Lawrence Okolie plans to target big-name heavyweights

Lawrence Okolie plans to target big-name heavyweights when he moves up in weight.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published at DAZN.com.

Lawrence Okolie will not waste any time pursuing big fights when his inevitable move to heavyweight occurs.

The current WBO cruiserweight champion is scheduled to defend his title against Poland’s Michal Cieslak on Sunday in London (DAZN). And although his immediate focus is dominated by Cieslak, Okolie is anticipating a move up in the near future.

Okolie plans to prove his dominance at 200 pounds via a fight with Mairis Briedis this year. After that, a shift to heavyweight for further honors is very much on his mind.

Okolie holds terrific advantages at cruiserweight due to his size. And when the leap to the land of the giants finally takes place, the 2016 Olympian will focus on the grandest names and prizes.

“I was moved fast at cruiserweight, and I expect to do the same at heavyweight,” Okolie told DAZN News. “I’m world champion at cruiserweight and that shows the level I’m at. And I don’t want to drop down just because I’m at heavyweight.

“I believe in my team and the people I’ve got around me and when the time comes to get to heavyweight, I want the best fights from the start.”

[lawrence-related id=24073,28340]

Lawrence Okolie plans to target big-name heavyweights

Lawrence Okolie plans to target big-name heavyweights when he moves up in weight.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published at DAZN.com.

Lawrence Okolie will not waste any time pursuing big fights when his inevitable move to heavyweight occurs.

The current WBO cruiserweight champion is scheduled to defend his title against Poland’s Michal Cieslak on Sunday in London (DAZN). And although his immediate focus is dominated by Cieslak, Okolie is anticipating a move up in the near future.

Okolie plans to prove his dominance at 200 pounds via a fight with Mairis Briedis this year. After that, a shift to heavyweight for further honors is very much on his mind.

Okolie holds terrific advantages at cruiserweight due to his size. And when the leap to the land of the giants finally takes place, the 2016 Olympian will focus on the grandest names and prizes.

“I was moved fast at cruiserweight, and I expect to do the same at heavyweight,” Okolie told DAZN News. “I’m world champion at cruiserweight and that shows the level I’m at. And I don’t want to drop down just because I’m at heavyweight.

“I believe in my team and the people I’ve got around me and when the time comes to get to heavyweight, I want the best fights from the start.”

[lawrence-related id=24073,28340]

Fight Week: Josh Taylor to defend belts against Jack Catterall; Chris Colbert returns

Fight Week: Josh Taylor to defend belts against Jack Catterall; Chris Colbert returns.

FIGHT WEEK

Undisputed 140-pound champ Josh Taylor will defend his belts against Jack Catterall on Saturday. The same night, Chris Colbert returns to the ring.

Josh Taylor (18-0, 13 KOs) vs. Jack Catterall (26-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 26
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: SSE Hydro, Glasgow, Scotland
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior welterweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Taylor’s undisputed championship
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Taylor No. 11
  • Odds: Tayor 10½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Robeisy Ramirez vs. Eric Donovan, featherweights; Nick Campbell vs. Jay McFarlane, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Taylor UD
  • Background: Taylor will be making his first appearance since unifying all the 140-pound belts by outpointing Jose Ramirez in May of last year in Las Vegas. The tough, gifted Scot put Ramirez down twice, which proved to be the difference in the otherwise closely contested showdown. The victory made Taylor the first undisputed champion from Britain in the four-belt era. He has defeated five consecutive unbeaten opponents, Ryan Martin, Ivan Baranchyk, Regis Prograis, Apinun Khongsong and Ramirez. Three of them – Baranchyk, Prograis and Ramirez – were world titleholders at the time. Could Catterall be next? The Englishman, coming off a wide decision over Avderrazak Houya in November 2020, has maintained his perfect record to climb to the top of the WBO’s 140-pound rankings but is taking a significant step up in class against Taylor and has no experience on such a big stage. His most notable victories were close decisions over Tyrone McKenna and Ohara Davies in 2018. Catterall took step-aside money so Taylor and Ramirez could fight.

