Amanda Serrano ready to make history with proposed ‘megafight’ vs. Katie Taylor

Amanda Serrano said she’s ready to make history with a proposed ‘megafight’ against Katie Taylor.

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

Amanda Serrano did her part Saturday to set up the richest fight in women’s boxing history.

The unified featherweight champion earned a 10-round unanimous decision over Miriam Gutierrez, which kept her in line to fight undefeated, undisputed lightweight champion Katie Taylor (20-0, 6 KOs) next year in New York. Serrano (42-1-1 30 KOs) is eager to step up in class — not to mention income bracket.

“It’s the megafight for women’s boxing,” Serrano said after her victory on the undercard of the Jake Paul-Tyron Woodley rematch in Tampa, Florida. “It’s two pound-for-pound girls going out there. You have [an] undisputed [champion and [a] seven-division world champion facing each other and I think that’s the megafight for women.

“I think we’re going to blow off those ceilings for women’s boxing. A seven-figure payday for both of us, Madison Square Garden, the big theater, main event. I mean, it’s going to be an amazing night.”

Serrano signed with Paul’s fledgling Most Valuable Promotions on Sept. 30. Paul was clear about how big he believes a Serrano vs. Taylor fight is.

“That’s its own main event, for sure,” he said, “and I’m so excited. I’m going to do everything in my power to make that fight the biggest female boxing fight in the history of the sport.”

Taylor locked in her place a week earlier with a unanimous decision over Firuza Sharipova in Liverpool, England. She wasn’t thrilled with how she fought. She hinted that she was looking ahead to Serrano:

“It was not a master class by any means. But all I needed to do was to get the win and I’m looking at bigger names next year,” Taylor said, per DAZN News.

The purported purse for Serrano vs. Taylor is unprecedented in women’s boxing. Serrano and Heather Hardy spoke with Sporting News in 2018 about how little money women fighters are paid. Serrano even became an MMA fighter to make extra cash.

“If I would have got the respect and the money that girls deserve, I would have stayed in boxing,” Serrano said then. “To be a female boxer, you have to have a 9-to-5 [job], and it sucks because boxing is a dangerous sport. You have to fully concentrate. You can’t just say after work [that] you’re going to train. Female boxers have to have an extra income.”

She was working full time as a boxing trainer in New York at that point. Now she’s fighting under Paul, who is an outspoken advocate for improving fighters’ pay.

“I was scheduled to fight Katie Taylor a couple years ago and I’m telling you, the fight we [were] offered was nowhere near what we’re getting now,” she said. “And I think Jake Paul has definitely helped towards that. What he brings to boxing, it’s something new, something exciting.”

And Paul says that he’s excited Serrano – whom he called a “superstar” and an “awesome person” – is finally getting paid.

“It’s so satisfying because she deserves the money and the [recognition] more than I do,” he said. “She’s put in thousands and hundreds of hours in the gym and she deserves the big payday that she’s going to get. And she deserves to be able to retire from boxing …”

“… And not work again,” Paul’s adviser, Nakisa Bidarian, interjected.

“Yeah, and not work again,” Paul continued, “and unfortunately that hasn’t been the case for women’s boxing. They’ve been underpaid and taken advantage of.”

In April, Taylor told “The Ak & Barak Show” on DAZN she would “love” to take on Serrano in a fight that has been more than three years in the making. “It’s obviously a fight that a lot of people would look forward to. She’s a great fighter. That is a genuine 50-50 fight, I think so,” Taylor said.

One big obstacle, as in most megafights, is television. Serrano has been fighting on Showtime. Taylor, one of Matchroom Boxing’s biggest stars, fights on DAZN.

“I’m not really in charge of that. I’m a fighter. I fight wherever the fights are at,” Serrano said.

If a deal is struck, Serrano will be fighting at home next year, for a whole lot of money.

Karisa Maxwell contributed to this report.

 

Amanda Serrano ready to make history with proposed ‘megafight’ vs. Katie Taylor

Amanda Serrano said she’s ready to make history with a proposed ‘megafight’ against Katie Taylor.

