Frank Sanchez puts Junior Fa down three times, stops him in seventh round

Frank Sanchez put Junior Fa down three times before stopping him in the seventh round Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

Frank Sanchez got the featured bouts off to an explosive start Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

The skillful Cuban knocked put fellow heavyweight contender Junior Fa down three times before finally stopping him in the seventh round of a 10-round bout.

The fight was largely uneventful until the final seconds of Round 6, when Sanchez (24-0, 17 KOs) put Fa (20-3, 11 KOs) down with a straight right hand to the chin.

Another big right from the Cuban, followed by a flurry of hard shots, put Fa down again and hurt him about a minute into Round 7. The Kiwi was able to get up but he went down once more — again from a right — with about 30 seconds to go.

This time the referee stopped the fight, giving Sanchez his fourth consecutive stoppage. The end came with 18 seconds remaining in the round.

Fa has now lost three of his last four fights.

Frank Sanchez puts Junior Fa down three times, stops him in seventh round

Frank Sanchez put Junior Fa down three times before stopping him in the seventh round Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

Frank Sanchez got the featured bouts off to an explosive start Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

The skillful Cuban knocked put fellow heavyweight contender Junior Fa down three times before finally stopping him in the seventh round of a 10-round bout.

The fight was largely uneventful until the final seconds of Round 6, when Sanchez (24-0, 17 KOs) put Fa (20-3, 11 KOs) down with a straight right hand to the chin.

Another big right from the Cuban, followed by a flurry of hard shots, put Fa down again and hurt him about a minute into Round 7. The Kiwi was able to get up but he went down once more — again from a right — with about 30 seconds to go.

This time the referee stopped the fight, giving Sanchez his fourth consecutive stoppage. The end came with 18 seconds remaining in the round.

Fa has now lost three of his last four fights.

Fight Week: Canelo Alvarez returns to defend 168-pound titles

Fight Week: Canelo Alvarez returns on Saturday to defend his 168-pound titles.

FIGHT WEEK

Canelo Alvarez makes the first defense of his 168-pound titles against prohibitive underdog Avni Yildirim on Saturday night in Miami

***

DANIELE SCARDINA (18-0, 14 KOs) VS.
CESAR NUNEZ (17-2-1, 9 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9KlsKzTnIU

  • When: Friday, Feb. 26
  • Where: Allianz Cloud, Milan, Italy
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • At stake: European title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Maxim Prodan vs. Nicola Cristofori, welterweights; Francesco Grandelli vs. Davide Tassi, featherweights; Tobia Loriga vs. Nicholas Esposito, welterweights
  • Prediction: Scardina KO 9
  • Background: Scardina is a 28-year-old Italian who is based in Miami. The capable boxer-puncher from the town of Rozzano has had success against European-level opposition but has yet to face elite opposition. He has a good knockout record but has gone the distance in his last three fights. He was last in the ring in Dec. 18, when he outpointed Serhiy Radchenko. Nunez, a 35-year-old Spaniard, probably isn’t a significant threat to Scardina. He’s coming off a second-round TKO victory over journeyman Alejandro Mostazo in Spain but failed to win his previous three fights, in which he was 0-2-1. He was stopped by light-punching Vincent Feigenbutz (eighth round) and Edgar Berlanga (first) in those losses.

***

CANELO ALVAREZ (54-1-2, 36 KOs)
VS. AVNI YILDIRIM (21-2, 12 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev2k8kucKTk

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • TV/Stream: DAZN and PPV
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • At stake: Alvarez’s WBA and WBC titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Alvarez No. 2
  • Odds: Alvarez 21-1 (BetMGM)
  • Also on the card: Julio Cesar Martinez vs. McWilliams Arroyo, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title); Zhang Zhilei vs. Jerry Forrest, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Alvarez KO 7
  • Background: Alvarez will be making the first defense of the titles he won by easily outpointing Callum Smith on Dec. 19. The 30-year-old Mexican star agreed to fight Yildirim because the Turk is his mandatory challenger and to keep busy after a year-long layoff before the Smith fight. He could fight four times this year, including a title-unification showdown with Billy Joe Saunders in May and possibly another unification matchup with Caleb Plant in September. Yildirim, a 29-year-old from Turkey, is a solid all-round fighter but not in Alvarez’s class. He has a few notable victories (Aaron Pryor Jr. and Marco Antonio Periban) but was blown out by Chris Eubank Jr. in three rounds and lost a unanimous technical decision to Anthony Dirrell in a fight for the then-vacant WBC 168-pound title in February 2019. That was Yildirim’s most-recent fight, which means he will have been out of the ring for two years when he faces Alvarez. The challenger agreed to step aside temporarily so Alvarez could fight then-champion Smith for the titles.

