Joe George scores one-punch KO of Marcos Escudero

Joe George stopped Marcos Escudero with one punch in Round 9 of their scheduled 10-round light heavyweight fight Saturday.

One punch can change the trajectory of a fight in an instant. Ask Marcos Escudero.

The Argentine seemed to be on his way to a one-sided decision over Joe George on the Angelo Leo-Tramaine Williams card Saturday in Uncasville, Conn., when, in the final seconds of Round 9, George landed a left uppercut that put Escudero flat on his back and ended his night.

The official time of the stoppage was 3:00.

George (11-0, 7 KOs) defeated Escudero (10-2, 9 KOs) by a controversial split decision in November, the most-recent fight for both men.

On Saturday, in a scheduled 10-round light heavyweight bout, Escudero outworked George from the opening bell, pounding his body and head as George rested with his back against the ropes much of the fight.

Not all the punches got through but more than enough did for Escudero to control the fight.

George had his moments before the dramatic ending, landing a sharp jab and some power shots, but he generally threw one punch at a time and was on the defensive most of the way.

The end came out of nowhere. Escudero ducked under a right hand. At the moment, with his head low, George uncorked a perfect left uppercut that launched Escudero onto the canvas and hurt him badly.

He didn’t come to close to getting up.

Just like that, George turned what seemed to be a bad night into a knockout of  the year candidate and a spectacular victory. Not a bad start for the first card on Showtime in months.

 

Here’s a peek at Showtime’s ‘Return to Boxing’

Showtime has released a clip from “Return to Boxing,” described as “a personal look at the role sports can play in healing a nation.”

Showtime has released an exclusive clip from “Return to Boxing,” which the premium network described as “a personal look at the role sports can play in healing a nation facing unprecedented challenges.

The piece, which will open the telecast in Showtime’s first post-lockdown card Saturday night, was written by executive producer David Dinkins Jr. and narrated by blow-by-blow commentator Mauro Ranallo.

The telecast will mark 141 days since the last live boxing event on Showtime.

“The squared circle has been a theater of thrills and metaphor for the struggle to overcome the odds,” Ranallo says. “While sport is not real life, it is a mirror of the human spirit.”

Angelo Leo (19-0, 9 KOs) will fight Tramaine Williams (19-0, 6 KOs) for a vacant junior featherweight title in the main event of the three-fight show at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn.

Coverage begins at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT.

Here is the clip:

Gervonta Davis vs. Leo Santa Cruz: Intriguing matchup

Gervonta Davis vs. Leo Santa Cruz is one of the best — and interesting — matchups on the Showtime-PBC schedule.

One of the gems on the Showtime-Premier Boxing Champions schedule is set for Oct. 24.

That’s when Gervonta Davis and Leo Santa Cruz are scheduled to fight for titles in two weight divisions – one a secondary belt – in the new Showtime bubble at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Conn.

We’ll see whether the matchup will generate big pay-per-view numbers but it’s difficult to find fault in the main event.

Davis (23-0, 22 KOs) is one of the most-gifted young fighters in the world and resonates with a wide swath of fans. Santa Cruz (37-1-1, 19 KOs) is a proven, volume-punching warhorse who doesn’t appear to be slowing down at 31.

It doesn’t get much better than this is an era when it seems elite fighters work as hard to avoid one another as they do in the ring.

Leo Santa Cruz (right) outpointed Miguel Flores to win a title in a fourth division. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions

And there are already good story lines directly related to the boxing side of the matchup.

The most compelling might be that Davis has agreed to a weight limit of 130 pounds, which will allow him to challenge for Santa Cruz’s WBA junior lightweight title. Davis’ WBA “regular” 135-pound belt also will be on the line but Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize that title. Vasiliy Lomachenko is the WBA lightweight champion.

Still, the fact the fight is scheduled to take place at 130 pounds is interesting. Davis made the move up to 135 pounds for his last fight, a 12th-round knockout of Yuriorkis Gamboa in July of last year. Can he even make 130 pounds at this point?

