Video: Ak, Barak: Teofimo Lopez says, ‘I want Devin (Haney)’

Undisputed lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez is in talks to face mandatory challenger George Kambosos of Australia. That’s not the fight he wants, though. He wants to face fellow American Devin Haney, with whom he has exchanged words over the past …

Undisputed lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez is in talks to face mandatory challenger George Kambosos of Australia.

That’s not the fight he wants, though. He wants to face fellow American Devin Haney, with whom he has exchanged words over the past several weeks.

Lopez unified all four 135-pound titles when he outpointed Vasiliy Lomachenko in October. Haney is a secondary titleholder.

In this episode of the Ak & Barak Show, DAZN commentators Akin Reyes and Barak Bess interview Lopez about his immediate future and more.

Here’s the interview.

The Ak & Barak Show is available on DAZN and Sirius XM Fight Nation, Channel 156.

[jwplayer NZ9IzXZu]

IBF orders Teofimo Lopez-George Kambosos title fight

The IBF has ordered a title fight between champion Teofimo Lopez and George Kambosos.

Could George Kambosos Jr. be undisputed lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez’s next opponent?

The IBF has ordered a title fight between Lopez and his mandatory challenger, giving them 30 days to reach an agreement in order to avoid a purse bid.

Lopez, who won all four major titles in his victory over pound-for-pound king Vasiliy Lomachenko on Oct. 17, could lose the IBF belt if he opts to fight a higher-profile opponent rather than Kambosos next.

Devin Haney, a secondary beltholder, has called out the 23-year-old Honduran-American.

Kambosos (19-0, 10 KOs) is coming off a split-decision victory over Lee Selby on Oct. 31, which made him the No. 1 contender. Kambosos is from Sydney, Australia.

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IBF orders Teofimo Lopez-George Kambosos title fight

The IBF has ordered a title fight between champion Teofimo Lopez and George Kambosos.

Could George Kambosos Jr. be undisputed lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez’s next opponent?

The IBF has ordered a title fight between Lopez and his mandatory challenger, giving them 30 days to reach an agreement in order to avoid a purse bid.

Lopez, who won all four major titles in his victory over pound-for-pound king Vasiliy Lomachenko on Oct. 17, could lose the IBF belt if he opts to fight a higher-profile opponent rather than Kambosos next.

Devin Haney, a secondary beltholder, has called out the 23-year-old Honduran-American.

Kambosos (19-0, 10 KOs) is coming off a split-decision victory over Lee Selby on Oct. 31, which made him the No. 1 contender. Kambosos is from Sydney, Australia.

[lawrence-related id=17004,15173]

Teofimo Lopez Jr.’s manager: He’ll probably stay at 135, fight by March

Teofimo Lopez Jr.’s manager believes the new undisputed champ will stay at 135 pounds and fight again by March.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Teofimo Lopez Jr.’s victory over Vasiliy Lomachenko on Saturday was tipped by some to be his last before moving up in weight.

The 23-year-old had even been quoted as claiming as such himself, though on Monday his manager David McWater said that wasn’t definite just yet.

“Teofimo says a lot of stuff,” McWater told Bad Left Hook. “He was 134.4 the morning of the weigh-in and had three liters of water and three meals the day before.

“With Perfecting Athletes (a South Florida-based outfit specializing in helping fighters make weight safely) on our side, it’s a whole different game. We might move up, but my guess is the next fight is a defense.”

McWater does not expect that defense to be a rematch with the Ukrainian, who was favored to defeat his younger opponent but was ultimately beaten at his own game.

“I can’t imagine a rematch,” McWater told the website. “Older guy never wins a rematch. If they fight again, Teofimo would hurt him badly. …

“[And] I don’t think Loma brings enough viewers to the table to pay both guys.”

If Lopez sticks around to defend his collection of title belts and a Lomachenko rematch is unlikely, then who?

On Monday, it was confirmed that the winner of the Lee Selby vs. George Kambosos bout on Oct. 31 will being recognized as mandatory challenger by the IBF, and McWater admitted the conventional route is very appealing.

“Yeah, I could see us fighting Selby or Kambosos,” McWater said. “They both have big fan bases in their countries.

“I can tell you exactly what he would say: ‘I’m a fighter, I need to fight.’ He’s not going to take long layoffs if he can help it. March 2021 at the latest.”

One possible reason Lopez would wait to move up to 140 is that the championships will be tied up for the foreseeable future.

Jose Ramirez and Josh Taylor are poised for a unification showdown of their own next year, limiting Lopez’s options if he wants a big bout in his junior welterweight debut.

McWater agreed that timing is why a divisional switch probably isn’t the right move, at least not just yet.

“For me, I would want to move up if we got the winner of the Jose Ramirez-Josh Taylor fight,” he continued. “Other than that, I think more exciting fights are at 135.”

