Video: Mannix, Mora: What now for Canelo Alvarez?

Sergiy Derevyanchenko decided to face Jermall Charlo rather than Canelo Alvarez in his next fight, removing yet another prospective opponent for the Mexican star. Where does that leave Alvarez? Well, the most-appealing candidate at this point …

Sergiy Derevyanchenko decided to face Jermall Charlo rather than Canelo Alvarez in his next fight, removing yet another prospective opponent for the Mexican star.

Where does that leave Alvarez?

Well, the most-appealing candidate at this point probably is super middleweight titleholder Callum Smith, who would provide Alvarez the opportunity to win a title in a fourth division.

No realistic opponent beyond the British fighter — at least no one who has been mentioned — would excite fans hoping to see Alvarez face an actual challenge when he fights next in September.

DAZN commentators Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora give their thoughts on Alvarez’s prospects in this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora.

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Eric Gomez of Golden Boy: ‘Very good chance’ Canelo fights Brit

Eric Gomez of Golden Boy said there’s a ‘very good chance’ Canelo Alvarez will fight either Callum Smith or John Ryder in September.

Will it be either Callum Smith or John Ryder?

Eric Gomez, president of Golden Boy Promotions, told Sky Sports that there’s a “very good chance” Canelo Alvarez will face a British fighter when he returns to the ring in September, meaning either Smith or Ryder.

However, Gomez also said, “We are not discarding any of the top guys.” And he added that it would be easier for Alvarez to face an American opponent because of coronavirus-related visa restrictions.

In other words, the search goes on.

Sky Sports asked Gomez specifically whether he could face Smith or Ryder. He responded by saying, “There is a very good chance. There are a couple of guys we are looking at as a possibility.”

Then he got into the visa issues, saying the selection of an American opponent would be less complicated.

“We don’t have to deal with any visa restrictions that have been imposed by the government,” he said. “If there is someone already here in the U.S.? That helps. It is more difficult now because of the restrictions.

“The borders are not all open so it isn’t easy to bring some fighters to the U.S. It all depends on the negotiations. We are not living in the world that we lived in last year. Canelo will be taking a significant pay cut. It depends on the negotiations.

“Anybody willing to come to the table and be reasonable, he will fight. We are not discarding any of the top guys.”

Sergiy Derevyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) of Ukraine, David Lemieux (41-4, 34 KOs) of Canada and Anthony Dirrell (33-2-1, 24 KOs) of Flint, Michigan, also have been mentioned as potential opponents for Alvarez (53-1-2, 36 KOs).

Smith (27-0, 19 KOs) is a super middleweight titleholder who would afford Alvarez an opportunity to win a major belt in a fourth weight class. Ryder (28-5, 16 KOs) lost to Smith in a competitive fight in November, the last time both fighters were in the ring.

Alvarez was scheduled to face 168-pound titleholder Billy Joe Saunders in May but that fight was canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic and the two couldn’t come to terms for a meeting in September.

That news prompted Smith’s trainer, Joe Gallagher, to say, “It’s supposed to have been a two-horse race, wasn’t it? Now he’s pulling himself out of it, Canelo has got no excuse now, but to fight Callum Smith.

“If that date and opportunity is put to Callum Smith, he’s ready to go.”

Ryder told Sky Sports: “There’s a few names in the hat. Hopefully my name is at the top and it gets picked out. Listen, he’s looking for an opponent, and I know the money is not there for these big shows. It’s a chance in a lifetime, I’m up for it.”

Video: Mannix, Mora: Who is the best opponent for Canelo Alvarez?

Who will Canelo Alvarez fight next? That question remains unanswered. And the possibilities seem to be growing every day. Among the current list of potential foes: Sergiy Derevyanchenko, Anthony Dirrell, David Lemieux and John Ryder. Derevyanchenko …

Who will Canelo Alvarez fight next?

That question remains unanswered. And the possibilities seem to be growing every day. Among the current list of potential foes: Sergiy Derevyanchenko, Anthony Dirrell, David Lemieux and John Ryder.

Derevyanchenko probably is the best fighter among that lot. But is he the best opponent for Alvarez when the Mexican superstar returns to the ring in September? And don’t forget: The Ukrainian fighter also has received an offer to fight middleweight titleholder Jermall Charlo.

So how does this drama end?

DAZN commentators Chris Mannix and Sergio Mora give their thoughts on this episode of Jabs with Mannix and Mora.

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Video: Saturday Fight Live: Callum Smith vs. George Groves

In this installment of DAZN’s “Saturday Fight Live,” Callum Smith watches and breaks down his breakthrough fight against George Groves.

Callum Smith came of age when he fought then-super middleweight titleholder George Groves in September 2018 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

The British rivals were engaged in a competitive fight when Smith hurt Groves with a left hook and put him down for the count with a flurry of followup punches in Round 7 to become a world champion.