[lawrence-related id=17675,17520]

***

KAMSHYBEK KUNKABAYEV (2-0, 2 KOs)
VS. STEVEN WARD (13-1, 4 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJ_JTdHHr2Q

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Tynyshpayev Academy of Transport and Communications, Almaty, Kazakhstan
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Evgeny Smirnov vs. Nurtas Azhbenov, lightweights; Zhanibek Alimkhanuly vs. TBA, middleweights
  • Prediction: Kunkabayev KO 7
  • Background: Kunkabayev is another former amateur star on a fast track in the professional ranks. The 29-year-old two-time silver medalist at the World Championships is taking part in a scheduled 10-rounder in only his third pro fight, albeit in his home country. He is a southpaw. Ward, 30, is probably best known for taking on Game of Thrones star “Mountain,” Thor Bjornsson, in an exhibition last month. However, he’s had some success as a legitimate boxer. He started his career 12-0, capped by a technical decision over Liam Conroy to win a minor light heavyweight title in June 2019 only to be stopped in one round by Ricards Bolotniks at the same weight six months later. He bounced back to outpoint journeyman Jone Volau in his first fight as a full-fledged cruiserweight this past September. Bottom line: Ward will be in with a naturally bigger, better and (if you count his amateur career) more experienced opponent.

***

ANTHONY DIRRELL (33-2-1, 24 KOs)
VS. KYRONE DAVIS (15-2, 6 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPMe-VIFYC4&t=149s

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall, Los Angeles
  • TV/Stream: FOX
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Jesus Alejandro Ramos vs. Jesus Emilio Bojorquez, 10 rounds, welterweights
  • Prediction: Dirrell UD
  • Background: Dirrell, a two-time 168-pound titleholder, has been out of the ring since September 2019. That’s when he lost his second belt to David Benavidez by a ninth-round knockout, the result of a deep cut above Dirrell’s right eye that was caused by a punch and ended the fight prematurely. Dirrell was competitive in that bout but faded in the last several rounds. The native of Flint, Mich., had won six consecutive fights before that, including a technical decision over Avni Yildirim in February 2019 to regain a belt. He also was cut in that fight. Dirrell, 36, might be making his last run at another title. Davis, 26, is a capable boxer but is moving up in class. The resident of Wilmington, Del., has beaten two journeymen since he lost a unanimous decision against Patrick Day in March 2018. His last fight was in January of last year, when he stopped Antonio Todd in four rounds.

[lawrence-related id=614]

***

JOSEPH PARKER (27-2, 21 KOs)
VS. JUNIOR FA (19-0, 10 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6F2x47-ebX0

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Spark Arena, Auckland
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight (unlimited)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Alrie Meleisea vs. Lani Daniels, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Parker UD
  • Background: Parker’s mission is to remain in contention for a title shot should one present himself. The 29-year-old former beltholder from New Zealand has won three consecutive fights – all by knockout – since he lost to Anthony Joshua (which cost him his title) and Dillian Whyte back to back in 2018. Parker last fought in February of last year, when he stopped journeyman Shawndell Winters in five rounds. Fa, also from New Zealand, reportedly defeated Parker twice in the amateurs but has yet to reach the elite level as a professional. Of course, this is his opportunity to get there. He’s coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Devin Vargas in November 2019. Fa is 6-foot-5, an inch taller than Parker, and thick. He weighed 267.5 for the Vargas fight. Parker weighed 245.25 against Winters.

Fight Week: Canelo Alvarez returns to defend 168-pound titles

Fight Week: Canelo Alvarez returns on Saturday to defend his 168-pound titles.

