eddy Reynoso

***

AVNI YILDIRIM BIO

Avni Yildirm was all smiles at the news conference at Hard Rock Stadium, the site of the fight. Chandan Khanna / AFP via Getty Images
  • Record: 21-2 (12 KOs)
  • Current titles: None
  • Other titles: None
  • Home country: Turkey (Istanbul)
  • Age: 29
  • Pro debut: 2014
  • Pro rounds: 132
  • Height: 5 feet, 11½ inch (182 cm)
  • Reach: 70 inches (178 cm)
  • Stance: Orthodox
  • Trainer: Ahmet Oner

***

WHY YOU SHOULD WATCH

Canelo Alvarez is fighting. Is there a better reason? The Mexican star is 30. Who knows how many more high quality performances are left in him, although he shows no signs of slowing down Plus, this fight sets up what could be back-to-back title-unification showdowns with Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant this year. The downside of the fight on Saturday is obvious: Yildirim, a 21-1 underdog, has almost no chance to win. Alvarez is levels above the solid, but limited Turk, who is the mandatory challenger to the WBC title. If you like to watch an overmatched challenger endure a one-side beating, this fight is for you. And, hey, a lot of people will be watching.

***

FIVE KEY QUESTIONS

How much better is Alvarez than Yildirim? A lot. Yildirim is taller and naturally bigger than Alvarez. Otherwise, Canelo has all the advantages.

Does Yildirim have a chance? Of course. He can land a lucky punch. Alvarez could get cut. Anything can happen in boxing.

Is Alvarez fighting again too soon? Doubtful. He went 12 rounds but had an easy time with Callum Smith two months ago.

Could Alvarez be overlooking Yildirim? Not a chance. No one is boxing is more professional than Alvarez. He takes ’em one fight at at time.

Could this be Alvarez’s biggest year? One of them if he fights and beats both Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant to unify all the 168-pound titles.

***

WHY ALVAREZ WILL WIN

Yildirim is taller than Alvarez, as most of his opponents are. And he’s naturally somewhat bigger. However, that means next to nothing when you compare their abilities and experience. Alvarez has significant advantages across the board — speed, athleticism, skill, power, ring IQ and durability. Yildirim was stopped in three rounds by Chris Eubank Jr. in 2017. And the gulf in experience is wide: Alvarez, who turned pro at 15, has fought 414 professional rounds, Yildirim 132. Alvarez is better, smarter and tougher than his opponent. Hence the odds.

WHY YILDIRIM WILL WIN

Yildirim has faced fighters 168 pounds or bigger his entire career. He should be able to handle Alvarez’s punches, at least for a while. His best bet is to box as well as he can, land punches here and there to prevent Alvarez from finding his rhythm, avoid taking too much punishment and somehow get into the second half of the fight. Then, perhaps, Alvarez will begin to tire and Yildirim can fight more aggressively and win rounds or hurt Alvarez. This scenario is highly unlikely … but possible.

PREDICTION

Alvarez will be Alvarez. He’ll take his time, wait for openings and then pounce when they present themselves. And they will present themselves. Yildirim is a decent boxer with some toughness but he doesn’t have the tools to cope with what Alvarez brings. The Turk will absorb the punches he takes in the early rounds but the more that land, the more they will wear him down. He will have taken too much punishment by the eighth or ninth round, at which time he will take a 10 count or the fight will be stopped by the referee or Yildirim’s corner.

Alvarez KO 9

***

ALSO ON THE CARD

  • Julioe Cesar Martinez vs. vs. McWilliams Arroyo, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title)
  • Zhang Zhilei vs. Jerry Forrest, heavyweights

[lawrence-related id=17675,17549,17532]

Canelo Alvarez vs. Avni Yildirim: time, how to watch, analysis, prediction

Canelo Alvarez vs. Avni Yildirim: time, how to watch, analysis, prediction

CANELO ALVAREZ
VS. AVNI YILDIRIM

THE MEXICAN STAR DEFENDS HIS TITLES AGAINST HIS MANDATORY CHALLENGER ON SATURDAY IN MIAMI

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Start time: 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • How to watchDAZN (download app) and pay-per-view
  • Cost: DAZN is $19.99 per month or $99 annually. PPV is $49.99 in U.S. Includes DAZN subscription through the end of April 2021 with purchase.
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Alvarez’s WBA and WBC titles
  • Odds: Alvarez 21-1 (BetMGM)

