Jermall Charlo wipes out Dennis Hogan in seven rounds

Middleweight titleholder Jermall Charlo defeated Dennis Hogan via 7th-round TKO at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

It’s time for Jermall Charlo to take on the other top players in the middleweight division.

As expected, the Houston-based 160-pound titleholder made short work of fringe contender Dennis Hogan, dropping the Irish-Australian twice on his way to a seventh-round stoppage at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

The second knockdown came courtesy of a blazing lead left hook that sent Hogan crashing to the canvas. Hogan got up on unsteady legs, but as he began wavering to his left, referee Charlie Hitch waved off the bout at 2:32 of the seventh.

“I made it through 2019 and we’re going to 2020 with 20/20 vision,” Charlo said. “Shout out to Dennis Hogan for giving me real competition and for coming up to fight me. Of course, my power prevailed tonight.”

Hogan (28-3-1, 7 knockouts) aquitted himself well from the opening round, peppering Charlo with lead left hooks and a consistent jab, as a considerable pro-Hogan contingent cheered him on.

But the size difference between the two fighters was plainly evident. Hogan, after all, was a career junior middleweight fighting for the first time at middleweight. Though he was catching Charlo with clean punches early on, they clearly had limited effect. Hogan also made a bad habit of rushing in with some of his punches, opening himself up to counters.

Jermall Charlo celebrates after his seventh-round knockout of Dennis Hogan on Saturday night. AP Photo / Vera Nieuwenhuis

Indeed, in Round 4, Charlo (30-0, 22 KOs) clocked his opponent coming in with a hard counter left uppercut that sent Hogan somersaulting backwards into the ropes. Though Hogan managed to survive, Charlo had found his groove. In the ensuing rounds, Charlo dug in with brutal power punches that began taking their toll on Hogan.

It was a typically violent ending for Charlo, but his resume at middleweight has been threadbare thus far. With the exception of his fight against Matvey Korobov (who suffered a fight-ending shoulder injury earlier in the night), Charlo has faced mostly underwhelming opposition since he moved up to middleweight in 2017. Jorge Sebastian Heiland, Hugo Centeno Jr., Matvey Korobov and Brandon Adams do little to whet the appetite.

Afterward, Charlo stayed mum on whom he preferred to fight next, while conceding that there were plenty of options in a division that includes other titleholders Gennadiy Golovkin, Canelo Alvarez and Demetrius Andrade.

“The middleweight division is wide open,” Charlo said. “I’m the WBC middleweight champion. I’m going to enjoy this. We’re going to get back to the drawing board. Shoot, I’m gonna fight whoever. But you have to make the right decision at the right time.”

Earlier in the night, Chris Eubank Jr. won by a second-round technical knockout when his opponent, Korobov, could no longer continue, citing a left shoulder injury. A Charlo-Eubank fight could be possible for 2020.

Chris Eubank Jr. wins by TKO after Matvey Korobov injures shoulder

Chris Eubank Jr. won a technical knockout in the second round after Matvey Korobov could no longer continue, citing a left shoulder injury.

So much for making a statement.

Chris Eubank Jr. promised fireworks for his American debut against Matvey Korobov, but he barely had time to even fight, thanks to a freak accident. Barely 30 seconds into Round 2, Korobov threw a left hand and immediately motioned at referee Steve Willis for a timeout as he gestured at his left shoulder. After a brief deliberation in the corner with the ring doctor, Willis called off the fight.

Eubank (29-2, 22 knockouts) won by technical knockout on the undercard of the Jermall Charlo vs. Dennis Hogan main event at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. The official time of the stoppage was 2:26 of the second round. Ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr. cited the cause as a “left shoulder injury.”

“I feel like I was just about to start getting my swagger,” said Eubank, who simply shrugged at the crowd. “He just turned around and stopped. I was going to go jump on him. I guess something happened with his shoulder.

“I mean, there’s nothing to take from the fight.  I threw like three or four punches. I was just warming up.”

The loss marks the third straight tough outcome for  Korobov (28-3-1, 14 KOs), whose last two fights included a draw with Immanuel Aleem and decision loss to Jermall Charlo.

Chris Eubank Jr. didn’t have much time show his stuff in his U.S. debut. AP Photo / Michael Owens

“I was trying to throw the left hand straight, and I just felt the muscle immediately, like I pulled it,” Korobov said. “It was a lot of pain right away. I couldn’t fight with just one arm, especially being a southpaw.”