Smith said recently, “It’s still the best night of my career.”

The Liverpudlian has successfully defended two times, stopping Hassan N’Dam in June of last year and outpointing John Ryder in November. He also has become a potential opponent for superstar Canelo Alvarez.

In this installment of DAZN’s “Saturday Fight Live,” Smith watches and breaks down his fight against Groves

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Canelo Alvarez trainer Eddy Reynoso floats four possible foes for May

Eddy Reynoso, the trainer of Canelo Alvarez, said we’ll learn soon who his fighter will face in May.

Eddy Reynoso, the trainer of Canelo Alvarez, said his fighter’s opponent for May will be announced on Jan. 15, according to BoxingNews24.com. And it won’t be at 175 pounds.

At least four possible opponents are being considered, the website reported. In his last fight, Alvarez moved up to 175 pounds and stopped Sergey Kovalev to win a light heavyweight title on Nov. 2.

“There are a lot of names,” Reynoso said. “The (Gennadiy) Golovkin trilogy, Callum Smith, John Ryder, Billy Joe Saunders. “We have five months until the date we have in May for when Canelo always fights in.

“There’s plenty of time for Canelo to go back down to 160 or 168. That’s not a problem for us. Right now, we’re going to give it to DAZN to see what’s available to us out there. We plan on making an announcement for the fight in May for Canelo on January 15, after the New Year.”

Alvarez (53-1-2, 36 knockouts) has said repeatedly that he’s not excited about the prospect of facing Golovkin (40-1-1, 35 KOs) a third time, saying in effect “that’s finished business” after they drew in 2017 and Alvarez won the rematch on points last year.

However, it’s a fight the fans would embrace. And Alvarez also has said, “if it represents (good) business, why not?”

Golovkin, who won a vacant middleweight title by outpointing tough Sergiy Derevyanchenko in October, is tentatively scheduled to face mandatory challenger Kamil Szeremeta in February.

That means a January announcement might be too late for Golovkin, who presumably would jump at the chance to fight Alvarez one more time but might not wait around for the opportunity.

Smith, a 168-pound titleholder, is coming off a so-so performance against a surprisingly tough Ryder but won by a unanimous decision on Nov. 23. The Englishman is an attractive opponent because he holds the WBA super middleweight title.

Reynoso told BoxingNews24.com that Alvarez has not given up his WBA “regular” 168-pound title, contrary to some reports. Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize that belt.

Ryder (28-5, 16 KOs) presumably is in the picture because of his inspired performance against Smith (27-0, 19 KOs). Some believe the relatively unknown Londoner did enough to win the fight.

And Billy Joe Saunders (29-0, 14 KOs), another 168-pound titleholder from England, also is coming off a mediocre performance. He stopped Marcelo Coceres in the 11th round but struggled up until that point on Nov. 9.

John Ryder and the unfortunate plight of the boxing B-side

You may have heard that North Londoner John Ryder had the performance of his life on Saturday night at the Echo Park Arena in Liverpool.

OPINION

You might’ve heard that North Londoner John Ryder gave the performance of his life against hometown favorite and titleholder Callum Smith on Saturday in Liverpool. You might’ve also heard that it didn’t matter one iota. After 12 rounds, the judges gave Smith a clean sweep: 117-111, 116-112 and 116-112.

It was boxing’s latest mind-numbing deviation from reality.

Though the early rounds were nip and tuck, Ryder outworked and outlanded Smith for the majority of the second half of the fight, pushing his taller foe up against the ropes and ripping shots to the body and head. Not all of them landed, but some of the got through cleanly. Ryder was the aggressor and, more importantly, the more effective fighter. If Smith was supposed to be the best super middleweight in the world, he certainly did not look it that night. Moreover he had no answer for Ryder’s inside game. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112 for the challenger. Scorekeeping is subjective, sure, but to an extent. The official outcome seemed like a willful distortion of what actually took place in the ring.

The sensible thing to do would be for the organizers to arrange a rematch. Not going to happen, according to Smith’s trainer and manger John Gallagher.

“It was a good performance (from Ryder),” Gallagher quipped during the post-fight press conference, “but it doesn’t warrant a rematch.”

Gallagher was adamant that his man won comfortably.

“Callum Smith did a good fight tonight, and he held off the challenge from the mandatory,” Gallagher said. “… I think (Smith) lost one in the first six or seven (rounds). … John had a couple of good rounds in the middle, and Callum came back at the end. I had it 8-4 at the end of the bell, something like that. At least seven rounds.”

Did Gallagher forget that it was Smith who had his back against the ropes in Round 12, bowing under the weight of Ryder’s combinations? 

When a reporter mentioned that Ryder and his team would be pushing for a rematch, Gallagher scoffed.