 

Chris Colbert (16-0, 6 KOs) vs. Hector Luis Garcia (26-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 26
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: The Cosmopolitan, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior lightweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Title eliminator
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Jerwin Ancajas vs. Fernando Martinez, junior bantamweights (for Ancajas’ IBF title); Gary Antuanne Russell vs. Viktor Postol, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Colbert UD
  • Background: Colbert was scheduled to challenge WBA 130-pound titleholder but Gutierrez had to pull out after testing positive for COVID-19. Garcia took the fight on a week’s notice. Colbert has dominated everyone placed in front of him with his unusual combination of speed and skill. He’s coming off a one-sided decision victory over respected Tugstsogt Nyambayar this past July. Of course, Colbert was disappointed that his first title shot fell through but another one will come soon enough if he continues to win. Garcia is no pushover replacement opponent. The Dominican represented his country in the 2016 Olympics, losing in the first round. He can box. However, while he has almost as many pro fights as Colbert, he hasn’t fought at an elite level. He has taken part in 11-round bouts in the Dominican Republic but his last three fights have been eight-rounders, the most-recent one a unanimous decision over Isaac Avelar on the David Morrell-Alantez Fox card in December.

 

Lawrence Okolie (17-0, 14 KOs) vs. Michal Cieslak (21-1, 15 KOs)

  • When: Sunday, Feb. 27
  • Time: 12 p.m. ET / 9 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: O2 Arena, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Cruiserweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Okolie’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Okolie 6½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Karim Guerfi vs. Jordan Gill, featherweights; Anthony Fowler vs. Lukasz Maciec, middleweights; Galal Yafai vs. Carlos Vado Bautista, flyweights
  • Prediction: Okolie KO 8
  • Background: Okolie is on a roll, having stopped his last seven opponents in seven rounds or fewer. That includes a sixth-round knockout of Krzysztof Glowacki to win his 200-pound title in March of last year. The 29-year-old Londoner has successfully defended once, a third-round stoppage of Dilan Prasovic in September. He’s 6-foot-5 and has an 82½-inch reach, which are heavyweight dimensions. He’ll probably move up in weight in the near future. Cieslak came up short in his only major championship fight, losing a decision to Ilunga Makabu for the vacant WBC title in January 2020. He rebounded from the setback by stopping both Taylor Mabika and Yury Kashinsky (last May) in his native Poland to earn a shot at Okolie.

 

Also fighting this week: Luis Torres (14-0, 9 KOs) will face Rodolfo Flores (14-5, 6 KOs) in a lightweight bout Thursday in Ciudad Obregon, Mexico (UFC Fight Pass); Joseph Adorno (14-0-2, 12 KOs) is scheduled to take on Iron Alvarez (14-1, 10 KOs) in a lightweight fight Saturday in Orlando, Florida (FITE).

Fight Week: Josh Taylor to defend belts against Jack Catterall; Chris Colbert returns

Fight Week: Josh Taylor to defend belts against Jack Catterall; Chris Colbert returns.

FIGHT WEEK

Undisputed 140-pound champ Josh Taylor will defend his belts against Jack Catterall on Saturday. The same night, Chris Colbert returns to the ring.

Josh Taylor (18-0, 13 KOs) vs. Jack Catterall (26-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 26
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: SSE Hydro, Glasgow, Scotland
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior welterweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Taylor’s undisputed championship
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Taylor No. 11
  • Odds: Tayor 10½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Robeisy Ramirez vs. Eric Donovan, featherweights; Nick Campbell vs. Jay McFarlane, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Taylor UD
  • Background: Taylor will be making his first appearance since unifying all the 140-pound belts by outpointing Jose Ramirez in May of last year in Las Vegas. The tough, gifted Scot put Ramirez down twice, which proved to be the difference in the otherwise closely contested showdown. The victory made Taylor the first undisputed champion from Britain in the four-belt era. He has defeated five consecutive unbeaten opponents, Ryan Martin, Ivan Baranchyk, Regis Prograis, Apinun Khongsong and Ramirez. Three of them – Baranchyk, Prograis and Ramirez – were world titleholders at the time. Could Catterall be next? The Englishman, coming off a wide decision over Avderrazak Houya in November 2020, has maintained his perfect record to climb to the top of the WBO’s 140-pound rankings but is taking a significant step up in class against Taylor and has no experience on such a big stage. His most notable victories were close decisions over Tyrone McKenna and Ohara Davies in 2018. Catterall took step-aside money so Taylor and Ramirez could fight.