***

CANELO ALVAREZ BIO

Canelo Alvarez speaks to the media at the news conference to kick off the promotion for his fight against Avni Yildirim. AP Photo / Marta Lavandier
  • Record: 54-1-2, 36 KOs
  • Current titles: WBA and WBC super middleweight
  • Other titles: WBC junior middleweight (2011-13), WBC middleweight (2015-16), WBO junior middleweight (2016-17), WBA and WBC middleweight (2018-20), IBF middleweight (2019), WBO light heavyweight (2019-20), WBA and WBC super middleweight (2020-present)
  • Home country: Mexico (Guadalajara)
  • Age: 30
  • Pro debut: 2005
  • Pro rounds: 414
  • Height: 5 feet, 8 inches (173 cm)
  • Reach: 70½ inches (179 cm)
  • Stance: Orthodox
  • Trainer: Eddy Reynoso

***

AVNI YILDIRIM BIO

Avni Yildirm was all smiles at the news conference at Hard Rock Stadium, the site of the fight. Chandan Khanna / AFP via Getty Images
  • Record: 21-2 (12 KOs)
  • Current titles: None
  • Other titles: None
  • Home country: Turkey (Istanbul)
  • Age: 29
  • Pro debut: 2014
  • Pro rounds: 132
  • Height: 5 feet, 11½ inch (182 cm)
  • Reach: 70 inches (178 cm)
  • Stance: Orthodox
  • Trainer: Ahmet Oner

***

WHY YOU SHOULD WATCH

Canelo Alvarez is fighting. Is there a better reason? The Mexican star is 30. Who knows how many more high quality performances are left in him, although he shows no signs of slowing down Plus, this fight sets up what could be back-to-back title-unification showdowns with Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant this year. The downside of the fight on Saturday is obvious: Yildirim, a 21-1 underdog, has almost no chance to win. Alvarez is levels above the solid, but limited Turk, who is the mandatory challenger to the WBC title. If you like to watch an overmatched challenger endure a one-side beating, this fight is for you. And, hey, a lot of people will be watching.

***

FIVE KEY QUESTIONS

How much better is Alvarez than Yildirim? A lot. Yildirim is taller and naturally bigger than Alvarez. Otherwise, Canelo has all the advantages.

Does Yildirim have a chance? Of course. He can land a lucky punch. Alvarez could get cut. Anything can happen in boxing.

Is Alvarez fighting again too soon? Doubtful. He went 12 rounds but had an easy time with Callum Smith two months ago.

Could Alvarez be overlooking Yildirim? Not a chance. No one is boxing is more professional than Alvarez. He takes ’em one fight at at time.

Could this be Alvarez’s biggest year? One of them if he fights and beats both Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant to unify all the 168-pound titles.

***

WHY ALVAREZ WILL WIN

Yildirim is taller than Alvarez, as most of his opponents are. And he’s naturally somewhat bigger. However, that means next to nothing when you compare their abilities and experience. Alvarez has significant advantages across the board — speed, athleticism, skill, power, ring IQ and durability. Yildirim was stopped in three rounds by Chris Eubank Jr. in 2017. And the gulf in experience is wide: Alvarez, who turned pro at 15, has fought 414 professional rounds, Yildirim 132. Alvarez is better, smarter and tougher than his opponent. Hence the odds.

WHY YILDIRIM WILL WIN

Yildirim has faced fighters 168 pounds or bigger his entire career. He should be able to handle Alvarez’s punches, at least for a while. His best bet is to box as well as he can, land punches here and there to prevent Alvarez from finding his rhythm, avoid taking too much punishment and somehow get into the second half of the fight. Then, perhaps, Alvarez will begin to tire and Yildirim can fight more aggressively and win rounds or hurt Alvarez. This scenario is highly unlikely … but possible.

PREDICTION

Alvarez will be Alvarez. He’ll take his time, wait for openings and then pounce when they present themselves. And they will present themselves. Yildirim is a decent boxer with some toughness but he doesn’t have the tools to cope with what Alvarez brings. The Turk will absorb the punches he takes in the early rounds but the more that land, the more they will wear him down. He will have taken too much punishment by the eighth or ninth round, at which time he will take a 10 count or the fight will be stopped by the referee or Yildirim’s corner.