“He’s fought, he’s won. It was his mandatory,” Gallagher said. “Now he’s got to move on. There are some good domestic fights (for Ryder) after that performance. John Ryder-Rocky Fielding II, that’s unfinished business there. That two fighters there, if Canelo (Alvarez) gives up his regular belt, they can fight for that.”

In other words, thanks for your effort, John, but back to the kiddie pool you go. The condescension continued, with Smith implying, quite ludicrously, that his poor performance was a result of Ryder not instilling any sense of fear in him.

“Fear brings out the best in me,” Smith said. “People are going to see how good I am when I’m in against the very best.

For Smith, it’s off to bigger and better things, like a potential clash with Alvarez.  

If Ryder expected to get a helping hand from his own promoter, Eddie Hearn, who also promotes Smith, he didn’t get it. Asked by Gallagher if he planned to petition the WBA, which sanctioned the bout, on Ryder’s behalf, Hearn replied, “It’s not up to me to appeal to the WBA, Joe. But I agree with you. I think (Ryder) should fight for one of the regular belts.”

Who needs enemies when you have friends like Hearn?

The collective comments reveal once more the brutal hierarchy of professional boxing. The A-side Smith will always get the benefit of the doubt and move on to bigger things, while the B-side, even on their best nights, end up having to go back to the drawing board. It’s a crying shame.

And Ryder is more familiar with the proverbial drawing board than most. He came up short in controversial losses to Rocky Fielding, Jack Arnfied and Billy Joe Saunders, a fight many observers felt Ryder did enough to win. Ryder was also dominating Nick Blackwell before he got caught with a shot in the seventh round. In other words, Ryder is better than what his record of 28-5 might indicate.

To his credit, Ryder stayed composed and professional during his post-fight interview on Saturday night. He felt he won the fight and that the scorecards were a bit wide, but he didn’t go off on a tirade about corruption in the sport. Not that anyone watching would have begrudged him for it.

In the end, it was the Callum Smith show, and Gallagher was not going to entertain another bad word.

“I’d also like to say there’s too much negativity,” Gallagher said. “We’ve got to be celebrating Callum Smith tonight. He fought his mandatory, knocked back the challenger John Ryder, won it, no matter what they say. It’s been 11 years since a British fighter defended the Ring Magazine belt in this country, Hatton, before that Calzaghe. You guys stop being so negative on the kid. He should be getting rounds of applause here.”

Applause and a large rug to sweep the night under.

Callum Smith defeats John Ryder by an iffy unanimous decision

Callum Smith outpointed John Ryder over 12 rounds in their super middleweight fight, but questions about boxing’s integrity have flared up.

Boxing’s gutter of bad decisions just got a bit more crowded.

It didn’t matter that super middleweight titleholder Callum Smith was bleeding from cuts, breathing heavily and getting battered on the ropes late in a 12-round fight. In the end, he still won a unanimous decision over mandatory challenger John Ryder at Echo Park Arena in Liverpool.

The scores were 117-111, 116-112 and 116-112, which added up to yet another controversial result. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112 in favor of Ryder.

It was supposed to be a showcase of sorts for the Liverpudlian Smith (27-0, 19 knockouts), who had not fought at home in nearly two years. It was anything but. The much shorter Ryder, a big underdog, consistently beat the 6-foot-3 Smith to the punch, outworking him on the inside, where he wailed away with convincing body shots. Later on, Ryder began mixing in hooks to the head. It was a breakout performance from Ryder (28-5, 16 KOs), who had previously lost to Billy Joe Saunders and Rocky Fielding and had mulled retirement at various times in his career.

Callum Smith (left) did enough to impress the judges but many viewers weren’t as convinced about his performance against John Ryder. Alex Livesey / Getty Images

“You know what, I got in there with the world No. 1 and I thought i just edged it,” a disappointed Ryder said afterward. “I didn’t do it tonight, but I thought I proved myself on the world stag. … I thought I forced the fight a lot. I thought he was just nicking rounds. I feel I did enough to win that.”

Smith looked sluggish. Though he was able to keep Ryder at bay with his jab early on, by the second half of the fight, Smith was drowning on the ropes as Ryder pressed harder and landed the cleaner shots. In Round 4, an inadvertent headbutt opened a cut above Smith’s right eye, but it hardly instilled a sense of urgency in Smith, who seemed to fight in one gear throughout the fight. Smith admitted as much in the post-fight interview.

“Early on I found it a little bit too easy,” Smith said. “I was in first gear for a little bit too long. Everything thing I was throwing was landing. When he was closing the distant I probably have dealt with it better. He’s very, very short and he got very close to me. He smothered me, and I allowed him to.”

