Good, bad, worse: Caleb Plant is a threat to Canelo Alvarez

Good, bad, worse: Caleb Plant is a threat to Canelo Alvarez.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Caleb Plant (right) found the target with regularity on Saturday. Sean Michael Ham / TGB Promotions

Canelo Alvarez would be a solid favorite to beat anyone in his weight class, including Caleb Plant.

That said, Plant’s performance against Caleb Truax on Saturday night – a shutout victory – might’ve tightened the spread to some degree. The Tennessean looked that good in a dominating victory in spite of a hand injury.

Plant has the natural gifts, quickness, reflexes and athleticism, which must’ve made him a blur to his ineffective 37-year-old opponent. He seems to have a high boxing IQ, the result of a life in the gym. And, by all accounts, he’s dedicated to his craft.

He might not be the puncher Alvarez and some others are but many fighters have risen to greatness without unusual power.

I’m not saying that Plant will ever be seen as a great fighter. It’s too early for that. His two most-significant victories are over Jose Uzcategui (to win his title) and now Truax. He must do more than that to rise to pound-for-pound status.

I AM saying that Plant seems to have the tools and work ethic to become a special fighter and perhaps give Alvarez more trouble than some will predict.

I keep thinking of Alvarez’s 2019 fight against Sergey Kovalev, a declining light heavyweight who fought the Mexican superstar on roughly even terms before he was stopped in the 11th round. The scores were 95-95, 96-94 and 96-94 for Alvarez after 10.

I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that this young, prime version of Plant – although smaller than Kovalev and not as powerful – is a better, more dynamic boxer than the Russian.

Of course, that notion could prove to be nonsense. Truax landed some solid right hands to Plant’s head, which did no damage. The natural question to ask is: What happens if Alvarez lands that punch?

Well, I presume Plant and his team will have a similar thought. And they’ll make the proper adjustments. Plant and Co. are well aware that Truax is at one level and Alvarez is another. They’ll be as ready as they can be. You can count on that.

And one more thing: Alvarez also knows that Plant is better than his last few opponents, especially after Saturday night.

***

BAD

Caleb Truax (right) survived to hear the final bell but took a beating. Sean Michael Ham / TGB Promotions

Truax said repeatedly going into the fight against Plant that he was grateful for the opportunity. Of course, he was. He arguably didn’t deserve it.

The product of Minnesota upset former Olympic champion James DeGale to win the same super middleweight belt Plant now holds in December 2017 and then lost it in the rematch four months later.

He has struggled since then, stopping journeyman Fabiano Pena, settling for a no-contest against Peter Quillin after he was cut, tore his Achilles tendon ahead a rematch with Quillin and then barely outpointed a 41-year-old David Basajjamivule in his most-recent fight.

Those aren’t the credentials of a mandatory challenger to Plant’s title. He most likely rose to that position because of his one and only significant victory years ago, which got him this fight.

However, when that fight actually began, he had nothing. He was beaten to the punch at every turn. He was slow, inactive, utterly overmatched. The CompuBox statistics reflect his futility: He landed less than four punches per round.

Truax tried hard. We all knew he would do that based on his track record. However, effort alone doesn’t amount to much when you don’t have the basic tools to compete at a high level, which we saw on Saturday.

You’ll rarely see a more one-sided fight than this one.

I don’t want to be too hard on any party. Such matchups are routine in boxing. Alvarez vs. Yildirim could be more one-sided, if that’s possible. And you certainly can’t blame Truax, who grabbed what was placed in front of him.

I would simply hope that the movers and shakers in the sport — anyone with any kind of authority — will see a fight like Plant vs. Truax and ask themselves, “Is this really the best we can do?”

***

WORSE

The man on the right fought for a “world title” on Saturday. Al Bello / Getty Images

The WBA might be the most objectionable of the four sanctioning bodies because it decided at some point to have two champions (three if you count its Gold title) per division and everyone inexplicably bought into it.

The Puerto Rico-based organization might’ve outdone itself on Friday, however.

The events are complicated but here goes. Heavyweight contender Trevor Bryan was scheduled to fight the WBA’s “regular” champion, Manuel Charr, on a Don King-promoted pay-per-view card in Hollywood, Fla.

However, in the end, Charr wasn’t available because of visa and other, more mysterious issues. So what did the WBA do? It designated Charr its “champion in recess” and approved a fight between Bryan and unranked Bermane Stiverne for the vacant “regular” title, which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize.

