Danny Garcia has to settle for fight against Ivan Redkach on Jan. 25

Danny Garcia was expected to fight Errol Spence or possibly Manny Pacquiao but instead will face Ivan Redkach on Jan. 25.

Danny Garcia had been scheduled to face Errol Spence on Jan. 25 but that fight was scraped after Spence’s horrific car accident in October. He has also been rumored to be a candidate to face Manny Pacquiao.

Instead, the former two-division titleholder will face Ivan Redkach on Jan. 25 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. Oh well, you gotta keep busy.

Garcia (35-2, 21 KOs) last fought in April, when he stopped Adrian Granados in seven rounds in April. That followed a frustrating year-and-a-half period in which he went 1-2, losing competitive decisions to Keith Thurman and Shawn Porter.

The Redkach fight is obviously meant to keep him in position for a big fight whenever – and against whomever – something comes together.

Garcia was interviewed during the Jermall Charlo-Dennis Hogan card on Showtime.

“First of all, thank God Spence is doing good,” he said. “I hear that he’s recovering well. I was really looking forward to fighting him but maybe he could be next after January 25. Pac-Man (Manny Pacquiao) or Spence, that’s who we want. 2020 is going to be a big year for me.”

Redkach (23-4-1, 18 KOs) is coming off arguably the highest-profile win of his career, a sixth-round knockout of an faded Devon Alexander in June.

The Los Angeles-based Ukrainian has lost his biggest fights and is 5-4-1 in his last 10 fights, although he has won three straight going into the Garcia fight.

Terence Crawford faces Egidijus Kavaliauskas and then uncertainty

Terence Crawford faces mandatory challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas on Saturday in New York.

Terence Crawford is in New York for some mandatory business Saturday, favored to beat Lithuanian welterweight challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas at Madison Square Garden and still ranked first or second in the pound-pound debate, yet uncertain about what awaits him in 2020.

Crawford hears rumors and smiles. Depending on the day or perhaps the hour, Floyd Mayweather is coming back. Or maybe not. It’s still not clear what Errol Spence Jr. will do two months after he was thrown from his Ferrari in a scary wreck on Oct. 10 in Dallas.

Crawford was asked about both this week in a media tour that included Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show on ESPN, which will televise his title defense after college football crowns its pound-for-pound best with the Heisman.

Question: Who does he have a better chance at fighting next year, Mayweather or Spence?

“Neither,’’ Crawford said.

Even if Mayweather does come back for more than an exhibition, the feared Crawford doesn’t expect to be anywhere on his list of potential opponents.

“That fight will never happen, I believe,’’ he said.

Meanwhile, there’s been no word on what Spence plans to do.

“Me and Spence fight, I don’t really know,’’ Crawford said. “I don’t know his health reasons right now. I know when he comes back to the fight game, he’s not itching to get back in the ring against me right off the injuries.’’

There had been a groundswell of talk from fans and media, all urging Crawford-vs.-Spence, in the immediate aftermath of Spence’s split-decision over Shawn Porter for two welterweight belts on Sept. 28 in Los Angeles. But there’s only been silence since Spence’s single-car crash.

Terence Crawford: Inability to lure PBC fighters into ring, ‘It’s frustrating’

Terence Crawford admits that the inability to make deals to face his PBC rivals is frustrating.

Terence Crawford wants to fight his welterweight counterparts at Premier Boxing Champions. The fact he can’t, he said, “It’s frustrating.”

Crawford (35-0, 26 knockouts) is scheduled to defend his 147-pound belt against mandatory challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas (21-0-1, 17 KOs) on Dec. 14 in New York City. He’d rather be fighting Errol Spence, Shawn Porter, Manny Pacquiao or Keith Thurman, all of whom are managed by PBC.

The problem is the fighters’ affiliations. Crawford is promoted by Top Rank, whose fights are televised on ESPN. PBC has a deal with Fox and Showtime. And cross-platform agreements are hard to reach, especially when one side (PBC) has all the fighters it needs to make good matchups.

Crawford expressed his feelings in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.

“It’s frustrating but I look at it as a business move by them not to fight me,” said Crawford, referring to the inability to make these fights. “I’m not going to knock them or be a hater, but I know where I stand and I know the game they’re playing and there’s nothing I can do about it.

“I just have to focus on what I can do and keep making a living and keeping my name up there as the best pound-for-pound fighter.”

Crawford seems particularly pessimistic about a possible matchup with Spence, his greatest rival for welterweight supremacy. Spence, recovering from injuries suffered in a car accident, is expected to fight next year.

“I don’t know if that fight will ever happen,” he said. “That’s not something I can decide. It takes two people to fight, and it takes two companies to sit down and figure it out and decide what network we’re going to fight on, where we’re going to fight, what the purses are going to be. It’s not as easy as people think it is, but it could be easy if we finally sat down at the same table and made it happen.”

