Weekend Review: Efe Ajagba’s uninspiring victory and a bizarre ending

Weekend Review: Efe Ajagba’s uninspiring victory and a bizarre ending.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER

Efe Ajagba – The Nigerian heavyweight gave a so-so performance in a dull fight but he deserved his unanimous-decision victory over Stephan Shaw in a 10-round bout Saturday at Turning Point Resort & Casino in Verona, New York. Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs) simply outworked Shaw, throwing and landing more punches than his opponent (111 of 430 to 78 of 341, according to CompuBox). Hence the 96-94 score on all three cards. He now has won two consecutive fights since his momentum-crushing setback against Frank Sanchez in October 2021, after which he has surgery to repair damage in both of his elbows. Of course, Ajagba, once heralded as a future champion, will have to do more than he did against Shaw if he hopes to win a major title one day. Ninety of the 111 punches he landed were jabs, meaning he connected on an average of 2.1 power shots per round (to 3.0 for Shaw). He has a good jab but it takes more diversity than that to succeed at the highest level. Can the 28-year-old get there? Based on what I saw on Saturday, I’d be surprised. I just don’t see the all-around ability.

 

BIGGEST LOSER

Stephan Shaw – Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs) blew the biggest opportunity of his career, which came about when Ajagba’s original opponent, Oscar Rivas, pulled out because of an eye injury and he was asked to step in a few weeks ago. The objective should be to seize such an opportunity, to give yourself every chance to emerge victorious by expended every ounce of your energy in the ring. Instead, Shaw fought passively, allowing Ajagba to outhustle him for most of the fight. And he still won four rounds, meaning a little more effort might’ve been enough for him to have his hand raised and his career changed. He’s quicker and more athletic than Ajagba. He might even be more skillful than the victor. He simply didn’t do the work, a fact that presumably will haunt him. The opportunity to fight a well-known opponent in a main event on national television (ESPN) doesn’t come around often. Shaw might never get such a chance again. All the 30-year-old from St. Louis can do now is learn from the disappointment and fight harder every time out going forward.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II

Jonathan Rice – Rice (16-6-1, 11 KOs) was more fortunate than effective against previously unbeaten Guido Vianello on the Ajagba-Shaw undercard. The 2016 Olympian from Italy outboxed and outworked Rice for most of six rounds of a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout, taking a clear lead on the cards in the process. Then, in the seventh round, a right from Rice caused a massive gash above Vianello’s left eye that made it impossible for him to continue. Thus, Rice, a late replacement for Shaw, emerged with a technical knockout victory. Rice has good size and a lot of ability but he suffers from the same malady as Shaw, passivity. It’s easy for me to say from the safety of my office that fighters should take risks that could result in injury or unconsciousness but isn’t that part of the deal? Rice beat a second undefeated prospect in his last three fights, after taking down Michael Coffie in 2021 (and then doing it again in a rematch). If he wants to build on his recent success, he needs to push himself harder inside the ropes. Otherwise he’s going to waste his talent.

 

MOST BIZARRE

Rice-Vianello finish – You never know what boxing will throw at you. Referee Benjy Esteves initially ruled that the cut above Vianello’s eye was caused by a clash of heads, which would’ve sent the fight to the scorecards and given Vianello’s a victory. He was leading 59-55, 59-55 and 58-56. However, an official with the Oneida Indian Nation Athletic Commission, which oversaw the card, saw on replays that a punch caused the gash and in effect ordered Esteves to see for himself before a final decision would be made. That’s how Rice ended up with a TKO victory. The state of New York doesn’t use replay under any circumstances, which made the commission official’s decision intriguing. Does Oneida even have a replay rule? Doesn’t matter. The fact that officials arrived at the correct decision was gratifying. Other, more prominent commissions could learn from Oneida’s example.

