Good, bad, worse: Shakur Stevenson was good and boring

Good, bad, worse: Shakur Stevenson was good and boring against Jeremiah Nakathila on Saturday in Las Vegas.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7hqu3ZbkDM

The “good” for Shakur Stevenson was that his unusual skill set was on full display against Jeremiah Nakathila on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Stevenson schooled his overmatched Namibian opponent from beginning to end, winning every round on all three scorecards and throwing in a knockdown to boot in the 12-round 130-pound bout. Nakathila could barely touch Stevenson, averaging 2.3 punches landed per round, according to CompuBox.

One could argue it was a masterful boxing exhibition by the 2016 Olympic silver medalist and former 126-pound titleholder.

The problem for Stevenson was that he also delivered plenty of “bad,” which was the talk of the ESPN-televised fight afterward.

Stevenson fancies himself a budding superstar, which makes sense given his ability. He didn’t perform like one against Nakathila, a far inferior boxer who didn’t have the tools to compete with an elite opponent.

Stevenson won every minute of every round but didn’t take the risks necessary to give himself a realistic chance of taking out Nakathila, which everyone watching was waiting for him to do. He took a safe approach because of Nakathila’s power.

Safe is boring, which is not what a superstar is.

Stevenson presumably will have learned a lesson in that fight. Yes, the main objective is to have your hand raised. However, the biggest stars in the sport are also entertainers. And he seems to understand that concept. He apologized for his performance on social media, which is a good sign.

He should take more risks, particularly against overmatched opponents. The rewards can be great.

[lawrence-related id=21040]

***

BAD

Referee Celestino Ruiz became a topic of discussion during the main event in Las Vegas. AP Photo / John Locher

A referee is on the wrong path when he or she steals attention away from the fighters.

That happened during the main event on ESPN, when referee Celestino Ruiz was unnecessarily obsessed with the feet of the southpaw Stevenson and Nakathila, who fights from an orthodox stance.

Southpaws and orthodox boxers typically step on one another because their lead feet are on the same side. It simply can’t be avoided entirely.

Nevertheless, Ruiz constantly – and annoyingly – warned the fighters to avoid each other’s feet. He even threatened once to take a point away from the next one to step on a foot, which was surrealistic.

The fighters are concentrating on their game plans and protecting themselves. The last thing they need is a referee badgering them about where they place their feet.

I try to assume the best about refs. Ruiz obviously wanted to avoid potential foot-on-foot problems. That said, he was out of control. I’ve watched thousands of fights in my career and I can’t recall any referee doing what Ruiz did.

I hope he behaved in that manner on his own. It would be more disturbing if it turns out he was instructed to issue such warnings, which I doubt is the case given the reputation of Nevada officials.

I trust that the powers that be in that state will prevent such nonsense from happening again.

***

WORSE

Jeremiah Nakathila (right) barely touched Shakur Stevenson in 36 minutes of fighting. AP Photo / John Locher

How did Nakathila end up as the WBO’s No. 2-ranked 130-pounder?

An argument can be made that all regions in the world should have representation in the rankings. Nakathila is African. And, of course, one never knows how a relatively obscure fighter will do in his first major test until he gets an opportunity.

At the same time, no one should rise to No. 2 without beating a contender or someone close to that status. Nakathila, who has fought outside his continent only once, has no such victories.

Obviously, his handlers are well connected because merit doesn’t seem to have played a role in his ascent.

As a result, the fight on Saturday was garbage. Nakathila, who appears to have power but little else, was out of his depth. And that isn’t supposed to be the case when the Nos. 1- and 2-ranked fighters face off.

I can’t be too critical of Top Rank, ESPN or the Nevada State Athletic Commission, all of which approved the bout. They obviously saw No. 1 and No. 2 and ran with it. The problem was with the WBO, which demonstrated again why sanctioning bodies can’t be trusted to get it right.

The alphabet organizations rank fighters based primarily on how much money they can collect in sanctioning fees, not on resume. That’s obvious to anyone paying attention.

Is boxing ever going to emerge from this frustrating cycle?

