Billy Joe Saunders outclasses Martin Murray, eyes big 2021

Billy Joe Saunders defeated Martin Murray by a near-shutout decision Friday night in London.

Billy Joe Saunders made Martin Murray look his age on Friday in London.

Saunders, defending his super middleweight title for the second time, outclassed his 38-year-old opponent in every way en route to a near-shutout decision that might’ve ended the career of Murray.

The victory sets Saunders up for a big fight in the coming year, as he has his sights set on the winner of the Dec. 19 fight between Canelo Alvarez and Callum Smith.

Saunders (30-0, 14 KOs) had been out of the ring since November of last year, when he stopped Marcelo Esteban Coceres, but he showed no ill effects.

The Londoner gave his countryman a boxing lesson from the opening bell, picking Murray apart with a consistent jab and one accurate combination after the other to win every round on the Boxing Junkie card.

Billy Joe Saunders (right) connected often against Martin Murray on Friday night. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

Murray (39-6-1, 17 KOs) never stopped trying and was able to blunt Saunders’ attack at times by holding him but seemed to be a step too slow and was able to land his own shots only sporadically. His only accomplishments were his ability to remain on his feet – although he went down as a result of a slip — and hear the final bell.

Thus, no one was surprised when the scorecards were announced: 120-109, 120-109 and 118-110.

Saunders, hoping to make a statement to his 168-pound rivals, probably would’ve preferred a stoppage but he can’t complain. He looked remarkably sharp given his long layoff and dominated an experienced, if aging opponent.

He was self-critical afterward but that speaks more to his high standards than his performance on Saturday.

“Tonight I tried to set rhythm but He knew how to tie up well,” Saunders said. … “I probably needed rounds. The main thing is I’m 30-0. Let’s see if I can make a big fight and get up for it.”

Saunders had a deal in place to face Alvarez earlier this year in what would’ve been the biggest fight of his career. However, it fell through as a result of COVID-19 and the sides couldn’t come to terms thereafter.

He hopes the big fight will come next for him, whether it’s Alvarez, Smith, Demetrius Andrade or Gennadiy Golovkin. He has some good victories – Chris Eubanks Jr., Andy Lee and David Lemieux, among them – but he wants to take the next step ASAP.

Saunders and Murray ended their fight on a conciliatory note. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

“It’s very important for me to do my thing [next year],” he said. “I’m not getting any younger. I just turned 31. I feel I’m in my prime. The stamina was there [Saturday] but I feel my timing was a little off. Maybe there was a little ring rust. I need rhythm for my boxing skills to come out.

“Hopefully we’ll get a big name. Obviously there’s Canelo and Smith, Andrade. I need a big fight to get up for it. OK, here we go.”

Said Eddie Hearn, Saunders’ promoter: “It must be one of them. Otherwise we’re wasting our time and wasting his career. He will fight anyone. … The pressure is on us, on Sky, whomever, to make a massive fight. If not, we might look back on Billy Joe’s career and wonder what could’ve been. We’re not prepared to do that. Let’s see how good he is in 2021.”

Murray recognized that he wasn’t good at all in what he hinted was his final fight.

That means he will have failed in five world title fights, going 0-4-1. He drew with Felix Sturm and lost to Sergio Martinez, Golovkin, Arthur Abraham and now Saunders. And he has taken enough – too much? – punishment along the way.

He wouldn’t say that he is retiring but …

“I’m feeling gutted,” he said. “… I was going to retire two years ago but I knew there was a big fight left in me, another world title shot. I did it for the enjoyment. Five times I fought for a world title, five times I didn’t get it.

“My body can’t take it. I’m 38. I just want to spend time with my family. I’ll never say never … but, yeah, I think that’s it. … I’m ready for a good rest now, mate.”

Billy Joe Saunders outclasses Martin Murray, eyes big 2021

Billy Joe Saunders defeated Martin Murray by a near-shutout decision Friday night in London.

Billy Joe Saunders made Martin Murray look his age on Friday in London.

Saunders, defending his super middleweight title for the second time, outclassed his 38-year-old opponent in every way en route to a near-shutout decision that might’ve ended the career of Murray.

The victory sets Saunders up for a big fight in the coming year, as he has his sights set on the winner of the Dec. 19 fight between Canelo Alvarez and Callum Smith.

Saunders (30-0, 14 KOs) had been out of the ring since November of last year, when he stopped Marcelo Esteban Coceres, but he showed no ill effects.

