Andre Ward: Faith in God, himself lifted him from dark side to greatness

Andre Ward used faith in God and himself, as well as good advice, to rise from a harrowing childhood to greatness in boxing.

Editor’s note: “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward” documentary premieres Friday on Showtime.

***

Andre Ward is as much a survivor as he is a champion.

That couldn’t have been more clear in the Showtime documentary “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward,” which chronicles his journey from a harrowing life on the streets of Oakland, California, to recognition as one of the best fighters of all time.

He came from a home in which both parents battled drug addiction. And he ended up on a similar path for a time, dealing narcotics while he was an amateur. He could’ve gone in one of two directions: toward life that statistics say wouldn’t end well or back to the gym, to which his father brought him as a child.

He chose the latter because he had positive voices in his life (including longtime trainer Virgil Hunter and a devoted wife, Tiffiney), faith in God and faith in himself. The rest is history.

“I always had drive,” Ward told Boxing Junkie. “I just always wanted to be good at things, I was always competitive. Doing things right always mattered to me. And just having Virg there and my dad while he was alive, different people along my journey who spoke truth to me when I didn’t want to hear it.

“My pastor at a certain point. Just two or three voices in my life that helped me make the right decisions. And then, of course, my faith. I needed a higher power to connect me with things I wanted to do.”

God was good to Ward, giving him once-in-a-generation talent and the willpower to make the most of it.

S.O.G., the son of God, remains the last American to win an Olympic gold medal. He turned the elusive trick in 2004 Athens Games by upsetting the favored Utkirbek Haydarov of Uzbekistan in the semifinals and beating Mahamed Aripgadzhiev of Belarus in the final.

And he was just getting started.

He was only 25 and relatively unproven as a professional in 2009 when he was entered in the Super Six World Boxing Classic, a six-man tournament that featured six of the best 168-pounders from around the world.

The favorites to win the championship were celebrated Europeans Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and Carl Froch. Ward was an afterthought, at least until his first-round fight.

Ward opened against Kessler, a fight in which the young American stunned many in the boxing world by outclassing his more-experienced Danish opponent for 10-plus rounds. The fight was stopped in Round 11 after an accidental head butt caused a gash above Kessler’s left eye but Ward had plenty of time to prove he was the better man, winning a wide technical decision.

As Dan Rafael wrote for ESPN at the time, “Although Kessler complained about the head butts and refereeing, the fact is that Ward simply kicked his butt.”

He never stopped kicking butt. He went on to beat replacement Allan Green, Abraham and Froch decisively to win the tournament and establish himself as the best super middleweight and a major figure in the sport seemingly overnight.

He had cleared a significant hurdle again.

“It was huge,” he said. “For me, a competitive person, to come out on top of that … I have the trophy right here in my office now. Every now and again I glance and it, look at the names on there and it just kind of feeds you. I think, ‘Man, we did that.’

“It was also a very scary moment in my career if you’re one of my handlers because that’s a sink or swim moment. I could’ve drowned in that tournament. I hadn’t beaten anybody up until that point.

“[Previous opponent] Edison Miranda was obviously a dangerous and tough contender but not at that level. Careers got ruined in the Super Six. I could’ve been one of them. So to come out on the other side just confirmed that I was the truth and that I was going to be there for a very long time.”

Ward’s next obstacle was outside the ring.

He entered into a protracted legal battle to extricate himself from his contract with promoter Dan Goossen over a co-promoter who Ward believed had a right to be part of his team. That’s the main reason he fought only twice between September 2012 and March 2016.

And before the dispute ran its course Goossen died as a result of liver cancer, in September 2014.

Ward had a positive takeaway from his relative inactivity during that period – most notably giving his body time to heal after so many years in the ring – but the loss of a man for whom he had affection still saddens him.

“[The inactivity] was a shame from the standpoint that it wasn’t ideal,” he said. “I don’t look at it the way everybody looks at it, though. People say, ‘Oh, you lost two years of your prime.’ I look at it like I got two years back because I was able to rest. … I think I extended my career two years by not fighting.

“And I learned a lot as a businessman going through that, being hands on with everything. It was painstaking, stressful work, but I learned a lot.”

Goossen’s death affected him more than many realize.

“It was a loss to me regardless of what people think or write,” he said. “Dan and I were family. Sometimes family fight. Unfortunately our fight was in public. Then to have a man die in the middle of the dispute. That was a very, very difficult thing to overcome and deal with.

“The worst part of it wasn’t the layoff, wasn’t not fighting. It was that I had no closure to this. I couldn’t even pay my respects.”

Ward fought only seven times after he won the Super Six tournament, the last five as a 175-pounder.

The biggest bout and most stirring drama of his career came in November 2016, when he challenged feared unified champion Sergey Kovalev in Las Vegas. Kovalev was a polished boxer with one-punch knockout power, which is why no one was in a hurry to tangle with him.

Ward could match the skill level of anyone but this was a significant challenge. And he had a problem going into that fight that wasn’t publicized: a knee injury that required drainage the day of the fight.

Then things got really hairy. Kovalev came out for the opening bell on fire, landing one hard shot after another until finally a right hand put Ward down on all fours.

Ward wasn’t hurt badly but he was in trouble nonetheless, as Kovalev had a 10-8 round and all the momentum. Would the fierce Russian build on his success and blow Ward away? That seemed to be where the fight was headed. Or would Ward find a way to regroup and turn the tide?

We know now what Ward is made of. He maintained his poise, made necessary adjustments and ended up winning a close, but unanimous decision to become a two-division titleholder.

Then, seven months later in the same town, he knocked out Kovalev in the eighth round to remove doubt about his superiority over his rival. Ward never fought again.

“Man, it was tough,” said Ward, referring to his sore knee and what followed. “It was tough, it was tough. Not just physically but emotionally and mentally. I found myself in those situations before in my life. It was the biggest moment in my life, the biggest moment of my career and things weren’t ideal.

“How are you going to respond now? Where is your faith now? It’s one thing to have faith when things are but when the wind picks up and starts to blow where is your faith now? It was a faith check for sure.

“I was really in disbelief. I was two hours away from the biggest fight of my life in Las Vegas and I have to have the doctor come to my house and drain my knee. … I learned from that that I can overcome [anything] even though things aren’t ideal.

“And I took that momentum into the second fight. I knew Kovalev had no shot. And we showed that.”

Ward thought about returning to the ring only once, after Canelo Alvarez knocked out Kovalez in November 2019. Had the Mexican star called him out, he said, he would’ve returned. Alvarez never mentioned his name, which in effect put Ward’s career to rest.

Now he’s remembered as one of the greatest fighters of his generation, an Olympic champion who went on to have a perfect professional career. And our admiration for him only grows as a result of the Showtime documentary, which lays out the imposing obstacles he had to overcome to accomplish what he did.

Ward was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2021. It was boxing’s way of saying, “We know what you did. And it was special.”

“That was just more for me,” he said. “… I’ve gotten to a place in my life where I don’t need validation. I know outside validation is fickle … so I don’t put a lot of stock in that. It’s good to see things and read things and hear things positive about my career.

“The Hall of Fame was more for me, though. I remember thinking, ‘I need this call. I want to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer so I can finally rest.”

Andre Ward: Faith in God, himself lifted him from dark side to greatness

Andre Ward used faith in God and himself, as well as good advice, to rise from a harrowing childhood to greatness in boxing.