Stiverne is 42, was knocked out in his last two fights (against Deontay Wilder in one round and Joe Joyce in six) and hadn’t fought for nearly two years yet found himself in a “title” fight.

Now, after Bryan put Stiverne down twice and stopped the Haitian-Canadian in 11 rounds, many people who should know better will refer to Bryan as a world heavyweight champion, which is a pathetic combination of laughable and depressing.

We all know that Anthony Joshua is the actual WBA titleholder but that doesn’t seem to matter.

So how did this happen? We can only speculate. One presumption: King still has some clout at 89 years old. The legendary promoter now has a major player in the division. Another presumption: WBA officials didn’t care who Bryan fought. Sanctioning fees are sanctioning fees.

I do my best to ignore the secondary titles. I hope everyone reading this does the same thing.

[lawrence-related id=17419,17416,17413]

Good, bad, worse: Caleb Plant is a threat to Canelo Alvarez

Good, bad, worse: Caleb Plant is a threat to Canelo Alvarez.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Caleb Plant (right) found the target with regularity on Saturday. Sean Michael Ham / TGB Promotions

Canelo Alvarez would be a solid favorite to beat anyone in his weight class, including Caleb Plant.

That said, Plant’s performance against Caleb Truax on Saturday night – a shutout victory – might’ve tightened the spread to some degree. The Tennessean looked that good in a dominating victory in spite of a hand injury.

Plant has the natural gifts, quickness, reflexes and athleticism, which must’ve made him a blur to his ineffective 37-year-old opponent. He seems to have a high boxing IQ, the result of a life in the gym. And, by all accounts, he’s dedicated to his craft.

He might not be the puncher Alvarez and some others are but many fighters have risen to greatness without unusual power.

I’m not saying that Plant will ever be seen as a great fighter. It’s too early for that. His two most-significant victories are over Jose Uzcategui (to win his title) and now Truax. He must do more than that to rise to pound-for-pound status.

I AM saying that Plant seems to have the tools and work ethic to become a special fighter and perhaps give Alvarez more trouble than some will predict.

I keep thinking of Alvarez’s 2019 fight against Sergey Kovalev, a declining light heavyweight who fought the Mexican superstar on roughly even terms before he was stopped in the 11th round. The scores were 95-95, 96-94 and 96-94 for Alvarez after 10.

I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that this young, prime version of Plant – although smaller than Kovalev and not as powerful – is a better, more dynamic boxer than the Russian.

Of course, that notion could prove to be nonsense. Truax landed some solid right hands to Plant’s head, which did no damage. The natural question to ask is: What happens if Alvarez lands that punch?

Well, I presume Plant and his team will have a similar thought. And they’ll make the proper adjustments. Plant and Co. are well aware that Truax is at one level and Alvarez is another. They’ll be as ready as they can be. You can count on that.

And one more thing: Alvarez also knows that Plant is better than his last few opponents, especially after Saturday night.

***

BAD

Caleb Truax (right) survived to hear the final bell but took a beating. Sean Michael Ham / TGB Promotions

Truax said repeatedly going into the fight against Plant that he was grateful for the opportunity. Of course, he was. He arguably didn’t deserve it.

The product of Minnesota upset former Olympic champion James DeGale to win the same super middleweight belt Plant now holds in December 2017 and then lost it in the rematch four months later.

He has struggled since then, stopping journeyman Fabiano Pena, settling for a no-contest against Peter Quillin after he was cut, tore his Achilles tendon ahead a rematch with Quillin and then barely outpointed a 41-year-old David Basajjamivule in his most-recent fight.

Those aren’t the credentials of a mandatory challenger to Plant’s title. He most likely rose to that position because of his one and only significant victory years ago, which got him this fight.

However, when that fight actually began, he had nothing. He was beaten to the punch at every turn. He was slow, inactive, utterly overmatched. The CompuBox statistics reflect his futility: He landed less than four punches per round.

Truax tried hard. We all knew he would do that based on his track record. However, effort alone doesn’t amount to much when you don’t have the basic tools to compete at a high level, which we saw on Saturday.

You’ll rarely see a more one-sided fight than this one.

I don’t want to be too hard on any party. Such matchups are routine in boxing. Alvarez vs. Yildirim could be more one-sided, if that’s possible. And you certainly can’t blame Truax, who grabbed what was placed in front of him.