FIGHT WEEK

Canelo Alvarez makes the first defense of his 168-pound titles against prohibitive underdog Avni Yildirim on Saturday night in Miami

***

DANIELE SCARDINA (18-0, 14 KOs) VS.
CESAR NUNEZ (17-2-1, 9 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9KlsKzTnIU

  • When: Friday, Feb. 26
  • Where: Allianz Cloud, Milan, Italy
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • At stake: European title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Maxim Prodan vs. Nicola Cristofori, welterweights; Francesco Grandelli vs. Davide Tassi, featherweights; Tobia Loriga vs. Nicholas Esposito, welterweights
  • Prediction: Scardina KO 9
  • Background: Scardina is a 28-year-old Italian who is based in Miami. The capable boxer-puncher from the town of Rozzano has had success against European-level opposition but has yet to face elite opposition. He has a good knockout record but has gone the distance in his last three fights. He was last in the ring in Dec. 18, when he outpointed Serhiy Radchenko. Nunez, a 35-year-old Spaniard, probably isn’t a significant threat to Scardina. He’s coming off a second-round TKO victory over journeyman Alejandro Mostazo in Spain but failed to win his previous three fights, in which he was 0-2-1. He was stopped by light-punching Vincent Feigenbutz (eighth round) and Edgar Berlanga (first) in those losses.

***

CANELO ALVAREZ (54-1-2, 36 KOs)
VS. AVNI YILDIRIM (21-2, 12 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev2k8kucKTk

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami
  • TV/Stream: DAZN and PPV
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • At stake: Alvarez’s WBA and WBC titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Alvarez No. 2
  • Odds: Alvarez 21-1 (BetMGM)
  • Also on the card: Julio Cesar Martinez vs. McWilliams Arroyo, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title); Zhang Zhilei vs. Jerry Forrest, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Alvarez KO 7
  • Background: Alvarez will be making the first defense of the titles he won by easily outpointing Callum Smith on Dec. 19. The 30-year-old Mexican star agreed to fight Yildirim because the Turk is his mandatory challenger and to keep busy after a year-long layoff before the Smith fight. He could fight four times this year, including a title-unification showdown with Billy Joe Saunders in May and possibly another unification matchup with Caleb Plant in September. Yildirim, a 29-year-old from Turkey, is a solid all-round fighter but not in Alvarez’s class. He has a few notable victories (Aaron Pryor Jr. and Marco Antonio Periban) but was blown out by Chris Eubank Jr. in three rounds and lost a unanimous technical decision to Anthony Dirrell in a fight for the then-vacant WBC 168-pound title in February 2019. That was Yildirim’s most-recent fight, which means he will have been out of the ring for two years when he faces Alvarez. The challenger agreed to step aside temporarily so Alvarez could fight then-champion Smith for the titles.

[lawrence-related id=17675,17520]

***

KAMSHYBEK KUNKABAYEV (2-0, 2 KOs)
VS. STEVEN WARD (13-1, 4 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJ_JTdHHr2Q

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Tynyshpayev Academy of Transport and Communications, Almaty, Kazakhstan
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Evgeny Smirnov vs. Nurtas Azhbenov, lightweights; Zhanibek Alimkhanuly vs. TBA, middleweights
  • Prediction: Kunkabayev KO 7
  • Background: Kunkabayev is another former amateur star on a fast track in the professional ranks. The 29-year-old two-time silver medalist at the World Championships is taking part in a scheduled 10-rounder in only his third pro fight, albeit in his home country. He is a southpaw. Ward, 30, is probably best known for taking on Game of Thrones star “Mountain,” Thor Bjornsson, in an exhibition last month. However, he’s had some success as a legitimate boxer. He started his career 12-0, capped by a technical decision over Liam Conroy to win a minor light heavyweight title in June 2019 only to be stopped in one round by Ricards Bolotniks at the same weight six months later. He bounced back to outpoint journeyman Jone Volau in his first fight as a full-fledged cruiserweight this past September. Bottom line: Ward will be in with a naturally bigger, better and (if you count his amateur career) more experienced opponent.

***

ANTHONY DIRRELL (33-2-1, 24 KOs)
VS. KYRONE DAVIS (15-2, 6 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPMe-VIFYC4&t=149s

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall, Los Angeles
  • TV/Stream: FOX
  • Division: Super middleweight (168 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Jesus Alejandro Ramos vs. Jesus Emilio Bojorquez, 10 rounds, welterweights
  • Prediction: Dirrell UD
  • Background: Dirrell, a two-time 168-pound titleholder, has been out of the ring since September 2019. That’s when he lost his second belt to David Benavidez by a ninth-round knockout, the result of a deep cut above Dirrell’s right eye that was caused by a punch and ended the fight prematurely. Dirrell was competitive in that bout but faded in the last several rounds. The native of Flint, Mich., had won six consecutive fights before that, including a technical decision over Avni Yildirim in February 2019 to regain a belt. He also was cut in that fight. Dirrell, 36, might be making his last run at another title. Davis, 26, is a capable boxer but is moving up in class. The resident of Wilmington, Del., has beaten two journeymen since he lost a unanimous decision against Patrick Day in March 2018. His last fight was in January of last year, when he stopped Antonio Todd in four rounds.

