Carl Frampton starts slowly, finishes Darren Traynor with body blows

Frampton stopped Darren Traynor with a body shot in the seventh round of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout Saturday in London.

Carl Frampton did his part. Now it’s up to Jamel Herring.

Frampton stopped Darren Traynor with a body shot exactly one minute into the seventh round of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout without spectators Saturday at York Hall in London.

If Herring successfully defends his junior lightweight title against Jonathan Oquendo on Sept. 5, he and Frampton, a former two-division titleholder, are expected to tangle sometime in November.

A victory over Herring would give Frampton a major title in a third weight division, bolstering the notion that he’s the most-accomplished Irish fighter of all time.

Traynor (16-4, 7 KOs) took the fight on one week’s notice when original opponent Vahram Vardanyan of Latvia couldn’t get a visa because of the coronavirus pandemic but looked like he belonged in the ring with Frampton, at least for the first half of the fight.

The Scot didn’t land many punches against his slick, athletic opponent but neither did Frampton, who seemed flat after more than eight months out of the ring.

However, that changed in an instant in Round 6. Frampton, who had picked up his intensity and started landed jabs with some consistency, put Traynor flat on his face with a left to the body toward the end of the round. He beat the count but suddenly seemed vulnerable.

Then came a strange conclusion to the fight. Frampton (28-2, 16 KOs) hurt Traynor with another left to the gut. He didn’t go down but grimaced and threw his fist in the air, as if to say, “I’m done.” And referee Michael Alexander obliged him, waiving off the fight.

Frampton wasn’t ecstatic about his performance but he was content to have gotten the job done.

“I’m happy to get the win,” he said. “I will say I was far from my best. People talked about rounds, about doing the rounds. I don’t think it’s going to harm me doing the rounds. If I had a chance to take him out in the first round, I wouldn’t done it. But I’m saying that the rounds were good. He’s a tough kid. …

“I had a decent game plan,” he went on. “I was trying to step back, not rush things. Once I started landing my jab – I hurt him a few times with the jab, as well – and then the body shots in the second half of the fight ….”

Traynor, a few inches taller than Frampton, has a similar frame to that of Herring. Traynor fights from an orthodox stance while Herring is a southpaw.

Still, Frampton said Traynor probably prepared him better for the coming challenge than the shorter Vardanyan would have. Frampton is 5-foot-5 (165 cms), Herring 5-10 (178 cms).

“He was a better opponent for Herring than my original opponent because I think [Vardanyan] was around my height, maybe a little bit shorter,” Frampton said. “Darren isn’t a southpaw but the dimensins are similar.

“I know I need to be a lot better for Herring. It’s good to get rounds done. And my hands are fine. No issues there. It’s onward and upward.”

In a preliminary, two-time Irish Olympian Mick Conlan (14-0, 8 KOs) overcame two point deductions for low blows to stop French veteran Sofiane Takoucht (35-5-1, 13 KOs) 1:54 into the 10th and final round of a featherweight bout.

The fight appeared to be headed toward a decision when Conlan caught Takoucht with a big left that hurt him and followed with a flurry that prompted the referee to stop the fight.

Conlan’s plan is to move down to the junior featherweight division, where he hopes to get his first chance to fight for a world title.

“I didn’t mean to throw the low blows, but I just love to hit them in the sweet spot and there’s a fine line,” Conlan told BT Sport. “It is hard to adjust mid-feet, and a lot of the shots must have swayed low. I am happy with the win, though.

“I don’t have a clue what happens next. I leave it to my team. But I will be ready. I did what I said I would do. I said I would break him down and take him out. It might have been the last round, but I did it.”

In other bouts, Troy Williamson (15-0-1, 11 KOs) defeated Harry Scarff (8-2, 1 KO) by a close unanimous decision in a 10-round junior middleweight bout; junior lightweight prospect Archie Sharp (19-0, 9 KOs) outpointed Jeff Ofori (10-3-1, 3 KOs) — 96-95 referee decision — in a 10-round lightweight bout; and Paddy Donovan (4-0, 3 KOs) stopped Des Newton (8-16, 2 KOs) 1:31 into a scheduled six-round welterweight bout.

