Canelo Alvarez announces he’ll fight American on May 4, but who?

Canelo Alvarez on Tuesday announced that he’ll fight an American on May 4, but he didn’t reveal who it is?

Who is Canelo Alvarez going to fight on May 4? You can keep guessing, although now you have a clue.

Alvarez confirmed Tuesday on TV Azteca that he will return to the ring on Cinco de Mayo weekend, when he has typically fought. He didn’t reveal his opponent, saying only that he will be fighting an American.

That could mean that he’ll defend his undisputed 168-pound championship against 160-pound beltholder Jermall Charlo, who reportedly has been the leading candidate for some time.

It could also mean that 168-pound contender David Benavidez — the opponent most fans seem to be backing — or 147-pound champ Terence Crawford remain in the running to win boxing’s version of the lottery, although they appear to be longshots.

Alvarez hasn’t shown much interest in facing Benavidez, who many believe is his most significant threat in the division. And it seems unlikely that Crawford, who is No. 1 pound-for-pound, will move up three divisions to face one of the best fighters of the era.

Jermell Charlo, Jermall’s twin brother, jumped two divisions to face Alvarez and was overmatched in a unanimous-decision loss in September.

Alvarez and all three of the aforementioned potential opponents work with the managerial company Premier Boxing Champions, which limits obstacles in negotiations.

Alvarez’s comments also evidently mean that fellow Mexican Jaime Munguia, another top 168-pound contender, is out as a potential opponent for now.

Jermall Charlo (33-0, 22 KOs) returned from a 2½-year layoff on Nov. 25, when he defeated Jose Benavidez Jr. by a one-sided decision in Las Vegas.

[lawrence-related id=39258,39244,39237,39233,39227,39198,39194,39842,39747]

Canelo Alvarez announces he’ll fight American on May 4, but who?

Canelo Alvarez on Tuesday announced that he’ll fight an American on May 4, but he didn’t reveal who it is?

Who is Canelo Alvarez going to fight on May 4? You can keep guessing, although now you have a clue.

Alvarez confirmed Tuesday on TV Azteca that he will return to the ring on Cinco de Mayo weekend, when he has typically fought. He didn’t reveal his opponent, saying only that he will be fighting an American.

That could mean that he’ll defend his undisputed 168-pound championship against 160-pound beltholder Jermall Charlo, who reportedly has been the leading candidate for some time.

It could also mean that 168-pound contender David Benavidez — the opponent most fans seem to be backing — or 147-pound champ Terence Crawford remain in the running to win boxing’s version of the lottery, although they appear to be longshots.

Alvarez hasn’t shown much interest in facing Benavidez, who many believe is his most significant threat in the division. And it seems unlikely that Crawford, who is No. 1 pound-for-pound, will move up three divisions to face one of the best fighters of the era.

Jermell Charlo, Jermall’s twin brother, jumped two divisions to face Alvarez and was overmatched in a unanimous-decision loss in September.

Alvarez and all three of the aforementioned potential opponents work with the managerial company Premier Boxing Champions, which limits obstacles in negotiations.

Alvarez’s comments also evidently mean that fellow Mexican Jaime Munguia, another top 168-pound contender, is out as a potential opponent for now.

Jermall Charlo (33-0, 22 KOs) returned from a 2½-year layoff on Nov. 25, when he defeated Jose Benavidez Jr. by a one-sided decision in Las Vegas.

[lawrence-related id=39258,39244,39237,39233,39227,39198,39194,39842,39747]

Junkie Drawer: Jermell Charlo arrested; Amanda Serrano to fight on Jake Paul card

Junkie Drawer: Jermell Charlo was arrested on Texas; Amanda Serrano will fight on a Jake Paul card in March.

Jermell Charlo was arrested Saturday in Texas on misdemeanor charges of assault causing bodily injury to a family member whose name was not released, reported ESPN, which cited police sources.

The 154-pound champion was released on bond Monday.

Charlo’s wife, Chyane Westbrook, filed for a temporary restraining order and divorce from Charlo on Tuesday, according to the sports news outlet.

Charlo went to trial in 2018 on felony domestic violent charges after he allegedly choked his then-girlfriend. He was acquited.