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Teofimo Lopez Jr.’s manager: He’ll probably stay at 135, fight by March

Teofimo Lopez Jr.’s manager believes the new undisputed champ will stay at 135 pounds and fight again by March.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Teofimo Lopez Jr.’s victory over Vasiliy Lomachenko on Saturday was tipped by some to be his last before moving up in weight.

The 23-year-old had even been quoted as claiming as such himself, though on Monday his manager David McWater said that wasn’t definite just yet.

“Teofimo says a lot of stuff,” McWater told Bad Left Hook. “He was 134.4 the morning of the weigh-in and had three liters of water and three meals the day before.

“With Perfecting Athletes (a South Florida-based outfit specializing in helping fighters make weight safely) on our side, it’s a whole different game. We might move up, but my guess is the next fight is a defense.”

McWater does not expect that defense to be a rematch with the Ukrainian, who was favored to defeat his younger opponent but was ultimately beaten at his own game.

“I can’t imagine a rematch,” McWater told the website. “Older guy never wins a rematch. If they fight again, Teofimo would hurt him badly. …

“[And] I don’t think Loma brings enough viewers to the table to pay both guys.”

If Lopez sticks around to defend his collection of title belts and a Lomachenko rematch is unlikely, then who?

On Monday, it was confirmed that the winner of the Lee Selby vs. George Kambosos bout on Oct. 31 will being recognized as mandatory challenger by the IBF, and McWater admitted the conventional route is very appealing.

“Yeah, I could see us fighting Selby or Kambosos,” McWater said. “They both have big fan bases in their countries.

“I can tell you exactly what he would say: ‘I’m a fighter, I need to fight.’ He’s not going to take long layoffs if he can help it. March 2021 at the latest.”

One possible reason Lopez would wait to move up to 140 is that the championships will be tied up for the foreseeable future.

Jose Ramirez and Josh Taylor are poised for a unification showdown of their own next year, limiting Lopez’s options if he wants a big bout in his junior welterweight debut.

McWater agreed that timing is why a divisional switch probably isn’t the right move, at least not just yet.

“For me, I would want to move up if we got the winner of the Jose Ramirez-Josh Taylor fight,” he continued. “Other than that, I think more exciting fights are at 135.”

[lawrence-related id=14860,14851,14842,14823,14821,14817,14814,14776]

 

Lee Selby hopes to become first Welshman to win titles in two divisions

Lee Selby hopes his fight against George Kambosos on May 9 will lead to a shot at winning a title in a second division.

Former featherweight champion Lee Selby is going home and back to the roots of his first title pursuit.

This time he’s two weight classes heavier and  six years older. He has more experience and a few more scars. But home and ambition haven’t changed a whole lot.

“It’s great to be boxing back at home in Cardiff after six years boxing all over the U.K. and U.S.,” the 33-year-old Selby (28-2, 9 KOs) said. “I’m one step away now from a shot at the IBF lightweight world title and my dream of becoming Wales’ first ever two-weight world champion.’’

The homecoming and renewed title pursuit are set for May 9 on DAZN against 26-year-old Australian George Kambosos at Motorpoint Arena in a lightweight eliminator announced this week by Matchroom Boxing.

The winner moves into position for a mandatory shot at the belt held by Teofimo Lopez, who this spring is expected to fight Vasiliy Lomachenko, No. 1 in Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound poll.

The bout, Selby’s first in Wales in six years, will be his third since he moved up the scale to 135 pounds after losing his featherweight title to Josh Warrington by a split decision in May 2018.

Kambosos (18-0, 10 KOs), Manny Pacquiao’s sparring partner a year ago, is coming off a notable victory, a split decision over former lightweight champion Mickey Bey on Dec. 14 at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

Said Kambosos: “I’m excited for a fight of this magnitude and look forward to retiring Lee Selby in his hometown with a dominating and punishing performance in addition to gaining all of the U.K. supporters that will get behind me toward winning my world title.”

Teofimo Lopez’s father: more prophet than fool, it turns out

Teofimo Lopez Sr. has long predicated that his son would quickly become one of the top boxers in the world.

This time last year Teofimo Lopez Sr. was the mad man in the attic. He was telling everyone within earshot that his son and trainee, Teofimo Lopez Jr., would blow out Vasiliy Lomachenko. No sweat. Lopez Jr. was then but a prospect coming off a vicious knockout of club-level Mason Menard. Lomachenko was a three-division titleholder with a sui generis skillset. Everyone scoffed, rolled their eyes, chalked it up to to Sr.’s usual tendency to gloat about his son.

It turns out he may not be so crazy.

On Saturday night at Madison Square Garden, Lopez did away with Richard Commey, a hard-punching Ghanian lightweight titleholder, inside two rounds. Prior to the fight, Lopez’s father predicted an early knockout. Mad man? More like prophet.