Alvarez KO 9

***

ALSO ON THE CARD

  • Julioe Cesar Martinez vs. vs. McWilliams Arroyo, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title)
  • Zhang Zhilei vs. Jerry Forrest, heavyweights

[lawrence-related id=17675,17549,17532]

Canelo Alvarez, Avni Yildirim make weight for fight Saturday

Canelo Alvarez and Avni Yildirim on Friday made weight for their title fight Saturday in Miami.

Canelo Alvarez and Avni Yildirim provided no drama at their weigh-in Friday.

Alvarez, who will defend his super middleweight titles, and Yildirim both weighed 167.6 pounds — .4 under the limit – for their fight Saturday night at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami (Fox).

Alvarez (54-1-2, 36 KOs) is around a 30-1 favorite, according to BetMGM. Thus, he is under pressure not only to win but dominate the challenger.

“I always went to be perfect,” Alvarez said through a translator after the weigh-in. “I always want to do things right inside the ring. This is no exception.”

Yildirim (21-2, 12 KOs) has the nickname “The Robot,” which reflects his come-forward fighting style.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faX1XNsnsXc&t=1738s

Alvarez isn’t the type of fighter to attack aggressively from the opening bell, but he implied that his opponent’s tactics could result in early fireworks.

“I always try to be patient,” he said. “It depends on what Yildirim tries to do. He [could] try to rip my head off. So it depends on what he tries to do.”

Alvarez won the WBA and WBC 168-pound titles by easily outpointing Callum Smith on Dec. 19. His plan is to beat Yildirim and then unify the four major super middleweight belts.

Yildirim is coming off a technical-decision loss to Anthony Dirrell for the then-vacant WBC title in February 2019, meaning he will have been out of the ring for two years.

The weigh-in results for the preliminary bouts are as follows:

  • Zhilei Zhang (256.2) vs. Jerry Forrest (236.6), 10 rounds, heavyweights
  • Diego Pacheco (168.0) vs. Rodolfo Gomez Jr. (167.0), eight rounds, super middleweights
  • Alexis Espino (167.8) vs. Ashton Sykes (164.2), six rounds, super middleweights
  • Aaron Aponte (139.8) vs. Harry Gigliotti (139.2), four rounds, junior welterweights
  • Keyshawn Davis (136.6) vs. Lester Brown (134.6), four rounds, lightweights

[lawrence-related id=18096,18082,18069,18057,18040]

Canelo Alvarez, Avni Yildirim make weight for fight Saturday

Canelo Alvarez and Avni Yildirim on Friday made weight for their title fight Saturday in Miami.

Canelo Alvarez and Avni Yildirim provided no drama at their weigh-in Friday.

Alvarez, who will defend his super middleweight titles, and Yildirim both weighed 167.6 pounds — .4 under the limit – for their fight Saturday night at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami (Fox).

Alvarez (54-1-2, 36 KOs) is around a 30-1 favorite, according to BetMGM. Thus, he is under pressure not only to win but dominate the challenger.

“I always went to be perfect,” Alvarez said through a translator after the weigh-in. “I always want to do things right inside the ring. This is no exception.”

Yildirim (21-2, 12 KOs) has the nickname “The Robot,” which reflects his come-forward fighting style.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faX1XNsnsXc&t=1738s

Alvarez isn’t the type of fighter to attack aggressively from the opening bell, but he implied that his opponent’s tactics could result in early fireworks.

“I always try to be patient,” he said. “It depends on what Yildirim tries to do. He [could] try to rip my head off. So it depends on what he tries to do.”

Alvarez won the WBA and WBC 168-pound titles by easily outpointing Callum Smith on Dec. 19. His plan is to beat Yildirim and then unify the four major super middleweight belts.

Yildirim is coming off a technical-decision loss to Anthony Dirrell for the then-vacant WBC title in February 2019, meaning he will have been out of the ring for two years.

The weigh-in results for the preliminary bouts are as follows:

  • Zhilei Zhang (256.2) vs. Jerry Forrest (236.6), 10 rounds, heavyweights
  • Diego Pacheco (168.0) vs. Rodolfo Gomez Jr. (167.0), eight rounds, super middleweights
  • Alexis Espino (167.8) vs. Ashton Sykes (164.2), six rounds, super middleweights
  • Aaron Aponte (139.8) vs. Harry Gigliotti (139.2), four rounds, junior welterweights
  • Keyshawn Davis (136.6) vs. Lester Brown (134.6), four rounds, lightweights

[lawrence-related id=18096,18082,18069,18057,18040]

Anthony Dirrell determined to prove that he still has it

Anthony Dirrell is determined to prove against Kyrone Davis on Saturday that he remains an elite fighter.

