Frank Sanchez outboxes, easily outpoints Efe Ajagba

Frank Sanchez outboxed Efe Ajagba to win a unanimous decision on the Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder card Saturday in Las Vegas.

Frank Sanchez took a significant step forward on the Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder card Saturday.

The well-schooled Cuban heavyweight outboxed fellow prospect Efe Ajagba to win a one-sided unanimous decision at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, a victory that should move him up the rankings.

Sanchez (19-0, 13) and Ajagba (15-1, 12 KOs) have a similar number of pro fights but the former had a vast amateur background in his native country, which made him an excellent boxer.

Sanchez didn’t land a tremendous number of punches but landed more and cleaner shots — many of them counters — and was an elusive target.

Ajagba will probably regret not throwing more punches in the fight. However, that might’ve been the result of Sanchez’s tactics. He just never gave Ajagba a good target.

Sanchez seemed to catch a break in Round 6, when he fell to a knee after taking a jab from Ajagba. It was ruled a slip.

And then, in Round 8, the winner had both his biggest and most bizarre moment. A hard right forced Ajagba to take a knee, at which time Sanchez landed a left hook.

Of course, it’s illegal to hit a man when he’s down. However, referee Mike Ortega took no action.

In the end, no one was surprised by the scoring. Sanchez won 98-91, 98-91 and 97-92. Boxing Junkie scored it 98-91 for Sanchez.

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Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez gets the job done once again

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez got the job done once again against Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsvPp0RahHA

We can be critical of Canelo Alvarez’s performance against Billy Joe Saunders before 73,126 Saturday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The Mexican star had his hand raised, as almost everyone expected, but Saunders’ pre-fight bravado wasn’t all talk. There was some substance to it. He trailed on the cards – 78-74, 78-74 and 77-75 – at the time the fight was stopped but he was competitive, which was surprising to many.

Alvarez actually seemed frustrated as late as the seventh round, when the British southpaw was at his most effective. The result was still up in the air at that point.

This was the great Canelo Alvarez? Struggling with a fighter who is capable but can’t punch with much authority?

I believe it’s legitimate to point out all of the above. This must be said too, though: Alvarez broke Saunders’ face with a single punch – a right uppercut to the right eye — and stopped him after eight rounds, the latter of which he predicted.

Alvarez said multiple times beforehand that he would have problems against Saunders in the early rounds but by the middle of the fight he would begin to take control.

That what’s he did. He brutally knocked out an experienced, world-class opponent to unify three of the four major super middleweight titles, which should lead to a showdown with Caleb Plant for the fourth belt around Mexican Independence Day in September.

“I said the fight was going to develop in the seventh, eighth round and that’s what happened,” Alvarez said through a translator. “It wasn’t as difficult as I expected. That’s because my preparation was good. And I improve every day.

“… I started getting adjusted real quick. I knew this was going to be the final outcome.”

All in all, he had a good night.

[lawrence-related id=20163,20159,20110]

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAFGSP1mvFw

You have to feel for Saunders.

The British champion gave Alvarez a tougher fight than almost anyone expected only to have his dream dashed as a result of an unfortunate eye-socket injury, which made it next-to-impossible to continue.

The judges had Alvarez ahead on the scorecards at the time of the stoppage but Saunders was in the fight and seemed to be building momentum before the injury. He had a chance to win. Then it was over. He couldn’t continue fighting, he suffered the first loss of his career and his 168-pound title was gone.

It’s no wonder he looked devasted after the fight.

Saunders has reason to be proud, though. He was competitive against the fighter many believe is No. 1 pound-for-pound in the world, which few others have been able to do.

Floyd Mayweather is the only one to have beaten Alvarez while Gennadiy Golovkin (SD draw and MD), Erislandy Lara (SD), Daniel Jacobs (UD) and even Sergey Kovalev (KO 11) fought him on roughly even terms before coming up short in the end.

Saunders arguably joins that latter group. At the very least, he was far more competitive than the previous six British fighters who faced Alvarez. All of them were blown out in one way or another.

