Jermall Charlo convinced he’s in a race toward greatness

Jermall Charlo faces Sergiy Derevyanchenko in a middleweight fight on Sept. 26.

Then-welterweight titleholder Kermit Cintron was training for a title defense in 2007 when a promising 17-year-old amateur climbed through the ropes to spar with him.

Cintron, a 30-year-old veteran at the time, and the young man were exchanging punches in what appeared to be an ordinary session. Then the amateur landed a sharp jab, then another, then – BAM! – he connected with a shot that put Cintron down and hurt him, requiring him to take time to recover.

That’s when the amateur – Jermall Charlo – knew beyond doubt that he had a future in boxing.

“He couldn’t believe it,” said Charlo, who defends his middleweight title against Sergiy Derevyanchenko on a Sept. 26 pay-per-view card in Uncasville, Conn. “I hit him so hard with an uppercut. I always knew I was good but that was the moment I knew I belonged.

“I always wanted to be a big-time boxer. Now I’m that big-time boxer.”

Charlo’s journey started years before that, as a child in Lafayette, Louisiana. His father used to organize boxing tournaments in their yard and instruct his boys – Jermall and twin brother Jermell – to have at it. As Jermall put it, “I started out by knocking out my neighbors.”

Jermall Charlo (pictured during a recent workout) faces his biggest middleweight test in Sergiy Derevyanchenko on Sept. 26. Andrew Hemingway / Showtime

Then, after the elder Charlo ran afoul of the law, the Charlos’ mother moved the family to Houston. And, well aware of the boys’ love for boxing, she found a gym. The rest is a boxing success story.

Jermall had a stellar amateur career, finishing with a reported record of 65-6. He was track to challenge for a berth on the 2008 U.S. Olympic team but a toe injury scuttled his plans.

Was he disappointed? To some degree. He had dreamed about fighting on the ultimate amateur platform but he had a good second option. Jermell had already turned pro in 2007. It was time to join him.

Jermall tore through the junior middleweight division, winning 21 consecutive fights – 16 by knockout – to set up a shot at Cornelius Bundrage’s IBF 154-pound title in November 2015.

And he made a loud statement in what should’ve been a significant challenge: Fast, powerful and determined, he put an overwhelmed Bundrage down four times and stopped him in the third round to win his first major title.

“You never put a dog in the pen with a lion,” he roared immediately after the fight. “I am the future of boxing.”

The victory, he told Boxing Junkie recently, only confirmed what he already knew.

Charlo isn’t convinced he’ll win over his critics no matter what he does. Andrew Hemingway / Showtime

“It was amazing,” he said. “I went home and suddenly I had a lot of new friends. I said to people, ‘I told you I was good. You didn’t listen to me.’ I had been trying to tell them but it’s hard to convince people how good you are.

“You have to prove your point. I always had a chip on my shoulder. I always wanted to be better than other people.”

Charlo (30-0, 22) still has his doubters.

He moved up to 160 pounds after stopping Julian Williams in his third and final title defense, in December 2016. And he continued to roll, winning five fights at his new weight and picking up a secondary title when the WBC elevated Canelo Alvarez to “franchise” champion.

However, none of his five victims – Jorge Sebastian Heiland, Hugo Centeno Jr., Matvey Korobov, Brandon Adams and Dennis Hogan – had the star power to lift Charlo to the next level, where the stars reside.

People were asking: When is he going to face an elite middleweight? The answer is now.

Derevenyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) fell short in his two biggest fights – against Daniel Jacobs and Gennadiy Golovkin – but fought both on at least even terms, losing close decisions each time. In the process, he won the respect of pundits and fans alike.

Charlo said he believes greatness is within his grasp. Andrew Hemingway / Showtime

The 34-year-old Ukrainian can box and he can punch, much like Charlo, who knows he has to win and look good doing it to win people over.

“This guy’s gonna be tough,” Charlo said. “If I can’t master being great in this fight, if I don’t look superb, people are going to criticize me. If I know this dude out, they’ll say he was nothing. If I struggle, if it’s a straight out brawl, they’re going to say I’m not ready for Canelo.

“I really have nothing to lose at this point.”

Charlo would love to fight Alvarez. And why not? They sit atop the rankings the most-important sanctioning body. They’re both 30 years old, in their primes. The fans would eagerly eat up that matchup.

And if Charlo were to win? “Then world couldn’t say s—,” he said with a laugh.

Of course, everyone wants to fight Alvarez. Charlo might be in line but exactly where is anybody’s guess. He also might never get the accolades he feels he deserves. There are no guarantees in an unforgiving sport.

That’s OK with Charlo. He has dreams of being remembered as one of the greatest boxers of all time but, he said, he’ll be fine regardless of his fate.