[lawrence-related id=614]

***

JOSEPH PARKER (27-2, 21 KOs)
VS. JUNIOR FA (19-0, 10 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6F2x47-ebX0

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 27
  • Where: Spark Arena, Auckland
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Heavyweight (unlimited)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Alrie Meleisea vs. Lani Daniels, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Parker UD
  • Background: Parker’s mission is to remain in contention for a title shot should one present himself. The 29-year-old former beltholder from New Zealand has won three consecutive fights – all by knockout – since he lost to Anthony Joshua (which cost him his title) and Dillian Whyte back to back in 2018. Parker last fought in February of last year, when he stopped journeyman Shawndell Winters in five rounds. Fa, also from New Zealand, reportedly defeated Parker twice in the amateurs but has yet to reach the elite level as a professional. Of course, this is his opportunity to get there. He’s coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Devin Vargas in November 2019. Fa is 6-foot-5, an inch taller than Parker, and thick. He weighed 267.5 for the Vargas fight. Parker weighed 245.25 against Winters.

Joseph Parker vs. Junior Fa set for Dec. 11 in Auckland

Joseph Parker is scheduled to face Junior Fa on Dec. 11 (in New Zealand) at Spark Arena in Auckland, the hometown of both fighters.

Joseph Parker will return to the ring in one of the biggest-ever fights in New Zealand.

The former heavyweight titleholder is scheduled to face Junior Fa on Dec. 11 (in New Zealand) at Spark Arena in Auckland, the hometown of both fighters. The card will be streamed on DAZN.

Parker, ranked by three of the four major sanctioning bodies, is coming off a fifth-round knockout of Shawndell Winters in February in Dallas.

Fa (19-0, 10 KOs), also ranked by one alphabet organization, last fought in November, when he easily outpointed Devin Vargas in Salt Lake City. He and Parker were rivals in the amateur ranks.

“This is going to be war,” promoter Eddie Hearn said. “… There’s plenty of needle with the amateur rivalry and there’s national pride at stake. A win over Fa will catapult Joe back into world ritle contention.”

Said Lou DiBella, Fa’s promoter: “I’ve always believed that Junior Fa had the ability to become a world champion and, on December 11, he’ll have the opportunity to prove that against a former heavyweight champion and amateur rival in countryman Joseph Parker.

“Not only is this matchup one of the biggest fights in New Zealand history, it has high significance on the heavyweight landscape worldwide, with the winner closing in on a world title shot. With a win, Junior can become a New Zealand sports superstar and a worldwide boxing star in one night.”

Parker (27-2, 21 KOs) won his title by outpointing Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2016, successfully defended it two times and then lost it to Anthony Joshua by decision in 2018.

[lawrence-related id=9591,7714]

Joseph Parker vs. Junior Fa set for Dec. 11 in Auckland

Joseph Parker is scheduled to face Junior Fa on Dec. 11 (in New Zealand) at Spark Arena in Auckland, the hometown of both fighters.

Joseph Parker will return to the ring in one of the biggest-ever fights in New Zealand.

The former heavyweight titleholder is scheduled to face Junior Fa on Dec. 11 (in New Zealand) at Spark Arena in Auckland, the hometown of both fighters. The card will be streamed on DAZN.

Parker, ranked by three of the four major sanctioning bodies, is coming off a fifth-round knockout of Shawndell Winters in February in Dallas.

Fa (19-0, 10 KOs), also ranked by one alphabet organization, last fought in November, when he easily outpointed Devin Vargas in Salt Lake City. He and Parker were rivals in the amateur ranks.

“This is going to be war,” promoter Eddie Hearn said. “… There’s plenty of needle with the amateur rivalry and there’s national pride at stake. A win over Fa will catapult Joe back into world ritle contention.”

Said Lou DiBella, Fa’s promoter: “I’ve always believed that Junior Fa had the ability to become a world champion and, on December 11, he’ll have the opportunity to prove that against a former heavyweight champion and amateur rival in countryman Joseph Parker.

