Billy Joe Saunders waits on Canelo Alvarez: ‘I’m ready to fight’

Billy Joe Saunders said he’d be willing to fight Canelo Alvarez in Mexico if that’s what it takes to get the fight made.

Billy Joe Saunders waits. Mostly, he wonders. But there’s still no word from Canelo Alvarez on whom he intends to fight on May 2.

It’s beginning to sound as if the frustrated Saunders won’t wait much longer. Make a decision, Saunders says, or else he is prepared to move on to another option, perhaps against another reported Alvarez possibility, Callum Smith.

“I’m up for the fight,’’ Saunders said about Alvarez during an interview with Sky Sports. “I’ve not priced myself out. I’ve asked right. I’m willing to travel for Cinco de Mayo. I can only do so much. I can only offer myself. If they really want to fight, then let’s get it on. We’ve got 12 weeks. If not, me and Callum Smith will get it on in a big fight. A huge unification fight.

“I hear Smith is the frontrunner. Then I hear I’m the frontrunner. If it doesn’t happen, I think me and Callum should fight.’’

Saunders, a super-middleweight champion, said he would even travel to Mexico to face Alvarez, who hasn’t fought in his home country in more than eight years. His last fight in Mexico was on Nov. 26, 2011, a fifth-round stoppage of Kermit Cintron in Mexico City.

“I would go to Mexico, if they want, as long as they have got a fair, square ring,” Saunders said. “Let’s see who the best is. I fear no man. If they want to fight, I’m ready to fight. I’m the WBO super middleweight champion.

“He’s a three-weight world champion, not four like he keeps saying. I wanted to be busy, I wanted to be out mid-February. But the Canelo fight got mentioned and you have to have patience. If it happens, it happens. If it doesn’t, it doesn’t.’’

In the wake of reports that talks for an Alvarez fight in Japan against Ryota Murata fell apart a few weeks ago, there has been widespread speculation about Alvarez’s opponent for the annual bout celebrating Cinco de Mayo.

Saunders and Smith, also a 168-pound champion, make sense. So far, however, there has only been silence from Alvarez about what – who – is next.

“The problem is, I’ve been here before,’’ Saunders said. “I’ve been here twice with Gennadiy Golovkin, I’ve been here twice with Canelo.

“These big fights? I’ve been before and seen the carpet pulled (out from under me). So I’m not excited. The only time I get excited is when I put pen to paper.”

Canelo Alvarez more and more likely to face Smith or Saunders

A fight between Canelo Alvarez and Ryota Murata now seems unlikely, which could open the door for either Callum Smith or Billy Joe Saunders.

It looks as if Canelo Alvarez is taking the first steps in finding an opponent other than Ryota Murata for a fight in early May.

Eddie Hearn, of Matchroom Boxing, says Alvarez’s management has had minor discussions about Callum Smith and Billy Joe Saunders. It’s a further sign that talks for an Alvarez-Murata fight in Japan on May 2, the Saturday before Cinco de Mayo, have fallen apart.

“It’s really going to come down to who Canelo Alvarez chooses,’’ Hearn told iFL TV. “There’s been minor conversations about both fighters, and they’re both aware of that.

“I think, there’s a long way to go to making a deal. But I do believe: Who else are they going to choose?’’

Both Smith and Saunders hold super middleweight titles. Alvarez, still the reigning middleweight champion, would defend his 160-pound belts against Murata. But there’s speculation that Canelo would struggle to get back down to 160 after fighting at 175 pounds in a 10th-round stoppage of Sergey Kovalev on Nov. 2 in Las Vegas. Canelo relinquished the light heavyweight belt he took from Kovalev.

Canelo presumably could get down to 168 than 160. From Hearns’ perspective, that means either Smith or Saunders. Also, a deal with either would be easy to do. Both Smith and Saunders are tied to DAZN, which signed Canelo to a $365-million contract in October 2018.  However, Canelo promoter Oscar De La Hoya has said there’s no interest in Saunders.

“Ultimately, as I’ve said, Canelo is the boss and Canelo will choose,’’ Hearn said. “But Billy and Callum are desperate for this fight.’’