The Londoner gave his countryman a boxing lesson from the opening bell, picking Murray apart with a consistent jab and one accurate combination after the other to win every round on the Boxing Junkie card.

Billy Joe Saunders (right) connected often against Martin Murray on Friday night. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

Murray (39-6-1, 17 KOs) never stopped trying and was able to blunt Saunders’ attack at times by holding him but seemed to be a step too slow and was able to land his own shots only sporadically. His only accomplishments were his ability to remain on his feet – although he went down as a result of a slip — and hear the final bell.

Thus, no one was surprised when the scorecards were announced: 120-109, 120-109 and 118-110.

Saunders, hoping to make a statement to his 168-pound rivals, probably would’ve preferred a stoppage but he can’t complain. He looked remarkably sharp given his long layoff and dominated an experienced, if aging opponent.

He was self-critical afterward but that speaks more to his high standards than his performance on Saturday.

“Tonight I tried to set rhythm but He knew how to tie up well,” Saunders said. … “I probably needed rounds. The main thing is I’m 30-0. Let’s see if I can make a big fight and get up for it.”

Saunders had a deal in place to face Alvarez earlier this year in what would’ve been the biggest fight of his career. However, it fell through as a result of COVID-19 and the sides couldn’t come to terms thereafter.

He hopes the big fight will come next for him, whether it’s Alvarez, Smith, Demetrius Andrade or Gennadiy Golovkin. He has some good victories – Chris Eubanks Jr., Andy Lee and David Lemieux, among them – but he wants to take the next step ASAP.

Saunders and Murray ended their fight on a conciliatory note. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

“It’s very important for me to do my thing [next year],” he said. “I’m not getting any younger. I just turned 31. I feel I’m in my prime. The stamina was there [Saturday] but I feel my timing was a little off. Maybe there was a little ring rust. I need rhythm for my boxing skills to come out.

“Hopefully we’ll get a big name. Obviously there’s Canelo and Smith, Andrade. I need a big fight to get up for it. OK, here we go.”

Said Eddie Hearn, Saunders’ promoter: “It must be one of them. Otherwise we’re wasting our time and wasting his career. He will fight anyone. … The pressure is on us, on Sky, whomever, to make a massive fight. If not, we might look back on Billy Joe’s career and wonder what could’ve been. We’re not prepared to do that. Let’s see how good he is in 2021.”

Murray recognized that he wasn’t good at all in what he hinted was his final fight.

That means he will have failed in five world title fights, going 0-4-1. He drew with Felix Sturm and lost to Sergio Martinez, Golovkin, Arthur Abraham and now Saunders. And he has taken enough – too much? – punishment along the way.

He wouldn’t say that he is retiring but …

“I’m feeling gutted,” he said. “… I was going to retire two years ago but I knew there was a big fight left in me, another world title shot. I did it for the enjoyment. Five times I fought for a world title, five times I didn’t get it.

“My body can’t take it. I’m 38. I just want to spend time with my family. I’ll never say never … but, yeah, I think that’s it. … I’m ready for a good rest now, mate.”

Martin Murray wants to put past disappointments behind him

Martin Murray wants to put past disappointments behind him when he faces Billy Joe Saunders on Friday.

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

***

Martin Murray said he wanted to put to bed the feeling of unfinished business with Billy Joe Saunders when they meet Friday in London DAZN.

The two fighters were due to fight in the past but a recurring calf injury forced Saunders to withdraw from two proposed dates.

However, Saunders had said in the past that he would eventually arrange a new date with the 38-year-old boxer. After failing to schedule a fight with Canelo Alvarez, and the impact of the coronavirus on the availability of fighters, a match-up has finally been scheduled.

Speaking in a pre-fight press conference, Murray admitted he was frustrated to have seen two fights with Saunders slip through his fingers.

“It did [hurt] but I get why he pulled out,” he said. “We all want those bigger fights. We all get frustrated. I’ve got nothing against him. We shook hands. He honored his word a few years late.

“He’s going to be in top condition, and we’re both going to lay it all down on the line. It’s going to be a good fight.”

Murray is yet again fighting for a world title and the veteran sees his chance as destiny, having previously believed that the pandemic could have cost him his career.

“This is my fifth [world title fight],” he said. “I know how hard it’s going to be. I rate Billy Joe, we have unfinished business. I believe everything happens for a reason. I’m fit, I’m focused, I’m ready.”

