Badou Jack dominates, stops Ilunga Makabu in 12th round to win 200-pound title

Badou Jack dominated and then stopped Ilunga Makabu in the 12th round to take Makabu’s 200-pound title Sunday in Saudi Arabia.

Badou Jack is a world champion again at 39 years old.

The former 168-pound titleholder and 175-pound contender knocked out an overmatched Ilunga Makabu in the 12th and final round to take Makabu’s WBC 200-pound belt on the Jake Paul-Tommy Fury card Sunday in Saudi Arabia.

Jack (28-3-3, 17 KOs) dominated Makabu (29-3, 25 KOs) from the outset, outboxing him, breaking him down, putting him down twice (in Rounds 4 and 11) and ultimately stopping him.

The end came when Jack hurt a fading Makabu with a right hand and then followed with a flurry of shots that prompted the referee to stop the fight 54 seconds into the last round.

Makabu fought aggressively and threw his share of punches. However, the quicker, more polished Jack clearly landed the cleaner shots and was almost always a step ahead of his 35-year-old opponent.

Jack held a 168-pound title in the mid-2010s. He also held the WBA’s “regular” 175-pound title, which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize.

Badou Jack dominates, stops Ilunga Makabu in 12th round to win 200-pound title

Badou Jack dominated and then stopped Ilunga Makabu in the 12th round to take Makabu’s 200-pound title Sunday in Saudi Arabia.

Badou Jack is a world champion again at 39 years old.

The former 168-pound titleholder and 175-pound contender knocked out an overmatched Ilunga Makabu in the 12th and final round to take Makabu’s WBC 200-pound belt on the Jake Paul-Tommy Fury card Sunday in Saudi Arabia.

Jack (28-3-3, 17 KOs) dominated Makabu (29-3, 25 KOs) from the outset, outboxing him, breaking him down, putting him down twice (in Rounds 4 and 11) and ultimately stopping him.

The end came when Jack hurt a fading Makabu with a right hand and then followed with a flurry of shots that prompted the referee to stop the fight 54 seconds into the last round.

Makabu fought aggressively and threw his share of punches. However, the quicker, more polished Jack clearly landed the cleaner shots and was almost always a step ahead of his 35-year-old opponent.

Jack held a 168-pound title in the mid-2010s. He also held the WBA’s “regular” 175-pound title, which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize.

Ilunga Makabu vs. Badou Jack odds, picks and predictions

Breaking down Sunday’s Ilunga Makabu vs. Badou Jack cruiserweight fight, with boxing odds, picks and predictions.

In a 12-round WBC cruiserweight championship fight, Ilunga Makabu faces Badou Jack Sunday at Diriyah Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The fight card is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. ET (ESPN+). Let’s analyze Tipico Sportsbook’s lines around the Makabu vs. Jack odds, and make our expert boxing picks and predictions.

The southpaw Makabu, the current holder of the WBC cruiserweight belt, hails from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He picked up a split-decision win against Thabiso Mchunu in late January of 2022. That followed up a knockout of Olanrewaju Durodola in his native DR Congo at Studio Mama Angebi in Kinshasha.

Makabu’s last loss came via TKO at Goodison Park in Liverpool against Tony Bellow way back in May 2016. He has managed to go the distance in 3 of the past 4 fights, as the competition has picked up recently.

Jack, a.k.a. “The Ripper”, posted a split-decision win in his most recent fight, too. He snuck by Richard Rivera at the Jeddah Superdome in August 2022, so this will be his 2nd consecutive fight in the KSA. Prior to the win over Rivera, Jack had 3 straight KO/TKO wins, and he has 5 straight wins since his last setback against Jean Pascal in Atlanta in December 2019.

Ilunga Makabu vs. Badou Jack odds

Provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated at 12:01 a.m. ET.