Anthony Dirrell’s primary goal going into his fight with Kyrone Davis on Saturday in Los Angeles isn’t complicated: The former titleholder wants to demonstrate that he remains one of the best super middleweights in the world.

Dirrell, 36, is coming off a ninth-round knockout loss to then-titleholder David Benavidez in a fight that was stopped because of a cut above Dirrell’s right eye in September 2019.

The veteran was competitive but well behind on the cards when the fight was stopped, 79-73, 78-74 and 78-74 after eight rounds. That and his previous performance against Avni Yildirim led many to believe that his best days were behind him.

Dirrell, as confident as ever, couldn’t care less what anyone thinks.

“I don’t listen to anybody,” he said on a Zoom conference call. “I don’t listen to y’all, to be honest. I know what I bring to the table. I know how I train. If I train the right way, nobody can beat me.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mr–KJPb440&t=675s

No one will question Dirrell’s toughness.

He contracted and overcame non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in the mid-2000s to reign twice as a super middleweight titleholder. He outpointed Sakio Bika to win the WBC belt in 2014 and lost it to Badou Jack by a majority decision in his first defense the following year.

In 2019, he regained the same title by winning a 10th-round technical split decision over Yildirim. Dirrell was cut above his left eye as the result of an accidental headbutt, which sent the fight to the scorecards.

Dirrell had said before the Yildirim fight that it might be his last because of his long career and desire to spend more time with his family but he couldn’t pass up the opportunity to defend his title against Benavidez, which didn’t turn out well.

Seventeen months later he seems to have a fire beneath him once again. He was asked what he wants to demonstrate against Davis (15-2, 6 KOs), a skillful technician from Delaware who is moving up from 160 pounds.

“That I’m still one of the top contenders, that I never dropped,” he said. “I’m still here, still in contention.”

The fight with Davis is a WBC title eliminator. So is a bout between Benavidez and Ronald Ellis, which is scheduled for March 13. That means the winner of the two fights could face one another for the right to fight titleholder Canelo Alvarez if Alvarez beats Yildirim on Saturday.

However, Dirrell said he wants nothing to do with the Benavidez-Ellis winner at this stage of his career.

“I don’t want it,” he said. “I want a championship, I want to fight for a belt. If it ain’t for a belt, I don’t want to fight for it. I’m not looking past Kyrone. I don’t look past nobody. I train for everybody the damn same.

“He knows what I bring to the table and the world knows what I bring to the table.”

[lawrence-related id=614,18032]

Anthony Dirrell determined to prove that he still has it

Anthony Dirrell is determined to prove against Kyrone Davis on Saturday that he remains an elite fighter.

Anthony Dirrell’s primary goal going into his fight with Kyrone Davis on Saturday in Los Angeles isn’t complicated: The former titleholder wants to demonstrate that he remains one of the best super middleweights in the world.

Dirrell, 36, is coming off a ninth-round knockout loss to then-titleholder David Benavidez in a fight that was stopped because of a cut above Dirrell’s right eye in September 2019.

The veteran was competitive but well behind on the cards when the fight was stopped, 79-73, 78-74 and 78-74 after eight rounds. That and his previous performance against Avni Yildirim led many to believe that his best days were behind him.

Dirrell, as confident as ever, couldn’t care less what anyone thinks.

“I don’t listen to anybody,” he said on a Zoom conference call. “I don’t listen to y’all, to be honest. I know what I bring to the table. I know how I train. If I train the right way, nobody can beat me.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mr–KJPb440&t=675s

No one will question Dirrell’s toughness.

He contracted and overcame non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in the mid-2000s to reign twice as a super middleweight titleholder. He outpointed Sakio Bika to win the WBC belt in 2014 and lost it to Badou Jack by a majority decision in his first defense the following year.

In 2019, he regained the same title by winning a 10th-round technical split decision over Yildirim. Dirrell was cut above his left eye as the result of an accidental headbutt, which sent the fight to the scorecards.

Dirrell had said before the Yildirim fight that it might be his last because of his long career and desire to spend more time with his family but he couldn’t pass up the opportunity to defend his title against Benavidez, which didn’t turn out well.

Seventeen months later he seems to have a fire beneath him once again. He was asked what he wants to demonstrate against Davis (15-2, 6 KOs), a skillful technician from Delaware who is moving up from 160 pounds.

