Caleb Plant on prospective fight with Canelo Alvarez: ‘I can win’

Caleb Plant is confident that he has what it takes to beat Canelo Alvarez.

Canelo Alvarez dispatched Billy Joe Saunders after eight rounds on Saturday in Texas. Now it’s on to Caleb Plant for all the super middleweight marbles in September if things shake out as expected.

Should we expect a similar result in the latter fight? Plant certainly doesn’t think so.

The Las Vegas-based Tennessean, who holds the IBF 168-pound title, acknowledges that he and Saunders are both slick, well-schooled technicians. However, he said that’s where the similarities end.

“Well, for one, I feel like I take the sport a lot more serious [than Saunders does],” Plant told me and Kenneth Bouhairie on The PBC Podcast. “Saunders said himself that he doesn’t train when he doesn’t have fights coming up. And maybe he doesn’t live the best lifestyle.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMs5WT5N4oA&t=510s

“Everyone who knows me knows how serious I take my training, they know how disciplined I am, they know how much I respect this sport and how much work I put into this sport. I feel that’s a big difference.”

And?

“And I feel I’m a lot faster than Billy Joe,” he said, “my defense is better, I punch harder than Billy Joe, I’m taller than Billy Joe. I feel that sometimes people misconstrue that sometimes because we both have a slick style that we fight the same.

“But that doesn’t necessarily mean that we fight the same. He doesn’t have a good jab. There are a whole lot of things I feel I do better.”

Plant, who watched the Alvarez-Saunders fight with family in Nashville, thought the British fighter performed well until a right uppercut broke his face in multiple places in Round 8.

And, yes, he believes he did “see things I feel I can take advantage of” even though he was impressed that Alvarez got the job done once again.

“It seemed like Billy Joe started to settle in around the fifth round and kind of started dictating the pace and having some success. But in the end he got caught with a big shot and that was all she wrote,” Plant said.

Alvarez (56-1-2, 38 KOs) has said that his immediate goal is to become the first undisputed 168-pound champion. Plant (21-0, 12 KOs) has the same dream.

Plant won his title by defeating Jose Uzcategui by a wide decision — putting him down twice in the process — in only his 18th pro fight. He has successfully defended three times.

Now, if he and Alvarez can come to terms on the ultimate 168-pound title-unification showdown, the 28-year-old will have the opportunity take an enormous step in his career.

He was asked on the podcast which motivates him more: the chance to become an undisputed world champion or the opportunity to take down arguably the No. 1 fighter in the world.

“I feel like with this fight right there I can knock out two birds with one stone, [defeat] a modern-day legend and become undisputed,” he responded. “Everything I’ve ever wanted out of boxing I can attain in one night.

“Like I said, that’s what I’m focused on. That’s where my eyes are set.”

Alvarez would be a significant favorite to beat Plant, which is no surprise given their respective places in boxing hierarchy.

Plant couldn’t care less about the opinions of oddsmakers or pundits. If he had listened to naysayers along the way, he said, he wouldn’t have a piece of the super middleweight championship and be in position to face the biggest star in the sport.

“I know in my heart that I can win,” he said. “And no matter who tells me differently they’re not going to be able to persuade me. I’ve been told my whole life what I can and can’t be and what I can and can’t achieve. And so far they’ve all been wrong. … If they were able to conquer and accomplish all the tings I have, they’d feel they were unstoppable too.

“When we get that fight, I will get my hand raised and it will be a great night and great victory. It will set my name in stone in history books forever.”

[lawrence-related id=20180,20167,20163,20110]

Caleb Plant on prospective fight with Canelo Alvarez: ‘I can win’

Caleb Plant is confident that he has what it takes to beat Canelo Alvarez.

Canelo Alvarez dispatched Billy Joe Saunders after eight rounds on Saturday in Texas. Now it’s on to Caleb Plant for all the super middleweight marbles in September if things shake out as expected.

Should we expect a similar result in the latter fight? Plant certainly doesn’t think so.

The Las Vegas-based Tennessean, who holds the IBF 168-pound title, acknowledges that he and Saunders are both slick, well-schooled technicians. However, he said that’s where the similarities end.