Editor’s note: “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward” documentary premieres Friday on Showtime.

***

Andre Ward is as much a survivor as he is a champion.

That couldn’t have been more clear in the Showtime documentary “S.O.G.: The Book of Ward,” which chronicles his journey from a harrowing life on the streets of Oakland, California, to recognition as one of the best fighters of all time.

He came from a home in which both parents battled drug addiction. And he ended up on a similar path for a time, dealing narcotics while he was an amateur. He could’ve gone in one of two directions: toward life that statistics say wouldn’t end well or back to the gym, to which his father brought him as a child.

He chose the latter because he had positive voices in his life (including longtime trainer Virgil Hunter and a devoted wife, Tiffiney), faith in God and faith in himself. The rest is history.

“I always had drive,” Ward told Boxing Junkie. “I just always wanted to be good at things, I was always competitive. Doing things right always mattered to me. And just having Virg there and my dad while he was alive, different people along my journey who spoke truth to me when I didn’t want to hear it.

“My pastor at a certain point. Just two or three voices in my life that helped me make the right decisions. And then, of course, my faith. I needed a higher power to connect me with things I wanted to do.”

God was good to Ward, giving him once-in-a-generation talent and the willpower to make the most of it.

S.O.G., the son of God, remains the last American to win an Olympic gold medal. He turned the elusive trick in 2004 Athens Games by upsetting the favored Utkirbek Haydarov of Uzbekistan in the semifinals and beating Mahamed Aripgadzhiev of Belarus in the final.

And he was just getting started.

He was only 25 and relatively unproven as a professional in 2009 when he was entered in the Super Six World Boxing Classic, a six-man tournament that featured six of the best 168-pounders from around the world.

The favorites to win the championship were celebrated Europeans Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and Carl Froch. Ward was an afterthought, at least until his first-round fight.

Ward opened against Kessler, a fight in which the young American stunned many in the boxing world by outclassing his more-experienced Danish opponent for 10-plus rounds. The fight was stopped in Round 11 after an accidental head butt caused a gash above Kessler’s left eye but Ward had plenty of time to prove he was the better man, winning a wide technical decision.

As Dan Rafael wrote for ESPN at the time, “Although Kessler complained about the head butts and refereeing, the fact is that Ward simply kicked his butt.”

He never stopped kicking butt. He went on to beat replacement Allan Green, Abraham and Froch decisively to win the tournament and establish himself as the best super middleweight and a major figure in the sport seemingly overnight.

He had cleared a significant hurdle again.

“It was huge,” he said. “For me, a competitive person, to come out on top of that … I have the trophy right here in my office now. Every now and again I glance and it, look at the names on there and it just kind of feeds you. I think, ‘Man, we did that.’

“It was also a very scary moment in my career if you’re one of my handlers because that’s a sink or swim moment. I could’ve drowned in that tournament. I hadn’t beaten anybody up until that point.

“[Previous opponent] Edison Miranda was obviously a dangerous and tough contender but not at that level. Careers got ruined in the Super Six. I could’ve been one of them. So to come out on the other side just confirmed that I was the truth and that I was going to be there for a very long time.”

Ward’s next obstacle was outside the ring.

He entered into a protracted legal battle to extricate himself from his contract with promoter Dan Goossen over a co-promoter who Ward believed had a right to be part of his team. That’s the main reason he fought only twice between September 2012 and March 2016.

And before the dispute ran its course Goossen died as a result of liver cancer, in September 2014.

Ward had a positive takeaway from his relative inactivity during that period – most notably giving his body time to heal after so many years in the ring – but the loss of a man for whom he had affection still saddens him.

“[The inactivity] was a shame from the standpoint that it wasn’t ideal,” he said. “I don’t look at it the way everybody looks at it, though. People say, ‘Oh, you lost two years of your prime.’ I look at it like I got two years back because I was able to rest. … I think I extended my career two years by not fighting.

“And I learned a lot as a businessman going through that, being hands on with everything. It was painstaking, stressful work, but I learned a lot.”

Goossen’s death affected him more than many realize.

“It was a loss to me regardless of what people think or write,” he said. “Dan and I were family. Sometimes family fight. Unfortunately our fight was in public. Then to have a man die in the middle of the dispute. That was a very, very difficult thing to overcome and deal with.

“The worst part of it wasn’t the layoff, wasn’t not fighting. It was that I had no closure to this. I couldn’t even pay my respects.”

Ward fought only seven times after he won the Super Six tournament, the last five as a 175-pounder.

The biggest bout and most stirring drama of his career came in November 2016, when he challenged feared unified champion Sergey Kovalev in Las Vegas. Kovalev was a polished boxer with one-punch knockout power, which is why no one was in a hurry to tangle with him.

Ward could match the skill level of anyone but this was a significant challenge. And he had a problem going into that fight that wasn’t publicized: a knee injury that required drainage the day of the fight.

Then things got really hairy. Kovalev came out for the opening bell on fire, landing one hard shot after another until finally a right hand put Ward down on all fours.

Ward wasn’t hurt badly but he was in trouble nonetheless, as Kovalev had a 10-8 round and all the momentum. Would the fierce Russian build on his success and blow Ward away? That seemed to be where the fight was headed. Or would Ward find a way to regroup and turn the tide?

We know now what Ward is made of. He maintained his poise, made necessary adjustments and ended up winning a close, but unanimous decision to become a two-division titleholder.

Then, seven months later in the same town, he knocked out Kovalev in the eighth round to remove doubt about his superiority over his rival. Ward never fought again.

“Man, it was tough,” said Ward, referring to his sore knee and what followed. “It was tough, it was tough. Not just physically but emotionally and mentally. I found myself in those situations before in my life. It was the biggest moment in my life, the biggest moment of my career and things weren’t ideal.

“How are you going to respond now? Where is your faith now? It’s one thing to have faith when things are but when the wind picks up and starts to blow where is your faith now? It was a faith check for sure.

“I was really in disbelief. I was two hours away from the biggest fight of my life in Las Vegas and I have to have the doctor come to my house and drain my knee. … I learned from that that I can overcome [anything] even though things aren’t ideal.

“And I took that momentum into the second fight. I knew Kovalev had no shot. And we showed that.”

Ward thought about returning to the ring only once, after Canelo Alvarez knocked out Kovalez in November 2019. Had the Mexican star called him out, he said, he would’ve returned. Alvarez never mentioned his name, which in effect put Ward’s career to rest.

Now he’s remembered as one of the greatest fighters of his generation, an Olympic champion who went on to have a perfect professional career. And our admiration for him only grows as a result of the Showtime documentary, which lays out the imposing obstacles he had to overcome to accomplish what he did.

Ward was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2021. It was boxing’s way of saying, “We know what you did. And it was special.”

“That was just more for me,” he said. “… I’ve gotten to a place in my life where I don’t need validation. I know outside validation is fickle … so I don’t put a lot of stock in that. It’s good to see things and read things and hear things positive about my career.

“The Hall of Fame was more for me, though. I remember thinking, ‘I need this call. I want to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer so I can finally rest.”

Canelo Alvarez: Ranking the Mexican star’s calendar years, best to worst

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021. Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus. The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, …

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021.

Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus.

