Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list of the best fighters in the world.

Devin Haney turned in the best performance of his career Saturday in his hometown of San Francisco, shutting out overmatched 140-pound champ Regis Prograis to win a major title in a second division.

If there was any doubt about Haney’s place among the best fighters in the world beforehand, there isn’t now.

The question we faced was whether his impressive victory merited an upgrade on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list (Top 15 plus five Honorable Mentions).

We feel it did.

Haney entered the fight ranked No. 14, one spot behind fellow young star Shakur Stevenson.

We normally wouldn’t bump a fighter up more than one or two notches after a victory over an opponent who wasn’t on the pound-for-pound list going into the fight. However, this case is unusual.

Consider three things:

  • One, Haney didn’t simply defeat Prograis, he embarrassed him. He dropped him and won every round on all three scorecards.
  • Two, he moved up in weight and directly into a world championship fight.
  • And, three, Prograis was no easy mark. He was a respected, once-beaten, two-time titleholder.

Yes, it was a special night for Haney.

As a result, he moves up to No. 10, which knocks previous No. 10 Errol Spence Jr., No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko, No. 12 Artur Beterbiev and Stevenson down one spot each.

Note: Spence and Lomachenko are coming off losses – Spence to Terence Crawford and Lomachenko to Haney – and Stevenson gave a shaky performance in his unanimous decision victory over Edwin De Los Santos.

Beterbiev, 38, can bounce back up the list depending on how he performs against Callum Smith on Jan. 13

Next pound-for-pounder up: Honorable mentions Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez and Sunny Edwards will face off on Saturday in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Devin Haney – No fight scheduled.
  11. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  12. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  13. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  14. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=40041,40037]

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list of the best fighters in the world.

Devin Haney turned in the best performance of his career Saturday in his hometown of San Francisco, shutting out overmatched 140-pound champ Regis Prograis to win a major title in a second division.

If there was any doubt about Haney’s place among the best fighters in the world beforehand, there isn’t now.

The question we faced was whether his impressive victory merited an upgrade on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list (Top 15 plus five Honorable Mentions).

We feel it did.

Haney entered the fight ranked No. 14, one spot behind fellow young star Shakur Stevenson.

We normally wouldn’t bump a fighter up more than one or two notches after a victory over an opponent who wasn’t on the pound-for-pound list going into the fight. However, this case is unusual.

Consider three things:

  • One, Haney didn’t simply defeat Prograis, he embarrassed him. He dropped him and won every round on all three scorecards.
  • Two, he moved up in weight and directly into a world championship fight.
  • And, three, Prograis was no easy mark. He was a respected, once-beaten, two-time titleholder.

Yes, it was a special night for Haney.

As a result, he moves up to No. 10, which knocks previous No. 10 Errol Spence Jr., No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko, No. 12 Artur Beterbiev and Stevenson down one spot each.

Note: Spence and Lomachenko are coming off losses – Spence to Terence Crawford and Lomachenko to Haney – and Stevenson gave a shaky performance in his unanimous decision victory over Edwin De Los Santos.

Beterbiev, 38, can bounce back up the list depending on how he performs against Callum Smith on Jan. 13

Next pound-for-pounder up: Honorable mentions Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez and Sunny Edwards will face off on Saturday in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Devin Haney – No fight scheduled.
  11. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  12. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  13. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  14. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=40041,40037]

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack Top 15 after sensational KO?

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack the Top 15 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list after his brutal KO of Demetrius Andrade?

This one is tricky.

David Benavidez couldn’t have looked much better than he did against Demetrius Andrade on Saturday in Las Vegas, where he put the former two-division titleholder down and pummeled him until the fight was stopped after the sixth round.

Benavidez’s stock certainly went up. However, was it enough for the Honorable Mention (going into the fight) to crack our Top 15?

Yes.

The question was how he would fit in. This is what we did:

  • No. 14 Roman Gonzalez, who has lost twice to Juan Francisco Estrada in his last three fights, drops to Honorable Mention. The 36-year-old future Hall of Famer has no fight scheduled.
  • No. 15 Devin Haney, coming off a victory over No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko in a close fight, moves up to No. 14. The 135-pound titleholder will challenge 140-pound champ Regis Prograis on Dec. 9, meaning his position here could change.
  • And Benavidez enters at No. 15, the highest position he has attained.

Honorable Mention Jermall Charlo, a 160-pound titleholder, held his position by outpointing smaller, but determined Jose Benavidez Jr. on the David Benavidez-Andrade card after a 2½-year layoff.