I would simply hope that the movers and shakers in the sport — anyone with any kind of authority — will see a fight like Plant vs. Truax and ask themselves, “Is this really the best we can do?”

***

WORSE

The man on the right fought for a “world title” on Saturday. Al Bello / Getty Images

The WBA might be the most objectionable of the four sanctioning bodies because it decided at some point to have two champions (three if you count its Gold title) per division and everyone inexplicably bought into it.

The Puerto Rico-based organization might’ve outdone itself on Friday, however.

The events are complicated but here goes. Heavyweight contender Trevor Bryan was scheduled to fight the WBA’s “regular” champion, Manuel Charr, on a Don King-promoted pay-per-view card in Hollywood, Fla.

However, in the end, Charr wasn’t available because of visa and other, more mysterious issues. So what did the WBA do? It designated Charr its “champion in recess” and approved a fight between Bryan and unranked Bermane Stiverne for the vacant “regular” title, which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize.

Stiverne is 42, was knocked out in his last two fights (against Deontay Wilder in one round and Joe Joyce in six) and hadn’t fought for nearly two years yet found himself in a “title” fight.

Now, after Bryan put Stiverne down twice and stopped the Haitian-Canadian in 11 rounds, many people who should know better will refer to Bryan as a world heavyweight champion, which is a pathetic combination of laughable and depressing.

We all know that Anthony Joshua is the actual WBA titleholder but that doesn’t seem to matter.

So how did this happen? We can only speculate. One presumption: King still has some clout at 89 years old. The legendary promoter now has a major player in the division. Another presumption: WBA officials didn’t care who Bryan fought. Sanctioning fees are sanctioning fees.

I do my best to ignore the secondary titles. I hope everyone reading this does the same thing.

[lawrence-related id=17419,17416,17413]

Trevor Bryan vs. Bermane Stiverne set for tonight on pay-per-view

Heavyweight contender Trevor Bryan will face Bermane Stiverne tonight (Friday) in Hollywood, Fla., on pay-per-view.

Heavyweight contender Trevor Bryan will face late replacement Bermane Stiverne tonight (Friday) at the Seminole Hard Rock in Hollywood, Fla., on pay-per-view.

Bryan (20-0, 14 KOs) had been scheduled to Manuel Charr but the German remained in his home country because of visa and other issues.

Bryan and Stiverne (25-4-1, 21 KOs) reportedly will fight for what the WBA calls its “regular” title, which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize. Anthony Joshua is the WBA beltholder.

Charr evidently was stripped of his “regular” title and designated “champion in recess.” The Bryan-Stiverne winner will be required to defend against Charr by May 30, according to BoxingScene.com.

Bryan and Stiverne weighed in at 267½ and 267¼ pounds, respectively.

Bryan has stopped his last three opponents but he hasn’t fought since August 2018, when he knocked out B.J. Flores in four rounds. Stiverne, a 42-year-old former titleholder, was stopped in six rounds by Joe Joyce in February 2019. That was his most-recent fight.

Trevor Bryan vs. Bermane Stiverne set for tonight on pay-per-view

Heavyweight contender Trevor Bryan will face Bermane Stiverne tonight (Friday) in Hollywood, Fla., on pay-per-view.

Heavyweight contender Trevor Bryan will face late replacement Bermane Stiverne tonight (Friday) at the Seminole Hard Rock in Hollywood, Fla., on pay-per-view.

Bryan (20-0, 14 KOs) had been scheduled to Manuel Charr but the German remained in his home country because of visa and other issues.

Bryan and Stiverne (25-4-1, 21 KOs) reportedly will fight for what the WBA calls its “regular” title, which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize. Anthony Joshua is the WBA beltholder.

Charr evidently was stripped of his “regular” title and designated “champion in recess.” The Bryan-Stiverne winner will be required to defend against Charr by May 30, according to BoxingScene.com.

Bryan and Stiverne weighed in at 267½ and 267¼ pounds, respectively.

Bryan has stopped his last three opponents but he hasn’t fought since August 2018, when he knocked out B.J. Flores in four rounds. Stiverne, a 42-year-old former titleholder, was stopped in six rounds by Joe Joyce in February 2019. That was his most-recent fight.

Video: Shawn Porter breaks down Deontay Wilder-Tyson Fury II

Shawn Porter said Tyson Fury is a better boxer than Deontay Wilder but added that Wilder will win their rematch by a knockout.