[lawrence-related id=35157,35148]

Weekend Review: Efe Ajagba’s uninspiring victory and a bizarre ending

Weekend Review: Efe Ajagba’s uninspiring victory and a bizarre ending.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER

Efe Ajagba – The Nigerian heavyweight gave a so-so performance in a dull fight but he deserved his unanimous-decision victory over Stephan Shaw in a 10-round bout Saturday at Turning Point Resort & Casino in Verona, New York. Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs) simply outworked Shaw, throwing and landing more punches than his opponent (111 of 430 to 78 of 341, according to CompuBox). Hence the 96-94 score on all three cards. He now has won two consecutive fights since his momentum-crushing setback against Frank Sanchez in October 2021, after which he has surgery to repair damage in both of his elbows. Of course, Ajagba, once heralded as a future champion, will have to do more than he did against Shaw if he hopes to win a major title one day. Ninety of the 111 punches he landed were jabs, meaning he connected on an average of 2.1 power shots per round (to 3.0 for Shaw). He has a good jab but it takes more diversity than that to succeed at the highest level. Can the 28-year-old get there? Based on what I saw on Saturday, I’d be surprised. I just don’t see the all-around ability.

 

BIGGEST LOSER

Stephan Shaw – Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs) blew the biggest opportunity of his career, which came about when Ajagba’s original opponent, Oscar Rivas, pulled out because of an eye injury and he was asked to step in a few weeks ago. The objective should be to seize such an opportunity, to give yourself every chance to emerge victorious by expended every ounce of your energy in the ring. Instead, Shaw fought passively, allowing Ajagba to outhustle him for most of the fight. And he still won four rounds, meaning a little more effort might’ve been enough for him to have his hand raised and his career changed. He’s quicker and more athletic than Ajagba. He might even be more skillful than the victor. He simply didn’t do the work, a fact that presumably will haunt him. The opportunity to fight a well-known opponent in a main event on national television (ESPN) doesn’t come around often. Shaw might never get such a chance again. All the 30-year-old from St. Louis can do now is learn from the disappointment and fight harder every time out going forward.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II

Jonathan Rice – Rice (16-6-1, 11 KOs) was more fortunate than effective against previously unbeaten Guido Vianello on the Ajagba-Shaw undercard. The 2016 Olympian from Italy outboxed and outworked Rice for most of six rounds of a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout, taking a clear lead on the cards in the process. Then, in the seventh round, a right from Rice caused a massive gash above Vianello’s left eye that made it impossible for him to continue. Thus, Rice, a late replacement for Shaw, emerged with a technical knockout victory. Rice has good size and a lot of ability but he suffers from the same malady as Shaw, passivity. It’s easy for me to say from the safety of my office that fighters should take risks that could result in injury or unconsciousness but isn’t that part of the deal? Rice beat a second undefeated prospect in his last three fights, after taking down Michael Coffie in 2021 (and then doing it again in a rematch). If he wants to build on his recent success, he needs to push himself harder inside the ropes. Otherwise he’s going to waste his talent.

 

MOST BIZARRE

Rice-Vianello finish – You never know what boxing will throw at you. Referee Benjy Esteves initially ruled that the cut above Vianello’s eye was caused by a clash of heads, which would’ve sent the fight to the scorecards and given Vianello’s a victory. He was leading 59-55, 59-55 and 58-56. However, an official with the Oneida Indian Nation Athletic Commission, which oversaw the card, saw on replays that a punch caused the gash and in effect ordered Esteves to see for himself before a final decision would be made. That’s how Rice ended up with a TKO victory. The state of New York doesn’t use replay under any circumstances, which made the commission official’s decision intriguing. Does Oneida even have a replay rule? Doesn’t matter. The fact that officials arrived at the correct decision was gratifying. Other, more prominent commissions could learn from Oneida’s example.

[lawrence-related id=35157,35148]

Efe Ajagba outworks Stephan Shaw to win unanimous decision

Heavyweight prospect Efe Ajagba outworked Stephan Shaw to win a unanimous decision Saturday in New York.

Efe Ajagba did the work. And he was rewarded.

Neither he nor opponent Stephan Shaw landed many eye-catching punches but Ajagba generally was the more-aggressive, busier fighter in their 10-round bout on Saturday at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York.

