How do Tim and Kostya Tszyu compare at same point of careers?

How do Tim and Kostya Tszyu compare at same point of careers?

Tim Tszyu will always have a high standard to live up to.

The 28-year-old Australian junior middleweight is the son of Kostya Tszyu, the dynamic former two-time junior welterweight champion who was inducted into the International Hall of Fame in 2011.

The younger Tszyu has a long way to go to catch up with dad but he has begun to make his own mark. That includes being upgraded by the WBO from “interim” to full 154-pound titleholder recently, his first major belt.

He will make his first defense against Brian Mendoza on Sunday afternoon in Broadbeach, Australia (Saturday night in the U.S) on Showtime.

But how do father and son compare at the same age? Have a look.

Kostya Tszyu (pictured here fighting Hugo Pineda) had a Hall of Fame career. Brendan Esposito / AFP via Getty Images.

Tim Tszyu (23-0, 17 KOs) is undefeated. When Kostya Tszyu (31-2, 25 KOs) turned 28 in September 1997, he had just suffered his first of two career losses. Vince Phillips stopped him in 10 rounds in May 1997 in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

That’s the only edge the younger Tszyu has over his father at 28.

Tim Tszyu has some impressive victories, including a unanimous decision over Terrell Gausha and a ninth-round stoppage of slick Tony Harrison that made him a top junior middleweight. However, Kostya Tszyu had already reigned as champion for two years by the time he lost to Phillips, with four successful defenses.

And his resume was strong, with victories over Juan Laporte, Livingstone Bramble, Hector Lopez, Jake Rodriguez (to win his first belt), Roger Mayweather and other proven opponents.

So, yes, dad was farther along than junior at the same juncture.

Tim Tszyu is just getting started, though. He’s in his prime and poised to do great things. If he gets past the hard-punching Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs), he could end up facing the man he has chased for a year and a half, fellow titleholder Jermell Charlo.

And Charlo seems particularly vulnerable after his disappointing performance against 168-pound champ Canelo Alvarez, who easily outpointed the highly regarded Texan on Sept. 30.

If Tszyu gets that fight and wins it convincingly, he almost certainly will emulate his father by climbing onto pound-for-pound lists. (Will there have been a better father-son combination in terms of accomplishments?)

And Tim Tszyu can look to dad for inspiration post-28th birthday.

Kostya Tszyu recorded some of his most important victories following the loss to Phillips. He beat in succession Ismael Chaves, Rafael Ruelas and Diosbelys Hurtado to set up a title fight with champion Miguel Angel Gonzalez, whom Tszyu stopped in 10 rounds.

He later defeated Julio Cesar Chavez, Sharmba Mitchell (twice), Zab Judah, Ben Tackie and Jesse James Leija before finally getting stopped by a prime Ricky Hatton in 2005 and retiring.

Tim Tszyu could join his father in the Hall of Fame if he embarks on a run like that in the next few years.

Of course, Tszyu isn’t thinking about what might lie ahead. He must defeat Mendoza before he can even begin to think about following the lead of a fighter as great as his father.

“I’m focusing right now on Mendoza,” he told Boxing Junkie. “I haven’t really thought too much about the future.”

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How do Tim and Kostya Tszyu compare at same point of careers?

How do Tim and Kostya Tszyu compare at same point of careers?

Tim Tszyu will always have a high standard to live up to.

The 28-year-old Australian junior middleweight is the son of Kostya Tszyu, the dynamic former two-time junior welterweight champion who was inducted into the International Hall of Fame in 2011.

The younger Tszyu has a long way to go to catch up with dad but he has begun to make his own mark. That includes being upgraded by the WBO from “interim” to full 154-pound titleholder recently, his first major belt.

He will make his first defense against Brian Mendoza on Sunday afternoon in Broadbeach, Australia (Saturday night in the U.S) on Showtime.

But how do father and son compare at the same age? Have a look.