The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, won major titles in four divisions and is on the cusp of becoming an undisputed champion for the first time. Alvarez (57-1-2, 38 KOs) challenges Dmitry Bivol in a pay-per-view bout Saturday from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

In this special feature, we take a look at Alvarez’s performances year by calendar year and then rank those years – best to worst – beginning in 2010, when he was introduced to American audiences on a significant scale.

The current year is not including because it hinges on Saturday’s fight. If he wins, it will be among his best years. If he loses, it will be down the list.

Here is what we came up with:

2019

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Daniel Jacobs (UD) and Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Background: The victory over Jacobs seems to fly under the radar but it was impressive. Jacobs was talented, polished, a big middleweight and at the top of his game when he met Alvarez in a title-unification bout. And the Mexican was up to the challenge, outboxing Jacobs to win a unanimous decision in a competitive fight. … Six months later he made a bold move by deciding to move up to light heavyweight to challenge beltholder Kovalev, who was somewhat past his prime but still dangerous and bigger than Alvarez. The Russian fought Alvarez on roughly even terms until the challenger dropped the hammer in Round 11. Two big fights, two big victories.

2018

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Gennadiy Golovkin (MD) and Rocky Fielding (TKO 3)
Background: The victory over Triple-G in their rematch was arguably the greatest of Alvarez’s career. The two best 160-pounders in the world had fought to a disputed draw a year earlier and there was every reason to believe the second fight would be just as close and perhaps disputed. It was, as both men held their own. However, unlike the first meeting, Alvarez pushed the action much of the fight and was rewarded for that on two of three cards. Golovkin was unbeaten and had made a record-tying 20 successful defenses going into the fight. … Throw out the Fielding fight. That was a secondary 168-pound title grab against a second-tier opponent.

2015

Record: 2-0
Opponents: James Kirkland (KO 3) and Miguel Cotto (UD)
Background: The victory over the wildly aggressive Kirkland wasn’t as meaningful many other Alvarez triumphs because of the Texan’s limitations. However, Alvarez’s brutal knockout might’ve been the most breathtaking of his 38 stoppages, which added considerably to his growing star power. … Cotto, 35, was past his prime and a smallish 154-pounder but his unquestioned ability and experience made him a threat to Alvarez, at least on paper. In the end, the slick Puerto Rican did give Alvarez some difficulty but he ended up on the wrong end of a clear decision.

2014

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Alfredo Angulo (TKO 10) and Erislandy Lara (SD)
Background: Some might forget that Angulo was a solid, durable boxer who was coming off a strong performance in a loss to the respected Lara when he fought Alvarez. Yet Alvarez dominated his fellow Mexican in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather. He outboxed Angulo for nine rounds and then stopped him in Round 10. … Some of Alvarez’s handlers didn’t want him to fight Lara, a tricky Cuban southpaw who could make anyone look bad. And that’s how it played out. Alvarez had to scrape and claw to eke out a split-decision victory that many believe was a gift from two of the three judges.

2021

Record: 3-0
Opponent: Avni Yildirim (KO 3), Billy Joe Saunders (KO 8), Caleb Plant (KO 11)
Background: Alvarez realized a goal by becoming undisputed super middleweight champion in a busy year last year. He fought the limited Yildirim in February only because he was his mandatory challenger. He then faced capable beltholders in Saunders (in May) and Plant (November), who held their own against Alvarez until he caught up with them, broke them down and ultimately stopped them. He turned 31 in July 2021. He obviously hadn’t slowed down.

2020

Record: 1-0
Opponent: Callum Smith (UD)
Background: Alvarez fought only once in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic but made the most the 168-pound title-unification bout. Smith was a legitimate opponent on paper, tall, skillful, experienced. He was an underdog but some believes he could be competitive against Alvarez. He wasn’t. Alvarez had his way with the Englishman in part because the latter didn’t have the power to knock Alvarez off his game, the result being a one-sided decision in a one-sided fight. The victory gave Alvarez two of the four major super middleweight titles, after which he set his sights on the last two.

2016

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Amir Khan (KO 6) and Liam Smith (KO 9)
Background: Alvarez’s knockout of Khan rivals his stoppage of James Kirkland. Khan, a quick, capable boxer who had moved up from 147 pounds to a catch weight of 155, held his own for five-plus rounds and then BAM! A right hand from hell put Khan down and removed him from his senses. … The Smith fight was as much about the crowd size and venue – 50,000-plus at the home of the Dallas Cowboys – as the opponent. Smith, the brother of Callum Smith, was a solid all-around fighter but had no where near Alvarez’s ability. The Englishman was overwhelmed in the end.

2012

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Shane Mosley (UD) and Josesito Lopez (TKO 5)
Background: Mosley, 40, was well past his prime when he met Alvarez but the fight was important for the rising star because Sugar Shane was the first major figure on his resume. And he didn’t disappoint, even at 21 years old. The younger, faster man outboxed his overmatched elder from beginning to end to win by a near-shutout decision. Taking down a future Hall of Famer is a significant step in any fighter’s career. … Lopez was and remains a gutsy warrior but he was too small for Alvarez, who put him down three times in a one-sided junior middleweight fight.

2011

Record: 4-0
Opponents: Matthew Hatton (UD), Ryan Rhodes (TKO 12), Alfonso Gomez (TKO 6), Kermit Cintron (TKO 5)
Background: One could argue that the limited Matthew Hatton. Ricky’s brother, didn’t have the credentials to be fighting for a major belt. However, the fact is he and Alvarez met for the junior middleweight title vacated by Manny Pacquiao. And it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez, levels above Hatton, would’ve won every round on all three cards had he not lost a point for hitting after the break in Round 7. He had won the first of eight titles at the tender age of 20. Rhodes, Gomez and Cintron were all solid fighters carefully selected to help Alvarez develop into one of the best fighters in the business.

2010

Record: 5-0
Opponents: Brian Camechis (KO 3), Jose Cotto (TKO 9), Luciano Cuello (TKO 6), Carlos Baldomir (KO 6) and Lovemore Ndou (UD 12)
Background: 2010 was most notable because it was the year in which Alvarez fought on a major U.S. card for the first time. The 19-year-old redhead from Guadalajara stopped Jose Cotto, Miguel’s brother, in the ninth round on the Mayweather-Mosley card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Cotto hurt Alvarez with a left hook in Round 1 but the teenager battled through it and ended up winning by knockout. Camechis, Cuello, Baldomir and Ndou didn’t give the evolving young star much resistance, which was a pattern that would continue when Alvarez faced second-tier opposition.

2017

Record: 1-0-1
Opponents: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (UD) and Gennadiy Golovkin (SD D)
Background: A showdown between Alvarez and Chavez had been discussed for years. When it finally happened, it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez outclassed (embarrassed?) the son of a Mexican legend, winning every round on all three cards. … The first fight between Alvarez and Triple-G was the ultimate middleweight matchup, between a long-reigning knockout artist (Golovkin) and a rising superstar (Alvarez). The Kazakhstani used effective aggression to win over most observers in a competitive fight but he had to settle for a controversial draw. Indeed, Alvarez was fortunate he didn’t leave the ring with his second loss.

2013

Record: 1-1
Opponents: Austin Trout (UD) and Floyd Mayweather (UD L)
Background: The 22-year-old Alvarez took a significant risk when he decided to fight the skillful Trout, who was left-handed, unbeaten and coming off a defining victory over Miguel Cotto. The gamble paid off. In his finest performance to date, he outboxed Trout to win a clear decision. … The decision to fight Mayweather was even bolder. And it didn’t pay off, at least in terms of results. The pound-for-pound king schooled the upstart, who didn’t have the tools to compete with a boxing wizard like Mayweather. The good news for him is that the setback sharpened his resolve to get better. He did.