  • Fight result (2-way line): Makabu -210 (bet $210 to win $100) | Jack +150 (bet $100 to win $150)
  • Over/Under: 10.5 rounds (Over -205 | Under +145)
  • Will the fight go the distance? (Yes -180 | No +120)

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Makabu vs. Jack picks and predictions

Records: Makabu (29-2-0) | Jack (27-3-3)

Fight result (2-way line or moneyline)

I like the powerful puncher Makabu (-210) to outlast Jack (+150) in this fight, but laying more than 2 times your potential return is just too risky, especially in a bout which I expect will come down to the discretion of the judges.

Instead, look to MAKABU BY POINTS (+150) in the method of victory section. He has ended up going the distance in 3 of his past 4 wins.

Over/Under (O/U)

Playing YES (-180): FIGHT TO GO THE DISTANCE is right at my personal limit for a standalone play. Tossed into a multi-fight(er) parlay, it makes the price a little more palatable.

Over 2.5 Rounds (-205) is a little too expensive for my liking, although I do see this one needing the help of the judges to determine a winner, despite the fact Makabu has 24 KO/TKO wins out of 29 total victories.

Watch this card with ESPN+ by signing up here.

Visit Boxing Junkie for more fight news and analysis.

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[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=2676]

Ilunga Makabu vs. Thabiso Mchunu: date, time, how to watch, background

Ilunga Makabu vs. Thabiso Mchunu: date, time, how to watch, background.

Ilunga Makabu, a candidate to face Canelo Alvarez, will defend his cruiserweight title against Thabiso Mchunu on pay-per-view.

Ilunga Makabu (28-2, 25 KOs) vs. Thabiso Mchunu (23-5, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Jan. 29
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Packard Music Hall, Warren, Ohio
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view (FITETV.com, DonKing.com, DKPBoxing.com, ITube247.com)
  • Cost: $49.99
  • Division: Cruiserweight
  • Weights: Makabu 197, Mchunu 198½
  • At stake: Makabu’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Trevor Bryan vs. Jonathan Guidry, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Makabu KO 8
  • Background: The main reason this rematch is significant is that super middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez has indicated he might want to move up to 200 pounds and challenge for Makabu’s title. The Congolese southpaw won his belt by outpointing Michal Cieslak in January 2020. He successfully defended by stopping Olanrewaju Durodola the following December and hasn’t fought since, meaning he will have been out of the ring for 13 months. Makabu fought Mchunu the first time in 2015 in South Africa, where he won what had been a close fight by an 11th-round knockout. He was stopped by then-WBC beltholder Tony Bellew in his next fight. He hasn’t lost since then, a span of nine fights. Mchunu, a South African, has ability. He has won his last four fights, including decisions over Thomas Oosthuizen (avenging an earlier loss) and Denis Lebedev. He was stopped by then-titleholder Oleksandr Usyk in nine rounds in 2016. The 33-year-old last fought in March of last year, when he easily outpointed Evgeny Tishchenko.

Ilunga Makabu vs. Thabiso Mchunu: date, time, how to watch, background

Ilunga Makabu vs. Thabiso Mchunu: date, time, how to watch, background.

Ilunga Makabu, a candidate to face Canelo Alvarez, will defend his cruiserweight title against Thabiso Mchunu on pay-per-view.

Ilunga Makabu (28-2, 25 KOs) vs. Thabiso Mchunu (23-5, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Jan. 29
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Packard Music Hall, Warren, Ohio
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view (FITETV.com, DonKing.com, DKPBoxing.com, ITube247.com)
  • Cost: $49.99
  • Division: Cruiserweight
  • Weights: Makabu 197, Mchunu 198½
  • At stake: Makabu’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Trevor Bryan vs. Jonathan Guidry, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Makabu KO 8
  • Background: The main reason this rematch is significant is that super middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez has indicated he might want to move up to 200 pounds and challenge for Makabu’s title. The Congolese southpaw won his belt by outpointing Michal Cieslak in January 2020. He successfully defended by stopping Olanrewaju Durodola the following December and hasn’t fought since, meaning he will have been out of the ring for 13 months. Makabu fought Mchunu the first time in 2015 in South Africa, where he won what had been a close fight by an 11th-round knockout. He was stopped by then-WBC beltholder Tony Bellew in his next fight. He hasn’t lost since then, a span of nine fights. Mchunu, a South African, has ability. He has won his last four fights, including decisions over Thomas Oosthuizen (avenging an earlier loss) and Denis Lebedev. He was stopped by then-titleholder Oleksandr Usyk in nine rounds in 2016. The 33-year-old last fought in March of last year, when he easily outpointed Evgeny Tishchenko.