Kostya Tszyu (pictured here fighting Hugo Pineda) had a Hall of Fame career. Brendan Esposito / AFP via Getty Images.

Tim Tszyu (23-0, 17 KOs) is undefeated. When Kostya Tszyu (31-2, 25 KOs) turned 28 in September 1997, he had just suffered his first of two career losses. Vince Phillips stopped him in 10 rounds in May 1997 in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

That’s the only edge the younger Tszyu has over his father at 28.

Tim Tszyu has some impressive victories, including a unanimous decision over Terrell Gausha and a ninth-round stoppage of slick Tony Harrison that made him a top junior middleweight. However, Kostya Tszyu had already reigned as champion for two years by the time he lost to Phillips, with four successful defenses.

And his resume was strong, with victories over Juan Laporte, Livingstone Bramble, Hector Lopez, Jake Rodriguez (to win his first belt), Roger Mayweather and other proven opponents.

So, yes, dad was farther along than junior at the same juncture.

Tim Tszyu is just getting started, though. He’s in his prime and poised to do great things. If he gets past the hard-punching Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs), he could end up facing the man he has chased for a year and a half, fellow titleholder Jermell Charlo.

And Charlo seems particularly vulnerable after his disappointing performance against 168-pound champ Canelo Alvarez, who easily outpointed the highly regarded Texan on Sept. 30.

If Tszyu gets that fight and wins it convincingly, he almost certainly will emulate his father by climbing onto pound-for-pound lists. (Will there have been a better father-son combination in terms of accomplishments?)

And Tim Tszyu can look to dad for inspiration post-28th birthday.

Kostya Tszyu recorded some of his most important victories following the loss to Phillips. He beat in succession Ismael Chaves, Rafael Ruelas and Diosbelys Hurtado to set up a title fight with champion Miguel Angel Gonzalez, whom Tszyu stopped in 10 rounds.

He later defeated Julio Cesar Chavez, Sharmba Mitchell (twice), Zab Judah, Ben Tackie and Jesse James Leija before finally getting stopped by a prime Ricky Hatton in 2005 and retiring.

Tim Tszyu could join his father in the Hall of Fame if he embarks on a run like that in the next few years.

Of course, Tszyu isn’t thinking about what might lie ahead. He must defeat Mendoza before he can even begin to think about following the lead of a fighter as great as his father.

“I’m focusing right now on Mendoza,” he told Boxing Junkie. “I haven’t really thought too much about the future.”

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Fight Week: New champ Tim Tszyu to make first defense vs. Brian Mendoza

Fight Week: New 154-pound titleholder Tim Tszyu is scheduled to make the first defense of his belt against Brian Mendoza on Saturday.

FIGHT WEEK

Tim Tszyu, recently upgraded to the full WBO 154-pound champion, will make his first defense against Brian Mendoza in Australia.

TIM TSZYU (23-0, 17 KOs) VS.
BRIAN MENDOZA (22-2, 16 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Oct. 14 (Oct. 15 in Australia)
  • Time: 10:30 p.m. ET / 7:30 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Gold Coast Convention Centre, Broadbeach, Australia
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior middleweight (154 pounds)
  • At stake: Tszyu’s WBO title
  • Odds: Tszyu 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Sam Goodman vs. Miguel Flores, junior featherweights; Nathaniel May vs. Jackson Jon England, junior lightweights; Sergei Vorobev vs. Wade Ryan, junior middleweights
  • Prediction: Tszyu KO 10
  • Background: Tszyu was supposed to have challenged then-undisputed 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo but ended up being upgraded from the WBO “interim” to full titleholder when Charlo fought Canelo Alvarez instead. The 28-year-old from Sydney has turned in a series of quality performances, including a decision over Terrell Gausha and knockouts of Tony Harrison and Carlos Ocampo in his last three fights. The son of Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu wasn’t gratified when he was upgraded, saying he wanted to win the title in the ring. He sees this fight more as a battle for the vacant title than a defense. Mendoza is one of the hotter boxers in the world. The 29-year-old from Albuquerque delivered back-to-back knockouts of former beltholder Jeison Rosario in November and top contender Sebastian Fundora in April. He has won three in a row since losing to Jesus Ramos in 2021.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

