Mikaela Mayer dominated Jennifer Han en route to shutout decision Saturday in Costa Mesa, California.
Mikaela Mayer made another strong statement Saturday in Costa Mesa, California.
The junior lightweight titleholder outclassed Jennifer Han en route to a near-shutout decision to retain her IBF and WBO belts and set up possible unification bouts.
Two judges scored the 10-round bout 100-90, the third 99-91.
Mayer (17-0, 5 KOs) outboxed Han (18-5-1, 1 KO) from beginning to end.
“I feel like I did a lot of good things in there,” Mayer said after the fight, according to ESPN. “… She gets her spacing in a little bit, so I had to throw her off and stay behind the jab. Coach Al [Mitchell] reminded me to stay behind the jab, set the right hand up. She would duck sometimes and make me miss. I started to go to the body.
“All in all, she’s a tough, durable girl. That’s why we chose her for this fight. We knew she would push me, but I feel like I did well.”
Now Mayer plans to target one of the two other 130-pound titleholders, Hyun Mi Choi (WBA) and Alycia Baumgardner (WBC). She would also consider going up to 135.
“I’ve been pretty clear that I want to go undisputed at 130,” he said. “Baumgardner and Choi, I’ve been calling them out. I want that fight, but if they’re not going to give me that fight in a timely fashion, I’m down, I’m game to go up and challenge the winner of [Amanda] Serrano versus Katie Taylor.”
Mikaela Mayer dominated Jennifer Han en route to shutout decision Saturday in Costa Mesa, California.
Mikaela Mayer made another strong statement Saturday in Costa Mesa, California.
The junior lightweight titleholder outclassed Jennifer Han en route to a near-shutout decision to retain her IBF and WBO belts and set up possible unification bouts.
Two judges scored the 10-round bout 100-90, the third 99-91.
Mayer (17-0, 5 KOs) outboxed Han (18-5-1, 1 KO) from beginning to end.
“I feel like I did a lot of good things in there,” Mayer said after the fight, according to ESPN. “… She gets her spacing in a little bit, so I had to throw her off and stay behind the jab. Coach Al [Mitchell] reminded me to stay behind the jab, set the right hand up. She would duck sometimes and make me miss. I started to go to the body.
“All in all, she’s a tough, durable girl. That’s why we chose her for this fight. We knew she would push me, but I feel like I did well.”
Now Mayer plans to target one of the two other 130-pound titleholders, Hyun Mi Choi (WBA) and Alycia Baumgardner (WBC). She would also consider going up to 135.
“I’ve been pretty clear that I want to go undisputed at 130,” he said. “Baumgardner and Choi, I’ve been calling them out. I want that fight, but if they’re not going to give me that fight in a timely fashion, I’m down, I’m game to go up and challenge the winner of [Amanda] Serrano versus Katie Taylor.”
Mikaela Mayer is excited about her new multi-year contract and the challenge she faces in Jennifer Han on Saturday.
It was announced Thursday at a news conference to promote Mikaela Mayer’s title defense against Jennifer Han on Saturday that Mayer has signed a multi-year contract extension with her promoter, Top Rank.
That achievement rivals her success in the ring when one considers that the sport has long favored men.
“Ever since I walked into a gym 14 years ago, I’ve been fighting for a place for women in the sport and to prove that we are a powerful force in the sport of boxing. This contract solidifies that,” said Mayer, who faces Han in the 10-round main event in Costa Mesa, California (ESPN, ESPN+).
“I’ve completed that goal to an extent. Obviously, there is a long way to go with creating equality in the sport and closing that gap, but I couldn’t be happier with this contract. It’s a dream contract.”
Another goal is to continue winning big fights, as Mayer (16-0, 5 KOs) has done.
The 2016 U.S. Olympian from California easily outpointed Ewa Brodnicka to win the vacant WBO junior lightweight title in October 2020 and successfully defended against Erica Farias and Maiva Hamadouche, adding the IBF belt in the last victory. All three of those opponents are good fighters.
So is Han, a former featherweight titleholder from Texas. She’s coming off a shutout loss to lightweight champion Katie Taylor last September but had difficulty losing weight for the fight after giving birth to her second child.
The 38-year-old Han (18-4-1, 1 KO) wasn’t Mayer’s first choice. She had hoped for an opportunity to unify three titles against either Alycia Baumgardner (WBC) or Hyun Mi Choi (WBA) but neither wanted the fight.
“[Han] just went 10 rounds against the 135-pound undisputed champion, Katie Taylor, so I have tons of respect for her,” Mayer said. “I know she has experience and has trained hard, and we didn’t look past her at all in preparing for this fight.”
“It’s no secret that I wanted to continue to unify. I wanted Alycia Baumgardner. I wanted Hyun Mi Choi. That was my first choice. They’re not quite ready to step up to that, I guess, so we had to look at another direction.”