Fight Week: Robson Conceicao returns; Ilunga Makabu, possible Canelo foe, in action

Fight Week: Robson Conceicao returns; Ilunga Makabu, possible Canelo foe, in action

FIGHT WEEK

2016 Olympic champion Robson Conceicao will face Xavier Martinez in his first fight since losing a decision to 130-pound titleholder Oscar Valdez.

Robson Conceicao (16-1, 8 KOs) vs. Xavier Martinez (17-0, 11 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 29
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweight
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Rene Tellez vs. Luis Melendez, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Conceicao UD
  • Background: Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, is in rebuilding mode. The slick 33-year-old fell short in his bid to take the WBC title from Oscar Valdez in September, starting strongly but fading in the second half of the fight to lose a unanimous decision. That was Conceicao’s first shot at a major belt. He didn’t select a pushover in his comeback fight. Martinez, a 24-year-old boxer-puncher from Sacramento, California, is on a nice run of victories over quality opponents. That includes a one-sided decision over rugged veteran Juan Carlos Burgos in a wild, toe-to-toe brawl in May of last year, which is his most-recent outing. He got up from two knockdowns to outpoint Claudio Marrero in his previous fight. A victory in what is being billed as a title eliminator would be a big step for the winner. Conceicao and Martinez are ranked Nos. 3 and 14 by the WBC, respectively. Nico Ali Walsh, Muhammad Ali’s grandson, is fighting on the card.

 

Ilunga Makabu (28-2, 25 KOs) vs. Thabiso Mchunu (23-5, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 29
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Packard Music Hall, Warren, Ohio
  • TV/Stream: FITE
  • Division: Cruiserweight
  • At stake: Makabu’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Trevor Bryan vs. Jonathan Guidry, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Makabu KO 8
  • Background: The main reason this rematch is significant is that super middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez has indicated he might want to move up to 200 pounds and challenge for Makabu’s title. The Congolese southpaw won his belt by outpointing Michal Cieslak in January 2020. He successfully defended by stopping Olanrewaju Durodola the following December and hasn’t fought since, meaning he will have been out of the ring for 13 months. Makabu fought Mchunu the first time in 2015 in South Africa, where he won what had been a close fight by an 11th-round knockout. He was stopped by then-WBC beltholder Tony Bellew in his next fight. He hasn’t lost since then, a span of nine fights. Mchunu, a South African, has ability. He has won his last four fights, including decisions over Thomas Oosthuizen (avenging an earlier loss) and Denis Lebedev. He was stopped by then-titleholder Oleksandr Usyk in nine rounds in 2016. The 33-year-old last fought in March of last year, when he easily outpointed Evgeny Tishchenko.

Also fighting this week:

  • Panya Pradabsri (37-1, 23 KOs) will defend his WBC strawweight title against Wanheng Menayothin (55-1, 19 KOs) on Tuesday, Jan. 25 in Bangkok, Thailand (no TV in U.S.).
  • Jerson Aguilar Hernandez (16-5, 3 KOs) will take on Marcos Rodriguez (10-4, 8 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout Friday, Jan. 28 in Mexico City (EstrellaTV).
  • Joahnys Argilagos (8-0, 4 KOs) is scheduled to face Michell Banquez (19-1, 13 KOs) in a 10-round junior featherweight bout Friday, Jan. 28 in Hialeah, Florida (FITE).

[lawrence-related id=25914,5747]

Fight Week: Robson Conceicao returns; Ilunga Makabu, possible Canelo foe, in action

Fight Week: Robson Conceicao returns; Ilunga Makabu, possible Canelo foe, in action

FIGHT WEEK

2016 Olympic champion Robson Conceicao will face Xavier Martinez in his first fight since losing a decision to 130-pound titleholder Oscar Valdez.

