Regis Prograis to fight Maurice Hooker on April 17: report

Former junior welterweight titleholders Regis Prograis and Maurice Hooker will meet on April 17 in Oxon Hill, Maryland on DAZN.

The rebuilding process for Regis Prograis and Maurice Hooker reportedly will begin against one another.

The former junior welterweight titleholders, who lost their belts and the zeroes in their loss columns last year, will meet on April 17 at MGM National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland, on DAZN, according to BoxingScene.com.

Also on the card, Luke Campbell will face Javier Fortuna for a vacant lightweight title.

Prograis (24-1, 20 KOs) lost a close majority decision and his title to Josh Taylor on Oct. 26 in London. The New Orleans native was knocking on the door of pound-for-pound recognition going into that fight.

Hooker (27-1-3, 18 KOs) was less effective against Jose Ramirez on July 27 in Arlington, Texas, losing his title by a sixth-round TKO. The Dallas product rebounded with a first-round knockout of Uriel Perez in December.

Campbell (20-3, 16 KOs) is coming off a one-sided decision loss to lightweight titleholder and pound-for-pound king Vassiliy Lomachenko on Aug. 31 in London. He is from Hull, in northern England.

Fortuna (35-2-1, 24 KOs) has beaten Sharif Bogere (UD 10) and Jesus Cuellar (TKO 2) since he lost a split decision to then-lightweight titleholder Robert Easter in January 2018. Forunta is Dominican.

Josh Taylor’s new promoter, Bob Arum, wants to make him ‘international star’

Titleholder Josh Taylor of Scotland has signed with Top Rank, but Cyclone Promotions says he’s already under contract.

A 140-pound title-unification fight just became more likely.

Junior welterweight champion Josh Taylor of Scotland has signed a contract with Top Rank, Bob Arum and Taylor said Thursday in a joint announcement.

The multi-year deal is expected to lead to a 140-pound unification fight with Jose Ramirez, also a Top Rank fighter.

“A new year, a new decade with lots of new beginnings, and I’m starting this new decade with a big bang,” said Taylor, who beat Regis Prograis for two of the junior welterweight titles in a Fight of the Year contender Oct. 26 in the U.K. “2019 was a huge year for me, but 2020 looks set to be even bigger and I’m delighted to have signed a deal with Top Rank and ESPN and an advisory contract with MTK Global.’’

Controversy with Taylor’s Top Rank deal looms, however. Promoter Barry McGuigan immediately responded to the announcement, saying in a statement that Taylor is already under contract.

“We are very disappointed to read the news today that Josh Taylor has signed a promotional agreement with another promotional company,” McGuigan said in statement released to the U.K.’s The Mirror.  “Josh Taylor is under an exclusive worldwide promotional contract with Cyclone Promotions.

“We have successfully brought Josh to the pinnacle of the sport from the day that he turned professional, including working alongside other stakeholders in boxing to deliver him the biggest fights.’’

Meanwhile, Arum called Taylor (16-0, 12 KOs) a fight fan’s fighter, fearless and willing to take on anybody.

“Whether it’s Jose Ramirez in a fight for the undisputed junior welterweight title or any of the welterweights out there, he’s ready for the biggest challenges,’’ Arum said. “I want to thank Josh’s advisors at MTK Global, who have the same goal as us, which is to make him an international star.”

Regis Prograis buys mother new house for Christmas

Some fighters buy jewelry after a big fight. Some, like Regis Prograis, buy their mother a new house.

Regis Prograis had a special surprise for Mom on Christmas Day.

The junior welterweight contender gave his mother a key to a new home.

“Just bought my momma a brand new house from the ground up,” Prograis wrote on Twitter. “She had no idea what kind of Christmas gift she was getting. We made her go through a few loops but she finally got her key.”

The New Orleans native is coming off a close decision loss to Josh Taylor in a thrilling World Boxing Super Series final in London. Despite the loss, which also cost him his title, Prograis significantly raised his profile and earned a career payday.

He is expected to be back in the ring in the spring, according to his handlers. 

Josh Taylor fined for making racial comments to an Asian bouncer

Josh Taylor was arrested and fined for making racial comments to an Asian doorman after he was tossed out of a nightclub in Edinburgh.

Junior welterweight titleholder Josh Taylor was arrested and fined £350 ($457) for making racial comments to an Asian doorman after he was tossed out of a nightclub in Edinburgh, Scotland, according to the BBC.

Taylor pleaded guilty to charges of behaving in a “threatening and abusive manner,” the BBC reported.

The boxer, who a prosecutor said was drunk at the time, was remorseful after his day in court. He wrote on his Twitter account that he was “ashamed.”

“I can only apologise,” he wrote, “not only to those whom I offended, but to my family and friends for the upset I’ve caused. There’s no excuse for the comments and the disturbance. I’m going to take some time off over Christmas to reflect on my actions and ensure it never happens again.”

Taylor was at the Shanghai Club when, at about 3 a.m. Sunday, he was asked to leave because of what the BBC reported was a “disturbance.” He then exchanged words with door staff – including the racial comments – and police were called.

Taylor’s lawyer defended him by saying he was a first-time offender who had “achieved exceptional heights” in his boxing career.”