Callum Smith still hoping to win Canelo Alvarez lottery

Callum Smith, a super middleweight champion, is trying keep himself in line for the big money that comes with a shot at Canelo Alvarez.

The campaign to be Canelo Alvarez’s next opponent continues.

Callum Smith, a super middleweight champion, is trying keep himself in line for the big money that comes with a shot at Alvarez in a fight projected to happen on Cinco De Mayo weekend in early May.

“I think everyone is just waiting to see who he picks,’’ Smith told Soccer AM, a Sky Sports’ talk show.

The waiting game continues amid uncertainty about talks for Alvarez to fight Ryota Murata in Japan. Negotiations are going nowhere, according to a report by ESPN, which cited an unnamed source.

Alvarez, still a reigning middleweight titleholder, is expected to go back down in weight after he relinquished the light heavyweight belt he took from Sergey Kovalev by a 10th-round stoppage in his last bout Nov. 2 in Las Vegas.

Murata fights at 160 pounds. Smith is at 168. Billy Joe Saunders, who holds another 168-pound belt, is also believed to be a possible Alvarez opponent.

“If it is me, I would be happy,’’ Smith said. “If not, I’m in a good division. There’s a lot of big fights out there for me, outside Canelo Alvarez, so I’m in a good position. It’s just sitting and waiting and hopefully we can get one of the big names sorted.

“Styles make fights. I think I’m a bit of a bad fight for him. I’m 6-foot-3. I’m a lot bigger than him. I can punch. Style-wise, I’m not ideal to fight, but I’m not taking anything away from Canelo Alvarez. He’s a special fighter and he’s one of the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world for a reason.

“I wouldn’t say he’s avoided me. I just think there’s a big list of opponents who want to fight him. So he’s got the choice of many, and he picks who he wants to fight. Whoever gets the job, takes it.”

Demetrius Andrade stops overmatched Luke Keeler in Round 9

Demetrius Andrade put an overmatched Luke Keeler down in each of the first two rounds and stopped him in Round 9 on Thursday night in Miami.

It wasn’t Demetrius Andrade’s prettiest performance but it was emphatic.

Andrade, seeking a knockout almost the entire fight, put an overmatched Luke Keeler down in each of the first two rounds and stopped him in Round 9 in defense of his middleweight title Thursday night in Miami.

Andrade (29-0, 18 KOs) has made only three successful defenses of his belt but, with other top middleweights evidently unwilling to fight him, he said he plans to move up in weight.

“I want to go up to 168 and fight Billy ‘Joke Ass’ Saunders and that’s what I’m going to do,” he said after the fight Thursday.

Andrade scored one of the quickest knockdowns possible, putting Keeler (17-3-1, 5 KOs) down with a left in the first few seconds of the fight. The game, fit Irishman survived. Then, in the final 30 seconds of the second round, a big overhand left put Keeler down again and this time he was hurt. Still, he survived.

After that, Andrade, a southpaw known for his sublime skills, looked sloppy at times as he tried – arguably too hard – to stop an opponent so limited he probably shouldn’t have been in the ring with him.

Finally, with about a minute to go in Round 9, Andrade landed another one of those overhand lefts and hurt Keeler again. This time, the champion battered his prey until referee Telis Assimenios stopped the fight with one second remaining in the round.

Andrade landed a high percentage of his power shots, 50 percent, according to CompuBox. And, in spite of his less-than-refined attack, he was typically difficult to hit. Keeler landed only 10 percent of his punches.

“I thought I was good,” Andrade said. “Luke Keeler is a warrior, a future champ one day. But today was my day. … I went in thinking to myself, ‘I could put him out.’ And that’s what I did.”

Andrade said he hasn’t given up completely on fighting one of the other elite 160-pounder, all of whom fight for rival companies.  Eddie Hearn, his promoter, reportedly made an offer to fellow titleholder Jermall Charlo but was turned down.

“Eddie Hearn said he sent an offer [to Charlo] and didn’t get no response,” Andrade said. “If they want to send an offer this way, I will respond.”

Canelo Alvarez vs. Ryota Murata in Japan? They’re talking

Canelo Alvarez and Ryota Murata are negotiating to fight this spring, multiple outlets have reported.