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

Amanda Serrano did her part Saturday to set up the richest fight in women’s boxing history.

The unified featherweight champion earned a 10-round unanimous decision over Miriam Gutierrez, which kept her in line to fight undefeated, undisputed lightweight champion Katie Taylor (20-0, 6 KOs) next year in New York. Serrano (42-1-1 30 KOs) is eager to step up in class — not to mention income bracket.

“It’s the megafight for women’s boxing,” Serrano said after her victory on the undercard of the Jake Paul-Tyron Woodley rematch in Tampa, Florida. “It’s two pound-for-pound girls going out there. You have [an] undisputed [champion and [a] seven-division world champion facing each other and I think that’s the megafight for women.

“I think we’re going to blow off those ceilings for women’s boxing. A seven-figure payday for both of us, Madison Square Garden, the big theater, main event. I mean, it’s going to be an amazing night.”

Serrano signed with Paul’s fledgling Most Valuable Promotions on Sept. 30. Paul was clear about how big he believes a Serrano vs. Taylor fight is.

“That’s its own main event, for sure,” he said, “and I’m so excited. I’m going to do everything in my power to make that fight the biggest female boxing fight in the history of the sport.”

Taylor locked in her place a week earlier with a unanimous decision over Firuza Sharipova in Liverpool, England. She wasn’t thrilled with how she fought. She hinted that she was looking ahead to Serrano:

“It was not a master class by any means. But all I needed to do was to get the win and I’m looking at bigger names next year,” Taylor said, per DAZN News.

The purported purse for Serrano vs. Taylor is unprecedented in women’s boxing. Serrano and Heather Hardy spoke with Sporting News in 2018 about how little money women fighters are paid. Serrano even became an MMA fighter to make extra cash.

“If I would have got the respect and the money that girls deserve, I would have stayed in boxing,” Serrano said then. “To be a female boxer, you have to have a 9-to-5 [job], and it sucks because boxing is a dangerous sport. You have to fully concentrate. You can’t just say after work [that] you’re going to train. Female boxers have to have an extra income.”

She was working full time as a boxing trainer in New York at that point. Now she’s fighting under Paul, who is an outspoken advocate for improving fighters’ pay.

“I was scheduled to fight Katie Taylor a couple years ago and I’m telling you, the fight we [were] offered was nowhere near what we’re getting now,” she said. “And I think Jake Paul has definitely helped towards that. What he brings to boxing, it’s something new, something exciting.”

And Paul says that he’s excited Serrano – whom he called a “superstar” and an “awesome person” – is finally getting paid.

“It’s so satisfying because she deserves the money and the [recognition] more than I do,” he said. “She’s put in thousands and hundreds of hours in the gym and she deserves the big payday that she’s going to get. And she deserves to be able to retire from boxing …”

“… And not work again,” Paul’s adviser, Nakisa Bidarian, interjected.

“Yeah, and not work again,” Paul continued, “and unfortunately that hasn’t been the case for women’s boxing. They’ve been underpaid and taken advantage of.”

In April, Taylor told “The Ak & Barak Show” on DAZN she would “love” to take on Serrano in a fight that has been more than three years in the making. “It’s obviously a fight that a lot of people would look forward to. She’s a great fighter. That is a genuine 50-50 fight, I think so,” Taylor said.

One big obstacle, as in most megafights, is television. Serrano has been fighting on Showtime. Taylor, one of Matchroom Boxing’s biggest stars, fights on DAZN.

“I’m not really in charge of that. I’m a fighter. I fight wherever the fights are at,” Serrano said.

If a deal is struck, Serrano will be fighting at home next year, for a whole lot of money.

Karisa Maxwell contributed to this report.

 

Tyron Woodley medically suspended by Florida commission after scary Jake Paul knockout

Tyron Woodley and one other fighter on the card were the only ones to receive medical suspensions.