And, at 31, Saunders is still young. He might never again have the opportunity to face a pound-for-pounder in front of 70,000-plus screaming fans, as he did on Saturday, but he’s far from finished. He’ll be in more big fights in the near future, assuming that’s what he wants.

Saunders obviously is in pain right now, both physically and emotionally. The wounds will heal, though. And he’ll be a more-respected fighter as a result of his performance on Saturday night.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bWRuu3UNZ0

Katsunari Takayama gave an inspirational performance on the Alvarez-Saunders card. Veteran referee Laurence Cole, who worked Takayama’s fight against 108-pound titleholder Elwin Soto, was not at his best.

Takayama (32-9, 12 KOs) was a great story coming into the fight. The 37-year-old former three-time strawweight champ from Japan was fighting for the second time after a four-year hiatus from the sport and took the fight on short notice, which would’ve made a title-winning victory remarkable.

And he gave himself a chance to pull it off, fighting with unusual energy and spirit against a much stronger opponent. Soto (19-1, 13 KOs) landed many clean, hard punches but Takayama took them and was the much busier of the two. He clearly was in the fight until the moment it was stopped.

In the ninth and final round, with Soto winning on the cards, the champion continued to land damaging blows but Takayama continued to fight back. Still, out of nowhere, Cole jumped in and stopped the fight at 2:44 of the round, raising the ire of many in the process.

I don’t want to be overly critical of a referee who was looking out for the best interest of a fighter but, frankly, Cole blew it. Takayama hadn’t been down and was firing back at Soto when Cole stepped in.

Plus, Takayama was a proud former champion in possibly his final title fight. He deserved more of a chance than Cole gave him to work his way out of trouble, if that’s what that was.

Immediately after the fight was stopped, Takayama, who accepted his fate graciously, shadow boxed in the ring with great vitality as if to demonstrate that he had plenty left in the tank. I wondered whether Cole, who watched Takayama, was thinking at that moment: “Man, he’s making me look bad right now.”

Indeed, he was. Cole should’ve allowed the fight to continue.

[lawrence-related id=20099]

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Saunders could’ve continued fighting. Countless others have fought through significant injuries, including those to the eye area. But we should use common sense here. Mark Tibbs, Saunders’ trainer, said his fighter’s face was “caved in” and that he couldn’t see. Would it really have been wise to continue exchanging punches with a beast like Alvarez? Saunders’ courage would’ve been applauded but he would’ve risked long term damage or possibly even his life – as Alvarez said – had he come out for the ninth round. That would be asking to much. … I had Alvarez leading Saunders 78-74 – six rounds to two – at the time of the stoppage. Some experts I respect had Saunders ahead, which has me scratching my head. Saunders was busier than Alvarez but half the punches he landed were jabs and his power punches had little effect, although he did better in that regard in the last few rounds. Alvarez obviously landed the cleaner, harder shots. I thought Alvarez clearly won Rounds 2, 3 and 8, which means Saunders would have to had to win the remaining rounds to lead on the cards. That doesn’t add up to me. … Alvarez was unusually animated when middleweight champion Demetrius Andrade showed up at the post-fight news conference to call him out, telling Andrade in English more than once to “get the f— out of here.” I appreciated Alvarez passion but I was disappointed at his repeated use of expletives. I thought he was classier than that.