[lawrence-related id=25595,25419,25389,25345,25341,25333,25146,25143]

Canelo Alvarez: Ranking the Mexican star’s calendar years, best to worst

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021. Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus. The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, …

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted this past November. It has been updated to include 2021.

Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus.

The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, won major titles in four divisions and is on the cusp of becoming an undisputed champion for the first time. Alvarez (57-1-2, 38 KOs) challenges Dmitry Bivol in a pay-per-view bout Saturday from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

In this special feature, we take a look at Alvarez’s performances year by calendar year and then rank those years – best to worst – beginning in 2010, when he was introduced to American audiences on a significant scale.

The current year is not including because it hinges on Saturday’s fight. If he wins, it will be among his best years. If he loses, it will be down the list.

Here is what we came up with:

2019

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Daniel Jacobs (UD) and Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Background: The victory over Jacobs seems to fly under the radar but it was impressive. Jacobs was talented, polished, a big middleweight and at the top of his game when he met Alvarez in a title-unification bout. And the Mexican was up to the challenge, outboxing Jacobs to win a unanimous decision in a competitive fight. … Six months later he made a bold move by deciding to move up to light heavyweight to challenge beltholder Kovalev, who was somewhat past his prime but still dangerous and bigger than Alvarez. The Russian fought Alvarez on roughly even terms until the challenger dropped the hammer in Round 11. Two big fights, two big victories.

2018

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Gennadiy Golovkin (MD) and Rocky Fielding (TKO 3)
Background: The victory over Triple-G in their rematch was arguably the greatest of Alvarez’s career. The two best 160-pounders in the world had fought to a disputed draw a year earlier and there was every reason to believe the second fight would be just as close and perhaps disputed. It was, as both men held their own. However, unlike the first meeting, Alvarez pushed the action much of the fight and was rewarded for that on two of three cards. Golovkin was unbeaten and had made a record-tying 20 successful defenses going into the fight. … Throw out the Fielding fight. That was a secondary 168-pound title grab against a second-tier opponent.

2015

Record: 2-0
Opponents: James Kirkland (KO 3) and Miguel Cotto (UD)
Background: The victory over the wildly aggressive Kirkland wasn’t as meaningful many other Alvarez triumphs because of the Texan’s limitations. However, Alvarez’s brutal knockout might’ve been the most breathtaking of his 38 stoppages, which added considerably to his growing star power. … Cotto, 35, was past his prime and a smallish 154-pounder but his unquestioned ability and experience made him a threat to Alvarez, at least on paper. In the end, the slick Puerto Rican did give Alvarez some difficulty but he ended up on the wrong end of a clear decision.

2014

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Alfredo Angulo (TKO 10) and Erislandy Lara (SD)
Background: Some might forget that Angulo was a solid, durable boxer who was coming off a strong performance in a loss to the respected Lara when he fought Alvarez. Yet Alvarez dominated his fellow Mexican in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather. He outboxed Angulo for nine rounds and then stopped him in Round 10. … Some of Alvarez’s handlers didn’t want him to fight Lara, a tricky Cuban southpaw who could make anyone look bad. And that’s how it played out. Alvarez had to scrape and claw to eke out a split-decision victory that many believe was a gift from two of the three judges.

2021

Record: 3-0
Opponent: Avni Yildirim (KO 3), Billy Joe Saunders (KO 8), Caleb Plant (KO 11)
Background: Alvarez realized a goal by becoming undisputed super middleweight champion in a busy year last year. He fought the limited Yildirim in February only because he was his mandatory challenger. He then faced capable beltholders in Saunders (in May) and Plant (November), who held their own against Alvarez until he caught up with them, broke them down and ultimately stopped them. He turned 31 in July 2021. He obviously hadn’t slowed down.

2020

Record: 1-0
Opponent: Callum Smith (UD)
Background: Alvarez fought only once in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic but made the most the 168-pound title-unification bout. Smith was a legitimate opponent on paper, tall, skillful, experienced. He was an underdog but some believes he could be competitive against Alvarez. He wasn’t. Alvarez had his way with the Englishman in part because the latter didn’t have the power to knock Alvarez off his game, the result being a one-sided decision in a one-sided fight. The victory gave Alvarez two of the four major super middleweight titles, after which he set his sights on the last two.

2016

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Amir Khan (KO 6) and Liam Smith (KO 9)
Background: Alvarez’s knockout of Khan rivals his stoppage of James Kirkland. Khan, a quick, capable boxer who had moved up from 147 pounds to a catch weight of 155, held his own for five-plus rounds and then BAM! A right hand from hell put Khan down and removed him from his senses. … The Smith fight was as much about the crowd size and venue – 50,000-plus at the home of the Dallas Cowboys – as the opponent. Smith, the brother of Callum Smith, was a solid all-around fighter but had no where near Alvarez’s ability. The Englishman was overwhelmed in the end.

2012

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Shane Mosley (UD) and Josesito Lopez (TKO 5)
Background: Mosley, 40, was well past his prime when he met Alvarez but the fight was important for the rising star because Sugar Shane was the first major figure on his resume. And he didn’t disappoint, even at 21 years old. The younger, faster man outboxed his overmatched elder from beginning to end to win by a near-shutout decision. Taking down a future Hall of Famer is a significant step in any fighter’s career. … Lopez was and remains a gutsy warrior but he was too small for Alvarez, who put him down three times in a one-sided junior middleweight fight.

2011

Record: 4-0
Opponents: Matthew Hatton (UD), Ryan Rhodes (TKO 12), Alfonso Gomez (TKO 6), Kermit Cintron (TKO 5)
Background: One could argue that the limited Matthew Hatton. Ricky’s brother, didn’t have the credentials to be fighting for a major belt. However, the fact is he and Alvarez met for the junior middleweight title vacated by Manny Pacquiao. And it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez, levels above Hatton, would’ve won every round on all three cards had he not lost a point for hitting after the break in Round 7. He had won the first of eight titles at the tender age of 20. Rhodes, Gomez and Cintron were all solid fighters carefully selected to help Alvarez develop into one of the best fighters in the business.

2010

Record: 5-0
Opponents: Brian Camechis (KO 3), Jose Cotto (TKO 9), Luciano Cuello (TKO 6), Carlos Baldomir (KO 6) and Lovemore Ndou (UD 12)
Background: 2010 was most notable because it was the year in which Alvarez fought on a major U.S. card for the first time. The 19-year-old redhead from Guadalajara stopped Jose Cotto, Miguel’s brother, in the ninth round on the Mayweather-Mosley card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Cotto hurt Alvarez with a left hook in Round 1 but the teenager battled through it and ended up winning by knockout. Camechis, Cuello, Baldomir and Ndou didn’t give the evolving young star much resistance, which was a pattern that would continue when Alvarez faced second-tier opposition.

2017

Record: 1-0-1
Opponents: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (UD) and Gennadiy Golovkin (SD D)
Background: A showdown between Alvarez and Chavez had been discussed for years. When it finally happened, it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez outclassed (embarrassed?) the son of a Mexican legend, winning every round on all three cards. … The first fight between Alvarez and Triple-G was the ultimate middleweight matchup, between a long-reigning knockout artist (Golovkin) and a rising superstar (Alvarez). The Kazakhstani used effective aggression to win over most observers in a competitive fight but he had to settle for a controversial draw. Indeed, Alvarez was fortunate he didn’t leave the ring with his second loss.