“Well, for one, I feel like I take the sport a lot more serious [than Saunders does],” Plant told me and Kenneth Bouhairie on The PBC Podcast. “Saunders said himself that he doesn’t train when he doesn’t have fights coming up. And maybe he doesn’t live the best lifestyle.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMs5WT5N4oA&t=510s

“Everyone who knows me knows how serious I take my training, they know how disciplined I am, they know how much I respect this sport and how much work I put into this sport. I feel that’s a big difference.”

And?

“And I feel I’m a lot faster than Billy Joe,” he said, “my defense is better, I punch harder than Billy Joe, I’m taller than Billy Joe. I feel that sometimes people misconstrue that sometimes because we both have a slick style that we fight the same.

“But that doesn’t necessarily mean that we fight the same. He doesn’t have a good jab. There are a whole lot of things I feel I do better.”

Plant, who watched the Alvarez-Saunders fight with family in Nashville, thought the British fighter performed well until a right uppercut broke his face in multiple places in Round 8.

And, yes, he believes he did “see things I feel I can take advantage of” even though he was impressed that Alvarez got the job done once again.

“It seemed like Billy Joe started to settle in around the fifth round and kind of started dictating the pace and having some success. But in the end he got caught with a big shot and that was all she wrote,” Plant said.

Alvarez (56-1-2, 38 KOs) has said that his immediate goal is to become the first undisputed 168-pound champion. Plant (21-0, 12 KOs) has the same dream.

Plant won his title by defeating Jose Uzcategui by a wide decision — putting him down twice in the process — in only his 18th pro fight. He has successfully defended three times.

Now, if he and Alvarez can come to terms on the ultimate 168-pound title-unification showdown, the 28-year-old will have the opportunity take an enormous step in his career.

He was asked on the podcast which motivates him more: the chance to become an undisputed world champion or the opportunity to take down arguably the No. 1 fighter in the world.

“I feel like with this fight right there I can knock out two birds with one stone, [defeat] a modern-day legend and become undisputed,” he responded. “Everything I’ve ever wanted out of boxing I can attain in one night.

“Like I said, that’s what I’m focused on. That’s where my eyes are set.”

Alvarez would be a significant favorite to beat Plant, which is no surprise given their respective places in boxing hierarchy.

Plant couldn’t care less about the opinions of oddsmakers or pundits. If he had listened to naysayers along the way, he said, he wouldn’t have a piece of the super middleweight championship and be in position to face the biggest star in the sport.

“I know in my heart that I can win,” he said. “And no matter who tells me differently they’re not going to be able to persuade me. I’ve been told my whole life what I can and can’t be and what I can and can’t achieve. And so far they’ve all been wrong. … If they were able to conquer and accomplish all the tings I have, they’d feel they were unstoppable too.

“When we get that fight, I will get my hand raised and it will be a great night and great victory. It will set my name in stone in history books forever.”

[lawrence-related id=20180,20167,20163,20110]

Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Canelo Alvarez unbeatable?

Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Canelo Alvarez unbeatable?

Is Canelo Alvarez unbeatable?

That’s a reasonable question to ask in the wake of his remarkable run of success. The Mexican star, coming off his knockout of Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday, is now 14-0-1 since he lost a one-sided decision to Floyd Mayweather  in 2013.

The only blemish on his record since that fight was a controversial draw in his first of two bouts against Gennadiy Golovkin, in 2017.

In this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora, DAZN commentators Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora discuss whether any of Alvarez’s rivals at or near his weight can beat him.

Here’s what they had to say.

[mm-video type=video id=01f5h1hbhhr2q8rsb0kk playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f5h1hbhhr2q8rsb0kk/01f5h1hbhhr2q8rsb0kk-0af70610e5667c386e7aea4bef97c298.jpg]

[lawrence-related id=20192,20180,20174,20167,20163,20159,20110]

Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Canelo Alvarez unbeatable?

Video: Mannix, Mora: Is Canelo Alvarez unbeatable?

Is Canelo Alvarez unbeatable?

That’s a reasonable question to ask in the wake of his remarkable run of success. The Mexican star, coming off his knockout of Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday, is now 14-0-1 since he lost a one-sided decision to Floyd Mayweather  in 2013.