Shawn Porter, welterweight contender and television analyst, said that Tyson Fury has better boxing skills than Deontay Wilder. He added that it won’t matter.

Porter, breaking down the Wilder-Fury rematch on Feb. 22 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, acknowledged Wilder’s limitations on the technical side of the sport but believes his punching power will decide the fight.

“That’s what he does, he knocks guys out,” Porter said of Wilder. “You can’t count out his punching power. And I know when Deontay Wilder wins this fight, it will be because of a knockout.”

Wilder (42-0-1, 41 KOs) has failed to knock out only two of his opponents, his first fights with Bermane Stiverne and Fury.

[jwplayer cPrW7MHt]

Fury (29-0-1, 20 KOs) survived two knockdowns to reach the final bell in December 2018. He belives he should’ve been awarded the victory but had to settle for a draw, which set up the rematch.

The Englishman has predicted that he will stop Wilder in two rounds.

 

Joe Joyce vs. Daniel Dubois showdown set for April 18: report

Joe Joyce and Daniel Dubois, two unbeaten Londoners, have agreed to fight one another on April 18 at O2 Arena, according to The Athletic.

Only one rising heavyweight will be left standing.

Joe Joyce and Daniel Dubois, two unbeaten Londoners, have agreed to fight one another on April 18 at O2 Arena, according to The Athletic. Apparently, they have yet to formally sign contracts.

The fight reportedly will be available on pay-per-view in the U.K., where the fighters are well known, and streamed on ESPN+ in the U.S.

Both fighters have climbed into the heavyweight rankings in spite of relatively few fights.

Joyce (10-0, 9 KOs) won a silver medal in the 2016 Rio Olympics and has plowed through increasingly difficult opposition. The 34-year-old is coming off the only decision in his pro career, a unanimous nod over capable Bryant Jennings in July.

Dubois (14-0, 13 KOs) is obviously a better long term prospect at only 22 years old. His resume is thinner than that of Joyce – who has also beaten Bermane Stiverne – but he has been just as overwhelming.

Both fighters are huge, Joyce 6-foot-6 and Dobois 6-5.

 

Who’s the best heavyweight? Hint: He comes from Manchester

The debate over who is the best active heavyweight will rage until someone emerges as No. 1 in the ring.

Anthony Joshua seems to think that he’s the best heavyweight in the world simply because he holds three of the four major belts.

Not necessarily. We all know that who you beat – and lose to – is more important than what you wear around your waist. The opportunity to fight for titles often has as much to do as your connections as your ability.

With that in mind, here is how I rank the top three big men in boxing.

  1. TYSON FURY
    Record
    : 29-0-1 (20 KOs)
    Defeated: Dereck Chisora (twice), Wladimir Klitschko
    Lost to: No one
    Drew with: Deontay Wilder
    Titles held: Lineal, IBF, WBA and WBO
    Background: Fury has by far the most impressive victory among active heavyweights, a wide decision over longtime heavyweight titleholder Wladimir Klitschko to become lineal champion in 2015. The Gypsy King had to walk away from boxing to deal with personal problems, losing his titles as a result, but he came back to draw with Deontay Wilder in an entertaining fight that many observers thought he deserved to win in 2018. I scored it 113-113. In that fight, Fury went down twice and got up twice. That included a hellacious knockdown in the final round that seemed to finish him off. Fury clearly is the best boxer among these three. And, as he demonstrated against Wilder, he’s resilient. Best victory, best boxer, best heavyweight. Of course, Wilder might have something to say about that when they fight again on Feb. 22 in Las Vegas.
  2. DEONTAY WILDER
    Record
    : 42-0-1 (41 KOs)
    Defeated: Luis Ortiz (twice)
    Lost to: No one
    Drew with: Tyson Fury
    Titles held: WBC (current)
    Background: The perception that Wilder can’t box is overstated. He certainly boxes well enough to set up the hardest punches in the sport almost every time he steps into the ring. Forty-one knockouts in 43 fights say a great deal. And, for what it’s worth, he boxed well enough to outpoint Bermane Stiverne to win his title by decision in 2015. He has made 10 successful defenses. Wilder also proved in his first fight with Luis Ortiz that he’s tougher than some might’ve expected. The Cuban had him in real trouble but he survived and won by KO in the 10th round. Ortiz outboxed Wilder in the rematch until a huge right put him down and out in Round 7. This is what Wilder does. A lot of people seem to think that the Bronze Bomber’s limited skill set – if that’s what it is – will bite him in the behind one day. Could that day be Feb. 22?
  3. ANTHONY JOSHUA
    Record
    : 23-1 (21 KOs)
    Defeated: Dillian White, Wladimir Klitschko, Joseph Parker, Alexander Povetkin, Andy Ruiz Jr.
    Lost to: Ruiz
    Titles held: IBF, WBA and WBO (current)
    Background: Joshua deserves credit for easily outpointing Andy Ruiz Jr. on Dec. 7 to regain the titles he lost to Ruiz by knockout this past June. The knockout artist turned himself into a safety-first boxer to win by scores of 118-110, 118-110 and 119-109. Great game plan, great execution. The performance wasn’t scintillating but it was thorough. Joshua also deserves recognition for surviving a knockdown to retire a 41-year-old Klitschko in 2017. All that doesn’t mean we can forget what happened in the first Ruiz fight. Joshua didn’t simply get caught by a big punch, which happens in the division. He was put down four times and, in the opinion of many, quit in the seventh round. A victory over a particularly heavy Ruiz in the rematch was only the first step in the process of rebuilding his reputation.