I’m completely baffled by the scoring of the Souleymane CissokhoKieron Conway fight on the Alvarez-Saunders card. I thought the Cissokho (13-0, 8 KOs) thoroughly outboxed Conway (16-2-1, 3 KOs), with a ninth-round knockdown his only significant slip-up. Conway was the aggressor but he landed few punches. That’s why I scored it 98-91 (nine rounds to one) for the Frenchman. The judges? They gave Cissokho a split-decision victory, 96-93, 95-94 and 92-97. I guess Conway could’ve been given one or two more rounds because he pushed the action but 97-92? Judge Don Griffin’s score was outrageous. … Speaking of outrageous, Nagy Aguilera’s actions in his fight against heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez (18-0, 13 KOs) on the Alvarez-Saunders card were suspect. Sanchez, who was in control of the fight, threw a right hand that slid off of Aguilera’s left shoulder and grazed his head. After a few moments he suddenly grabbed his head, fell to the canvas, got up, fell again and then got to his feet once more in a circus-like series of events. He began to complain that the former Cuban amateur star had been punching him behind the head throughout the fight. It seemed to me that Aguilera (21-11, 14 KOs) was looking for a way out of the fight and found it. Sanchez won a shutout technical decision.

[lawrence-related id=20099,20102,20096]

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez gets the job done once again

Good, bad, worse: Canelo Alvarez got the job done once again against Billy Joe Saunders on Saturday.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsvPp0RahHA

We can be critical of Canelo Alvarez’s performance against Billy Joe Saunders before 73,126 Saturday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The Mexican star had his hand raised, as almost everyone expected, but Saunders’ pre-fight bravado wasn’t all talk. There was some substance to it. He trailed on the cards – 78-74, 78-74 and 77-75 – at the time the fight was stopped but he was competitive, which was surprising to many.

Alvarez actually seemed frustrated as late as the seventh round, when the British southpaw was at his most effective. The result was still up in the air at that point.

This was the great Canelo Alvarez? Struggling with a fighter who is capable but can’t punch with much authority?

I believe it’s legitimate to point out all of the above. This must be said too, though: Alvarez broke Saunders’ face with a single punch – a right uppercut to the right eye — and stopped him after eight rounds, the latter of which he predicted.

Alvarez said multiple times beforehand that he would have problems against Saunders in the early rounds but by the middle of the fight he would begin to take control.

That what’s he did. He brutally knocked out an experienced, world-class opponent to unify three of the four major super middleweight titles, which should lead to a showdown with Caleb Plant for the fourth belt around Mexican Independence Day in September.

“I said the fight was going to develop in the seventh, eighth round and that’s what happened,” Alvarez said through a translator. “It wasn’t as difficult as I expected. That’s because my preparation was good. And I improve every day.

“… I started getting adjusted real quick. I knew this was going to be the final outcome.”

All in all, he had a good night.

[lawrence-related id=20163,20159,20110]

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAFGSP1mvFw

You have to feel for Saunders.

The British champion gave Alvarez a tougher fight than almost anyone expected only to have his dream dashed as a result of an unfortunate eye-socket injury, which made it next-to-impossible to continue.

The judges had Alvarez ahead on the scorecards at the time of the stoppage but Saunders was in the fight and seemed to be building momentum before the injury. He had a chance to win. Then it was over. He couldn’t continue fighting, he suffered the first loss of his career and his 168-pound title was gone.

It’s no wonder he looked devasted after the fight.

Saunders has reason to be proud, though. He was competitive against the fighter many believe is No. 1 pound-for-pound in the world, which few others have been able to do.

Floyd Mayweather is the only one to have beaten Alvarez while Gennadiy Golovkin (SD draw and MD), Erislandy Lara (SD), Daniel Jacobs (UD) and even Sergey Kovalev (KO 11) fought him on roughly even terms before coming up short in the end.

Saunders arguably joins that latter group. At the very least, he was far more competitive than the previous six British fighters who faced Alvarez. All of them were blown out in one way or another.

And, at 31, Saunders is still young. He might never again have the opportunity to face a pound-for-pounder in front of 70,000-plus screaming fans, as he did on Saturday, but he’s far from finished. He’ll be in more big fights in the near future, assuming that’s what he wants.

Saunders obviously is in pain right now, both physically and emotionally. The wounds will heal, though. And he’ll be a more-respected fighter as a result of his performance on Saturday night.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bWRuu3UNZ0

Katsunari Takayama gave an inspirational performance on the Alvarez-Saunders card. Veteran referee Laurence Cole, who worked Takayama’s fight against 108-pound titleholder Elwin Soto, was not at his best.

