Canelo Alvarez: Ranking the Mexican star’s calendar years, best to worst

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021. Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus. The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, …

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021.

Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus.

The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, won major titles in four divisions and is on the cusp of becoming an undisputed champion for the first time. Alvarez (57-1-2, 38 KOs) challenges Dmitry Bivol in a pay-per-view bout Saturday from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

In this special feature, we take a look at Alvarez’s performances year by calendar year and then rank those years – best to worst – beginning in 2010, when he was introduced to American audiences on a significant scale.

The current year is not including because it hinges on Saturday’s fight. If he wins, it will be among his best years. If he loses, it will be down the list.

Here is what we came up with:

2019

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Daniel Jacobs (UD) and Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Background: The victory over Jacobs seems to fly under the radar but it was impressive. Jacobs was talented, polished, a big middleweight and at the top of his game when he met Alvarez in a title-unification bout. And the Mexican was up to the challenge, outboxing Jacobs to win a unanimous decision in a competitive fight. … Six months later he made a bold move by deciding to move up to light heavyweight to challenge beltholder Kovalev, who was somewhat past his prime but still dangerous and bigger than Alvarez. The Russian fought Alvarez on roughly even terms until the challenger dropped the hammer in Round 11. Two big fights, two big victories.

2018

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Gennadiy Golovkin (MD) and Rocky Fielding (TKO 3)
Background: The victory over Triple-G in their rematch was arguably the greatest of Alvarez’s career. The two best 160-pounders in the world had fought to a disputed draw a year earlier and there was every reason to believe the second fight would be just as close and perhaps disputed. It was, as both men held their own. However, unlike the first meeting, Alvarez pushed the action much of the fight and was rewarded for that on two of three cards. Golovkin was unbeaten and had made a record-tying 20 successful defenses going into the fight. … Throw out the Fielding fight. That was a secondary 168-pound title grab against a second-tier opponent.

2015

Record: 2-0
Opponents: James Kirkland (KO 3) and Miguel Cotto (UD)
Background: The victory over the wildly aggressive Kirkland wasn’t as meaningful many other Alvarez triumphs because of the Texan’s limitations. However, Alvarez’s brutal knockout might’ve been the most breathtaking of his 38 stoppages, which added considerably to his growing star power. … Cotto, 35, was past his prime and a smallish 154-pounder but his unquestioned ability and experience made him a threat to Alvarez, at least on paper. In the end, the slick Puerto Rican did give Alvarez some difficulty but he ended up on the wrong end of a clear decision.

2014

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Alfredo Angulo (TKO 10) and Erislandy Lara (SD)
Background: Some might forget that Angulo was a solid, durable boxer who was coming off a strong performance in a loss to the respected Lara when he fought Alvarez. Yet Alvarez dominated his fellow Mexican in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather. He outboxed Angulo for nine rounds and then stopped him in Round 10. … Some of Alvarez’s handlers didn’t want him to fight Lara, a tricky Cuban southpaw who could make anyone look bad. And that’s how it played out. Alvarez had to scrape and claw to eke out a split-decision victory that many believe was a gift from two of the three judges.

2021

Record: 3-0
Opponent: Avni Yildirim (KO 3), Billy Joe Saunders (KO 8), Caleb Plant (KO 11)
Background: Alvarez realized a goal by becoming undisputed super middleweight champion in a busy year last year. He fought the limited Yildirim in February only because he was his mandatory challenger. He then faced capable beltholders in Saunders (in May) and Plant (November), who held their own against Alvarez until he caught up with them, broke them down and ultimately stopped them. He turned 31 in July 2021. He obviously hadn’t slowed down.

2020

Record: 1-0
Opponent: Callum Smith (UD)
Background: Alvarez fought only once in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic but made the most the 168-pound title-unification bout. Smith was a legitimate opponent on paper, tall, skillful, experienced. He was an underdog but some believes he could be competitive against Alvarez. He wasn’t. Alvarez had his way with the Englishman in part because the latter didn’t have the power to knock Alvarez off his game, the result being a one-sided decision in a one-sided fight. The victory gave Alvarez two of the four major super middleweight titles, after which he set his sights on the last two.