The BBC also reported that Taylor was charged with cocaine possession at a police station. However, a judge accepted his not guilty plea and the charges were dropped.

“I’m regularly tested by all the relevant authorities … and could be at any time regardless of when I’m fighting,” Taylor said. “I would never risk my career and reputation with drugs.”

Taylor is coming off the biggest victory of his career, a majority decision victory over Regis Prograis that unified two 140-pound titles on Oct. 26 in London.

Terence Crawford and his cul-de-sac at welterweight

Whatever happens on Saturday night, Richard Commey and Teofimo Lopez have a future path. The same can’t be said for Terence Crawford.

NEW YORK – Whoever wins the lightweight title fight between champion Richard Commey and Teofimo Lopez on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden will have a lot more going on for him than just bragging rights or, in Lopez’s case, new hardware.

He’ll have a little something called momentum.

Commey-Lopez is not only the best on-paper matchup of the night, far exceeding the main event between welterweight titleholder Terence Crawford and Egidijus Kavaliauskas (we’ll get to that later). The winner could also go on to face Vasiliy Lomachenko in a unification of three of the four major lightweight belts next year. With apologies to newly minted lightweight titleholder Devin Haney, whose network allegiances make him a non-starter in this discussion, that is as about as good as it can get today in a sport beset by shoddy matchmaking and warring tribalism.

In other words, Commey-Lopez isn’t your typical boxing one-off that takes place in isolation, subject to a short half-life and a few forgettable column inches. No, its precise appeal is that it is freighted with significance beyond the 36 minutes (likely less) of combat that will unfold in the ring on Saturday night. And that’s a breath of fresh air, considering that the value of certain titleholders today are inseparable from the presumed significance of the particular alphabet-soup trinket they hold. One thinks immediately of WBO super middleweight titleholder Billy Joe Saunders and the WBO middleweight titleholder Demetrius Andrade, both of whom have fought virtually nobody of note to merit the high perch they occupy in their respective divisions.

Commey-Lopez is the latest brick laid down by promoter Top Rank toward what figures to be the edifice that will one day house the lightweight division’s most accomplished fighter. And the company did it by dutifully adding the most consequential 135-pounders, such as Ray Beltran, to their stable. They did it by scooping up Lopez from the 2016 Olympics, by getting in touch with Commey’s promoter Lou DiBella last year, by having Lomachenko outslug the likes of Pedraza and Luke Campbell (for a vacant title) earlier this year.

Commey-Lopez: Call it the big picture approach.

Alas, the same can’t be said for the fight that follows on Saturday night. Indeed, there is an air of banality surrounding titleholder Terence Crawford’s fight against undefeated Lithuanian contender Egidijus Kavaliauskas.

Even the fight’s usual carnival barkers seem to have caught on to this and have adjusted their brand of ballyhoo accordingly. Instead of selling Crawford-Kavaliauskas as a matchup of supreme consequence, they have sought to paint it as a rare opportunity to catch one of the great improvisers in the sport in action. During an ESPN segment, Teddy Atlas compared Crawford’s ring “instincts” to Jimi Hendrix riffing on the guitar, Bobby Fischer overlooking a chess board, and Louis Armstrong blowing the trumpet. “(Crawford) creates it as he does it,” Atlas said. “He’s got the greatest instincts I’ve ever seen.” Sitting beside Atlas, Max Kellerman, no stranger to rhetorical overkill himself, guffawed upon hearing that comment.

Actually, from a contemporary standpoint, Atlas isn’t entirely wrong. Few fighters have shown themselves to be as versatile and creative in the ring as Crawford. At some point, however, such claims must be born out in the ring against the very best.

Unfortunately, Crawford is Exhibit A in the ramifications wrought by the sport’s frustrating political divide. Unlike its lightweight stable, Top Rank simply does not have the key players at welterweight to fulfill on the promise of a generational talent like Crawford. Unlike Commey-Lopez, Crawford-Kavaliauskas doesn’t lead anywhere. There is no conceivable Lomachenko for Crawford waiting in the wings. Crawford’s best possible opponents – Errol Spence, Manny Pacquiao, Shawn Porter, Danny Garcia and Keith Thurman – are all aligned with Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions, which understandably prefers to do their own round robin of fights. Moreover, whatever hope there was that the two sides could come together to stage a Crawford-Spence bout appears to have gone out the window in the wake of Spence’s harrowing car accident in October. At the very least, that fight is on the back-burner.

Crawford’s seemingly hamstrung future has had the effect of completely whitewashing his opponent, Kavaliauskas, a two-time Olympian who is known to crack with both hands. Kavaliauskas is no schlub, but his last fight, a draw against a distinctly mediocre Ray Robinson, did much to lower his stock. But Crawford, to be sure, is simply graded on a different scale. It is difficult to imagine what Kavaliauskas could bring to the ring that will trouble Crawford.

A saving grace for Crawford may be the current crop of elite junior welterweights who will all likely move up to 147 at some point, including Top Rank stablemate Jose Ramirez, Josh Taylor and Regis Prograis. But that development might take a year or more, which is an eternity for a fighter who is already 32 years old. 

The difference with Hendrix and Armstrong? They were soloists whose virtuosities did not necessarily rely on anyone else. In boxing, they call that shadowboxing.