[autotag]Tyron Woodley[/autotag] was on the receiving end of a wicked right hand thrown by YouTuber-turner-boxer [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] in the sixth round of Saturday’s eight-round rematch.

The punch resulted in multiple losses for Woodley. He lost consciousness, the bout itself, and the chance to win a $500,000 knockout bonus. After the fight, it was deemed Woodley also has lost the ability to fight for the next two months.

Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation deputy communications director Patrick Fargason told MMA Junkie on Monday that Woodley has been suspended 60 days by his department, which oversaw the event.

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[autotag]Miriam Gutierrez[/autotag], who was on the wrong end of a unanimous decision following a battle with [autotag]Amanda Serrano[/autotag], also was suspended. However, her suspension was deemed indefinite due to the damage taken over all 10 rounds.

Aside from Woodley and Gutierrez, none of the other 12 fighters on the card – including former NBA player Deron Williams and former NFL running back Frank Gore who partook in a wild exhibition bout – received a suspension.

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Amanda Serrano one victory away from ultimate showdown against Katie Taylor

Amanda Serrano is one victory away from an ultimate showdown against pound-for-pound rival Katie Taylor.

Someone recently mentioned to Amanda Serrano that the great Manny Pacquiao won titles in a record eight weight classes but she corrected that person.

“We consider it six divisions,” she said.

Serrano doesn’t have anything against Pacquiao, one of the most beloved fighters of his era. She simply wants you to know that her titles in seven divisions should be considered the most in history.

How’s that?

Well, Pacquiao won only Ring Magazine titles in two divisions, featherweight and junior welterweight. Some recognize the publication’s titles, many (including Boxing Junkie) don’t, yet somehow it became universally accepted that he was an eight-division champion.

In other words, Serrano has a point. She arguably holds the record.

Of course, Serrano (41-1-1, 30 KOs) and other women boxers are constantly fighting for recognition comparable to that of the men. And it remains an uphill battle, even in the case of a seven-division champion.

That said, a showdown looms for Serrano that could to true star status. If she beats Miriam Gutierrez on the Jake Paul-Tyron Woodley II card Saturday in Tampa, Florida, she’s expected to face undisputed lightweight champion Katie Taylor in what would be an enormous women’s fight.

“A fight with Katie Taylor would be the biggest in women’s boxing history,” Serrano said. “We’re both top of the pound-for-pound lists, so that’s extremely exciting. We’re both tremendous fighters and we want to prove who’s the best on fight night.”

That doesn’t mean she’s overlooking Gutierrez (14-1, 5 KOs) even though the Spanish fighter lost a near-shutout decision against Taylor in January of last year and has beaten no one of note.

The only advantage Gutierrez might have is that she’s a natural 135-pounder, the weight at which Serrano would fight Taylor. Serrano currently holds three titles at 126 pounds, which is her natural weight, but she won belts at 130, 135 and 140 in the past.

“For me and my team, we’re always making sure that I’m staying humble,” Serrano said. “I have a task in front of me and that’s Miriam Gutierrez. I always train like I’m the underdog. Once you overlook your opponent, you won’t get what you want in the future.”

She went on: “I’m expecting a war on Saturday. Gutierrez is a tough and durable fighter. She’s a natural lightweight too. This is a good measuring stick for me and Katie Taylor, because that’s the only person to beat Gutierrez. I know what I’m capable of doing at 135 pounds.”

If she wins on Saturday, we’ll see what she’s capable of against her toughest opponent yet.

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Amanda Serrano one victory away from ultimate showdown against Katie Taylor

Amanda Serrano is one victory away from an ultimate showdown against pound-for-pound rival Katie Taylor.

Someone recently mentioned to Amanda Serrano that the great Manny Pacquiao won titles in a record eight weight classes but she corrected that person.

“We consider it six divisions,” she said.

Serrano doesn’t have anything against Pacquiao, one of the most beloved fighters of his era. She simply wants you to know that her titles in seven divisions should be considered the most in history.

How’s that?