Robson Conceicao (16-1, 8 KOs) vs. Xavier Martinez (17-0, 11 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 29
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweight
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Rene Tellez vs. Luis Melendez, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Conceicao UD
  • Background: Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medalist from Brazil, is in rebuilding mode. The slick 33-year-old fell short in his bid to take the WBC title from Oscar Valdez in September, starting strongly but fading in the second half of the fight to lose a unanimous decision. That was Conceicao’s first shot at a major belt. He didn’t select a pushover in his comeback fight. Martinez, a 24-year-old boxer-puncher from Sacramento, California, is on a nice run of victories over quality opponents. That includes a one-sided decision over rugged veteran Juan Carlos Burgos in a wild, toe-to-toe brawl in May of last year, which is his most-recent outing. He got up from two knockdowns to outpoint Claudio Marrero in his previous fight. A victory in what is being billed as a title eliminator would be a big step for the winner. Conceicao and Martinez are ranked Nos. 3 and 14 by the WBC, respectively. Nico Ali Walsh, Muhammad Ali’s grandson, is fighting on the card.

 

Ilunga Makabu (28-2, 25 KOs) vs. Thabiso Mchunu (23-5, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 29
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Packard Music Hall, Warren, Ohio
  • TV/Stream: FITE
  • Division: Cruiserweight
  • At stake: Makabu’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Trevor Bryan vs. Jonathan Guidry, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Makabu KO 8
  • Background: The main reason this rematch is significant is that super middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez has indicated he might want to move up to 200 pounds and challenge for Makabu’s title. The Congolese southpaw won his belt by outpointing Michal Cieslak in January 2020. He successfully defended by stopping Olanrewaju Durodola the following December and hasn’t fought since, meaning he will have been out of the ring for 13 months. Makabu fought Mchunu the first time in 2015 in South Africa, where he won what had been a close fight by an 11th-round knockout. He was stopped by then-WBC beltholder Tony Bellew in his next fight. He hasn’t lost since then, a span of nine fights. Mchunu, a South African, has ability. He has won his last four fights, including decisions over Thomas Oosthuizen (avenging an earlier loss) and Denis Lebedev. He was stopped by then-titleholder Oleksandr Usyk in nine rounds in 2016. The 33-year-old last fought in March of last year, when he easily outpointed Evgeny Tishchenko.

Also fighting this week:

  • Panya Pradabsri (37-1, 23 KOs) will defend his WBC strawweight title against Wanheng Menayothin (55-1, 19 KOs) on Tuesday, Jan. 25 in Bangkok, Thailand (no TV in U.S.).
  • Jerson Aguilar Hernandez (16-5, 3 KOs) will take on Marcos Rodriguez (10-4, 8 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout Friday, Jan. 28 in Mexico City (EstrellaTV).
  • Joahnys Argilagos (8-0, 4 KOs) is scheduled to face Michell Banquez (19-1, 13 KOs) in a 10-round junior featherweight bout Friday, Jan. 28 in Hialeah, Florida (FITE).

[lawrence-related id=25914,5747]

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Joe Smith Jr. isn’t destined for the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

The strapping light heavyweight titleholder isn’t a polished boxer, although he seems to have improved. He isn’t particularly quick or athletic. In other words, the union worker is exactly what he has been called, “a blue-collar fighter.”

And that has both worked for him in the ring and endeared him to fans, many of whom can relate to him.

Smith’s performance against late replacement Steve Geffrard on Saturday wasn’t special but it was good enough, which is all that matters. He used his not-so-secret weapons of fitness, punching power and persistence to wear down and finally stop Geffrard (18-3, 12 KOs) in the ninth round.

Just a typical work shift for Smith, who was making the first defense of his WBO 175-pound belt.

Next up for him? He’s thinking big. He wants to take on imposing fellow titleholder Artur Beterbiev or, if Canelo Alvarez decides to fight a 175-pound opponent instead one at 200 or 168, he’d jump at that opportunity for obvious reasons.