“I feel I’m doing everything right at this point in my life,” he said. “My mom is happy for me. I have a wife and kids. I’ve invested my money. I bought a big mansion. I’m living the best life I can. Thank God for that. I really can’t complain.

“And I feel that [in boxing] I’m leading the race and finish is right up ahead of me. It’s right there. I just have to be great, to feel great about myself, to be who I want to be.”

[lawrence-related id=13452,8518,3803]

Jermall Charlo convinced he’s in a race toward greatness

Jermall Charlo faces Sergiy Derevyanchenko in a middleweight fight on Sept. 26.

Then-welterweight titleholder Kermit Cintron was training for a title defense in 2007 when a promising 17-year-old amateur climbed through the ropes to spar with him.

Cintron, a 30-year-old veteran at the time, and the young man were exchanging punches in what appeared to be an ordinary session. Then the amateur landed a sharp jab, then another, then – BAM! – he connected with a shot that put Cintron down and hurt him, requiring him to take time to recover.

That’s when the amateur – Jermall Charlo – knew beyond doubt that he had a future in boxing.

“He couldn’t believe it,” said Charlo, who defends his middleweight title against Sergiy Derevyanchenko on a Sept. 26 pay-per-view card in Uncasville, Conn. “I hit him so hard with an uppercut. I always knew I was good but that was the moment I knew I belonged.

“I always wanted to be a big-time boxer. Now I’m that big-time boxer.”

Charlo’s journey started years before that, as a child in Lafayette, Louisiana. His father used to organize boxing tournaments in their yard and instruct his boys – Jermall and twin brother Jermell – to have at it. As Jermall put it, “I started out by knocking out my neighbors.”

Jermall Charlo (pictured during a recent workout) faces his biggest middleweight test in Sergiy Derevyanchenko on Sept. 26. Andrew Hemingway / Showtime

Then, after the elder Charlo ran afoul of the law, the Charlos’ mother moved the family to Houston. And, well aware of the boys’ love for boxing, she found a gym. The rest is a boxing success story.

Jermall had a stellar amateur career, finishing with a reported record of 65-6. He was track to challenge for a berth on the 2008 U.S. Olympic team but a toe injury scuttled his plans.

Was he disappointed? To some degree. He had dreamed about fighting on the ultimate amateur platform but he had a good second option. Jermell had already turned pro in 2007. It was time to join him.

Jermall tore through the junior middleweight division, winning 21 consecutive fights – 16 by knockout – to set up a shot at Cornelius Bundrage’s IBF 154-pound title in November 2015.

And he made a loud statement in what should’ve been a significant challenge: Fast, powerful and determined, he put an overwhelmed Bundrage down four times and stopped him in the third round to win his first major title.

“You never put a dog in the pen with a lion,” he roared immediately after the fight. “I am the future of boxing.”

The victory, he told Boxing Junkie recently, only confirmed what he already knew.

Charlo isn’t convinced he’ll win over his critics no matter what he does. Andrew Hemingway / Showtime

“It was amazing,” he said. “I went home and suddenly I had a lot of new friends. I said to people, ‘I told you I was good. You didn’t listen to me.’ I had been trying to tell them but it’s hard to convince people how good you are.

“You have to prove your point. I always had a chip on my shoulder. I always wanted to be better than other people.”

Charlo (30-0, 22) still has his doubters.

He moved up to 160 pounds after stopping Julian Williams in his third and final title defense, in December 2016. And he continued to roll, winning five fights at his new weight and picking up a secondary title when the WBC elevated Canelo Alvarez to “franchise” champion.

However, none of his five victims – Jorge Sebastian Heiland, Hugo Centeno Jr., Matvey Korobov, Brandon Adams and Dennis Hogan – had the star power to lift Charlo to the next level, where the stars reside.

People were asking: When is he going to face an elite middleweight? The answer is now.

Derevenyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) fell short in his two biggest fights – against Daniel Jacobs and Gennadiy Golovkin – but fought both on at least even terms, losing close decisions each time. In the process, he won the respect of pundits and fans alike.

Charlo said he believes greatness is within his grasp. Andrew Hemingway / Showtime

The 34-year-old Ukrainian can box and he can punch, much like Charlo, who knows he has to win and look good doing it to win people over.

“This guy’s gonna be tough,” Charlo said. “If I can’t master being great in this fight, if I don’t look superb, people are going to criticize me. If I know this dude out, they’ll say he was nothing. If I struggle, if it’s a straight out brawl, they’re going to say I’m not ready for Canelo.

“I really have nothing to lose at this point.”

Charlo would love to fight Alvarez. And why not? They sit atop the rankings the most-important sanctioning body. They’re both 30 years old, in their primes. The fans would eagerly eat up that matchup.

And if Charlo were to win? “Then world couldn’t say s—,” he said with a laugh.

