Callum Smith: ‘I believe best version of me can beat anyone in world’

Callum Smith confident going into fight with Artur Beterbiev: “I believe that the best version of me can beat anyone in the world..”

The last time we saw Callum Smith on a big stage he got his you know what handed to him by Canelo Alvarez.

Smith fought bravely but had neither the skill set nor the resilience to compete on the same level as the Mexican superstar, who won a one-sided decision to unify two 168-pound titles in December 2020 in San Antonio.

Will anything be different when Smith faces another star Saturday in Quebec City, Canada (ESPN, ESPN+)?

Smith (29-1, 21 KOs) is set to challenge 175-pound titleholder Artur Beterbiev, who has stopped all of his 19 professional opponents to become one of the most feared fighters in the world.

The Englishman says heā€™s ready for the challenge.

ā€œIā€™m in a good place mentally and physically, and Iā€™m ready to perform,ā€ Smith said Thursday at the final news conference. ā€œā€¦ This will be exciting. Heā€™s a very good fighter. Heā€™s a three-belt champion. So, his achievements speak for themselves.

ā€œBut, I believe in myself. I always have. I believe that the best version of me can beat anyone in the world. I fully stand by that.”

Smith moved up to light heavyweight after the setback against Alvarez. And he moved on from trainer Joe Gallagher in favor of Los Angeles-based Buddy McGirt.

The 33-year-old feels good about the new arrangement, which has produced back-to-back knockouts of Lenin Casillo in 2021 and Mathieu Bauderlique last year. He believes heā€™s a better fighter than he was in 2020.

ā€œIā€™ve improved a lot over the last couple of years with Buddy McGirt,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd the time is now. Iā€™m ready to become a two-division world champion. Iā€™m being presented with the opportunity this weekend, and itā€™s an opportunity I plan on taking.ā€

McGirt also believes in his protƩgƩ.

The Hall of Famer fighter-turned-trainer respects Beterbiev, arguably the most intimidating fighter in the world, but he implied that a lot of people are going to be surprised come Saturday night.

ā€œHeā€™s very underrated,ā€ McGirt said of Smith. ā€œI think a lot of people underestimate him. Heā€™s going to really showcase what he can do on Saturday night. You canā€™t go into the fight thinking about his record. We know whatā€™s in front of us. Weā€™re not stupid. We know that itā€™s a tough test.

ā€œWeā€™re prepared for that. If youā€™re worried about that, youā€™re in the wrong business.ā€

Weā€™ll see how prepared Smith really is.

[lawrence-related id=40416,32131,24068,16592]

Callum Smith: ‘I believe best version of me can beat anyone in world’

Callum Smith confident going into fight with Artur Beterbiev: “I believe that the best version of me can beat anyone in the world..”

The last time we saw Callum Smith on a big stage he got his you know what handed to him by Canelo Alvarez.

Smith fought bravely but had neither the skill set nor the resilience to compete on the same level as the Mexican superstar, who won a one-sided decision to unify two 168-pound titles in December 2020 in San Antonio.

Will anything be different when Smith faces another star Saturday in Quebec City, Canada (ESPN, ESPN+)?

Smith (29-1, 21 KOs) is set to challenge 175-pound titleholder Artur Beterbiev, who has stopped all of his 19 professional opponents to become one of the most feared fighters in the world.

The Englishman says heā€™s ready for the challenge.

ā€œIā€™m in a good place mentally and physically, and Iā€™m ready to perform,ā€ Smith said Thursday at the final news conference. ā€œā€¦ This will be exciting. Heā€™s a very good fighter. Heā€™s a three-belt champion. So, his achievements speak for themselves.

ā€œBut, I believe in myself. I always have. I believe that the best version of me can beat anyone in the world. I fully stand by that.”

Smith moved up to light heavyweight after the setback against Alvarez. And he moved on from trainer Joe Gallagher in favor of Los Angeles-based Buddy McGirt.

The 33-year-old feels good about the new arrangement, which has produced back-to-back knockouts of Lenin Casillo in 2021 and Mathieu Bauderlique last year. He believes heā€™s a better fighter than he was in 2020.

ā€œIā€™ve improved a lot over the last couple of years with Buddy McGirt,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd the time is now. Iā€™m ready to become a two-division world champion. Iā€™m being presented with the opportunity this weekend, and itā€™s an opportunity I plan on taking.ā€

McGirt also believes in his protƩgƩ.