Would Smith (28-3, 22 KOs) win those fights? Probably not, although he’d have a puncher’s chance against anyone. Sullivan Barrera (2017) and beltholder Dmitry Bivol (2019) easily outpointed him. It’s difficult to imagine him doing much better against Beterbiev of Alvarez.

We know what Smith would bring to those fights, though. He’d enter the ring in fantastic shape and he’d fight his heart out, which is all we can expect of any boxer.

 

BAD

I’m an optimistic person.

I hold out hope that Canelo Alvarez will fight one of the five potential opponents I suggested in a previous column, David Benavidez, Gennadiy Golovkin, Jermall Charlo, Dmitry Bivol or Artur Beterbiev.

However, also as I’ve written, the Mexican star has been driven more by collecting titles than the person across the ring from him. That allowed him to become undisputed 168-pound champ by a winning series of lackluster matchups.

Eddy Reynoso, Alvarez’s trainer and manager, has expressed interest in fighting cruiserweight beltholder Ilunga Makabu to add a belt in another division. Other than that, he’s been quiet about his intentions.

He said recently that he hasn’t even been in serious talks with anyone, although that’s hard to believe because the targeted fight date of May 7 is fast approaching.

I fear that Alvarez and Reynoso will choose the bigger, but limited Makabu, assuming the Congolese fighter defeats Thabiso Mchunu on Jan. 29. At the same time, There has been chatter that Charlo, a 160-pound champ, might be in the mix.

One British outlet had an interesting – and frightening – take on rumors that boxing purists might be disappointed with Alvarez’s next opponent. The outlet floated the idea that he might be targeting YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, which would generate a fortune but have no resemblance to a competitive fight. Let’s hope that Alvarez has enough respect for the sport to pass on that silly notion.

Reynoso said we could get word on his protégé’s next opponent soon. Fingers crossed.

 

WORSE

Tyson Fury fights are good for boxing because of the energy he delivers before, during and after his bouts. And I have to think that he wants to get his 6-foot-9 body into the ring more often than he has.

The problem is that it’s easier said than done. The WBC beltholder has fought only twice in the past 2½ years, his knockout victories over Deontay Wilder in their second and third fights.

The last fight with Wilder occurred this past October, only four months ago. That followed Oleksandr Usyk’s upset over Anthony Joshua to win three of the four major heavyweight titles. Fans hope that the winner of their rematch will face Fury for the undisputed championship.

In the meantime, Fury needed an opponent. And it appeared that mandatory challenger Dillian Whyte would finally get a crack at his countryman.

Alas, that fight is stuck in the muck because Whyte has refused to accept the 80-20 purse split ordered by the WBC if the principals can’t reach an agreement and it goes to a purse bid, which Whyte has officially appealed. He reportedly wants something close to a 55-45 split.

The purse bid was pushed back to this coming Friday, meaning the parties have only a few more days to come to terms before the event becomes open to other promoters.

And if Fury and Whyte are unable to reach an agreement? Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter said his fighter will face someone else in late March. Arum threw out the names of Robert Helenius and Manuel Charr but he will have many good options.

Let’s hope things sort themselves out so we can see Fury fight in a few months.

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Joe Smith Jr. isn’t destined for the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

The strapping light heavyweight titleholder isn’t a polished boxer, although he seems to have improved. He isn’t particularly quick or athletic. In other words, the union worker is exactly what he has been called, “a blue-collar fighter.”

And that has both worked for him in the ring and endeared him to fans, many of whom can relate to him.

Smith’s performance against late replacement Steve Geffrard on Saturday wasn’t special but it was good enough, which is all that matters. He used his not-so-secret weapons of fitness, punching power and persistence to wear down and finally stop Geffrard (18-3, 12 KOs) in the ninth round.

Just a typical work shift for Smith, who was making the first defense of his WBO 175-pound belt.

Next up for him? He’s thinking big. He wants to take on imposing fellow titleholder Artur Beterbiev or, if Canelo Alvarez decides to fight a 175-pound opponent instead one at 200 or 168, he’d jump at that opportunity for obvious reasons.