Of course, everyone wants to fight Alvarez. Charlo might be in line but exactly where is anybody’s guess. He also might never get the accolades he feels he deserves. There are no guarantees in an unforgiving sport.

That’s OK with Charlo. He has dreams of being remembered as one of the greatest boxers of all time but, he said, he’ll be fine regardless of his fate.

“I feel I’m doing everything right at this point in my life,” he said. “My mom is happy for me. I have a wife and kids. I’ve invested my money. I bought a big mansion. I’m living the best life I can. Thank God for that. I really can’t complain.

“And I feel that [in boxing] I’m leading the race and finish is right up ahead of me. It’s right there. I just have to be great, to feel great about myself, to be who I want to be.”

[lawrence-related id=13452,8518,3803]

Sergiy Derevyanchenko: Disappointments make you stronger

Sergiy Derevyanchenko sees no point in looking backward at his setbacks. His focus is on Jermall Charlo.

You probably shouldn’t try to get Sergiy Derevyanchenko to talk about the past, including his losses to Daniel Jacobs and Gennadiy Golovkin. He doesn’t see the point of living in the past.

The future? Same thing, even as he approaches his 35th birthday. Derevyanchenko is focused on the now. And he has significant challenge directly in front of him: Jermall Charlo on Sept. 26 in Uncasville, Conn.

“I move forward,” he told Boxing Junkie through a translator, who happened to be his wife, Iryna. “I don’t look back. All my wins make me stronger. All my losses, the same thing. All my fights give me experience, they make me better. So I move forward.”

Derevyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) lost a tight split decision to Jacobs in October 2018. And his fight with Golovkin might’ve been closer even though Triple-G won a unanimous decision.

Sergiy Derevyanchenko (right) came up just short against Daniel Jacobs in 2018. AP Photo / Frank Franklin II

The 34-year-old Ukrainian could’ve had his hand raised both times if he had landed a few more punches here and there. Many thought he did enough to win the brutal fight with Golovkin, which would’ve made him a middleweight titleholder and a bigger player.

Is he bitter? Nope. Again, no dwelling on the past.

Derevyanchenko acknowledged that he experienced what he called a “bad emotion” after each loss but moved on quickly. Does he believe he deserved to win those fights? If so, he wouldn’t say that. Instead, he accepted the judges’ decisions and used them to his benefit.

“I don’t think I did enough to win those fights. That’s why I’m working harder,” he said.

“The Technician” hasn’t fought since the Golovkin fight, which took place last October. In that time, he said, he never allowed himself to get out of shape. He trains religiously for a simple reason, he said: It’s part of the job.

In other words, you can be sure he’ll be at peak fitness when he’s face to face with Charlo in the ring.

Derevyanchenko respects Charlo, who holds a secondary 160-pound title. He was asked whether he believes the Houston fighter is in the same class as Jacobs and Golovkin. He didn’t even wait for his wife to translate, saying “yes.”

Derevyanchenko hopes to have his hand raised on Sept. 26. Amanda Westcott / DAZN

“At middleweight there are strong fighters,” he said. “Canelo, Golovkin, Charlo, Andrade. Top fighters. They are all elite fighters. They can all beat each other. It depends on preparation, the situation, the judges, if they meet in the ring.

“Everyone has an opportunity to win. And nobody knows what will happen. That’s why it’s so interesting to be part of this.”

Derevyanchenko has definitely been in the thick of it. He will have fought three elite middleweights in a span of four fights, which is almost unheard of these days. For him, it is just part of the plan.

Six months before the Jacobs fight, he said, he compiled a list of middleweights he wanted to face and pinned it to a wall. The names on the list: Gennadiy Golovkin, Daniel Jacobs, Jermall Charlo, Canelo Alvarez and Billy Joe Saunders.

He’ll be able to check off Charlo after Sept. 26. And he hopes that this time he can put a “W” next to the name on the list.

He was asked whether the third time will be the charm but neither he nor Iryna understood the expression. After it was explained to them, Derevyanchenko chuckled and said, “I like that. Yes, I think it will be the charm.”

Again, Derevyanchenko isn’t comfortable peering beyond the Charlo fight. He’ll be 35 on Halloween but says he feels better now than he did when he was 25, meaning he has barely thought about the concept of retirement.

But he did reveal a wish he has for the future: He doesn’t want to be forgotten.

“I just want my name to go down in history,” he said. “I want young fighters to watch my fights and learn something from my style, from my mistakes, from my wins. Yes, this is something that’s important to me.”

[lawrence-related id=13452]

Sergiy Derevyanchenko: Disappointments make you stronger

Sergiy Derevyanchenko sees no point in looking backward at his setbacks. His focus is on Jermall Charlo.

You probably shouldn’t try to get Sergiy Derevyanchenko to talk about the past, including his losses to Daniel Jacobs and Gennadiy Golovkin. He doesn’t see the point of living in the past.

