Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Joe Smith Jr. isn’t destined for the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

The strapping light heavyweight titleholder isn’t a polished boxer, although he seems to have improved. He isn’t particularly quick or athletic. In other words, the union worker is exactly what he has been called, “a blue-collar fighter.”

And that has both worked for him in the ring and endeared him to fans, many of whom can relate to him.

Smith’s performance against late replacement Steve Geffrard on Saturday wasn’t special but it was good enough, which is all that matters. He used his not-so-secret weapons of fitness, punching power and persistence to wear down and finally stop Geffrard (18-3, 12 KOs) in the ninth round.

Just a typical work shift for Smith, who was making the first defense of his WBO 175-pound belt.

Next up for him? He’s thinking big. He wants to take on imposing fellow titleholder Artur Beterbiev or, if Canelo Alvarez decides to fight a 175-pound opponent instead one at 200 or 168, he’d jump at that opportunity for obvious reasons.

Would Smith (28-3, 22 KOs) win those fights? Probably not, although he’d have a puncher’s chance against anyone. Sullivan Barrera (2017) and beltholder Dmitry Bivol (2019) easily outpointed him. It’s difficult to imagine him doing much better against Beterbiev of Alvarez.

We know what Smith would bring to those fights, though. He’d enter the ring in fantastic shape and he’d fight his heart out, which is all we can expect of any boxer.

 

BAD

I’m an optimistic person.

I hold out hope that Canelo Alvarez will fight one of the five potential opponents I suggested in a previous column, David Benavidez, Gennadiy Golovkin, Jermall Charlo, Dmitry Bivol or Artur Beterbiev.

However, also as I’ve written, the Mexican star has been driven more by collecting titles than the person across the ring from him. That allowed him to become undisputed 168-pound champ by a winning series of lackluster matchups.

Eddy Reynoso, Alvarez’s trainer and manager, has expressed interest in fighting cruiserweight beltholder Ilunga Makabu to add a belt in another division. Other than that, he’s been quiet about his intentions.

He said recently that he hasn’t even been in serious talks with anyone, although that’s hard to believe because the targeted fight date of May 7 is fast approaching.

I fear that Alvarez and Reynoso will choose the bigger, but limited Makabu, assuming the Congolese fighter defeats Thabiso Mchunu on Jan. 29. At the same time, There has been chatter that Charlo, a 160-pound champ, might be in the mix.

One British outlet had an interesting – and frightening – take on rumors that boxing purists might be disappointed with Alvarez’s next opponent. The outlet floated the idea that he might be targeting YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, which would generate a fortune but have no resemblance to a competitive fight. Let’s hope that Alvarez has enough respect for the sport to pass on that silly notion.

Reynoso said we could get word on his protégé’s next opponent soon. Fingers crossed.

 

WORSE

Tyson Fury fights are good for boxing because of the energy he delivers before, during and after his bouts. And I have to think that he wants to get his 6-foot-9 body into the ring more often than he has.

The problem is that it’s easier said than done. The WBC beltholder has fought only twice in the past 2½ years, his knockout victories over Deontay Wilder in their second and third fights.

The last fight with Wilder occurred this past October, only four months ago. That followed Oleksandr Usyk’s upset over Anthony Joshua to win three of the four major heavyweight titles. Fans hope that the winner of their rematch will face Fury for the undisputed championship.

In the meantime, Fury needed an opponent. And it appeared that mandatory challenger Dillian Whyte would finally get a crack at his countryman.

Alas, that fight is stuck in the muck because Whyte has refused to accept the 80-20 purse split ordered by the WBC if the principals can’t reach an agreement and it goes to a purse bid, which Whyte has officially appealed. He reportedly wants something close to a 55-45 split.

The purse bid was pushed back to this coming Friday, meaning the parties have only a few more days to come to terms before the event becomes open to other promoters.

And if Fury and Whyte are unable to reach an agreement? Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter said his fighter will face someone else in late March. Arum threw out the names of Robert Helenius and Manuel Charr but he will have many good options.

Let’s hope things sort themselves out so we can see Fury fight in a few months.

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion

Good, bad, worse: Joe Smith Jr. gets it done again in workmanlike fashion.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Joe Smith Jr. isn’t destined for the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

The strapping light heavyweight titleholder isn’t a polished boxer, although he seems to have improved. He isn’t particularly quick or athletic. In other words, the union worker is exactly what he has been called, “a blue-collar fighter.”