Takayama (32-9, 12 KOs) was a great story coming into the fight. The 37-year-old former three-time strawweight champ from Japan was fighting for the second time after a four-year hiatus from the sport and took the fight on short notice, which would’ve made a title-winning victory remarkable.

And he gave himself a chance to pull it off, fighting with unusual energy and spirit against a much stronger opponent. Soto (19-1, 13 KOs) landed many clean, hard punches but Takayama took them and was the much busier of the two. He clearly was in the fight until the moment it was stopped.

In the ninth and final round, with Soto winning on the cards, the champion continued to land damaging blows but Takayama continued to fight back. Still, out of nowhere, Cole jumped in and stopped the fight at 2:44 of the round, raising the ire of many in the process.

I don’t want to be overly critical of a referee who was looking out for the best interest of a fighter but, frankly, Cole blew it. Takayama hadn’t been down and was firing back at Soto when Cole stepped in.

Plus, Takayama was a proud former champion in possibly his final title fight. He deserved more of a chance than Cole gave him to work his way out of trouble, if that’s what that was.

Immediately after the fight was stopped, Takayama, who accepted his fate graciously, shadow boxed in the ring with great vitality as if to demonstrate that he had plenty left in the tank. I wondered whether Cole, who watched Takayama, was thinking at that moment: “Man, he’s making me look bad right now.”

Indeed, he was. Cole should’ve allowed the fight to continue.

[lawrence-related id=20099]

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Saunders could’ve continued fighting. Countless others have fought through significant injuries, including those to the eye area. But we should use common sense here. Mark Tibbs, Saunders’ trainer, said his fighter’s face was “caved in” and that he couldn’t see. Would it really have been wise to continue exchanging punches with a beast like Alvarez? Saunders’ courage would’ve been applauded but he would’ve risked long term damage or possibly even his life – as Alvarez said – had he come out for the ninth round. That would be asking to much. … I had Alvarez leading Saunders 78-74 – six rounds to two – at the time of the stoppage. Some experts I respect had Saunders ahead, which has me scratching my head. Saunders was busier than Alvarez but half the punches he landed were jabs and his power punches had little effect, although he did better in that regard in the last few rounds. Alvarez obviously landed the cleaner, harder shots. I thought Alvarez clearly won Rounds 2, 3 and 8, which means Saunders would have to had to win the remaining rounds to lead on the cards. That doesn’t add up to me. … Alvarez was unusually animated when middleweight champion Demetrius Andrade showed up at the post-fight news conference to call him out, telling Andrade in English more than once to “get the f— out of here.” I appreciated Alvarez passion but I was disappointed at his repeated use of expletives. I thought he was classier than that.

I’m completely baffled by the scoring of the Souleymane CissokhoKieron Conway fight on the Alvarez-Saunders card. I thought the Cissokho (13-0, 8 KOs) thoroughly outboxed Conway (16-2-1, 3 KOs), with a ninth-round knockdown his only significant slip-up. Conway was the aggressor but he landed few punches. That’s why I scored it 98-91 (nine rounds to one) for the Frenchman. The judges? They gave Cissokho a split-decision victory, 96-93, 95-94 and 92-97. I guess Conway could’ve been given one or two more rounds because he pushed the action but 97-92? Judge Don Griffin’s score was outrageous. … Speaking of outrageous, Nagy Aguilera’s actions in his fight against heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez (18-0, 13 KOs) on the Alvarez-Saunders card were suspect. Sanchez, who was in control of the fight, threw a right hand that slid off of Aguilera’s left shoulder and grazed his head. After a few moments he suddenly grabbed his head, fell to the canvas, got up, fell again and then got to his feet once more in a circus-like series of events. He began to complain that the former Cuban amateur star had been punching him behind the head throughout the fight. It seemed to me that Aguilera (21-11, 14 KOs) was looking for a way out of the fight and found it. Sanchez won a shutout technical decision.