WEDNESDAY

  • Femke Hermans vs. Mary Spencer, rematch, junior middleweights (for vacant IBF title), Montreal (ESPN+)

SATURDAY

  • KSI vs. Tommy Fury, cruiserweights, Manchester, England (pay-per-view)
  • Vincenzo Gualtieri vs. Janibek Alimkhanuly, middleweights (for Gualtieri’s IBF and Alimkhanuly’s WBO titles), Rosenberg, Texas (ESPN, ESPN+)

[lawrence-related id=39255,37854,37848,37841,36678,36653,36648,36644]

Fight Week: New champ Tim Tszyu to make first defense vs. Brian Mendoza

Fight Week: New 154-pound titleholder Tim Tszyu is scheduled to make the first defense of his belt against Brian Mendoza on Saturday.

FIGHT WEEK

Tim Tszyu, recently upgraded to the full WBO 154-pound champion, will make his first defense against Brian Mendoza in Australia.

TIM TSZYU (23-0, 17 KOs) VS.
BRIAN MENDOZA (22-2, 16 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Oct. 14 (Oct. 15 in Australia)
  • Time: 10:30 p.m. ET / 7:30 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Gold Coast Convention Centre, Broadbeach, Australia
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior middleweight (154 pounds)
  • At stake: Tszyu’s WBO title
  • Odds: Tszyu 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Sam Goodman vs. Miguel Flores, junior featherweights; Nathaniel May vs. Jackson Jon England, junior lightweights; Sergei Vorobev vs. Wade Ryan, junior middleweights
  • Prediction: Tszyu KO 10
  • Background: Tszyu was supposed to have challenged then-undisputed 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo but ended up being upgraded from the WBO “interim” to full titleholder when Charlo fought Canelo Alvarez instead. The 28-year-old from Sydney has turned in a series of quality performances, including a decision over Terrell Gausha and knockouts of Tony Harrison and Carlos Ocampo in his last three fights. The son of Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu wasn’t gratified when he was upgraded, saying he wanted to win the title in the ring. He sees this fight more as a battle for the vacant title than a defense. Mendoza is one of the hotter boxers in the world. The 29-year-old from Albuquerque delivered back-to-back knockouts of former beltholder Jeison Rosario in November and top contender Sebastian Fundora in April. He has won three in a row since losing to Jesus Ramos in 2021.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

WEDNESDAY

  • Femke Hermans vs. Mary Spencer, rematch, junior middleweights (for vacant IBF title), Montreal (ESPN+)

SATURDAY

  • KSI vs. Tommy Fury, cruiserweights, Manchester, England (pay-per-view)
  • Vincenzo Gualtieri vs. Janibek Alimkhanuly, middleweights (for Gualtieri’s IBF and Alimkhanuly’s WBO titles), Rosenberg, Texas (ESPN, ESPN+)

[lawrence-related id=39255,37854,37848,37841,36678,36653,36648,36644]

Tim Tszyu on Jermell Charlo’s performance against Canelo Alvarez: ‘Just there to survive’

Tim Tszyu on Jermell Charlo’s performance against Canelo Alvarez this past Saturday: ‘I think he was there just there to survive.”

Tim Tszyu was supposed to have fought Jermell Charlo before the 154-pound king made the decision to move up two divisions to challenge Canelo Alvarez last Saturday. And Tszyu still wants that fight, which he believes would leave no doubt about who is the best junior middleweight.

The newly upgraded WBO champ doesn’t think much of Charlo at the moment, though.

Tszyu, who faces Brian Mendoza on Oct. 14 in Australia (Showtime) watched the Alvarez-Charlo fight with the rest of us. And he wasn’t impressed with the effort of Charlo, who wasn’t competitive and lost a one-sided decision.