The Hall of Famer fighter-turned-trainer respects Beterbiev, arguably the most intimidating fighter in the world, but he implied that a lot of people are going to be surprised come Saturday night.

ā€œHeā€™s very underrated,ā€ McGirt said of Smith. ā€œI think a lot of people underestimate him. Heā€™s going to really showcase what he can do on Saturday night. You canā€™t go into the fight thinking about his record. We know whatā€™s in front of us. Weā€™re not stupid. We know that itā€™s a tough test.

ā€œWeā€™re prepared for that. If youā€™re worried about that, youā€™re in the wrong business.ā€

Weā€™ll see how prepared Smith really is.

[lawrence-related id=40416,32131,24068,16592]

Callum Smith brutally knocks out Mathieu Bauderlique in fourth round

Callum Smith brutally knocked out Mathieu Bauderlique in the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round 175-pound bout Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

Callum Smith appears to be a legitimate threat to anyone at 175 pounds.

Smith, a former 168-pound titleholder, knocked out Mathieu Bauderlique at 1:53 of the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round WBC title eliminator on the Oleksandr Usyk-Anthony Joshua II card Saturday in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

The Englishman is now 2-0 at his new weight, including a second-round stoppage of Gilbert Castillo Rivera in his previous fight.

“I think it’s another one to add to the reel,” he said in the ring afterward.

Smith (29-1, 21 KOs) and Bauderlique (21-2, 12 KOs) engaged in a spirited back-and-forth battle for three-plus rounds, with both fighters landing eye-catching shots.

However, Smith changed the fight instantaneously with a left hook that put his French opponent down about 20 seconds into Round 4.

Bauderlique, a 2016 Olympic bronze medalist, was able to get to his feet and fight reasonably well but Smith kept the pressure on him, landing some hard follow-up shots.

The end came when Smith landed another left hook that sent Bauderlique down and part way through the ropes, where he was counted out.

Smith is now at the head of the line to face WBC titleholder Artur Beterbiev.

“Puts me in line for the world title next,” he said, “so good night all around.”

[lawrence-related id=32123]

Callum Smith brutally knocks out Mathieu Bauderlique in fourth round

Callum Smith brutally knocked out Mathieu Bauderlique in the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round 175-pound bout Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

Callum Smith appears to be a legitimate threat to anyone at 175 pounds.

Smith, a former 168-pound titleholder, knocked out Mathieu Bauderlique at 1:53 of the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round WBC title eliminator on the Oleksandr Usyk-Anthony Joshua II card Saturday in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

The Englishman is now 2-0 at his new weight, including a second-round stoppage of Gilbert Castillo Rivera in his previous fight.

“I think it’s another one to add to the reel,” he said in the ring afterward.

Smith (29-1, 21 KOs) and Bauderlique (21-2, 12 KOs) engaged in a spirited back-and-forth battle for three-plus rounds, with both fighters landing eye-catching shots.

However, Smith changed the fight instantaneously with a left hook that put his French opponent down about 20 seconds into Round 4.

Bauderlique, a 2016 Olympic bronze medalist, was able to get to his feet and fight reasonably well but Smith kept the pressure on him, landing some hard follow-up shots.

The end came when Smith landed another left hook that sent Bauderlique down and part way through the ropes, where he was counted out.

Smith is now at the head of the line to face WBC titleholder Artur Beterbiev.

“Puts me in line for the world title next,” he said, “so good night all around.”

[lawrence-related id=32123]

Oleksandr Usyk vs. Anthony Joshua II: LIVE updates and results, full coverage

Oleksandr Usyk vs. Anthony Joshua II: LIVE updates and results, full coverage.

Please click here to read the full report on the Oleksandr Usyk-Anthony Joshua fight Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

***

Oleksandr Usyk successfully defended his heavyweight titles by defeating Anthony Joshua by a split decision in their rematch Saturday in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Two judges had Usyk winning, 116-112 and 115-113. The third scored it for Joshua, 115-113. Boxing Junkie scored it 115-113 for Usyk, seven rounds to five.

Usyk defeated Joshua by a unanimous decision by a unanimous decision to win the titles last September.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Filip Hrgovich survived a first-round knockdown to defeat Zhang Zhilei by a unanimous decision in a competitive, back-and-forth IBF heavyweight title eliminator.

The scores were 115-112, 115-112 and 114-113. Boxing Junkie scored it 115-112 for Hrgovic, eight rounds to four.