After a string of disappointments, Murray said he would leave nothing to chance in the ring on Friday night.

“What I know about him is when he’s on his game, he’s on his game,” Murray said. “I’ve got to prepare myself for an elite Billy Joe. I know it’s going to be a hard fight. I thought I won the fight against [Arthur] Abraham, but in hindsight, I left it too close to call in Germany.

“I won’t be doing that on Friday.”

Speaking earlier to Boxing With Chris Mannix, Saunders acknowledged how much the withdrawal must have hurt his rival.

“He put a lot of money into training, and boxers know how much that costs,” he said. “But I had two calf injuries. I rushed back into the gym and it happened again. You can’t fight and then come out making excuses.

“I’ve got no bad blood or animosity against him. He’s got his shot. Whatever’s been said, it’s a chance on Friday night to back it up.”

Martin Murray wants to put past disappointments behind him

Martin Murray wants to put past disappointments behind him when he faces Billy Joe Saunders on Friday.

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

***

Martin Murray said he wanted to put to bed the feeling of unfinished business with Billy Joe Saunders when they meet Friday in London DAZN.

The two fighters were due to fight in the past but a recurring calf injury forced Saunders to withdraw from two proposed dates.

However, Saunders had said in the past that he would eventually arrange a new date with the 38-year-old boxer. After failing to schedule a fight with Canelo Alvarez, and the impact of the coronavirus on the availability of fighters, a match-up has finally been scheduled.

Speaking in a pre-fight press conference, Murray admitted he was frustrated to have seen two fights with Saunders slip through his fingers.

“It did [hurt] but I get why he pulled out,” he said. “We all want those bigger fights. We all get frustrated. I’ve got nothing against him. We shook hands. He honored his word a few years late.

“He’s going to be in top condition, and we’re both going to lay it all down on the line. It’s going to be a good fight.”

Murray is yet again fighting for a world title and the veteran sees his chance as destiny, having previously believed that the pandemic could have cost him his career.

“This is my fifth [world title fight],” he said. “I know how hard it’s going to be. I rate Billy Joe, we have unfinished business. I believe everything happens for a reason. I’m fit, I’m focused, I’m ready.”

After a string of disappointments, Murray said he would leave nothing to chance in the ring on Friday night.

“What I know about him is when he’s on his game, he’s on his game,” Murray said. “I’ve got to prepare myself for an elite Billy Joe. I know it’s going to be a hard fight. I thought I won the fight against [Arthur] Abraham, but in hindsight, I left it too close to call in Germany.

“I won’t be doing that on Friday.”

Speaking earlier to Boxing With Chris Mannix, Saunders acknowledged how much the withdrawal must have hurt his rival.

“He put a lot of money into training, and boxers know how much that costs,” he said. “But I had two calf injuries. I rushed back into the gym and it happened again. You can’t fight and then come out making excuses.

“I’ve got no bad blood or animosity against him. He’s got his shot. Whatever’s been said, it’s a chance on Friday night to back it up.”

Fight Week: Errol Spence Jr. makes return vs. Danny Garcia

Fight Week: Errol Spence Jr. faces Danny Garcia in his first fight since his car accident last year.

FIGHT WEEK

A look at the coming week in capsules

***

JAZZA DICKENS (29-3, 11 KOS)
VS. RYAN WALSH (26-2-2, 12 KOS)

James Dickens (pictured here against Nathaniel May) faces Ryan Walsh on Wednesday. Lewis Storey / Getty Images

When: Wednesday, Dec. 2
Where: Production Park Studios, Wakefield, England
TV/Stream: ESPN+
Division: Featherweight (10 rounds)
At stake: Golden Contract tournament final
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: NA
Also on the card: Ricards Bolotniks vs. Serge Michel, 10 rounds, light heavyweights (Golden Contract tournament final)
Prediction: Walsh SD
Background: The fight was supposed to have taken place in September but it was postponed after Walsh tested positive for COVID-19. Dickens, a 29-year-old from Liverpool, England, defeated Leigh Wood by a majority decision in a brutal fight on Feb. 21 to reach the tournament final. He has won seven consecutive fights since he back-to-back setbacks in 2016 and 2017, a technical decision against Thomas Patrick Ward and a second round stoppage against Guillermo Rigondeaux. Dickens suffered a broken jaw in the latter fight. Walsh, 34, defeated Tyrone McCullagh by a wide decision the same night of Dickens’ semifinal. Walsh, from Cromer, England, is a former British featherweight titleholder. He is the twin brother of junior lightweight title challenger Liam Walsh.