“I think he was just there to survive, honestly,” Tszyu told Boxing Junkie. “He looked like a scared boy, in my opinion. Canelo pressed it, did what he had to do. He sort of annihilated him every round. What surprised me is that [Charlo] really didn’t put up much of a game.

“When I was watching Spence-Crawford, Spence went out on his shield. Even though things weren’t working, he was trying to win, trying to figure it out. He went out on his shield the way a fighter should. Charlo was there just to survive, to say he accomplished 12 rounds with Canelo. That’s what he wanted.”

Tszyu (23-0, 17 KOs) was upgraded by the WBO from “interim” to full champion — his first major title — when the Alvarez-Charlo opening bell sounded.

When he was asked what that meant to him, he paused and then gave a straight forward answer: He won’t feel as if he’s a true champion until he beats Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs). And he won’t be completely satisfied until he takes down Charlo, who still holds three of the four major 154-pound titles.

Charlo has been dismissive of a potential fight with Tszyu, although he didn’t rule it out when he was asked about the possibility after his loss. However, he appears to be focused on luring 147-pound champion Terence Crawford into the ring, which Tszyu dismissed as Charlo “chasing money.”

Tszyu remains hopeful that he’ll meet Charlo, though.

“I don’t think Charlo has as many options as he thinks,” Tszyu said. “There aren’t too many people out there. Once we finish this fight, I think it does make sense.”

In a perfect world Tszyu would’ve beaten Charlo to win his first world title, not claiming it outside the ring. And he’s as confident as ever that he’d win that fight.

“A hundred percent,” he said. “That’s the guy I’ve been chasing for a year and half now. Even if no world titles are involved, that’s the name I wanted. … I saw it from a long time ago that he’s vulnerable. I never saw that competitive edge in him. That showed [on Saturday].”

Tim Tszyu on Jermell Charlo’s performance against Canelo Alvarez: ‘Just there to survive’

Tim Tszyu on Jermell Charlo’s performance against Canelo Alvarez this past Saturday: ‘I think he was there just there to survive.”

Tim Tszyu was supposed to have fought Jermell Charlo before the 154-pound king made the decision to move up two divisions to challenge Canelo Alvarez last Saturday. And Tszyu still wants that fight, which he believes would leave no doubt about who is the best junior middleweight.

The newly upgraded WBO champ doesn’t think much of Charlo at the moment, though.

Tszyu, who faces Brian Mendoza on Oct. 14 in Australia (Showtime) watched the Alvarez-Charlo fight with the rest of us. And he wasn’t impressed with the effort of Charlo, who wasn’t competitive and lost a one-sided decision.

“I think he was just there to survive, honestly,” Tszyu told Boxing Junkie. “He looked like a scared boy, in my opinion. Canelo pressed it, did what he had to do. He sort of annihilated him every round. What surprised me is that [Charlo] really didn’t put up much of a game.

“When I was watching Spence-Crawford, Spence went out on his shield. Even though things weren’t working, he was trying to win, trying to figure it out. He went out on his shield the way a fighter should. Charlo was there just to survive, to say he accomplished 12 rounds with Canelo. That’s what he wanted.”

Tszyu (23-0, 17 KOs) was upgraded by the WBO from “interim” to full champion — his first major title — when the Alvarez-Charlo opening bell sounded.

When he was asked what that meant to him, he paused and then gave a straight forward answer: He won’t feel as if he’s a true champion until he beats Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs). And he won’t be completely satisfied until he takes down Charlo, who still holds three of the four major 154-pound titles.

Charlo has been dismissive of a potential fight with Tszyu, although he didn’t rule it out when he was asked about the possibility after his loss. However, he appears to be focused on luring 147-pound champion Terence Crawford into the ring, which Tszyu dismissed as Charlo “chasing money.”

Tszyu remains hopeful that he’ll meet Charlo, though.

“I don’t think Charlo has as many options as he thinks,” Tszyu said. “There aren’t too many people out there. Once we finish this fight, I think it does make sense.”