2016

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Amir Khan (KO 6) and Liam Smith (KO 9)
Background: Alvarez’s knockout of Khan rivals his stoppage of James Kirkland. Khan, a quick, capable boxer who had moved up from 147 pounds to a catch weight of 155, held his own for five-plus rounds and then BAM! A right hand from hell put Khan down and removed him from his senses. … The Smith fight was as much about the crowd size and venue – 50,000-plus at the home of the Dallas Cowboys – as the opponent. Smith, the brother of Callum Smith, was a solid all-around fighter but had no where near Alvarez’s ability. The Englishman was overwhelmed in the end.

2012

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Shane Mosley (UD) and Josesito Lopez (TKO 5)
Background: Mosley, 40, was well past his prime when he met Alvarez but the fight was important for the rising star because Sugar Shane was the first major figure on his resume. And he didn’t disappoint, even at 21 years old. The younger, faster man outboxed his overmatched elder from beginning to end to win by a near-shutout decision. Taking down a future Hall of Famer is a significant step in any fighter’s career. … Lopez was and remains a gutsy warrior but he was too small for Alvarez, who put him down three times in a one-sided junior middleweight fight.

2011

Record: 4-0
Opponents: Matthew Hatton (UD), Ryan Rhodes (TKO 12), Alfonso Gomez (TKO 6), Kermit Cintron (TKO 5)
Background: One could argue that the limited Matthew Hatton. Ricky’s brother, didn’t have the credentials to be fighting for a major belt. However, the fact is he and Alvarez met for the junior middleweight title vacated by Manny Pacquiao. And it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez, levels above Hatton, would’ve won every round on all three cards had he not lost a point for hitting after the break in Round 7. He had won the first of eight titles at the tender age of 20. Rhodes, Gomez and Cintron were all solid fighters carefully selected to help Alvarez develop into one of the best fighters in the business.

2010

Record: 5-0
Opponents: Brian Camechis (KO 3), Jose Cotto (TKO 9), Luciano Cuello (TKO 6), Carlos Baldomir (KO 6) and Lovemore Ndou (UD 12)
Background: 2010 was most notable because it was the year in which Alvarez fought on a major U.S. card for the first time. The 19-year-old redhead from Guadalajara stopped Jose Cotto, Miguel’s brother, in the ninth round on the Mayweather-Mosley card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Cotto hurt Alvarez with a left hook in Round 1 but the teenager battled through it and ended up winning by knockout. Camechis, Cuello, Baldomir and Ndou didn’t give the evolving young star much resistance, which was a pattern that would continue when Alvarez faced second-tier opposition.

2017

Record: 1-0-1
Opponents: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (UD) and Gennadiy Golovkin (SD D)
Background: A showdown between Alvarez and Chavez had been discussed for years. When it finally happened, it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez outclassed (embarrassed?) the son of a Mexican legend, winning every round on all three cards. … The first fight between Alvarez and Triple-G was the ultimate middleweight matchup, between a long-reigning knockout artist (Golovkin) and a rising superstar (Alvarez). The Kazakhstani used effective aggression to win over most observers in a competitive fight but he had to settle for a controversial draw. Indeed, Alvarez was fortunate he didn’t leave the ring with his second loss.

2013

Record: 1-1
Opponents: Austin Trout (UD) and Floyd Mayweather (UD L)
Background: The 22-year-old Alvarez took a significant risk when he decided to fight the skillful Trout, who was left-handed, unbeaten and coming off a defining victory over Miguel Cotto. The gamble paid off. In his finest performance to date, he outboxed Trout to win a clear decision. … The decision to fight Mayweather was even bolder. And it didn’t pay off, at least in terms of results. The pound-for-pound king schooled the upstart, who didn’t have the tools to compete with a boxing wizard like Mayweather. The good news for him is that the setback sharpened his resolve to get better. He did.

[lawrence-related id=25595,25419,25389,25345,25341,25333,25146,25143]

Canelo Alvarez: Ranking the Mexican star’s calendar years, best to worst

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021. Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus. The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, …

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021.

Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus.

The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, won major titles in four divisions and is on the cusp of becoming an undisputed champion for the first time. Alvarez (57-1-2, 38 KOs) challenges Dmitry Bivol in a pay-per-view bout Saturday from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

In this special feature, we take a look at Alvarez’s performances year by calendar year and then rank those years – best to worst – beginning in 2010, when he was introduced to American audiences on a significant scale.