SERRANO’S NEXT FIGHT SET

Unified 126-pound champion Amanda Serrano (46-2-1, 30 KOs) is scheduled to return to her native Puerto Rico to defend her titles against mandatory challenger Nina Meinke (18-3, 4 KOs) on March 2, according to a news release.

Serrano, a seven-division titleholder, hasn’t fought in the country of her birth since March 2021.

YouTuber-turned-boxer and Serrano’s promoter Jake Paul will fight in the main event at Coliseo Jose Miguel Agrelot in San Juan. No opponent for Paul (8-1, 5 KOs) was announced.

He’s coming off a first-round knockout of Andre August on Dec. 15.

[lawrence-related id=39194,40009,40111]

Junkie Drawer: Jermell Charlo arrested; Amanda Serrano to fight on Jake Paul card

Junkie Drawer: Jermell Charlo was arrested on Texas; Amanda Serrano will fight on a Jake Paul card in March.

Jermell Charlo was arrested Saturday in Texas on misdemeanor charges of assault causing bodily injury to a family member whose name was not released, reported ESPN, which cited police sources.

The 154-pound champion was released on bond Monday.

Charlo’s wife, Chyane Westbrook, filed for a temporary restraining order and divorce from Charlo on Tuesday, according to the sports news outlet.

Charlo went to trial in 2018 on felony domestic violent charges after he allegedly choked his then-girlfriend. He was acquited.

SERRANO’S NEXT FIGHT SET

Unified 126-pound champion Amanda Serrano (46-2-1, 30 KOs) is scheduled to return to her native Puerto Rico to defend her titles against mandatory challenger Nina Meinke (18-3, 4 KOs) on March 2, according to a news release.

Serrano, a seven-division titleholder, hasn’t fought in the country of her birth since March 2021.

YouTuber-turned-boxer and Serrano’s promoter Jake Paul will fight in the main event at Coliseo Jose Miguel Agrelot in San Juan. No opponent for Paul (8-1, 5 KOs) was announced.

He’s coming off a first-round knockout of Andre August on Dec. 15.

[lawrence-related id=39194,40009,40111]

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list of the best fighters in the world.

Devin Haney turned in the best performance of his career Saturday in his hometown of San Francisco, shutting out overmatched 140-pound champ Regis Prograis to win a major title in a second division.

If there was any doubt about Haney’s place among the best fighters in the world beforehand, there isn’t now.

The question we faced was whether his impressive victory merited an upgrade on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list (Top 15 plus five Honorable Mentions).

We feel it did.

Haney entered the fight ranked No. 14, one spot behind fellow young star Shakur Stevenson.

We normally wouldn’t bump a fighter up more than one or two notches after a victory over an opponent who wasn’t on the pound-for-pound list going into the fight. However, this case is unusual.

Consider three things:

  • One, Haney didn’t simply defeat Prograis, he embarrassed him. He dropped him and won every round on all three scorecards.
  • Two, he moved up in weight and directly into a world championship fight.
  • And, three, Prograis was no easy mark. He was a respected, once-beaten, two-time titleholder.

Yes, it was a special night for Haney.

As a result, he moves up to No. 10, which knocks previous No. 10 Errol Spence Jr., No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko, No. 12 Artur Beterbiev and Stevenson down one spot each.

Note: Spence and Lomachenko are coming off losses – Spence to Terence Crawford and Lomachenko to Haney – and Stevenson gave a shaky performance in his unanimous decision victory over Edwin De Los Santos.

Beterbiev, 38, can bounce back up the list depending on how he performs against Callum Smith on Jan. 13

Next pound-for-pounder up: Honorable mentions Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez and Sunny Edwards will face off on Saturday in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Devin Haney – No fight scheduled.
  11. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  12. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  13. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  14. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=40041,40037]

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list

Pound-for-pound: Devin Haney continues his ascent up the Boxing Junkie list of the best fighters in the world.

Devin Haney turned in the best performance of his career Saturday in his hometown of San Francisco, shutting out overmatched 140-pound champ Regis Prograis to win a major title in a second division.

If there was any doubt about Haney’s place among the best fighters in the world beforehand, there isn’t now.