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Stevenson won the WBO “interim” title with his victory over Nakathila, meaning his next fight could be a title challenge of champion Jamel Herring. I have tremendous respect for the 35-year-old Herring, who is on an impressive run of victories over established opponents. That includes a knockout of former Fighter of the Year Carl Frampton in his most-recent bout. I just don’t believe he’s as talented as Stevenson, whose gifts are rare. I believe Stevenson would outbox him and win a major title in a second division even if he doesn’t dazzle us in the process. … Jose Pedraza looked sharp in his victory over previously unbeaten Julian Rodriguez in a scheduled 10-round 140-pound bout on the Stevenson-Nakathila card, which ended after eight rounds with a beaten Rodriguez sitting on his stool. Pedraza demonstrated once again that he’s one of better technicians in the world, schooling and ultimately breaking down his less-experienced opponent to remain in title contention at 32 years old. All three judges somehow had it 77-75 for Pedraza at the time of the stoppage, five rounds to three. I thought Pedraza won every round. …

The “good” in this column could’ve been the four featured fights – all involving heavyweights — on the July 24 Tyson FuryDeontay Wilder III card: Fury vs Wilder, Robert Helenius vs. Adam Kownacki II, Frank Sanchez vs. Efe Ajagba and Jared Anderson vs. Vladimir Treshkin. That’s going to be entertaining as hell. And it’s further proof that competing entities – Top Rank and Premier Boxing Champions, in this case – can work together when they have to. Can we build on this? … Claressa Shields deserves credit for her victory in her MMA debut on Thursday. Things looked bleak for two rounds, during which jiu-jitsu expert Brittney Elkin controlled the battle on the ground. However, Shields, obviously determined, rallied to win when Elkin tried for a takedown but failed and was met with a flurry of hard punches. “I just had never-quit attitude every round,” Shields said. She should be proud of herself. …

Longtime heavyweight contender Alexander Povetkin, 41, has announced his retirement. The Russian had a good career, which started with a super heavyweight gold medal in the 2004 Olympics. He never won a major professional title – losing badly to Wladimir Klitschko and Anthony Joshua in his only tries — but he was a contender for more than a decade. He defeated Larry Donald, Chris Byrd, Eddie Chambers, Ruslan Chagaev, Marco Huck, Hasim Rahman and several other capable heavyweights. And he saved one of his best for second to last, a stunning one punch knockout of Dillian Whyte last August. Whyte stopped Povetkin in the rematch, prompting him to call it quits. Povetkin also will be remembered for his failed drug tests.

[lawrence-related id=21001,20998,21036,18905,13130]

Good, bad, worse: Shakur Stevenson was good and boring

Good, bad, worse: Shakur Stevenson was good and boring against Jeremiah Nakathila on Saturday in Las Vegas.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7hqu3ZbkDM

The “good” for Shakur Stevenson was that his unusual skill set was on full display against Jeremiah Nakathila on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Stevenson schooled his overmatched Namibian opponent from beginning to end, winning every round on all three scorecards and throwing in a knockdown to boot in the 12-round 130-pound bout. Nakathila could barely touch Stevenson, averaging 2.3 punches landed per round, according to CompuBox.

One could argue it was a masterful boxing exhibition by the 2016 Olympic silver medalist and former 126-pound titleholder.

The problem for Stevenson was that he also delivered plenty of “bad,” which was the talk of the ESPN-televised fight afterward.

Stevenson fancies himself a budding superstar, which makes sense given his ability. He didn’t perform like one against Nakathila, a far inferior boxer who didn’t have the tools to compete with an elite opponent.

Stevenson won every minute of every round but didn’t take the risks necessary to give himself a realistic chance of taking out Nakathila, which everyone watching was waiting for him to do. He took a safe approach because of Nakathila’s power.

Safe is boring, which is not what a superstar is.

Stevenson presumably will have learned a lesson in that fight. Yes, the main objective is to have your hand raised. However, the biggest stars in the sport are also entertainers. And he seems to understand that concept. He apologized for his performance on social media, which is a good sign.

He should take more risks, particularly against overmatched opponents. The rewards can be great.

[lawrence-related id=21040]

***

BAD

Referee Celestino Ruiz became a topic of discussion during the main event in Las Vegas. AP Photo / John Locher

A referee is on the wrong path when he or she steals attention away from the fighters.

That happened during the main event on ESPN, when referee Celestino Ruiz was unnecessarily obsessed with the feet of the southpaw Stevenson and Nakathila, who fights from an orthodox stance.

Southpaws and orthodox boxers typically step on one another because their lead feet are on the same side. It simply can’t be avoided entirely.

Nevertheless, Ruiz constantly – and annoyingly – warned the fighters to avoid each other’s feet. He even threatened once to take a point away from the next one to step on a foot, which was surrealistic.

The fighters are concentrating on their game plans and protecting themselves. The last thing they need is a referee badgering them about where they place their feet.