Well, Pacquiao won only Ring Magazine titles in two divisions, featherweight and junior welterweight. Some recognize the publication’s titles, many (including Boxing Junkie) don’t, yet somehow it became universally accepted that he was an eight-division champion.

In other words, Serrano has a point. She arguably holds the record.

Of course, Serrano (41-1-1, 30 KOs) and other women boxers are constantly fighting for recognition comparable to that of the men. And it remains an uphill battle, even in the case of a seven-division champion.

That said, a showdown looms for Serrano that could to true star status. If she beats Miriam Gutierrez on the Jake Paul-Tyron Woodley II card Saturday in Tampa, Florida, she’s expected to face undisputed lightweight champion Katie Taylor in what would be an enormous women’s fight.

“A fight with Katie Taylor would be the biggest in women’s boxing history,” Serrano said. “We’re both top of the pound-for-pound lists, so that’s extremely exciting. We’re both tremendous fighters and we want to prove who’s the best on fight night.”

That doesn’t mean she’s overlooking Gutierrez (14-1, 5 KOs) even though the Spanish fighter lost a near-shutout decision against Taylor in January of last year and has beaten no one of note.

The only advantage Gutierrez might have is that she’s a natural 135-pounder, the weight at which Serrano would fight Taylor. Serrano currently holds three titles at 126 pounds, which is her natural weight, but she won belts at 130, 135 and 140 in the past.

“For me and my team, we’re always making sure that I’m staying humble,” Serrano said. “I have a task in front of me and that’s Miriam Gutierrez. I always train like I’m the underdog. Once you overlook your opponent, you won’t get what you want in the future.”

She went on: “I’m expecting a war on Saturday. Gutierrez is a tough and durable fighter. She’s a natural lightweight too. This is a good measuring stick for me and Katie Taylor, because that’s the only person to beat Gutierrez. I know what I’m capable of doing at 135 pounds.”

If she wins on Saturday, we’ll see what she’s capable of against her toughest opponent yet.

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Katie Taylor outpoints tough, but overmatched Miriam Gutierrez

Katie Taylor outpointed tough, but overmatched Miriam Gutierrez on Saturday in London.

When durability is your greatest quality, it’s difficult to win fights. Especially when you’re facing Katie Taylor.

The undisputed lightweight champion outclassed a game, but overmatched Miriam Gutierrez on Saturday night at SSE Arena in London, delivering a beating en route to a near-shutout victory to retain her titles.

The former Olympic champion from Ireland was coming off a rough fight in her rematch with Delfine Persoon on Aug. 22, which Taylor won by a unanimous decision. Some wondered whether the relatively quick turnaround – less than three months – would have an adverse effect on Taylor.

It didn’t.

Taylor (17-0, 6 KOs) seemed perfectly fresh, perfectly fit, and was better than Gutierrez in every way, which made the mission of the 37-year-old from Spain — a late comer to boxing — all but impossible. The only thing she could do was survive.

Miriam Gutierrez (left) never stopped trying but didn’t have the tools to compete with Katie Tayor. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

The champion seemed to be on the verge of a knockout in the opening moments, when she stunned the challenger and then followed with a flurry of hard punches with Gutierrez’s back against the ropes. Gutierrez survived.

A left hook jolted Gutierrez (13-1, 5 KOs) in Round 3. That was followed by another barrage of stiff, accurate shots. She survived.

Taylor put her opponent down with a right-left combination a split second before the bell to end Round 4. She survived.

And, from Rounds 5 to 10, Taylor unloaded more punishing volleys at various moments in attempt to score an elusive knockout, some of which seemed to have referee John Latham thinking about stopping the fight. It just didn’t happen. Gutierrez survived.

That was the loser’s only consolation. The scores were 100-89, 100-90 and a generous 99-91, which reflected Taylor’s utter dominance in the mismatch. Boxing Junkie had it 100-89, a shutout.

“I’m very, very satisfied,” Taylor said. “… She was very, very tough. I was trying my best to get her out of there but she kept firing back. She’s very durable. She obviously was a lot bigger and stronger than I am.

