Mike Plania stuns Joshua Greer by winning majority decision

Mike Plania has arrived. The Filipino, who is from the same hometown as Manny Pacquiao, put bantamweight contender Joshua Greer down twice with left hooks and went on two win a majority decision in a 10-round bout Tuesday at the MGM Grand in Las …

Mike Plania has arrived.

The Filipino, who is from the same hometown as Manny Pacquiao, put bantamweight contender Joshua Greer down twice with left hooks and went on two win a majority decision in a 10-round bout Tuesday at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Plania (24-1, 12 KOs) knocked Greer (22-2-1, 12 KOs) flat on his back less than two minutes into the fight, giving him an advantage from the start. Greer fought carefully — too carefully? — after that, which allowed a confident Plania to dictate the action and take a lead on the cards.

Greer went down again from the same punch in Round 6, putting him in an even bigger hole. That seemed to wake Greer up, as he fought with urgency from then on. He went from sticking and moving to standing in front of Plania and trading punches, getting the better of most exchanges.

However, it was too late for the Chicago product, at least on two cards. Judge Dave Moretti had it 94-94, meaning he thought Greer won six of the 10 rounds. The other judges turned in scores of 96-92 and 97-91 for Plania, giving him the victory.

Greer, ranked by three of the four major sanctioning bodies going into the fight, will now have to rebuild. Plania, whose nickname is “Magic,” presumably will shoot up the rankings.

“This win is going to change my life,” said a jubilant Plania, from General Santos City. “I think Greer underestimated me. He kept saying, ‘Night Night,’ but tonight, it was magic time.

“I thought I could knock him out after the knockdown in the first round, but he was tough and adjusted his strategy. I took this fight on only three weeks’ notice, but I had faith in God that I could win.”

Giovani Santillan (left) rallied to eke out a victory over Antonio DeMarco. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

In the co-feature, Giovani Santillan survived a spirited effort from 34-year-old veteran Antonio DeMarco to win a 10-round welterweight fight by a majority decision.

The fight was competitive throughout but DeMarco (33-9-1, 24 KOs) seemed to be landing the harder, more-accurate punches by the middle rounds and was building toward an upset. However, Santillan (26-0, 15 KOs) picked up his pace to rally in the late rounds.

One judge had it 95-95 but the other two scored it 96-94 in Santillan’s favor to preserve the 28-year-old San Diegan’s perfect record.

DeMarco, a former lightweight titleholder from Mexico, has now lost six of his last eight fights, although the previous five setbacks were all against quality opponents.

Santillan looked at the fight as a valuable learning experience.

“I knew it was a close fight, but I felt like I did enough solid work in there to pull out the win,” Santillan said. “He never hurt me at any point in the fight, but he used his experience in there. He’s a former world champion who has been in there with the best of the best.

“I want to get back in the ring as soon as possible and use this experience to my advantage.”

In other preliminary bouts, big-punching Nikoloz Sekhniashvili (6-0, 4 KOs) was unable to take out durable Isiah Jones (8-2, 3 KOs) but outworked the Detroit fighter to win a unanimous six-round unanimous decision.

Nikoloz Sekhniashvili (right) outworked Isiah Jones to win their middleweight bout. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

Sekhniashvili, from the former Soviet republic of Georgia, attacked Jones from beginning to end but Jones proved to have both a good chin and polished survival skills. He didn’t do much in the way of fighting back, which is reflected in the official scorecards: 59-55, 60-54, 60-54, all in favor of Sekhniashvili.

In a six-round junior middleweight fight, Bobirzhan Mominov (11-0, 8 KOs) threw punches at a feverish rate to defeat Cameron Krael (17-16-3, 4 KOs) of Las Vegas by a unanimous decision.

Mominov, from the same town in Kazakhstan as Gennadiy Golovkin, fired hard, accurate punches from the opening bell to the end of the entertaining fight. Krael, tough and capable, simply couldn’t keep pace with the winner.

The scores were 57-56, 58-55, 58-55. Mominov lost a point because of a rabbit punch in the sixth round.

And Hector Perez (7-2, 3 KOs) of Tamarac, Florida defeated Juan Torres (5-3-1, 2 KOs) of Cypress, Texas by a unanimous decision in a six-round heavyweight fight.

Joshua Greer Jr. vs. Mike Plania next up in Top Rank boxing series

Joshua Greer Jr. is scheduled to face Filipino Mike Plania in a 10-round bantamweight fight Tuesday in Las Vegas.

You want more boxing? Three fight cards are scheduled for the next seven days on ESPN and ESPN+.