Next pound-for-pounder up: No. 14 Haney faces Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  11. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  13. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  14. Devin Haney – Scheduled to challenge 140-pound titleholder Regis Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=39510,39507,39503,39500,39495,39488]

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack Top 15 after sensational KO?

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack the Top 15 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list after his brutal KO of Demetrius Andrade?

This one is tricky.

David Benavidez couldn’t have looked much better than he did against Demetrius Andrade on Saturday in Las Vegas, where he put the former two-division titleholder down and pummeled him until the fight was stopped after the sixth round.

Benavidez’s stock certainly went up. However, was it enough for the Honorable Mention (going into the fight) to crack our Top 15?

Yes.

The question was how he would fit in. This is what we did:

  • No. 14 Roman Gonzalez, who has lost twice to Juan Francisco Estrada in his last three fights, drops to Honorable Mention. The 36-year-old future Hall of Famer has no fight scheduled.
  • No. 15 Devin Haney, coming off a victory over No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko in a close fight, moves up to No. 14. The 135-pound titleholder will challenge 140-pound champ Regis Prograis on Dec. 9, meaning his position here could change.
  • And Benavidez enters at No. 15, the highest position he has attained.

Honorable Mention Jermall Charlo, a 160-pound titleholder, held his position by outpointing smaller, but determined Jose Benavidez Jr. on the David Benavidez-Andrade card after a 2½-year layoff.

Next pound-for-pounder up: No. 14 Haney faces Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  11. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  13. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  14. Devin Haney – Scheduled to challenge 140-pound titleholder Regis Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=39510,39507,39503,39500,39495,39488]

Pound-for-pound: Does Shakur Stevenson’s uninspiring performance impact him?

Pound-for-pound: Does Shakur Stevenson’s uninspiring performance impact him?

Shakur Stevenson remained unbeaten and won a major title in a third division but managed to draw criticism at the same time.

That’s because he refused to engage Edwin De Los Santos in his unanimous decision victory Thursday night in Las Vegas, throwing a paltry average of 17 punches per round in a boring fight.

Does that mean Stevenson — ranked No. 13 by Boxing Junkie going into the fight — drops down or falls off the list?

No.

One, he won the fight. Two, his skill set — particularly his defensive ability — was on clear display. And, three, everyone has off nights, even someone as talented as he is.

So we decided to give Stevenson the benefit of the doubt for now and then see how he does in his next fight, which could come against a more formidable opponent than De Los Santos.

We’ll add this, though: He can’t expect to barely win horrible fights and ascend to the top of the list.

Next pound-for-pounder up: Honorable Mention David Benavidez is scheduled to face Demetrius Andrade on Nov. 25 in Las Vegas (pay-per-view).

On the same card, Honorable Mention Jermall Charlo will face Jose Benavidez Jr.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – Reportedly in talks with Honorable Mention Kazuto Ioka for a title-unification New Year’s Eve bout in Japan.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  11. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  13. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  14. Roman Gonzalez  No fight scheduled.
  15. Devin Haney – Scheduled to challenge 140-pound titleholder Regis Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): David Benavidez (scheduled to face Demetrius Andrade on Nov. 25 in Las Vegas); Jermall Charlo (scheduled to face Jose Benavidez Jr. on Nov. 25 in Las Vegas); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Kazuto Ioka (reportedly in talks with No. 6 Juan Francisco Estrada for a title-unification New Year’s Eve bout in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=39510,39507,39503,39500,39495,39488]

Pound-for-pound: Does Shakur Stevenson’s uninspiring performance impact him?

Pound-for-pound: Does Shakur Stevenson’s uninspiring performance impact him?

Shakur Stevenson remained unbeaten and won a major title in a third division but managed to draw criticism at the same time.

That’s because he refused to engage Edwin De Los Santos in his unanimous decision victory Thursday night in Las Vegas, throwing a paltry average of 17 punches per round in a boring fight.

Does that mean Stevenson — ranked No. 13 by Boxing Junkie going into the fight — drops down or falls off the list?

No.

One, he won the fight. Two, his skill set — particularly his defensive ability — was on clear display. And, three, everyone has off nights, even someone as talented as he is.

So we decided to give Stevenson the benefit of the doubt for now and then see how he does in his next fight, which could come against a more formidable opponent than De Los Santos.

We’ll add this, though: He can’t expect to barely win horrible fights and ascend to the top of the list.

Next pound-for-pounder up: Honorable Mention David Benavidez is scheduled to face Demetrius Andrade on Nov. 25 in Las Vegas (pay-per-view).