Canelo Alvarez and Ryota Murata are negotiating to fight this spring, multiple outlets have reported.

Alvarez, who still holds two middleweight titles, told Sports Illustrated recently that he’s interested in fighting in Japan. Murata, a resident of Tokyo, is very popular in his home country.

“I’ve been thinking about fighting all over the world,” Alvarez told SI.com. “Tokyo, Japan, has been one of the primary places on my mind.”

SI reported that Alvarez has not committed to fighting Murata next. He reportedly is still considering 168-pound titleholders Callum Smith and Billy Joe Saunders.

Alvarez (53-1-2, 36 KOs) has not announced the weight at which his next fight will take place. He’s coming off a knockout victory over Sergey Kovalev in November but gave up the title, a clear indication that he doesn’t want to fight at 175 pounds.

The prevailing wisdom is that Alvarez will fight at super middleweight, meaning his matchup with Murata (16-2, 13 KOs) could take place at 168 pounds or perhaps at a catch weight between 160 and 168.

Murata is best known for winning a gold medal in the 2012 Olympics. The 34-year-old has won two in a row since he lost a wide decision to Rob Brant in October 2018.

Oscar De La Hoya: Billy Joe Saunders not Canelo Alvarez’s first choice

Oscar De La Hoya, the promoter of Canelo Alvarez, said that Billy Joe Saunders is not the front runner to face his fighter on May 2.

Billy Joe Saunders isn’t the leading candidate to fight Canelo Alvarez on May 2, according to Alvarez’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya.

Saunders, a 168-pound titleholder had been rumored to be Alvarez’s first choice for his next fight.

De La Hoya was talking about Alvarez’s immediate plans during a SecondsOut video interview when he squelched the rumor.

“I’ll tell you one thing,” he said. “Saunders is not the front runner, that’s for sure. I have no idea who threw that name out there. But once we nail down who it’s going to be, we’ll make an announcement shortly

“I have a trip to Mexico with Canelo and his team [scheduled}. We’ll sit down, I’ll stay there a few days, iron out a deal and take it from there.”

Saunders has been considered a leading candidate for several reasons. One, everyone seems to agree that 168 pounds would be the best weight for him. And Saunders is one of the four super middleweight titleholders.

A fight with Saunders and Callum Smith, another beltholder, would be the easiest fights to make. David Benavidez and Caleb Plant also hold 168-pound titles but they fight for rival Premier Boxing Champions, which would make negotiations complicated.

Another option would be a move back down to 160, although De La Hoya doesn’t seem to be keen on that idea.

“Just because of experience, going up to 160 and coming back to 147, maybe it would be a little difficult for him. But he has the option.”

Alvarez hasn’t fought at 160 since he defeated Gennadiy Golovkin by a majority decision in September 2018.

In his last fight, Alvarez stopped Sergey Kovalev to win a title at 175 pounds. He gave up the title shortly afterward, an indication that he has no plans to fight at light heavyweight.

Eric Gomez: 168 pounds is Canelo Alvarez’s ‘best weight class’

Golden Boy Promotions President Eric Gomez believes 168 pounds is the best weight for Canelo Alvarez at this stage of his career.

Canelo Alvarez’s immediate future remains up in the air.

Golden Boy Promotions President Eric Gomez told ESPN.com that Alvarez will fight next on May 2, which was expected. He generally fights on Cinco de Mayo weekend.

Who will he fight? No one is off the table, although Brits Callum Smith and Billy Joe Saunders seem to be in the mix.

The only thing that seems likely is that Alvarez will fight at or around 168 pounds, although anything is possible in that regard too. He’s coming off a KO victory over Sergey Kovalev to win a 175-pound belt in November but gave it up.

“I personally feel that’s the best weight class, where he’s going to be the best at, at this point in his career,” Gomez said. “That’s the weight class he’s going to feel the best, the strongest. But it doesn’t necessarily mean he won’t go back to light heavyweight, he still has that possibility.

“Giving up the title, yes, it was about the weight, but it wasn’t all about the weight.”