I try to assume the best about refs. Ruiz obviously wanted to avoid potential foot-on-foot problems. That said, he was out of control. I’ve watched thousands of fights in my career and I can’t recall any referee doing what Ruiz did.

I hope he behaved in that manner on his own. It would be more disturbing if it turns out he was instructed to issue such warnings, which I doubt is the case given the reputation of Nevada officials.

I trust that the powers that be in that state will prevent such nonsense from happening again.

***

WORSE

Jeremiah Nakathila (right) barely touched Shakur Stevenson in 36 minutes of fighting. AP Photo / John Locher

How did Nakathila end up as the WBO’s No. 2-ranked 130-pounder?

An argument can be made that all regions in the world should have representation in the rankings. Nakathila is African. And, of course, one never knows how a relatively obscure fighter will do in his first major test until he gets an opportunity.

At the same time, no one should rise to No. 2 without beating a contender or someone close to that status. Nakathila, who has fought outside his continent only once, has no such victories.

Obviously, his handlers are well connected because merit doesn’t seem to have played a role in his ascent.

As a result, the fight on Saturday was garbage. Nakathila, who appears to have power but little else, was out of his depth. And that isn’t supposed to be the case when the Nos. 1- and 2-ranked fighters face off.

I can’t be too critical of Top Rank, ESPN or the Nevada State Athletic Commission, all of which approved the bout. They obviously saw No. 1 and No. 2 and ran with it. The problem was with the WBO, which demonstrated again why sanctioning bodies can’t be trusted to get it right.

The alphabet organizations rank fighters based primarily on how much money they can collect in sanctioning fees, not on resume. That’s obvious to anyone paying attention.

Is boxing ever going to emerge from this frustrating cycle?

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

Stevenson won the WBO “interim” title with his victory over Nakathila, meaning his next fight could be a title challenge of champion Jamel Herring. I have tremendous respect for the 35-year-old Herring, who is on an impressive run of victories over established opponents. That includes a knockout of former Fighter of the Year Carl Frampton in his most-recent bout. I just don’t believe he’s as talented as Stevenson, whose gifts are rare. I believe Stevenson would outbox him and win a major title in a second division even if he doesn’t dazzle us in the process. … Jose Pedraza looked sharp in his victory over previously unbeaten Julian Rodriguez in a scheduled 10-round 140-pound bout on the Stevenson-Nakathila card, which ended after eight rounds with a beaten Rodriguez sitting on his stool. Pedraza demonstrated once again that he’s one of better technicians in the world, schooling and ultimately breaking down his less-experienced opponent to remain in title contention at 32 years old. All three judges somehow had it 77-75 for Pedraza at the time of the stoppage, five rounds to three. I thought Pedraza won every round. …

The “good” in this column could’ve been the four featured fights – all involving heavyweights — on the July 24 Tyson FuryDeontay Wilder III card: Fury vs Wilder, Robert Helenius vs. Adam Kownacki II, Frank Sanchez vs. Efe Ajagba and Jared Anderson vs. Vladimir Treshkin. That’s going to be entertaining as hell. And it’s further proof that competing entities – Top Rank and Premier Boxing Champions, in this case – can work together when they have to. Can we build on this? … Claressa Shields deserves credit for her victory in her MMA debut on Thursday. Things looked bleak for two rounds, during which jiu-jitsu expert Brittney Elkin controlled the battle on the ground. However, Shields, obviously determined, rallied to win when Elkin tried for a takedown but failed and was met with a flurry of hard punches. “I just had never-quit attitude every round,” Shields said. She should be proud of herself. …

Longtime heavyweight contender Alexander Povetkin, 41, has announced his retirement. The Russian had a good career, which started with a super heavyweight gold medal in the 2004 Olympics. He never won a major professional title – losing badly to Wladimir Klitschko and Anthony Joshua in his only tries — but he was a contender for more than a decade. He defeated Larry Donald, Chris Byrd, Eddie Chambers, Ruslan Chagaev, Marco Huck, Hasim Rahman and several other capable heavyweights. And he saved one of his best for second to last, a stunning one punch knockout of Dillian Whyte last August. Whyte stopped Povetkin in the rematch, prompting him to call it quits. Povetkin also will be remembered for his failed drug tests.

[lawrence-related id=21001,20998,21036,18905,13130]

Video: Shakur Stevenson: ‘I have to live up to the hype’

Video: Shakur Stevenson “I have to live up to the hype.”

All the pressure is on Shakur Stevenson.