On the same card, Honorable Mention Jermall Charlo will face Jose Benavidez Jr.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – Reportedly in talks with Honorable Mention Kazuto Ioka for a title-unification New Year’s Eve bout in Japan.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  11. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  13. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  14. Roman Gonzalez  No fight scheduled.
  15. Devin Haney – Scheduled to challenge 140-pound titleholder Regis Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): David Benavidez (scheduled to face Demetrius Andrade on Nov. 25 in Las Vegas); Jermall Charlo (scheduled to face Jose Benavidez Jr. on Nov. 25 in Las Vegas); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Kazuto Ioka (reportedly in talks with No. 6 Juan Francisco Estrada for a title-unification New Year’s Eve bout in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=39510,39507,39503,39500,39495,39488]

Shakur Stevenson has work to do to repair his reputation after debacle

Shakur Stevenson has work to do to repair his reputation after debacle against Edwin De Los Santos on Thursday in Las Vegas.

Is it over?

Sorry. I fell asleep sometime in the middle of the Shakur Stevenson-Edwin De Los Santos “fight” on Thursday night in Las Vegas. I suspect I wasn’t the only one who dozed off. A total of 105 punches landed – an average of less than 10 per round – would send even a hardcore boxing fan into slumber.

And that’s not good news for Stevenson.

The new 135-pound titleholder, as gifted as anyone in the world, has designs on becoming the face of boxing. His performance against De Los Santos was a step in the opposite direction.

It was exactly what Stevenson (21-0, 10 KOs) said it was: “A bad performance.”

Stevenson did enough to win a unanimous decision and a vacant belt but his unwillingness to take significant risks against the hard-punching De Los Santos (16-2, 14 KOs) in the process undoubtedly turned off fans around the globe.

The lack of action in the fight certainly disappointed the spectators at T-Mobile Arena, who booed with more passion than the boxers fought.

How damaging to Stevenson’s reputation was the performance?

Well, let’s not overreact. There might’ve been a reason for Stevenson’s reticence beyond his typical hit-and-not-be-hit style. Some have speculated that the southpaw had a problem with left hand (or perhaps his arm or shoulder).

That could at least partly explain the fact he threw only 54 power punches, connecting on a mere 19.

Stevenson was asked immediately after the fight whether he fought with an injury but wouldn’t provide a direct answer, instead only implying that there might’ve been a problem.

“I don’t got nothing to say about that. I don’t make excuses. It happens. We go through a lot as fighters,” said Stevenson, whose instincts to take responsibility for his subpar performance should be applauded.

Maybe Stevenson did have an injury. And maybe he’ll revert to the fighter who showed signs of being more aggressive in his previous few fights, which undoubtedly was the result of those who openly have questioned his punching power.

However, at the moment, one of the worst title fights in recent memory remains at the forefront of our minds.

Having your hand raised is the primary objective in boxing, as Stevenson suggested when he said in the ring, “That’s all I wanted to do.” And victories can pay big dividends. Good paydays, major titles and recognition of your ability come with success.

Winning isn’t enough, though, at least if you hope to become iconic. Fans want to be entertained, not anesthetized. And there was nothing entertaining about Stevenson’s performance against De Los Santos unless his elusiveness was enough to satisfy you.

Floyd Mayweather was a safety-first fighter in the latter part of his career but he scored many knockouts as he built his fanbase in his formative years and was a master self-marketer, which captured the imagination of fans.

It’s safe to say there will never be another Floyd Mayweather, meaning it’s unfair to expect Stevenson to aspire to that.

Andre Ward, another sublime boxer, had neither the entertaining style nor the ability to sell himself. As a result, he was a generational talent that didn’t resonate with fans. This could be Stevenson’s fate if he doesn’t take more risks in the ring.

That doesn’t mean Stevenson should suddenly become an aggressive, knockout-oriented fighter who walks down his foes. That approach wouldn’t play to his strengths, particularly his uncanny ability to avoid taking clean punches.

It does mean that he might want to take just enough risks to break down opponents and then find his killer instinct to take them out if the opportunities are there. Perhaps he could watch more videos of Terence Crawford, a talented technician with a seek-and-destroy mentality.

Yes, Crawford takes more punches than Stevenson does but that’s acceptable if you consider the results: “Bud” probably hasn’t heard a single boo in his career.

I won’t be surprised if Stevenson becomes the fighter and attraction he wants to be. Everyone agrees that the skillset is there. And while he’ll never be a one-punch knockout artist, I believe he’ll learn from his experience on Thursday and grow.