As a result, the heavyweight prospect left the ring with a unanimous-decision victory, his second consecutive win since he lost to Frank Sanchez.

All three judges scored it 96-94, six rounds to four for Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs).

Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs) was handed the biggest opportunity of his career when he was offered a place in a main event on ESPN a few weeks after Ajagba’s original opponent, Oscar Rivas, pulled out with an eye injury.

However, the product of St. Louis didn’t fight with the urgency one would expect in such a situation.

In fact, it was Ajagba who pushed the action most of the fight and threw more punches. The 6-foot-6 Nigerian essentially won the decision with his long jab, which he landed consistently from beginning to end.

Shaw also jabbed well at times and landed a handful of power shots, but he fought on his back foot and let Ajagba dictate the action.

Ajagba landed almost twice as many jabs as Shaw did, 90-48, according to CompuBox.

“I went back to the corner and they told me to let my hands go, keep throwing punches, my jab,” Ajagba said. “I controlled the fight, so that’s how I won the fight. He tried to land the big shots.

“I watched him to see what he was going to do. He kept throwing the jab, using the jab more.”

Ajagba was one of the hottest young heavyweights in the world when he lost a one-sided decision to Sanchez in October 2021, after which he had surgery to repair injuries in both elbows and took time to heal.

He returned to stop relative unknown Jozsef Darmos in two rounds this past August. And now he has a victory over the capable Shaw under his belt, which could lift the 28-year-old back into the rankings and a step closer to title contention.

Efe Ajagba outworks Stephan Shaw to win unanimous decision

Heavyweight prospect Efe Ajagba outworked Stephan Shaw to win a unanimous decision Saturday in New York.

Efe Ajagba did the work. And he was rewarded.

Neither he nor opponent Stephan Shaw landed many eye-catching punches but Ajagba generally was the more-aggressive, busier fighter in their 10-round bout on Saturday at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York.

As a result, the heavyweight prospect left the ring with a unanimous-decision victory, his second consecutive win since he lost to Frank Sanchez.

All three judges scored it 96-94, six rounds to four for Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs).

Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs) was handed the biggest opportunity of his career when he was offered a place in a main event on ESPN a few weeks after Ajagba’s original opponent, Oscar Rivas, pulled out with an eye injury.

However, the product of St. Louis didn’t fight with the urgency one would expect in such a situation.

In fact, it was Ajagba who pushed the action most of the fight and threw more punches. The 6-foot-6 Nigerian essentially won the decision with his long jab, which he landed consistently from beginning to end.

Shaw also jabbed well at times and landed a handful of power shots, but he fought on his back foot and let Ajagba dictate the action.

Ajagba landed almost twice as many jabs as Shaw did, 90-48, according to CompuBox.

“I went back to the corner and they told me to let my hands go, keep throwing punches, my jab,” Ajagba said. “I controlled the fight, so that’s how I won the fight. He tried to land the big shots.

“I watched him to see what he was going to do. He kept throwing the jab, using the jab more.”

Ajagba was one of the hottest young heavyweights in the world when he lost a one-sided decision to Sanchez in October 2021, after which he had surgery to repair injuries in both elbows and took time to heal.

He returned to stop relative unknown Jozsef Darmos in two rounds this past August. And now he has a victory over the capable Shaw under his belt, which could lift the 28-year-old back into the rankings and a step closer to title contention.

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba defeated Stephan Shaw by a unanimous decision in a 10-round bout Saturday at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York.

All three judges had the same score, 96-94, six rounds to four.

Neither fighter landed many eye-catching punches but Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs) was the aggressor and outworked Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs), including dozens of jabs that kept Shaw at a distance for most of the fight.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Jonathan Rice defeated Guido Vianello by a technical knockout in the seventh round after the Italian couldn’t continue because of a cut over his left eye in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout.

Vianello (15-7-1, 10 KOs) seemed to have outworked Rice (15-7-1, 10 KOs) for most of the fight to build a lead on the cards.