 

Chris Colbert (16-0, 6 KOs) vs. Hector Luis Garcia (26-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 26
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: The Cosmopolitan, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior lightweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Title eliminator
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Jerwin Ancajas vs. Fernando Martinez, junior bantamweights (for Ancajas’ IBF title); Gary Antuanne Russell vs. Viktor Postol, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Colbert UD
  • Background: Colbert was scheduled to challenge WBA 130-pound titleholder but Gutierrez had to pull out after testing positive for COVID-19. Garcia took the fight on a week’s notice. Colbert has dominated everyone placed in front of him with his unusual combination of speed and skill. He’s coming off a one-sided decision victory over respected Tugstsogt Nyambayar this past July. Of course, Colbert was disappointed that his first title shot fell through but another one will come soon enough if he continues to win. Garcia is no pushover replacement opponent. The Dominican represented his country in the 2016 Olympics, losing in the first round. He can box. However, while he has almost as many pro fights as Colbert, he hasn’t fought at an elite level. He has taken part in 11-round bouts in the Dominican Republic but his last three fights have been eight-rounders, the most-recent one a unanimous decision over Isaac Avelar on the David Morrell-Alantez Fox card in December.

 

Lawrence Okolie (17-0, 14 KOs) vs. Michal Cieslak (21-1, 15 KOs)

  • When: Sunday, Feb. 27
  • Time: 12 p.m. ET / 9 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: O2 Arena, London
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Cruiserweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: Okolie’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Okolie 6½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Karim Guerfi vs. Jordan Gill, featherweights; Anthony Fowler vs. Lukasz Maciec, middleweights; Galal Yafai vs. Carlos Vado Bautista, flyweights
  • Prediction: Okolie KO 8
  • Background: Okolie is on a roll, having stopped his last seven opponents in seven rounds or fewer. That includes a sixth-round knockout of Krzysztof Glowacki to win his 200-pound title in March of last year. The 29-year-old Londoner has successfully defended once, a third-round stoppage of Dilan Prasovic in September. He’s 6-foot-5 and has an 82½-inch reach, which are heavyweight dimensions. He’ll probably move up in weight in the near future. Cieslak came up short in his only major championship fight, losing a decision to Ilunga Makabu for the vacant WBC title in January 2020. He rebounded from the setback by stopping both Taylor Mabika and Yury Kashinsky (last May) in his native Poland to earn a shot at Okolie.

 

Also fighting this week: Luis Torres (14-0, 9 KOs) will face Rodolfo Flores (14-5, 6 KOs) in a lightweight bout Thursday in Ciudad Obregon, Mexico (UFC Fight Pass); Joseph Adorno (14-0-2, 12 KOs) is scheduled to take on Iron Alvarez (14-1, 10 KOs) in a lightweight fight Saturday in Orlando, Florida (FITE).

Lawrence Okolie puts Dilan Prasovic away in three rounds in first defense

Lawrence Okolie put Dilan Prasovic away in three rounds on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card Saturday in London.

Lawrence Okolie will now begin in earnest his quest to unify the cruiserweight titles.

The WBO beltholder needed only two-plus rounds to stop overmatched Dilan Prasovic on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card Saturday night at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, Okolie’s hometown.

Okolie (17-0, 14 KOs) now has seven consecutive knockouts.