“… I would’ve liked a stoppage today, but overall I thought it was a great performance.”

Taylor, 34, has no plans to slow down.

“I feel like we’re just getting better and better,” she said. “… People keep mentioning legacy. It’s all about legacy. I want to make history in this sport and inspire the next generation of fighters.”

What’s next for her? Promoter Eddie Hearn, standing at her side after the fight, said options abound.

“I like the winner of [the Cecilia] Braekhus-[Jessica] McCaskill [rematch],” he said. “We’ve got Chantelle Cameron soon at 140. That’s a big fight. We have Natasha Jonas. Terri Harper can come up from 130. Mikaela Mayer. There are so many challenges.

“And [Taylor] won’t duck any of them. I couldn’t suggest a fight she wouldn’t take.”

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Katie Taylor outpoints tough, but overmatched Miriam Gutierrez

Katie Taylor outpointed tough, but overmatched Miriam Gutierrez on Saturday in London.

When durability is your greatest quality, it’s difficult to win fights. Especially when you’re facing Katie Taylor.

The undisputed lightweight champion outclassed a game, but overmatched Miriam Gutierrez on Saturday night at SSE Arena in London, delivering a beating en route to a near-shutout victory to retain her titles.

The former Olympic champion from Ireland was coming off a rough fight in her rematch with Delfine Persoon on Aug. 22, which Taylor won by a unanimous decision. Some wondered whether the relatively quick turnaround – less than three months – would have an adverse effect on Taylor.

It didn’t.

Taylor (17-0, 6 KOs) seemed perfectly fresh, perfectly fit, and was better than Gutierrez in every way, which made the mission of the 37-year-old from Spain — a late comer to boxing — all but impossible. The only thing she could do was survive.

Miriam Gutierrez (left) never stopped trying but didn’t have the tools to compete with Katie Tayor. Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

The champion seemed to be on the verge of a knockout in the opening moments, when she stunned the challenger and then followed with a flurry of hard punches with Gutierrez’s back against the ropes. Gutierrez survived.

A left hook jolted Gutierrez (13-1, 5 KOs) in Round 3. That was followed by another barrage of stiff, accurate shots. She survived.

Taylor put her opponent down with a right-left combination a split second before the bell to end Round 4. She survived.

And, from Rounds 5 to 10, Taylor unloaded more punishing volleys at various moments in attempt to score an elusive knockout, some of which seemed to have referee John Latham thinking about stopping the fight. It just didn’t happen. Gutierrez survived.

That was the loser’s only consolation. The scores were 100-89, 100-90 and a generous 99-91, which reflected Taylor’s utter dominance in the mismatch. Boxing Junkie had it 100-89, a shutout.

“I’m very, very satisfied,” Taylor said. “… She was very, very tough. I was trying my best to get her out of there but she kept firing back. She’s very durable. She obviously was a lot bigger and stronger than I am.

“… I would’ve liked a stoppage today, but overall I thought it was a great performance.”

Taylor, 34, has no plans to slow down.

“I feel like we’re just getting better and better,” she said. “… People keep mentioning legacy. It’s all about legacy. I want to make history in this sport and inspire the next generation of fighters.”

What’s next for her? Promoter Eddie Hearn, standing at her side after the fight, said options abound.

“I like the winner of [the Cecilia] Braekhus-[Jessica] McCaskill [rematch],” he said. “We’ve got Chantelle Cameron soon at 140. That’s a big fight. We have Natasha Jonas. Terri Harper can come up from 130. Mikaela Mayer. There are so many challenges.

“And [Taylor] won’t duck any of them. I couldn’t suggest a fight she wouldn’t take.”

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Terri Harper dominates, stops Katharina Thanderz

Terri Harper, making the fourth defense of her junior lightweight title, stopped Katharina Thanderz at 1:12 of Round 9 Saturday in London.

Terri Harper had little trouble with Katharina Thanderz.