[lawrence-related id=20099,20102,20096]

Frank Sanchez outpoints Nagy Aguilera in truncated bout

Frank Sanchez outpointed Nagy Aguilera in truncated bout on the Canelo Alvarez-Billy Joe Saunders card Saturday.

Frank Sanchez remained unbeaten in an unconventional way on the Canelo Alvarez-Billy Joe Saunders card Saturday.

The heavyweight contender from Cuba was in control of his bout against journeyman Nagy Aguilera when the latter went down in Round 6 from what he said was a punch behind his head and couldn’t continue, which sent the fight to the judges.

Sanchez won every round on all three cards, which reflected his dominating performance. Boxing Junkie also had it 60-54.

The official time of the stoppage was 1:42 of Round 6.

Sanchez (18-0, 14 KOs) controlled the fight from the beginning, although he didn’t throw a high volume of punches.

He hurt Aguilera (21-11, 14 KOs) with a straight right about 30 seconds into the fight and relied almost completely on that punch to win rounds. He landed it many more times but never hurt Aguilera badly enough to set up a stoppage.

That is until the final punch. Sanchez threw a wide right that skipped off Aguilera’s left shoulder and seemed to graze his head. Still, the Dominican native grabbed his head and fell to the canvas. He then got up and fell again.

Aguilera got to his feet once more, after which he began to complain that Sanchez hit him behind the head throughout the fight. Sanchez landed a right when Aguilera lost focus and made that complaint in Round 3.

Was Aguilera looking for a way out of the fight? That will be debated this evening and in the coming days. What’s not up for debate is that Sanchez dominated a fight against an overmatched opponent.

Frank Sanchez outpoints Nagy Aguilera in truncated bout

Frank Sanchez outpointed Nagy Aguilera in truncated bout on the Canelo Alvarez-Billy Joe Saunders card Saturday.

Frank Sanchez remained unbeaten in an unconventional way on the Canelo Alvarez-Billy Joe Saunders card Saturday.

The heavyweight contender from Cuba was in control of his bout against journeyman Nagy Aguilera when the latter went down in Round 6 from what he said was a punch behind his head and couldn’t continue, which sent the fight to the judges.

Sanchez won every round on all three cards, which reflected his dominating performance. Boxing Junkie also had it 60-54.

The official time of the stoppage was 1:42 of Round 6.

Sanchez (18-0, 14 KOs) controlled the fight from the beginning, although he didn’t throw a high volume of punches.

He hurt Aguilera (21-11, 14 KOs) with a straight right about 30 seconds into the fight and relied almost completely on that punch to win rounds. He landed it many more times but never hurt Aguilera badly enough to set up a stoppage.

That is until the final punch. Sanchez threw a wide right that skipped off Aguilera’s left shoulder and seemed to graze his head. Still, the Dominican native grabbed his head and fell to the canvas. He then got up and fell again.

Aguilera got to his feet once more, after which he began to complain that Sanchez hit him behind the head throughout the fight. Sanchez landed a right when Aguilera lost focus and made that complaint in Round 3.

Was Aguilera looking for a way out of the fight? That will be debated this evening and in the coming days. What’s not up for debate is that Sanchez dominated a fight against an overmatched opponent.

A boxer taunted his opponent, and promptly got knocked out through the ropes

Oops.

Boxer Julian Fernandez was absolutely amped for his fight against undefeated boxer Frank Sanchez at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. Fernandez was strutting around the ring and, literally, asking Sanchez to punch him in the face.

Now, I’m no boxing expert, but allowing free face shots does not seem like a good way to win a match. And so, unsurprisingly, Fernandez’s taunting came before a powerful knockout from Sanchez. Fernandez fell into and, eventually, through the ropes and out of the ring, which ended the fight during the undercard for Canelo Alvarez vs. Callum Smith.

Hindsight is 20/20 and it’s usually unfair to say an athlete should’ve seen this coming. But… Fernandez (13-3) should’ve seen this coming. Sanchez (17-0) has won 13 of his 17 fights through knockout.