The only blemish on his record since that fight was a controversial draw in his first of two bouts against Gennadiy Golovkin, in 2017.

In this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora, DAZN commentators Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora discuss whether any of Alvarez’s rivals at or near his weight can beat him.

Here’s what they had to say.

[mm-video type=video id=01f5h1hbhhr2q8rsb0kk playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f5h1hbhhr2q8rsb0kk/01f5h1hbhhr2q8rsb0kk-0af70610e5667c386e7aea4bef97c298.jpg]

[lawrence-related id=20192,20180,20174,20167,20163,20159,20110]

Billy Joe Saunders update: multiple fractures, required surgery

Billy Joe Saunders reportedly suffered multiple fractures in his cheek bone against Canelo Alvarez on Saturday and was set to have surgery.

Billy Joe Saunders suffered multiple fractures in his cheek bone in his knockout loss to Canelo Alvarez on Saturday and was scheduled to have surgery on Sunday night, according to promoter Eddie Hearn.

The injury occurred when Alvarez landed a right uppercut to Saunders’ right eye in the eighth round of their title-unification bout at a packed AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The British fighter couldn’t come out for Round 9.

The bone that was broken is part of the eye socket.

Saunders was taken to John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, which is near the Dallas Cowboys’ home stadium. He had surgery there, Hearn said.

“He’s going to be out for a long, long time,” Hearn told The Athletic.

Saunders (30-1, 14 KOs) had been competitive with Alvarez (56-1-2, 38 KOs) until the decisive punch, although he was losing on all three scorecards at the time of the stoppage.

Alvarez, who entered the fight with the WBA and WBC 168-pound belts added Saunders’ WBO title to his collection. He’s expected to fight IBF champ Caleb Plant in September in a bid to become the first undisputed champion in the division.

[lawrence-related id=20167,20163,20159,20110]

Billy Joe Saunders update: multiple fractures, required surgery

Billy Joe Saunders reportedly suffered multiple fractures in his cheek bone against Canelo Alvarez on Saturday and was set to have surgery.

Billy Joe Saunders suffered multiple fractures in his cheek bone in his knockout loss to Canelo Alvarez on Saturday and was scheduled to have surgery on Sunday night, according to promoter Eddie Hearn.

The injury occurred when Alvarez landed a right uppercut to Saunders’ right eye in the eighth round of their title-unification bout at a packed AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The British fighter couldn’t come out for Round 9.

The bone that was broken is part of the eye socket.

Saunders was taken to John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, which is near the Dallas Cowboys’ home stadium. He had surgery there, Hearn said.

“He’s going to be out for a long, long time,” Hearn told The Athletic.

Saunders (30-1, 14 KOs) had been competitive with Alvarez (56-1-2, 38 KOs) until the decisive punch, although he was losing on all three scorecards at the time of the stoppage.

Alvarez, who entered the fight with the WBA and WBC 168-pound belts added Saunders’ WBO title to his collection. He’s expected to fight IBF champ Caleb Plant in September in a bid to become the first undisputed champion in the division.

[lawrence-related id=20167,20163,20159,20110]

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez gets the job done once again

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez got the job done once again against Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsvPp0RahHA

We can be critical of Canelo Alvarez’s performance against Billy Joe Saunders before 73,126 Saturday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The Mexican star had his hand raised, as almost everyone expected, but Saunders’ pre-fight bravado wasn’t all talk. There was some substance to it. He trailed on the cards – 78-74, 78-74 and 77-75 – at the time the fight was stopped but he was competitive, which was surprising to many.

Alvarez actually seemed frustrated as late as the seventh round, when the British southpaw was at his most effective. The result was still up in the air at that point.

This was the great Canelo Alvarez? Struggling with a fighter who is capable but can’t punch with much authority?

I believe it’s legitimate to point out all of the above. This must be said too, though: Alvarez broke Saunders’ face with a single punch – a right uppercut to the right eye — and stopped him after eight rounds, the latter of which he predicted.

Alvarez said multiple times beforehand that he would have problems against Saunders in the early rounds but by the middle of the fight he would begin to take control.

That what’s he did. He brutally knocked out an experienced, world-class opponent to unify three of the four major super middleweight titles, which should lead to a showdown with Caleb Plant for the fourth belt around Mexican Independence Day in September.