The 2016 Olympic silver medalist and former 126-pound titleholder is one of the hottest young fighters in the world. His opponent on Saturday is relatively obscure Jeremia Nakathila of Namibia, who is 21-1 (17 KOs) but also about a 30-1 underdog.

Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) is taking nothing for granted, though. He knows he has a job to do in the fight for the WBO’s “interim” 130-pound title.

“It feels good knowing that [promoter] Bob [Arum] thinks I’m the next superstar of the sport, and I have to live up to the hype,” he said at the final news conference to promote the fight on ESPN and ESPN+.

“At the end of the day, I listen [to the hype], but you can’t get too hot, You still gotta complete the task. I try to stay in between. I don’t try to listen to everything I hear and go off that.

“I try to make sure I do what I’m supposed to do. My preparation was good. My weight is good. I’m ready to fight Saturday.”

Check out the entire news conference below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0oPHN1UK60

[lawrence-related id=20989]

Video: Shakur Stevenson: ‘I have to live up to the hype’

Video: Shakur Stevenson “I have to live up to the hype.”

All the pressure is on Shakur Stevenson.

The 2016 Olympic silver medalist and former 126-pound titleholder is one of the hottest young fighters in the world. His opponent on Saturday is relatively obscure Jeremia Nakathila of Namibia, who is 21-1 (17 KOs) but also about a 30-1 underdog.

Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) is taking nothing for granted, though. He knows he has a job to do in the fight for the WBO’s “interim” 130-pound title.

“It feels good knowing that [promoter] Bob [Arum] thinks I’m the next superstar of the sport, and I have to live up to the hype,” he said at the final news conference to promote the fight on ESPN and ESPN+.

“At the end of the day, I listen [to the hype], but you can’t get too hot, You still gotta complete the task. I try to stay in between. I don’t try to listen to everything I hear and go off that.

“I try to make sure I do what I’m supposed to do. My preparation was good. My weight is good. I’m ready to fight Saturday.”

Check out the entire news conference below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0oPHN1UK60

[lawrence-related id=20989]

Shakur Stevenson is class of 2016 U.S. Olympic Team as pro

Shakur Stevenson is the class of the 2016 U.S. Olympic Team as a professional.

BOXING JUNKIE TRACKS THE PROGRESS OF THE 2016 U.S. OLYMPIC BOXING TEAM AND PROVIDES OUR TOP 10 AMONG AMERICAN OLYMPIANS FROM THE PAST THREE GAMES

Silver medalist Shakur Stevenson was arguably the most-gifted member of the men’s 2016 U.S. Olympic team, which competed in Rio de Janeiro. He definitely has had the most success as a professional.

And he already is one of the most accomplished among American Olympians from the last three Games (2008, 2012 and 2016).

Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) has held the WBO 126-pound title and will face Jeremia Nakathia for the sanctioning body’s “interim” 130-pound belt on Saturday in Las Vegas (ESPN, ESPN+), meaning a shot at a second major title is around the corner.

The most-decorated boxer on the past two U.S. Olympic teams is Claressa Shields, who was a two-time gold medalist and has won multiple professional titles.

Here is a look at the 2016 U.S. men’s team – including division and results in the Olympics — and how each member is doing in the professional ranks. Also, following that, we provide our Top 10 list from the past three Olympics in terms of professional accomplishments.

2016 TEAM

Shakur Stevenson was devastated after losing to Robeisy Ramirez in the gold medal match in the 2016 Olympics. Robert Hanashiro / USA TODAY Sports

Nico Hernandez
Division
: Light flyweight
Result
: Bronze
Pro: Hernandez (7-0, 4 KOs) hasn’t fought since February 2019 in part because he was accidently shot in the leg this past Nov. 1. He had surgery and reportedly was recovering. The resident of Wichita, Kansas, won a minor flyweight title by stopping Szilveszter Kanalas in one round in 2018 but has yet to face a notable opponent or take part in a major event. That title fight was his only outing scheduled for more than eight rounds.

Antonio Vargas
Division
: Flyweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Vargas (12-1, 5 KOs) was building momentum when he was stopped in one round by capable Mexican Jose Maria Cardenas in a scheduled eight-rounder in May 2019, the result of a single right-handed punch. He rebounded by winning two scheduled six-round fights, the most-recent one in February of last year. All but one of the Kissimmee resident’s fights have taken place in Florida, where he has become a regional attraction.

Shakur Stevenson
Division: Bantamweight
Result: Silver
Pro: Stevenson defeated Joet Gonzalez by a near-shutout decision to win the vacant WBO featherweight title in Reno, Nevada. He defended once, stopping Felix Caraballo in six rounds in June of last year, and then moved up to junior lightweight. He shut out Toka Kahn Clary in a 10-rounder this past December. As the mandatory challenger, he’s expected to face WBO champ Jamel Herring this winter if he beats Nakathia on Saturday.