The current year is not including because it hinges on Saturday’s fight. If he wins, it will be among his best years. If he loses, it will be down the list.

Here is what we came up with:

2019

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Daniel Jacobs (UD) and Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Background: The victory over Jacobs seems to fly under the radar but it was impressive. Jacobs was talented, polished, a big middleweight and at the top of his game when he met Alvarez in a title-unification bout. And the Mexican was up to the challenge, outboxing Jacobs to win a unanimous decision in a competitive fight. … Six months later he made a bold move by deciding to move up to light heavyweight to challenge beltholder Kovalev, who was somewhat past his prime but still dangerous and bigger than Alvarez. The Russian fought Alvarez on roughly even terms until the challenger dropped the hammer in Round 11. Two big fights, two big victories.

2018

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Gennadiy Golovkin (MD) and Rocky Fielding (TKO 3)
Background: The victory over Triple-G in their rematch was arguably the greatest of Alvarez’s career. The two best 160-pounders in the world had fought to a disputed draw a year earlier and there was every reason to believe the second fight would be just as close and perhaps disputed. It was, as both men held their own. However, unlike the first meeting, Alvarez pushed the action much of the fight and was rewarded for that on two of three cards. Golovkin was unbeaten and had made a record-tying 20 successful defenses going into the fight. … Throw out the Fielding fight. That was a secondary 168-pound title grab against a second-tier opponent.

2015

Record: 2-0
Opponents: James Kirkland (KO 3) and Miguel Cotto (UD)
Background: The victory over the wildly aggressive Kirkland wasn’t as meaningful many other Alvarez triumphs because of the Texan’s limitations. However, Alvarez’s brutal knockout might’ve been the most breathtaking of his 38 stoppages, which added considerably to his growing star power. … Cotto, 35, was past his prime and a smallish 154-pounder but his unquestioned ability and experience made him a threat to Alvarez, at least on paper. In the end, the slick Puerto Rican did give Alvarez some difficulty but he ended up on the wrong end of a clear decision.

2014

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Alfredo Angulo (TKO 10) and Erislandy Lara (SD)
Background: Some might forget that Angulo was a solid, durable boxer who was coming off a strong performance in a loss to the respected Lara when he fought Alvarez. Yet Alvarez dominated his fellow Mexican in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather. He outboxed Angulo for nine rounds and then stopped him in Round 10. … Some of Alvarez’s handlers didn’t want him to fight Lara, a tricky Cuban southpaw who could make anyone look bad. And that’s how it played out. Alvarez had to scrape and claw to eke out a split-decision victory that many believe was a gift from two of the three judges.

2021

Record: 3-0
Opponent: Avni Yildirim (KO 3), Billy Joe Saunders (KO 8), Caleb Plant (KO 11)
Background: Alvarez realized a goal by becoming undisputed super middleweight champion in a busy year last year. He fought the limited Yildirim in February only because he was his mandatory challenger. He then faced capable beltholders in Saunders (in May) and Plant (November), who held their own against Alvarez until he caught up with them, broke them down and ultimately stopped them. He turned 31 in July 2021. He obviously hadn’t slowed down.

2020

Record: 1-0
Opponent: Callum Smith (UD)
Background: Alvarez fought only once in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic but made the most the 168-pound title-unification bout. Smith was a legitimate opponent on paper, tall, skillful, experienced. He was an underdog but some believes he could be competitive against Alvarez. He wasn’t. Alvarez had his way with the Englishman in part because the latter didn’t have the power to knock Alvarez off his game, the result being a one-sided decision in a one-sided fight. The victory gave Alvarez two of the four major super middleweight titles, after which he set his sights on the last two.

2016

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Amir Khan (KO 6) and Liam Smith (KO 9)
Background: Alvarez’s knockout of Khan rivals his stoppage of James Kirkland. Khan, a quick, capable boxer who had moved up from 147 pounds to a catch weight of 155, held his own for five-plus rounds and then BAM! A right hand from hell put Khan down and removed him from his senses. … The Smith fight was as much about the crowd size and venue – 50,000-plus at the home of the Dallas Cowboys – as the opponent. Smith, the brother of Callum Smith, was a solid all-around fighter but had no where near Alvarez’s ability. The Englishman was overwhelmed in the end.