Carl Frampton starts slowly, finishes Darren Traynor with body blows

Frampton stopped Darren Traynor with a body shot in the seventh round of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout Saturday in London.

Carl Frampton did his part. Now it’s up to Jamel Herring.

Frampton stopped Darren Traynor with a body shot exactly one minute into the seventh round of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout without spectators Saturday at York Hall in London.

If Herring successfully defends his junior lightweight title against Jonathan Oquendo on Sept. 5, he and Frampton, a former two-division titleholder, are expected to tangle sometime in November.

A victory over Herring would give Frampton a major title in a third weight division, bolstering the notion that he’s the most-accomplished Irish fighter of all time.

Traynor (16-4, 7 KOs) took the fight on one week’s notice when original opponent Vahram Vardanyan of Latvia couldn’t get a visa because of the coronavirus pandemic but looked like he belonged in the ring with Frampton, at least for the first half of the fight.

The Scot didn’t land many punches against his slick, athletic opponent but neither did Frampton, who seemed flat after more than eight months out of the ring.

However, that changed in an instant in Round 6. Frampton, who had picked up his intensity and started landed jabs with some consistency, put Traynor flat on his face with a left to the body toward the end of the round. He beat the count but suddenly seemed vulnerable.

Then came a strange conclusion to the fight. Frampton (28-2, 16 KOs) hurt Traynor with another left to the gut. He didn’t go down but grimaced and threw his fist in the air, as if to say, “I’m done.” And referee Michael Alexander obliged him, waiving off the fight.

Frampton wasn’t ecstatic about his performance but he was content to have gotten the job done.

“I’m happy to get the win,” he said. “I will say I was far from my best. People talked about rounds, about doing the rounds. I don’t think it’s going to harm me doing the rounds. If I had a chance to take him out in the first round, I wouldn’t done it. But I’m saying that the rounds were good. He’s a tough kid. …

“I had a decent game plan,” he went on. “I was trying to step back, not rush things. Once I started landing my jab – I hurt him a few times with the jab, as well – and then the body shots in the second half of the fight ….”

Traynor, a few inches taller than Frampton, has a similar frame to that of Herring. Traynor fights from an orthodox stance while Herring is a southpaw.

Still, Frampton said Traynor probably prepared him better for the coming challenge than the shorter Vardanyan would have. Frampton is 5-foot-5 (165 cms), Herring 5-10 (178 cms).

“He was a better opponent for Herring than my original opponent because I think [Vardanyan] was around my height, maybe a little bit shorter,” Frampton said. “Darren isn’t a southpaw but the dimensins are similar.

“I know I need to be a lot better for Herring. It’s good to get rounds done. And my hands are fine. No issues there. It’s onward and upward.”

In a preliminary, two-time Irish Olympian Mick Conlan (14-0, 8 KOs) overcame two point deductions for low blows to stop French veteran Sofiane Takoucht (35-5-1, 13 KOs) 1:54 into the 10th and final round of a featherweight bout.

The fight appeared to be headed toward a decision when Conlan caught Takoucht with a big left that hurt him and followed with a flurry that prompted the referee to stop the fight.

Conlan’s plan is to move down to the junior featherweight division, where he hopes to get his first chance to fight for a world title.

“I didn’t mean to throw the low blows, but I just love to hit them in the sweet spot and there’s a fine line,” Conlan told BT Sport. “It is hard to adjust mid-feet, and a lot of the shots must have swayed low. I am happy with the win, though.

“I don’t have a clue what happens next. I leave it to my team. But I will be ready. I did what I said I would do. I said I would break him down and take him out. It might have been the last round, but I did it.”