Carlos Balderas
Division
: Lightweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Balderas (9-1, 8 KOs) was a hot prospect coming out of the 2016 Games but hadn’t gained traction as a professional. Then he ran into disaster: a sixth-round knockout loss to Juan Rene Tellez in December 2019, his most-recent fight. However, the product of Santa Marica, Calif., will be the beneficiary of a fresh start: He reportedly has signed a multi-fight deal with Top Rank. He’s expected to fight again in August, according to Yahoo Sports.

Gary Antuanne Russell
Division
: Light welterweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Russell (14-0, 14 KOs) is the younger brother of Gary Russell Jr. and seems to be on his way to realizing similar success. Gary Antuanne has it all – skill, speed and power, as his knockout record indicates. He’s coming off a sensational sixth-round stoppage of Jovanie Santiago on May 29. Santiago had gone the distance with Adrien Broner in his previous fight. Russell is within a victory or two of his first title shot.

Charles Conwell
Division
: middleweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Conwell (14-0, 11 KOs) had the tragic misfortune of delivering the blows that resulted in the death of Patrick Day in October 2019, which deeply affected Conwell. He has bounced back to win three consecutive fights, including a ninth-round stoppage of Madiyar Ashkeyev in December. The resident of Cleveland is scheduled to face Mark DeLuca on the Teofimo Lopez-George Kambosos card on June 19. Conwell is ranked by two sanctioning bodies, meaning a title shot could come soon.

***

TOP 10 FROM PAST THREE OLYMPICS

Errol Spence Jr. has won titles and climbed the pound-for-pound list since turning pro in 2012.  Ronald Martinez / Getty Images
  1. Errol Spence Jr. (27-0, 21 KOs) – The welterweight titleholder, Boxing Junkie’s No. 4 fighter pound for pound, has by far the best resume of recent Olympians. He’s scheduled to face fellow beltholder and legend Manny Pacquiao on Aug. 21.
  2. Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) – The quick-handed featherweight beltholder has been criticized for not fighting as regularly as other titleholders but he has some solid victories and is currently the longest-reigning world champion.
  3. Jose Ramirez (26-1, 17 KOs) – The now-former 140-pound unified titleholder suffered his first loss last month, a close decision against Josh Taylor, but he has a number of notable victories and remains an elite fighter.
  4. Demetrius Andrade (30-0, 18 KOs) – The current middleweight titleholder and former 154-pound champ has had difficulty making fights with top-tier opponents but has dominated those placed in front of him.
  5. Deontay Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) – Say what you want about Wilder’s ability or lack thereof; the former heavyweight champ has one of the biggest right hands in boxing history, as his record indicates. It took a special heavyweight in Tyson Fury to sully Wilder’s perfect record.
  6. Jamel Herring (23-2, 11 KOs) – The former Marine battled through two mid-career losses to become a junior lightweight champion. And he’s coming off his biggest victory, a sixth-round knockout of former Fighter of the Year Carl Frampton in April.
  7. Shakur Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) – The fast-rising star is No. 7 for now. He could shoot up this list in short order.
  8. Joseph Diaz Jr. (31-1-1, 15 KOs) – Jo Jo outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year, his break-out performance. He lost his title on the scale in his next fight and has moved up to 135. He faces a major challenge against Javier Fortuna next month.
  9. Sadam Ali (27-3, 14 KOs) – Ali’s claim to fame was retiring Miguel Cotto and winning a 154-pound title in the process. He was stopped by Jessie Vargas before that fight and is 1-2 since.
  10. Rau’shee Warren (18-3, 4 KOs) – The two-time Olympian narrowly outpointed Juan Carlos Payano in their rematch to win a bantamweight title but lost it to Zhanat Zhakiyan in his first defense. He also lost to Nordine Oubaali in a bid to win another 118-pound title.

Here are the Olympics in which our Top 10 participated: 2008 – Andrade, Ali, Russell Jr. and Warren; 2012 –Spence, Herring, Ramirez, Diaz and Warren; 2016 – Stevenson.

[lawrence-related id=20952,16357]

 

Shakur Stevenson is class of 2016 U.S. Olympic Team as pro

Shakur Stevenson is the class of the 2016 U.S. Olympic Team as a professional.