2013

Record: 1-1
Opponents: Austin Trout (UD) and Floyd Mayweather (UD L)
Background: The 22-year-old Alvarez took a significant risk when he decided to fight the skillful Trout, who was left-handed, unbeaten and coming off a defining victory over Miguel Cotto. The gamble paid off. In his finest performance to date, he outboxed Trout to win a clear decision. … The decision to fight Mayweather was even bolder. And it didn’t pay off, at least in terms of results. The pound-for-pound king schooled the upstart, who didn’t have the tools to compete with a boxing wizard like Mayweather. The good news for him is that the setback sharpened his resolve to get better. He did.

[lawrence-related id=25595,25419,25389,25345,25341,25333,25146,25143]

Report: Canelo Alvarez near deal to face Dmitry Bivol, then Gennadiy Golovkin

Report: Canelo Alvarez is near a two-fight deal to face Dmitry Bivol and then Gennadiy Golovkin.

Canelo Alvarez’s immediate future might be coming into focus. And cruiserweight titleholder Ilunga Makabu isn’t in the picture.

The undisputed super middleweight champion is nearing a two-fight deal with promoter Eddie Hearn to face light heavyweight titleholder Dmitry Bivol on May 7 and then, if he beats Bivol, meet rival Gennadiy Golovkin a third time in defense of his 168-pound belt on Sept. 17, ESPN is reporting.

Alvarez has also been negotiating to face middleweight titleholder Jermall Charlo, according to the outlet.

The Mexican star had indicated that he was targeting Makabu because he wanted to win a world title in a fifth division. However, he evidently has pivoted, perhaps as a result of criticism.

[lawrence-related id=27638,27431,27221,26449,25956]

Alvarez (57-1-2, 39 KOs) would be fighting for a 175-pound title for a second time. He stopped then-beltholder Sergey Kovalev in 11 rounds in November 2019. Bivol doesn’t have Kovalev’s punching power but he’s closer to his prime and can box at least as well as his Russian countryman.

Golovkin is expected to face Ryota Murata in a title-unification bout this spring, although no date has been set. The Kazakhstani is 0-1-1 against Alvarez, fighting to a disputed draw in their first fight in 2017 and then losing a decision the following year.

Triple-G turned 40 on April 8.

ESPN is reporting that Alvarez would make at least $85 for the two-fight deal and upwards of $45 million for the Charlo fight.

Report: Canelo Alvarez near deal to face Dmitry Bivol, then Gennadiy Golovkin

Report: Canelo Alvarez is near a two-fight deal to face Dmitry Bivol and then Gennadiy Golovkin.

Canelo Alvarez’s immediate future might be coming into focus. And cruiserweight titleholder Ilunga Makabu isn’t in the picture.

The undisputed super middleweight champion is nearing a two-fight deal with promoter Eddie Hearn to face light heavyweight titleholder Dmitry Bivol on May 7 and then, if he beats Bivol, meet rival Gennadiy Golovkin a third time in defense of his 168-pound belt on Sept. 17, ESPN is reporting.

Alvarez has also been negotiating to face middleweight titleholder Jermall Charlo, according to the outlet.

The Mexican star had indicated that he was targeting Makabu because he wanted to win a world title in a fifth division. However, he evidently has pivoted, perhaps as a result of criticism.

[lawrence-related id=27638,27431,27221,26449,25956]

Alvarez (57-1-2, 39 KOs) would be fighting for a 175-pound title for a second time. He stopped then-beltholder Sergey Kovalev in 11 rounds in November 2019. Bivol doesn’t have Kovalev’s punching power but he’s closer to his prime and can box at least as well as his Russian countryman.

Golovkin is expected to face Ryota Murata in a title-unification bout this spring, although no date has been set. The Kazakhstani is 0-1-1 against Alvarez, fighting to a disputed draw in their first fight in 2017 and then losing a decision the following year.

Triple-G turned 40 on April 8.

ESPN is reporting that Alvarez would make at least $85 for the two-fight deal and upwards of $45 million for the Charlo fight.

Canelo Alvarez doesn’t need to fight cruiserweights to prove greatness

Opinion: Canelo Alvarez is continuing down the wrong path with his decision to fight cruiserweight Ilunga Makabu.

I hate what Canelo Alvarez is doing.

And I’m not talking only about his surprising decision to move up to the cruiserweight division to challenge obscure WBC titleholder Ilunga Makabu. For me, it started with his fight against Rockey Fielding in December 2018.

That’s when it became obvious to me that the Mexican star was more interested in collecting increasingly meaningless title belts than facing the best possible opponents in a misguided attempt to “make history,” as he puts it.

Alvarez was so determined to win a title in a third division that he arranged to move up from middleweight to fight Fielding, who held the WBA “regular” super middleweight title at the time. Of course, Alvarez won easily, stopping the Englishman in three rounds, and then basked in the glory of his great accomplishment.

In fact, he wasn’t fooling anyone. Fielding was a mediocre fighter who owned a belt that no one takes seriously. The actual WBA champion at the time was Callum Smith, who Alvarez would later defeat to become a legitimate 168-pound titleholder.

I remember thinking at the time of the Fielding fight, “This isn’t the warrior who sought out genuine challenges for so many years. This was someone taking advantage of flaws in a broken system.”

Alvarez went back down to middleweight and accepted one of those genuine challenges, a meeting with talented Daniel Jacobs in May 2019. He won a close decision in a competitive fight, restoring some of the faith I had in him.

Then came an interesting move: Again bent on adding a title in another division, he jumped from 160 pounds to 175 to face then-WBO titleholder Sergey Kovalev in November 2019. I respected that decision because I respected Kovalev, who was aging but still a competent fighter and naturally bigger than Alvarez.

The decision to fight Kovalev when he did was carefully calculated. Kovalev had battled Anthony Yarde in a taxing bout only nine weeks earlier, which arguably wasn’t enough time for a 36-year-old to recover. Indeed, Kovalev was the most vulnerable of the 175-pound champions.

However, he was a reasonable choice of opponents for Alvarez given the circumstances. Roy Jones Jr., a light heavyweight, chose to fight John Ruiz instead of Lennox Lewis for obvious reasons when he made the bold decision to challenge for a heavyweight championship in 2003. Made sense.

After that came Alvarez’s quest to become undisputed super middleweight champion, which also had at least some merit. In a time of fragmented titles, fighters who hold all four major belts provide some clarity as to whom is the best in a particular division. And, yes, one could argue that the accomplishment is historic.

Here’s the problem: Alvarez didn’t fight the best 168-pounders to reach his goal. He fought Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant because they held the titles. I believe the best potential opponents at 168 or below were David Benavidez, Jermall Charlo and Gennadiy Golovkin, all of whom would have made for more compelling – and, most likely, more competitive – fights than the titleholders did.

Alvarez can argue that he was working within the system to pursue his goals. Right. Again, the problem is that the system is flawed, as corrupt sanctioning bodies often provide title shots to fighters who aren’t necessarily worthy. That isn’t to denigrate Smith, Saunders and Plant as weak fighters; they aren’t. They’re just not as good as the other three.

