Danny Garcia wants another title at 147 and one at 154 to complete legacy

Danny Garcia wants to win one more title at 147 pounds and then win one at 154 to complete his legacy.

Danny Garcia said he will eventually move up to 154 pounds in pursuit of a world title in a third weight class. Not yet, though. He has more he wants to accomplish at 147.

Garcia was tentatively scheduled to fight titleholder Errol Spence Jr. on January 25 but Spence’s horrific car accident in October forced him to change plans. He ended up easily outpointing Ivan Redkach on that date at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

Garcia (36-2, 21 KOs) still wants Spence, who holds two belts, but he has a long list of options that appeal to him.

“Yes, that’s what we want,” Garcia said on The PBC Podcast. “We want [Spence] … or Manny Pacquiao or a rematch with Keith Thurman or Shawn Porter or even Mikey Garcia. That would be a big fight. … Any of those fights could be next for me.”

And if it’s Spence?

“I feel it’s a great style for me,” Garcia said. “Porter hit him a lot. I’ve seen things in the Mikey Garcia fight that I could definitely take advantage of and defeat him.”

Garcia, 32, doesn’t expect to fight all the rivals he mentioned. He plans to fight two more times at 147, winning another welterweight title in the process, and then move up to junior middleweight.

“I definitely want to become a champion in a third division,” he said. “… It’s always been my goal to win titles at 140, 147 and 154. … I feel like I have two more big fights left at this weight class, at 147, against either a Pacquiao or a Spence and I would want to rematch Thurman or Porter and get that victory. Then there’s nothing more for me to do at 147.

“I want to win another welterweight title. I need to get one big win at 147. And then I want to win at title at 154. I feel like my legacy will be complete after that.”

Julian Williams’ trainer: ‘He should be ready to go by August or September’

Stephen Edwards, the trainer of Julian Williams, believes his charge will be ready for a tune-up fight as soon as late summer.

It’s not if Julian Williams will fight Jeison Rosario again, it’s when.

Williams recently decided not to exercise his contractual right to an immediate rematch with Rosario, the Dominican contender who stopped him in five rounds in a significant upset on Jan. 18. However, Stephen Edwards, the trainer of Williams, says they have every intention of fighting Rosario again. Just not next. They need time to heal and regroup.

“Julian just had surgery [to repair damaged skin around] both of his eyes last week,” Edwards told BoxingScene.com. “He can’t even spar until May or June. We wouldn’t be ready for a rematch in a reasonable period of time.”

In the fight, Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) opened up a large gash over Williams’ left eye, which immediately changed the tenor of the fight.

“It’s counterproductive to rush into a rematch without getting his eye fixed and his eye was a big reason he lost in the first place,” Edward said. “But Team Rosario has expressed to me personally that they are honorable and will give us the rematch very soon. Just not next because we won’t be ready.”

Sampson Lewkowicz, the promoter of Rosario, told Boxing Junkie that Rosario “100%” plans to give Williams a rematch whenever he is ready.

Edwards believes Williams (27-2-1, 16 KOs) should be ready for a tune-up fight by late summer.

“He should be ready to go by August or September,” he said.

Edwards does not know who the opponent will be yet. In the meantime, the trainers says Williams won’t be peddling any excuses.

“What I’ve learned is it’s no use talking about what went wrong publicly,” Edwards said. “It always sounds like an excuse and, at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter. The result is what matters.

“Julian just has to redeem himself. Jeison Rosario fought a great fight, and he got the win.”

 

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Julian Williams won’t ask for immediate rematch with Jeison Rosario

Multiple outlets have reported that Julian Williams is not interested in pursuing an immediate rematch against Jeison Rosario.

The future appears to be wide open for Jeison Rosario.

Former junior middleweight titleholder Julian Williams is forgoing his contractual right to an immediate rematch against Rosario, the Dominican contender who scored a shocking stoppage of Williams on Jan. 18 in the latter’s inaugural title defense in his hometown of Philadelphia, multiple outlets have reported.

The reason? Williams (27-2-1, 16 KOs) needs to recover from surgery on the cut he suffered over his left eye in the Rosario fight. Provided Rosario is still a titleholder, Williams has every intention of pursuing a rematch later in the year, according to BoxingScene.com. The feeling apparently is mutual.

“When Williams wants the rematch, Rosario will give it to him, 100%,” Sampson Lewkowicz, Rosario’s promoter, told Boxing Junkie. “For now, Williams has a medical problem.”

That leaves Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs), who turns 25 in April, with a few options in a division teeming with intriguing possibilities. He could face his mandatory in Russian Bakhram Murtazaliev (17-0, 13 KOs). Or, more compellingly, he could head straight into a unification against fellow titleholder Jermell Charlo (33-1, 17 KOs), who revenged his disputed loss to Tony Harrison (28-3, 21 KOs) last December. Both Charlo and Rosario are aligned with Premier Boxing Champions, so that would be a relatively easy matchup to make.