Smith, the titleholder, emerged with a unanimous decision victory over a game John Ryder on Saturday in Liverpool.  Alex Livesey  /Getty Images

By Round 5, a noticeable mark appeared below Smith’s right eye. Though Smith had a very good Round 6, in which he landed several straight rights, Ryder began to pull away in the second half. The left hook that Smith is known for sailed over Ryder’s head all fight long. Round 8 saw Ryder tag Smith with a blistering combination to end the round.

“I knew (Ryder) was a tough fighter,” Smith said. “I knew it was going to be that kind of fight. He’s good at getting really close. He stopped me from doing what I’m good at. It wasn’t the best performance. But I thought I won most of the early rounds. I thought I only lost one or only two out of the first eight. He worked hard — I give him his due — at the end. … I think I was due for a bad one. It was the first time I got cut in a fight. … I’ll be better fighter because of it.”

Smith seemed to hint that his poor performance was a result of not facing one of the elite fighters in the division.

“There was no fear tonight,” he said. “I didn’t believe John Ryder was good enough to beat me. The fights that bring the best out of me are the top four (in the division). That’s what I want now. I want the big names. … I just want a big name where that fear brings out the better in me.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Callum Smith, John Ryder make weight for their fight in England

Super middleweight titleholder Callum Smith and challenger John Ryder both made weight for Saturday’s fight in Liverpool.

Super middleweight titleholder Callum Smith and mandatory challenger John Ryder made weight Friday for their fight Saturday at Echo Arena in Smith’s hometown of Liverpool, England on DAZN.

Both Smith and Ryder weighed in at 167.4, .6 under the 168-pound limit.

Smith (26-0, 19 knockouts) won his title by a seventh-round knockout of countryman George Groves in the World Boxing Super series final in September of last year. He has only had one fight since then, a third-round stoppage of Hassan N’Dam in June on the undercard of Anthony Joshua-Andy Ruiz Jr. in New York City.

Ryder (28-4, 16 KOs) has won four consecutive fights since his split-decision loss to Rocky Fielding in 2017. In his last fight, he stopped Bilal Akkawy inside three rounds in May on the Canelo Alvarez-Daniel Jacobs undercard.

Callum Smith faces pressure against John Ryder because of what lies ahead

There are heightened stakes and perhaps some additional pressure on Callum Smith on Saturday in a super middleweight bout as critical as any in his unbeaten career. He faces John Ryder. But it is more than just another fight. It’s a projected …

There are heightened stakes and perhaps some additional pressure on Callum Smith on Saturday in a super middleweight bout as critical as any in his unbeaten career. He faces John Ryder. But it is more than just another fight.

It’s a projected springboard for Smith (26-0, 19 knockouts), who has hopes for bigger names, bigger crowds and bigger money in 2020.

You’ll find Smith’s name on a list of possible opponents for Canelo Alvarez, who figures to fight again in May. A fight at light heavyweight against Sergey Kovalev has also has been mentioned.

Mostly, there’s been talk about a 168-pound showdown with U.K. rival Billy Joe Saunders in March or April at Anfield, a Liverpool soccer stadium with a seating capacity of about 54,000. Promoter Eddie Hearn foresees a huge crowd for that one. But there’s already talk that Saunders, who failed to impress in a stoppage of Marcelo Coceres on Nov. 9, isn’t a big enough name.

“It’s an opportunity, and we will see what happens,” Smith trainer Joe Gallagher told The Mirror, a U.K. newspaper “But we don’t want Anfield with just 10,000 there. We want Anfield with a proper dance partner.

Callum Smith (right) is coming off an impressive knockout of Hassan N’Dam in June. Timothy A. Clary / AFP via Getty Images)

“From what I hear about Billy Joe Saunders, he either wants to move back down to middleweight or get the Canelo fight. But I don’t think Billy Joe Saunders would bring 30-40,000 in.

“Just look at his last fights. We will just have to wait and see. But, first and foremost, we have to take care of John Ryder, and he’s in the form of his life.”

Gallagher knows about the perils of looking ahead instead of focusing on the immediate. Ryder (28-4, 16 KOs), a mandatory challenger for Smith’s belt, has some momentum. He’s won four straight since dropping a split decision to Rocky Fielding on April 22 ,2017.

Smith fights Ryder at the 11,000-seat Echo Arena, also in Liverpool, Smith’s hometown, on DAZN in the U.S. and Sky Sports in the U.K.

“We haven’t see the best of Callum Smith yet,” Gallagher said. “That’s the frightening thing. Against George Groves (on Sept. 28, 2018), I was really annoyed that he stopped (Groves) in the seventh round because he had so much more to show in terms of shot selection.

“Listen, he’s still got huge potential and hopefully John Ryder will be able to bring another skill set out of Callum for everyone to sit back and say he is the real deal. We did testing last week and everything is the best it’s been. His weight is down. That tells you everything that he won’t take any challenge lightly. He’s absolutely on it.’’