Finally, we arrive at Alvarez’s decision to face cruiserweight titleholder Makabu. Once again, he is making what seems to be a bold move to make history. But how bold is it really?

On one hand, a 168-pounder is moving up two weight classes to face a major titleholder who weighed 197½ pounds for his most-recent fight and has 25 knockouts in 28 victories. On the other hand, Makabu has faced only one fighter you’ve heard of – Tony Bellew – and was stopped in three rounds.

And here’s the kicker: WBC officials announced when they created the bridgerweight division that they planned to lower the cruiserweight limit from 200 pounds to 190. I’m not clear on when they plan to do that but I’m guessing it will happen before the Alvarez-Makabu fight, which would make Makabu’s size advantage more manageable.

I have to acknowledge that the weight difference is still significant. At the same time, the move seems gimmicky, particularly when real, exciting challenges against fighters closer to his size are available.

Benavidez, Charlo, Golovkin (who deserves a third shot at Alvarez after two inconclusive bouts) and the top light heavyweights are more accomplished than Makabu and are genuine threats to Alvarez. I, as a fan, was dying to see Alvarez vs. Benavidez and I know I wasn’t alone.

Alvarez has the clout to do as he pleases, as he made clear at the WBC convention in Mexico City. He declared, “I do what I want.” That doesn’t mean that we have to buy into the decisions he makes as he pursues his version of “history”.

I applaud him on a remarkable career. I acknowledge that he has faced a long list of elite opponents over the past decade, more than any other active fighter. And I don’t believe his current method of choosing opponents indicates he’s dodging anyone. That’s not who he is.

The problem, in my opinion, is that he has decided that flimsy belts and titles in more and more divisions is his path to greatness. News flash: He’s already great. He should take a step back and ask himself, “Who are actually the best possible opponents and who do the fans want to see me fight?” And then he should act accordingly.

[lawrence-related id=25914,25892,25767]

Canelo Alvarez doesn’t need to fight cruiserweights to prove greatness

Opinion: Canelo Alvarez is continuing down the wrong path with his decision to fight cruiserweight Ilunga Makabu.

I hate what Canelo Alvarez is doing.

And I’m not talking only about his surprising decision to move up to the cruiserweight division to challenge obscure WBC titleholder Ilunga Makabu. For me, it started with his fight against Rockey Fielding in December 2018.

That’s when it became obvious to me that the Mexican star was more interested in collecting increasingly meaningless title belts than facing the best possible opponents in a misguided attempt to “make history,” as he puts it.

Alvarez was so determined to win a title in a third division that he arranged to move up from middleweight to fight Fielding, who held the WBA “regular” super middleweight title at the time. Of course, Alvarez won easily, stopping the Englishman in three rounds, and then basked in the glory of his great accomplishment.

In fact, he wasn’t fooling anyone. Fielding was a mediocre fighter who owned a belt that no one takes seriously. The actual WBA champion at the time was Callum Smith, who Alvarez would later defeat to become a legitimate 168-pound titleholder.

I remember thinking at the time of the Fielding fight, “This isn’t the warrior who sought out genuine challenges for so many years. This was someone taking advantage of flaws in a broken system.”

Alvarez went back down to middleweight and accepted one of those genuine challenges, a meeting with talented Daniel Jacobs in May 2019. He won a close decision in a competitive fight, restoring some of the faith I had in him.

Then came an interesting move: Again bent on adding a title in another division, he jumped from 160 pounds to 175 to face then-WBO titleholder Sergey Kovalev in November 2019. I respected that decision because I respected Kovalev, who was aging but still a competent fighter and naturally bigger than Alvarez.

The decision to fight Kovalev when he did was carefully calculated. Kovalev had battled Anthony Yarde in a taxing bout only nine weeks earlier, which arguably wasn’t enough time for a 36-year-old to recover. Indeed, Kovalev was the most vulnerable of the 175-pound champions.

However, he was a reasonable choice of opponents for Alvarez given the circumstances. Roy Jones Jr., a light heavyweight, chose to fight John Ruiz instead of Lennox Lewis for obvious reasons when he made the bold decision to challenge for a heavyweight championship in 2003. Made sense.

After that came Alvarez’s quest to become undisputed super middleweight champion, which also had at least some merit. In a time of fragmented titles, fighters who hold all four major belts provide some clarity as to whom is the best in a particular division. And, yes, one could argue that the accomplishment is historic.

Here’s the problem: Alvarez didn’t fight the best 168-pounders to reach his goal. He fought Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders and Caleb Plant because they held the titles. I believe the best potential opponents at 168 or below were David Benavidez, Jermall Charlo and Gennadiy Golovkin, all of whom would have made for more compelling – and, most likely, more competitive – fights than the titleholders did.

Alvarez can argue that he was working within the system to pursue his goals. Right. Again, the problem is that the system is flawed, as corrupt sanctioning bodies often provide title shots to fighters who aren’t necessarily worthy. That isn’t to denigrate Smith, Saunders and Plant as weak fighters; they aren’t. They’re just not as good as the other three.

Finally, we arrive at Alvarez’s decision to face cruiserweight titleholder Makabu. Once again, he is making what seems to be a bold move to make history. But how bold is it really?

On one hand, a 168-pounder is moving up two weight classes to face a major titleholder who weighed 197½ pounds for his most-recent fight and has 25 knockouts in 28 victories. On the other hand, Makabu has faced only one fighter you’ve heard of – Tony Bellew – and was stopped in three rounds.

And here’s the kicker: WBC officials announced when they created the bridgerweight division that they planned to lower the cruiserweight limit from 200 pounds to 190. I’m not clear on when they plan to do that but I’m guessing it will happen before the Alvarez-Makabu fight, which would make Makabu’s size advantage more manageable.

I have to acknowledge that the weight difference is still significant. At the same time, the move seems gimmicky, particularly when real, exciting challenges against fighters closer to his size are available.

Benavidez, Charlo, Golovkin (who deserves a third shot at Alvarez after two inconclusive bouts) and the top light heavyweights are more accomplished than Makabu and are genuine threats to Alvarez. I, as a fan, was dying to see Alvarez vs. Benavidez and I know I wasn’t alone.

Alvarez has the clout to do as he pleases, as he made clear at the WBC convention in Mexico City. He declared, “I do what I want.” That doesn’t mean that we have to buy into the decisions he makes as he pursues his version of “history”.

I applaud him on a remarkable career. I acknowledge that he has faced a long list of elite opponents over the past decade, more than any other active fighter. And I don’t believe his current method of choosing opponents indicates he’s dodging anyone. That’s not who he is.

The problem, in my opinion, is that he has decided that flimsy belts and titles in more and more divisions is his path to greatness. News flash: He’s already great. He should take a step back and ask himself, “Who are actually the best possible opponents and who do the fans want to see me fight?” And then he should act accordingly.

[lawrence-related id=25914,25892,25767]

Special report: Ranking Canelo Alvarez’s calendar years in boxing, best to worst

Special report: Ranking Canelo Alvarez’s calendar years in boxing, best to worst.

Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus.

The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, won major titles in four divisions and is on the cusp of becoming an undisputed champion for the first time. Alvarez (56-1-2, 38 KOs) faces Caleb Plant (21-0, 12 KOs) for all four major super middleweight belts in a pay-per-view bout Saturday from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

In this special feature, we take a look at Alvarez’s performances year by calendar year and then rank those years – best to worst – beginning in 2010, when he was introduced to American audiences on a significant scale.