And that has both worked for him in the ring and endeared him to fans, many of whom can relate to him.

Smith’s performance against late replacement Steve Geffrard on Saturday wasn’t special but it was good enough, which is all that matters. He used his not-so-secret weapons of fitness, punching power and persistence to wear down and finally stop Geffrard (18-3, 12 KOs) in the ninth round.

Just a typical work shift for Smith, who was making the first defense of his WBO 175-pound belt.

Next up for him? He’s thinking big. He wants to take on imposing fellow titleholder Artur Beterbiev or, if Canelo Alvarez decides to fight a 175-pound opponent instead one at 200 or 168, he’d jump at that opportunity for obvious reasons.

Would Smith (28-3, 22 KOs) win those fights? Probably not, although he’d have a puncher’s chance against anyone. Sullivan Barrera (2017) and beltholder Dmitry Bivol (2019) easily outpointed him. It’s difficult to imagine him doing much better against Beterbiev of Alvarez.

We know what Smith would bring to those fights, though. He’d enter the ring in fantastic shape and he’d fight his heart out, which is all we can expect of any boxer.

 

BAD

I’m an optimistic person.

I hold out hope that Canelo Alvarez will fight one of the five potential opponents I suggested in a previous column, David Benavidez, Gennadiy Golovkin, Jermall Charlo, Dmitry Bivol or Artur Beterbiev.

However, also as I’ve written, the Mexican star has been driven more by collecting titles than the person across the ring from him. That allowed him to become undisputed 168-pound champ by a winning series of lackluster matchups.

Eddy Reynoso, Alvarez’s trainer and manager, has expressed interest in fighting cruiserweight beltholder Ilunga Makabu to add a belt in another division. Other than that, he’s been quiet about his intentions.

He said recently that he hasn’t even been in serious talks with anyone, although that’s hard to believe because the targeted fight date of May 7 is fast approaching.

I fear that Alvarez and Reynoso will choose the bigger, but limited Makabu, assuming the Congolese fighter defeats Thabiso Mchunu on Jan. 29. At the same time, There has been chatter that Charlo, a 160-pound champ, might be in the mix.

One British outlet had an interesting – and frightening – take on rumors that boxing purists might be disappointed with Alvarez’s next opponent. The outlet floated the idea that he might be targeting YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, which would generate a fortune but have no resemblance to a competitive fight. Let’s hope that Alvarez has enough respect for the sport to pass on that silly notion.

Reynoso said we could get word on his protégé’s next opponent soon. Fingers crossed.

 

WORSE

Tyson Fury fights are good for boxing because of the energy he delivers before, during and after his bouts. And I have to think that he wants to get his 6-foot-9 body into the ring more often than he has.

The problem is that it’s easier said than done. The WBC beltholder has fought only twice in the past 2½ years, his knockout victories over Deontay Wilder in their second and third fights.

The last fight with Wilder occurred this past October, only four months ago. That followed Oleksandr Usyk’s upset over Anthony Joshua to win three of the four major heavyweight titles. Fans hope that the winner of their rematch will face Fury for the undisputed championship.

In the meantime, Fury needed an opponent. And it appeared that mandatory challenger Dillian Whyte would finally get a crack at his countryman.

Alas, that fight is stuck in the muck because Whyte has refused to accept the 80-20 purse split ordered by the WBC if the principals can’t reach an agreement and it goes to a purse bid, which Whyte has officially appealed. He reportedly wants something close to a 55-45 split.

The purse bid was pushed back to this coming Friday, meaning the parties have only a few more days to come to terms before the event becomes open to other promoters.

And if Fury and Whyte are unable to reach an agreement? Bob Arum, Fury’s co-promoter said his fighter will face someone else in late March. Arum threw out the names of Robert Helenius and Manuel Charr but he will have many good options.

Let’s hope things sort themselves out so we can see Fury fight in a few months.

Joe Smith Jr. wears down, stops late replacement Steve Geffrard

Joe Smith Jr. wore down and then stopped late replacement Steve Geffrard on Saturday in Verona, New York.

Joe Smith Jr. had to be relieved as much as anything else.

The light heavyweight titleholder, facing his third scheduled opponent for his first defense, stopped Steve Geffrard in the ninth round Saturday night at Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona, New York.

Geffrard, a former amateur standout who took the fight on eight days notice, boxed well at times but was outworked and ultimately overwhelmed the hard-punching champion.