Joshua Greer Jr., Jose Pedraza and Emanuel Navarrete will be showcased on Tuesday, June 16 (ESPN), Thursday, June 18 (ESPN) and Saturday, June 20 (ESPN+), respectively, as Top Rank maintains its fast pace in the return of boxing from the coronavirus lockdown.

Greer, the 26-year-old bantamweight contender from Chicago, is scheduled to face Filipino Mike Plania in a 10-rounder in the tightly controlled MGM Grand ballroom in Las Vegas in which Shakur Stevenson and Jessie Magdaleno won their main events last Tuesday and Thursday.

Greer (22-1-1, 12 KOs) is a quick-handed boxer-puncher. He’s the No. 1 challenger to John Riel Casimero’s 118-pound title and is ranked in the Top 10 of two other organizations, meaning a title shot is around the corner if he continues to win.

He is coming off back-to-back victories over fellow contender Nikolai Potapov (majority decision) and Antonio Nieves (unanimous decision), which bolstered his position as one of the top bantamweights in world. He has his eye on an eventual showdown with pound-for-pounder Naoya Inoue, who holds two 118-pound belts.

Greer has won 19 consecutive fights since he lost a four-round majority decision to Stephen Fulton in 2015, his fifth fight.

“Whoever the opponent is, it doesn’t matter. I prepare the same,” Greer said. “Every fight is a world title fight for me. I’m ranked No. 1 in the world, so I have to take advantage of this opportunity.”

Plania (23-1, 12 KOs) is ranked in the Top 12 by two sanctioning bodies. The 23-year-old General Santos City resident failed the only other time he faced a contender, losing a unanimous decision to Juan Carlos Payano even though he put Payano down in 2018.

Another big name is on the June 16 card. Former lightweight titleholder Antonio DeMarco (33-8-1, 24 KOs) faces unbeaten Giovani Santillan (25-0, 15 KOs) in a scheduled 10-rounder welterweight bout.

DeMarco, 34, has lost his last two fights – decisions against Maxim Dadashev and Jamal James – and five of his last seven but the Mexican has a big name. That gives Santillan, a prospect from San Diego, a chance to score points as he builds his resume.

“A win against DeMarco will change my life,” Santillan said. “It will mean I would’ve won a fight against a former world champion on national television when hardly anything live is occurring. A lot of people are watching these fights, and I believe this will put me in contention to fight for a world title.

“I want to get a ranking in the Top 15 of any of the major sanctioning body to be considered as a world title challenger, and defeating Antonio DeMarco will be a great step in that direction.”

Also on the June 16 card:

  • Nikoloz Sekhniashvili (5-04, 4 KOs) vs. Isiah Jones (8-1, 3 KOs), six rounds, super middleweights
  • Edward Vazquez (7-0, 1 KO) vs. TBA, six rounds, junior lightweights
  • Hector Perez (6-2, 3 KOs) vs. Juan Torres (5-2-1, 2 KOs), six rounds, heavyweights

Featherweight prospect Chris Zavala (6-0, 3 KOs) was scheduled to fight Vazquez on the June 16 card but was pulled after testing positive for the coronavirus.

Manny Robles Jr., Zavala’s trainer, told ESPN that his fighter was infected by a sparring partner.

“All three of the kids that were sparring one another, we have quarantined them. Chris was the last one to test positive,” he said.

On June 18, Pedraza, the former Olympian and two-division titleholder, faces Mikkel LesPierre in a 10-round junior welterweight main event. Pedraza (26-3, 13 KOs) has lost two of his last three fights, decisions against Vasiliy Lomachenko in 2018 and Jose Zepeda last September.

LesPierre (22-1-1, 10 KOs) rebounded from a one-sided loss to Maurice Hooker in March of last year to outpoint Roody Pierre Paul in December. LesPierre is from Trinidad and Tobago but lives in Brooklyn.

Gabriel Flores Jr. fights Josec Ruiz in a 10-round lightweight co-feature.

And on June 20, Navarette, a junior featherweight titleholder and one of the hottest fighters in the world, defends his title against fellow Mexican Uriel Lopez in Mexico City on ESPN’s streaming service.

Navarette (31-1, 27 KOs) outpointed then-unbeaten Isaac Dogboe to win his title in December 2018, stopped Dogboe in an immediate rematch and has successfully defended four more times – all by knockout. He fought five times last year.

Lopez (13-13-1, 6 KOs) has lost his last three fights by decision.

 

READ MORE

Jessie Magdaleno got the job done but was disappointing

Jessie Magdaleno wins fight those in boxing would like to forget

Photos: Jessie Magdaleno-Yenifel Vicente debacle and more