BOXING JUNKIE TRACKS THE PROGRESS OF THE 2016 U.S. OLYMPIC BOXING TEAM AND PROVIDES OUR TOP 10 AMONG AMERICAN OLYMPIANS FROM THE PAST THREE GAMES

Silver medalist Shakur Stevenson was arguably the most-gifted member of the men’s 2016 U.S. Olympic team, which competed in Rio de Janeiro. He definitely has had the most success as a professional.

And he already is one of the most accomplished among American Olympians from the last three Games (2008, 2012 and 2016).

Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) has held the WBO 126-pound title and will face Jeremiah Nakathia for the sanctioning body’s “interim” 130-pound belt on Saturday in Las Vegas (ESPN, ESPN+), meaning a shot at a second major title is around the corner.

The most-decorated boxer on the past two U.S. Olympic teams is Claressa Shields, who was a two-time gold medalist and has won multiple professional titles.

Here is a look at the 2016 U.S. men’s team – including division and results in the Olympics — and how each member is doing in the professional ranks. Also, following that, we provide our Top 10 list from the past three Olympics in terms of professional accomplishments.

2016 TEAM

Shakur Stevenson was devastated after losing to Robeisy Ramirez in the gold medal match in the 2016 Olympics. Robert Hanashiro / USA TODAY Sports

Nico Hernandez
Division
: Light flyweight
Result
: Bronze
Pro: Hernandez (7-0, 4 KOs) hasn’t fought since February 2019 in part because he was accidently shot in the leg this past Nov. 1. He had surgery and reportedly was recovering. The resident of Wichita, Kansas, won a minor flyweight title by stopping Szilveszter Kanalas in one round in 2018 but has yet to face a notable opponent or take part in a major event. That title fight was his only outing scheduled for more than eight rounds.

Antonio Vargas
Division
: Flyweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Vargas (12-1, 5 KOs) was building momentum when he was stopped in one round by capable Mexican Jose Maria Cardenas in a scheduled eight-rounder in May 2019, the result of a single right-handed punch. He rebounded by winning two scheduled six-round fights, the most-recent one in February of last year. All but one of the Kissimmee resident’s fights have taken place in Florida, where he has become a regional attraction.

Shakur Stevenson
Division: Bantamweight
Result: Silver
Pro: Stevenson defeated Joet Gonzalez by a near-shutout decision to win the vacant WBO featherweight title in Reno, Nevada. He defended once, stopping Felix Caraballo in six rounds in June of last year, and then moved up to junior lightweight. He shut out Toka Kahn Clary in a 10-rounder this past December. As the mandatory challenger, he’s expected to face WBO champ Jamel Herring this winter if he beats Nakathia on Saturday.

Carlos Balderas
Division
: Lightweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Balderas (9-1, 8 KOs) was a hot prospect coming out of the 2016 Games but hadn’t gained traction as a professional. Then he ran into disaster: a sixth-round knockout loss to Juan Rene Tellez in December 2019, his most-recent fight. However, the product of Santa Marica, Calif., will be the beneficiary of a fresh start: He reportedly has signed a multi-fight deal with Top Rank. He’s expected to fight again in August, according to Yahoo Sports.

Gary Antuanne Russell
Division
: Light welterweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Russell (14-0, 14 KOs) is the younger brother of Gary Russell Jr. and seems to be on his way to realizing similar success. Gary Antuanne has it all – skill, speed and power, as his knockout record indicates. He’s coming off a sensational sixth-round stoppage of Jovanie Santiago on May 29. Santiago had gone the distance with Adrien Broner in his previous fight. Russell is within a victory or two of his first title shot.

Charles Conwell
Division
: middleweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Conwell (14-0, 11 KOs) had the tragic misfortune of delivering the blows that resulted in the death of Patrick Day in October 2019, which deeply affected Conwell. He has bounced back to win three consecutive fights, including a ninth-round stoppage of Madiyar Ashkeyev in December. The resident of Cleveland is scheduled to face Mark DeLuca on the Teofimo Lopez-George Kambosos card on June 19. Conwell is ranked by two sanctioning bodies, meaning a title shot could come soon.