***

BRANDON ADAMS (21-3, 13 KOS)
VS. SONNY DUVERSONNE (11-2-2, 8 KOS)

Brandon Adams (left) fell short against champion Jermall Charlo in June of last year. Tim Warner / Getty Images

When: Thursday, Dec. 3
Where: Wild Card Boxing Club, Hollywood, Calif.
TV/Stream: NBC Sports Net
Division: Junior middleweight (10 rounds)
At stake: No titles
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: NA
Also on the card: Larry Gomez vs. Brian Ceballo, 10 rounds, welterweights; Mahonri Montes vs. Gor Yeritsyan, 8 rounds, welterweights
Prediction: Adams SD
Background: This is the second installment of the new Ring City USA boxing series at Freddie Roach’s gym on NBC Sports Network. Adams is coming off a near-shutout loss to titleholder Jermall Charlo in June of last year, meaning he will have been out of the ring 18 months. Adams, a decent boxer, made a name for himself by outpointing Shane Mosley Jr. to win the “Contender” series in November 2018. The Los Angeles fighter is ranked No. 10 at middleweight by the WBC. Duversonne, a late comer to boxing at 27, was also a late replacement for this fight. The 30-year-old Floridian has lost his last two fights, although he was competitive in both. He lost a unanimous decision to unbeaten prospect Lorenzo Simpson but put Simpson down on Oct. 9 and lost a split decision to Chordale Booker on Nov. 4. Duversonne has an 80-inch reach, 10 inches longer than Adams’.

***

BILLY JOE SAUNDERS (29-0, 14 KOS)
VS. MARTIN MURRAY (39-5-1, 17 KOS)

Billy Joe Saunders (right) is coming off a wide decision over Marcelo Esteban Coceres in November of last year. Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Getty Images

When: Friday, Dec. 4
Where: London
TV/Stream: DAZN
Division: Super middleweight (12 rounds)
At stake: Saunders’ WBO title
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: Saunders 17-1 (BetMGM)
Also on the card: James Tennyson vs. Josh O’Reilly, 12 rounds, lightweights; Zach Parker vs. Cesar Nunez, 10 rounds, super middleweights
Prediction: Saunders UD
Background: Saunders was supposed to have faced Canelo Alvarez earlier this year but the fight was canceled because of COVID-19 and Saunders fell out of consideration as a potential opponent for the Mexican star. The slick boxer from the London suburbs last fought in November of last year, when he stopped Marcelo Esteban Coceres in the 11th-round in a surprisingly competitive fight. The former 160-pound titleholder will be making the second defense of his 168-pound belt, which he won by easily outpointing Shefat Isufi in May of last year. Murray, Saunders’ countryman, will be fighting for a major title for the fifth time after failing in his first four attempts. The 38-year-old drew with Felix Sturm in 2011 and lost to Sergio Martinez (UD), Gennadiy Golovkin (TKO 11) and Arthur Abraham (SD). He has beaten two journeyman since losing a majority decision to Hassan N’Dam in December 2018. His last fight was 13 months ago.

***

ERROL SPENCE JR. (26-0, 21 KOS)
VS. DANNY GARCIA (36-2, 21 KOS)

Errol Spence Jr. (right, against Shawn Porter) is No. 5 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list. AP Photo / Ringo H.W. Chiu

When: Saturday, Dec. 5
Where: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
Division: Welterweight (12 rounds)
At stake: Spence’s IBF and WBC titles
Pound-for-pound ranking: Spence No. 5
Odds: Spence 3½-1 (BetMGM)
Also on the card: Sebastian Fundora vs. Habib Ahmed, 12 rounds, junior middleweights; Julio Ceja vs. Eduardo Ramirez, 12 rounds, featherweights; Josesito Lopez vs. Francisco Santana 10 rounds, welterweights; Miguel Flores vs. Isaac Avelar, 10 rounds, junior lightweights
Prediction: Spence UD
Background: Spence, a gifted, versatile boxer-puncher, will be making his fifth title defense in his first fight this year. Last year he shut out the smaller Mikey Garcia in March and defeated Shawn Porter by a split decision in a thrilling back-and-forth brawl in September. The following month he was involved in a horrific one-car accident in which he rolled his Ferrari and was thrown through the windshield. Somehow he suffered only minor injuries and says he’s fine now. Garcia is a former two-division titleholder who has lost only in close fights against elite opponents, Keith Thurman (SD) in 2017 and Porter (UD) the following year. He has defeated Adrian Granados (KO 7) in April of last year and Ivan Redkach (UD) in January since the Porter setback. Garcia is naturally smaller than Spence but is known as an excellent counterpuncher with power and a sturdy chin.