In a perfect world Tszyu would’ve beaten Charlo to win his first world title, not claiming it outside the ring. And he’s as confident as ever that he’d win that fight.

“A hundred percent,” he said. “That’s the guy I’ve been chasing for a year and half now. Even if no world titles are involved, that’s the name I wanted. … I saw it from a long time ago that he’s vulnerable. I never saw that competitive edge in him. That showed [on Saturday].”

Weekend Review: Shakur Stevenson, Brian Mendoza, ‘Bam’ Rodriguez have their way

Weekend Review: Shakur Stevenson, Brian Mendoza and ‘Bam’ Rodriguez delivered impressive performances on Saturday night.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Shakur Stevenson

Stevenson is building the case that he’s the best pure boxer since Floyd Mayweather ruled the sport. The 2016 Olympic silver medalist was brilliant once again against Shuichiro Yoshino in his 135-pound debut Saturday in his hometown of Newark, New Jersey, landing power shots at will to break down, score two knockdowns and finally stop his Japanese opponent in the sixth round. All the while he took almost nothing in return even though he stood directly in front of Yoshino throughout, underscoring his defensive wizardry. The dazzling performance was as perfect as it gets. And remember: Yoshino, while a significant underdog, was no pushover. He was coming off back-to-back victories over capable countrymen Masayuki Ito and Masayoshi Nakatani, earning him a ranking in three of the four major sanctioning bodies. And Stevenson (20-0, 10 KOs) made Yoshino (16-1, 12 KOs) look like he didn’t belong in the ring, which he does against most opponents. We’ll see how Stevenson does against next level opposition – Devin Haney, Gervonta Davis, et al – but he couldn’t have been much better so far.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
Brian Mendoza

Everyone loves a good rags-to-riches story. And Mendoza’s is compelling. The 29-year-old from Albuquerque seemed to have hit his ceiling as an elite boxer when he lost two of three fights between 2019 and 2021, the second against talented Jesus Ramos. Mendoza wasn’t ready to give up, however. And his persistence paid off. He received a chance to prove that he is more than journeyman when he took a fight against former unified 154-pound champion Jeison Rosario on short notice and stopped him in November. That led to an even bigger opportunity on Saturday, when he delivered a Knockout of the Year candidate against rising star Sebastian Fundora in the seventh round of a fight he was losing to claim his place among the best junior middleweights in the world. Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs) went from an afterthought to the cusp of a world title fight in two bouts. Can he take down undisputed champion Jermell Charlo or Tim Tszyu? Probably not. But he certainly has earned the opportunity. And he has proved in his past two fights that anything is possible if you believe in yourself.

 

BIGGEST WINNER III
Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez

Rodriguez’s unanimous decision victory over Cristian Gonzalez to win a vacant 112-pound title Saturday – giving him a major belt in a second division at 23 – wasn’t pretty but it was gutsy and convincing. Gonzalez’s strategy wasn’t complicated: Throw punches on the run, the idea being Rodriguez will have difficulty hitting a moving target. And the Mexican had some success, forcing his more-heralded opponent to give chase the entire fight. The problem for Gonzalez (15-2, 5 KOs) was that Rodriguez (18-0, 11 KOs) was able to corner him enough to land hard, eye-catching shots and win over the judges. We learned afterward that Rodriguez suffered what he believes was a broken jaw in the middle rounds, meaning he fought half the bout in great pain. It wasn’t Rodriguez’s greatest performance, as he acknowledged afterward. At the same time, the young star demonstrated that he can overcome multiple obstacles to win an important fight by a clear margin. That’s a good night’s work by any standard. The downside is his injury. A broken jaw probably would keep him out of the ring until late in the year or even early 2024.