Smith (28-3, 22 KOs) had won the vacant WBO 175-title by defeating Maxim Vlasov by a majority decision last April.

He was originally scheduled to make his first defense against Umar Salamov in October but Smith contracted COVID-19 and had to pull out. That fight wasn’t rescheduled, which opened the door for Callum Johnson to challenge Smith.

Joe Smith Jr. (left) patiently wore down Steve Geffrard on Saturday. Mikey Williams/Top Rank Inc via Getty Images)

Then Johnson tested positive for the virus, which required Smith’s handlers to embark on a frantic search for another replacement. They went through a number of potential before Geffrard, who had been training for another fight, finally agreed to step in.

The Miami product, who had won his previous 18 fights but had never gone past eight rounds, demonstrated that he has some ability. He fought behind a peek-a-boo defense that made it difficult for Smith to land clean punches. And Geffrard (18-3, 12 KOs) jabbed well and followed with some good power shots at times.

However, Smith, stalking his prey most of the fight, was the busier puncher and his shots – including some hard right hands – began to wear Geffrard down by the middle of the scheduled 12 rounds.

Finally, in the ninth round, Smith unleashed a flurry of punches with Geffrard’s back against the ropes that forced the beaten challenger to take a knee and prompted his corner to stop the fight.

The official time was 37 seconds into Round 9.

“He really brought it today,” a diplomatic Smith said. “It was a great fight. As you can see, he’s a great boxer, a good survivor. I was trying to get him out of there early, but I realized he was very tough and I wasn’t going to be able to do that.

“I tried to wait until the later rounds and started throwing more combinations to pick him apart.”

It probably wasn’t the finest performance in Smith’s career but it was solid given the bumpy road to his first defense and a lack of time to prepare for a well-schooled boxer with a respected trainer in his corner, Kevin Cunningham.

Now it’s on to bigger, more-compelling matchups against the best in the division – with fellow titleholders Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol at the top of the list – if those fights can be made.

And there’s a superstar from Mexico who has also piqued Smith’s interest if he’s willing to move up from 168 to face him.

“[Beterbiev] is what I want,” he said. “I want to get back in the gym, work on my craft, and like I say each and every time I get in the ring, I’m going to get better and better. I believe the next time you see me, I’ll be ready for anybody. …

“If Canelo [Alvarez] wants to come to 175 and fight me, I’m ready for him. That’s the fight I want. Everybody would love to see that fight. It would be a big deal.”

Joe Smith Jr. wears down, stops late replacement Steve Geffrard

Joe Smith Jr. wore down and then stopped late replacement Steve Geffrard on Saturday in Verona, New York.

Joe Smith Jr. had to be relieved as much as anything else.

The light heavyweight titleholder, facing his third scheduled opponent for his first defense, stopped Steve Geffrard in the ninth round Saturday night at Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona, New York.

Geffrard, a former amateur standout who took the fight on eight days notice, boxed well at times but was outworked and ultimately overwhelmed the hard-punching champion.

Smith (28-3, 22 KOs) had won the vacant WBO 175-title by defeating Maxim Vlasov by a majority decision last April.

He was originally scheduled to make his first defense against Umar Salamov in October but Smith contracted COVID-19 and had to pull out. That fight wasn’t rescheduled, which opened the door for Callum Johnson to challenge Smith.

Joe Smith Jr. (left) patiently wore down Steve Geffrard on Saturday. Mikey Williams/Top Rank Inc via Getty Images)

Then Johnson tested positive for the virus, which required Smith’s handlers to embark on a frantic search for another replacement. They went through a number of potential before Geffrard, who had been training for another fight, finally agreed to step in.

The Miami product, who had won his previous 18 fights but had never gone past eight rounds, demonstrated that he has some ability. He fought behind a peek-a-boo defense that made it difficult for Smith to land clean punches. And Geffrard (18-3, 12 KOs) jabbed well and followed with some good power shots at times.

However, Smith, stalking his prey most of the fight, was the busier puncher and his shots – including some hard right hands – began to wear Geffrard down by the middle of the scheduled 12 rounds.

Finally, in the ninth round, Smith unleashed a flurry of punches with Geffrard’s back against the ropes that forced the beaten challenger to take a knee and prompted his corner to stop the fight.

The official time was 37 seconds into Round 9.

“He really brought it today,” a diplomatic Smith said. “It was a great fight. As you can see, he’s a great boxer, a good survivor. I was trying to get him out of there early, but I realized he was very tough and I wasn’t going to be able to do that.