Remember, Davis isn’t known for his discipline. He lost his junior lightweight title when he weighed 132 for his fight against Francisco Fonseca on the Floyd Mayweather-Conor McGregor card in 2017. He made 130 for his next three bouts but needed two tries before succeeding against Hugo Ruiz in February of last year. And he initially weighed 136.2 the day before the lightweight fight against Gamboa. He made weight on his second attempt.

Thus, Stephen Espinoza, president of sports and event programming for Showtime, chuckled when he was asked on a conference call whether he was concerned about Davis’ ability to make weight.

“He’s motivated here. I don’t think there will be any problems making weight on this one,” Espinoza said.

Meanwhile, the fact the fight will take place at 130 – and not 135 – probably raises Santa Cruz’s chances of winning twofold. The three-division titleholder from the Los Angeles area was a 126-pounder only two fights ago. And while he outpointed Miguel Flores to win his 130-pound title in his debut at the weight in November, he didn’t look particularly sharp. That raised questions about his effectiveness at 130.

Can Davis make the junior lightweight limit? If he can’t, what will Santa Cruz do? Go through with the fight anyway? And can Santa Cruz be as effective at 130 as he was at lighter weights?

Davis vs. Santa Cruz provides a lot of fodder for discussion.

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Pay-per-view card featuring Charlo twins ‘crown jewel’ of Showtime slate

Jermell and Jermall Charlo will headline one of the deepest pay-per-view cards in recent memory on Sept. 26.

Glance at the Showtime schedule of fights for the remainder of 2020 and your eyes are likely to focus on a specific date: Sept. 26.

That’s when the Charlo twins headline an unusual, split-session pay-per-view show behind closed doors at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut. Here are the featured fights on the show, which will be divided into two four-fight cards – separated by a break – on the same day for same price.

No decision has been made as to the order in which the Charlos will fight.

Card A:

  • Jermell Charlo vs. Jeison Rosario in a junior middleweight title-unification bout.
  • Mario Barrios vs. Ryan Karl for Barrios’ junior welterweight title.
  • Daniel Roman vs. TBA in a junior featherweight bout.

Card B:

  • Jermall Charlo vs. Sergiy Derevyanchenko for Charlo’s middleweight belt.
  • Brandon Figueroa vs. Damien Vazquez for Figueroa’s junior featherweight title.
  • Diego Magdaleno vs. Isaac Cruz in a lightweight bout.

That lineup brings back memories of the legendary Don King pay-per-view cards of a generation or two ago.

“You have to go back to the marathon Don King pay-per-views of the 1980s,” said Stephen Espinoza, president of sports and event programming for Showtime Networks Inc. “And even those events, 30, 40 years ago, you didn’t see the array of talent you’ll see on Sept. 26.

“Jermell and Jermall are in arguably the toughest fights of their careers. That’s the crown jewel of the schedule right now.”

Espinoza answered questions in a virtual news conference shortly after the schedule was officially announced Wednesday morning.

One question posed to him centered on the timing of the pay-per-view show. Many people in the country are struggling economically as a result of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, which could affect the buy rate.

Espinoza didn’t reveal the price of the pay-per-view other than to say it will be comparable to previous shows.

“A lot of people are being squeezed financially,” he said. “That was one of the motivating factors in structuring it the way we did. We tried to provide not just value … but more value than you’ve seen on any recent pay-per-view.

“The reality is that pay-per-view is a tool to help fights happen that wouldn’t otherwise happen. We understand the financial pressure here. We feel this is a great value … and we think the market will respond.”

The combination of two compelling Charlo fights on one card is a strong selling point, particularly when combined with two more world title fights.

Jermell Charlo (33-1, 17 KOs) and Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) are two of the hottest fighters in the world.

Charlo, who holds one 154-pound title, is coming off a sensational 11th-round knockout of slick Tony Harrison to avenge an earlier points loss and regain his title. Rosario shocked the boxing world by stopping the highly respected Julian Williams in five rounds to win two belts in his most-recent fight.