Earlier, Ryosuke Iwasa dropped Marlon Tapales twice en route to an 11th-round stoppage in a scheduled 12-round junior featherweight bout.

The two southpaws traded left hands all fight long, but Tapales was sloppy, both on defense and offense. Iwasa (27-3, 17 KOs), from Kashiwa, Japan, was a bit  more accurate and patient, biding his time before decking Tapales (33-3, 16 KOs) with a straight left in the 11th round. The Filipino was able to get up, but when referee Shada Murdaugh motioned him to come forward, Tapales momentarily stumbled, forcing Murdaugh to end the fight at 1:09. 

“I knew that I had him hurt in the 11th round, and I was ready for the finish if the referee had let him keep fighting,” Iwasa said.” It was a tough fight, but I trained really hard for this performance.
“My height and reach was definitely an advantage. I was able to put my punches together well. He never hurt me but he was still difficult, and I had to focus to figure him out.”

In Round 3, a clash of heads caused Tapales to touch the canvas. Referee Murdaugh ruled it a knockdown. Thereafter a visible bruise appeared on Tapales’ right cheek. 

Toward the end, Tapales began to show signs that he was wilting. In Round 8, Tapales landed his best punch of the fight, a crunching right hook that drew oohs from a relatively sparse crowd. But Iwasa took the punch well and came back to land his own combinations. Winded, Tapales retreated to the ropes as Iwasa began teeing off on him for the rest of the round. Tapales trudged back to his corner, as if already defeated. 

Iwasa should be next in line to face the winner of the not-yet-finalized junior lightweight title fight between Danny Roman and Murodjon Ahkmadeliev.

Jermall Charlo and his bleak future at middleweight

Titleholder Jermall Charlo may be the most talented fighter in the stacked middleweight division. The problem? He has yet to prove it.

OPINION

Titleholder Jermall Charlo may be the most talented fighter in the stacked middleweight division. The problem? He has yet to prove it. And when he takes on Dennis Hogan on Saturday night at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, he won’t be any closer to doing so.

Both fighters made weight today. Charlo weighed in at 159¾ pounds and Hogan, with plenty of room to spare, at 158½ pounds.

Of course, Hogan (28-2-1, 7 knockouts) is a career junior middleweight who is making his debut at the 160-pound limit. That, in a nutshell, should tell you how difficult it has been for Charlo to match up with the top fighters at middleweight; he needed to entice a junior middleweight to step up as an opponent.

Granted, Hogan, an Irishman who resides in Australia, is coming off a controversial loss to Jaime Munguia in a match he appeared to have done enough to win. Hogan’s team immediately pursued a rematch, but Munguia’s brain trust had other ideas. Still, putting forth a convincing effort against a defensively porous fighter like Munguia (perhaps one of the most overrated titleholders in recent memory) is one thing; doing it against a fighter of Charlo’s caliber is an altogether different proposition.

Kevin Hogan (right) probably isn’t the type of opponent who will take Jermall Charlo to the next level. Stephanie Trapp / Showtime

Indeed, a Charlo (29-0, 21 KOs) victory is hardly in doubt, but it’s not clear what it will do for the Houston native’s career. To wit, Charlo’s middleweight run has consisted of Jorge Sebastian Heiland, Hugo Centeno Jr., Matvey Korobov and Brandon Adams. Hardly breathtaking. Aside from the Korobov fight – one in which many observers had Korobov winning – many of Charlo’s fights at middleweight are little more than showcases.

In many ways, Charlo’s predicament bears some comparison to that of Terence Crawford, the welterweight titleholder who currently faces a dearth of quality opponents on his end of the stratified boxing landscape, over at Top Rank/ESPN. Most of the best welterweights fight under the Premier Boxing Champions banner, which does business exclusively with Showtime and Fox. Likewise, the other middleweight titleholders all fight exclusively on DAZN, including Canelo Alvarez, Gennadiy Golovkin and Demetrius Andrade, and it’s not clear whether Charlo can ever get those fights. That’s a shame considering Charlo built his name off of one of the most impressive knockouts in the past few years, his fifth round stoppage of Julian Williams, in what was his last fight at junior middleweight. 

Surely, though, if the unification matchups are out of reach, there should be better options for Charlo than the likes of Hogan, Adams and Centeno. To that end, hard-hitting British contender Chris Eubank Jr., who fights Korobov on the same card Saturday night, may prove to be an attractive possibility. That fight would be intriguing and it would certainly sell, especially in Eubank’s native England. Moreover, Eubank would offer a far sterner test for Charlo than his recent opponents did. But there is no guarantee that Eubank even gets passed Korobov, a skilled, if somewhat shopworn southpaw who landed a surprising number of left hand leads against Charlo. Eubank has struggled with dexterous boxers in the past, namely Billy Joe Saunders and George Groves.