2012

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Shane Mosley (UD) and Josesito Lopez (TKO 5)
Background: Mosley, 40, was well past his prime when he met Alvarez but the fight was important for the rising star because Sugar Shane was the first major figure on his resume. And he didn’t disappoint, even at 21 years old. The younger, faster man outboxed his overmatched elder from beginning to end to win by a near-shutout decision. Taking down a future Hall of Famer is a significant step in any fighter’s career. … Lopez was and remains a gutsy warrior but he was too small for Alvarez, who put him down three times in a one-sided junior middleweight fight.

2011

Record: 4-0
Opponents: Matthew Hatton (UD), Ryan Rhodes (TKO 12), Alfonso Gomez (TKO 6), Kermit Cintron (TKO 5)
Background: One could argue that the limited Matthew Hatton. Ricky’s brother, didn’t have the credentials to be fighting for a major belt. However, the fact is he and Alvarez met for the junior middleweight title vacated by Manny Pacquiao. And it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez, levels above Hatton, would’ve won every round on all three cards had he not lost a point for hitting after the break in Round 7. He had won the first of eight titles at the tender age of 20. Rhodes, Gomez and Cintron were all solid fighters carefully selected to help Alvarez develop into one of the best fighters in the business.

2010

Record: 5-0
Opponents: Brian Camechis (KO 3), Jose Cotto (TKO 9), Luciano Cuello (TKO 6), Carlos Baldomir (KO 6) and Lovemore Ndou (UD 12)
Background: 2010 was most notable because it was the year in which Alvarez fought on a major U.S. card for the first time. The 19-year-old redhead from Guadalajara stopped Jose Cotto, Miguel’s brother, in the ninth round on the Mayweather-Mosley card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Cotto hurt Alvarez with a left hook in Round 1 but the teenager battled through it and ended up winning by knockout. Camechis, Cuello, Baldomir and Ndou didn’t give the evolving young star much resistance, which was a pattern that would continue when Alvarez faced second-tier opposition.

2017

Record: 1-0-1
Opponents: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (UD) and Gennadiy Golovkin (SD D)
Background: A showdown between Alvarez and Chavez had been discussed for years. When it finally happened, it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez outclassed (embarrassed?) the son of a Mexican legend, winning every round on all three cards. … The first fight between Alvarez and Triple-G was the ultimate middleweight matchup, between a long-reigning knockout artist (Golovkin) and a rising superstar (Alvarez). The Kazakhstani used effective aggression to win over most observers in a competitive fight but he had to settle for a controversial draw. Indeed, Alvarez was fortunate he didn’t leave the ring with his second loss.

2013

Record: 1-1
Opponents: Austin Trout (UD) and Floyd Mayweather (UD L)
Background: The 22-year-old Alvarez took a significant risk when he decided to fight the skillful Trout, who was left-handed, unbeaten and coming off a defining victory over Miguel Cotto. The gamble paid off. In his finest performance to date, he outboxed Trout to win a clear decision. … The decision to fight Mayweather was even bolder. And it didn’t pay off, at least in terms of results. The pound-for-pound king schooled the upstart, who didn’t have the tools to compete with a boxing wizard like Mayweather. The good news for him is that the setback sharpened his resolve to get better. He did.

[lawrence-related id=25595,25419,25389,25345,25341,25333,25146,25143]

John Ryder rallies to defeat Daniel Jacobs by split decision

Daniel Jacobs might be finished as an elite fighter. Englishman John Ryder rallied to defeat Jacobs by a split decision in a 12-round supper middleweight title eliminator Saturday at Alexandra Palace in London, the 35-year-old Jacobs’ second …

Daniel Jacobs might be finished as an elite fighter.

Englishman John Ryder rallied to defeat Jacobs by a split decision in a 12-round supper middleweight title eliminator Saturday at Alexandra Palace in London, the 35-year-old Jacobs’ second consecutive shaky performance.

All three judges scored the bout 115-113, with two giving it to Ryder.

Jacobs (37-4, 30 KOs) is a former middleweight champ who is best known for acquitting himself well in setbacks against future Hall of Famers Gennadiy Golovkin and Canelo Alvarez.

However, in his last fight, he was fortunate to get past limited Gabriel Rosado by a split decision. And, on Saturday, he faded down the stretch.