“Not only is this matchup one of the biggest fights in New Zealand history, it has high significance on the heavyweight landscape worldwide, with the winner closing in on a world title shot. With a win, Junior can become a New Zealand sports superstar and a worldwide boxing star in one night.”

Parker (27-2, 21 KOs) won his title by outpointing Andy Ruiz Jr. in 2016, successfully defended it two times and then lost it to Anthony Joshua by decision in 2018.

[lawrence-related id=9591,7714]

Conspicuous absence and the politics of promoter-network relations

Lou DiBella used to put on a lot of shows for Showtime, but that hasn’t been the case recently. The promoter gives his take on why.

Showtime has presented a robust slate of programming in recent months featuring the likes of Gervonta Davis, Claressa Shields, and most recently, welterweight contender Danny Garcia. The same goes for ShoBox, the premium network’s long-running series devoted to up-and-coming prospects.

But conspicuously missing from these shows have been fighters connected to Lou DiBella, the longtime New York promoter who has worked extensively with Showtime in the past.

What’s going on?

DiBella says he has been embargoed, meaning Showtime isn’t doing business with him. Stephen Espinoza, president of Showtime Sports, insists that isn’t so. The only thing we know: Fighters from DiBella’s stable, many of whom need dates, aren’t fighting on the network.

The only recent exception was DiBella-promoted Alicia Napoleon, who fought on the Claressa Shields-Ivana Habazin card on Jan. 10. And DiBella cautioned not to read anything into the inclusion of Napoleon. “That’s only because they wanted Alicia as a future opponent for Claressa,” he said.

The fissure evidently stems from a meeting set up by DiBella that brought together heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder, the star of the Premier Boxing Champions stable who fights on Fox and Showtime, and DAZN, a rival of PBC, in March of last year.

Plus, DiBella has brought other fighters to the U.K.-based streaming service, including Regis Prograis. The former junior welterweight titleholder’s most-recent fight on Showtime was against Julius Indongo on March 9, 2018. His next fight was on a Top Rank-promoted main event on ESPN. Afterward, Prograis joined the World Boxing Super Series, in which he lost in the final to Josh Taylor. That fight was streamed on DAZN.

“No one is beholden to a network. [DiBella] doesn’t owe me his business, but at the same time there is a consistent evaluation,” Espinoza told Tha Boxing Voice in a Jan. 22 interview. “Part of the calculation of who we do business with … part of it is who is loyal and who we believe does business in the right way with us. I was not happy that we put that much into Regis Prograis and he went somewhere else.

“OK, that doesn’t mean I’m never doing business with Lou again but [Sergiy] Derevyanchenko, [DiBella] took him to DAZN. … Put it another way. You’re in my shoes, you’ve seen guys come up with Lou and then see them pay off somewhere else. Would you forget [that]?”

DiBella doesn’t buy that story. The promoter contends that the real reason he is “persona non grata” at Showtime is because of the meeting between Wilder and DAZN’s Executive Chairman John Skipper. Wilder’s managers Al Haymon, who heads PBC, and Shelly Finkel were also reported to have attended the meeting, in which Skipper reportedly offered Wilder a $100 million, three-fight deal to fight on the streaming platform. Wilder turned it down, citing “dishonesty” from DAZN, and went on to face Dominic Breazeale on Showtime and reportedly made in the neighborhood of $20 million. (Skipper later conceded to The Athletic that he was “too brash” during negotiations.)

DiBella promoted nine straight Wilder fights, beginning with his first title defense against Eric Molina in June 2015 and ending with his first fight with Tyson Fury in December 2018, according to BoxRec.com. DiBella believed he was acting “out of incredible loyalty” to Wilder when he arranged the meeting with DAZN but that it did not sit well with Espinoza, Finkel and Haymon, who has lucrative output deals with Showtime and Fox.

It’s not clear whether DiBella’s decision “to go rogue,” if that’s what it was, forced Haymon and Espinoza to meet DAZN’s outsize financial offer to ensure that Wilder did not join a rival entity. But as DiBella put it, “My only loyalty was to Deontay.”

“DiBella Entertainment is not embargoed by Showtime,” Espinzoa told Boxing Junkie in a statement. “No promoters are. But it would not serve any useful purpose to continue this in a public forum. Lou and I can discuss future business privately.”

DiBella feels differently. Showtime’s main content partner is the PBC; the two entities have a deal that takes them through next year. With that being the case, DiBella believes there was never going to be a significant offer from Showtime to have Prograis appear on its main platform precisely because the majority of Showtime’s budget was allocated to PBC fighters.