Would Smith (28-3, 22 KOs) win those fights? Probably not, although he’d have a puncher’s chance against anyone. Sullivan Barrera (2017) and beltholder Dmitry Bivol (2019) easily outpointed him. It’s difficult to imagine him doing much better against Beterbiev of Alvarez.

We know what Smith would bring to those fights, though. He’d enter the ring in fantastic shape and he’d fight his heart out, which is all we can expect of any boxer.

 

BAD

I’m an optimistic person.

I hold out hope that Canelo Alvarez will fight one of the five potential opponents I suggested in a previous column, David Benavidez, Gennadiy Golovkin, Jermall Charlo, Dmitry Bivol or Artur Beterbiev.

However, also as I’ve written, the Mexican star has been driven more by collecting titles than the person across the ring from him. That allowed him to become undisputed 168-pound champ by a winning series of lackluster matchups.

Eddy Reynoso, Alvarez’s trainer and manager, has expressed interest in fighting cruiserweight beltholder Ilunga Makabu to add a belt in another division. Other than that, he’s been quiet about his intentions.

He said recently that he hasn’t even been in serious talks with anyone, although that’s hard to believe because the targeted fight date of May 7 is fast approaching.

I fear that Alvarez and Reynoso will choose the bigger, but limited Makabu, assuming the Congolese fighter defeats Thabiso Mchunu on Jan. 29. At the same time, There has been chatter that Charlo, a 160-pound champ, might be in the mix.

One British outlet had an interesting – and frightening – take on rumors that boxing purists might be disappointed with Alvarez’s next opponent. The outlet floated the idea that he might be targeting YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, which would generate a fortune but have no resemblance to a competitive fight. Let’s hope that Alvarez has enough respect for the sport to pass on that silly notion.

Reynoso said we could get word on his protégé’s next opponent soon. Fingers crossed.

 

WORSE

Tyson Fury fights are good for boxing because of the energy he delivers before, during and after his bouts. And I have to think that he wants to get his 6-foot-9 body into the ring more often than he has.

The problem is that it’s easier said than done. The WBC beltholder has fought only twice in the past 2½ years, his knockout victories over Deontay Wilder in their second and third fights.

The last fight with Wilder occurred this past October, only four months ago. That followed Oleksandr Usyk’s upset over Anthony Joshua to win three of the four major heavyweight titles. Fans hope that the winner of their rematch will face Fury for the undisputed championship.

In the meantime, Fury needed an opponent. And it appeared that mandatory challenger Dillian Whyte would finally get a crack at his countryman.

Alas, that fight is stuck in the muck because Whyte has refused to accept the 80-20 purse split ordered by the WBC if the principals can’t reach an agreement and it goes to a purse bid, which Whyte has officially appealed. He reportedly wants something close to a 55-45 split.

The purse bid was pushed back to this coming Friday, meaning the parties have only a few more days to come to terms before the event becomes open to other promoters.

And if Fury and Whyte are unable to reach an agreement? Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter said his fighter will face someone else in late March. Arum threw out the names of Robert Helenius and Manuel Charr but he will have many good options.

Let’s hope things sort themselves out so we can see Fury fight in a few months.

Canelo Alvarez doesn’t need to fight cruiserweights to prove greatness

Opinion: Canelo Alvarez is continuing down the wrong path with his decision to fight cruiserweight Ilunga Makabu.

I hate what Canelo Alvarez is doing.

And I’m not talking only about his surprising decision to move up to the cruiserweight division to challenge obscure WBC titleholder Ilunga Makabu. For me, it started with his fight against Rockey Fielding in December 2018.

That’s when it became obvious to me that the Mexican star was more interested in collecting increasingly meaningless title belts than facing the best possible opponents in a misguided attempt to “make history,” as he puts it.

Alvarez was so determined to win a title in a third division that he arranged to move up from middleweight to fight Fielding, who held the WBA “regular” super middleweight title at the time. Of course, Alvarez won easily, stopping the Englishman in three rounds, and then basked in the glory of his great accomplishment.

