Otto Wallin outclasses Dominic Breazeale to win wide decision

Otto Wallin outclassed Dominic Breazeale en route to winning a wide decision on Saturday night in Uncasville, Conn.

Otto Wallin looked like a threat to any heavyweight on Saturday night.

Wallin, who made his name in a competitive setback against Tyson Fury, outboxed Dominic Breazeale to win a one-sided decision and bolster his credentials as a legitimate contender on the Adrien Broner-Jovanie Santiago card in Uncasville, Conn.

Wallin (22-1, 14 KOs) used his superior speed and skillset to pick apart Breazeale (20-3, 18 KOs) for most of the fight, including some hard, eye-catching left hands from the southpaw.

Breazeale, a two-time title challenger, was the aggressor but most of his shots were wild and telegraphed, which allowed Wallin to avoid them.

Breazeale seemed to be tired and discouraged by the middle rounds, when it was clear that he was in over his head. However, he had his best rounds late in the fight, when he was able to trap Wallin on the ropes and land some power shots.

The problem for Breazeale was that it was too little, too late. He simply hadn’t accomplished enough to make the fight competitive. He landed only 16% of his punches, according to CompuBox. Wallin connected on 35% of his shots, 41% of his power punches.

The scores were 118-110, 117-111 and 116-112, all in Wallin’s favor. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110 for Wallin.

The Swede has now won two consecutive fights since the loss to Fury. He stopped Travis Kauffman this past August.

Breazeale, 35, was coming off a first-round, one-punch knockout loss to Deontay Wilder. That means he now has lost two one-sided fights in succession. He’ll have to decide whether he wants rebuild at his age.

[lawrence-related id=17959]

Otto Wallin outclasses Dominic Breazeale to win wide decision

Otto Wallin outclassed Dominic Breazeale en route to winning a wide decision on Saturday night in Uncasville, Conn.

Otto Wallin looked like a threat to any heavyweight on Saturday night.

Wallin, who made his name in a competitive setback against Tyson Fury, outboxed Dominic Breazeale to win a one-sided decision and bolster his credentials as a legitimate contender on the Adrien Broner-Jovanie Santiago card in Uncasville, Conn.

Wallin (22-1, 14 KOs) used his superior speed and skillset to pick apart Breazeale (20-3, 18 KOs) for most of the fight, including some hard, eye-catching left hands from the southpaw.

Breazeale, a two-time title challenger, was the aggressor but most of his shots were wild and telegraphed, which allowed Wallin to avoid them.

Breazeale seemed to be tired and discouraged by the middle rounds, when it was clear that he was in over his head. However, he had his best rounds late in the fight, when he was able to trap Wallin on the ropes and land some power shots.

The problem for Breazeale was that it was too little, too late. He simply hadn’t accomplished enough to make the fight competitive. He landed only 16% of his punches, according to CompuBox. Wallin connected on 35% of his shots, 41% of his power punches.

The scores were 118-110, 117-111 and 116-112, all in Wallin’s favor. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110 for Wallin.

The Swede has now won two consecutive fights since the loss to Fury. He stopped Travis Kauffman this past August.

Breazeale, 35, was coming off a first-round, one-punch knockout loss to Deontay Wilder. That means he now has lost two one-sided fights in succession. He’ll have to decide whether he wants rebuild at his age.

[lawrence-related id=17959]

Robert Easter outboxes, easily outpoints Ryan Martin

Robert Easter Jr. gave a clinic on how to throw and land the jab with consistency on Saturday. And it was more than enough to earn him a victory. Easter, fighting behind the most basic punch in boxing from the opening bell, outboxed Ryan Martin to …

Robert Easter Jr. gave a clinic on how to throw and land the jab with consistency on Saturday. And it was more than enough to earn him a victory.

Easter, fighting behind the most basic punch in boxing from the opening bell, outboxed Ryan Martin to win a wide unanimous decision in a 12-round junior welterweight bout on the Adrien Broner-Jovanie Santiago card at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn.

Easter (23-1-1, 14 KOs) used the jab and occasional power shots to keep Martin (24-2, 14 KOs) at a distance where he was able to pick his opponent apart. Martin was able to cut off the ring on occasion – and land some of his own punches – but he spent most of his time following Easter around the ring in futility.

Martin’s trainer admonished him repeatedly between rounds that he wasn’t doing enough to be competitive but he simply couldn’t corner Easter enough to win rounds.

And even when the fighters ended up exchanging punches inside, where Martin was more comfortable, Easter was able to hold his own.

That’s how the fight went from beginning to end, with few ebbs and flows. It was all Easter.

That was reflected in the official scorecards: Easter won 118-110, 118-110 and 117-111. Boxing junkie had it 119-109 in Easter’s favor, 11 rounds to one.

Easter is now undefeated in three fights (2-0-1) since he lost a one-sided decision and his lightweight title to Mikey Garcia in July 2018, which brings Easter a significant step close to contender status at 140 pounds.

Martin has now lost his two biggest fights. He was knocked out by junior welterweight titleholder Josh Taylor in the seventh round in November 2018.

Robert Easter outboxes, easily outpoints Ryan Martin

Robert Easter Jr. gave a clinic on how to throw and land the jab with consistency on Saturday. And it was more than enough to earn him a victory. Easter, fighting behind the most basic punch in boxing from the opening bell, outboxed Ryan Martin to …

Robert Easter Jr. gave a clinic on how to throw and land the jab with consistency on Saturday. And it was more than enough to earn him a victory.

Easter, fighting behind the most basic punch in boxing from the opening bell, outboxed Ryan Martin to win a wide unanimous decision in a 12-round junior welterweight bout on the Adrien Broner-Jovanie Santiago card at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn.

Easter (23-1-1, 14 KOs) used the jab and occasional power shots to keep Martin (24-2, 14 KOs) at a distance where he was able to pick his opponent apart. Martin was able to cut off the ring on occasion – and land some of his own punches – but he spent most of his time following Easter around the ring in futility.

Martin’s trainer admonished him repeatedly between rounds that he wasn’t doing enough to be competitive but he simply couldn’t corner Easter enough to win rounds.

And even when the fighters ended up exchanging punches inside, where Martin was more comfortable, Easter was able to hold his own.

That’s how the fight went from beginning to end, with few ebbs and flows. It was all Easter.

That was reflected in the official scorecards: Easter won 118-110, 118-110 and 117-111. Boxing junkie had it 119-109 in Easter’s favor, 11 rounds to one.

Easter is now undefeated in three fights (2-0-1) since he lost a one-sided decision and his lightweight title to Mikey Garcia in July 2018, which brings Easter a significant step close to contender status at 140 pounds.

Martin has now lost his two biggest fights. He was knocked out by junior welterweight titleholder Josh Taylor in the seventh round in November 2018.