Josh Taylor rides two knockdowns to undisputed championship

Josh Taylor scored two knockdowns and outpointed Jose Ramirez to become the undisputed 140-pound champion Saturday.

Two knockdowns lifted Josh Taylor from a world titleholder to something akin to a legend, at least in his country.

The Scot put American rival Jose Ramirez down twice in the middle rounds, which proved to be the difference in their fight for the undisputed junior welterweight championship Saturday night at Virgin Hotels in Las Vegas.

All three judges scored the back-and-forth scrap 114-112, meaning it would’ve ended in a draw and settled nothing had Ramirez remained on his feet.

As it is, Taylor became just the sixth male fighter to win all the major belts in any division in the four-belt era, which solidified his place as one of best fighters ever from Scotland.

“I’m ecstatic,” said Taylor, who has now beaten Regis Prograis and Ramirez in a span of three fights. “I trained my whole life for this moment, I dedicated my whole life to this moment,

“I’ve dreamed of it so many times over. I’m so happy. I’m over the moon.”

Josh Taylor (left) put Jose Ramirez flat on his back in the Round 7. AP Photo / John Locher

Taylor (18-0, 13 KOs) instigated some trash talk before the fight, which culminated in an altercation after the weigh-in in the new Las Vegas hotel.

However, he said after the fight that it was never personal. His goal was merely to get under the skin of Ramirez in an attempt to get him to fight aggressively, which Taylor believed he could use to his advantage.

And he did, landing a number of hard shots when Ramirez lunged at him.

The fight was roughly even when, seconds after the start Round 6, Taylor countered his opponent with a short left that put him flat on his face. Ramirez obviously wasn’t hurt because he performed well the rest of the round but the tone of the fight had changed.

The knockdown in Round 7 made that clear. The fighters were in the process of untangling when, with about 30 seconds remaining in the round, Ramirez let his guard down and took a perfect left uppercut to the chin that put him flat on his back and hurt him.

Ramirez, who staggered as he got up, was able to survive the round but he didn’t fully recover until some point in Round 8, after which he had some of his best rounds.

Taylor must’ve thought that he had a big lead on the scorecards because he became relatively passive, allowing a desperate Ramirez to outwork him and climb back into the fight. Ramirez won three of the final four rounds on two cards, all four on the third.

Taylor celebrates after becoming undisputed 140-pound champion. AP Photo / John Locher

Boxing Junkie also scored the fight 114-112 for Taylor, six rounds each. And it gave Ramirez three of the final four rounds.

Still, Taylor was critical of the scoring afterward.

“I thought the scorecards were a little tight,” he said. “I thought they were well wider than that. I wasn’t too happy with the selection of the judges, but I wasn’t going to moan. I was confident in winning this fight anyway.”

Of course, a victory is a victory. And Taylor couldn’t have been much happier.

He knows that his countrymen will now speak of him in the same breath as the great Hall of Famer Ken Buchanan, the lightweight champion from the early 1970s who is from the town in which Taylor was born, Edinburgh.

Taylor plans to visit Buchanan – undoubtedly with his four belts in tow – when he returns to Scotland.

“I did it just like you champ!” Taylor said directly to his countryman as he was interviewed. “I’ll see you when I get home. Much love. He’s a legend. You gave me so much inspiration to do it, and I’m just like you. See you soon, champ.”

Taylor said before the fight on Saturday that he would be interested in moving up to 147 pounds to challenge pound-for-pound king Terence Crawford, who shares Bob Arum as a promoter.

However, he said nothing about his next fight immediately after his victory on Saturday. He was 100% invested in his celebration.

Meanwhile, Ramirez (26-1, 17 KOs) didn’t speak to the media immediately after the fight but his trainer – Robert Garcia – did. Garcia said he was told by someone at ringside that referee Kenny Bayless, trying to break the fighters, was holding Ramirez’s arm when he was knocked down for the second time.

However, replays made it clear that wasn’t the case. Ramirez might’ve been distracted but it was a fair knockdown.

“Taylor is the undisputed champ,” Garcia said. “I congratulate him. You don’t see that often. He definitely earned it, he made history. I gotta go back and see the fight. People were telling me in the second knockdown … the ref was holding Jose’s hand and he got hit. I have to see it.

“But, hey, we can’t win ’em all.”

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Josh Taylor rides two knockdowns to undisputed championship

Josh Taylor scored two knockdowns and outpointed Jose Ramirez to become the undisputed 140-pound champion Saturday.

Two knockdowns lifted Josh Taylor from a world titleholder to something akin to a legend, at least in his country.

The Scot put American rival Jose Ramirez down twice in the middle rounds, which proved to be the difference in their fight for the undisputed junior welterweight championship Saturday night at Virgin Hotels in Las Vegas.

All three judges scored the back-and-forth scrap 114-112, meaning it would’ve ended in a draw and settled nothing had Ramirez remained on his feet.