[lawrence-related id=15730,15652]

Fight Week: Errol Spence Jr. makes return vs. Danny Garcia

Fight Week: Errol Spence Jr. faces Danny Garcia in his first fight since his car accident last year.

FIGHT WEEK

A look at the coming week in capsules

***

JAZZA DICKENS (29-3, 11 KOS)
VS. RYAN WALSH (26-2-2, 12 KOS)

James Dickens (pictured here against Nathaniel May) faces Ryan Walsh on Wednesday. Lewis Storey / Getty Images

When: Wednesday, Dec. 2
Where: Production Park Studios, Wakefield, England
TV/Stream: ESPN+
Division: Featherweight (10 rounds)
At stake: Golden Contract tournament final
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: NA
Also on the card: Ricards Bolotniks vs. Serge Michel, 10 rounds, light heavyweights (Golden Contract tournament final)
Prediction: Walsh SD
Background: The fight was supposed to have taken place in September but it was postponed after Walsh tested positive for COVID-19. Dickens, a 29-year-old from Liverpool, England, defeated Leigh Wood by a majority decision in a brutal fight on Feb. 21 to reach the tournament final. He has won seven consecutive fights since he back-to-back setbacks in 2016 and 2017, a technical decision against Thomas Patrick Ward and a second round stoppage against Guillermo Rigondeaux. Dickens suffered a broken jaw in the latter fight. Walsh, 34, defeated Tyrone McCullagh by a wide decision the same night of Dickens’ semifinal. Walsh, from Cromer, England, is a former British featherweight titleholder. He is the twin brother of junior lightweight title challenger Liam Walsh.

***

BRANDON ADAMS (21-3, 13 KOS)
VS. SONNY DUVERSONNE (11-2-2, 8 KOS)

Brandon Adams (left) fell short against champion Jermall Charlo in June of last year. Tim Warner / Getty Images

When: Thursday, Dec. 3
Where: Wild Card Boxing Club, Hollywood, Calif.
TV/Stream: NBC Sports Net
Division: Junior middleweight (10 rounds)
At stake: No titles
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: NA
Also on the card: Larry Gomez vs. Brian Ceballo, 10 rounds, welterweights; Mahonri Montes vs. Gor Yeritsyan, 8 rounds, welterweights
Prediction: Adams SD
Background: This is the second installment of the new Ring City USA boxing series at Freddie Roach’s gym on NBC Sports Network. Adams is coming off a near-shutout loss to titleholder Jermall Charlo in June of last year, meaning he will have been out of the ring 18 months. Adams, a decent boxer, made a name for himself by outpointing Shane Mosley Jr. to win the “Contender” series in November 2018. The Los Angeles fighter is ranked No. 10 at middleweight by the WBC. Duversonne, a late comer to boxing at 27, was also a late replacement for this fight. The 30-year-old Floridian has lost his last two fights, although he was competitive in both. He lost a unanimous decision to unbeaten prospect Lorenzo Simpson but put Simpson down on Oct. 9 and lost a split decision to Chordale Booker on Nov. 4. Duversonne has an 80-inch reach, 10 inches longer than Adams’.

***

BILLY JOE SAUNDERS (29-0, 14 KOS)
VS. MARTIN MURRAY (39-5-1, 17 KOS)

Billy Joe Saunders (right) is coming off a wide decision over Marcelo Esteban Coceres in November of last year. Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Getty Images