The current year is not including because it hinges on Saturday’s fight. If he wins, it will be among his best years. If he loses, it will be down the list.

Here is what we came up with:

2019

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Daniel Jacobs (UD) and Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Background: The victory over Jacobs seems to fly under the radar but it was impressive. Jacobs was talented, polished, a big middleweight and at the top of his game when he met Alvarez in a title-unification bout. And the Mexican was up to the challenge, outboxing Jacobs to win a unanimous decision in a competitive fight. … Six months later he made a bold move by deciding to move up to light heavyweight to challenge beltholder Kovalev, who was somewhat past his prime but still dangerous and bigger than Alvarez. The Russian fought Alvarez on roughly even terms until the challenger dropped the hammer in Round 11. Two big fights, two big victories.

2018

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Gennadiy Golovkin (MD) and Rocky Fielding (TKO 3)
Background: The victory over Triple-G in their rematch was arguably the greatest of Alvarez’s career. The two best 160-pounders in the world had fought to a disputed draw a year earlier and there was every reason to believe the second fight would be just as close and perhaps disputed. It was, as both men held their own. However, unlike the first meeting, Alvarez pushed the action much of the fight and was rewarded for that on two of three cards. Golovkin was unbeaten and had made a record-tying 20 successful defenses going into the fight. … Throw out the Fielding fight. That was a secondary 168-pound title grab against a second-tier opponent.

2015

Record: 2-0
Opponents: James Kirkland (KO 3) and Miguel Cotto (UD)
Background: The victory over the wildly aggressive Kirkland wasn’t as meaningful many other Alvarez triumphs because of the Texan’s limitations. However, Alvarez’s brutal knockout might’ve been the most breathtaking of his 38 stoppages, which added considerably to his growing star power. … Cotto, 35, was past his prime and a smallish 154-pounder but his unquestioned ability and experience made him a threat to Alvarez, at least on paper. In the end, the slick Puerto Rican did give Alvarez some difficulty but he ended up on the wrong end of a clear decision.

2014

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Alfredo Angulo (TKO 10) and Erislandy Lara (SD)
Background: Some might forget that Angulo was a solid, durable boxer who was coming off a strong performance in a loss to the respected Lara when he fought Alvarez. Yet Alvarez dominated his fellow Mexican in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather. He outboxed Angulo for nine rounds and then stopped him in Round 10. … Some of Alvarez’s handlers didn’t want him to fight Lara, a tricky Cuban southpaw who could make anyone look bad. And that’s how it played out. Alvarez had to scrape and claw to eke out a split-decision victory that many believe was a gift from two of the three judges.

2020

Record: 1-0
Opponent: Callum Smith (UD)
Background: Alvarez fought only once in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic but made the most the 168-pound title-unification bout. Smith was a legitimate opponent on paper, tall, skillful, experienced. He was an underdog but some believes he could be competitive against Alvarez. He wasn’t. Alvarez had his way with the Englishman in part because the latter didn’t have the power to knock Alvarez off his game, the result being a one-sided decision in a one-sided fight. The victory gave Alvarez two of the four major super middleweight titles, after which he set his sights on the last two.

2016

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Amir Khan (KO 6) and Liam Smith (KO 9)
Background: Alvarez’s knockout of Khan rivals his stoppage of James Kirkland. Khan, a quick, capable boxer who had moved up from 147 pounds to a catch weight of 155, held his own for five-plus rounds and then BAM! A right hand from hell put Khan down and removed him from his senses. … The Smith fight was as much about the crowd size and venue – 50,000-plus at the home of the Dallas Cowboys – as the opponent. Smith, the brother of Callum Smith, was a solid all-around fighter but had no where near Alvarez’s ability. The Englishman was overwhelmed in the end.

2012

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Shane Mosley (UD) and Josesito Lopez (TKO 5)
Background: Mosley, 40, was well past his prime when he met Alvarez but the fight was important for the rising star because Sugar Shane was the first major figure on his resume. And he didn’t disappoint, even at 21 years old. The younger, faster man outboxed his overmatched elder from beginning to end to win by a near-shutout decision. Taking down a future Hall of Famer is a significant step in any fighter’s career. … Lopez was and remains a gutsy warrior but he was too small for Alvarez, who put him down three times in a one-sided junior middleweight fight.

2011

Record: 4-0
Opponents: Matthew Hatton (UD), Ryan Rhodes (TKO 12), Alfonso Gomez (TKO 6), Kermit Cintron (TKO 5)
Background: One could argue that the limited Matthew Hatton. Ricky’s brother, didn’t have the credentials to be fighting for a major belt. However, the fact is he and Alvarez met for the junior middleweight title vacated by Manny Pacquiao. And it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez, levels above Hatton, would’ve won every round on all three cards had he not lost a point for hitting after the break in Round 7. He had won the first of eight titles at the tender age of 20. Rhodes, Gomez and Cintron were all solid fighters carefully selected to help Alvarez develop into one of the best fighters in the business.

2010

Record: 5-0
Opponents: Brian Camechis (KO 3), Jose Cotto (TKO 9), Luciano Cuello (TKO 6), Carlos Baldomir (KO 6) and Lovemore Ndou (UD 12)
Background: 2010 was most notable because it was the year in which Alvarez fought on a major U.S. card for the first time. The 19-year-old redhead from Guadalajara stopped Jose Cotto, Miguel’s brother, in the ninth round on the Mayweather-Mosley card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Cotto hurt Alvarez with a left hook in Round 1 but the teenager battled through it and ended up winning by knockout. Camechis, Cuello, Baldomir and Ndou didn’t give the evolving young star much resistance, which was a pattern that would continue when Alvarez faced second-tier opposition.

2017

Record: 1-0-1
Opponents: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (UD) and Gennadiy Golovkin (SD D)
Background: A showdown between Alvarez and Chavez had been discussed for years. When it finally happened, it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez outclassed (embarrassed?) the son of a Mexican legend, winning every round on all three cards. … The first fight between Alvarez and Triple-G was the ultimate middleweight matchup, between a long-reigning knockout artist (Golovkin) and a rising superstar (Alvarez). The Kazakhstani used effective aggression to win over most observers in a competitive fight but he had to settle for a controversial draw. Indeed, Alvarez was fortunate he didn’t leave the ring with his second loss.

2013

Record: 1-1
Opponents: Austin Trout (UD) and Floyd Mayweather (UD L)
Background: The 22-year-old Alvarez took a significant risk when he decided to fight the skillful Trout, who was left-handed, unbeaten and coming off a defining victory over Miguel Cotto. The gamble paid off. In his finest performance to date, he outboxed Trout to win a clear decision. … The decision to fight Mayweather was even bolder. And it didn’t pay off, at least in terms of results. The pound-for-pound king schooled the upstart, who didn’t have the tools to compete with a boxing wizard like Mayweather. The good news for him is that the setback sharpened his resolve to get better. He did.

[lawrence-related id=25595,25419,25389,25345,25341,25333,25146,25143]

Special report: Ranking Canelo Alvarez’s calendar years in boxing, best to worst

Special report: Ranking Canelo Alvarez’s calendar years in boxing, best to worst.

Canelo Alvarez has known almost nothing but success over the past decade-plus.