The question we faced was whether his impressive victory merited an upgrade on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list (Top 15 plus five Honorable Mentions).

We feel it did.

Haney entered the fight ranked No. 14, one spot behind fellow young star Shakur Stevenson.

We normally wouldn’t bump a fighter up more than one or two notches after a victory over an opponent who wasn’t on the pound-for-pound list going into the fight. However, this case is unusual.

Consider three things:

  • One, Haney didn’t simply defeat Prograis, he embarrassed him. He dropped him and won every round on all three scorecards.
  • Two, he moved up in weight and directly into a world championship fight.
  • And, three, Prograis was no easy mark. He was a respected, once-beaten, two-time titleholder.

Yes, it was a special night for Haney.

As a result, he moves up to No. 10, which knocks previous No. 10 Errol Spence Jr., No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko, No. 12 Artur Beterbiev and Stevenson down one spot each.

Note: Spence and Lomachenko are coming off losses – Spence to Terence Crawford and Lomachenko to Haney – and Stevenson gave a shaky performance in his unanimous decision victory over Edwin De Los Santos.

Beterbiev, 38, can bounce back up the list depending on how he performs against Callum Smith on Jan. 13

Next pound-for-pounder up: Honorable mentions Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez and Sunny Edwards will face off on Saturday in Glendale, Arizona.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Devin Haney – No fight scheduled.
  11. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  12. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  13. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  14. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=40041,40037]

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack Top 15 after sensational KO?

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack the Top 15 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list after his brutal KO of Demetrius Andrade?

This one is tricky.

David Benavidez couldn’t have looked much better than he did against Demetrius Andrade on Saturday in Las Vegas, where he put the former two-division titleholder down and pummeled him until the fight was stopped after the sixth round.

Benavidez’s stock certainly went up. However, was it enough for the Honorable Mention (going into the fight) to crack our Top 15?

Yes.

The question was how he would fit in. This is what we did:

  • No. 14 Roman Gonzalez, who has lost twice to Juan Francisco Estrada in his last three fights, drops to Honorable Mention. The 36-year-old future Hall of Famer has no fight scheduled.
  • No. 15 Devin Haney, coming off a victory over No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko in a close fight, moves up to No. 14. The 135-pound titleholder will challenge 140-pound champ Regis Prograis on Dec. 9, meaning his position here could change.
  • And Benavidez enters at No. 15, the highest position he has attained.

Honorable Mention Jermall Charlo, a 160-pound titleholder, held his position by outpointing smaller, but determined Jose Benavidez Jr. on the David Benavidez-Andrade card after a 2½-year layoff.

Next pound-for-pounder up: No. 14 Haney faces Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  11. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  13. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  14. Devin Haney – Scheduled to challenge 140-pound titleholder Regis Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=39510,39507,39503,39500,39495,39488]

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack Top 15 after sensational KO?

Pound-for-pound: Does David Benavidez crack the Top 15 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list after his brutal KO of Demetrius Andrade?

This one is tricky.

David Benavidez couldn’t have looked much better than he did against Demetrius Andrade on Saturday in Las Vegas, where he put the former two-division titleholder down and pummeled him until the fight was stopped after the sixth round.

Benavidez’s stock certainly went up. However, was it enough for the Honorable Mention (going into the fight) to crack our Top 15?

Yes.

The question was how he would fit in. This is what we did:

  • No. 14 Roman Gonzalez, who has lost twice to Juan Francisco Estrada in his last three fights, drops to Honorable Mention. The 36-year-old future Hall of Famer has no fight scheduled.
  • No. 15 Devin Haney, coming off a victory over No. 11 Vasiliy Lomachenko in a close fight, moves up to No. 14. The 135-pound titleholder will challenge 140-pound champ Regis Prograis on Dec. 9, meaning his position here could change.
  • And Benavidez enters at No. 15, the highest position he has attained.

Honorable Mention Jermall Charlo, a 160-pound titleholder, held his position by outpointing smaller, but determined Jose Benavidez Jr. on the David Benavidez-Andrade card after a 2½-year layoff.

Next pound-for-pounder up: No. 14 Haney faces Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.