When: Friday, Dec. 4
Where: London
TV/Stream: DAZN
Division: Super middleweight (12 rounds)
At stake: Saunders’ WBO title
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: Saunders 17-1 (BetMGM)
Also on the card: James Tennyson vs. Josh O’Reilly, 12 rounds, lightweights; Zach Parker vs. Cesar Nunez, 10 rounds, super middleweights
Prediction: Saunders UD
Background: Saunders was supposed to have faced Canelo Alvarez earlier this year but the fight was canceled because of COVID-19 and Saunders fell out of consideration as a potential opponent for the Mexican star. The slick boxer from the London suburbs last fought in November of last year, when he stopped Marcelo Esteban Coceres in the 11th-round in a surprisingly competitive fight. The former 160-pound titleholder will be making the second defense of his 168-pound belt, which he won by easily outpointing Shefat Isufi in May of last year. Murray, Saunders’ countryman, will be fighting for a major title for the fifth time after failing in his first four attempts. The 38-year-old drew with Felix Sturm in 2011 and lost to Sergio Martinez (UD), Gennadiy Golovkin (TKO 11) and Arthur Abraham (SD). He has beaten two journeyman since losing a majority decision to Hassan N’Dam in December 2018. His last fight was 13 months ago.

***

ERROL SPENCE JR. (26-0, 21 KOS)
VS. DANNY GARCIA (36-2, 21 KOS)

Errol Spence Jr. (right, against Shawn Porter) is No. 5 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list. AP Photo / Ringo H.W. Chiu

When: Saturday, Dec. 5
Where: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
Division: Welterweight (12 rounds)
At stake: Spence’s IBF and WBC titles
Pound-for-pound ranking: Spence No. 5
Odds: Spence 3½-1 (BetMGM)
Also on the card: Sebastian Fundora vs. Habib Ahmed, 12 rounds, junior middleweights; Julio Ceja vs. Eduardo Ramirez, 12 rounds, featherweights; Josesito Lopez vs. Francisco Santana 10 rounds, welterweights; Miguel Flores vs. Isaac Avelar, 10 rounds, junior lightweights
Prediction: Spence UD
Background: Spence, a gifted, versatile boxer-puncher, will be making his fifth title defense in his first fight this year. Last year he shut out the smaller Mikey Garcia in March and defeated Shawn Porter by a split decision in a thrilling back-and-forth brawl in September. The following month he was involved in a horrific one-car accident in which he rolled his Ferrari and was thrown through the windshield. Somehow he suffered only minor injuries and says he’s fine now. Garcia is a former two-division titleholder who has lost only in close fights against elite opponents, Keith Thurman (SD) in 2017 and Porter (UD) the following year. He has defeated Adrian Granados (KO 7) in April of last year and Ivan Redkach (UD) in January since the Porter setback. Garcia is naturally smaller than Spence but is known as an excellent counterpuncher with power and a sturdy chin.

[lawrence-related id=15730,15652]

Billy Joe Saunders set to fight Martin Murray on Dec. 4

Billy Joe Saunders was set to face Canelo Alvarez before the coronavirus pandemic took hold. Now he’ll have to settle for Martin Murray.

Billy Joe Saunders was set to face Canelo Alvarez in the biggest fight of his life before the coronavirus pandemic took hold. Now he’ll have to settle for Martin Murray.

Saunders will make the second defense of his super middleweight title against his countryman on Dec. 4 at The SSE Arena (Wembley Arena) in London. The card will be streamed on DAZN in the U.S. and televised on Sky Sports in the U.K.

Saunders (29-0, 14 KOs) won the vacant WBO 168-pound title when he defeated Shefat Isufi by a wide decision in May of last year in Stevenage, England. He stopped Marcelo Coceres in the 11th round in his first defense last November in Los Angeles.

He hopes to unify the super middleweight titles next year.

“I am very happy to be defending my WBO world title again,” Saunders aid. ‘I haven’t boxed for a year, and I really do miss being in the ring. I can’t wait to have my 30th professional fight and finish the year with a bang before a big 2021.

“The coronavirus pandemic has affected everybody in many ways, and it has had a big impact on the sport of boxing. The Canelo Alvarez fight falling through was very frustrating for me, but now the journey continues in December.

“Martin and I were supposed to fight twice before but it didn’t happen either time. He said some stuff and so did I, so let’s see who can back it up. I’m enjoying training with Mark Tibbs. He’s incredibly knowledgeable in the sport of boxing, and we are working on new stuff that we will show on the night.”

Murray (39-5-1, 17 KOs) was scheduled to face Saunders in 2018 but their fight fell through twice.

The long time middleweight and super middleweight contender challenged for a major title four times between 2011 and 2015, going 0-3-1 in those fights.

