Oscar Rivas outpoints Ryan Rozicki to become first ‘bridgerweight’ champ

Oscar Rivas outpointed Ryan Rozicki to become the first ‘”bridgerweight” titleholder Saturday in Montreal.

For better or worse, boxing has it’s first bridgerweight titleholder.

Oscar Rivas, a longtime heavyweight contender, overcame a spirited effort from Ryan Rozicki to win a unanimous decision and the new WBC belt at Olympia Theatre in Montreal.

The weight class, with a limit of 224 pounds, was established to cater to fighters too big for the cruiserweight division (200-pound limit) and too small for heavyweight behemoths like Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua.

Rivas, who weighed in at 222¼, was expected to fight fellow small heavyweight Bryant Jennings but Jennings couldn’t enter Canada because he’s not vaccinated against the coronavirus. In stepped Rozicki, who has fought as a cruiserweight in his brief career. He weighed only 203.

Still, the Nova Scotian turned what many thought was a mismatch into a competitive fight.

Rivas (28-1, 19 KOs) and Rozicki (13-1, 13 KOs) fought toe-to-toe almost the entire bout, the only place in which the underdog had a chance to win the fight because of Rivas’ advantages in ability and experience.

Rozicki landed his share of eye-catching shots during brutal inside work and proved to be durable against his much bigger opponent. However, Rivas, quicker and more accurate, got the better of most exchanges and landed more clean shots.

Plus, Rivas, who created more space to throw punches in the final few rounds, was particularly effective down the stretch.

The scores were 116-111, 115-112 and 115-112.

Rivas, who stopped Jennings in the 12th round in January 2019 and was competitive in a decision loss to Dillian Whyte six months later, reportedly still dreams of winning a heavyweight belt.

However, after Saturday, he can now call himself a world titleholder.

Meanwhile, Rozicki probably improved his stock by performing better than expected. He almost certainly will return to cruiserweight, where he now should get important opportunities.

 

 

Oscar Rivas outpoints Ryan Rozicki to become first ‘bridgerweight’ champ

Oscar Rivas outpointed Ryan Rozicki to become the first ‘”bridgerweight” titleholder Saturday in Montreal.

For better or worse, boxing has it’s first bridgerweight titleholder.

Oscar Rivas, a longtime heavyweight contender, overcame a spirited effort from Ryan Rozicki to win a unanimous decision and the new WBC belt at Olympia Theatre in Montreal.

The weight class, with a limit of 224 pounds, was established to cater to fighters too big for the cruiserweight division (200-pound limit) and too small for heavyweight behemoths like Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua.

Rivas, who weighed in at 222¼, was expected to fight fellow small heavyweight Bryant Jennings but Jennings couldn’t enter Canada because he’s not vaccinated against the coronavirus. In stepped Rozicki, who has fought as a cruiserweight in his brief career. He weighed only 203.

Still, the Nova Scotian turned what many thought was a mismatch into a competitive fight.

Rivas (28-1, 19 KOs) and Rozicki (13-1, 13 KOs) fought toe-to-toe almost the entire bout, the only place in which the underdog had a chance to win the fight because of Rivas’ advantages in ability and experience.

Rozicki landed his share of eye-catching shots during brutal inside work and proved to be durable against his much bigger opponent. However, Rivas, quicker and more accurate, got the better of most exchanges and landed more clean shots.

Plus, Rivas, who created more space to throw punches in the final few rounds, was particularly effective down the stretch.

The scores were 116-111, 115-112 and 115-112.

Rivas, who stopped Jennings in the 12th round in January 2019 and was competitive in a decision loss to Dillian Whyte six months later, reportedly still dreams of winning a heavyweight belt.

However, after Saturday, he can now call himself a world titleholder.

Meanwhile, Rozicki probably improved his stock by performing better than expected. He almost certainly will return to cruiserweight, where he now should get important opportunities.

 

 

Fight Week: Jamel Herring, Shakur Stevenson set for compelling clash

Fight Week: Jamel Herring and Shakur Stevenson are set for compelling title clash on Saturday.

FIGHT WEEK

JUNIOR LIGHTWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER JAMEL HERRING WILL DEFEND HIS BELT AGAINST GIFTED SHAKUR STEVENSON IN A HUGE FIGHT FOR BOTH MEN ON SATURDAY.

***

OSCAR RIVAS (27-1, 19 KOs) VS. RYAN ROZICKI (13-0, 13 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Oct. 22
  • Where: Olympia Theatre, Montreal
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Bridgerweight (224-pound limit)
  • At stake: Vacant WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Sebastien Bouchard vs. Sergio Ortega, welterweights; Steve Rolls vs. Gregory Trenel, super middleweights
  • Prediction: Rivas KO 5
  • Background: The winner of this fight will become the inaugural champion of the newly created division between heavyweight and cruiserweight, the brainchild of the WBC. Rivas, a career-long heavyweight who is 6 foot, ½ inch, has some credentials. He stopped one-time heavyweight title challenger Bryant Jennings in January 2019 and was competitive in a unanimous-decision loss to Dillian Whyte six months later. He weighed 239¼ pounds for the Whyte fight but dropped down to 221¼ for his most-recent bout, a third-round stoppage of Sylvera Louis in March. He’s a natural bridgerweight, if there is such a thing. Rivas was scheduled to face Jennings again for the “title” but the American reportedly pulled out over quarantine restrictions related to COVID-19. He was replaced by Rozicki, a relative unknown who has fought as a cruiserweight his entire career. The Canadian has never faced an elite opponent and has taken part in only two scheduled 10-round bout yet is fighting for what the WBC calls a world championship.

***

JAMEL HERRING (23-2, 11 KOs) VS. SHAKUR STEVENSON (16-0, 8 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Oct. 23
  • Where: State Farm Arena, Atlanta
  • TV/Stream: ESPN and ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweights
  • At stake: Herring’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Stevenson 6½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Nico Ali Walsh vs. James Westley, middleweights
  • Prediction: Stevenson UD
  • Background: This is one of the best-possible matchups in boxing, as Herring and Stevenson arguably are the two of the three best 130-pounders in the world, including Oscar Valdez. Herring, 35, is a late bloomer who overcame losses to Denis Shafikov and Ladarius Miller in 2016 and 2017 to build himself into a world champion, a distinction he earned by easily outpointing Masayuki Ito to win the WBO version of the title in May 2019. The tall (5-foot-10), rangy boxer from Cincinnati has successfully defended his belt three times, including an impressive sixth-round knockout of former Fighter of the Year Carl Frampton this past April. Stevenson, a 2016 Olympic silver medalist, is a polished boxer who has been blessed with unusual speed and athleticism. None of his 16 opponents gave him much of a fight, including veterans Christopher Diaz, Joet Gonzalez and Toka Kahn Clary. Stevenson defeated Gonzalez by a near-shutout decision to win the vacant WBO featherweight title but vacated immediately to campaign at junior lightweight. He’s coming off a shutout of Jeremiah Nakathila in June.

Also fighting this weekend: Ganigan Lopez (36-11, 19 KOs) will face Jose Soto Munoz (15-0, 6 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round junior bantamweight fight in Mexico City (Telemundo).

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