“Even though I was embargoed by Showtime because of the Wilder-DAZN meeting, after the conclusion of the WBSS, I personally offered Regis to Showtime in a meeting with Espinoza at the Palm restaurant [in New York City] on Friday, November 15, 2019,” DiBella said. “I made it clear to him that we were open to one fight or a multi-fight deal with Showtime. On a stack of Bibles and my father’s grave, I have not received any offer from Showtime, for one or more fights, to this date.

“In fact, in multiple conversations, Stephen conveyed to me that he was concerned about a lack of big fights for Regis because Al Haymon would not provide his fighters to fight Regis on Showtime. Obviously, Regis is managed by Pete Berg, Sam Katkovski and Mark Wahlberg, not Al. Obviously, I am no longer a PBC promoter. Stephen also reminded me that he had a Haymon-PBC deal through the conclusion of 2021 and that most of his budget was committed to that deal. All of the above has been conveyed to Regis’ management. ANY offer would have been conveyed and strongly considered. It still would be.”

Added DiBella: “This has nothing to do with Regis. I continued to work with (Showtime) a year after, including Wilder-Fury 1, and ShoBox events (O’Shaquie Foster-Jon Fernandez on Sept. 21), after Regis moved on from Showtime and prior to the Wilder meeting with DAZN. It has everything to do with the meeting between Deontay Wilder and DAZN.”

In addition to not getting dates on Showtime, DiBella no longer promotes any PBC-related cards in the New York area. For several years, DiBella was the chief promoter for PBC events at Barclays Center. The last PBC show he promoted was the Showtime-televised main event between Brain Castano and Erislandy Lara on March 2, 2019. He orchestrated the Wilder-DAZN meeting roughly two weeks later. Most of the Barclays Center cards since then have been promoted by California-based Tom Brown of TGB Promotions.

Timothy Smith, spokesperson for the PBC, said in a statement that “The PBC has a deal with Showtime where we provide content for its boxing programming. Showtime uses other promoters for its SHOBOX programming. Whatever the business relationship is between Stephen and Lou, you have to ask them about that.

“As far as being embargoed by PBC, I’m not sure I know what that means. We have consolidated much of the promotional work for the PBC with TGB because they do a fantastic job. We continue to work with other promoters, depending upon the show. We’re currently working with Top Rank to help stage Wilder-Fury 2.”

In the Tha Boxing Voice interview, Espinoza went on to say: “Lou has never once said to me any of the names (prospects Junior Fa and Charles Conwell) that you just said, not one time. Lou has a lot of business at DAZN and when he is tired of doing business over there he’ll pick up the phone and call me. Never once – and I will say this to you definitively – he has never once mentioned any one of those names to me and that’s not what a good promoter does. If a good promoter wants guys on a network, he is emailing, texting, sending me flyers, [direct messaging] me, saying, ‘You’ve got to see this guy,’ and I’ve never once heard any one of those names once from his mouth in a conversation.”

DiBella not only remembers the situation differently, but he called Espinoza’s explanation “empirically false,” pointing out that Showtime had a contractual claim on Prograis.

“I asked Stephen if there was an interest in stepping up because (at that point) Regis was looking for more money and not being on ShoBox and Stephen basically told us to take that opportunity,” DiBella told Boxing Junkie. “Regis went to ESPN and WBSS amicably. I have unequivocal proof of that. Showtime waived the right of first negotiation-last refusal that they were granted when they televised Prograis-Indongo. In exchange, I told Showtime that I would offer them Regis’ first fight after the tournament.

Added DiBella: “I’m in shock over the [Espinoza] interview. I thought we were finally getting to normalized things. I’m beyond disbelief.”

DiBella was referring to the fact that his fighter, Napoleon, fought on the Shields-Habazin main event on Jan. 10. Espinoza’s interview with Tha Boxing Voice took place two weeks later. DiBella takes issue with Espinoza’s comment that he was not offering his fighters to his network, citing what he believes is the ongoing embargo. Recently, DiBella says Espinoza offered another ShoBox date to one of his fighters, middleweight prospect Charles Conwell. Dibella is hopeful that this is the beginning of a thaw.

