Isaac Dogboe defeats Joet Gonzalez by split decision in spirited battle

Isaac Dogboe defeated Joet Gonzalez by a split decision in spirited battle Saturday in Hinckley, Minnesota.

Isaac Dogboe took his biggest step yet toward a title shot at a 126-pound title Saturday.

The former 122-pound beltholder from Ghana got off to a quick start and then withstood a rally from Joet Gonzalez to win a split decision in a 10-round bout Saturday night at Grand Casino Hinckley in Hinckley, Minnesota.

The fight was billed as a WBC title eliminator even though Dogboe and Gonzalez were ranked Nos. 5 and 6, respectively.

Dogboe (24-2, 15 KOs), the shorter fighter, controlled the first few rounds by darting in, unloaded combinations and darting out while Gonzalez threw relatively few punches.

However, by Round 4, during which Gonzalez stung Dogboe with a right hand, the Los Angeles fighter picked up his work rate and walked down his opponent much of the rest of the fight.

That produced some back-and-forth rounds that were difficult to score, although Gonzalez clearly did his best work in the second half of the fight.

The fight seemed to be in doubt as the bell rang to start the final round, in which the combatants stood toe to toe and emptied their respective gas tanks.

All three judges turned in scores of 96-94, two for Dogoe and one for Gonzalez. Dogboe won the 10th round on all three cards, which gave him the victory.

Dogboe has now won four consecutive fights since he lost back-to-back fights to Emanuel Navarrete in 2018 and 2019, the second time by a knockout.

However, his last three fights have all been close, majority decisions over Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz, and now the split decision over Gonzalez.

Meanwhile, Gonzalez (25-3, 15 KOs) was hoping to get a third opportunity to fight for a featherweight title after two disappointments. However, he has now lost three of his past five fights. He’ll have to rebuild.

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: Stakes are high for both fighters

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: Stakes are high for both fighters on Saturday.

Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe both will have something to prove on Saturday.

The featherweight contenders have looked terrific at times, ordinary on other occasions. They’ll need to be at their best when the face each other in a scheduled 10-round bout Saturday in Hinckley, Minnesota, a fight that could lead to a title shot.

“There’s a little more pressure because the opportunity is there for a third world title shot,” Gonzalez said. “But I got to get the job done. I’ve got to get past Isaac Dogboe first and then go from there.”

Gonzalez (25-2, 15 KOs) is only 2-2 in his last four fights, unanimous-decision losses coming in title fights against pound-for-pounder Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete last October.

Stevenson, a superb boxer, outclassed an always-game, but overmatched Gonzalez. However, giving a gritty performance in an entertaining fight, he pushed the physically imposing Navarrete harder than many expected him to.

The Los Angeles fighter rebounded from that setback by stopping Jeo Santisima in nine rounds in March.

Gonzalez said the setback against Navarrete made him a better fighter.

“I took a lot from the Navarrete fight,” he said. “You live and learn each and every day. From that fight, I think I showed most of the people what I’m about and what I’m willing to do to get my hand raised. Unfortunately, I didn’t get my hand raised, but I was in that fight for all 12 rounds.

“If I was hurt, I wouldn’t have fought the way I fought. For the most part, I made that fight exciting. But it is what it is, and now I can’t wait to face Isaac Dogboe.”

Dogboe (23-2, 15 KOs) seemed to be a rising star because of his impressive run to a 122-pound championship in 2018. And then he ran into a brick wall familiar to Gonzalez, Navarrete.

The Mexican fairly easily outpointed his much shorter opponent in December 2018 to take the Ghanaian’s belt and then stopped him in the 12th and final round in the rematch five months later, which severely damaged Dogboe’s image as an elite talent.

Dogboe didn’t give up, however, He returned as a 126-pounder 14 months later and is 3-0 at his new weight, although he eked past Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz in his last two fights.

He’s aware of the challenge he will face on Saturday.

“One thing I believe is that without risk there is no reward,” he said. “I love the challenge. I’m always willing to go in there with whoever is in front of me. I’m really looking forward to this fight. I know that Joet is going to bring it.”

You can bet both fighters will bring it.

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Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: Stakes are high for both fighters

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: Stakes are high for both fighters on Saturday.

Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe both will have something to prove on Saturday.

The featherweight contenders have looked terrific at times, ordinary on other occasions. They’ll need to be at their best when the face each other in a scheduled 10-round bout Saturday in Hinckley, Minnesota, a fight that could lead to a title shot.

“There’s a little more pressure because the opportunity is there for a third world title shot,” Gonzalez said. “But I got to get the job done. I’ve got to get past Isaac Dogboe first and then go from there.”

Gonzalez (25-2, 15 KOs) is only 2-2 in his last four fights, unanimous-decision losses coming in title fights against pound-for-pounder Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete last October.