***

TOP 10 FROM PAST THREE OLYMPICS

Errol Spence Jr. has won titles and climbed the pound-for-pound list since turning pro in 2012.  Ronald Martinez / Getty Images
  1. Errol Spence Jr. (27-0, 21 KOs) – The welterweight titleholder, Boxing Junkie’s No. 4 fighter pound for pound, has by far the best resume of recent Olympians. He’s scheduled to face fellow beltholder and legend Manny Pacquiao on Aug. 21.
  2. Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) – The quick-handed featherweight beltholder has been criticized for not fighting as regularly as other titleholders but he has some solid victories and is currently the longest-reigning world champion.
  3. Jose Ramirez (26-1, 17 KOs) – The now-former 140-pound unified titleholder suffered his first loss last month, a close decision against Josh Taylor, but he has a number of notable victories and remains an elite fighter.
  4. Demetrius Andrade (30-0, 18 KOs) – The current middleweight titleholder and former 154-pound champ has had difficulty making fights with top-tier opponents but has dominated those placed in front of him.
  5. Deontay Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) – Say what you want about Wilder’s ability or lack thereof; the former heavyweight champ has one of the biggest right hands in boxing history, as his record indicates. It took a special heavyweight in Tyson Fury to sully Wilder’s perfect record.
  6. Jamel Herring (23-2, 11 KOs) – The former Marine battled through two mid-career losses to become a junior lightweight champion. And he’s coming off his biggest victory, a sixth-round knockout of former Fighter of the Year Carl Frampton in April.
  7. Shakur Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) – The fast-rising star is No. 7 for now. He could shoot up this list in short order.
  8. Joseph Diaz Jr. (31-1-1, 15 KOs) – Jo Jo outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year, his break-out performance. He lost his title on the scale in his next fight and has moved up to 135. He faces a major challenge against Javier Fortuna next month.
  9. Sadam Ali (27-3, 14 KOs) – Ali’s claim to fame was retiring Miguel Cotto and winning a 154-pound title in the process. He was stopped by Jessie Vargas before that fight and is 1-2 since.
  10. Rau’shee Warren (18-3, 4 KOs) – The two-time Olympian narrowly outpointed Juan Carlos Payano in their rematch to win a bantamweight title but lost it to Zhanat Zhakiyan in his first defense. He also lost to Nordine Oubaali in a bid to win another 118-pound title.

Here are the Olympics in which our Top 10 participated: 2008 – Andrade, Ali, Russell Jr. and Warren; 2012 –Spence, Herring, Ramirez, Diaz and Warren; 2016 – Stevenson.

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Shakur Stevenson is class of 2016 U.S. Olympic Team as pro

Shakur Stevenson is the class of the 2016 U.S. Olympic Team as a professional.

BOXING JUNKIE TRACKS THE PROGRESS OF THE 2016 U.S. OLYMPIC BOXING TEAM AND PROVIDES OUR TOP 10 AMONG AMERICAN OLYMPIANS FROM THE PAST THREE GAMES

Silver medalist Shakur Stevenson was arguably the most-gifted member of the men’s 2016 U.S. Olympic team, which competed in Rio de Janeiro. He definitely has had the most success as a professional.

And he already is one of the most accomplished among American Olympians from the last three Games (2008, 2012 and 2016).

Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) has held the WBO 126-pound title and will face Jeremiah Nakathia for the sanctioning body’s “interim” 130-pound belt on Saturday in Las Vegas (ESPN, ESPN+), meaning a shot at a second major title is around the corner.

The most-decorated boxer on the past two U.S. Olympic teams is Claressa Shields, who was a two-time gold medalist and has won multiple professional titles.

Here is a look at the 2016 U.S. men’s team – including division and results in the Olympics — and how each member is doing in the professional ranks. Also, following that, we provide our Top 10 list from the past three Olympics in terms of professional accomplishments.

2016 TEAM

Shakur Stevenson was devastated after losing to Robeisy Ramirez in the gold medal match in the 2016 Olympics. Robert Hanashiro / USA TODAY Sports

Nico Hernandez
Division
: Light flyweight
Result
: Bronze
Pro: Hernandez (7-0, 4 KOs) hasn’t fought since February 2019 in part because he was accidently shot in the leg this past Nov. 1. He had surgery and reportedly was recovering. The resident of Wichita, Kansas, won a minor flyweight title by stopping Szilveszter Kanalas in one round in 2018 but has yet to face a notable opponent or take part in a major event. That title fight was his only outing scheduled for more than eight rounds.

Antonio Vargas
Division
: Flyweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Vargas (12-1, 5 KOs) was building momentum when he was stopped in one round by capable Mexican Jose Maria Cardenas in a scheduled eight-rounder in May 2019, the result of a single right-handed punch. He rebounded by winning two scheduled six-round fights, the most-recent one in February of last year. All but one of the Kissimmee resident’s fights have taken place in Florida, where he has become a regional attraction.