Fernandez’s tactics were inadvisable.

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Watch Frank Sanchez knock Julian Fernandez out of the ring

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez stopped Julian Fernandez in the seventh round on Saturday in San Antonio.

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez ended a harder-than-expected fight in dramatic fashion on the Canelo Alvarez-Callum Smith card Saturday in San Antonio.

Julian Fernandez, a journeyman from Mexico, was able to survive for six-plus rounds with guile and some athleticism. However, midway through Round 7, Sanchez (17-0, 13 KOs) hurt Fernandez (14-3, 11 KOs) with a straight right and put him through the ropes with a follow-up punch.

Referee Jon Schorle waved off the fight with Fernandez, his nose bloodied, lying on the apron. The official time was 1:35 of the seventh round.

Sanchez, a former Cuban amateur who is ranked by three of the four major sanctioning bodies, could face a contender for the first time next year.

Watch Frank Sanchez knock Julian Fernandez out of the ring

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez stopped Julian Fernandez in the seventh round on Saturday in San Antonio.

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez ended a harder-than-expected fight in dramatic fashion on the Canelo Alvarez-Callum Smith card Saturday in San Antonio.

Julian Fernandez, a journeyman from Mexico, was able to survive for six-plus rounds with guile and some athleticism. However, midway through Round 7, Sanchez (17-0, 13 KOs) hurt Fernandez (14-3, 11 KOs) with a straight right and put him through the ropes with a follow-up punch.

Referee Jon Schorle waved off the fight with Fernandez, his nose bloodied, lying on the apron. The official time was 1:35 of the seventh round.

Sanchez, a former Cuban amateur who is ranked by three of the four major sanctioning bodies, could face a contender for the first time next year.

Frank Sanchez dominates, stops Brian Howard in four rounds

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez stopped Brian Howard at 2:07 of Round 4 in a scheduled 10-round fight Saturday in Los Angeles.

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez stopped Brian Howard at 2:07 of Round 4 in a scheduled 10-round fight on the Luis Ortiz-Alexander Flores card Saturday in Los Angeles.

Sanchez, the former Cuban amateur, put his overmatched opponent down once in Round 3 and thrice more in Round 4.

Sanchez (16-0, 12 KOs) fought with more aggression than he had in previous fights and it paid off. He pushed the action and outworked Howard (15-4, 12 KOs) for two-plus rounds.

Then came the pain. A right uppercut followed by a left-right-left combination put Howard down in the final seconds of Round 3.

Sanchez put Howard down for the second time with a left hook early in Round 4, sent him to the canvas again with the same punch and then sent him reeling into the ropes with a flurry of punches, which prompted the ref to stop the fight.

The winner outlanded the loser 66-11 overall and 49-4 in power shots, according to CompuBox. That’s how one-sided the fight was.

 

Frank Sanchez dominates, stops Brian Howard in four rounds

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez stopped Brian Howard at 2:07 of Round 4 in a scheduled 10-round fight Saturday in Los Angeles.

Heavyweight contender Frank Sanchez stopped Brian Howard at 2:07 of Round 4 in a scheduled 10-round fight on the Luis Ortiz-Alexander Flores card Saturday in Los Angeles.

Sanchez, the former Cuban amateur, put his overmatched opponent down once in Round 3 and thrice more in Round 4.

Sanchez (16-0, 12 KOs) fought with more aggression than he had in previous fights and it paid off. He pushed the action and outworked Howard (15-4, 12 KOs) for two-plus rounds.

Then came the pain. A right uppercut followed by a left-right-left combination put Howard down in the final seconds of Round 3.

Sanchez put Howard down for the second time with a left hook early in Round 4, sent him to the canvas again with the same punch and then sent him reeling into the ropes with a flurry of punches, which prompted the ref to stop the fight.

The winner outlanded the loser 66-11 overall and 49-4 in power shots, according to CompuBox. That’s how one-sided the fight was.