***

Callum Smith stopped Mathieu Bauderlique in the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round lightweight fight, Smith’s second as a full-fledged 175-pounder.

Smith (29-1, 21 KOs) put Bauderlique (21-2, 12 KOs) down with a left hook early in the final round. The Englishman followed that with a series of hard shots, including another left hook that sent the Frenchman to the canvas again and ended the fight.

***

Badou Jack defeated Richard Rivera by a split decision in a 10-round cruiserweight bout.

Two judges scored it for Jack, 96-94 and 96-94. One had Rivera winning, 96-94.

Jack (27-3-3, 16 KOs) apparently benefitted from an extended Round 8, which reportedly went 3 minutes, 58 seconds. The Swede did particularly well in that extra minute.

***

Oleksandr Usyk will defend his three heavyweight titles against former champion Anthony Joshua in their rematch today (Saturday) in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (DAZN).

Usyk (19-0, 13 KOs) won the IBF, WBA and WBO belts by outpointing Joshua (24-2, 22 KOs) last September.

Also on the card, light heavyweight contender Callum Smith will face Mathieu Bauderlique; Filip Hrgovic will take on Zhang Zhilei in a heavyweight bout; and cruiserweight contender Badou Jack will fight Richard Rivera.

The card begins at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the show.

Boxing Junkie will post results of all the featured bouts on the card immediately after they end. Simply return to this post when the time comes.

Full coverage ā€“ a fight story, photo gallery and analysis ā€“ will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=32059,32040,32032,32018]

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Oleksandr Usyk vs. Anthony Joshua II: LIVE updates and results, full coverage

Oleksandr Usyk vs. Anthony Joshua II: LIVE updates and results, full coverage.

Please click here to read the full report on the Oleksandr Usyk-Anthony Joshua fight Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

***

Oleksandr Usyk successfully defended his heavyweight titles by defeating Anthony Joshua by a split decision in their rematch Saturday in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Two judges had Usyk winning, 116-112 and 115-113. The third scored it for Joshua, 115-113. Boxing Junkie scored it 115-113 for Usyk, seven rounds to five.

Usyk defeated Joshua by a unanimous decision by a unanimous decision to win the titles last September.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Filip Hrgovich survived a first-round knockdown to defeat Zhang Zhilei by a unanimous decision in a competitive, back-and-forth IBF heavyweight title eliminator.

The scores were 115-112, 115-112 and 114-113. Boxing Junkie scored it 115-112 for Hrgovic, eight rounds to four.

***

Callum Smith stopped Mathieu Bauderlique in the fourth round of a scheduled 12-round lightweight fight, Smith’s second as a full-fledged 175-pounder.

Smith (29-1, 21 KOs) put Bauderlique (21-2, 12 KOs) down with a left hook early in the final round. The Englishman followed that with a series of hard shots, including another left hook that sent the Frenchman to the canvas again and ended the fight.

***

Badou Jack defeated Richard Rivera by a split decision in a 10-round cruiserweight bout.

Two judges scored it for Jack, 96-94 and 96-94. One had Rivera winning, 96-94.

Jack (27-3-3, 16 KOs) apparently benefitted from an extended Round 8, which reportedly went 3 minutes, 58 seconds. The Swede did particularly well in that extra minute.

***

Oleksandr Usyk will defend his three heavyweight titles against former champion Anthony Joshua in their rematch today (Saturday) in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (DAZN).

Usyk (19-0, 13 KOs) won the IBF, WBA and WBO belts by outpointing Joshua (24-2, 22 KOs) last September.

Also on the card, light heavyweight contender Callum Smith will face Mathieu Bauderlique; Filip Hrgovic will take on Zhang Zhilei in a heavyweight bout; and cruiserweight contender Badou Jack will fight Richard Rivera.

The card begins at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the show.

Boxing Junkie will post results of all the featured bouts on the card immediately after they end. Simply return to this post when the time comes.

Full coverage ā€“ a fight story, photo gallery and analysis ā€“ will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=32059,32040,32032,32018]

[vertical-gallery id=32063]

Canelo Alvarez doesn’t need to fight cruiserweights to prove greatness

Opinion: Canelo Alvarez is continuing down the wrong path with his decision to fight cruiserweight Ilunga Makabu.

I hate what Canelo Alvarez is doing.