The 28-year-old champion put Prasovic (15-1, 12 KOs) down with a right hand to the side of the head with around 40 seconds remaining in Round 2. The Montenegrin survived the round but didn’t have much more to offer.

Less than a minute into Round 3, Okolie landed a brutal left to the body that put Prasovic on the canvas and hurt him badly. He was on all fours and in pain when referee Steve Gray reached the count of 10.

Okolie, a 2016 Olympian, was making the first defense of the vacant title he won by stopping former 200-pound champion Krzysztof Glowacki in six rounds this past March.

The 6-foot-5 resident of Hackney has stated that he wants unify the cruiserweight titles and then move up to heavyweight.

The 200-pound beltholders are Mairis Briedis (IBF), Arsen Goulamirian (WBA) and Ilunga Makabu (WBC). Okolie said after his victory that he’d like to face Briedis first because he’s recognized by many as the top cruiserweight.

[lawrence-related id=24068]

Lawrence Okolie puts Dilan Prasovic away in three rounds in first defense

Lawrence Okolie put Dilan Prasovic away in three rounds on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card Saturday in London.

Lawrence Okolie will now begin in earnest his quest to unify the cruiserweight titles.

The WBO beltholder needed only two-plus rounds to stop overmatched Dilan Prasovic on the Anthony Joshua-Oleksandr Usyk card Saturday night at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, Okolie’s hometown.

Okolie (17-0, 14 KOs) now has seven consecutive knockouts.

The 28-year-old champion put Prasovic (15-1, 12 KOs) down with a right hand to the side of the head with around 40 seconds remaining in Round 2. The Montenegrin survived the round but didn’t have much more to offer.

Less than a minute into Round 3, Okolie landed a brutal left to the body that put Prasovic on the canvas and hurt him badly. He was on all fours and in pain when referee Steve Gray reached the count of 10.

Okolie, a 2016 Olympian, was making the first defense of the vacant title he won by stopping former 200-pound champion Krzysztof Glowacki in six rounds this past March.

The 6-foot-5 resident of Hackney has stated that he wants unify the cruiserweight titles and then move up to heavyweight.

The 200-pound beltholders are Mairis Briedis (IBF), Arsen Goulamirian (WBA) and Ilunga Makabu (WBC). Okolie said after his victory that he’d like to face Briedis first because he’s recognized by many as the top cruiserweight.

[lawrence-related id=24068]

Good, bad, worse: Vergil Ortiz Jr. shines and more mandatory blues

Good, bad, worse: Vergil Ortiz Jr. shines and more mandatory blues.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sU6TEiBpCFE

Vergil Ortiz Jr. moved to the next level on Saturday night.

It’s one thing to beat up on solid fighters like Antonio Orozco, Brad Solomon and Samuel Vargas. It’s another to have your way with someone like Maurice Hooker, a talented former champion determined to find his place among the best welterweights.

Ortiz endured the toughest challenge of his career but in the end did to Hooker what he had done to all his previous opponents, scoring a brutal knockout in the seventh round.

The performance was impressive beyond his trademark pressure and power punching. I liked his ability to shift his focus to Hooker’s body after it became clear he couldn’t hurt him with shots to the head, although you wonder why he didn’t target the gut earlier.

And I think his defense is underappreciated. He slipped many of Hooker’s punches or caught them on his gloves.

That tells me he’s not just a strong, aggressive fighter; he’s evolving into a better all-around boxer under trainer Robert Garcia. And at only 22 he’s going to continue to improve over the next few years.

What’s next?

Terence Crawford has been mentioned as a potential opponent for Ortiz, although preliminary talks between the camps haven’t amounted to anything. And that’s fortunate for Ortiz, who probably isn’t ready for that type of challenge.

Hooker was a step up in opposition for him; Crawford is a giant step up from Hooker. Ortiz should take his time, gain more seasoning against good opposition and then take his shot at the top 147-pounders.

He’s almost there now. 2022 could be his breakout year.

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6JZOMy1EFU

Maurice Hooker isn’t a bad fighter. In fact, the opposite is true, as he demonstrated early in his entertaining fight with Ortiz.