However, in the sixth round, Rice landed a straight right that caused a gruesome cut below Vianello’s left eyebrow. The ring doctor, who was summoned after the seventh round had begun, said Vianello couldn’t continue.

The ending was bizarre. Referee Benjy Esteves initially ruled that the cut was caused by a clash of heads, which would’ve sent the fight to the scorecards. However, a member of the Oneida Indian Nation Athletic Commission essentially ordered Esteves to check the replay, which indicated the cut was caused by a punch.

Thus, Rice, who took the fight on a few weeks notice, was declared the winner.

***

Abraham Nova (22-1, 15 KOs) put Adam Lopez (16-4, 6 KOs) down twice and defeated him by a unanimous decision in a 10-round 130-pound fight.

The scores were 98-90, 98-92 and 97-91. Lopez went down in the fifth and sixth rounds.

***

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba is scheduled to take on Stephan Shaw tonight (Saturday) at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York on ESPN and ESPN+.

Also on the card, Guido Vianello will face Jonathan Rice in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout. And Adam Lopez will face Abraham Nova in a 10-round 130-pound bout.

The main portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the broadcast.

Boxing Junkie will post the result of the main event immediately afterward. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes. We’ll also post the results of other featured bouts.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=35145,35142,35138,35134]

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: LIVE updates, results, full coverage.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba defeated Stephan Shaw by a unanimous decision in a 10-round bout Saturday at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York.

All three judges had the same score, 96-94, six rounds to four.

Neither fighter landed many eye-catching punches but Ajagba (17-1, 13 KOs) was the aggressor and outworked Shaw (18-1, 13 KOs), including dozens of jabs that kept Shaw at a distance for most of the fight.

A full report will follow shortly.

***

Jonathan Rice defeated Guido Vianello by a technical knockout in the seventh round after the Italian couldn’t continue because of a cut over his left eye in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout.

Vianello (15-7-1, 10 KOs) seemed to have outworked Rice (15-7-1, 10 KOs) for most of the fight to build a lead on the cards.

However, in the sixth round, Rice landed a straight right that caused a gruesome cut below Vianello’s left eyebrow. The ring doctor, who was summoned after the seventh round had begun, said Vianello couldn’t continue.

The ending was bizarre. Referee Benjy Esteves initially ruled that the cut was caused by a clash of heads, which would’ve sent the fight to the scorecards. However, a member of the Oneida Indian Nation Athletic Commission essentially ordered Esteves to check the replay, which indicated the cut was caused by a punch.

Thus, Rice, who took the fight on a few weeks notice, was declared the winner.

***

Abraham Nova (22-1, 15 KOs) put Adam Lopez (16-4, 6 KOs) down twice and defeated him by a unanimous decision in a 10-round 130-pound fight.

The scores were 98-90, 98-92 and 97-91. Lopez went down in the fifth and sixth rounds.

***

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba is scheduled to take on Stephan Shaw tonight (Saturday) at Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York on ESPN and ESPN+.

Also on the card, Guido Vianello will face Jonathan Rice in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout. And Adam Lopez will face Abraham Nova in a 10-round 130-pound bout.

The main portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in the broadcast.

Boxing Junkie will post the result of the main event immediately afterward. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes. We’ll also post the results of other featured bouts.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the night of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=35145,35142,35138,35134]

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: Date, time, how to watch, background

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba will face unbeaten Stephan Shaw in a scheduled 10-round main event Saturday night on ESPN and ESPN+.

Efe Ajagba (16-1, 13 KOs) vs. Stephan Shaw (18-0, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Jan. 14
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Turning Stone Resort & Casino, Verona, New York
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • Weights: Ajagba 235¼, Shaw 239½
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Guido Vianello vs. Jonnie Rice, heavyweights; Adam Lopez vs. Abraham Nova, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Ajagba KO 8
  • Background: Efe Ajagba continues his comeback against unbeaten late replacement Stephen Shaw in a main event on ESPN. Ajagba is a Houston-based Nigerian who is known for his size (6-foot-6) and punching power. The 28-year-old was a fast-rising contender until he was soundly outpointed by Frank Sanchez in October 2021, which seemed to expose his limitations. He rebounded in his only fight since, a second-round knockout of Jozsef Darmos in August. Ajagba had been scheduled to face Oscar Rivas but Rivas pulled out with an eye injury. Shaw, who was scheduled to fight on the undercard, agreed to step up to face the hulking young contender on two weeks notice. Shaw has been busy, fighting three times last year. He’s coming off an eight-round shutout decision over Rydell Booker in November. However, he has taken part in only one scheduled 10-rounder and that was more than three years ago. This is by far the biggest opportunity for the 30-year-old product of St. Louis, who turned pro in 2013.