Here’s what the list looks like at the moment:

BOXING JUNKIE
POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Terence Crawford – No fight scheduled.
  2. Naoya Inoue – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder Marlon Tapales for the undisputed 122-pound championship on Dec. 26 in Japan.
  3. Oleksandr Usyk – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 9 Tyson Fury for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  4. Dmitry Bivol – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound title against Lyndon Arthur on Dec. 23 in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Juan Francisco Estrada – No fight scheduled.
  6. Canelo Alvarez– No fight scheduled.
  7. Jermell Charlo – No fight scheduled.
  8. Gervonta Davis – No fight scheduled.
  9. Tyson Fury – Scheduled to face fellow titleholder and No. 3 Oleksandr Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight championship on Feb. 17 in Saudi Arabia.
  10. Errol Spence Jr. – No fight scheduled.
  11. Vasiliy Lomachenko – No fight scheduled.
  12. Artur Beterbiev – Scheduled to defend his 175-pound titles against Callum Smith on Jan. 13 in Quebec City, Canada.
  13. Shakur Stevenson – No fight scheduled.
  14. Devin Haney – Scheduled to challenge 140-pound titleholder Regis Prograis on Dec. 9 in San Francisco.
  15. David Benavidez – No fight scheduled.

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Jermall Charlo (no fight scheduled); Sunny Edwards (scheduled to face Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona); Roman Gonzalez (no fight scheduled);  Kazuto Ioka (scheduled to defend his 115-pound title against Josber Perez on New Year’s Eve in Japan); Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez (scheduled to face Sunny Edwards in a 112-pound title-unification bout on Dec. 16 in Glendale, Arizona).

[lawrence-related id=39510,39507,39503,39500,39495,39488]

Jermall Charlo primed to reclaim his elite status in ‘second half’ of career

Jermall Charlo is primed to reclaim his elite status in what he called the second half of boxing career.

Jermall Charlo looks at his 2½-year layoff as a sort of “halftime” in his career. And he plans to be better than ever coming out of the break.

The 33-year-old middleweight titleholder left boxing to address his mental health, a struggle that led to suicidal thoughts and the possibility of retirement from the sport. Nothing he could face in boxing could rival that challenge.

However, the dark clouds have lifted. And he’s ready to return to his first love.

Charlo (32-0, 22 KOs) is scheduled to face veteran Jose Benavidez Jr. on the David Benavidez-Demetrius Andrade pay-per-view card Saturday night at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.

“We just had our halftime show,” Charlo told Boxing Junkie. “I’m glad fans enjoyed the first part of the show. Now we have to close out the game. It’s clutch time. It’s time to lock in.”

Charlo spent the past two years trying to figure out who he is as a person, not an athlete.

He and brother Jermell have been boxing since they were 8 years old, a quarter century ago. That has been his identity, a successful boxer who ultimately won a number of major belts, earned fame and became wealthy.

However, he recently asked himself whether it was worth the sacrifices. The way he sees it he puts his life on the line every time he goes to work and no one, aside from those closest to him, truly care.

He wants to be there for those who do care.

“I was focused on learning who I am,” he said, “what it takes to be … a better father, a better friend, someone who is really there, not a fake person. I want to spend time with my grandma, a grandma-grandson thing.

“… I want to have a life. I feel like it’s time for me to be that person.”

Charlo missed out on what would’ve been the biggest fight of his career, a meeting with 168-pound champion Canelo Alvarez that ultimately went to his brother in September.

He has no regrets, however. He wasn’t prepared mentally to tackle a challenge of that magnitude. And he was pleased that the opportunity remained in the family, although the Mexican star won that fight by a one-sided decision.

Charlo believes he could still meet Alvarez, though. He and the Benavidez-Andrade winner will be leading candidates to face Alvarez next Cinco de Mayo weekend. Or he could end up in the ring with the winner of Saturday’s main event if Alvarez goes a different direction.

Those type of matchups would bring Charlo back into the thick of the championship action after his long hiatus.

“I’m taking it one fight at a time, obviously,” said Charlo, making it clear he must beat Benavidez to take the next step. “My intention is to blow Benavidez’s head off. I have enough ammunition to do that.