The former 140-pound champion used his long jab fairly effectively, landed some clean power shots and showed a good chin against a big puncher. Indeed, he gave his fellow Texan a run for his money … until he didn’t.

Hooker was broken down by Ortiz’s body work and overall pressure by the middle the fight and simply couldn’t continue beyond Round 7.

He blamed an injured right hand – and we’ll take his word for it – but the beating he took from Ortiz also played a role. The injury might’ve been a blessing in disguise: It saved him from taking further punishment, which was on the way.

Hooker has now suffered brutal knockout losses in two of his past three fights, the first being a sixth-round stoppage against Jose Ramirez that cost him his 140-pound belt in 2019.

That doesn’t bode well in terms of his ambition to win a title at 147. He has ability but evidently not the resilience required to cope with bruisers like Ramirez and Ortiz, who make their livings by gradually chopping down their opponents.

Hooker obviously was frustrated after the fight. He responded to boos from his hometown fans during his post-fight interview by yelling, “F— y’all.”

Who knows? Maybe he’ll use the disappointment as motivation to prove people — including me — wrong.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUu9zbpWltA

We endured the latest example of the mandatory blues on Saturday.

Artur Beterbiev, the physically imposing light heavyweight titleholder, took on someone named Adam Deines who really had no business being in the ring with him. He survived nine-plus rounds on limited ability and an abundance of courage.

So how did he end up fighting Beterbiev?

First of all, the Russian-born German was ranked No. 5 by the IBF. He has some ability, but No. 5 in the world? C’mon. And, second, evidently no one ranked above him was available to fight Beterbiev. Thus, he became the mandatory challenger.

For the record, Beterbiev needed the work. He hadn’t fought in 17 months. And he probably was satisfied with a nice showcase in front of his home-country fans in Moscow.

That said, this is supposed to be the highest level of the sport. Beterbiev is on pound-for-pound lists. ESPN, which televised the fight, is supposed to be the big leagues. And fans were served up a mismatch.

It wasn’t as bad as Canelo Alvarez’s defense against another mandatory challenger, Avni Yildirim, but it wasn’t competitive.

The bigger problem is that fighters are putting too much emphasis on titles and not enough on the man who stands across the ring from them. We can’t expect every fight to be like Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Roman Gonzalez but we shouldn’t accept second-rate matchups like Beterbiev vs. Deines either.

RABBIT PUNCHES

A new cruiserweight star arrived on Saturday. Lawrence Okolie, facing the biggest test of his career, blew out veteran Krzysztof Glowacki (31-3, 19 KOs) in the sixth round to win the vacant WBO title at SSE Arena in London, Okolie’s hometown.

Okolie (16-0, 13 KOs) is 6-foot-5 and knows how to use his height and reach. He kept Glowacki used his jab to keep Glowacki at a safe distanced and set up hard, accurate power shots. The knockout punch – a straight right – left no doubt about the winner’s ability to hurt an opponent.

And the 2016 Olympian is remarkably quick for a man of his height, another reason he would be a difficult challenge to any 200-pounder and perhaps to heavyweights on day. …

Seneisa Estrada (20-0, 8 KOs) gave a strong performance against long-reigning strawweight champ Anabel Ortiz (31-4, 4 KOs) on the Ortiz-Hooker card, winning a near-shut decision and the WBA title.

Estrada deserves to be mentioned among the best female fighters in the world.

[lawrence-related id=18773,18769]

Good, bad, worse: Vergil Ortiz Jr. shines and more mandatory blues

Good, bad, worse: Vergil Ortiz Jr. shines and more mandatory blues.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sU6TEiBpCFE

Vergil Ortiz Jr. moved to the next level on Saturday night.

It’s one thing to beat up on solid fighters like Antonio Orozco, Brad Solomon and Samuel Vargas. It’s another to have your way with someone like Maurice Hooker, a talented former champion determined to find his place among the best welterweights.