And Iā€™m not talking only about his surprising decision to move up to the cruiserweight division to challenge obscure WBC titleholder Ilunga Makabu. For me, it started with his fight against Rockey Fielding in December 2018.

Thatā€™s when it became obvious to me that the Mexican star was more interested in collecting increasingly meaningless title belts than facing the best possible opponents in a misguided attempt to ā€œmake history,ā€ as he puts it.

Alvarez was so determined to win a title in a third division that he arranged to move up from middleweight to fight Fielding, who held the WBA ā€œregularā€ super middleweight title at the time. Of course, Alvarez won easily, stopping the Englishman in three rounds, and then basked in the glory of his great accomplishment.

In fact, he wasnā€™t fooling anyone. Fielding was a mediocre fighter who owned a belt that no one takes seriously. The actual WBA champion at the time was Callum Smith, who Alvarez would later defeat to become a legitimate 168-pound titleholder.

I remember thinking at the time of the Fielding fight, ā€œThis isnā€™t the warrior who sought out genuine challenges for so many years. This was someone taking advantage of flaws in a broken system.ā€

Alvarez went back down to middleweight and accepted one of those genuine challenges, a meeting with talented Daniel Jacobs in May 2019. He won a close decision in a competitive fight, restoring some of the faith I had in him.

Then came an interesting move: Again bent on adding a title in another division, he jumped from 160 pounds to 175 to face then-WBO titleholder Sergey Kovalev in November 2019. I respected that decision because I respected Kovalev, who was aging but still a competent fighter and naturally bigger than Alvarez.

The decision to fight Kovalev when he did was carefully calculated. Kovalev had battled Anthony Yarde in a taxing bout only nine weeks earlier, which arguably wasnā€™t enough time for a 36-year-old to recover. Indeed, Kovalev was the most vulnerable of the 175-pound champions.

However, he was a reasonable choice of opponents for Alvarez given the circumstances. Roy Jones Jr., a light heavyweight, chose to fight John Ruiz instead of Lennox Lewis for obvious reasons when he made the bold decision to challenge for a heavyweight championship in 2003. Made sense.

After that came Alvarez’s quest to become undisputed super middleweight champion, which also had at least some merit. In a time of fragmented titles, fighters who hold all four major belts provide some clarity as to whom is the best in a particular division. And, yes, one could argue that the accomplishment is historic.

Hereā€™s the problem: Alvarez didnā€™t fight the best 168-pounders to reach his goal. He fought Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant because they held the titles. I believe the best potential opponents at 168 or below were David Benavidez, Jermall Charlo and Gennadiy Golovkin, all of whom would have made for more compelling ā€“ and, most likely, more competitive ā€“ fights than the titleholders did.

Alvarez can argue that he was working within the system to pursue his goals. Right. Again, the problem is that the system is flawed, as corrupt sanctioning bodies often provide title shots to fighters who arenā€™t necessarily worthy. That isnā€™t to denigrate Smith, Saunders and Plant as weak fighters; they arenā€™t. Theyā€™re just not as good as the other three.

Finally, we arrive at Alvarezā€™s decision to face cruiserweight titleholder Makabu. Once again, he is making what seems to be a bold move to make history. But how bold is it really?

On one hand, a 168-pounder is moving up two weight classes to face a major titleholder who weighed 197Ā½ pounds for his most-recent fight and has 25 knockouts in 28 victories. On the other hand, Makabu has faced only one fighter youā€™ve heard of ā€“ Tony Bellew ā€“ and was stopped in three rounds.

And hereā€™s the kicker: WBC officials announced when they created the bridgerweight division that they planned to lower the cruiserweight limit from 200 pounds to 190. Iā€™m not clear on when they plan to do that but I’m guessing it will happen before the Alvarez-Makabu fight, which would make Makabuā€™s size advantage more manageable.

I have to acknowledge that the weight difference is still significant. At the same time, the move seems gimmicky, particularly when real, exciting challenges against fighters closer to his size are available.

Benavidez, Charlo, Golovkin (who deserves a third shot at Alvarez after two inconclusive bouts) and the top light heavyweights are more accomplished than Makabu and are genuine threats to Alvarez. I, as a fan, was dying to see Alvarez vs. Benavidez and I know I wasnā€™t alone.

Alvarez has the clout to do as he pleases, as he made clear at the WBC convention in Mexico City. He declared, ā€œI do what I want.ā€ That doesnā€™t mean that we have to buy into the decisions he makes as he pursues his version of ā€œhistoryā€.