“I tried to wait until the later rounds and started throwing more combinations to pick him apart.”

It probably wasn’t the finest performance in Smith’s career but it was solid given the bumpy road to his first defense and a lack of time to prepare for a well-schooled boxer with a respected trainer in his corner, Kevin Cunningham.

Now it’s on to bigger, more-compelling matchups against the best in the division – with fellow titleholders Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol at the top of the list – if those fights can be made.

And there’s a superstar from Mexico who has also piqued Smith’s interest if he’s willing to move up from 168 to face him.

“[Beterbiev] is what I want,” he said. “I want to get back in the gym, work on my craft, and like I say each and every time I get in the ring, I’m going to get better and better. I believe the next time you see me, I’ll be ready for anybody. …

“If Canelo [Alvarez] wants to come to 175 and fight me, I’m ready for him. That’s the fight I want. Everybody would love to see that fight. It would be a big deal.”

Joe Smith Jr., handlers grateful Steve Geffrard accepted challenge

Joe Smith Jr. and his handlers are grateful that Steve Geffrard agreed to fight the light heavyweight titleholder Saturday.

Joe Smith Jr. and his handlers are thrilled that someone – anyone – agreed to face the light heavyweight titleholder Saturday in upstate New York.

Two weeks ago, when Callum Johnson pulled out of the fight because of COVID-19, Smith’s co-promoter Joe DeGuardia and Co. spent the next three days frantically trying to find a legitimate opponent to step in.

Finally, after a battery of phone calls and lost sleep, one time amateur standout Steve Geffrard (18-2, 12 KOs) agreed to take the fight. DeGuardia was relieved … and exhausted.

“It was a crazy process,” DeGuardia said during the final news conference before the ESPN fight. “We went through three days of living hell. My throat is still sore from all the calls and the phone conversations.

“I gotta tell you one thing: The one shining light of it all was these two guys because we went through over a dozen fighters. Guys turned it down left and right, the championship of the world, the opportunity of a lifetime.

“Everyone one of them, Joe told me, ‘Yes, no problem.’ Finally, after about the eighth guy, he said, ‘Listen, Joe. Whoever you put in there I don’t care who I’m fighting. So just go make a deal.

“On the other side, Steve, as soon as he got the call, this fighter recognized what it was. Now remember he was training. We made the deal on Friday (Jan. 7). The next day he was supposed to be fighting in Florida.

“He heard about this opportunity and said, ‘Absolutely. It’s the championship of the world.’ So these two guys, give them a lot of credit. But the time before was torture.”

The coronavirus has played a central role in Smith’s schedule for some time.

The New Yorker was supposed to take on Maxim Vlasov for the vacant WBO 175-pound title last February but the fight was pushed to April after Vlasov tested positive. Smith (27-3, 21 KOs) won a majority decision to claim his first major belt.

Then his scheduled defense against Umar Salamov in October was canceled when Smith contracted the virus. That fight wasn’t rescheduled, which opened the door for Johnson. And we know what happened next.

Smith is grateful things turned out the way they did.

“I’m extremely happy to be here,” he said. “There was a couple of moments when I didn’t think I was going to be here today. I can’t wait for Saturday. … I’m just thankful to my team, to the WBO, Top Rank and everybody for making this happen.”

[lawrence-related id=27439,27436,27426]

Joe Smith Jr., handlers grateful Steve Geffrard accepted challenge

Joe Smith Jr. and his handlers are grateful that Steve Geffrard agreed to fight the light heavyweight titleholder Saturday.

Joe Smith Jr. and his handlers are thrilled that someone – anyone – agreed to face the light heavyweight titleholder Saturday in upstate New York.

Two weeks ago, when Callum Johnson pulled out of the fight because of COVID-19, Smith’s co-promoter Joe DeGuardia and Co. spent the next three days frantically trying to find a legitimate opponent to step in.

Finally, after a battery of phone calls and lost sleep, one time amateur standout Steve Geffrard (18-2, 12 KOs) agreed to take the fight. DeGuardia was relieved … and exhausted.

“It was a crazy process,” DeGuardia said during the final news conference before the ESPN fight. “We went through three days of living hell. My throat is still sore from all the calls and the phone conversations.

“I gotta tell you one thing: The one shining light of it all was these two guys because we went through over a dozen fighters. Guys turned it down left and right, the championship of the world, the opportunity of a lifetime.