He went on: “I’m willing to fight all those guys, but it’s not up to me to decide if I’m going to fight them or if I’m not going to fight them. I’m open to fighting all those guys. I’ve been saying that from Day 1. Nothing has changed. I’m the best fighter in the division and I’m always willing to prove it.”

“… Bob is willing to make any fight happen,” Crawford said. “At the end of the day, it’s not up to Bob. It’s up to me. The fighters are the ones that fight, and without us, there’s no promotion. So if a fighter really wants a fight to happen, he can make it happen. You can tell them, ‘Listen, this is the fight I want and I’m not fighting until I get that fight.’ It’s simple. At the end of the day, they work for us. If we don’t fight, nobody is going to get paid, so they have to make the fights that the fighters want.”

Crawford, 32, told The Times that he wants to accomplish as much as possible before he retires in three to four years.

“I still want to be the undisputed welterweight champion of the world,” he said, “and I believe I’ll be the first to be undisputed in two divisions, back-to-back. I just want to leave a mark on the sport of boxing so people talk about me like they talk about the other great champions before me. That’s my goal before I retire.”

5 things to be grateful for this Thanksgiving holiday

There is a lot to be grateful for in boxing. Here are five things that make me feel fortunate on Thanksgiving.

We all have a lot to be grateful for on this Thanksgiving. Here are five things in the boxing world that make me feel fortunate.

  1. A heavyweight who can knock out a Tyrannosaurus rex. I can understand where the purists are coming from. Deontay Wilder doesn’t have the sublime skill set that normally separates the great fighters from the rest. All I know is how I feel when Wilder lands those bombs to end his fights instantly. There is nothing like it in sports. I’m going to enjoy him as long as he’s around.
  2. The spirit of the underdog. The oddsmakers generally know what they’re doing when they make one fighter a favorite – sometimes a prohibitive favorite – over another fighter. Thank goodness not every underdog buys into the prevailing wisdom. I think we’re all inspired by the fighters who overcome the odds, the “Rockys,” if you will. I’m thinking of you Andy Ruiz Jr. and Julian Williams.
  3. The talent at the top: Non-fans ask me occasionally, “What happened to boxing? Where are the great fighters?” They’re there. Uber-talents like Vassiliy Lomachenko, Terence Crawford, Canelo Alvarez, Naoya Inoue, Oleksandr Usyk, Gennadiy Golovkin, Errol Spence, et al would’ve been successful in any era and are a joy to watch. I just wish more sports fans were aware of that.
  4. An abundance of dates. The dying sport certainly produces a lot of shows, both on television and streaming services. ESPN, ESPN+, Fox, Showtime, DAZN and others have made major investments in the sport. And the quality of the cards has generally been very good. If we could only keep MMA fighters and YouTubers out of the picture.
  5. The fighters themselves. They will always be what I’m most grateful for. These young (sometimes not-so-young) men and women risk their very well being to pursue their dreams and entertain us every time they step through the ropes. From the superstars to the journeymen, they need to know that we appreciate them and what they do. I’ll always admire them.

Fox Exec says network will have ‘best of the best,’ own ‘PBC belts’

Bill Wanger, executive vice president of programming for Fox Sports, appeared on the Chris Mannix podcast last week to discuss boxing.

Al Haymon may stay tight-lipped when it comes to the media, but Bill Wanger apparently has no such qualms.

Wanger, the executive vice president of programming at Fox Sports, appeared on the Chris Mannix boxing podcast last week and, well, he had a few interesting things to say. Wanger expounded on everything from the network’s multi-year deal with Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions to his thoughts on the boxing landscape at large.

Here are some snippets.

On sharing fighters with Showtime

Given that longtime cable broadcaster Showtime also has a multi-year deal with the PBC, one of the biggest questions in the past year was how Haymon went about apportioning his roster to satisfy the needs of both networks. When Mannix brought up this specific point, Wanger was blunt about Fox having the “premier package.”

“Our deal with the PBC is to be in the premier position and to have the premier package,” Wanger said. “So a lot of who takes what between Fox and Showtime is already taken care of in the contractual process. … We have a contract with the PBC with a certain number of fights to be in the premier position. At the end of the day, that’s what we’re going to have. We’re not too worried about that.”

When Mannix asked Wanger to clarify what he meant by “premier,” Wanger responded, “At the end of the day, we get the best fights and the top stars. Showtime will have what they’re going to have. But Fox will have the best of the best.”

On making fights with rival networks and promoters

Another topic was boxing’s fragmented business. Mannix suggested the possibility of more cross-promotional events, in which fighters would appear  on rival networks. Wanger doesn’t see that as a priority for the network, citing PBC’s vast roster as a sign of its “self-sufficiency.”

“The PBC and Fox have 99 percent of the top fighters,” Wanger said. “Yes, there are a few on the other platforms, but we’re totally self-sufficient. Those guys are actually having difficulty making the fights they need for their fighters, whether its Terence Crawford or Canelo (Alvarez) and so on and so forth.”