He drew with then-middleweight titleholder Felix Sturm in 2011 and lost title fights against Sergio Martinez (UD), Gennady Golovkin (TKO 11) and Arthur Abraham (SD). The Abraham fight was at 168.

The 38-year-old is 7-2 since then, losing decisions to George Groves and Hassan N’Dam. He last fought in November, outpointing Sladan Janjanin in an eight-round fight.

“I’m really looking forward to getting back in there and fighting for another world title,” Murray said. “The big fights definitely bring out the best in me. This year has been a good year for me personally. It seemed like all the stresses of life were taken away, so I really enjoyed being able to relax a bit more and spend even more time with my family.

“There was no bad blood really between me and Billy, to be honest. It was just a lot of frustration after he pulled out twice. That got left where it was, but we’ve definitely got some unfinished business. I’m expecting a hard fight and Billy Joe to be at his best, so I’ll be ready.”

Said promoter Eddie Hearn: “I’m delighted to announce another big fight for the 2020 schedule as we close out this tough year with a huge bang. All-British world title fights are always special, especially in the super middleweight division, and I’m really excited to see Billy back in the ring.

“We were 24 hours away from an announcement for Billy to fight Canelo when the pandemic hit, and so it throws up the final roll of the dice for Martin Murray, who will give it everything on December 4.”

[lawrence-related id=13252,11238,7820]

Billy Joe Saunders set to fight Martin Murray on Dec. 4

Billy Joe Saunders was set to face Canelo Alvarez before the coronavirus pandemic took hold. Now he’ll have to settle for Martin Murray.

Billy Joe Saunders was set to face Canelo Alvarez in the biggest fight of his life before the coronavirus pandemic took hold. Now he’ll have to settle for Martin Murray.

Saunders will make the second defense of his super middleweight title against his countryman on Dec. 4 at The SSE Arena (Wembley Arena) in London. The card will be streamed on DAZN in the U.S. and televised on Sky Sports in the U.K.

Saunders (29-0, 14 KOs) won the vacant WBO 168-pound title when he defeated Shefat Isufi by a wide decision in May of last year in Stevenage, England. He stopped Marcelo Coceres in the 11th round in his first defense last November in Los Angeles.

He hopes to unify the super middleweight titles next year.

“I am very happy to be defending my WBO world title again,” Saunders aid. ‘I haven’t boxed for a year, and I really do miss being in the ring. I can’t wait to have my 30th professional fight and finish the year with a bang before a big 2021.

“The coronavirus pandemic has affected everybody in many ways, and it has had a big impact on the sport of boxing. The Canelo Alvarez fight falling through was very frustrating for me, but now the journey continues in December.

“Martin and I were supposed to fight twice before but it didn’t happen either time. He said some stuff and so did I, so let’s see who can back it up. I’m enjoying training with Mark Tibbs. He’s incredibly knowledgeable in the sport of boxing, and we are working on new stuff that we will show on the night.”

Murray (39-5-1, 17 KOs) was scheduled to face Saunders in 2018 but their fight fell through twice.

The long time middleweight and super middleweight contender challenged for a major title four times between 2011 and 2015, going 0-3-1 in those fights.

He drew with then-middleweight titleholder Felix Sturm in 2011 and lost title fights against Sergio Martinez (UD), Gennady Golovkin (TKO 11) and Arthur Abraham (SD). The Abraham fight was at 168.

The 38-year-old is 7-2 since then, losing decisions to George Groves and Hassan N’Dam. He last fought in November, outpointing Sladan Janjanin in an eight-round fight.

“I’m really looking forward to getting back in there and fighting for another world title,” Murray said. “The big fights definitely bring out the best in me. This year has been a good year for me personally. It seemed like all the stresses of life were taken away, so I really enjoyed being able to relax a bit more and spend even more time with my family.

“There was no bad blood really between me and Billy, to be honest. It was just a lot of frustration after he pulled out twice. That got left where it was, but we’ve definitely got some unfinished business. I’m expecting a hard fight and Billy Joe to be at his best, so I’ll be ready.”

Said promoter Eddie Hearn: “I’m delighted to announce another big fight for the 2020 schedule as we close out this tough year with a huge bang. All-British world title fights are always special, especially in the super middleweight division, and I’m really excited to see Billy back in the ring.

“We were 24 hours away from an announcement for Billy to fight Canelo when the pandemic hit, and so it throws up the final roll of the dice for Martin Murray, who will give it everything on December 4.”

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