“Everyone one of them, Joe told me, ‘Yes, no problem.’ Finally, after about the eighth guy, he said, ‘Listen, Joe. Whoever you put in there I don’t care who I’m fighting. So just go make a deal.

“On the other side, Steve, as soon as he got the call, this fighter recognized what it was. Now remember he was training. We made the deal on Friday (Jan. 7). The next day he was supposed to be fighting in Florida.

“He heard about this opportunity and said, ‘Absolutely. It’s the championship of the world.’ So these two guys, give them a lot of credit. But the time before was torture.”

The coronavirus has played a central role in Smith’s schedule for some time.

The New Yorker was supposed to take on Maxim Vlasov for the vacant WBO 175-pound title last February but the fight was pushed to April after Vlasov tested positive. Smith (27-3, 21 KOs) won a majority decision to claim his first major belt.

Then his scheduled defense against Umar Salamov in October was canceled when Smith contracted the virus. That fight wasn’t rescheduled, which opened the door for Johnson. And we know what happened next.

Smith is grateful things turned out the way they did.

“I’m extremely happy to be here,” he said. “There was a couple of moments when I didn’t think I was going to be here today. I can’t wait for Saturday. … I’m just thankful to my team, to the WBO, Top Rank and everybody for making this happen.”

[lawrence-related id=27439,27436,27426]

Joe Smith Jr. on his return to ring, undisputed 175-pound championship and Canelo sweepstakes

Joe Smith Jr. discusses his return, the prospect of becoming undisputed 175-pound champion and a potential fight with Canelo Alvarez.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published at DAZN.com.

Things were looking up for Joe Smith Jr. after capturing the WBO light heavyweight title last April.

Unification bouts against titleholders Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol were on the horizon for Smith, but those dreams were dashed when he contracted COVID-19 in September. Then he was scheduled to face Callum Johnson on Saturday. Those plans got scrapped at the end of last week, as Johnson tested positive for the coronavirus.

Smith wanted to stay on the card and was insistent on making his first title defense. His team searched far and wide. Finally, Steve Geffrard accepted the challenge and the fight is on at Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona, N.Y.

Ahead of his 2022 debut, Smith talked to DAZN News about his 2021, possibly being part of the Canelo Alvarez sweepstakes and the status of the light heavyweight division.

DID IT MATTER WHO THE OPPONENT WAS AFTER JOHNSON PULLED OUT?

“I just wanted somebody in there that was comfortable but I didn’t really care who it was. I just wanted to fight. But at the same time, I didn’t want to fight another top guy and not be prepared enough for it. They tried to get me everybody, but nobody wanted to take the fight on short notice. They wanted more money than I was getting paid. So that was their way of saying no.

“They went through a lot of guys. They called up a lot of people. But they were able to find this guy who’s taking the fight. He may not have the best professional resume right now but he’s a well-experienced fighter. He’s been in the ring with everybody and he has a great amateur background.”

FRUSTRATION OVER HIS LONG LAYOFF AND NOT BUILDING ON HIS MOMENTUM

“It was very frustrating and hard. Once, I got COVID the first time I realized that it’s not a joke (and) that you can get it just being around anybody. No one needs to show symptoms, anything and you could just pick it up. I made the choice and sacrifice for this to make this opportunity happen this time. I didn’t go near anybody. I skipped the holidays. It was just me and my wife. My wife took off for work and I went from home to the gym. That’s it.

“When I went to the gym, nobody was there. It was just me. Shut down the whole gym. I went early when nobody was there. Sparring partners, we COVID tested them and made sure everything was good before we even got in the room with them.”

IF HE’S STILL BOTHERED BY LOSS TO BIVOL

“I got past it. He’s a great fighter. In my opinion, I think he’s the best light heavyweight right now other than me (laughs). I’ll be looking forward to getting a fight with him in the future as long as I can do what I need to do this weekend and get past this guy.”

BEING IN THE MIX FOR A POSSIBLE FIGHT AGAINST CANELO ALVAREZ IN MAY

“I hope I’m in there. I’m hoping I’m one of the names mentioned because I believe I deserve a shot like that. I believe I deserve a payday. I’ve had a lot of tough fights. He’s the pound-for pound-king and I want to fight the best. That’s it. That’s the motivation for me to fight the best. It makes me better.”

THE FIGHT THAT’S MOST LIKELY NEXT BETWEEN CANELO, BIVOL AND BETERBIEV?