In fact, he wasn’t fooling anyone. Fielding was a mediocre fighter who owned a belt that no one takes seriously. The actual WBA champion at the time was Callum Smith, who Alvarez would later defeat to become a legitimate 168-pound titleholder.

I remember thinking at the time of the Fielding fight, “This isn’t the warrior who sought out genuine challenges for so many years. This was someone taking advantage of flaws in a broken system.”

Alvarez went back down to middleweight and accepted one of those genuine challenges, a meeting with talented Daniel Jacobs in May 2019. He won a close decision in a competitive fight, restoring some of the faith I had in him.

Then came an interesting move: Again bent on adding a title in another division, he jumped from 160 pounds to 175 to face then-WBO titleholder Sergey Kovalev in November 2019. I respected that decision because I respected Kovalev, who was aging but still a competent fighter and naturally bigger than Alvarez.

The decision to fight Kovalev when he did was carefully calculated. Kovalev had battled Anthony Yarde in a taxing bout only nine weeks earlier, which arguably wasn’t enough time for a 36-year-old to recover. Indeed, Kovalev was the most vulnerable of the 175-pound champions.

However, he was a reasonable choice of opponents for Alvarez given the circumstances. Roy Jones Jr., a light heavyweight, chose to fight John Ruiz instead of Lennox Lewis for obvious reasons when he made the bold decision to challenge for a heavyweight championship in 2003. Made sense.

After that came Alvarez’s quest to become undisputed super middleweight champion, which also had at least some merit. In a time of fragmented titles, fighters who hold all four major belts provide some clarity as to whom is the best in a particular division. And, yes, one could argue that the accomplishment is historic.

Here’s the problem: Alvarez didn’t fight the best 168-pounders to reach his goal. He fought Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant because they held the titles. I believe the best potential opponents at 168 or below were David Benavidez, Jermall Charlo and Gennadiy Golovkin, all of whom would have made for more compelling – and, most likely, more competitive – fights than the titleholders did.

Alvarez can argue that he was working within the system to pursue his goals. Right. Again, the problem is that the system is flawed, as corrupt sanctioning bodies often provide title shots to fighters who aren’t necessarily worthy. That isn’t to denigrate Smith, Saunders and Plant as weak fighters; they aren’t. They’re just not as good as the other three.

Finally, we arrive at Alvarez’s decision to face cruiserweight titleholder Makabu. Once again, he is making what seems to be a bold move to make history. But how bold is it really?

On one hand, a 168-pounder is moving up two weight classes to face a major titleholder who weighed 197½ pounds for his most-recent fight and has 25 knockouts in 28 victories. On the other hand, Makabu has faced only one fighter you’ve heard of – Tony Bellew – and was stopped in three rounds.

And here’s the kicker: WBC officials announced when they created the bridgerweight division that they planned to lower the cruiserweight limit from 200 pounds to 190. I’m not clear on when they plan to do that but I’m guessing it will happen before the Alvarez-Makabu fight, which would make Makabu’s size advantage more manageable.

I have to acknowledge that the weight difference is still significant. At the same time, the move seems gimmicky, particularly when real, exciting challenges against fighters closer to his size are available.

Benavidez, Charlo, Golovkin (who deserves a third shot at Alvarez after two inconclusive bouts) and the top light heavyweights are more accomplished than Makabu and are genuine threats to Alvarez. I, as a fan, was dying to see Alvarez vs. Benavidez and I know I wasn’t alone.

Alvarez has the clout to do as he pleases, as he made clear at the WBC convention in Mexico City. He declared, “I do what I want.” That doesn’t mean that we have to buy into the decisions he makes as he pursues his version of “history”.

I applaud him on a remarkable career. I acknowledge that he has faced a long list of elite opponents over the past decade, more than any other active fighter. And I don’t believe his current method of choosing opponents indicates he’s dodging anyone. That’s not who he is.

The problem, in my opinion, is that he has decided that flimsy belts and titles in more and more divisions is his path to greatness. News flash: He’s already great. He should take a step back and ask himself, “Who are actually the best possible opponents and who do the fans want to see me fight?” And then he should act accordingly.

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