[lawrence-related id=35142,35138,35134]

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: Date, time, how to watch, background

Efe Ajagba vs. Stephan Shaw: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba will face unbeaten Stephan Shaw in a scheduled 10-round main event Saturday night on ESPN and ESPN+.

Efe Ajagba (16-1, 13 KOs) vs. Stephan Shaw (18-0, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Jan. 14
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Turning Stone Resort & Casino, Verona, New York
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Heavyweight (no limit)
  • Weights: Ajagba 235¼, Shaw 239½
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Guido Vianello vs. Jonnie Rice, heavyweights; Adam Lopez vs. Abraham Nova, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Ajagba KO 8
  • Background: Efe Ajagba continues his comeback against unbeaten late replacement Stephen Shaw in a main event on ESPN. Ajagba is a Houston-based Nigerian who is known for his size (6-foot-6) and punching power. The 28-year-old was a fast-rising contender until he was soundly outpointed by Frank Sanchez in October 2021, which seemed to expose his limitations. He rebounded in his only fight since, a second-round knockout of Jozsef Darmos in August. Ajagba had been scheduled to face Oscar Rivas but Rivas pulled out with an eye injury. Shaw, who was scheduled to fight on the undercard, agreed to step up to face the hulking young contender on two weeks notice. Shaw has been busy, fighting three times last year. He’s coming off an eight-round shutout decision over Rydell Booker in November. However, he has taken part in only one scheduled 10-rounder and that was more than three years ago. This is by far the biggest opportunity for the 30-year-old product of St. Louis, who turned pro in 2013.

[lawrence-related id=35142,35138,35134]

Video: Efe Ajagba weighs in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½

Video: Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½ for their heavyweight fight Saturday on ESPN and ESPN+.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼ pounds for his scheduled 10-rounder against Stephan Shaw on Saturday in Verona, New York (ESPN, ESPN+). Shaw came in at 239½.

The fighters’ have fought at similar weights in recent fights.

Ajagba (16-1, 13 KOs) rebounded from his unanimous-decision loss to Frank Sanchez in October 2021 to stop Jozsef Darmos in two rounds this past August. Shaw (18-0, 13 KOs) last fought in November, when he outpointed Rydell Booker.

In other featured bouts on the card, heavyweights Jonathan Rice and Guido Vianello weighed 274¼ and 239, respectively. And Adam Lopez and Abraham Nova both came in at 129 for their junior lightweight matchup.

[lawrence-related id=35138,35134,35106]

Video: Efe Ajagba weighs in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½

Video: Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼, Stephan Shaw at 239½ for their heavyweight fight Saturday on ESPN and ESPN+.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba on Friday weighed in at 235¼ pounds for his scheduled 10-rounder against Stephan Shaw on Saturday in Verona, New York (ESPN, ESPN+). Shaw came in at 239½.

The fighters’ have fought at similar weights in recent fights.

Ajagba (16-1, 13 KOs) rebounded from his unanimous-decision loss to Frank Sanchez in October 2021 to stop Jozsef Darmos in two rounds this past August. Shaw (18-0, 13 KOs) last fought in November, when he outpointed Rydell Booker.

In other featured bouts on the card, heavyweights Jonathan Rice and Guido Vianello weighed 274¼ and 239, respectively. And Adam Lopez and Abraham Nova both came in at 129 for their junior lightweight matchup.

[lawrence-related id=35138,35134,35106]