“I honestly don’t know. I’ll take any of the fights. I’m looking to get Beterbiev or Canelo next. Those are the two I want next. If the Canelo fight is there and if the Beterbiev fight pops up after that one, I would take that. That would be the order I would choose. But if it’s not Canelo, it’s Beterbiev. I want him next if I don’t face Canelo. I have to fight for more belts and then unify them all again.”

IS THE GOAL TO BECOME THE UNDISPUTED CHAMPION AT 175 POUNDS?

“Yes, I would like to. If I fought Beterbiev first and beat him then I would choose to fight Bivol after that.”

Joe Smith Jr. on his return to ring, undisputed 175-pound championship and Canelo sweepstakes

Joe Smith Jr. discusses his return, the prospect of becoming undisputed 175-pound champion and a potential fight with Canelo Alvarez.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published at DAZN.com.

Things were looking up for Joe Smith Jr. after capturing the WBO light heavyweight title last April.

Unification bouts against titleholders Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol were on the horizon for Smith, but those dreams were dashed when he contracted COVID-19 in September. Then he was scheduled to face Callum Johnson on Saturday. Those plans got scrapped at the end of last week, as Johnson tested positive for the coronavirus.

Smith wanted to stay on the card and was insistent on making his first title defense. His team searched far and wide. Finally, Steve Geffrard accepted the challenge and the fight is on at Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona, N.Y.

Ahead of his 2022 debut, Smith talked to DAZN News about his 2021, possibly being part of the Canelo Alvarez sweepstakes and the status of the light heavyweight division.

DID IT MATTER WHO THE OPPONENT WAS AFTER JOHNSON PULLED OUT?

“I just wanted somebody in there that was comfortable but I didn’t really care who it was. I just wanted to fight. But at the same time, I didn’t want to fight another top guy and not be prepared enough for it. They tried to get me everybody, but nobody wanted to take the fight on short notice. They wanted more money than I was getting paid. So that was their way of saying no.

“They went through a lot of guys. They called up a lot of people. But they were able to find this guy who’s taking the fight. He may not have the best professional resume right now but he’s a well-experienced fighter. He’s been in the ring with everybody and he has a great amateur background.”

FRUSTRATION OVER HIS LONG LAYOFF AND NOT BUILDING ON HIS MOMENTUM

“It was very frustrating and hard. Once, I got COVID the first time I realized that it’s not a joke (and) that you can get it just being around anybody. No one needs to show symptoms, anything and you could just pick it up. I made the choice and sacrifice for this to make this opportunity happen this time. I didn’t go near anybody. I skipped the holidays. It was just me and my wife. My wife took off for work and I went from home to the gym. That’s it.

“When I went to the gym, nobody was there. It was just me. Shut down the whole gym. I went early when nobody was there. Sparring partners, we COVID tested them and made sure everything was good before we even got in the room with them.”

IF HE’S STILL BOTHERED BY LOSS TO BIVOL

“I got past it. He’s a great fighter. In my opinion, I think he’s the best light heavyweight right now other than me (laughs). I’ll be looking forward to getting a fight with him in the future as long as I can do what I need to do this weekend and get past this guy.”

BEING IN THE MIX FOR A POSSIBLE FIGHT AGAINST CANELO ALVAREZ IN MAY

“I hope I’m in there. I’m hoping I’m one of the names mentioned because I believe I deserve a shot like that. I believe I deserve a payday. I’ve had a lot of tough fights. He’s the pound-for pound-king and I want to fight the best. That’s it. That’s the motivation for me to fight the best. It makes me better.”

THE FIGHT THAT’S MOST LIKELY NEXT BETWEEN CANELO, BIVOL AND BETERBIEV?

“I honestly don’t know. I’ll take any of the fights. I’m looking to get Beterbiev or Canelo next. Those are the two I want next. If the Canelo fight is there and if the Beterbiev fight pops up after that one, I would take that. That would be the order I would choose. But if it’s not Canelo, it’s Beterbiev. I want him next if I don’t face Canelo. I have to fight for more belts and then unify them all again.”

IS THE GOAL TO BECOME THE UNDISPUTED CHAMPION AT 175 POUNDS?

“Yes, I would like to. If I fought Beterbiev first and beat him then I would choose to fight Bivol after that.”