A fight with Smith or Saunders makes sense because it would allow Alvarez to win a 168-pound title and enhance his exposure in the U.K., wherever the fight takes place. Alvarez beat Rocky Fielding to win what the WBA calls its “regular” super middleweight title but Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize that belt.

Of course, Alvarez could also fight Gennadiy Golovkin a third time.

“We’re not ruling out anybody – everybody, even at 160 pounds,” Gomez said. “If he wants to go back to 160 pounds or if there’s any of the champions that want to move up, face him, we’re not ruling anything out.”

Eddie Hearn: If Saunders or Smith can’t get Canelo? Fight each other

Eddie Hearn believes Canelo Alvarez will fight either Billy Joe Saunders or Callum Smith. If not, Hearn says, they should fight each other.

Billy Joe Saunders and Callum Smith are lobbying to be Canelo Alvarez’s opponent in the Mexican’s next fight. But if Alvarez decides on somebody else, promoter Eddie Hearn says, the U.K. super middleweights should fight each other.

Alvarez’s plans for his next bout, projected to be on May 2, are still unclear. He relinquished the light heavyweight belt he took from Sergey Kovalev on Nov. 2. There’s still talk about a move back down the scale to middleweight for a third fight against Gennadiy Golovkin.

“If he (Alvarez) doesn’t fight one of those guys next, then they should fight each other, and they should unify,’’ Hearn told iFL TV.

Hearn, who promotes both Saunders and Smith, said he still believes Canelo (53-1-2, 36 KOs) will decide to fight one of the two. Saunders (29-0, 14 KOs) and Smith (27-0, 19 KOs) each hold one of the 168-pound belts.

Alvarez won what the WBA calls its “regular” super middleweight title when he stopped overmatched Rocky Fielding (28-2, 16 KOs) in December but Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize that belt. Smith is the actual WBA titleholder.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. has surgery on broken nose

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. had surgery for a broken nose and needed 10 stitches for a cut above his left eye following his loss to Danny Jacobs.

PHOENIX – Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. underwent surgery for a fractured nose and needed 10 stitches for a cut above his left eye following his controversial loss to Danny Jacobs on Friday night at Talking Stick Arena.

Chavez is expected to be sidelined for at least six weeks, according to members of his camp. He asked for a rematch with Jacobs.

However, any chance at an immediate rematch appeared unlikely after a bout that ended with angry fans tossing debris into the ring in outrage at Chavez’s abrupt decision not to continue after the fifth round.

Jacobs said he wants to move on in a quest to win a super middleweight title.

“I want to fight the biggest in the division,’’ he said. “… There’s Billy Joe Saunders and a lot of other champions.” One of them, Callum Smith, was at ringside Friday.

Jacobs (36-3, 30 KOS), a former middleweight champ, also said he wants a rematch with Gennadiy Golovkin, who beat him in a close decision at 160 pounds.

Chavez (51-4-1, 33 KOs), who was at 172.7 pounds at the weigh-in and appeared to be at least 190 at the opening bell, accused Jacobs of dirty tactics. He said he was injured by headbutts and elbows from Jacobs. However, video shows that Jacobs cut Chavez above the eye with a right hand. Another right hand in the fight appears to break Chavez’s nose.

Chavez’s corner informed the referee Wes Melton and ringside physician Dr. Robin MacDougall that he couldn’t continue because he couldn’t breathe. Apparently, his breathing was restricted by blood from the fractures in the nose. However, MacDougall said he was never got to examine Chavez, who was taken to a Phoenix hospital after the bout.

Terence Crawford and his cul-de-sac at welterweight

Whatever happens on Saturday night, Richard Commey and Teofimo Lopez have a future path. The same can’t be said for Terence Crawford.

NEW YORK – Whoever wins the lightweight title fight between champion Richard Commey and Teofimo Lopez on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden will have a lot more going on for him than just bragging rights or, in Lopez’s case, new hardware.

He’ll have a little something called momentum.

Commey-Lopez is not only the best on-paper matchup of the night, far exceeding the main event between welterweight titleholder Terence Crawford and Egidijus Kavaliauskas (we’ll get to that later). The winner could also go on to face Vasiliy Lomachenko in a unification of three of the four major lightweight belts next year. With apologies to newly minted lightweight titleholder Devin Haney, whose network allegiances make him a non-starter in this discussion, that is as about as good as it can get today in a sport beset by shoddy matchmaking and warring tribalism.