As it is, Taylor became just the sixth male fighter to win all the major belts in any division in the four-belt era, which solidified his place as one of best fighters ever from Scotland.

“I’m ecstatic,” said Taylor, who has now beaten Regis Prograis and Ramirez in a span of three fights. “I trained my whole life for this moment, I dedicated my whole life to this moment,

“I’ve dreamed of it so many times over. I’m so happy. I’m over the moon.”

Josh Taylor (left) put Jose Ramirez flat on his back in the Round 7. AP Photo / John Locher

Taylor (18-0, 13 KOs) instigated some trash talk before the fight, which culminated in an altercation after the weigh-in in the new Las Vegas hotel.

However, he said after the fight that it was never personal. His goal was merely to get under the skin of Ramirez in an attempt to get him to fight aggressively, which Taylor believed he could use to his advantage.

And he did, landing a number of hard shots when Ramirez lunged at him.

The fight was roughly even when, seconds after the start Round 6, Taylor countered his opponent with a short left that put him flat on his face. Ramirez obviously wasn’t hurt because he performed well the rest of the round but the tone of the fight had changed.

The knockdown in Round 7 made that clear. The fighters were in the process of untangling when, with about 30 seconds remaining in the round, Ramirez let his guard down and took a perfect left uppercut to the chin that put him flat on his back and hurt him.

Ramirez, who staggered as he got up, was able to survive the round but he didn’t fully recover until some point in Round 8, after which he had some of his best rounds.

Taylor must’ve thought that he had a big lead on the scorecards because he became relatively passive, allowing a desperate Ramirez to outwork him and climb back into the fight. Ramirez won three of the final four rounds on two cards, all four on the third.

Taylor celebrates after becoming undisputed 140-pound champion. AP Photo / John Locher

Boxing Junkie also scored the fight 114-112 for Taylor, six rounds each. And it gave Ramirez three of the final four rounds.

Still, Taylor was critical of the scoring afterward.

“I thought the scorecards were a little tight,” he said. “I thought they were well wider than that. I wasn’t too happy with the selection of the judges, but I wasn’t going to moan. I was confident in winning this fight anyway.”

Of course, a victory is a victory. And Taylor couldn’t have been much happier.

He knows that his countrymen will now speak of him in the same breath as the great Hall of Famer Ken Buchanan, the lightweight champion from the early 1970s who is from the town in which Taylor was born, Edinburgh.

Taylor plans to visit Buchanan – undoubtedly with his four belts in tow – when he returns to Scotland.

“I did it just like you champ!” Taylor said directly to his countryman as he was interviewed. “I’ll see you when I get home. Much love. He’s a legend. You gave me so much inspiration to do it, and I’m just like you. See you soon, champ.”

Taylor said before the fight on Saturday that he would be interested in moving up to 147 pounds to challenge pound-for-pound king Terence Crawford, who shares Bob Arum as a promoter.

However, he said nothing about his next fight immediately after his victory on Saturday. He was 100% invested in his celebration.

Meanwhile, Ramirez (26-1, 17 KOs) didn’t speak to the media immediately after the fight but his trainer – Robert Garcia – did. Garcia said he was told by someone at ringside that referee Kenny Bayless, trying to break the fighters, was holding Ramirez’s arm when he was knocked down for the second time.

However, replays made it clear that wasn’t the case. Ramirez might’ve been distracted but it was a fair knockdown.

“Taylor is the undisputed champ,” Garcia said. “I congratulate him. You don’t see that often. He definitely earned it, he made history. I gotta go back and see the fight. People were telling me in the second knockdown … the ref was holding Jose’s hand and he got hit. I have to see it.

“But, hey, we can’t win ’em all.”

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Kenny Bayless, NSAC goofed by stopping fight for review

Referee Kenny Bayless and Nevada officials should be embarrassed by the decision to stop the Top Rank main event for a review Tuesday.

I have the utmost respect for the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which is one of the finest oversight bodies in the world. And Kenny Bayless, the veteran referee, is one of the best in the business.

Those are among the reasons I was so flabbergasted by what I witnessed Thursday night on ESPN.

Jose Pedraza was in the process of dominating Mikkel LesPierre in the bubble at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas when the talented Puerto Rican went down from a punch to the stomach at 1:50 of Round 5 and Bayless began his count.

After the round, Bayless was alerted to the fact that the apparent knockdown might’ve been the result of a trip. Thus, a moment after the bell sounded to begin Round 6, Bayless called a timeout, left the ring and conferred with his fellow officials to determine whether  it was a knock down or a trip.

After watching replays, they finally decided that it was the latter and the fight resumed.

Here’s the problem: The process took 2 minutes, 10 seconds, which is an eternity in boxing. I understand that Nevada rules allow a break in the action to make such a determination but it’s a horrible, short-sighted idea for a number of reasons.