“I said the fight was going to develop in the seventh, eighth round and that’s what happened,” Alvarez said through a translator. “It wasn’t as difficult as I expected. That’s because my preparation was good. And I improve every day.

“… I started getting adjusted real quick. I knew this was going to be the final outcome.”

All in all, he had a good night.

[lawrence-related id=20163,20159,20110]

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAFGSP1mvFw

You have to feel for Saunders.

The British champion gave Alvarez a tougher fight than almost anyone expected only to have his dream dashed as a result of an unfortunate eye-socket injury, which made it next-to-impossible to continue.

The judges had Alvarez ahead on the scorecards at the time of the stoppage but Saunders was in the fight and seemed to be building momentum before the injury. He had a chance to win. Then it was over. He couldn’t continue fighting, he suffered the first loss of his career and his 168-pound title was gone.

It’s no wonder he looked devasted after the fight.

Saunders has reason to be proud, though. He was competitive against the fighter many believe is No. 1 pound-for-pound in the world, which few others have been able to do.

Floyd Mayweather is the only one to have beaten Alvarez while Gennadiy Golovkin (SD draw and MD), Erislandy Lara (SD), Daniel Jacobs (UD) and even Sergey Kovalev (KO 11) fought him on roughly even terms before coming up short in the end.

Saunders arguably joins that latter group. At the very least, he was far more competitive than the previous six British fighters who faced Alvarez. All of them were blown out in one way or another.

And, at 31, Saunders is still young. He might never again have the opportunity to face a pound-for-pounder in front of 70,000-plus screaming fans, as he did on Saturday, but he’s far from finished. He’ll be in more big fights in the near future, assuming that’s what he wants.

Saunders obviously is in pain right now, both physically and emotionally. The wounds will heal, though. And he’ll be a more-respected fighter as a result of his performance on Saturday night.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bWRuu3UNZ0

Katsunari Takayama gave an inspirational performance on the Alvarez-Saunders card. Veteran referee Laurence Cole, who worked Takayama’s fight against 108-pound titleholder Elwin Soto, was not at his best.

Takayama (32-9, 12 KOs) was a great story coming into the fight. The 37-year-old former three-time strawweight champ from Japan was fighting for the second time after a four-year hiatus from the sport and took the fight on short notice, which would’ve made a title-winning victory remarkable.

And he gave himself a chance to pull it off, fighting with unusual energy and spirit against a much stronger opponent. Soto (19-1, 13 KOs) landed many clean, hard punches but Takayama took them and was the much busier of the two. He clearly was in the fight until the moment it was stopped.

In the ninth and final round, with Soto winning on the cards, the champion continued to land damaging blows but Takayama continued to fight back. Still, out of nowhere, Cole jumped in and stopped the fight at 2:44 of the round, raising the ire of many in the process.

I don’t want to be overly critical of a referee who was looking out for the best interest of a fighter but, frankly, Cole blew it. Takayama hadn’t been down and was firing back at Soto when Cole stepped in.

Plus, Takayama was a proud former champion in possibly his final title fight. He deserved more of a chance than Cole gave him to work his way out of trouble, if that’s what that was.

Immediately after the fight was stopped, Takayama, who accepted his fate graciously, shadow boxed in the ring with great vitality as if to demonstrate that he had plenty left in the tank. I wondered whether Cole, who watched Takayama, was thinking at that moment: “Man, he’s making me look bad right now.”

Indeed, he was. Cole should’ve allowed the fight to continue.

[lawrence-related id=20099]

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Saunders could’ve continued fighting. Countless others have fought through significant injuries, including those to the eye area. But we should use common sense here. Mark Tibbs, Saunders’ trainer, said his fighter’s face was “caved in” and that he couldn’t see. Would it really have been wise to continue exchanging punches with a beast like Alvarez? Saunders’ courage would’ve been applauded but he would’ve risked long term damage or possibly even his life – as Alvarez said – had he come out for the ninth round. That would be asking to much. … I had Alvarez leading Saunders 78-74 – six rounds to two – at the time of the stoppage. Some experts I respect had Saunders ahead, which has me scratching my head. Saunders was busier than Alvarez but half the punches he landed were jabs and his power punches had little effect, although he did better in that regard in the last few rounds. Alvarez obviously landed the cleaner, harder shots. I thought Alvarez clearly won Rounds 2, 3 and 8, which means Saunders would have to had to win the remaining rounds to lead on the cards. That doesn’t add up to me. … Alvarez was unusually animated when middleweight champion Demetrius Andrade showed up at the post-fight news conference to call him out, telling Andrade in English more than once to “get the f— out of here.” I appreciated Alvarez passion but I was disappointed at his repeated use of expletives. I thought he was classier than that.