“I had said that it wouldn’t go past the fifth or sixth round,” Lopez Sr. told Boxing Junkie. “I said it could be another Mason Menard fight. I knew once (my son) hurt him, he had to finish him. Commey’s a big puncher. He was on a string of like four knockouts. We had to take him out right away.”

The belt Teofimo Lopez won on Saturday night might be the first of many. He’s only 22. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

The pivotal punch was a booming overhand right that instantly crippled Commey, who was loading up on one of his own.

“We talked about it (that punch) during training camp,” Lopez Sr. said. “It’s a punch that we throw when somebody leans in. Commey leans in a lot with the right hand. We knew we were going to catch him. We just had to be a little bit faster than he was. and we caught him right on the chin, caught him in a good spot.”

Now father and son can focus on the man the elder Lopez has been calling out for more than a year.

“I’ve been saying that for a long time,” Lopez Sr. said. “My son will take all the belts from Lomachenko in 2020.”

And as if his son needed an additional boost against the No. 1 fighter pound-for-pound, Lopez Sr. says the knockout of Commey will play with Lomachenko’s mind. Lomachenko witnessed the devastation from ringside.

“That’s why we did it (knockout Commey),” Lopez Sr. said. “We gonna show everybody we got the biggest punch in boxing right now at his weight division. 135. Nobody cracking like him.”

Terence Crawford batters, stops Egidijus Kavaliauskas in Round 9

Terence Crawford stops Egidijus Kavaliauskas in 9th round to successfully defend his welterweight title at Madison Square Garden.

NEW YORK CITY – For a moment or two, panic took root Saturday at Madison Square Garden.

It started in Round 3, when a mean overhand right sent the sweat flying from Terence Crawford’s brow, causing the welterweight titleholder to hold onto the man who threw the punch, the challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas. An unfamiliar sight. A slew of combinations from the Lithuanian led to Crawford touching the canvas in what should have been ruled a knockdown – but referee Ricky Gonzalez saw otherwise, calling it a slip.

And it continued in the next round, with Kavaliauskas landing flush right-hand counters. The message was clear enough: Kavaliauskas, the fighter whose name did not even merit spelling or pronouncing leading up to the fight, did not make the trek to New York City to simply lie down.

And Crawford? The Omaha native simply smiled, bit down on his mouth piece and trawled forward in the direction of the gunfire.

In what played out to be his most challenging fight at welterweight, Crawford still found a way to break down Kavaliauskas, dropping him three times and stopping him 44 seconds into Round 9.

Terence Crawford’s performance wasn’t always a thing of beauty but the result was familiar. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

“I thought I had to entertain ya’ll for a little bit,” said Crawford (36-0, 27 KOs). “He’s a strong fighter, durable, and I thought I’d give the crowd something to cheer for.”

After Kavaliauskas (21-1-1, 17 KOs) connected on his blistering right in Round 3, Crawford gave up on finesse and adopted a far more dogged approach: high guard, plodding footwork and a mindset geared toward hurting his man. “Take two to land one,” as the dictum goes.

“I wasn’t hurt at all,” Crawford said, regarding Round 3. “I got up and went straight to him. I wasn’t hurt by no means. I walked through everything he threw all night.”

Case in point was the pivotal Round 7. Crawford, who by this time had switched from a southpaw to an orthodox stance, absorbed two point-blank left and right punches from Kavaliauskas. Crawford’s response? He simply stood in the pocket and responded with his own fierce combinations, before eventually landing two straight rights that dropped the Lithuanian for the first time in the fight.

From then on, Kavaliauskas was a marked man. Crawford opened up his arsenal, landing an array of straight lefts, uppercuts and sweeping right hooks that had Kavaliauskas teetering from pillar to post. Chants of “Crawford” filled the arena from a reported 10,101 in attendance.

Crawford’s demeanor after the fight said, “That’s how I planned it.” Mikey Williams / Top Rank

“The round before that, my coaches kept telling me [to] stop loading up,” Crawford said. “I was loading up a lot because the first couple clean shots I landed, I knew I hurt him. I wanted to give the crowd a knockout. When I started letting my hands go, I started landing more fatal shots.”

Crawford delivered the finishing touches in Round 9, dropping Kavaliauskas with a left hand, right uppercut. Referee Ricky Gonzalez allowed the fight to go on, but after Crawford downed the challenger again with a right hook, Fields waved off the fight.

The promotion had been clouded by talk of Crawford’s inability to lure into the ring other top 147-pounders, who are aligned with Premier Boxing Champions. Crawford, who fights for Top Rank, addressed those concerns by shifting the burden of responsibility to the likes of Errol Spence, Shawn Porter, Danny Garcia, Manny Pacquiao, et al.