Harper, making the fourth defense of her WBC junior lightweight title, thoroughly outboxed Thanderz before stopping her at 1:12 of Round 9 on the Katie Taylor-Miriam Gutierrez card Saturday in London.

Harper (11-0-1, 5 KOs) fought behind her sharp jab and used intelligent lateral movement to confound Thanderz (13-1, 2 KOs), who couldn’t figure out to land punches consistently.

The Denaby fighter was unable to hurt Thanderz through eight-plus rounds but followed her jab to land more than enough power shots to take a big lead on the cards.

In the ninth, a clash of heads stopped the fight for a few moments. Harper then hurt Thanderz with a left hook to the body and followed with a series of hard, unanswered punches, prompting referee Victor Loughlin to stop the fight.

Harper was coming off a hard-fought split draw against Natasha Jonas in August.

“I just stuck to the jab, kept moving and didn’t get dragged into that fight,” said Harper, referring toe-to-toe confrontations.

The goal of Harper and her promoter, Eddie Hearn, is for her to unify the 130-pound titles. The other major titleholders are Hyun Mi Choi, Maiva Hamadouche and Mikael Mayer.

“The key for me in women’s boxing is that the champions are willing to fight champions,” Hearn said. “There’s no reason we can’t have one champion in each division.

“That’s what fans have always wanted in boxing.”

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Terri Harper dominates, stops Katharina Thanderz

Terri Harper, making the fourth defense of her junior lightweight title, stopped Katharina Thanderz at 1:12 of Round 9 Saturday in London.

Terri Harper had little trouble with Katharina Thanderz.

Harper, making the fourth defense of her WBC junior lightweight title, thoroughly outboxed Thanderz before stopping her at 1:12 of Round 9 on the Katie Taylor-Miriam Gutierrez card Saturday in London.

Harper (11-0-1, 5 KOs) fought behind her sharp jab and used intelligent lateral movement to confound Thanderz (13-1, 2 KOs), who couldn’t figure out to land punches consistently.

The Denaby fighter was unable to hurt Thanderz through eight-plus rounds but followed her jab to land more than enough power shots to take a big lead on the cards.

In the ninth, a clash of heads stopped the fight for a few moments. Harper then hurt Thanderz with a left hook to the body and followed with a series of hard, unanswered punches, prompting referee Victor Loughlin to stop the fight.

Harper was coming off a hard-fought split draw against Natasha Jonas in August.

“I just stuck to the jab, kept moving and didn’t get dragged into that fight,” said Harper, referring toe-to-toe confrontations.

The goal of Harper and her promoter, Eddie Hearn, is for her to unify the 130-pound titles. The other major titleholders are Hyun Mi Choi, Maiva Hamadouche and Mikael Mayer.

“The key for me in women’s boxing is that the champions are willing to fight champions,” Hearn said. “There’s no reason we can’t have one champion in each division.

“That’s what fans have always wanted in boxing.”

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Rachel Ball easily outpoints Jorgelina Guanini

Rachel Ball defeated late replacement Jorgelina Guanini in a 10-round junior featherweight fight Saturday in London.

Rachel Ball is on a roll,

The Briton, coming off a notable victory over Shannon Courtenay, defeated late replacement Jorgelina Guanini in a 10-round junior featherweight fight on the Katie Taylor-Miriam Gutierrez on Saturday in London.

The scores were 99-91, 99-91 and 99-92, giving Ball the WBC “interim” title.

Ball (7-1, 0 KOs) received some resistance from the capable Guanini (9-2-2, 1 KO), who holds the IBF junior bantamweight title, but ultimately outworked the Argentine to win rounds.

The resident of Aldridge was supposed to have fought Ebanie Bridges for the vacant WBA bantamweight title but Bridges pulled out because of an injury.

Ball would like to fight for that title but said she is open-minded about her opposition.

“I want to get the WBA title,” she said. “I’m happy to do that fight early on next year. But I’m not going to start picking and choosing at this level.

“You need to fight who they put in front of you and be ready.”