I’m completely baffled by the scoring of the Souleymane CissokhoKieron Conway fight on the Alvarez-Saunders card. I thought the Cissokho (13-0, 8 KOs) thoroughly outboxed Conway (16-2-1, 3 KOs), with a ninth-round knockdown his only significant slip-up. Conway was the aggressor but he landed few punches. That’s why I scored it 98-91 (nine rounds to one) for the Frenchman. The judges? They gave Cissokho a split-decision victory, 96-93, 95-94 and 92-97. I guess Conway could’ve been given one or two more rounds because he pushed the action but 97-92? Judge Don Griffin’s score was outrageous. … Speaking of outrageous, Nagy Aguilera’s actions in his fight against heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez (18-0, 13 KOs) on the Alvarez-Saunders card were suspect. Sanchez, who was in control of the fight, threw a right hand that slid off of Aguilera’s left shoulder and grazed his head. After a few moments he suddenly grabbed his head, fell to the canvas, got up, fell again and then got to his feet once more in a circus-like series of events. He began to complain that the former Cuban amateur star had been punching him behind the head throughout the fight. It seemed to me that Aguilera (21-11, 14 KOs) was looking for a way out of the fight and found it. Sanchez won a shutout technical decision.

[lawrence-related id=20099,20102,20096]

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez gets the job done once again

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez got the job done once again against Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsvPp0RahHA

We can be critical of Canelo Alvarez’s performance against Billy Joe Saunders before 73,126 Saturday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The Mexican star had his hand raised, as almost everyone expected, but Saunders’ pre-fight bravado wasn’t all talk. There was some substance to it. He trailed on the cards – 78-74, 78-74 and 77-75 – at the time the fight was stopped but he was competitive, which was surprising to many.

Alvarez actually seemed frustrated as late as the seventh round, when the British southpaw was at his most effective. The result was still up in the air at that point.

This was the great Canelo Alvarez? Struggling with a fighter who is capable but can’t punch with much authority?

I believe it’s legitimate to point out all of the above. This must be said too, though: Alvarez broke Saunders’ face with a single punch – a right uppercut to the right eye — and stopped him after eight rounds, the latter of which he predicted.

Alvarez said multiple times beforehand that he would have problems against Saunders in the early rounds but by the middle of the fight he would begin to take control.

That what’s he did. He brutally knocked out an experienced, world-class opponent to unify three of the four major super middleweight titles, which should lead to a showdown with Caleb Plant for the fourth belt around Mexican Independence Day in September.

“I said the fight was going to develop in the seventh, eighth round and that’s what happened,” Alvarez said through a translator. “It wasn’t as difficult as I expected. That’s because my preparation was good. And I improve every day.

“… I started getting adjusted real quick. I knew this was going to be the final outcome.”

All in all, he had a good night.

[lawrence-related id=20163,20159,20110]

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAFGSP1mvFw

You have to feel for Saunders.

The British champion gave Alvarez a tougher fight than almost anyone expected only to have his dream dashed as a result of an unfortunate eye-socket injury, which made it next-to-impossible to continue.

The judges had Alvarez ahead on the scorecards at the time of the stoppage but Saunders was in the fight and seemed to be building momentum before the injury. He had a chance to win. Then it was over. He couldn’t continue fighting, he suffered the first loss of his career and his 168-pound title was gone.

It’s no wonder he looked devasted after the fight.

Saunders has reason to be proud, though. He was competitive against the fighter many believe is No. 1 pound-for-pound in the world, which few others have been able to do.

Floyd Mayweather is the only one to have beaten Alvarez while Gennadiy Golovkin (SD draw and MD), Erislandy Lara (SD), Daniel Jacobs (UD) and even Sergey Kovalev (KO 11) fought him on roughly even terms before coming up short in the end.