Ortiz endured the toughest challenge of his career but in the end did to Hooker what he had done to all his previous opponents, scoring a brutal knockout in the seventh round.

The performance was impressive beyond his trademark pressure and power punching. I liked his ability to shift his focus to Hooker’s body after it became clear he couldn’t hurt him with shots to the head, although you wonder why he didn’t target the gut earlier.

And I think his defense is underappreciated. He slipped many of Hooker’s punches or caught them on his gloves.

That tells me he’s not just a strong, aggressive fighter; he’s evolving into a better all-around boxer under trainer Robert Garcia. And at only 22 he’s going to continue to improve over the next few years.

What’s next?

Terence Crawford has been mentioned as a potential opponent for Ortiz, although preliminary talks between the camps haven’t amounted to anything. And that’s fortunate for Ortiz, who probably isn’t ready for that type of challenge.

Hooker was a step up in opposition for him; Crawford is a giant step up from Hooker. Ortiz should take his time, gain more seasoning against good opposition and then take his shot at the top 147-pounders.

He’s almost there now. 2022 could be his breakout year.

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6JZOMy1EFU

Maurice Hooker isn’t a bad fighter. In fact, the opposite is true, as he demonstrated early in his entertaining fight with Ortiz.

The former 140-pound champion used his long jab fairly effectively, landed some clean power shots and showed a good chin against a big puncher. Indeed, he gave his fellow Texan a run for his money … until he didn’t.

Hooker was broken down by Ortiz’s body work and overall pressure by the middle the fight and simply couldn’t continue beyond Round 7.

He blamed an injured right hand – and we’ll take his word for it – but the beating he took from Ortiz also played a role. The injury might’ve been a blessing in disguise: It saved him from taking further punishment, which was on the way.

Hooker has now suffered brutal knockout losses in two of his past three fights, the first being a sixth-round stoppage against Jose Ramirez that cost him his 140-pound belt in 2019.

That doesn’t bode well in terms of his ambition to win a title at 147. He has ability but evidently not the resilience required to cope with bruisers like Ramirez and Ortiz, who make their livings by gradually chopping down their opponents.

Hooker obviously was frustrated after the fight. He responded to boos from his hometown fans during his post-fight interview by yelling, “F— y’all.”

Who knows? Maybe he’ll use the disappointment as motivation to prove people — including me — wrong.

***

WORSE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUu9zbpWltA

We endured the latest example of the mandatory blues on Saturday.

Artur Beterbiev, the physically imposing light heavyweight titleholder, took on someone named Adam Deines who really had no business being in the ring with him. He survived nine-plus rounds on limited ability and an abundance of courage.

So how did he end up fighting Beterbiev?

First of all, the Russian-born German was ranked No. 5 by the IBF. He has some ability, but No. 5 in the world? C’mon. And, second, evidently no one ranked above him was available to fight Beterbiev. Thus, he became the mandatory challenger.

For the record, Beterbiev needed the work. He hadn’t fought in 17 months. And he probably was satisfied with a nice showcase in front of his home-country fans in Moscow.

That said, this is supposed to be the highest level of the sport. Beterbiev is on pound-for-pound lists. ESPN, which televised the fight, is supposed to be the big leagues. And fans were served up a mismatch.

It wasn’t as bad as Canelo Alvarez’s defense against another mandatory challenger, Avni Yildirim, but it wasn’t competitive.

The bigger problem is that fighters are putting too much emphasis on titles and not enough on the man who stands across the ring from them. We can’t expect every fight to be like Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Roman Gonzalez but we shouldn’t accept second-rate matchups like Beterbiev vs. Deines either.

RABBIT PUNCHES

A new cruiserweight star arrived on Saturday. Lawrence Okolie, facing the biggest test of his career, blew out veteran Krzysztof Glowacki (31-3, 19 KOs) in the sixth round to win the vacant WBO title at SSE Arena in London, Okolie’s hometown.