“That I’m still one of the top contenders, that I never dropped,” he said. “I’m still here, still in contention.”

The fight with Davis is a WBC title eliminator. So is a bout between Benavidez and Ronald Ellis, which is scheduled for March 13. That means the winner of the two fights could face one another for the right to fight titleholder Canelo Alvarez if Alvarez beats Yildirim on Saturday.

However, Dirrell said he wants nothing to do with the Benavidez-Ellis winner at this stage of his career.

“I don’t want it,” he said. “I want a championship, I want to fight for a belt. If it ain’t for a belt, I don’t want to fight for it. I’m not looking past Kyrone. I don’t look past nobody. I train for everybody the damn same.

“He knows what I bring to the table and the world knows what I bring to the table.”

[lawrence-related id=614,18032]

Canelo Alvarez vs. Avni Yildirim: The case for both fighters, prediction

CANELO ALVAREZ VS. AVNI YILDIRIM THE MEXICAN STAR DEFENDS HIS TITLES AGAINST HIS MANDATORY CHALLENGER ON SATURDAY IN MIAMI When : Saturday, Feb. 27 Start time : 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show) Where : Hard Rock Stadium, Miami How to …

CANELO ALVAREZ
VS. AVNI YILDIRIM

THE MEXICAN STAR DEFENDS HIS TITLES AGAINST HIS MANDATORY CHALLENGER ON SATURDAY IN MIAMI

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Start time: 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • How to watchDAZN (download app) and pay-per-view
  • Cost: DAZN is $19.99 per month or $99 annually. PPV is $49.99 in U.S. Includes DAZN subscription through the end of April 2021 with purchase.
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Alvarez’s WBA and WBC titles
  • Odds: Alvarez 21-1 (BetMGM)

***

WHY ALVAREZ WILL WIN

Yildirim is taller than Alvarez, as most of his opponents are. And he’s naturally bigger. However, that means next to nothing when you compare their abilities. Alvarez has overwhelming advantages across the board — speed, athleticism, skill, power, ring IQ, durability. The list goes on. Yildirim was stopped in three rounds by Chris Eubank Jr. in 2017, which brings his chin into question. And the gulf in experience is wide: Alvarez, who turned pro at 15, has fought 414 professional rounds, Yildirim 132. Alvarez is better, smarter and tougher than his opponent. Hence the odds: Alvarez is around a 30-1 favorite.

WHY YILDIRIM WILL WIN

Yildirim has faced fighters 168 pounds or bigger his entire career. He might be able to handle Alvarez’s punches, at least for a while. His best bet is to box as well as he can, land punches here and there to prevent Alvarez from finding his rhythm, avoid taking too much punishment and somehow get into the second half of the fight. Then, perhaps, Alvarez will begin to tire and Yildirim can fight more aggressively and win rounds or hurt Alvarez. This scenario is highly unlikely … but possible. Another longshot: Yildirim somehow lands a punch that puts Alvarez away. The Turk is a big, strong guy. Crazier things have happened.

PREDICTION

Alvarez will be Alvarez. He’ll take his time, wait for openings and then pounce when they present themselves. And they will present themselves. Yildirim is a decent boxer with some toughness but he doesn’t have the tools to cope with what Alvarez brings. The Turk will absorb the punches he takes in the early rounds but the more that land, the more they will wear him down. He will have taken too much punishment by the eighth or ninth round, at which time he will take a 10 count or the fight will be stopped by the referee or Yildirim’s corner.

Alvarez KO 9

[lawrence-related id=18082,18069,18057,17675,18064]

Canelo Alvarez vs. Avni Yildirim: The case for both fighters, prediction

CANELO ALVAREZ VS. AVNI YILDIRIM THE MEXICAN STAR DEFENDS HIS TITLES AGAINST HIS MANDATORY CHALLENGER ON SATURDAY IN MIAMI When : Saturday, Feb. 27 Start time : 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show) Where : Hard Rock Stadium, Miami How to …

CANELO ALVAREZ
VS. AVNI YILDIRIM

THE MEXICAN STAR DEFENDS HIS TITLES AGAINST HIS MANDATORY CHALLENGER ON SATURDAY IN MIAMI

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Start time: 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • How to watchDAZN (download app) and pay-per-view
  • Cost: DAZN is $19.99 per month or $99 annually. PPV is $49.99 in U.S. Includes DAZN subscription through the end of April 2021 with purchase.
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Alvarez’s WBA and WBC titles
  • Odds: Alvarez 21-1 (BetMGM)