For Charlo, a Eubank win, at least in the interim, may represent the only meaningful step forward in his career.

 


 

Chris Eubank Jr and Matvey Korobov also made weight for their middleweight bout that will top the undercard. Eubank weighed in at 159 1/2 pounds, Korobov at 159.

Also, Marlon Tapales and Ryosuke Iwasa both weighed in at 121 1/2 pounds for their 12-round junior featherweight bout.

Chris Eubank Jr. seeks new horizons in United States

Chris Eubank Jr. will make his U.S. debut against middleweight southpaw Matvey Korobov on the undercard of Charlo-Hogan this Saturday.

Chris Eubank Jr. knows that there is only so much he can do to further build on his family name back home in England. Here in America, though? The possibilities seem endless.

“My goal is to make a name for myself in the U.S. and broaden our horizons,” Eubank, the son of former two-division titleholder Chris Eubank Sr., said during a media workout today in Brooklyn. “The fight fans here have known me for a while, but I want to break out past that.”

The 30-year-old Eubank takes his first step in that direction against Matvey Korobov this Saturday at the Barclays Center on the undercard of the middleweight title fight between Jermall Charlo and Dennis Hogan.

“This is a great starting fight for me in the U.S. We’re aiming to make our own history,” Eubank said. “I’ve done so much in England, and I feel like this is the right time to expose myself to the American public.”

Chris Eubank Jr. came to the U.S. to conquer new territories. Stephanie Trapp / Showtime

Eubank (28-2, 21 knockouts) is coming off a career-best win over former super middleweight titleholder and compatriot James DeGale last February. Eubank battered the shopworn DeGale over 12 rounds en route to a unanimous-decision win. He also participated in the World Boxing Super series 168-pound tournament, defeating Avni Yildirim by third-round knockout but dropping a decision to George Groves, another domestic rival.

Eubank suffered his other loss early in his career against Billy Joe Saunders, which is to say that he has pretty much exhausted all the major fights in his native U.K. Hence, his focus on the U.S. scene.

“I’ve been dreaming about coming here and fighting in the U.S. since I was a kid,” he said. “You dream about fighting where all your favorite fighters came to perform on the big stage. To do it here in New York is special. It’s an iconic place, and so many great world champions have come from here.”

Against Korobov, Eubank will face a skilled southpaw who gave 160-pound titleholder Charlo all he could handle last year. Some observers believe Korobov did enough to eke out a decision. One possible factor in Eubank’s favor is that he will be fighting at his natural weight for the first time in several years.

“I’m not a true super middleweight, so I’m excited to be fighting at 160 pounds. I’m going to be a beast,” Eubank said. “I’m going to be an absolute savage. The power and the speed is going to really shine through against guys my own size.”

Should he get past Korobov on Saturday, Eubank has his sights set any of the middleweight titleholders, including one of Saturday’s main-eventers.

“Anyone with a belt in the middleweight division, I’m coming for them,” Eubank said. “If that means Charlo, I’ll be more than happy to get in there with him.”

 

Julian Williams to fight winner of Tony Harrison-Jermell Charlo II?

Julian Williams has signed a contract to fight the winner of Harrison-Charlo II, according to his trainer Stephen Edwards.

The 154-pound division is the gift that keeps giving.

Stephen Edwards, the manager and trainer of junior middleweight titleholder Julian Williams, said on the Showtime boxing podcast that should his fighter defeat Jeison Rosario on Jan. 18 in Philadelphia, he is expected to face the winner of the Dec. 21 rematch between Tony Harrison and Jermell Charlo.

Williams holds two of the four major 154-pound titles, Harrison one.

“We’ve already signed a unification match to fight the winner of Jermell and Tony,” Edwards said.

Williams (27-1-1, 16 knockouts) is expected to beat Rosario (19-1-1, 13 KOs), a Miami-based Dominican who enters the fight as a heavy underdog.

After the title-unification bout, Edwards said that a rematch with 160-pound titleholder Jermall Charlo would be appealing. Charlo blitzed Williams with a vicious fifth-round knockout in 2016.

Most of the top 154-pounders are aligned with Premier Boxing Champions, including former titleholders in Erislandy Lara and Jarrett Hurd.