I applaud him on a remarkable career. I acknowledge that he has faced a long list of elite opponents over the past decade, more than any other active fighter. And I donā€™t believe his current method of choosing opponents indicates heā€™s dodging anyone. Thatā€™s not who he is.

The problem, in my opinion, is that he has decided that flimsy belts and titles in more and more divisions is his path to greatness. News flash: Heā€™s already great. He should take a step back and ask himself, ā€œWho are actually the best possible opponents and who do the fans want to see me fight?ā€ And then he should act accordingly.

[lawrence-related id=25914,25892,25767]

Canelo Alvarez doesn’t need to fight cruiserweights to prove greatness

Opinion: Canelo Alvarez is continuing down the wrong path with his decision to fight cruiserweight Ilunga Makabu.

I hate what Canelo Alvarez is doing.

And Iā€™m not talking only about his surprising decision to move up to the cruiserweight division to challenge obscure WBC titleholder Ilunga Makabu. For me, it started with his fight against Rockey Fielding in December 2018.

Thatā€™s when it became obvious to me that the Mexican star was more interested in collecting increasingly meaningless title belts than facing the best possible opponents in a misguided attempt to ā€œmake history,ā€ as he puts it.

Alvarez was so determined to win a title in a third division that he arranged to move up from middleweight to fight Fielding, who held the WBA ā€œregularā€ super middleweight title at the time. Of course, Alvarez won easily, stopping the Englishman in three rounds, and then basked in the glory of his great accomplishment.

In fact, he wasnā€™t fooling anyone. Fielding was a mediocre fighter who owned a belt that no one takes seriously. The actual WBA champion at the time was Callum Smith, who Alvarez would later defeat to become a legitimate 168-pound titleholder.

I remember thinking at the time of the Fielding fight, ā€œThis isnā€™t the warrior who sought out genuine challenges for so many years. This was someone taking advantage of flaws in a broken system.ā€

Alvarez went back down to middleweight and accepted one of those genuine challenges, a meeting with talented Daniel Jacobs in May 2019. He won a close decision in a competitive fight, restoring some of the faith I had in him.

Then came an interesting move: Again bent on adding a title in another division, he jumped from 160 pounds to 175 to face then-WBO titleholder Sergey Kovalev in November 2019. I respected that decision because I respected Kovalev, who was aging but still a competent fighter and naturally bigger than Alvarez.

The decision to fight Kovalev when he did was carefully calculated. Kovalev had battled Anthony Yarde in a taxing bout only nine weeks earlier, which arguably wasnā€™t enough time for a 36-year-old to recover. Indeed, Kovalev was the most vulnerable of the 175-pound champions.

However, he was a reasonable choice of opponents for Alvarez given the circumstances. Roy Jones Jr., a light heavyweight, chose to fight John Ruiz instead of Lennox Lewis for obvious reasons when he made the bold decision to challenge for a heavyweight championship in 2003. Made sense.

After that came Alvarez’s quest to become undisputed super middleweight champion, which also had at least some merit. In a time of fragmented titles, fighters who hold all four major belts provide some clarity as to whom is the best in a particular division. And, yes, one could argue that the accomplishment is historic.

Hereā€™s the problem: Alvarez didnā€™t fight the best 168-pounders to reach his goal. He fought Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant because they held the titles. I believe the best potential opponents at 168 or below were David Benavidez, Jermall Charlo and Gennadiy Golovkin, all of whom would have made for more compelling ā€“ and, most likely, more competitive ā€“ fights than the titleholders did.

Alvarez can argue that he was working within the system to pursue his goals. Right. Again, the problem is that the system is flawed, as corrupt sanctioning bodies often provide title shots to fighters who arenā€™t necessarily worthy. That isnā€™t to denigrate Smith, Saunders and Plant as weak fighters; they arenā€™t. Theyā€™re just not as good as the other three.

Finally, we arrive at Alvarezā€™s decision to face cruiserweight titleholder Makabu. Once again, he is making what seems to be a bold move to make history. But how bold is it really?

On one hand, a 168-pounder is moving up two weight classes to face a major titleholder who weighed 197Ā½ pounds for his most-recent fight and has 25 knockouts in 28 victories. On the other hand, Makabu has faced only one fighter youā€™ve heard of ā€“ Tony Bellew ā€“ and was stopped in three rounds.