“All I expect is for me to get that win, dominatingly,” said Charlo, who believes he was robbed in his first fight with Harrison. “… I won’t leave it up to the judges. I learned that in the past. I have to win very dominatingly or win by knockout.”

Jermall Charlo (30-0, 22 KOs) holds a 160-pound title but has been criticized for less-than-elite opposition. That shouldn’t be a problem against Derevyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs).

The Ukrainian, who reportedly had around 400 amateur fights, pushed Daniel Jacobs to the limit in a split-decision loss in 2018 and gave Gennadiy Golovkin as much hell as Canelo Alvarez did in a close, unanimous-decision setback last October. Some believe he deserved the decision.

Jermall Charlo believes some fans will still find fault in a victory over Derevyanchenko but also thinks it will set up potential fights with Alvarez and Triple-G.

“[A victory] lets people know I’m ready for the big fights, ones against Canelo and Golovkin,” Jermall Charlo said. “[Derevyanchenko] has been in with tough competition but he’s lost both times. People will still doubt me. That’s part of boxing.

“[Still] this is a step up for me, I guess, in the eyes of some people. I’m ready to fight.”

Showtime, PBC unveil packed nine-card schedule

Showtime and Premier Boxing Champions have unveiled nine cards over five months featuring some of the biggest names in the sport.

The stars are coming out on Showtime.

The premium network and Premier Boxing Champions have unveiled nine cards – including two pay-per-view events – over five months featuring some of the biggest names in the sport. The shows will take place without spectators at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn.

The schedule features 18 undefeated fighters, nine world champions and eight world championship fights including one world title unification bout. PBC, with its large stable of fighters, reportedly has 20 bouts on the schedule. That includes 14 bouts in which Top 10-ranked fighters will face one another.

Jermall and Jermell Charlo will face Sergiy Derevyanchenko and Jeison Rosario, respectively, on the same pay-per-view show, and Gervonta Davis will fight Leo Santa Cruz on a separate pay-per-view card.

Others in action will include David Benavidez, Nonito Donaire, Sergey Lipinets and Chris Colbert.

“We are proud to announce the strongest and most comprehensive schedule of fights in all of boxing,” said Stephen Espinoza, president of sports and event programming for Showtime Networks Inc. “Each bout on this schedule, our largest schedule announcement since 2018, carries high stakes and significant implications.

“From highly regarded prospects to emerging stars to established champions — all in tough matchups — this lineup delivers on our promise to provide boxing fans with the best talent, the most exciting fights and the highest quality presentation in the sport. We are thrilled to return to live boxing with this star-studded schedule of exciting, meaningful fights.”

The first card, on Aug. 1, features Stephen Fulton Jr. vs. Angelo Leo for a vacant junior featherweight title.

The card featuring the Charlo brothers will be broken into two events (for the same price) on the same day.

Here are the featured fights on the Showtime schedule:

Aug. 1: Stephen Fulton Jr. (18-0, 8 KOs) vs. Angelo Leo (19-0, 9 KOs) for the vacant WBO junior featherweight title.

Aug. 15: David Benavidez (22-0, 19 KOs) vs. Roamer Alexis Angulo (26-1, 22 KOs) for Benavidez’s WBC super middleweight title.

Sept. 19: Erickson Lubin (22-1, 16 KOs) vs. Terrell Gausha (21-1-1, 10 KOs), junior middleweights.

Sept. 26 (PPV): Jermall Charlo (30-0, 22 KOs) vs. Sergiy Derevyanchenko (13-2, 10 KOs) for Charlo’s WBC middleweight title; Jermell Charlo (33-1, 17 KOs) vs. Jeison Rosaro (20-1-1, 14 KOs) in WBC, WBA, IBF junior middleweight unification; Brandon Figueroa vs. Damien Vasquez for Figueroa’s WBA junior featherweight title; Diego Magdaleno vs. Isaac Cruz, lightweights; Mario Barrios vs. Ryan Karl for Barrios’ WBA junior welterweight title.

