Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Callum Smith legitimate threat to Canelo Alvarez?

Canelo Alvarez is around a 4-1 favorite to beat Callum Smith on Dec. 19 at the Alamodome in San Antonio on DAZN, according to BetMGM. That doesn’t mean Alvarez can take anything for granted against the unbeaten super middleweight titleholder from …

Canelo Alvarez is around a 4-1 favorite to beat Callum Smith on Dec. 19 at the Alamodome in San Antonio on DAZN, according to BetMGM.

That doesn’t mean Alvarez can take anything for granted against the unbeaten super middleweight titleholder from Liverpool, England, who is a capable, experienced all-around fighter and much taller than the pound-for-pounder from Mexico.

In this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora, courtesy of DAZN, hosts Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora tackle the question: Is Smith a legitimate threat to beat Alvarez?

Hint: They came to the same conclusion. Here’s what they had to say.

[jwplayer dzRXYpUK]

 

 

Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Callum Smith legitimate threat to Canelo Alvarez?

Canelo Alvarez is around a 4-1 favorite to beat Callum Smith on Dec. 19 at the Alamodome in San Antonio on DAZN, according to BetMGM. That doesn’t mean Alvarez can take anything for granted against the unbeaten super middleweight titleholder from …

Canelo Alvarez is around a 4-1 favorite to beat Callum Smith on Dec. 19 at the Alamodome in San Antonio on DAZN, according to BetMGM.

That doesn’t mean Alvarez can take anything for granted against the unbeaten super middleweight titleholder from Liverpool, England, who is a capable, experienced all-around fighter and much taller than the pound-for-pounder from Mexico.

In this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora, courtesy of DAZN, hosts Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora tackle the question: Is Smith a legitimate threat to beat Alvarez?

Hint: They came to the same conclusion. Here’s what they had to say.

[jwplayer dzRXYpUK]

 

 

Sergey Kovalev plans to fight at cruiserweight, says trainer

Sergey Kovalev will be moving up to the cruiserweight division, according to his trainer Buddy McGirt.

The next time Sergey Kovalev ducks through the ropes, expect him to be a bit heavier.

After 39 fights at light heavyweight in a career that spans more than a decade, the former titleholder is looking to start afresh in a new weight class.

“He’s going up to cruiserweight,” his trainer Buddy McGirt told Boxing Junkie. “We’ll start training in about a month.”

Kovalev (34-4-1, 29 KOs) recently loss his 175-pound title to Canelo Alvarez after suffering an 11th-round technical knockout in November. The bout, which generated a career purse for the Russian, came on the heels of what was a taxing fight for Kovalev against Anthony Yarde in late August. Kovalev was nearly out on his feet before storming back to stop the British contender in the 11th round.

McGirt said that he signed off on Kovalev’s decision to move up to cruiserweight under one condition: He can’t come in anywhere close to the 200-pound limit.

“As long as we go to 185 [pounds], we’re good. No more than 185,” McGirt said. “He can come in at 180 and beat those guys. He’ll be light, and that’s OK.”

McGirt said the decision had nothing to do with the loss to Alvarez per se. Rather, he based it off of how Kovalev looked in the past couple of training camps. Cutting weight to make the 175-pound limit was becoming harder and harder.

“I think he’ll be better at that weight (cruiserweight),” McGirt said.

It’s not clear when or whom Kovalev will fight next, but his promoter, Main Events, told Boxing Junkie last month that he will likely appear on a DAZN card. McGirt says he has not spoken to anybody from the promotional side about Kovalev’s move up in weight.

“I haven’t spoken to Kathy [Duva of Main Events], so I can’t put that lie out there,” he said.

Main Events did not respond to a request for comment.

Kovalev was recently sued by a woman he allegedly assaulted for non-payment of their agreed-upon settlement. The woman, Jamie Frontz, claims Kovalev punched her in the face and that she suffered a displaced disk in her back. The assault case is still pending.

Buddy McGirt on Adam Lopez: ‘He lost the battle but won the war’

Buddy McGirt believes Adam Lopez is primed for big things after his seventh-round TKO loss to Oscar Valdez on Saturday night in Las Vegas.

Adam Lopez was deprived of a career-changing win on Saturday night but his future remains bright, according to his trainer, Buddy McGirt.

“I’m proud of Adam,” McGirt told Boxing Junkie. “To me, Adam won the fight. He lost the battle but won the war.”

The 23-year-old career featherweight moved up a division as a last-minute replacement to fight Oscar Valdez, a former featherweight titleholder making his debut at the junior lightweight limit. Valdez’s original opponent, Andres Gutierrez, was dropped from the scheduled 10-rounder after weighing in 11 pounds over the 130-pound limit.

Of course, Lopez was recruited simply as a fill-in to preserve the main event so that the A-side’s three-month training camp would not go to waste. Instead, Lopez veered from the intended script, pasting Valdez all night with sharp jabs, quick straight rights and hard left hooks, one of which sent Valdez to the canvas in the second round. 

“Kid can fight, man,” McGirt said. “He’s a future superstar. He’s the real deal man. The sky’s the limit for this young man. I told him, ‘Don’t lose focus, man.’”

In the seventh, however, Valdez, answered back with a crushing left hook that hurt Lopez and led to a knockdown. When he got up, Valdez jumped on his opponent with a flurry of punches that prompted referee Russell to stop the fight, cutting short what might have been a colossal upset win for the unheralded Lopez.

While many observers criticized Mora’s decision, McGirt respected the call.

“I’m gonna say this: The referees see more than I do, since he’s the closest man to the action,” said McGirt, who lost a fighter in the ring earlier this year in Maxim Dadashev. “I’m not mad at anybody. Maybe he saw something and just had to lean with it. He felt what he needed to do.”

Bad call or not, Lopez left the ring with an enhanced profile.

“By (stopping the fight), Mora made Adam the biggest star,” McGirt said. “It was better than going to the scorecards and getting robbed. Either way, it made Adam the bigger star.”

Indeed, two of the three judges had Valdez leading after six rounds, including an egregious 58-55 – five rounds to one – from Dave Moretti.

The real loser, McGirt insisted, is Valdez, who has to contend with the reality that he struggled visibly against a prospect who was still fighting in six-to-eight-round fights.

“Valdez has to second guess himself now,” McGirt said. “He fought a 126-pounder moving up the day before and you get your ass kicked like that for seven rounds, know what I mean? It’s going to make Valdez think. He was an Olympian and former champion. Adam knows he belongs and in 2020, God willing, he becomes a world champion.”

McGirt said Lopez was consoled by a pair of former world champions, who were called the fight on ESPN+.

“He was very disappointed but Andre Ward and Timothy Bradley had a nice talk with him,” McGirt said. “They shot straight from the hip and said they were Adam Lopez fans. They told him we didn’t want to be fans but you made us fans.”

The crowd at the Cosmopolitan apparently felt the same way, as it booed Valdez when he gave his post-fight remarks inside the ring.

“You heard the crowd cheering Adam and booing Valdez on the way out,” McGirt said. “What better feeling is that? Tyson Fury didn’t win against Deontay Wilder and he’s a bigger star.”

McGirt also said that promoter Bob Arum offered words of encouragement. Lopez will continue to work with Top Rank, “without a doubt,” McGirt added.

Maybe there are moral victories in boxing, after all.