***

WHY ALVAREZ WILL WIN

Yildirim is taller than Alvarez, as most of his opponents are. And he’s naturally bigger. However, that means next to nothing when you compare their abilities. Alvarez has overwhelming advantages across the board — speed, athleticism, skill, power, ring IQ, durability. The list goes on. Yildirim was stopped in three rounds by Chris Eubank Jr. in 2017, which brings his chin into question. And the gulf in experience is wide: Alvarez, who turned pro at 15, has fought 414 professional rounds, Yildirim 132. Alvarez is better, smarter and tougher than his opponent. Hence the odds: Alvarez is around a 30-1 favorite.

WHY YILDIRIM WILL WIN

Yildirim has faced fighters 168 pounds or bigger his entire career. He might be able to handle Alvarez’s punches, at least for a while. His best bet is to box as well as he can, land punches here and there to prevent Alvarez from finding his rhythm, avoid taking too much punishment and somehow get into the second half of the fight. Then, perhaps, Alvarez will begin to tire and Yildirim can fight more aggressively and win rounds or hurt Alvarez. This scenario is highly unlikely … but possible. Another longshot: Yildirim somehow lands a punch that puts Alvarez away. The Turk is a big, strong guy. Crazier things have happened.

PREDICTION

Alvarez will be Alvarez. He’ll take his time, wait for openings and then pounce when they present themselves. And they will present themselves. Yildirim is a decent boxer with some toughness but he doesn’t have the tools to cope with what Alvarez brings. The Turk will absorb the punches he takes in the early rounds but the more that land, the more they will wear him down. He will have taken too much punishment by the eighth or ninth round, at which time he will take a 10 count or the fight will be stopped by the referee or Yildirim’s corner.

Alvarez KO 9

[lawrence-related id=18082,18069,18057,17675,18064]

Canelo Alvarez: The child prodigy who made good

Canelo Alvarez’s unusual childhood serves as the foundation of his remarkable career.

Canelo Alvarez had an idyllic childhood in most ways. The boxing superstar grew up in a tight-knit family of 10 on a modest ranch in San Augustin, on the outskirts of Guadalajara, Mexico.

The boy enjoyed the animals on the ranch, especially the horses. He rides to this day. And he has fond memories of working with his father — beginning at the age of 5 — at the local paletaria, which produced and sold frozen treats.

“I would help my dad make the popsicles and the shaved ice, to help supply the paletaria,” Alvarez said on promotional video. “I’d also go around on the truck selling the popsicles. I feel proud of that because it taught me to work hard.

“It taught me to be responsible from a young age?

Sounds like a tranquil existence, doesn’t it? Well, there was more to Alvarez at a young age.

He was a fighter – as in the exchanging of punches – as long as he can remember. The other kids in the area made sure of that by taunting him because of his red hair, which made him the one thing kids can’t be: different.

“I had freckles and was a redhead, so I fought every day,” Alvarez told Boxing Junkie through a translator.

[jwplayer GzmmWUsT]

Those experiences as a child – the work ethic he learned at such a young, the willingness to stand up for himself – set the foundation for a boxing career that continues to sparkle as he prepares to defend his 168-pound titles against Avni Yildirim on Saturday in Miami.

Alvarez laced up the gloves for the first time at the age of 11, not long after he witnessed older brother Rigoberto make his professional debut in 2000 in nearby Ciudad Guzman. The sites, the sounds, the drama inside the venue. He knew immediately that was for him.

Rigoberto, 12 years older than Canelo, worked with his eager brother before his amateur debut but there was only so much he could teach in a short time. The younger Alvarez recalled the fight on the promotional video.

“I had been training with my older brother Rigoberto for about a week,” he said. “And he brought me to fight an amateur fight. As always, in your first fight, you get a draw. If you win or lose, you always get a draw so that you don’t lose the will to keep training.”

Alvarez certainly didn’t lose the will. He told Boxing Junkie that he felt at home in the ring the second the opening bell rang.

“I felt really good,” he said. “I felt fulfilled.”

As if you had found your destiny? he was asked.  “Without a doubt. I was born for this,” he responded.