Oct. 10: Sergey Lipinets (16-1, 12 KOs) vs. Kudratillo Abdukahorov (15-0, 8 KOs) for IBF interim welterweight title.

Oct. 24 (PPV): Gervonta Davis (23-0, 22 KOs) vs. Leo Santa Cruz (37-1-1, 19 KOs) for Davis’ WBA lightweight title and Santa Cruz’s WBA junior lightweight title

Nov. 28: Chris Colbert (14-0, 5 KOs) vs. Jaime Arboleda (16-1, 13 KOs), junior lightweights.

Dec. 12: Nordine Oubaali (17-0, 12 KOs) vs. Nonito Donaire (40-6, 26 KOs) for Oubaali’s WBC bantamweight title.

 

Lomachenko-Lopez ‘working date’ now Oct. 3, sites for PBC return revealed

Promoters are scrambling to find the best dates and sites to showcase their fighters.

Promoters are scrambling to find the best dates and sites to showcase their fighters.

The lightweight title-unification fight between Vasilily Lomachenko, Boxing Junkie’s No. 1 fighter pound-for-pound, and Teofimo Lopez has tentatively been moved from Sept. 19 to Oct. 3 in the hopes that the corornavirus will ease enough to allow some spectators, BoxingScene.com reported.

Bob Arum, who promotes both fighters, hopes to stage the fight in Las Vegas.

Lomachenko-Lopez was originally scheduled for May 30 at Madison Square Garden in New York but was canceled because of the pandemic.

“Loma-Lopez, we had scheduled it for Sept. 19 as the working date but now it will probably go on pay-per-view and that means the working date now is Oct. 3,” Arum said.

“Right now, with the [coronavirus] spike going on Nevada we couldn’t schedule it even with limited spectators. Hopefully, and we have some time, we’re looking to do that fight for 2,000 or maybe 2,500 people.”

Lomachenko (14-1, 10 KOs) last fought in August, when he defeated Luke Campbell by a unanimous decision in London. He reportedly opened his training camp this week in Ukraine.

Lopez (15-0, 12 KOs) is coming off a sensational second-round knockout of Richard Commey to win his 135-pound title.

Meanwhile, BoxingScene.com reported that the sites for Premier Boxing Champions’ first post-lockdown cards are set.

The PBC will stage a card on Aug. 1 in a secured bubble at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Connecticut on Showtime, according to the website. An MMA card reportedly will be held at the same site the week before.

Luis Nery (30-0, 24 KOs) could face Aaron Alameda (25-0, 13 KOs) in a junior featherweight bout in the main event Aug. 1, according to BoxingScene.com.

Also, an Aug. 8 card – reportedly featuring Jamal James vs. Thomas Dulorme in a welterweight bout, although that hasn’t be finalized – will take place at Microsoft Theater in downtown Los Angeles, from where Fox apparently will televise several cards.

The first show on Fox was scheduled for July 25 but was moved because of the scheduled start of the Major League Baseball season.

 

 

Showtimes provides first look at documentary ‘Ringside’

Showtime has provided a sneak peek at its documentary “Ringside,” which premieres at 8:30 p.m. ET / PT on Friday.

Showtime has provided a sneak peek at its documentary “Ringside,” which premieres at 8:30 p.m. ET / PT on Friday.

The documentary, filmed over nine years, follows the lives of boxing prodigies Destyne Butler Jr. and Kenneth Sims Jr. on the rough South Side of Chicago.

The clip, which hasn’t been available until now, illustrates the different paths the young men took. Butler reflects on the mistakes he made in an emtional letter to his father from a correctional center. Meanwhile, Sims fulfills his dream of becoming a successful professional boxer.