“I’ll fight anybody,” Crawford said. “I’ve been saying that for I don’t know how long. I’m not ducking anyone on the PBC side or Top Rank platform.

“I want to fight all the top guys.”

Teofimo Lopez Richard Commey

Crown him. In a rousing, statement-making performance, Teofimo Lopez drubbed Richard Commey inside two rounds to become the newest IBF lightweight titleholder on the Terence Crawford-Egidijus Kavaliauskas card Saturday at Madison Square Garden in …

Crown him.

In a rousing, statement-making performance, Teofimo Lopez drubbed Richard Commey inside two rounds to become the newest IBF lightweight titleholder on the Terence Crawford-Egidijus Kavaliauskas card Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

In the second and final round, the fighters traded vicious overhand rights but Lopez’s landed, causing Commey to take a knee and stumble over. He was able to get up but never regained his senses completely. Lopez proceeded to batter the Ghanian fighter on the ropes, prompting referee David Fields to stop the fight at 1:13.

“God, thank you,” Lopez (15-0, 12 knockouts) said afterward. “Thank you so much, man. I’m at a loss of words. But like the great ‘KG’ said, anything is possible. Anything is possible!”

In the toughest assignment of his career, Lopez displayed the fast-twitch reflexes, power, and poise that belies his 22 years. Lopez, to be sure, didn’t appear bothered by the familial issues that dogged him in his last bout against Masayoshi Nakatani earlier in the year.

Commey (29-3, 26 KOs), making the second defense of his title, acquitted himself well in the opening round, landing a hard right that got Lopez’s attention, as well as mixing in a few jabs. But that would be the extent of his success.

“That’s a bad guy (Commey), man,” Lopez said. “Any shot could have done the same thing. I think that’s why everybody was looking to the fight. It was going to be an explosive night.

“It’s a blessing, man. Dreams come true, man. You just gotta have faith in it.”

The win sets up a unification of three of the four lightweight belts for 2020. Ukrainian Vasiliy Lomachenko holds the other two belts. Lomachenko, who was sitting ringside, confirmed that he wanted a unification fight next.

Also, Josue Vargas outlasted Noel Murphy in a hard-fought 10-round junior welterweight bout.

All three judges awarded the Bronx-based Vargas a 98-92 scorecard.

After a few early close rounds, Vargas (16-1, 9 KOs) began to pull away by repeatedly landing hard right hooks and straight lefts. Murphy (14-2-1, 2 KOs) got on his bicycle, having occasional success countering Vargas as he barreled his way inside, but he had few answers otherwise for Vargas’ overall aggression.

“What a blessing to fight in front of my home fans and put on a show for them,” said Vargas, who picked up an interim title. “The belt means the world to me. I know this isn’t a world title, but I am on my way. To be 21 years old and fight at The Garden is truly special.”

Edgar Berlanga will need another occasion to go past the opening round for the first time in his career. The hard-hitting prospect knocked down Cesar Nunez (16-2-1, 8 KOs) thrice in the first round, before the referee waved off the bout at 2-45.

This was Berlanga’s 13th first-round knockout win in as many fights. According to the young fighter, he wanted to continue the streak in honor of his late cousin who was murdered during training camp.

“Next fight I want to go more rounds, but I wanted the first-round knockout for my cousin,” Berlanga (13-13, 13 KOs) said. “I want to be the one to carry the Puerto Rican flag and represent the island in New York.”

Julian Rodriguez is figuring out what happens when his opponents don’t keel over from one punch.

The hard-hitting Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey native went the distance against an unusually durable Manuel Mendez in an 8-round junior welterweight bout.

Two judges scored it 80-71 and one had it 79-72, all for the undefeated Rodriguez.

Rodriguez (19-0, 12 KOs) started off hot, dropping Mendez with a hard left hook early in Round 1. Rodriguez followed up with a fusillade of punches, including another whiplashing left hook.

But instead of wilting, Mendez (16-7-3, 11 KOs) put his head down and continued to come forward, absorbing shot after shot. By Round 3, Rodriguez appeared to be tiring, even though Mendez was landing nothing much of consequence. By the mid rounds, it was Mendez who was stalking Rodriguez. In the final round, Rodriguez was able to pull away, landing multiple combinations.

Undefeated Australian George Kambosos Jr. edged Cleveland’s Mickey Bey by split decision in a closely contested 10-round lightweight bout.

Two judges had it 97-92 and 96-93 in favor of the Aussie. One gave it to Bey, 97-94.

Kambosos (18-0, 10 KOs) was a tad quicker during the exchanges, which proved to be critical. After nine back-and-forth rounds, Kambosos turned it up in Round 10, knocking down Bey (23-3-1, 11 KOs) with a hard counter right uppercut. Kambosos followed up with a slew of punches, including a hard left as Bey survived on the ropes.