John Ryder celebrates the biggest victory of his career.  Alex Davidson / Getty Images

The Brooklyn product fought well in the first half of the fight, jabbing, sticking, moving and generally outboxing the slower local fighter to control the action.

However, by Round 7, Jacobs, perhaps growing tired, fought more flatfooted and willingly exchanged with Ryder. That opened the door for the rugged underdog to climb back into the fight.

And he did, getting the better of inside exchanges that turned what had been a tactical fight into something akin to a brawl.

In the end, Ryder (31-5, 17 KOs) did enough in the second half of the bout to pull out the biggest victory of his career.

The 33-year-old from Islington came up short in his only title fight, losing a disputed unanimous decision to then-super middleweight champ Callum Smith in November 2019.

The victory on Saturday sets him up for another big fight and possibly a title shot, although it will be difficult to land a fight with undisputed 168-pound champion Alvarez.

Jacobs could pursue a rematch with Ryder, although the Englishman will probably want to take the next step in his career. Otherwise, Jacobs will have to begin the rebuilding process.

John Ryder rallies to defeat Daniel Jacobs by split decision

Daniel Jacobs might be finished as an elite fighter. Englishman John Ryder rallied to defeat Jacobs by a split decision in a 12-round supper middleweight title eliminator Saturday at Alexandra Palace in London, the 35-year-old Jacobs’ second …

Daniel Jacobs might be finished as an elite fighter.

Englishman John Ryder rallied to defeat Jacobs by a split decision in a 12-round supper middleweight title eliminator Saturday at Alexandra Palace in London, the 35-year-old Jacobs’ second consecutive shaky performance.

All three judges scored the bout 115-113, with two giving it to Ryder.

Jacobs (37-4, 30 KOs) is a former middleweight champ who is best known for acquitting himself well in setbacks against future Hall of Famers Gennadiy Golovkin and Canelo Alvarez.

However, in his last fight, he was fortunate to get past limited Gabriel Rosado by a split decision. And, on Saturday, he faded down the stretch.

John Ryder celebrates the biggest victory of his career.  Alex Davidson / Getty Images

The Brooklyn product fought well in the first half of the fight, jabbing, sticking, moving and generally outboxing the slower local fighter to control the action.

However, by Round 7, Jacobs, perhaps growing tired, fought more flatfooted and willingly exchanged with Ryder. That opened the door for the rugged underdog to climb back into the fight.

And he did, getting the better of inside exchanges that turned what had been a tactical fight into something akin to a brawl.

In the end, Ryder (31-5, 17 KOs) did enough in the second half of the bout to pull out the biggest victory of his career.

The 33-year-old from Islington came up short in his only title fight, losing a disputed unanimous decision to then-super middleweight champ Callum Smith in November 2019.

The victory on Saturday sets him up for another big fight and possibly a title shot, although it will be difficult to land a fight with undisputed 168-pound champion Alvarez.

Jacobs could pursue a rematch with Ryder, although the Englishman will probably want to take the next step in his career. Otherwise, Jacobs will have to begin the rebuilding process.

Daniel Jacobs, John Ryder make weight for super middleweight clash Saturday

Daniel Jacobs and John Ryder made weight for their super middleweight clash Saturday in London.

Daniel Jacobs and John Ryder on Friday came in under the super middleweight limit for their fight Saturday at Alexandra Palace in London (DAZN).

Jacobs (37-3, 30 KOs) weighed 166.9 pounds, 1.1 under the limit. Ryder (30-5, 17 KOs) weighed 167.

Jacobs, a former middleweight titleholder, will be taking part in his third fight as a full-fledged super middleweight. The Brooklyn product has fought above 160 in the past.

He’s coming off a split-decision victory over veteran Gabriel Rosado in November 2020.

Ryder, who will be fighting in his hometown, last fought on Sept. 10. That’s when he stopped journeyman Jozef Jurko in Austria.

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Daniel Jacobs, John Ryder make weight for super middleweight clash Saturday

Daniel Jacobs and John Ryder made weight for their super middleweight clash Saturday in London.

Daniel Jacobs and John Ryder on Friday came in under the super middleweight limit for their fight Saturday at Alexandra Palace in London (DAZN).

Jacobs (37-3, 30 KOs) weighed 166.9 pounds, 1.1 under the limit. Ryder (30-5, 17 KOs) weighed 167.