Shakur Stevenson
Division: Bantamweight
Result: Silver
Pro: Stevenson defeated Joet Gonzalez by a near-shutout decision to win the vacant WBO featherweight title in Reno, Nevada. He defended once, stopping Felix Caraballo in six rounds in June of last year, and then moved up to junior lightweight. He shut out Toka Kahn Clary in a 10-rounder this past December. As the mandatory challenger, he’s expected to face WBO champ Jamel Herring this winter if he beats Nakathia on Saturday.

Carlos Balderas
Division
: Lightweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Balderas (9-1, 8 KOs) was a hot prospect coming out of the 2016 Games but hadn’t gained traction as a professional. Then he ran into disaster: a sixth-round knockout loss to Juan Rene Tellez in December 2019, his most-recent fight. However, the product of Santa Marica, Calif., will be the beneficiary of a fresh start: He reportedly has signed a multi-fight deal with Top Rank. He’s expected to fight again in August, according to Yahoo Sports.

Gary Antuanne Russell
Division
: Light welterweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Russell (14-0, 14 KOs) is the younger brother of Gary Russell Jr. and seems to be on his way to realizing similar success. Gary Antuanne has it all – skill, speed and power, as his knockout record indicates. He’s coming off a sensational sixth-round stoppage of Jovanie Santiago on May 29. Santiago had gone the distance with Adrien Broner in his previous fight. Russell is within a victory or two of his first title shot.

Charles Conwell
Division
: middleweight
Result: No medal
Pro: Conwell (14-0, 11 KOs) had the tragic misfortune of delivering the blows that resulted in the death of Patrick Day in October 2019, which deeply affected Conwell. He has bounced back to win three consecutive fights, including a ninth-round stoppage of Madiyar Ashkeyev in December. The resident of Cleveland is scheduled to face Mark DeLuca on the Teofimo Lopez-George Kambosos card on June 19. Conwell is ranked by two sanctioning bodies, meaning a title shot could come soon.

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TOP 10 FROM PAST THREE OLYMPICS

Errol Spence Jr. has won titles and climbed the pound-for-pound list since turning pro in 2012.  Ronald Martinez / Getty Images
  1. Errol Spence Jr. (27-0, 21 KOs) – The welterweight titleholder, Boxing Junkie’s No. 4 fighter pound for pound, has by far the best resume of recent Olympians. He’s scheduled to face fellow beltholder and legend Manny Pacquiao on Aug. 21.
  2. Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) – The quick-handed featherweight beltholder has been criticized for not fighting as regularly as other titleholders but he has some solid victories and is currently the longest-reigning world champion.
  3. Jose Ramirez (26-1, 17 KOs) – The now-former 140-pound unified titleholder suffered his first loss last month, a close decision against Josh Taylor, but he has a number of notable victories and remains an elite fighter.
  4. Demetrius Andrade (30-0, 18 KOs) – The current middleweight titleholder and former 154-pound champ has had difficulty making fights with top-tier opponents but has dominated those placed in front of him.
  5. Deontay Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) – Say what you want about Wilder’s ability or lack thereof; the former heavyweight champ has one of the biggest right hands in boxing history, as his record indicates. It took a special heavyweight in Tyson Fury to sully Wilder’s perfect record.
  6. Jamel Herring (23-2, 11 KOs) – The former Marine battled through two mid-career losses to become a junior lightweight champion. And he’s coming off his biggest victory, a sixth-round knockout of former Fighter of the Year Carl Frampton in April.
  7. Shakur Stevenson (15-0, 8 KOs) – The fast-rising star is No. 7 for now. He could shoot up this list in short order.
  8. Joseph Diaz Jr. (31-1-1, 15 KOs) – Jo Jo outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year, his break-out performance. He lost his title on the scale in his next fight and has moved up to 135. He faces a major challenge against Javier Fortuna next month.
  9. Sadam Ali (27-3, 14 KOs) – Ali’s claim to fame was retiring Miguel Cotto and winning a 154-pound title in the process. He was stopped by Jessie Vargas before that fight and is 1-2 since.
  10. Rau’shee Warren (18-3, 4 KOs) – The two-time Olympian narrowly outpointed Juan Carlos Payano in their rematch to win a bantamweight title but lost it to Zhanat Zhakiyan in his first defense. He also lost to Nordine Oubaali in a bid to win another 118-pound title.

Here are the Olympics in which our Top 10 participated: 2008 – Andrade, Ali, Russell Jr. and Warren; 2012 –Spence, Herring, Ramirez, Diaz and Warren; 2016 – Stevenson.

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