The Mexican star has beaten one ranked fighter after another, won major titles in four divisions and is on the cusp of becoming an undisputed champion for the first time. Alvarez (56-1-2, 38 KOs) faces Caleb Plant (21-0, 12 KOs) for all four major super middleweight belts in a pay-per-view bout Saturday from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

In this special feature, we take a look at Alvarez’s performances year by calendar year and then rank those years – best to worst – beginning in 2010, when he was introduced to American audiences on a significant scale.

The current year is not including because it hinges on Saturday’s fight. If he wins, it will be among his best years. If he loses, it will be down the list.

Here is what we came up with:

2019

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Daniel Jacobs (UD) and Sergey Kovalev (KO 11)
Background: The victory over Jacobs seems to fly under the radar but it was impressive. Jacobs was talented, polished, a big middleweight and at the top of his game when he met Alvarez in a title-unification bout. And the Mexican was up to the challenge, outboxing Jacobs to win a unanimous decision in a competitive fight. … Six months later he made a bold move by deciding to move up to light heavyweight to challenge beltholder Kovalev, who was somewhat past his prime but still dangerous and bigger than Alvarez. The Russian fought Alvarez on roughly even terms until the challenger dropped the hammer in Round 11. Two big fights, two big victories.

2018

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Gennadiy Golovkin (MD) and Rocky Fielding (TKO 3)
Background: The victory over Triple-G in their rematch was arguably the greatest of Alvarez’s career. The two best 160-pounders in the world had fought to a disputed draw a year earlier and there was every reason to believe the second fight would be just as close and perhaps disputed. It was, as both men held their own. However, unlike the first meeting, Alvarez pushed the action much of the fight and was rewarded for that on two of three cards. Golovkin was unbeaten and had made a record-tying 20 successful defenses going into the fight. … Throw out the Fielding fight. That was a secondary 168-pound title grab against a second-tier opponent.

2015

Record: 2-0
Opponents: James Kirkland (KO 3) and Miguel Cotto (UD)
Background: The victory over the wildly aggressive Kirkland wasn’t as meaningful many other Alvarez triumphs because of the Texan’s limitations. However, Alvarez’s brutal knockout might’ve been the most breathtaking of his 38 stoppages, which added considerably to his growing star power. … Cotto, 35, was past his prime and a smallish 154-pounder but his unquestioned ability and experience made him a threat to Alvarez, at least on paper. In the end, the slick Puerto Rican did give Alvarez some difficulty but he ended up on the wrong end of a clear decision.

2014

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Alfredo Angulo (TKO 10) and Erislandy Lara (SD)
Background: Some might forget that Angulo was a solid, durable boxer who was coming off a strong performance in a loss to the respected Lara when he fought Alvarez. Yet Alvarez dominated his fellow Mexican in his first fight since losing to Floyd Mayweather. He outboxed Angulo for nine rounds and then stopped him in Round 10. … Some of Alvarez’s handlers didn’t want him to fight Lara, a tricky Cuban southpaw who could make anyone look bad. And that’s how it played out. Alvarez had to scrape and claw to eke out a split-decision victory that many believe was a gift from two of the three judges.

2020

Record: 1-0
Opponent: Callum Smith (UD)
Background: Alvarez fought only once in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic but made the most the 168-pound title-unification bout. Smith was a legitimate opponent on paper, tall, skillful, experienced. He was an underdog but some believes he could be competitive against Alvarez. He wasn’t. Alvarez had his way with the Englishman in part because the latter didn’t have the power to knock Alvarez off his game, the result being a one-sided decision in a one-sided fight. The victory gave Alvarez two of the four major super middleweight titles, after which he set his sights on the last two.

2016

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Amir Khan (KO 6) and Liam Smith (KO 9)
Background: Alvarez’s knockout of Khan rivals his stoppage of James Kirkland. Khan, a quick, capable boxer who had moved up from 147 pounds to a catch weight of 155, held his own for five-plus rounds and then BAM! A right hand from hell put Khan down and removed him from his senses. … The Smith fight was as much about the crowd size and venue – 50,000-plus at the home of the Dallas Cowboys – as the opponent. Smith, the brother of Callum Smith, was a solid all-around fighter but had no where near Alvarez’s ability. The Englishman was overwhelmed in the end.

2012

Record: 2-0
Opponents: Shane Mosley (UD) and Josesito Lopez (TKO 5)
Background: Mosley, 40, was well past his prime when he met Alvarez but the fight was important for the rising star because Sugar Shane was the first major figure on his resume. And he didn’t disappoint, even at 21 years old. The younger, faster man outboxed his overmatched elder from beginning to end to win by a near-shutout decision. Taking down a future Hall of Famer is a significant step in any fighter’s career. … Lopez was and remains a gutsy warrior but he was too small for Alvarez, who put him down three times in a one-sided junior middleweight fight.

2011

Record: 4-0
Opponents: Matthew Hatton (UD), Ryan Rhodes (TKO 12), Alfonso Gomez (TKO 6), Kermit Cintron (TKO 5)
Background: One could argue that the limited Matthew Hatton. Ricky’s brother, didn’t have the credentials to be fighting for a major belt. However, the fact is he and Alvarez met for the junior middleweight title vacated by Manny Pacquiao. And it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez, levels above Hatton, would’ve won every round on all three cards had he not lost a point for hitting after the break in Round 7. He had won the first of eight titles at the tender age of 20. Rhodes, Gomez and Cintron were all solid fighters carefully selected to help Alvarez develop into one of the best fighters in the business.

2010

Record: 5-0
Opponents: Brian Camechis (KO 3), Jose Cotto (TKO 9), Luciano Cuello (TKO 6), Carlos Baldomir (KO 6) and Lovemore Ndou (UD 12)
Background: 2010 was most notable because it was the year in which Alvarez fought on a major U.S. card for the first time. The 19-year-old redhead from Guadalajara stopped Jose Cotto, Miguel’s brother, in the ninth round on the Mayweather-Mosley card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Cotto hurt Alvarez with a left hook in Round 1 but the teenager battled through it and ended up winning by knockout. Camechis, Cuello, Baldomir and Ndou didn’t give the evolving young star much resistance, which was a pattern that would continue when Alvarez faced second-tier opposition.

2017

Record: 1-0-1
Opponents: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (UD) and Gennadiy Golovkin (SD D)
Background: A showdown between Alvarez and Chavez had been discussed for years. When it finally happened, it wasn’t much of a fight. Alvarez outclassed (embarrassed?) the son of a Mexican legend, winning every round on all three cards. … The first fight between Alvarez and Triple-G was the ultimate middleweight matchup, between a long-reigning knockout artist (Golovkin) and a rising superstar (Alvarez). The Kazakhstani used effective aggression to win over most observers in a competitive fight but he had to settle for a controversial draw. Indeed, Alvarez was fortunate he didn’t leave the ring with his second loss.

2013

Record: 1-1
Opponents: Austin Trout (UD) and Floyd Mayweather (UD L)
Background: The 22-year-old Alvarez took a significant risk when he decided to fight the skillful Trout, who was left-handed, unbeaten and coming off a defining victory over Miguel Cotto. The gamble paid off. In his finest performance to date, he outboxed Trout to win a clear decision. … The decision to fight Mayweather was even bolder. And it didn’t pay off, at least in terms of results. The pound-for-pound king schooled the upstart, who didn’t have the tools to compete with a boxing wizard like Mayweather. The good news for him is that the setback sharpened his resolve to get better. He did.

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