The film, directed by Andre Hormann, won the Silver Hugo Award at the Chicago International Film Festival

Adrien Broner, who can’t get his $10 million to fight, says ‘I’m a rapper now’

Adrien Broner says he’ll focus on rapping if he can’t get the $10 million he is demanding to get back into the ring.

Have we seen the last of Adrien Broner in the ring?

“The Problem” is demanding that Showtime and Premier Boxing Champions pay him $10 million for his next fight or he’s finished with boxing. He said on Instagram that he’ll be content to give up the sport and focus full time on his music career.

“OK, look. I ain’t heard from Stephen Espinoza [of Showtime]. Me and Al [Haymon of PBC], we talk every day. Ain’t nobody talking about that $10 million. So I’ll take that as I’m still retired and do what I’m going to do. I’m going to focus on my album. And I’m just a rapper. I’m a rapper now.

“… Until they talk about my $10 million, I ain’t going to be in the f—ing ring. I’m going to be in the studio. So my album dropping. It is what it is.”

Is he bluffing?

Broner seemed to imply on another Instagram post that he’ll show everyone what he’s capable of.

“I’m not f—ing playing no games y’all put me up against the best in the world and I never turned down a fight now it’s time to come correct or leave me the f— alone but I will become champion again and I promise I’m go make y’all pay double the PRICE!!!!!!!”

The reality is that Broner doesn’t command that kind of money, particularly in an economy that has been devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. He still commands attention because of his mouth, which sells his fights. But $10 million? No way.

Broner (33-4-1, 24 KOs) has had a lot of success in his career, winning titles in four divisions by the time he was 26.

That’s the past, though. Broner, now 30, is 0-2-1 in his last three fights. He lost a wide decision to Mikey Garcia in 2017, a majority decision to Jessie Vargas the following year and another one-sided decision to Manny Pacquiao in 2019.

A boxer who hasn’t won a fight in more than three years might want to consider another career.

More classic fights: Showtime to showcase Floyd Mayweather tonight

Showtime Boxing Classics features two Floyd Mayweather fights beginning at 10 ET / PT tonight.

Showtime Boxing Classics features two Floyd Mayweather fights beginning at 10 ET / PT tonight.

Mayweather takes on Marcos Maidana in their first fight, which took place in May 2014. That’s followed by Mayweather’s final bout, a knockout of MMA star Conor McGregor in August 2017.

The fights are available on Showtime, the Showtime streaming service and Showtime Anytime.

Some observers thought that the pressure-fighting Maidana did enough in his first fight with Mayweather to get the decision, although the judges gave Mayweather a majority-decision victory. Mayweather also won the rematch.

And while the McGregor fight was a mismatch from the outset, it attracted a huge number of viewers and allowed Mayweather to finish is career at 50-0.

As part of the coverage, combat sports analysts Luke Thomas and Brian Campbell will host the live digital series “Morning Kombat Classics” on the Morning Kombat YouTube Channel.

Thomas and Campbell will watch the fights along with viewers and give real-time reactions and answer questions. Viewers can participate by using the hashtag #FightFromHome on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

Boxing gears continue to turn in preparation for restart

The powers that be continue to gear up for the return of live boxing – without spectators – amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The powers that be continue to gear up for the return of live boxing – without spectators – amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Stephen Espinoza of Showtime said he expects live boxing to return to the premium network in July, although no date has been set as safety precautions are finalized. Golden Boy Promotions has set July 4 – with young lightweight star Ryan Garcia as the featured fighter – as its tentative restart date.

And Bob Arum of Top Rank, who had already said he would begin staging four-fight shows early next month on ESPN’s platforms, said UFC 249 on Saturday was a decent first step back but his shows “will be a lot better” in terms of how precautions are handled.

Showtime’s last show was on March 13.

“We’re targeting sometime in July to return,” Espinoza told BoxingScene.com. “And, obviously, we’re spending a tremendous amount of time right now trying to make the environment as safe as possible. Keep in mind, that involves working with PBC as they set up protocols for the fighters and promoters. And it’s also working with our parent company (ViacomCBS) as we set up protocols for our employees and contractors. I think there’s a perception that young, healthy people are not affected. Number one, that’s not true for this particular virus.