And hereā€™s the kicker: WBC officials announced when they created the bridgerweight division that they planned to lower the cruiserweight limit from 200 pounds to 190. Iā€™m not clear on when they plan to do that but I’m guessing it will happen before the Alvarez-Makabu fight, which would make Makabuā€™s size advantage more manageable.

I have to acknowledge that the weight difference is still significant. At the same time, the move seems gimmicky, particularly when real, exciting challenges against fighters closer to his size are available.

Benavidez, Charlo, Golovkin (who deserves a third shot at Alvarez after two inconclusive bouts) and the top light heavyweights are more accomplished than Makabu and are genuine threats to Alvarez. I, as a fan, was dying to see Alvarez vs. Benavidez and I know I wasnā€™t alone.

Alvarez has the clout to do as he pleases, as he made clear at the WBC convention in Mexico City. He declared, ā€œI do what I want.ā€ That doesnā€™t mean that we have to buy into the decisions he makes as he pursues his version of ā€œhistoryā€.

I applaud him on a remarkable career. I acknowledge that he has faced a long list of elite opponents over the past decade, more than any other active fighter. And I donā€™t believe his current method of choosing opponents indicates heā€™s dodging anyone. Thatā€™s not who he is.

The problem, in my opinion, is that he has decided that flimsy belts and titles in more and more divisions is his path to greatness. News flash: Heā€™s already great. He should take a step back and ask himself, ā€œWho are actually the best possible opponents and who do the fans want to see me fight?ā€ And then he should act accordingly.

[lawrence-related id=25914,25892,25767]

Callum Smith delivers brutal knockout of Lenin Castillo in 175-pound debut

Callum Smith delivered a brutal second-round knockout of Lenin Castillo in his 175-pound debut on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card.

Callum Smith made a strong first impression as a light heavyweight on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card Saturday in London.

Smith, fighting for the first time since losing his super middleweight title to Canelo Alvarez in December, knocked out former Olympian Lenin Castillo with a single, devastating right hand 55 seconds into Round 2 in the scheduled 10-rounder.

Castillo, knocked unconscious, remained on the canvas until medical personnel removed him on a stretcher.

Smith (28-1, 20 KOs) was fighting for the first time as a full-fledged 175-pounder, a weight at which Castillo (21-4-1, 16 KOs) has fought his entire professional career.

However, Smith looked comfortable from the outset, fighting aggressively and with obvious confidence. The bout has been largely uneventful when early in the second round Smith landed a right counter to the head that put his Dominican opponent flat on his back.

It was clear immediately that Castillo was injured badly, as he seemed to have a seizure. Most notably, his legs shook badly.

Paramedics jumped into the ring quickly to treat Castillo and, after a few minutes, he was whisked out of the ring and taken to a hospital. DAZN later reported that he had regained consciousness.

Of course, Castilloā€™s condition made it impossible for Smith to celebrate his victory in the ring. However, the Liverpudlian had big night. He got back into the win column in dramatic fashion against a capable opponent, which is a significant step in the right direction.

Callum Smith delivers brutal knockout of Lenin Castillo in 175-pound debut

Callum Smith delivered a brutal second-round knockout of Lenin Castillo in his 175-pound debut on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card.

Callum Smith made a strong first impression as a light heavyweight on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card Saturday in London.

Smith, fighting for the first time since losing his super middleweight title to Canelo Alvarez in December, knocked out former Olympian Lenin Castillo with a single, devastating right hand 55 seconds into Round 2 in the scheduled 10-rounder.

Castillo, knocked unconscious, remained on the canvas until medical personnel removed him on a stretcher.

Smith (28-1, 20 KOs) was fighting for the first time as a full-fledged 175-pounder, a weight at which Castillo (21-4-1, 16 KOs) has fought his entire professional career.

However, Smith looked comfortable from the outset, fighting aggressively and with obvious confidence. The bout has been largely uneventful when early in the second round Smith landed a right counter to the head that put his Dominican opponent flat on his back.

It was clear immediately that Castillo was injured badly, as he seemed to have a seizure. Most notably, his legs shook badly.

Paramedics jumped into the ring quickly to treat Castillo and, after a few minutes, he was whisked out of the ring and taken to a hospital. DAZN later reported that he had regained consciousness.

Of course, Castilloā€™s condition made it impossible for Smith to celebrate his victory in the ring. However, the Liverpudlian had big night. He got back into the win column in dramatic fashion against a capable opponent, which is a significant step in the right direction.