Saunders arguably joins that latter group. At the very least, he was far more competitive than the previous six British fighters who faced Alvarez. All of them were blown out in one way or another.

And, at 31, Saunders is still young. He might never again have the opportunity to face a pound-for-pounder in front of 70,000-plus screaming fans, as he did on Saturday, but he’s far from finished. He’ll be in more big fights in the near future, assuming that’s what he wants.

Saunders obviously is in pain right now, both physically and emotionally. The wounds will heal, though. And he’ll be a more-respected fighter as a result of his performance on Saturday night.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bWRuu3UNZ0

Katsunari Takayama gave an inspirational performance on the Alvarez-Saunders card. Veteran referee Laurence Cole, who worked Takayama’s fight against 108-pound titleholder Elwin Soto, was not at his best.

Takayama (32-9, 12 KOs) was a great story coming into the fight. The 37-year-old former three-time strawweight champ from Japan was fighting for the second time after a four-year hiatus from the sport and took the fight on short notice, which would’ve made a title-winning victory remarkable.

And he gave himself a chance to pull it off, fighting with unusual energy and spirit against a much stronger opponent. Soto (19-1, 13 KOs) landed many clean, hard punches but Takayama took them and was the much busier of the two. He clearly was in the fight until the moment it was stopped.

In the ninth and final round, with Soto winning on the cards, the champion continued to land damaging blows but Takayama continued to fight back. Still, out of nowhere, Cole jumped in and stopped the fight at 2:44 of the round, raising the ire of many in the process.

I don’t want to be overly critical of a referee who was looking out for the best interest of a fighter but, frankly, Cole blew it. Takayama hadn’t been down and was firing back at Soto when Cole stepped in.

Plus, Takayama was a proud former champion in possibly his final title fight. He deserved more of a chance than Cole gave him to work his way out of trouble, if that’s what that was.

Immediately after the fight was stopped, Takayama, who accepted his fate graciously, shadow boxed in the ring with great vitality as if to demonstrate that he had plenty left in the tank. I wondered whether Cole, who watched Takayama, was thinking at that moment: “Man, he’s making me look bad right now.”

Indeed, he was. Cole should’ve allowed the fight to continue.

[lawrence-related id=20099]

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Saunders could’ve continued fighting. Countless others have fought through significant injuries, including those to the eye area. But we should use common sense here. Mark Tibbs, Saunders’ trainer, said his fighter’s face was “caved in” and that he couldn’t see. Would it really have been wise to continue exchanging punches with a beast like Alvarez? Saunders’ courage would’ve been applauded but he would’ve risked long term damage or possibly even his life – as Alvarez said – had he come out for the ninth round. That would be asking to much. … I had Alvarez leading Saunders 78-74 – six rounds to two – at the time of the stoppage. Some experts I respect had Saunders ahead, which has me scratching my head. Saunders was busier than Alvarez but half the punches he landed were jabs and his power punches had little effect, although he did better in that regard in the last few rounds. Alvarez obviously landed the cleaner, harder shots. I thought Alvarez clearly won Rounds 2, 3 and 8, which means Saunders would have to had to win the remaining rounds to lead on the cards. That doesn’t add up to me. … Alvarez was unusually animated when middleweight champion Demetrius Andrade showed up at the post-fight news conference to call him out, telling Andrade in English more than once to “get the f— out of here.” I appreciated Alvarez passion but I was disappointed at his repeated use of expletives. I thought he was classier than that.

I’m completely baffled by the scoring of the Souleymane CissokhoKieron Conway fight on the Alvarez-Saunders card. I thought the Cissokho (13-0, 8 KOs) thoroughly outboxed Conway (16-2-1, 3 KOs), with a ninth-round knockdown his only significant slip-up. Conway was the aggressor but he landed few punches. That’s why I scored it 98-91 (nine rounds to one) for the Frenchman. The judges? They gave Cissokho a split-decision victory, 96-93, 95-94 and 92-97. I guess Conway could’ve been given one or two more rounds because he pushed the action but 97-92? Judge Don Griffin’s score was outrageous. … Speaking of outrageous, Nagy Aguilera’s actions in his fight against heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez (18-0, 13 KOs) on the Alvarez-Saunders card were suspect. Sanchez, who was in control of the fight, threw a right hand that slid off of Aguilera’s left shoulder and grazed his head. After a few moments he suddenly grabbed his head, fell to the canvas, got up, fell again and then got to his feet once more in a circus-like series of events. He began to complain that the former Cuban amateur star had been punching him behind the head throughout the fight. It seemed to me that Aguilera (21-11, 14 KOs) was looking for a way out of the fight and found it. Sanchez won a shutout technical decision.