Stevenson, a superb boxer, outclassed an always-game, but overmatched Gonzalez. However, giving a gritty performance in an entertaining fight, he pushed the physically imposing Navarrete harder than many expected him to.

The Los Angeles fighter rebounded from that setback by stopping Jeo Santisima in nine rounds in March.

Gonzalez said the setback against Navarrete made him a better fighter.

“I took a lot from the Navarrete fight,” he said. “You live and learn each and every day. From that fight, I think I showed most of the people what I’m about and what I’m willing to do to get my hand raised. Unfortunately, I didn’t get my hand raised, but I was in that fight for all 12 rounds.

“If I was hurt, I wouldn’t have fought the way I fought. For the most part, I made that fight exciting. But it is what it is, and now I can’t wait to face Isaac Dogboe.”

Dogboe (23-2, 15 KOs) seemed to be a rising star because of his impressive run to a 122-pound championship in 2018. And then he ran into a brick wall familiar to Gonzalez, Navarrete.

The Mexican fairly easily outpointed his much shorter opponent in December 2018 to take the Ghanaian’s belt and then stopped him in the 12th and final round in the rematch five months later, which severely damaged Dogboe’s image as an elite talent.

Dogboe didn’t give up, however, He returned as a 126-pounder 14 months later and is 3-0 at his new weight, although he eked past Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz in his last two fights.

He’s aware of the challenge he will face on Saturday.

“One thing I believe is that without risk there is no reward,” he said. “I love the challenge. I’m always willing to go in there with whoever is in front of me. I’m really looking forward to this fight. I know that Joet is going to bring it.”

You can bet both fighters will bring it.

[lawrence-related id=31643,24782,11984]

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: date, time, how to watch, background

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: date, time, how to watch, background.

Featherweight contenders Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe will face off in a title eliminator in Hinckley, Minnesota.

JOET GONZALEZ (25-2, 15 KOS) VS. ISAAC DOGBOE (23-2, 15 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, July 23
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Grand Casino Hinckley, Hinckley, Minnesota
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Cost: $6.99 per month or $69.99 annually (increasing to $9.99 and $99.99 on Aug. 23)
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • Rounds: 10
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Giovanni Cabrera, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez UD
  • Background: The main event is being billed as a WBC title eliminator. Gonzalez, ranked No. 4 by the sanctioning body, is a two-time WBO featherweight title challenger. He lost wide unanimous decisions to then-beltholders Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete last October. The 28-year-old from Los Angeles rebounded from the Navarrete setback by stopping Jeo Santisima in nine rounds in March. He was once a top amateur. Dogboe, ranked No. 5 by the WBC, is a former junior featherweight titleholder and apparently a rising star. However, back-to-back losses to Navarrete (UD and TKO 12) cost him his belt and his momentum. He has won his three fights since the second loss to Navarrete, an eight-round KO of Chris Avalos and majority decisions over Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz. The Diaz fight took place in November. Dogboe fought for his native Ghana in the 2012 Olympics.

[lawrence-related id=24782,11984]

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: date, time, how to watch, background

Joet Gonzalez vs. Isaac Dogboe: date, time, how to watch, background.

Featherweight contenders Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe will face off in a title eliminator in Hinckley, Minnesota.

JOET GONZALEZ (25-2, 15 KOS) VS. ISAAC DOGBOE (23-2, 15 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, July 23
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Grand Casino Hinckley, Hinckley, Minnesota
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Cost: $6.99 per month or $69.99 annually (increasing to $9.99 and $99.99 on Aug. 23)
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • Rounds: 10
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Giovanni Cabrera, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez UD
  • Background: The main event is being billed as a WBC title eliminator. Gonzalez, ranked No. 4 by the sanctioning body, is a two-time WBO featherweight title challenger. He lost wide unanimous decisions to then-beltholders Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete last October. The 28-year-old from Los Angeles rebounded from the Navarrete setback by stopping Jeo Santisima in nine rounds in March. He was once a top amateur. Dogboe, ranked No. 5 by the WBC, is a former junior featherweight titleholder and apparently a rising star. However, back-to-back losses to Navarrete (UD and TKO 12) cost him his belt and his momentum. He has won his three fights since the second loss to Navarrete, an eight-round KO of Chris Avalos and majority decisions over Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz. The Diaz fight took place in November. Dogboe fought for his native Ghana in the 2012 Olympics.

[lawrence-related id=24782,11984]

Fight Week: Joet Gonzalez, Isaac Dogboe will face off in 126-pound title eliminator

Fight Week: Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe will face off in a126-pound title eliminator Saturday in Hinckley, Minnesota.

FIGHT WEEK

Featherweight contenders Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe will face off in a title eliminator in Hinckley, Minnesota.