 

BIGGEST LOSER
Sebastian Fundora

Sebastian Fundora (left) took at least one big shot too many. Esther Lin / Showtime

Fundora (20-1-1, 13 KOs) described his fate perfectly in his post-fight interview. “This is boxing,” he said. Indeed, the 6-foot-6 “Towering Inferno” was in full control of the fight for six-plus rounds, alternately peppering the 5-10 Mendoza with his long jab and beating him up on the inside. He was pitching a near shutout after six rounds. Then disaster struck. Mendoza landed a left hook from hell, which buckled Fundora’s knees. And he followed with a right-left combination to the head of his suddenly helpless foe that put him down and out. This is boxing. Fundora couldn’t have been classier after his heartbreaking setback, which temporarily derailed his plans to fight for a world title. He gave Mendoza credit and vowed to bounce back. And he will. The 25-year-old  looked terrific for six-plus rounds and then got caught with a perfect shot from a strong puncher. He’ll go back to the gym, work on his defense and return with more motivation than he has ever had.

 

RABBIT PUNCHES

Promoter Bob Arum has said he’d like to have Stevenson face the winner of the May 20 fight between Haney and Vasiliy Lomachenko unless Haney wins and moves up to 140 pounds. That would provide Stevenson’s first genuine opportunity to make a case that he’s the best fighter on the planet. Let’s hope it happens in the fall. After that? It would be difficult to match “Tank” Davis with one of the above because of competing alliances but the fans certainly will demand it. A lot of great 135-pound matchups appear to lie ahead. … I doubt anyone will reach the level of a prime Mayweather in terms of pure boxing ability but Stevenson has a chance. He’s a hit-and-not-get-hit wizard if there ever was one. And if his performance against Yoshino is an indication, he’s determined to add knockout power to his arsenal. That could mean he’s getting better, which is a scary thought for those at or near 135 pounds. …

Marlon Tapales (37-3, 19 KOs) of the Philippines delivered a tremendous upset on the Rodriguez-Gonzalez card, defeating the celebrated Murodjon Akhmadaliev (11-1, 8 KOs) of Uzbekistan by a split decision to become a unified 122-pound champion at 31. Tapales, a former 118-pound beltholder, outworked the 2016 Olympic bronze medalist early in the fight and then withstood a fierce rally down the stretch to record his biggest victory. My guess is that Akhmadaliev would work harder in the opening rounds and win a clear decision in a rematch. … Gifted 126-pound contender Raymond Ford (14-0-1, 8 KOs) looked impressive in his one-sided decision victory over veteran Jessie Magdaleno (29-2, 18 KOs) on the Rodriguez-Gonzalez card. Ford outboxed Madaleno, put him down twice and hurt on several other occasions in a dominating performance. And Ford is still developing. He’s one to keep an eye on. …

Heavyweight contender Jared Anderson (14-0, 14 KOs) maintained his perfect knockout record against previously unbeaten George Arias (18-1, 7 KOs) on the Stevenson-Yoshino card. “Big Baby” is only 23, which is an infant in his division. Still, he appears to be ready to face a fellow contender. The question is: Who is going to want to fight him? He’s that good, that imposing. … Lightweight contender Keyshawn Davis (8-0, 6 KOs) turned in another strong performance on the Stevenson-Yoshino card, dominating and then stopping veteran Anthony Yigit (26-3-1, 10 KOs) in nine rounds. It’s too early to pit Davis against one of the elite 135-pounders mentioned above but he’ll get there soon enough. The talent is there. … Junior welterweight Brandun Lee (28-0, 23 KOs) withstood a fierce effort from Pedro Campa (34-3-1, 23 KOs) to win a unanimous decision on the Mendoza-Fundora card. Lee probably was too focused on stopping the Mexican veteran, which made his mission more difficult. However, the 23-year-old from the Southern California desert got the job done and will have learned from the experience.