He could make subtle, measured changes that will allow him to become a more entertaining fighter, remain the boxing wizard he has become and continue to do what he has always done, which is to win fights.

If he does that, he could silence those boos forever and become a legend.

[lawrence-related id=39704,39682]

Shakur Stevenson has work to do to repair his reputation after debacle

Shakur Stevenson has work to do to repair his reputation after debacle against Edwin De Los Santos on Thursday in Las Vegas.

Is it over?

Sorry. I fell asleep sometime in the middle of the Shakur Stevenson-Edwin De Los Santos “fight” on Thursday night in Las Vegas. I suspect I wasn’t the only one who dozed off. A total of 105 punches landed – an average of less than 10 per round – would send even a hardcore boxing fan into slumber.

And that’s not good news for Stevenson.

The new 135-pound titleholder, as gifted as anyone in the world, has designs on becoming the face of boxing. His performance against De Los Santos was a step in the opposite direction.

It was exactly what Stevenson (21-0, 10 KOs) said it was: “A bad performance.”

Stevenson did enough to win a unanimous decision and a vacant belt but his unwillingness to take significant risks against the hard-punching De Los Santos (16-2, 14 KOs) in the process undoubtedly turned off fans around the globe.

The lack of action in the fight certainly disappointed the spectators at T-Mobile Arena, who booed with more passion than the boxers fought.

How damaging to Stevenson’s reputation was the performance?

Well, let’s not overreact. There might’ve been a reason for Stevenson’s reticence beyond his typical hit-and-not-be-hit style. Some have speculated that the southpaw had a problem with left hand (or perhaps his arm or shoulder).

That could at least partly explain the fact he threw only 54 power punches, connecting on a mere 19.

Stevenson was asked immediately after the fight whether he fought with an injury but wouldn’t provide a direct answer, instead only implying that there might’ve been a problem.

“I don’t got nothing to say about that. I don’t make excuses. It happens. We go through a lot as fighters,” said Stevenson, whose instincts to take responsibility for his subpar performance should be applauded.

Maybe Stevenson did have an injury. And maybe he’ll revert to the fighter who showed signs of being more aggressive in his previous few fights, which undoubtedly was the result of those who openly have questioned his punching power.

However, at the moment, one of the worst title fights in recent memory remains at the forefront of our minds.

Having your hand raised is the primary objective in boxing, as Stevenson suggested when he said in the ring, “That’s all I wanted to do.” And victories can pay big dividends. Good paydays, major titles and recognition of your ability come with success.

Winning isn’t enough, though, at least if you hope to become iconic. Fans want to be entertained, not anesthetized. And there was nothing entertaining about Stevenson’s performance against De Los Santos unless his elusiveness was enough to satisfy you.

Floyd Mayweather was a safety-first fighter in the latter part of his career but he scored many knockouts as he built his fanbase in his formative years and was a master self-marketer, which captured the imagination of fans.

It’s safe to say there will never be another Floyd Mayweather, meaning it’s unfair to expect Stevenson to aspire to that.

Andre Ward, another sublime boxer, had neither the entertaining style nor the ability to sell himself. As a result, he was a generational talent that didn’t resonate with fans. This could be Stevenson’s fate if he doesn’t take more risks in the ring.

That doesn’t mean Stevenson should suddenly become an aggressive, knockout-oriented fighter who walks down his foes. That approach wouldn’t play to his strengths, particularly his uncanny ability to avoid taking clean punches.

It does mean that he might want to take just enough risks to break down opponents and then find his killer instinct to take them out if the opportunities are there. Perhaps he could watch more videos of Terence Crawford, a talented technician with a seek-and-destroy mentality.

Yes, Crawford takes more punches than Stevenson does but that’s acceptable if you consider the results: “Bud” probably hasn’t heard a single boo in his career.

I won’t be surprised if Stevenson becomes the fighter and attraction he wants to be. Everyone agrees that the skillset is there. And while he’ll never be a one-punch knockout artist, I believe he’ll learn from his experience on Thursday and grow.

He could make subtle, measured changes that will allow him to become a more entertaining fighter, remain the boxing wizard he has become and continue to do what he has always done, which is to win fights.

If he does that, he could silence those boos forever and become a legend.

[lawrence-related id=39704,39682]

Shakur Stevenson wins stinker to capture title in third division

Shakur Stevenson outpointed Edwin De Los Santos in a boring fight to capture a major title in a third division Thursday in Las Vegas.