Jacobs, a former middleweight titleholder, will be taking part in his third fight as a full-fledged super middleweight. The Brooklyn product has fought above 160 in the past.

He’s coming off a split-decision victory over veteran Gabriel Rosado in November 2020.

Ryder, who will be fighting in his hometown, last fought on Sept. 10. That’s when he stopped journeyman Jozef Jurko in Austria.

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John Ryder covets opportunity to fight Daniel Jacobs

The last time we saw John Ryder on a big stage, in November 2019, he ended up on the wrong end of a disputed decision against then-168-pound titleholder Callum Smith in Liverpool, England. The Londoner has his first important fight since that …

The last time we saw John Ryder on a big stage, in November 2019, he ended up on the wrong end of a disputed decision against then-168-pound titleholder Callum Smith in Liverpool, England.

The Londoner has his first important fight since that disappointment on Saturday in his hometown, where he’ll face former middleweight titleholder Daniel Jacobs.

The fight will be streamed on DAZN.

“It feels like it’s a long time coming,” Ryder said at the final news conference before the fight at Alexandra Palace. “COVID messed everything up. It’s about putting things right now.”

“It doesn’t get much bigger than this for me,” he added.

Ryder (30-5, 17 KOs) rebounded from the loss to Smith – who went on to lose his belt to Canelo Alvarez – by defeating two journeymen, Mike Guy in December 2020 and Jozef Jurko this past September.

That kept him busy while his handlers tried to procure him a meaningful fight. And his patience has paid off.

Of course, he would’ve preferred to challenge undisputed champion Alvarez but landing a fight with the Mexican star is like winning the lottery. Jacobs (37-3, 30 KOs) is an excellent consolation. A victory over the respected Brooklyn veteran would be the biggest of his career and bring him closer to goal of getting a second shot at a super middleweight belt.

And the fact he might not get many more such opportunities is not lost on him and his team.

“It’s a must win,” said Charlie Sims, Ryder’s manager. “John wants to go on and win world titles and Danny Jacobs is the man in the way. John knows he has to put in a career-best performance to win and that’s what he’s planning to do.”

Indeed, the fight is being billed as make-or-break for both men. Jacobs is coming off a shaky performance against Gabriel Rosado in November 2020, winning a split decision.

However, Ryder wouldn’t bite when it was suggested to him that the loser of the bout on Saturday night might be finished as elite super middleweight. Win or lose, he made it clear that he has more to accomplish.

“At 33 I’m not ready to retire,” he said. “I want to keep going. I want to have a few more years in this sport and a few more years of big fights and world title fights and getting what I deserve out of this sport.”

[lawrence-related id=28122,3131]

John Ryder covets opportunity to fight Daniel Jacobs

The last time we saw John Ryder on a big stage, in November 2019, he ended up on the wrong end of a disputed decision against then-168-pound titleholder Callum Smith in Liverpool, England. The Londoner has his first important fight since that …

The last time we saw John Ryder on a big stage, in November 2019, he ended up on the wrong end of a disputed decision against then-168-pound titleholder Callum Smith in Liverpool, England.

The Londoner has his first important fight since that disappointment on Saturday in his hometown, where he’ll face former middleweight titleholder Daniel Jacobs.

The fight will be streamed on DAZN.

“It feels like it’s a long time coming,” Ryder said at the final news conference before the fight at Alexandra Palace. “COVID messed everything up. It’s about putting things right now.”

“It doesn’t get much bigger than this for me,” he added.

Ryder (30-5, 17 KOs) rebounded from the loss to Smith – who went on to lose his belt to Canelo Alvarez – by defeating two journeymen, Mike Guy in December 2020 and Jozef Jurko this past September.

That kept him busy while his handlers tried to procure him a meaningful fight. And his patience has paid off.

Of course, he would’ve preferred to challenge undisputed champion Alvarez but landing a fight with the Mexican star is like winning the lottery. Jacobs (37-3, 30 KOs) is an excellent consolation. A victory over the respected Brooklyn veteran would be the biggest of his career and bring him closer to goal of getting a second shot at a super middleweight belt.

And the fact he might not get many more such opportunities is not lost on him and his team.

“It’s a must win,” said Charlie Sims, Ryder’s manager. “John wants to go on and win world titles and Danny Jacobs is the man in the way. John knows he has to put in a career-best performance to win and that’s what he’s planning to do.”