[lawrence-related id=36653,36648,36644,36640,36633]

Weekend Review: Shakur Stevenson, Brian Mendoza, ‘Bam’ Rodriguez have their way

Weekend Review: Shakur Stevenson, Brian Mendoza and ‘Bam’ Rodriguez delivered impressive performances on Saturday night.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Shakur Stevenson

Stevenson is building the case that he’s the best pure boxer since Floyd Mayweather ruled the sport. The 2016 Olympic silver medalist was brilliant once again against Shuichiro Yoshino in his 135-pound debut Saturday in his hometown of Newark, New Jersey, landing power shots at will to break down, score two knockdowns and finally stop his Japanese opponent in the sixth round. All the while he took almost nothing in return even though he stood directly in front of Yoshino throughout, underscoring his defensive wizardry. The dazzling performance was as perfect as it gets. And remember: Yoshino, while a significant underdog, was no pushover. He was coming off back-to-back victories over capable countrymen Masayuki Ito and Masayoshi Nakatani, earning him a ranking in three of the four major sanctioning bodies. And Stevenson (20-0, 10 KOs) made Yoshino (16-1, 12 KOs) look like he didn’t belong in the ring, which he does against most opponents. We’ll see how Stevenson does against next level opposition – Devin Haney, Gervonta Davis, et al – but he couldn’t have been much better so far.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
Brian Mendoza

Everyone loves a good rags-to-riches story. And Mendoza’s is compelling. The 29-year-old from Albuquerque seemed to have hit his ceiling as an elite boxer when he lost two of three fights between 2019 and 2021, the second against talented Jesus Ramos. Mendoza wasn’t ready to give up, however. And his persistence paid off. He received a chance to prove that he is more than journeyman when he took a fight against former unified 154-pound champion Jeison Rosario on short notice and stopped him in November. That led to an even bigger opportunity on Saturday, when he delivered a Knockout of the Year candidate against rising star Sebastian Fundora in the seventh round of a fight he was losing to claim his place among the best junior middleweights in the world. Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs) went from an afterthought to the cusp of a world title fight in two bouts. Can he take down undisputed champion Jermell Charlo or Tim Tszyu? Probably not. But he certainly has earned the opportunity. And he has proved in his past two fights that anything is possible if you believe in yourself.

 

BIGGEST WINNER III
Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez

Rodriguez’s unanimous decision victory over Cristian Gonzalez to win a vacant 112-pound title Saturday – giving him a major belt in a second division at 23 – wasn’t pretty but it was gutsy and convincing. Gonzalez’s strategy wasn’t complicated: Throw punches on the run, the idea being Rodriguez will have difficulty hitting a moving target. And the Mexican had some success, forcing his more-heralded opponent to give chase the entire fight. The problem for Gonzalez (15-2, 5 KOs) was that Rodriguez (18-0, 11 KOs) was able to corner him enough to land hard, eye-catching shots and win over the judges. We learned afterward that Rodriguez suffered what he believes was a broken jaw in the middle rounds, meaning he fought half the bout in great pain. It wasn’t Rodriguez’s greatest performance, as he acknowledged afterward. At the same time, the young star demonstrated that he can overcome multiple obstacles to win an important fight by a clear margin. That’s a good night’s work by any standard. The downside is his injury. A broken jaw probably would keep him out of the ring until late in the year or even early 2024.

 

BIGGEST LOSER
Sebastian Fundora

Sebastian Fundora (left) took at least one big shot too many. Esther Lin / Showtime

Fundora (20-1-1, 13 KOs) described his fate perfectly in his post-fight interview. “This is boxing,” he said. Indeed, the 6-foot-6 “Towering Inferno” was in full control of the fight for six-plus rounds, alternately peppering the 5-10 Mendoza with his long jab and beating him up on the inside. He was pitching a near shutout after six rounds. Then disaster struck. Mendoza landed a left hook from hell, which buckled Fundora’s knees. And he followed with a right-left combination to the head of his suddenly helpless foe that put him down and out. This is boxing. Fundora couldn’t have been classier after his heartbreaking setback, which temporarily derailed his plans to fight for a world title. He gave Mendoza credit and vowed to bounce back. And he will. The 25-year-old  looked terrific for six-plus rounds and then got caught with a perfect shot from a strong puncher. He’ll go back to the gym, work on his defense and return with more motivation than he has ever had.