Rosario’s upset of Williams was just another eye-opening outcome in the ultra competitive 154-pound division. Last year, Williams upset multiple-belt titleholder Jarrett Hurd (24-1, 16 KOs) in impressive fashion. All in all, the division has produced some of the most interesting story lines of any weight class.

As for Williams, he is staring down at yet another attempt at a comeback. He was knocked out by current middleweight titleholder Jermall Charlo (Jermell’s twin brother) in 2016 before making a statement against Hurd last year. Williams’ trainer Stephen Edwards has set the bar high for his charge the second time around. Shortly after the upset loss to Rosario, Edwards was adamant about getting revenge.

“[Williams] cannot go out on his career losing to that kid, I’m sorry,” Edwards said on the TalkBox Boxing Podcast. “[The loss to] Jermall Charlo, I can accept that a little bit. You know, that guy may go to the Hall of Fame, and we can say we fought him when Julian was a little young at the time and that he caught Julian with a great shot.

“This fight (against Rosario), I can’t stomach that. I’m serious. I just can’t.”

 

Follow Sean Nam on Twitter @seanpasbon

Julian Williams’ trainer: JRock has to KO Rosario in rematch

Stephen Edwards, the trainer of Julian Williams, believes his charge not only needs to beat Jeison Rosario, but do so by knockout.

The trainer of Julian Williams wants his charge to avenge his stunning upset loss to Jeison Rosario on Jan. 18. And he wants him to do so by knockout.

Stephen Edwards, Williams’ longtime trainer, set the bar high for Williams during an appearance on the Everlast TalkBox Podcast.

“I may get overruled on this, I don’t know,” Edwards said, “but for me being able to go to sleep at night and what I believe Julian is at, he gotta get that loss the f— back.

“I don’t care who don’t like this. He gotta fight that kid again and he gotta knock that kid out.”

Talk about pressure.

Williams made strong statement last May when he upset Jarrett Hurd to win two junior middleweight titles. It was a remarkable comeback for a fighter who had been written off by some after suffering a knockout loss at the hands of Jermall Charlo in 2016.

A rematch with Hurd was expected to take place in December but Hurd, for whatever reason, declined. In stepped Rosario, a hard-hitting, but relatively unknown Dominican who was expected to be something of a tune-up for Williams. There were even tentative plans to have Williams face a fellow titleholder in a unification bout this summer.

The 24-year-old Rosario had other plans. Rosario busted up Williams’ eye early in the fight and then stopped the Philadelphian in the fifth-round in front of his hometown crowd.

Edwards, still smarting from the loss, believes a knockout in the rematch will be the only way to conclusively put this episode behind them.

“If [Williams] don’t [knock out Rosario] I’m gonna be disappointed in him,” Edwards said. “I made it as clear as I can. I don’t know if [the rematch is] going to be next or whatever, but he gotta get that kid back.”

Edwards upped the ante.

“[Williams] cannot go out on his career losing to that kid, I’m sorry,” he said. “[The loss to] Jermall Charlo, I can accept that a little bit. You know, that guy may go to the Hall of Fame, and we can say we fought him when Julian was a little young at the time and that he caught Julian with a great shot.

“This fight (against Rosario), I can’t stomach that. I’m serious. I just can’t.”

 

Jeison Rosario scores stunning 5th-round KO of Julian Williams

Jeison Rosario’s promoter expected KO of Julian Williams

Promoter Sampson Lewkowicz always knew that Jeison Rosario was going to knock out Julian Williams, even if no on else shared that opinion.

A few weeks ago, at a meeting to discuss the upcoming junior middleweight title fight between champion Julian Williams and unsung challenger Jeison Rosario, Sampson Lewkowicz, Rosario’s promoter, put down a bold prediction.

“I told them (the people in the meeting) this isn’t going past six [rounds]. Rosario will stop [Williams],” Lewkowicz told Boxing Junkie. “Everyone looked at me like I was stupid.”

Williams, naturally, was heavily favored to win. How heavy? One sports book made him a 33-1 favorite, a reflection no doubt of the dominating fashion in which Williams defeated Jarrett Hurd last year to win his titles. Plus, contender Nathaniel Gallimore had knocked out Rosario in 2017; Williams easily outpointed Gallimore when they fought in 2018. No matter, for Lewkowicz, it was Rosario by early knockout.

“‘Oh, you’re joking,’ they said,” Lewkowicz  recalled. “No! It’s not a joke. I’m telling you this guy ‘Banana’ Rosario will knock [Williams] out.”