Joe Smith Jr. vs. Steve Geffrard: date, time, how to watch, background

Joe Smith Jr. vs. Steve Geffrard: date, time, how to watch, background.

JOE SMITH JR. WILL DEFEND HIS LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE AGAINST STEVE GEFFRARD ON ESPN

Joe Smith Jr. (27-3, 21 KOs) vs. Steve Geffrard (18-2, 12 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 15
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Turning Stone Resort and Casino, Verona, New York
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Light heavyweight
  • At stake: Smith’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Smith 9½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Abraham Nova vs. William Encarnacion, featherweights; Lyubomyr Pinchuk vs. Jose Mario Flores, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Smith KO 8
  • Background: Smith has overcome limited ability and disappointing setbacks to realize his dream of winning a world title, which he claimed by outpointing Maxim Vlasov in a gritty performance this past April. Some thought the hard-punching Long Islander had hit his ceiling when he lost wide decisions to Sullivan Barrera and Dmitry Bivol in 2017 and 2019. However, he followed the Bivol setback with a surprisingly one-sided victory over Jesse Hart and then stopped capable Eleider Alvarez, which set up the fight with Vlasov for the vacant title. Smith was supposed to have made his first defense against Callum Johnson but the Englishman tested positive for COVID-19. Geffrard, who had been training for a fight on another card, agreed on eight days’ notice to step in as Smith’s opponent. The 31-year-old from Miami, a solid boxer with heavy hands, returned from a three-year layoff to defeat journeyman Denis Grachev by a unanimous decision in an eight-round bout last March. He has won 18 consecutive fights since starting his career with back-to-back losses but has never faced an opponent of Smith’s caliber. “I give Steve credit for taking this fight on short notice,” Smith said. “He is a tough guy, and I expect him to bring everything he has for this opportunity. I’m ready to fight regardless of who is in the ring with me. My goal is the same, which is to defend my world title and keep it on Long Island, where it belongs.” Smith was originally scheduled to fight Umar Salamov on Oct. 30 but Smith had to pull out after contracting the coronavirus. The fight was rescheduled for this month. However, Salamov, from Russia, couldn’t obtain a visa to enter the U.S. Johnson then agreed to fight Smith.

[lawrence-related id=19315]

Joe Smith Jr. vs. Steve Geffrard: date, time, how to watch, background

Joe Smith Jr. vs. Steve Geffrard: date, time, how to watch, background.

JOE SMITH JR. WILL DEFEND HIS LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE AGAINST STEVE GEFFRARD ON ESPN

Joe Smith Jr. (27-3, 21 KOs) vs. Steve Geffrard (18-2, 12 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 15
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Turning Stone Resort and Casino, Verona, New York
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Light heavyweight
  • At stake: Smith’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Smith 9½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Abraham Nova vs. William Encarnacion, featherweights; Lyubomyr Pinchuk vs. Jose Mario Flores, heavyweights
  • Prediction: Smith KO 8
  • Background: Smith has overcome limited ability and disappointing setbacks to realize his dream of winning a world title, which he claimed by outpointing Maxim Vlasov in a gritty performance this past April. Some thought the hard-punching Long Islander had hit his ceiling when he lost wide decisions to Sullivan Barrera and Dmitry Bivol in 2017 and 2019. However, he followed the Bivol setback with a surprisingly one-sided victory over Jesse Hart and then stopped capable Eleider Alvarez, which set up the fight with Vlasov for the vacant title. Smith was supposed to have made his first defense against Callum Johnson but the Englishman tested positive for COVID-19. Geffrard, who had been training for a fight on another card, agreed on eight days’ notice to step in as Smith’s opponent. The 31-year-old from Miami, a solid boxer with heavy hands, returned from a three-year layoff to defeat journeyman Denis Grachev by a unanimous decision in an eight-round bout last March. He has won 18 consecutive fights since starting his career with back-to-back losses but has never faced an opponent of Smith’s caliber. “I give Steve credit for taking this fight on short notice,” Smith said. “He is a tough guy, and I expect him to bring everything he has for this opportunity. I’m ready to fight regardless of who is in the ring with me. My goal is the same, which is to defend my world title and keep it on Long Island, where it belongs.” Smith was originally scheduled to fight Umar Salamov on Oct. 30 but Smith had to pull out after contracting the coronavirus. The fight was rescheduled for this month. However, Salamov, from Russia, couldn’t obtain a visa to enter the U.S. Johnson then agreed to fight Smith.

[lawrence-related id=19315]