“I recently just had Alicia Napoleon on a Showtime fight time card,” he said.” I thought the embargo was lifted a month or two ago. He called me to use Alicia Napoleon in a fight. How come the embargo was sort of finally lifted and [Showtime senior vice president] Gordon Hall told me and [co-promoter] Tony Holden that Charles Conwell has a April ShoBox? So that happened because I was never offering him or that happened because maybe he was lifting an embargo? If this all started with Regis Prograis, how come I did so much work for Showtime after Regis fought on ESPN?

“What can a good promoter do when he’s embargoed?”

Junior Fa outpoints Devin Vargas in entertaining heavyweight scrap

Junior Fa defeats Devin Vargas in a 10-round heavyweight bout at the Salt Palace in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Rising Kiwi heavyweight Junior Fa notched his fourth victory this year Friday at the Salt Palace in Salt Lake City, Utah, outpointing a game Devin Vargas over 10 spirited rounds.

The scores were 99-89, 97-91 and 100-88, all in favor of Fa.

Fa, whose family is from Tonga, is a native of New Zealand but this was effectively a home game for him because Utah has a large Tongan population. But if Fa (19-0, 10 knockouts) was expecting an easy homecoming, he was sorely mistaken. He had to work for all 10 rounds. Despite the marked size difference – Fa was considerably bigger – the 37-year-old Vargas (21-6, 9 KOs) did all he could to make his opponent uncomfortable.

After taking some hard leather early on, Vargas was able to get Fa’s attention in Round 4 with a jolting uppercut. Vargas followed that up in the next round with a left hand that rocked Fa, who began to retreat.

Midway through the round, though, Fa stopped Vargas in his tracks with a left to the liver that forced Vargas to take a knee. Vargas took most of the count before getting up and, in a savvy move, also spit out his mouth guard to buy some more time. But Fa took control of the fight at that point.

Fa would send Vargas writhing to the canvas once more in the eighth round with a left hook.

“It was a bit (harder) than I thought it was going to be,” Fa said afterward.  “I just wanna train a bit harder, fight better fighters, work on my craft. And, hopefully, I’ll be back in Utah.”

At the top of the undercard, Fa’s countryman Hemi Ahio had what amounted to a breezy walk in the park, scoring three knockdowns over blubbery Joshua Tufte en route to a second-round stoppage in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout.

The hard-hitting Ahio (16-0, 11 KOs), who had virtually no amateur experience, scored the first knockdown late in the opening round courtesy of a right hand as Tufte (19-4, 9 KOs) sat on the ropes. Early in the next round, Ahio downed Tufte once more. A few moments later, Ahio connected on a right hand that put Tufte down for good, as referee Chet Fullmer mercifully waved off the bout. The stoppage came at 1:10 of the second round.

After nine sleepy rounds of a scheduled 10-round welterweight bout, Ivan Golub decided to turn it up a notch.

The Brooklyn-based Ukrainian worked patiently behind his jab all night against an especially reserved Janer Gonzalez, but he ended matters on a violent note. Midway through the 10th and final round, Golub (18-1, 14 KOs) connected on a chopping left hand that flattened Gonzalez (19-3-1, 15 KOs). The fight was immediately waved off at the 1:56 mark.

There was relatively little action, as Gonzalez sought to play keep away for most of the fight, throwing but a handful of punches each round. The southpaw Golub, however, pumped his jab and repeatedly landed stiff left hands to the body.

There was a minor kerfuffle after the eighth round, as it appeared that Gonzalez’s trainer believed the bout was set for eight rounds.

In the opener, journeyman Mike Guy pulled off a mild upset, defeating Denis Douglin by a split decision in an eight-round super middleweight bout. The scores were 78-74, 77-75 and 75-77.

It was a patchy fight early on involving lots of holding, thanks mainly to Guy, who is known for trying to rough up his opponents on the inside. It showed midway through the first round, when a clash of heads caused a cut over Douglin’s left eye.

The southpaw Douglin (22-7, 14 KOs) had some success landing the straight left, but he had trouble adapting to Guy’s unorthodox rhythm. In Round 3, Douglin landed a straight left that opened up a bloody cut underneath Guy’s right eye. It didn’t seem to affect Guy much, as he fought well in the fourth and fifth rounds, rocking Douglin a few times with clubbing right hands. In the final round, Guy (12-4-1, 5 KOs) closed the show with a nice flurry.

Leading up to the fight, Douglin (22-7, 14KOs) swore that he would retire from boxing should he lose another fight. This was Douglin’s first fight in nearly a year.