In no particular order …

  • Pedraza put LesPierre down and hurt him later in Round 5. I believe LesPierre recovered sufficiently before the end of the round. Still, any advantage Pedraza had was lost in that 2:10.
  • The break in the action spoiled the flow of the fight. As ESPN broadcaster Joe Tessitore pointed out on the air, a bout is composed of three-minute rounds with one-minute of rest between them. “You have to withstand that and endure that,” he said. Right. That’s boxing. Timeouts generally are justified only to protect the fighters.
  • Three minutes-plus (including the minute before the review period) is long enough for a boxer to grow cold. Thus, when the fight resumed after the break, Pedraza and LesPierre had to transition from cool idle to hot fight mode in an instant. That’s not easy.
  • And the break in the action sucked the life out of the fight. It’s also difficult for fans to get re-engaged after such a long – and bizarre – break.

Beyond all that, the timeout wasn’t necessary. Bayless could’ve told LesPierre and his cornerman after Round 5 that the knockdown might’ve been a trip and was under review. Then a replay official could’ve made the determination during Round 6 and informed the corner before Round 7.

In other words, was it really imperative for LesPierre to know whether it was a knockdown or a trip at that moment? I know it changed the scoring of Round 5. Still, it didn’t warrant stopping the fight for two minutes.

And, on top of everything else, Bayless and Co. got the call wrong. In my opinion, it WAS a knockdown. Yes, Pedraza tripped over LesPierre’s foot but it was a clean punch that started the process. That’s an obvious knockdown in my book.

I don’t want to be too hard on the NSAC, which I believe constantly evolves in an effort to better serve the boxers and everyone else in the sport. All oversight organizations should be as diligent as this one.

That said, what happened on Tuesday was both ridiculous and alarming. If NSAC officials are a sharp as I think that are, something like this will never happen again.

Deontay Wilder is complaining about referee Kenny Bayless after loss to Tyson Fury

So many excuses.

Deontay Wilder took his first professional loss in Saturday’s heavyweight championship TKO defeat against Tyson Fury.

Wilder went into the fight with a 42-0-1 record — with that one draw coming against Fury in 2018 — and he hasn’t exactly been taking this first defeat in 44 tries well.

He has basically gone through a Rolodex of excuses.

On Monday, Wilder told The Athletic that the elaborate, 45-pound costume that he wore during his ring walk had his legs tired by Round 3, rendering him unable to deliver one of his devastating right-hand blows to Fury. But that wasn’t all.

Wilder didn’t think referee Kenny Bayless enforced the rules fairly either. He told The Athletic that Bayless delivered an impassioned warning in the locker room about punches to the back of the head. But come fight time, Bayless let Fury punch the back of the head with impunity.

Via The Athletic:

“Bayless had come in my dressing room, looked me in my eyes and said if I hit Fury in the back of the head – rabbit punch – or hit off of the break, he would disqualify me or deduct two points from me. I guess those rules just applied to me because they didn’t apply to my opponent. (Fury) hit me in the back of the neck and the head all night and Bayless didn’t do anything about it, to the point I got lumps and bruises. That was a thing that was very frustrating to me.”

He continued to say about Bayless deducting a point from Fury in the fifth round:

“Why are you taking a point now when he’s been doing this all through the fight?” Wilder said he roared to Bayless. “What happened to that speech? What happened to that disqualification? All those things you said you’d do to me?”

Wilder added that he was prepared for Fury’s antics, but he wasn’t ready to fight on wobbly legs. Wilder also plans to activate the rematch clause and fight the third leg of a Wilder-Fury trilogy this year.

[jwplayer dduKEtcy-q2aasYxh]

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Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury II: All officials will be American

Veteran Kenny Bayless got the refereeing assignment for the Deontay Wilder-Tyson Fury rematch from the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

LAS VEGAS — An All-American panel of judges and an American judge will work the heavyweight rematch featuring the U.K.’s Tyson Fury and American Deontay Wilder Saturday night on ESPN/Fox pay-per-view at the MGM Grand.

Veteran Kenny Bayless got the refereeing assignment from the Nevada State Athletic Commission, it was announced Wednesday.

The Nevada commission also announced that Glenn Feldman of Connecticut, Dave Moretti of Nevada and Steve Weisfeld of New Jersey will judge the rematch of a controversial draw on Dec. 1, 2018 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center.

Fury’s camp did not ask the Commission to assign a U.K. judge.

“No problem,’’ Fury said. “The judge from the U.K. robbed me in the first one.’’

Phil Edwards, of the U.K., scored the first fight a draw, 113-113. He scored seven rounds in favor of Fury. But Wilder’s two knockdowns of Fury, first in the ninth and again in the. 12th, resulted in a draw on Edwards’ card.

Judge Robert Tapper of Canada had 114-112 for Fury. The third judge, Alejandro Rochin, had it 115-111 for Wilder.

“Kenny is a great referee,’’ Wilder said after the assignments were announced. “He has experience. I even like his facial gestures.’’