Okolie (16-0, 13 KOs) is 6-foot-5 and knows how to use his height and reach. He kept Glowacki used his jab to keep Glowacki at a safe distanced and set up hard, accurate power shots. The knockout punch – a straight right – left no doubt about the winner’s ability to hurt an opponent.

And the 2016 Olympian is remarkably quick for a man of his height, another reason he would be a difficult challenge to any 200-pounder and perhaps to heavyweights on day. …

Seneisa Estrada (20-0, 8 KOs) gave a strong performance against long-reigning strawweight champ Anabel Ortiz (31-4, 4 KOs) on the Ortiz-Hooker card, winning a near-shut decision and the WBA title.

Estrada deserves to be mentioned among the best female fighters in the world.

[lawrence-related id=18773,18769]

Lawrence Okolie puts Nikodem Jezewski away in Round 2

Lawrence Okolie knocked out Nikodem Jezewski in two rounds on the Anthony Joshua-Kubrat Pulev card Saturday in London.

Bring on Krzysztof Głowacki.

Lawrence Okolie destroyed Nikodem Jezewski on the Anthony Joshua-Kubrat Pulev card Saturday in London, putting the Pole down three times and stopping him in two rounds.

The victory sets up a meeting with Glowacki for the vacant WBO cruiserweight title.

Okolie, a 2016 Olympian from London, was supposed to have fought Glowacki on Saturday’s card but Glowacki had to pull out after testing postitive for COVID-19.

Jezewski (19-1-1, 9 KOs) agreed to step in and fight Okolie on five days notice. Maybe that wasn’t the best decision.

Okolie (15-0, 12 KOs) landed a right to the body that forced Jezewski to take a knee about halfway through the opening round. And the winner was only getting started.

He hurt Jezewski with a right to the head moments later, which wobbled him. He then put Okolie him down again with another right to the head, hurting him badly.

In Round 2 one more right hand to the head put Jezewski onto all fours. He was able to get up but he couldn’t continue. The fight was stopped at 1:45.

In a preliminary bout, heavyweight prospect Hughie Fury (25-3, 14 KOs) survived a cut above his left eye to defeat Mariusz Wach (36-7, 19 KOs) by a near-shutout decision in a 10-round bout.

Fury, the cousin of Tyson Fury, won by scores of 100-90, 100-90 and 99-91.

He has won two consecutive fights since he was outpointed by Alexander Povetkin in August of last year.

Lawrence Okolie puts Nikodem Jezewski away in Round 2

Lawrence Okolie knocked out Nikodem Jezewski in two rounds on the Anthony Joshua-Kubrat Pulev card Saturday in London.

Bring on Krzysztof Głowacki.

Lawrence Okolie destroyed Nikodem Jezewski on the Anthony Joshua-Kubrat Pulev card Saturday in London, putting the Pole down three times and stopping him in two rounds.

The victory sets up a meeting with Glowacki for the vacant WBO cruiserweight title.

Okolie, a 2016 Olympian from London, was supposed to have fought Glowacki on Saturday’s card but Glowacki had to pull out after testing postitive for COVID-19.

Jezewski (19-1-1, 9 KOs) agreed to step in and fight Okolie on five days notice. Maybe that wasn’t the best decision.

Okolie (15-0, 12 KOs) landed a right to the body that forced Jezewski to take a knee about halfway through the opening round. And the winner was only getting started.

He hurt Jezewski with a right to the head moments later, which wobbled him. He then put Okolie him down again with another right to the head, hurting him badly.

In Round 2 one more right hand to the head put Jezewski onto all fours. He was able to get up but he couldn’t continue. The fight was stopped at 1:45.

In a preliminary bout, heavyweight prospect Hughie Fury (25-3, 14 KOs) survived a cut above his left eye to defeat Mariusz Wach (36-7, 19 KOs) by a near-shutout decision in a 10-round bout.

Fury, the cousin of Tyson Fury, won by scores of 100-90, 100-90 and 99-91.

He has won two consecutive fights since he was outpointed by Alexander Povetkin in August of last year.