In other bouts, Troy Williamson (15-0-1, 11 KOs) defeated Harry Scarff (8-2, 1 KO) by a close unanimous decision in a 10-round junior middleweight bout; junior lightweight prospect Archie Sharp (19-0, 9 KOs) outpointed Jeff Ofori (10-3-1, 3 KOs) — 96-95 referee decision — in a 10-round lightweight bout; and Paddy Donovan (4-0, 3 KOs) stopped Des Newton (8-16, 2 KOs) 1:31 into a scheduled six-round welterweight bout.

Carl Frampton believes he and Jamel Herring will get title fight ‘sorted’

Carl Frampton still feels confident that he’ll get his title shot against Jamel Herring late this year.

Carl Frampton and Jamel Herring, in particular, have had a challenging 2020.

Frampton had been preparing to face Vahram Vardanyan on Saturday, but those plans changed last week when the Armenian boxer ran into visa issues and was denied entry into England.

Meanwhile, Herring, the a junior lightweight titleholder, had separate positive COVID-19 results that twice postponed his fight against Jonathan Oquendo. Herring is now set to face Oquendo on Sept. 5.

All this being said, Frampton, who will now face Darren Traynor on Saturday, still feels confident that he’ll get that title shot against Herring late this year.

“[Herring’s in] exactly the same boat as me in terms of mishaps and things gone wrong,” Frampton recently said on “Boxing with Chris Mannix”. “It hasn’t been a great year.

“I feel extremely sorry for (Herring), and I understand what it’s like, and I know Jamel, like myself, he trains away from home,” he continued. “He leaves his family and he goes and trains. He leaves his children and wife behind. I’m sure it would almost feel like a wasted time away from family. It’s got to be hard to deal with.”

He added: “I don’t know him personally, but the impression I have of him is that he’s mentally a very strong person, and I’m pretty sure he’ll be able to deal with it. I feel like I’m a mentally strong person. I think we’ll get it sorted.”

Frampton (27-2, 15 KOs) hasn’t fought since he shut out Tyler McCreary on Nov. 30. Herring (21-2, 10 KOs) successfully defended his title against Lamont Roach on Nov. 9.

Carl Frampton to face Darren Traynor on Saturday in London

Carl Frampton will face late replacement Darren Traynor in a 10-round lightweight bout Saturday at the BT Sport Studio in London.

Carl Frampton will face late replacement Darren Traynor in a 10-round lightweight bout Saturday at the BT Sport Studio in London, Top Rank announced.

The card will be televised on ESPN in the U.S.

Frampton was scheduled to fight Vahram Vardanyan, an Armenian who lives in Latvia, but he couldn’t get into the U.K. as a result of visa issues and pulled out of the fight last week.

MTK Global, Frampton’s management company, reportedly had been paying Traynor for several weeks in preparation for just such an emergency.

Traynor (16-3, 7 KOs) is a two-time Scottish titleholder but hasn’t faced an opponent of Frampton’s caliber.

Frampton (27-2, 15 KOs) is a former two-division world titleholder and 2018 Fighter of the Year. He hasn’t fought since he shut out Tyler McCreary last November.

“I’m delighted to get an opponent over the line,” Frampton stated in a news release. “I have to credit MTK Global for seeing there could have been issues with the original opponent getting into the country, and they have been paying Darren Traynor for a number of weeks to train.

“He’ll be in decent shape and will be up for it as well. There is no pressure on him, but it is up to me to look good. I want to be taking this guy out and then moving on to think about Jamel Herring.

“I can’t be complacent in the slightest. I know I’m the big favorite in the fight, but I want to win and want to look good, and I want to win by knockout. I feel like he’s a better opponent as he’s fought at a higher level than Vardanyan, and he’s coming in at lightweight.

“I haven’t made my debut at junior lightweight yet, and I’m already jumping in at lightweight, so that’s obviously a little bit in his favor. But I’m looking forward to not having to struggle at all in fight week and then putting on an explosive show.”

Said Frank Warren, Frampton’s co-promoter: “Carl is gunning for a third world title at a third different weight and cannot afford any mishaps on Saturday night. Darren Traynor is ready to step in and fully prepared to give Carl the competitive fight he needs before heading into a WBO world championship battle against Jamel Herring, hopefully, later this year.”