And that’s exactly what happened. On Saturday night, in Williams’ hometown of Philadelphia, the relatively unknown Dominican stopped the incumbent in the fifth round to capture two belts. After a strong opening round for Williams, Rosario went to work in Round 2, connecting on some hard shots to the body and head, one of which opened up a cut over Williams’ left eye. In Round 5, Rosario landed a left hook that badly shook up Williams. Rosario added the finishing touches with a booming uppercut followed by a right and clean-up left hook before referee Benjy Esteves jumped in to stop the fight.

“The power of Rosario [made me confident],” Lewkowicz said. “Every fight he went to the other fighter’s backyard and it was too much pressure and he would make a mistake.”

Lewkowicz paused, then quipped, “I don’t know why everyone was shocked.”

Lewkowicz wasn’t being facetious. The 69-year-old Uruguayan-American, after all, made his name as one of the sport’s preeminent scouts. When it comes to snatching up promising boxers from around the globe, no one had a better track record or sharper set of eyes than Lewkowicz. The more obscure the boxer, the better. His resume includes discovering the likes of Manny Pacquiao and Sergio Martinez. Lewkowicz’s other current titleholder is super middleweight David Benavidez.

“One way or another I’ve had 32 champion,” Lewkowicz said. “When I used to be with ‘Maravilla’ Martinez, one guy told me, ‘You’re like a roach. It doesn’t matter what poison they give you, you always come back with someone else.”

Count Rosario as Lewkowicz’s latest diamond in the rough.

“I believe I should have gotten some respect when I say my guy would knock [Williams] out,” Lewkowicz said.

So then, what’s next? Well, says Lewkowicz, it’s up to Williams. A rematch clause is in place, but Williams must pull the trigger. Lewkowicz doesn’t advise rushing back into the ring, however, certainly not against Rosario.

“If you want the rematch, we will (honor) it, but I don’t recommend it,” Lewkowicz said. “I believe (Williams) needs to recoup himself, fight a [tune up] and come back and get the rematch. But it’s up to him.

“But I strongly do not recommend it. I watched the fight again and Rosario is too strong. I promise that whatever is the decision, the result will be the same.”

If nothing else, Lewkowicz is confident that his charge won’t let the sudden fame get to his head. After the win on Saturday night, the team made sure to celebrate – with water.

“This kid,” Lewkowicz said, “is a real clean-cut kid.”

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.

Michael Zerafa describes moments before Dwight Ritchie’s death

Michael Zerafa has come out with a statement on the death of Dwight Ritchie. The two were sparring when Zerafa landed a fatal body blow.

Michael Zerafa was still trying to make sense of the death of boxer and close friend Dwight Ritchie two days later.

The junior middleweight from Australia was sparring with Ritchie in a Melbourne gym on Saturday when, according to reports, Ritchie collapsed. Paramedics rushed to the seen but couldn’t save him. He was pronounced dead in the ring

According to 7news.com.au, Zerafa said Ritchie “suddenly stopped” in the sixth round of sparring. He described what happened this way:

“He rocked up, fit as ever, we were both in preparation for our fights. He just took a few backward steps and just held his chest and just collapsed. Everyone ran into the ring but unfortunately it wasn’t enough.”

The final punch landed on Ritchie’s left side but, Zerafa said, was “nothing out of the ordinary. No shots landed that were really different. Just something happened.”

Zerafa issued a statement through the Australian website Exclusive Insight. It reads:

“There are simply no words to describe how I am feeling right now. Dwight was one of the most humble people I have ever met. We had known each other since we were teenagers, when we were just starting out in the sport. And for the past 10 years, Dwight and I had been supporting each other inside, and outside of the ring. There had always been a professional and mutual respect between us.

“Yesterday, was an absolute tragedy, and as tough as it is right now for myself, I can only imagine how difficult the past 24 hours has been for Dwight’s family. My heart bleeds for his three children and his beautiful partner. I have spoken to the family, and given my deepest condolences. The boxing community has lost a truly great person, and I have lost a mate. I appreciate all the messages of support that I have been receiving from family, friends, media and the boxing community.

“Dwight’s passing is a further reminder why we can’t take life for granted. Nothing in life is guaranteed. Dwight lived his life with purpose, and those in the boxing community that came to know him, will forever cherish the positive memories we had with him. He taught me so much, not just as a boxer but as a person, and I will always be thankful for the lessons Dwight shared with me about life. Dwight, you will always be remembered. Rest in Peace mate.”

Zerafa (27-3, 16 knockouts) is scheduled to face Jeff Horn in a rematch on December 18. Zerafa stopped Horn in August.

Ritchie’s was the fourth boxing-related death this year. Maxim Dadashev, Patrick Day and Boris Stanchov died as a result of blows they took in fights.