In other words, Commey-Lopez isn’t your typical boxing one-off that takes place in isolation, subject to a short half-life and a few forgettable column inches. No, its precise appeal is that it is freighted with significance beyond the 36 minutes (likely less) of combat that will unfold in the ring on Saturday night. And that’s a breath of fresh air, considering that the value of certain titleholders today are inseparable from the presumed significance of the particular alphabet-soup trinket they hold. One thinks immediately of WBO super middleweight titleholder Billy Joe Saunders and the WBO middleweight titleholder Demetrius Andrade, both of whom have fought virtually nobody of note to merit the high perch they occupy in their respective divisions.

Commey-Lopez is the latest brick laid down by promoter Top Rank toward what figures to be the edifice that will one day house the lightweight division’s most accomplished fighter. And the company did it by dutifully adding the most consequential 135-pounders, such as Ray Beltran, to their stable. They did it by scooping up Lopez from the 2016 Olympics, by getting in touch with Commey’s promoter Lou DiBella last year, by having Lomachenko outslug the likes of Pedraza and Luke Campbell (for a vacant title) earlier this year.

Commey-Lopez: Call it the big picture approach.

Alas, the same can’t be said for the fight that follows on Saturday night. Indeed, there is an air of banality surrounding titleholder Terence Crawford’s fight against undefeated Lithuanian contender Egidijus Kavaliauskas.

Even the fight’s usual carnival barkers seem to have caught on to this and have adjusted their brand of ballyhoo accordingly. Instead of selling Crawford-Kavaliauskas as a matchup of supreme consequence, they have sought to paint it as a rare opportunity to catch one of the great improvisers in the sport in action. During an ESPN segment, Teddy Atlas compared Crawford’s ring “instincts” to Jimi Hendrix riffing on the guitar, Bobby Fischer overlooking a chess board, and Louis Armstrong blowing the trumpet. “(Crawford) creates it as he does it,” Atlas said. “He’s got the greatest instincts I’ve ever seen.” Sitting beside Atlas, Max Kellerman, no stranger to rhetorical overkill himself, guffawed upon hearing that comment.

Actually, from a contemporary standpoint, Atlas isn’t entirely wrong. Few fighters have shown themselves to be as versatile and creative in the ring as Crawford. At some point, however, such claims must be born out in the ring against the very best.

Unfortunately, Crawford is Exhibit A in the ramifications wrought by the sport’s frustrating political divide. Unlike its lightweight stable, Top Rank simply does not have the key players at welterweight to fulfill on the promise of a generational talent like Crawford. Unlike Commey-Lopez, Crawford-Kavaliauskas doesn’t lead anywhere. There is no conceivable Lomachenko for Crawford waiting in the wings. Crawford’s best possible opponents – Errol Spence, Manny Pacquiao, Shawn Porter, Danny Garcia and Keith Thurman – are all aligned with Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions, which understandably prefers to do their own round robin of fights. Moreover, whatever hope there was that the two sides could come together to stage a Crawford-Spence bout appears to have gone out the window in the wake of Spence’s harrowing car accident in October. At the very least, that fight is on the back-burner.

Crawford’s seemingly hamstrung future has had the effect of completely whitewashing his opponent, Kavaliauskas, a two-time Olympian who is known to crack with both hands. Kavaliauskas is no schlub, but his last fight, a draw against a distinctly mediocre Ray Robinson, did much to lower his stock. But Crawford, to be sure, is simply graded on a different scale. It is difficult to imagine what Kavaliauskas could bring to the ring that will trouble Crawford.

A saving grace for Crawford may be the current crop of elite junior welterweights who will all likely move up to 147 at some point, including Top Rank stablemate Jose Ramirez, Josh Taylor and Regis Prograis. But that development might take a year or more, which is an eternity for a fighter who is already 32 years old. 

The difference with Hendrix and Armstrong? They were soloists whose virtuosities did not necessarily rely on anyone else. In boxing, they call that shadowboxing.