 

Julian Williams to make hometown defense against Jeison Rosario on Jan. 18

Julian William, who owns two of junior middleweight belts, will take on Jeison Rosario at the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia on Jan. 11.

Julian Williams will make the first defense of his two junior welterweight titles at home.

Williams is scheduled to face Jeison Rosario on Jan. 18 at Temple University’s Liacouras Center in Philadelphia, it was announced Wednesday in a release. The fight will be televised on Fox.

Williams had been slated to fight in December in a rematch against Jarrett Hurd, whom he dominated in a thrilling fight to win two of the four major belts in the division. But Hurd, for reasons that remain unknown, decided to pull out. (Hurd has hinted that he might move up to middleweight.)

“This is going to be great having a homecoming fight back in Philadelphia,” said Williams (27-1-1, 16 knockouts). “I haven’t fought in Philadelphia since 2011, so I can’t wait to get back in the ring in front of all my people.”

Rosario (19-1-1, 13 KOs) is a notch or two below Hurd, but Williams isn’t looking past the Dominican challenger, who is 7-0-1 since his knockout loss to Nathaniel Gallimore in 2017.

Julian Williams (right) won his titles by upsetting Jarrett Hurd in May. AP Photo / Jose Luis Magana

“Rosario is a good fighter and I’m very familiar with him,” Williams said. “I know he packs a solid punch and that he’s been on a tear ever since his lone loss to Nathaniel Gallimore. So he’ll be a stiff test for me. But I’m prepared to win. Most of all, I’m just excited to defend my titles … as a unified champion in front of my hometown crowd.”

Some had written Williams off after a brutal knockout loss to Jermall Charlo in 2016. But Williams kept his head down the next couple of years, putting together four consecutive victories, before getting another opportunity to challenge for the title against Hurd in May.

The junior middleweight division boasts some of the best talent and matchups in the sport. On Dec. 21, another intriguing 154-pound title rematch will take place between titleholder Tony Harrison and Jermell Charlo. The winner of that fight sets up a potential clash with the winner of Williams-Rosario.

Jaime Munguia vs. Gary O’Sullivan set for Jan. 11 in San Antonio

Jaime Munguia will move up a division to face middleweight Gary O’Sullivan in a 12-round bout at the Alamodome in San Antonio on Jan. 11.

After five successful defenses of his junior middleweight title, Mexican slugger Jaime Munguia is moving up a division.

The 23-year-old makes his middleweight debut against Irish veteran Gary “Spike” O’Sullivan in a 12-rounder on Jan. 11 at the Alamodome in San Antonio on DAZN, Golden Boy Promotions has announced.

“I feel very happy to be starting the year 2020 with a great fight at a great place like San Antonio, Texas,” Munguia said.”I have fought in Houston, Texas before, where the people there treated me very well. I think that San Antonio won’t be any different.”

Munguia burst onto the scene last year when he appeared from nowhere to poleaxe Sadam Ali to win the WBO junior middleweight belt. He went on to defend it successfully against Liam Smith, Brandon Cook, Takeshi Inoue, Dennis Hogan and most recently Patrick Allotey. With each subsequent fight, however, Munguia, who sports a hulkish build, found it increasingly onerous to make the 154-pound limit.

“We’re going to deliver a great fight against a tough fighter in Gary O’Sullivan,” Munguia said. “He’s great and he’s strong, but we’re going to come very well prepared. We plan to do an excellent job and make it very clear who is the best in the ring.”

Munguia (34-0, 27 knockouts) joins a packed middleweight crew, which includes stablemate and countryman Canelo Alvarez (who may or may not return to that division after moving up to light heavyweight recently), as well as titleholders Gennadiy Golovkin, Jermall Charlo, and Demetrius Andrade.

The 35-year-old O’Sullivan ( 30-3, 21 KOs) reeled off consecutive wins since getting starched by David Lemieux last year. O’Sullivan made a name for himself when he wiped out once highly regarded prospect Antoine Douglas back in 2017.

“For me it’s a dream come true to fight the undefeated champion of the world and the No. 1-ranked fighter in the world,” O’Sullivan said. “It makes it even better that he’s Mexican. I grew up watching the great Mexican champions, and to get the opportunity to fight Jaime is an honor.”

The undercard bouts have not been announced.

Fox Exec says network will have ‘best of the best,’ own ‘PBC belts’

Bill Wanger, executive vice president of programming for Fox Sports, appeared on the Chris Mannix podcast last week to discuss boxing.

Al Haymon may stay tight-lipped when it comes to the media, but Bill Wanger apparently has no such qualms.