Shakur Stevenson won another title but few fans on Thursday in Las Vegas.

The boxing wizard from New Jersey left no doubt that he is far superior to opponent Edwin De Los Santos, comfortably winning a unanimous decision and the vacant WBC 130-pound title.

Stevenson (21-0, 10 KOs) has now won major belts in three division in a span of only nine fights, which speaks to his unusual ability.

De Los Santos’ problem on Thursday was his inability to hit one of the best defensive fights of his generation. The Dominican chased Stevenson much of the fight but landed a pathetic total of 40 punches, according to CompuBox.

That’s the fewest punches landed in a 12-round fight in CompuBox’s 38-year history.

Stevenson had a similar problem, though: He landed only 65 punches himself because he didn’t take the risks necessary to do so against an opponent known for his power. The winner landed only 19 power shots (to 14 for De Los Santos).

That’s why the disappointed spectators at T-Mobile Arena booed loudly at several points in what was a painfully boring fight.

And it’s probably why the scoring (116-112, 116-112 and 115-113) was closer than it probably should’ve been. If the fighters land few punches, the aggressor – which was De Los Santos in most rounds – will often get the nod.

The only punch that landed with any consistency in the fight was Stevenson’s right jab, which found De Los Santos’ head 46 times. That evidently was the difference in the scoring.

Stevenson acknowledged that it wasn’t his best night.

“I had a bad performance tonight,” he said. “That’s all I’m really focused on. I wasn’t feeling too good, so I’ll live with it. It’s OK. I came here and got the victory, and that’s all I wanted to do.

“I just didn’t feel good. I didn’t feel good before the fight. Honestly, I had already told myself that if I feel like this in the ring and if it’s not going well, I’m going to make sure that I box and get the victory.”

Meanwhile, De Los Santos expressed his frustration with Stevenson’s tactics.

“We all know what happened,” he said. “He came for a track meet. He didn’t come to fight. I showed that I am on a higher level because he never stood and fought like he does with other fighters.

“I did my job. He came to survive. That’s what he did. They gifted him the title, but I’m the people’s champion.”

Neither Stevenson nor De Los Santos was the people’s champion on Thursday night.

Shakur Stevenson wins stinker to capture title in third division

Shakur Stevenson outpointed Edwin De Los Santos in a boring fight to capture a major title in a third division Thursday in Las Vegas.

Shakur Stevenson won another title but few fans on Thursday in Las Vegas.

The boxing wizard from New Jersey left no doubt that he is far superior to opponent Edwin De Los Santos, comfortably winning a unanimous decision and the vacant WBC 130-pound title.

Stevenson (21-0, 10 KOs) has now won major belts in three division in a span of only nine fights, which speaks to his unusual ability.

De Los Santos’ problem on Thursday was his inability to hit one of the best defensive fights of his generation. The Dominican chased Stevenson much of the fight but landed a pathetic total of 40 punches, according to CompuBox.

That’s the fewest punches landed in a 12-round fight in CompuBox’s 38-year history.

Stevenson had a similar problem, though: He landed only 65 punches himself because he didn’t take the risks necessary to do so against an opponent known for his power. The winner landed only 19 power shots (to 14 for De Los Santos).

That’s why the disappointed spectators at T-Mobile Arena booed loudly at several points in what was a painfully boring fight.

And it’s probably why the scoring (116-112, 116-112 and 115-113) was closer than it probably should’ve been. If the fighters land few punches, the aggressor – which was De Los Santos in most rounds – will often get the nod.

The only punch that landed with any consistency in the fight was Stevenson’s right jab, which found De Los Santos’ head 46 times. That evidently was the difference in the scoring.

Stevenson acknowledged that it wasn’t his best night.

“I had a bad performance tonight,” he said. “That’s all I’m really focused on. I wasn’t feeling too good, so I’ll live with it. It’s OK. I came here and got the victory, and that’s all I wanted to do.

“I just didn’t feel good. I didn’t feel good before the fight. Honestly, I had already told myself that if I feel like this in the ring and if it’s not going well, I’m going to make sure that I box and get the victory.”

Meanwhile, De Los Santos expressed his frustration with Stevenson’s tactics.

“We all know what happened,” he said. “He came for a track meet. He didn’t come to fight. I showed that I am on a higher level because he never stood and fought like he does with other fighters.

“I did my job. He came to survive. That’s what he did. They gifted him the title, but I’m the people’s champion.”

Neither Stevenson nor De Los Santos was the people’s champion on Thursday night.