“We wanted to fight someone who is strong and proven. We don’t want any easy fights. We want to continue growing and getting better.”
The fight is a homecoming for Mayer, who spent much of her youth in the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles. She has fought only twice in the L.A. area as a professional, the last time in 2018
“I haven’t fought in L.A. in a long time,” she said. “It’s kind of come full circle. I started here 14 years ago when I was 17. And I left at 19 years old with a dream: to become an Olympian and become one of the best female fighters in the world.
“Fourteen years later, I’m here fighting in the main event on ESPN. I’ve come a long way.”
Mikaela Mayer is excited about her new multi-year contract and the challenge she faces in Jennifer Han on Saturday.
It was announced Thursday at a news conference to promote Mikaela Mayer’s title defense against Jennifer Han on Saturday that Mayer has signed a multi-year contract extension with her promoter, Top Rank.
That achievement rivals her success in the ring when one considers that the sport has long favored men.
“Ever since I walked into a gym 14 years ago, I’ve been fighting for a place for women in the sport and to prove that we are a powerful force in the sport of boxing. This contract solidifies that,” said Mayer, who faces Han in the 10-round main event in Costa Mesa, California (ESPN, ESPN+).
“I’ve completed that goal to an extent. Obviously, there is a long way to go with creating equality in the sport and closing that gap, but I couldn’t be happier with this contract. It’s a dream contract.”
Another goal is to continue winning big fights, as Mayer (16-0, 5 KOs) has done.
The 2016 U.S. Olympian from California easily outpointed Ewa Brodnicka to win the vacant WBO junior lightweight title in October 2020 and successfully defended against Erica Farias and Maiva Hamadouche, adding the IBF belt in the last victory. All three of those opponents are good fighters.
So is Han, a former featherweight titleholder from Texas. She’s coming off a shutout loss to lightweight champion Katie Taylor last September but had difficulty losing weight for the fight after giving birth to her second child.
The 38-year-old Han (18-4-1, 1 KO) wasn’t Mayer’s first choice. She had hoped for an opportunity to unify three titles against either Alycia Baumgardner (WBC) or Hyun Mi Choi (WBA) but neither wanted the fight.
“[Han] just went 10 rounds against the 135-pound undisputed champion, Katie Taylor, so I have tons of respect for her,” Mayer said. “I know she has experience and has trained hard, and we didn’t look past her at all in preparing for this fight.”
“It’s no secret that I wanted to continue to unify. I wanted Alycia Baumgardner. I wanted Hyun Mi Choi. That was my first choice. They’re not quite ready to step up to that, I guess, so we had to look at another direction.”
“We wanted to fight someone who is strong and proven. We don’t want any easy fights. We want to continue growing and getting better.”
The fight is a homecoming for Mayer, who spent much of her youth in the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles. She has fought only twice in the L.A. area as a professional, the last time in 2018
“I haven’t fought in L.A. in a long time,” she said. “It’s kind of come full circle. I started here 14 years ago when I was 17. And I left at 19 years old with a dream: to become an Olympian and become one of the best female fighters in the world.
“Fourteen years later, I’m here fighting in the main event on ESPN. I’ve come a long way.”
Katie Taylor defeated Jennifer Han by a shutout decision on the Josh Warrington-Maurico Lara card Saturday in Leeds, England.
Bring on Amanda Serrano?
Jennifer Han was no match in her fight against Katie Taylor on the Josh Warrington-Mauricio Lara card Saturday in Leeds, England, which Taylor won by a shutout decision.
Thus, Taylor once again retains her lightweight championship and looks ahead to bigger fights.
That could mean a showdown with fellow pound-for-pounder Serrano, a seven-division titleholder who currently holds a featherweight belt.
Han (18-4-1, 1 KO) is a former 126-pound champ who moved up to 135 in her previous fight. However, it was the ability and speed of Taylor (19-0, 6 KOs) that seemed to trouble Han more than any size disadvantage.
Taylor seemed to be a step ahead of Han the entire fight, beating her to the punch and landed many more eye-catching blows than the fighter from El Paso, Texas, who wasn’t active enough to win rounds.
Han was never hurt by her Irish opponent but she went down after a flurry of punches in Round 8.
Of course, that didn’t matter much on the cards. All three judges had the same score, 100-89 in Taylor’s favor. Boxing Junkie scored it 99-90 for Taylor.
She would’ve liked to score a knockout but she said Han, a capable boxer, made that difficult.
“She was very good at surviving,” Taylor said. “She’s very crafty, very slippery.
Taylor then moved on to the future. She could face Serrano, who easily outpointed Yamileth Mercado last weekend. Another option is to move up to 147 pounds and take on Jessica McCaskill.
Taylor isn’t picky.
“I’m willing to fight anyone at any weight,” she said. “I want the big fights.’