Indeed, the fight is being billed as make-or-break for both men. Jacobs is coming off a shaky performance against Gabriel Rosado in November 2020, winning a split decision.

However, Ryder wouldn’t bite when it was suggested to him that the loser of the bout on Saturday night might be finished as elite super middleweight. Win or lose, he made it clear that he has more to accomplish.

“At 33 I’m not ready to retire,” he said. “I want to keep going. I want to have a few more years in this sport and a few more years of big fights and world title fights and getting what I deserve out of this sport.”

[lawrence-related id=28122,3131]

Daniel Jacobs vs. John Ryder: Date, time, how to watch, background

Daniel Jacobs vs. John Ryder: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Daniel Jacobs will return to the ring after 14-plus months to face John Ryder in a super middleweight bout in London.

Daniel Jacobs (37-3, 30 KOs) vs. John Ryder (30-5, 17 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 12
  • Time: 3 p.m. ET / noon PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Alexandra Palace, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Cost: $19.99 per month or $99.99 annually
  • Division: Super middleweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Jacobs 1½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Lee McGregor vs. Diego Alberto Ruiz, junior featherweights; Ellie Scotney vs. Jorgelina Guanini, super bantamweights
  • Prediction: Jacobs UD
  • Background: Jacobs said it was always a dream of his to fight in London, the site of his return to the ring this coming Saturday. We’ll see whether hometown favorite Ryder can turn it into a nightmare in a super middleweight title eliminator. Jacobs lost his middleweight title to Canelo Alvarez by decision in May 2019. He then moved up to super middleweight, at which he has fought  twice: a fifth-round knockout of Julio Cesar Chavez in December 2019 and a closer-than-expected split-decision victory over Gabriel Rosado in November of 2020. The cancer survivor from Brooklyn was so disappointed with his performance against Rosado that he apologized afterward. He remains major player in the 168-pound division – he’s ranked by all four sanctioning bodies, No. 3 by the WBC – but at 35 the polished boxer-puncher is probably entering the final stage of his successful career. Ryder should provide a barometer to determine how much Jacobs has left. The 33-year-old Londoner is 2-0 since he gave a solid performance but lost a wide decision to then-WBA super middleweight titleholder Callum Smith  in November 2019, outpointing Mike Guy in December 2020 and stopping Jozef Jurko in five rounds this past September. Ryder, a good, experienced boxer, is left-handed.

Daniel Jacobs vs. John Ryder: Date, time, how to watch, background

Daniel Jacobs vs. John Ryder: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Daniel Jacobs will return to the ring after 14-plus months to face John Ryder in a super middleweight bout in London.

Daniel Jacobs (37-3, 30 KOs) vs. John Ryder (30-5, 17 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 12
  • Time: 3 p.m. ET / noon PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Alexandra Palace, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Cost: $19.99 per month or $99.99 annually
  • Division: Super middleweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Jacobs 1½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Lee McGregor vs. Diego Alberto Ruiz, junior featherweights; Ellie Scotney vs. Jorgelina Guanini, super bantamweights
  • Prediction: Jacobs UD
  • Background: Jacobs said it was always a dream of his to fight in London, the site of his return to the ring this coming Saturday. We’ll see whether hometown favorite Ryder can turn it into a nightmare in a super middleweight title eliminator. Jacobs lost his middleweight title to Canelo Alvarez by decision in May 2019. He then moved up to super middleweight, at which he has fought  twice: a fifth-round knockout of Julio Cesar Chavez in December 2019 and a closer-than-expected split-decision victory over Gabriel Rosado in November of 2020. The cancer survivor from Brooklyn was so disappointed with his performance against Rosado that he apologized afterward. He remains major player in the 168-pound division – he’s ranked by all four sanctioning bodies, No. 3 by the WBC – but at 35 the polished boxer-puncher is probably entering the final stage of his successful career. Ryder should provide a barometer to determine how much Jacobs has left. The 33-year-old Londoner is 2-0 since he gave a solid performance but lost a wide decision to then-WBA super middleweight titleholder Callum Smith  in November 2019, outpointing Mike Guy in December 2020 and stopping Jozef Jurko in five rounds this past September. Ryder, a good, experienced boxer, is left-handed.