[lawrence-related id=20099,20102,20096]

Canelo Alvarez’s free agency boosts chances of fight with Caleb Plant: Hearn

Canelo Alvarez’s free agency boosts the chances of making a fight with Caleb Plant, according to promoter Eddie Hearn.

The fact Canelo Alvarez isn’t tied contractually to a television network could be the key in making a deal to fight Caleb Plant.

That’s the opinion of promoter Eddie Hearn, who was optimistic after Alvarez’s eighth-round stoppage of Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday night that Alvarez will meet Plant for the undisputed 168-pound championship in September.

The Saunders fight was Alvarez’s second in a two-fight deal with DAZN, meaning he’s now a free agent. Plant is managed by Premier Boxing Champions, which is affiliated with Fox and Showtime.

Alvarez, the WBA, WBC and WBO beltholder, wants to fight IBF champ to unify all four major titles.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqwEGzo20y4

“It’s not complicated,” said Hearn, who partners with DAZN. “It’s the beauty of Canelo’s decision to be a network free agent. It stops politics, it stops anything from getting in the way. The numbers on DAZN tonight were absolutely astronomical. They’ll (DAZN) have to make a huge offer for that fight. Fox will make a huge offer for that fight.

“He’s free to make the fights he wants to make where he where he wants them to happen. To me it’s a very straight-forward process. And I think the process should start immediately.”

Alvarez said immediately after the fight and then again at the post-fight news conference that he’s targeting Plant, who also has expressed interest in the fight.

“Right now I’m really happy with what I achieved and I want to celebrate with my family,” Alvarez said. “… You already know what I want. Hopefully we can get that going so I can unify the titles.”

And if that fight can’t be made for whatever reason?

“If it doesn’t happen, then we can continue to make history in other ways,” he said. “Right now, that’s my goal. Hopefully we can continue to work for that.”

Canelo Alvarez’s free agency boosts chances of fight with Caleb Plant: Hearn

Canelo Alvarez’s free agency boosts the chances of making a fight with Caleb Plant, according to promoter Eddie Hearn.

The fact Canelo Alvarez isn’t tied contractually to a television network could be the key in making a deal to fight Caleb Plant.

That’s the opinion of promoter Eddie Hearn, who was optimistic after Alvarez’s eighth-round stoppage of Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday night that Alvarez will meet Plant for the undisputed 168-pound championship in September.

The Saunders fight was Alvarez’s second in a two-fight deal with DAZN, meaning he’s now a free agent. Plant is managed by Premier Boxing Champions, which is affiliated with Fox and Showtime.

Alvarez, the WBA, WBC and WBO beltholder, wants to fight IBF champ to unify all four major titles.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqwEGzo20y4

“It’s not complicated,” said Hearn, who partners with DAZN. “It’s the beauty of Canelo’s decision to be a network free agent. It stops politics, it stops anything from getting in the way. The numbers on DAZN tonight were absolutely astronomical. They’ll (DAZN) have to make a huge offer for that fight. Fox will make a huge offer for that fight.

“He’s free to make the fights he wants to make where he where he wants them to happen. To me it’s a very straight-forward process. And I think the process should start immediately.”

Alvarez said immediately after the fight and then again at the post-fight news conference that he’s targeting Plant, who also has expressed interest in the fight.

“Right now I’m really happy with what I achieved and I want to celebrate with my family,” Alvarez said. “… You already know what I want. Hopefully we can get that going so I can unify the titles.”

And if that fight can’t be made for whatever reason?

“If it doesn’t happen, then we can continue to make history in other ways,” he said. “Right now, that’s my goal. Hopefully we can continue to work for that.”