 

RABBIT PUNCHES

Promoter Bob Arum has said he’d like to have Stevenson face the winner of the May 20 fight between Haney and Vasiliy Lomachenko unless Haney wins and moves up to 140 pounds. That would provide Stevenson’s first genuine opportunity to make a case that he’s the best fighter on the planet. Let’s hope it happens in the fall. After that? It would be difficult to match “Tank” Davis with one of the above because of competing alliances but the fans certainly will demand it. A lot of great 135-pound matchups appear to lie ahead. … I doubt anyone will reach the level of a prime Mayweather in terms of pure boxing ability but Stevenson has a chance. He’s a hit-and-not-get-hit wizard if there ever was one. And if his performance against Yoshino is an indication, he’s determined to add knockout power to his arsenal. That could mean he’s getting better, which is a scary thought for those at or near 135 pounds. …

Marlon Tapales (37-3, 19 KOs) of the Philippines delivered a tremendous upset on the Rodriguez-Gonzalez card, defeating the celebrated Murodjon Akhmadaliev (11-1, 8 KOs) of Uzbekistan by a split decision to become a unified 122-pound champion at 31. Tapales, a former 118-pound beltholder, outworked the 2016 Olympic bronze medalist early in the fight and then withstood a fierce rally down the stretch to record his biggest victory. My guess is that Akhmadaliev would work harder in the opening rounds and win a clear decision in a rematch. … Gifted 126-pound contender Raymond Ford (14-0-1, 8 KOs) looked impressive in his one-sided decision victory over veteran Jessie Magdaleno (29-2, 18 KOs) on the Rodriguez-Gonzalez card. Ford outboxed Madaleno, put him down twice and hurt on several other occasions in a dominating performance. And Ford is still developing. He’s one to keep an eye on. …

Heavyweight contender Jared Anderson (14-0, 14 KOs) maintained his perfect knockout record against previously unbeaten George Arias (18-1, 7 KOs) on the Stevenson-Yoshino card. “Big Baby” is only 23, which is an infant in his division. Still, he appears to be ready to face a fellow contender. The question is: Who is going to want to fight him? He’s that good, that imposing. … Lightweight contender Keyshawn Davis (8-0, 6 KOs) turned in another strong performance on the Stevenson-Yoshino card, dominating and then stopping veteran Anthony Yigit (26-3-1, 10 KOs) in nine rounds. It’s too early to pit Davis against one of the elite 135-pounders mentioned above but he’ll get there soon enough. The talent is there. … Junior welterweight Brandun Lee (28-0, 23 KOs) withstood a fierce effort from Pedro Campa (34-3-1, 23 KOs) to win a unanimous decision on the Mendoza-Fundora card. Lee probably was too focused on stopping the Mexican veteran, which made his mission more difficult. However, the 23-year-old from the Southern California desert got the job done and will have learned from the experience.

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Photos: Brian Mendoza’s epic seventh-round knockout of Sebastian Fundora

Photos: Brian Mendoza’s epic seventh-round knockout of Sebastian Fundora on Saturday.

Brian Mendoza knocked out Sebastian Fundora in the seventh round Saturday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California.

Mendoza hurt Fundora with a crushing left hook and followed with a right-left combination that put the previously unbeaten “Towering Inferno” down and out.

Here are images from the fight. All photos by Esther Lin of Showtime.

Photos: Brian Mendoza’s epic seventh-round knockout of Sebastian Fundora

Photos: Brian Mendoza’s epic seventh-round knockout of Sebastian Fundora on Saturday.

Brian Mendoza knocked out Sebastian Fundora in the seventh round Saturday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California.

Mendoza hurt Fundora with a crushing left hook and followed with a right-left combination that put the previously unbeaten “Towering Inferno” down and out.

Here are images from the fight. All photos by Esther Lin of Showtime.