JOET GONZALEZ (25-2, 15 KOS) VS. ISAAC DOGBOE (23-2, 15 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, July 23
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Grand Casino Hinckley, Hinckley, Minnesota
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • Rounds: 10
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Giovanni Cabrera, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez UD
  • Background: The main event is being billed as a WBC title eliminator. Gonzalez, ranked No. 4 by the sanctioning body, is a two-time WBO featherweight title challenger. He lost wide unanimous decisions to then-beltholders Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete last October. The 28-year-old from Los Angeles rebounded from the Navarrete setback by stopping Jeo Santisima in nine rounds in March. He was once a top amateur. Dogboe, ranked No. 5 by the WBC, is a former junior featherweight titleholder and apparently a rising star. However, back-to-back losses to Navarrete (UD and TKO 12) cost him his belt and his momentum. He has won his three fights since the second loss to Navarrete, an eight-round KO of Chris Avalos and majority decisions over Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz. The Diaz fight took place in November. Dogboe fought for his native Ghana in the 2012 Olympics.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

WEDNESDAY

  • Knockout CP Freshmart vs. Wanheng Menayothin, strawweights (for CP Freshmart’s WBA title), Chonburi, Thailand (no TV in U.S.).

FRIDAY

  • George Acosta vs. Isaac Avelar, junior lightweights, Ontario, California (Thompson Boxing YouTube and Facebook).
  • Sergio Mendoza vs. Francisco Gomez, flyweights, Hermosillo, Mexico (Canela TV).

[lawrence-related id=24782,11984]

Fight Week: Joet Gonzalez, Isaac Dogboe will face off in 126-pound title eliminator

Fight Week: Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe will face off in a126-pound title eliminator Saturday in Hinckley, Minnesota.

FIGHT WEEK

Featherweight contenders Joet Gonzalez and Isaac Dogboe will face off in a title eliminator in Hinckley, Minnesota.

JOET GONZALEZ (25-2, 15 KOS) VS. ISAAC DOGBOE (23-2, 15 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, July 23
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Grand Casino Hinckley, Hinckley, Minnesota
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • Rounds: 10
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Giovanni Cabrera, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez UD
  • Background: The main event is being billed as a WBC title eliminator. Gonzalez, ranked No. 4 by the sanctioning body, is a two-time WBO featherweight title challenger. He lost wide unanimous decisions to then-beltholders Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete last October. The 28-year-old from Los Angeles rebounded from the Navarrete setback by stopping Jeo Santisima in nine rounds in March. He was once a top amateur. Dogboe, ranked No. 5 by the WBC, is a former junior featherweight titleholder and apparently a rising star. However, back-to-back losses to Navarrete (UD and TKO 12) cost him his belt and his momentum. He has won his three fights since the second loss to Navarrete, an eight-round KO of Chris Avalos and majority decisions over Adam Lopez and Christopher Diaz. The Diaz fight took place in November. Dogboe fought for his native Ghana in the 2012 Olympics.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

WEDNESDAY

  • Knockout CP Freshmart vs. Wanheng Menayothin, strawweights (for CP Freshmart’s WBA title), Chonburi, Thailand (no TV in U.S.).

FRIDAY

  • George Acosta vs. Isaac Avelar, junior lightweights, Ontario, California (Thompson Boxing YouTube and Facebook).
  • Sergio Mendoza vs. Francisco Gomez, flyweights, Hermosillo, Mexico (Canela TV).

[lawrence-related id=24782,11984]

Isaac Dogboe stops Chris Avalos in eighth round

Isaac Dogboe stopped Chris Avalos in the eighth round on the Oscar Valdez-Jayson Velez card Tuesday in Las Vegas.

Isaac Dogboe took a step forward on the Oscar Valdez-Jayson Velez card Tuesday.

The Ghanaian fighter, coming off back-to-back losses to Emanuel Navarrete, stopped Chris Avalos with 35 seconds remaining in an eight-round featherweight bout inside the bubble at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

It was Dogboe’s first victory since he stopped Hidenori Otake in August 2018.

“We’re still warming up. I felt great in there today,” Dogboe said.

Dogboe (21-2, 15 KOs) lost his 122-pound title to Navarrete by a unanimous decision in December 2018. In the rematch, five months later, the Mexican stopped him in the 12th round.

That led to a big change. He hired Barry Hunter to supplant his father as his trainer and got to work rebuilding his career.

Avalos (27-8, 20 KOs) wasn’t the stiffest test — the former title challenger was 2-5 in his previous seven fights — but he remains a decent, game fighter.  And Dogboe handled him easily.

The first few rounds were competitive but, by Round 3, brutal power shots — particularly those to the body — began to take a toll on Avalos, who took considerable punishment in the later rounds.

As the final round was winding down, Dogboe, obviously trying to score a knockout, landed a big left hand. That was followed moments later by a damaging right, which prompted referee Russel Mora to stop the fight.

Dogboe landed three times as many punches as Avalos, according to CompuBox.