CaneloAlvarez (left) is pictured with Jose Miguel Cotto before his first big fight in the U.S. in 2010. He was 19 years old. Gabriel Bouys / AFP via Getty Images

Alvarez  showed up at the Guadalajara gym of Chepo and son Eddy Reynoso when he was 13. His skills were still raw at that point but he was sturdy and fearless. More important, he wanted to learn as much as he possibly could.

Nothing has changed since that day.

“My first impressions of him was that he was a really strong puncher,” Eddy Reynoso told Boxing Junkie through a translator. “He lacked technique but, even at a young age, you noticed that he had a lot of strength.

“… And he was always a student. He couldn’t stay still. I’ve always said the students who ask the teachers questions, those are the ones who could go far in the sport. He asked a lot of questions.

“I remember he would ask for videos of other fighters. He was very disciplined, he liked to learn. That’s something a lot of fighters don’t have.”

It wasn’t long before the Reynosos realized that they had a special fighter on their hands. And so did his potential amateur opponents in Mexico, few of whom had any interest whatsoever in fighting him by the time he had turned 15.

That’s when the Reynosos and Alvarez came to the conclusion that it made no sense to remain at the amateur level, at which he reportedly finished with a record of 44-2. Chepo approached the boy one day and said simply: “Get ready because you’re going to debut as a professional in a month.”

Alvarez was certain he was ready.

“I learned really fast,” Alvarez said. “I listened to Chepo and Eddy. They told me things that I would work on in the gym and think about when I went home. I already sparred with professional fighters, Oscar Larios, another champion.

“I was able to train with them and learn quickly because of them.”

Alvarez walked in the gym of trainers Eddy (left) and Chepo Reynoso when he was 13 years old. The rest is history. Ethan Miller / Getty Images

The idea of fighting professionally at 15 wasn’t novel to the Reynosos. Marco Antonio Barrera, who lives in Guadalajara, also joined the pro ranks at that tender age in 1989. “The Baby Faced Assassin” went on to win titles in three divisions and enter the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2017.

Of course, the Reynosos believed that Alvarez had the tools to compete successfully. They also had Barrera in mind.

“He had the boxing qualities,” Eddy Reynoso said. “He was better than some of the fighters who were 20 years old. Some of them had already gone 10 rounds but they didn’t have the boxing abilities that he did.

“Look at the trajectory of Marco Antonio Barrera. He had no rivals to fight as an amateur. The same with Canelo. So my father decided to turn him professional.

“This is something I haven’t really talked about with anybody else. The inspiration to have someone so young become a professional was Marco Antonio Barrera, a fighter I followed closely. He also debuted at 15. That’s something that drove us to go that route.”

Alvarez did just fine. That first fight took place on Oct. 29, 2005, at the Arena Chololo Larios (named after the fighter) in the Tonala area of Guadalajara. He fought 0-1 Abraham Gonzalez, who was also from the area, in a scheduled four-round junior welterweight bout. They both weighed 139 pounds.

Alvarez won by a fourth-round TKO.

“It felt really good,” he said of his debut. “I was very motivated. It’s what I always dreamed about. I always thought I would debut at 18 but I ended up debuting at 15. And at 16 I was already a champion in the State of Jalisco.”

We all know what happened after that.

[lawrence-related id=18069,18057,18040,17675,18064]

Canelo Alvarez: The child prodigy who made good

Canelo Alvarez’s unusual childhood serves as the foundation of his remarkable career.

Canelo Alvarez had an idyllic childhood in most ways. The boxing superstar grew up in a tight-knit family of 10 on a modest ranch in San Augustin, on the outskirts of Guadalajara, Mexico.

The boy enjoyed the animals on the ranch, especially the horses. He rides to this day. And he has fond memories of working with his father — beginning at the age of 5 — at the local paletaria, which produced and sold frozen treats.

“I would help my dad make the popsicles and the shaved ice, to help supply the paletaria,” Alvarez said on promotional video. “I’d also go around on the truck selling the popsicles. I feel proud of that because it taught me to work hard.

“It taught me to be responsible from a young age?

Sounds like a tranquil existence, doesn’t it? Well, there was more to Alvarez at a young age.

He was a fighter – as in the exchanging of punches – as long as he can remember. The other kids in the area made sure of that by taunting him because of his red hair, which made him the one thing kids can’t be: different.

“I had freckles and was a redhead, so I fought every day,” Alvarez told Boxing Junkie through a translator.