Wanger, the executive vice president of programming at Fox Sports, appeared on the Chris Mannix boxing podcast last week and, well, he had a few interesting things to say. Wanger expounded on everything from the network’s multi-year deal with Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions to his thoughts on the boxing landscape at large.

Here are some snippets.

On sharing fighters with Showtime

Given that longtime cable broadcaster Showtime also has a multi-year deal with the PBC, one of the biggest questions in the past year was how Haymon went about apportioning his roster to satisfy the needs of both networks. When Mannix brought up this specific point, Wanger was blunt about Fox having the “premier package.”

“Our deal with the PBC is to be in the premier position and to have the premier package,” Wanger said. “So a lot of who takes what between Fox and Showtime is already taken care of in the contractual process. … We have a contract with the PBC with a certain number of fights to be in the premier position. At the end of the day, that’s what we’re going to have. We’re not too worried about that.”

When Mannix asked Wanger to clarify what he meant by “premier,” Wanger responded, “At the end of the day, we get the best fights and the top stars. Showtime will have what they’re going to have. But Fox will have the best of the best.”

On making fights with rival networks and promoters

Another topic was boxing’s fragmented business. Mannix suggested the possibility of more cross-promotional events, in which fighters would appear  on rival networks. Wanger doesn’t see that as a priority for the network, citing PBC’s vast roster as a sign of its “self-sufficiency.”

“The PBC and Fox have 99 percent of the top fighters,” Wanger said. “Yes, there are a few on the other platforms, but we’re totally self-sufficient. Those guys are actually having difficulty making the fights they need for their fighters, whether its Terence Crawford or Canelo (Alvarez) and so on and so forth.”

Wanger would not confirm or deny a reported joint pay-per-view deal between Fox and ESPN to showcase the projected rematch of Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury in 2020, but he made it clear that each network has their own corporate agenda to adhere to. 

“I think that in this new dynamic, this new world of DAZN in the business and ESPN in the business and PBC in the business with Fox and Showtime, yeah there is rooting interest (for certain fighters and fights), quite selfishly,” he said.

On the likelihood of an Errol Spence-Terence Crawford showdown

Wanger poured cold water over a potential Errol Spence-Terence Crawford welterweight title-unification fight. He made it clear that Spence has no reason to rush into a fight with Crawford, not when he has other options at his disposal within the PBC roster, including Danny Garcia, Keith Thurman, and Manny Pacquiao.

“With regards to Errol, the PBC has a stacked welterweight division and there are plenty of fights that Errol can have well before he needs to fight Terence Crawford,” Wanger said. “And again if Errol and his team have a desire to fight Terence Crawford, a deal can be made.

“Errol’s gotta take care of business inside the PBC family, and … once he does that (and) the time is right and he wants to fight Terence Crawford, they’ll make the fight.”

On PBC creating their own title belts

Mannix took Wanger to task for Fox’s refusal to recognize WBO welterweight titleholder Crawford on graphics depicting the top titleholders in the division. Wanger offered a somewhat circular rationale, stating that they feel the WBA, WBC, and IBF belts are “the most important belts” because they’re “the ones that have traditionally been around the longest (and) are the ones we will recognize.” Mannix mentioned the fact that Fox leaves out the WBO but recognizes a secondary title from the WBA, at which point Wanger dropped this nugget:

“You know what we’re going to do with the PBC, and we’re on our way to do this … as things fall in the place. We are going to have a PBC belt and a PBC champion, lets say of the heavyweight division. So play this out, Andy Ruiz (a PBC fighter) beats Anthony Joshua again and eventually you have Andy Ruiz and Deontay Wilder fighting for the PBC heavyweight title. You could do that potentially with the welterweights, you could do that at 154 pounds, you could do that at 168 pounds.”

Wanger did not clarify whether this meant that the PBC would no longer collaborate with the three other sanctioning bodies. In any case, it’s clear that Wanger believes that insofar as the heavyweight (on the condition that Ruiz beats Joshua), welterweight, junior middleweight and supper middleweight divisions are concerned, there is no reason for the PBC to branch out to make fights.

On Jermall Charlo fighting potentially on a different platform.

The PBC doesn’t have depth in the middleweight division. When Mannix pointed out that most of the top 160-pound fighters are on DAZN, which has left WBC titleholder Jermall Charlo out of the mix, Wanger hinted that you may see Charlo hopping over to another network for the time being.

“Yeah, Al’s taking care of Jermall and putting him on a path where he might not be on our platforms for the next few fights, but he’ll come back,” he said.