Wanger would not confirm or deny a reported joint pay-per-view deal between Fox and ESPN to showcase the projected rematch of Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury in 2020, but he made it clear that each network has their own corporate agenda to adhere to. 

“I think that in this new dynamic, this new world of DAZN in the business and ESPN in the business and PBC in the business with Fox and Showtime, yeah there is rooting interest (for certain fighters and fights), quite selfishly,” he said.

On the likelihood of an Errol Spence-Terence Crawford showdown

Wanger poured cold water over a potential Errol Spence-Terence Crawford welterweight title-unification fight. He made it clear that Spence has no reason to rush into a fight with Crawford, not when he has other options at his disposal within the PBC roster, including Danny Garcia, Keith Thurman, and Manny Pacquiao.

“With regards to Errol, the PBC has a stacked welterweight division and there are plenty of fights that Errol can have well before he needs to fight Terence Crawford,” Wanger said. “And again if Errol and his team have a desire to fight Terence Crawford, a deal can be made.

“Errol’s gotta take care of business inside the PBC family, and … once he does that (and) the time is right and he wants to fight Terence Crawford, they’ll make the fight.”

On PBC creating their own title belts

Mannix took Wanger to task for Fox’s refusal to recognize WBO welterweight titleholder Crawford on graphics depicting the top titleholders in the division. Wanger offered a somewhat circular rationale, stating that they feel the WBA, WBC, and IBF belts are “the most important belts” because they’re “the ones that have traditionally been around the longest (and) are the ones we will recognize.” Mannix mentioned the fact that Fox leaves out the WBO but recognizes a secondary title from the WBA, at which point Wanger dropped this nugget:

“You know what we’re going to do with the PBC, and we’re on our way to do this … as things fall in the place. We are going to have a PBC belt and a PBC champion, lets say of the heavyweight division. So play this out, Andy Ruiz (a PBC fighter) beats Anthony Joshua again and eventually you have Andy Ruiz and Deontay Wilder fighting for the PBC heavyweight title. You could do that potentially with the welterweights, you could do that at 154 pounds, you could do that at 168 pounds.”

Wanger did not clarify whether this meant that the PBC would no longer collaborate with the three other sanctioning bodies. In any case, it’s clear that Wanger believes that insofar as the heavyweight (on the condition that Ruiz beats Joshua), welterweight, junior middleweight and supper middleweight divisions are concerned, there is no reason for the PBC to branch out to make fights.

On Jermall Charlo fighting potentially on a different platform.

The PBC doesn’t have depth in the middleweight division. When Mannix pointed out that most of the top 160-pound fighters are on DAZN, which has left WBC titleholder Jermall Charlo out of the mix, Wanger hinted that you may see Charlo hopping over to another network for the time being.

“Yeah, Al’s taking care of Jermall and putting him on a path where he might not be on our platforms for the next few fights, but he’ll come back,” he said.

Manny Pacquiao could be back in the ring ‘in March, April’: report

Manny Pacquiao said he could fight again this Spring, with many possible opponents.

Manny Pacquiao hopes to return to the ring early next year during a break from his duties as a Filipino senator.

Pacquiao told the Manila Bulletin Sunday that “he can fight in March, April.’’

Pacquiao’s hopes for a spring bout re-ignited speculation about his opponent. In a political season, the senator, who will be 41 on December 17, has more aspiring opponents than he might have running mates or rival candidates in his oft-rumored plans for a run at the Filipino presidency.

The list appears to be led by Danny Garcia and Mikey Garcia. Danny Garcia had been in line to fight Errol Spence Jr. after Spence’s decision over Shawn Porter on September 28 in Los Angeles. But it’s not clear what’s next for Spence after he was thrown from his Ferrari in a scary crash in Dallas on Oct. 10.

Meanwhile, Mikey Garcia has not fought since jumping up in weight and losing a one-sided decision to Spence in Dallas on March 16.

Not on the list – not yet, anyway – is Keith Thurman, who lost a split decision to Pacquiao for a welterweight belt on July 20 in Las Vegas.

Thurman disclosed in mid-September that he underwent surgery on his left hand after the bout. Pain in the hand bothered him throughout the fight, he said. The surgery was a bone fusion. He said he would not be able to fight until next year.

Thurman, who battled back from a first-round knockdown, turned the next 11 rounds into a back-and-forth battle that ended with Pacquiao winning 115-113, 115-113 and 113-114. It was a heck of a fight.

“I would love the rematch,’’ Thurman said then.

If the hand heals in time for March or April, Thurman figures to say much the same thing as speculation mounts about who’s next for Pacquiao.

Also, not on the list is Terence Crawford, perhaps the best welterweight on the planet. But that’s not exactly a surprise. Crawford is a Top Rank fighter, Pacquaio is a Premier Boxing Champions fighter and – blah, blah, blah – never the twain shall meet.