Luis Ortiz: ‘This isn’t going to be my last opportunity. I’m here to fight’

Luis Ortiz said his knockout loss to Deontay Wilder in their first fight was the result of fatigue and that has been corrected.

LAS VEGAS – An interviewer asked Deontay Wilder how his rematch with Luis Ortiz on Saturday night at the MGM Grand will end.

The heavyweight titleholder, seated on the dais during the final news conference before the fight, looked up at the interviewer standing next to him and said politely and with a straight face: “Look who you’re talking to.”

Indeed, one can almost assume that Wilder’s opponents will not hear the final bell.

Only Bermane Stiverne, against whom Wilder was content to box to win his championship almost five years ago, and Tyson Fury have gone the distance with the Bronze Bomber. And Stiverne lasted less than a full round in their rematch.

Wilder’s knockout ratio of 95.2 percent (of total) fights is highest in heavyweight history.

Ortiz understands the magnitude of Wilder’s punching power as well as anyone. The Cuban, who almost stopped Wilder in the seventh round, went down twice and couldn’t continue in the 10th round when they met for the first time in March of last year.

Deontay Wilder couldn’t have been more at ease at the final news conference before he fights Luis Ortiz on Saturday. Sean Michael Ham / Mayweather Promotions

Still, Ortiz, while acknowledging that Wilder (41-0-1, 40 knockouts) is a strong man, said in so many words that Wilder’s power is nothing out of the ordinary.

“I’ve had 500 fights since my amateur career over 10 years,” he said through a translator. “When you get hit by a heavyweight, everybody has power. Sometimes it feels like a horse or a mule kicking you.”

Ortiz (31-1, 26 KOs) said the reason he was stopped in the first fight was more about fatigue than Wilder’s ability to inflict damage.

The 40-year-old said he trained six weeks before the first fight and weighed 241¼, a typical weight for him. That had always been sufficient for Ortiz to be successful. For this fight, he said, he trained 12 weeks – including work with a strength and conditioning coach, as well as a nutritionist – and is expected to come in lighter than his previous weight.

Everyone would agree that he looked positively svelte at the press conference, his flat stomach visible behind a tight workout suit.

Wilder (left) and Ortiz have developed a cordial relationship. Sean Michael Ham / Mayweather Promotions

If Ortiz hurts Wilder again, will better fitness enable him to finish the job? Or will Ortiz’s conditioning give him a better chance of withstanding Wilder’s power for the entire 12 rounds?

Wilder isn’t preoccupied with those questions.

“He looks good,” Wilder said of his rival, “but I don’t think it’s going to matter against a fighter like me. 365 days I’m in shape. I come to camp in shape. The first day of camp, we sparred. I’m always prepared, always ready to go.

“And it’s always a good feeling to see my opponents in shape as well, prepared properly and ready for war.”

Wilder implied during the news conference that this fight could be his opponent’s last opportunity to fight on the biggest stage, which hit a nerve with Ortiz. He obviously doesn’t plan to fade away any time soon.

“This isn’t going to be my last opportunity,” he said. “I’m here to fight. You’ll see on Saturday. … It was just simply fatigue (in the first fight). I corrected that. And this time around the better man will win.”