[jwplayer GzmmWUsT]

Those experiences as a child – the work ethic he learned at such a young, the willingness to stand up for himself – set the foundation for a boxing career that continues to sparkle as he prepares to defend his 168-pound titles against Avni Yildirim on Saturday in Miami.

Alvarez laced up the gloves for the first time at the age of 11, not long after he witnessed older brother Rigoberto make his professional debut in 2000 in nearby Ciudad Guzman. The sites, the sounds, the drama inside the venue. He knew immediately that was for him.

Rigoberto, 12 years older than Canelo, worked with his eager brother before his amateur debut but there was only so much he could teach in a short time. The younger Alvarez recalled the fight on the promotional video.

“I had been training with my older brother Rigoberto for about a week,” he said. “And he brought me to fight an amateur fight. As always, in your first fight, you get a draw. If you win or lose, you always get a draw so that you don’t lose the will to keep training.”

Alvarez certainly didn’t lose the will. He told Boxing Junkie that he felt at home in the ring the second the opening bell rang.

“I felt really good,” he said. “I felt fulfilled.”

As if you had found your destiny? he was asked.  “Without a doubt. I was born for this,” he responded.

CaneloAlvarez (left) is pictured with Jose Miguel Cotto before his first big fight in the U.S. in 2010. He was 19 years old. Gabriel Bouys / AFP via Getty Images

Alvarez  showed up at the Guadalajara gym of Chepo and son Eddy Reynoso when he was 13. His skills were still raw at that point but he was sturdy and fearless. More important, he wanted to learn as much as he possibly could.

Nothing has changed since that day.

“My first impressions of him was that he was a really strong puncher,” Eddy Reynoso told Boxing Junkie through a translator. “He lacked technique but, even at a young age, you noticed that he had a lot of strength.

“… And he was always a student. He couldn’t stay still. I’ve always said the students who ask the teachers questions, those are the ones who could go far in the sport. He asked a lot of questions.

“I remember he would ask for videos of other fighters. He was very disciplined, he liked to learn. That’s something a lot of fighters don’t have.”

It wasn’t long before the Reynosos realized that they had a special fighter on their hands. And so did his potential amateur opponents in Mexico, few of whom had any interest whatsoever in fighting him by the time he had turned 15.

That’s when the Reynosos and Alvarez came to the conclusion that it made no sense to remain at the amateur level, at which he reportedly finished with a record of 44-2. Chepo approached the boy one day and said simply: “Get ready because you’re going to debut as a professional in a month.”

Alvarez was certain he was ready.

“I learned really fast,” Alvarez said. “I listened to Chepo and Eddy. They told me things that I would work on in the gym and think about when I went home. I already sparred with professional fighters, Oscar Larios, another champion.

“I was able to train with them and learn quickly because of them.”

Alvarez walked in the gym of trainers Eddy (left) and Chepo Reynoso when he was 13 years old. The rest is history. Ethan Miller / Getty Images

The idea of fighting professionally at 15 wasn’t novel to the Reynosos. Marco Antonio Barrera, who lives in Guadalajara, also joined the pro ranks at that tender age in 1989. “The Baby Faced Assassin” went on to win titles in three divisions and enter the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2017.

Of course, the Reynosos believed that Alvarez had the tools to compete successfully. They also had Barrera in mind.

“He had the boxing qualities,” Eddy Reynoso said. “He was better than some of the fighters who were 20 years old. Some of them had already gone 10 rounds but they didn’t have the boxing abilities that he did.

“Look at the trajectory of Marco Antonio Barrera. He had no rivals to fight as an amateur. The same with Canelo. So my father decided to turn him professional.

“This is something I haven’t really talked about with anybody else. The inspiration to have someone so young become a professional was Marco Antonio Barrera, a fighter I followed closely. He also debuted at 15. That’s something that drove us to go that route.”

Alvarez did just fine. That first fight took place on Oct. 29, 2005, at the Arena Chololo Larios (named after the fighter) in the Tonala area of Guadalajara. He fought 0-1 Abraham Gonzalez, who was also from the area, in a scheduled four-round junior welterweight bout. They both weighed 139 pounds.

Alvarez won by a fourth-round TKO.

“It felt really good,” he said of his debut. “I was very motivated. It’s what I always dreamed about. I always thought I would debut at 18 but I ended up debuting at 15. And at 16 I was already a champion in the State of Jalisco.”

We all know what happened after that.

[lawrence-related id=18069,18057,18040,17675,18064]