The future? Same thing, even as he approaches his 35th birthday. Derevyanchenko is focused on the now. And he has significant challenge directly in front of him: Jermall Charlo on Sept. 26 in Uncasville, Conn.

“I move forward,” he told Boxing Junkie through a translator, who happened to be his wife, Iryna. “I don’t look back. All my wins make me stronger. All my losses, the same thing. All my fights give me experience, they make me better. So I move forward.”

Derevyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) lost a tight split decision to Jacobs in October 2018. And his fight with Golovkin might’ve been closer even though Triple-G won a unanimous decision.

Sergiy Derevyanchenko (right) came up just short against Daniel Jacobs in 2018. AP Photo / Frank Franklin II

The 34-year-old Ukrainian could’ve had his hand raised both times if he had landed a few more punches here and there. Many thought he did enough to win the brutal fight with Golovkin, which would’ve made him a middleweight titleholder and a bigger player.

Is he bitter? Nope. Again, no dwelling on the past.

Derevyanchenko acknowledged that he experienced what he called a “bad emotion” after each loss but moved on quickly. Does he believe he deserved to win those fights? If so, he wouldn’t say that. Instead, he accepted the judges’ decisions and used them to his benefit.

“I don’t think I did enough to win those fights. That’s why I’m working harder,” he said.

“The Technician” hasn’t fought since the Golovkin fight, which took place last October. In that time, he said, he never allowed himself to get out of shape. He trains religiously for a simple reason, he said: It’s part of the job.

In other words, you can be sure he’ll be at peak fitness when he’s face to face with Charlo in the ring.

Derevyanchenko respects Charlo, who holds a secondary 160-pound title. He was asked whether he believes the Houston fighter is in the same class as Jacobs and Golovkin. He didn’t even wait for his wife to translate, saying “yes.”

Derevyanchenko hopes to have his hand raised on Sept. 26. Amanda Westcott / DAZN

“At middleweight there are strong fighters,” he said. “Canelo, Golovkin, Charlo, Andrade. Top fighters. They are all elite fighters. They can all beat each other. It depends on preparation, the situation, the judges, if they meet in the ring.

“Everyone has an opportunity to win. And nobody knows what will happen. That’s why it’s so interesting to be part of this.”

Derevyanchenko has definitely been in the thick of it. He will have fought three elite middleweights in a span of four fights, which is almost unheard of these days. For him, it is just part of the plan.

Six months before the Jacobs fight, he said, he compiled a list of middleweights he wanted to face and pinned it to a wall. The names on the list: Gennadiy Golovkin, Daniel Jacobs, Jermall Charlo, Canelo Alvarez and Billy Joe Saunders.

He’ll be able to check off Charlo after Sept. 26. And he hopes that this time he can put a “W” next to the name on the list.

He was asked whether the third time will be the charm but neither he nor Iryna understood the expression. After it was explained to them, Derevyanchenko chuckled and said, “I like that. Yes, I think it will be the charm.”

Again, Derevyanchenko isn’t comfortable peering beyond the Charlo fight. He’ll be 35 on Halloween but says he feels better now than he did when he was 25, meaning he has barely thought about the concept of retirement.

But he did reveal a wish he has for the future: He doesn’t want to be forgotten.

“I just want my name to go down in history,” he said. “I want young fighters to watch my fights and learn something from my style, from my mistakes, from my wins. Yes, this is something that’s important to me.”

[lawrence-related id=13452]

Jermall Charlo, Sergiy Derevyanchenko nearing deal on fall fight

Jermall Charlo and contender Sergiy Derevyanchenko are in the final stages of negotiations for a fight in either September or October.

Jermall Charlo needed significant challenge. And he reportedly has one.

Charlo, the middleweight titleholder, and contender Sergiy Derevyanchenko are in the final stages of negotiations for a fight in either September or October, according to The Athletic. No site or network was reported.

Charlo was elevated to the WBC’s full titleholder after Canelo Alvarez was designated “franchise” champion in June of last year but, in five fights since moving up from 154 ponds, he hadn’t faced a serious challenge.

Derevyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) should be a genuine test. The durable, well-schooled Ukrainian lost close decisions in title fights against Daniel Jacobs and Gennadiy Golovkin to build a reputation as one of the best in and around the division.

He reportedly also had received an offer to fight Canelo Alvarez, presumably at 168 pounds. The Athletic is reporting that Derevyanchenko wasn’t offered enough to take that fight.

Charlo (30-0, 22 KOs) has beaten Jorge Sebastian Heiland, Hugo Centeno Jr., Matt Korobov, Brandon Adams and Denis Hogan at 160 pounds, which led some to criticize his choice of opponents at middleweight.

No one will be critical of Derevyanchenko.