“But more importantly, the vast majority of individuals probably have someone very close to them who is high risk. Whether it’s a grandparent they take care of, or a spouse or child who might have immune conditions. For someone in my position and the other senior people at Showtime, there’s a heavy responsibility toward asking employees and freelancers to come to an event and wanting to make sure they’re as safe as possible when they return to their families.”

Espinoza said a July restart will allow fighters more time to prepare.

“Practically speaking, we want the fighters to have a full camp,” Espinoza said. “For example, California is just starting to re-open. Texas is just starting to re-open within the last week, along with a lot of other states. That means that a lot of the fighters in California, Texas and elsewhere haven’t had regular access to a gym or to sparring. So, could we rush back in June? Sure. But that wouldn’t give the fighters the best opportunities to succeed.

“We want the fighters to have full camps. And for us, as we re-open now in mid-May, that means coming back in July. We’re not gonna come back just for the sake of coming back. There’s not particular value in saying, ‘We’re the first,’ or, ‘We’re the second.’ The value is coming back with fights that matter, with fighters who have had a fair opportunity to prepare. That’s the key. Nobody wants to see fights with unprepared fighters in meaningless tune-up fights. So, coming back in July is our target.”

Golden Boy President Eric Gomez said safety is his company’s first priority.

“We envision shows without fans and, at some point, with fans, but what the specifications are for a return to shows with fans I don’t know,” Gomez told BoxingScene.com. “We don’t know if that will be this year or not, but we’ll have to follow whatever the guidelines are from federal government, state government. They might say no shows with fans until there’s a vaccine. I don’t know.”

He went on: “We’ll be ready to jump into action as soon as the restrictions are lifted, as soon as there is some sort of path to do shows again. We want to do [July 4] in California. That’s where we are, that’s where Ryan is from. But if they’re not ready yet, we’ll look into Nevada, we’ll look into Texas, we’ll look everywhere. But most important is the safety of the fighters, the safety of the staff, that’s the most important thing. We would have to find an arena that everybody’s comfortable with and where we have safety guidelines, and they know it’s going to be a sterile place. It’s going to have to be an arena possibly next to a hotel, where the hotel is going to be safe as well. There’s a lot to it.”

One additional bit of news from Gomez: It’s possible that Canelo Alvarez will fight without spectators.

“We’re going to discuss it and start having talks about it with DAZN, with Canelo, with everybody involved,” Gomez said. “If it’s something Canelo would approve and he’s up for it, and we can make it work for everyone involved, we’re going to do it. What matters is if Canelo is in agreement with it and is willing to do it, and then we’ll go from there.”

Arum had suggested that UFC’s Dana White jumped the gun by staging his first show this month but, after the fact, he wasn’t as critical. However, he did mention the fact that one participant — Jacare Souza — and two of his cornermen tested positive for COVID-19 the day before the event.

UFC 249 took place behind closed doors at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Florida.

“As a first step, it wasn’t bad,” Arum said. “They were the first ones to come back [with a major sporting event in the United States], and with that will come certain mistakes. It wouldn’t be fair to criticize with it being the first one out the box, nor am I here to criticize them. As they do more shows, especially once they come back to Las Vegas, they will adhere to their policies and it will be a lot better. It will look more like ours.

He went on: “We knew all along what UFC’s plans were for these shows. Ours is better, and there’s was never going to determine how we handle our shows. There’s will be as good as ours once they start doing shows in Las Vegas. The Nevada officials have come up with a very good plan, and we’ve been working with a coronavirus task force in state along with [Nevada State Athletic Commission executive director] Bob Bennett and the MGM hotels, which will make a facility available for us.

“What happened on Saturday [with Souza] will never happen at our shows. It will be detected before they even get in the facility. That has to be done and will be done. We’re talking about four fights to start out — the fewer fights you have, the better you can control things.”