“I can still fight Canelo or one of the big names. We never know.”

Benavidez Jr.?

David’s older brother obviously was selected as a tune-up opponent, a competent, tough boxer who will come to fight but probably poses a limited threat to Charlo.

Charlo said he isn’t approaching Benavidez as a relatively easy mark, however. One, as he implied, he can’t afford to slip up if he wants the biggest fights. And, two, his opponent has made it “a little more personal” by publicly downplaying his mental health issues.

Charlo expects to roll over Benavidez on Saturday in spite of his time away.

“It’s like the old Harley,” he said. “You just take it out, wipe it up, clean it up. The engine is still the same. It runs like crazy. … It got a little dust on it but I doubt that it’s rusty.”

The second half kickout should come around 10:30 p.m. ET.

[lawrence-related id=21352,21315,21260]

Jermall Charlo primed to reclaim his elite status in ‘second half’ of career

Jermall Charlo is primed to reclaim his elite status in what he called the second half of boxing career.

Jermall Charlo looks at his 2½-year layoff as a sort of “halftime” in his career. And he plans to be better than ever coming out of the break.

The 33-year-old middleweight titleholder left boxing to address his mental health, a struggle that led to suicidal thoughts and the possibility of retirement from the sport. Nothing he could face in boxing could rival that challenge.

However, the dark clouds have lifted. And he’s ready to return to his first love.

Charlo (32-0, 22 KOs) is scheduled to face veteran Jose Benavidez Jr. on the David Benavidez-Demetrius Andrade pay-per-view card Saturday night at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.

“We just had our halftime show,” Charlo told Boxing Junkie. “I’m glad fans enjoyed the first part of the show. Now we have to close out the game. It’s clutch time. It’s time to lock in.”

Charlo spent the past two years trying to figure out who he is as a person, not an athlete.

He and brother Jermell have been boxing since they were 8 years old, a quarter century ago. That has been his identity, a successful boxer who ultimately won a number of major belts, earned fame and became wealthy.

However, he recently asked himself whether it was worth the sacrifices. The way he sees it he puts his life on the line every time he goes to work and no one, aside from those closest to him, truly care.

He wants to be there for those who do care.

“I was focused on learning who I am,” he said, “what it takes to be … a better father, a better friend, someone who is really there, not a fake person. I want to spend time with my grandma, a grandma-grandson thing.

“… I want to have a life. I feel like it’s time for me to be that person.”

Charlo missed out on what would’ve been the biggest fight of his career, a meeting with 168-pound champion Canelo Alvarez that ultimately went to his brother in September.

He has no regrets, however. He wasn’t prepared mentally to tackle a challenge of that magnitude. And he was pleased that the opportunity remained in the family, although the Mexican star won that fight by a one-sided decision.

Charlo believes he could still meet Alvarez, though. He and the Benavidez-Andrade winner will be leading candidates to face Alvarez next Cinco de Mayo weekend. Or he could end up in the ring with the winner of Saturday’s main event if Alvarez goes a different direction.

Those type of matchups would bring Charlo back into the thick of the championship action after his long hiatus.

“I’m taking it one fight at a time, obviously,” said Charlo, making it clear he must beat Benavidez to take the next step. “My intention is to blow Benavidez’s head off. I have enough ammunition to do that.

“I can still fight Canelo or one of the big names. We never know.”

Benavidez Jr.?

David’s older brother obviously was selected as a tune-up opponent, a competent, tough boxer who will come to fight but probably poses a limited threat to Charlo.

Charlo said he isn’t approaching Benavidez as a relatively easy mark, however. One, as he implied, he can’t afford to slip up if he wants the biggest fights. And, two, his opponent has made it “a little more personal” by publicly downplaying his mental health issues.

Charlo expects to roll over Benavidez on Saturday in spite of his time away.

“It’s like the old Harley,” he said. “You just take it out, wipe it up, clean it up. The engine is still the same. It runs like crazy. … It got a little dust on it but I doubt that it’s rusty.”

The second half kickout should come around 10:30 p.m. ET.

[lawrence-related id=21352,21315,21260]