Terence Crawford and his cul-de-sac at welterweight

Whatever happens on Saturday night, Richard Commey and Teofimo Lopez have a future path. The same can’t be said for Terence Crawford.

NEW YORK – Whoever wins the lightweight title fight between champion Richard Commey and Teofimo Lopez on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden will have a lot more going on for him than just bragging rights or, in Lopez’s case, new hardware.

He’ll have a little something called momentum.

Commey-Lopez is not only the best on-paper matchup of the night, far exceeding the main event between welterweight titleholder Terence Crawford and Egidijus Kavaliauskas (we’ll get to that later). The winner could also go on to face Vasiliy Lomachenko in a unification of three of the four major lightweight belts next year. With apologies to newly minted lightweight titleholder Devin Haney, whose network allegiances make him a non-starter in this discussion, that is as about as good as it can get today in a sport beset by shoddy matchmaking and warring tribalism.

In other words, Commey-Lopez isn’t your typical boxing one-off that takes place in isolation, subject to a short half-life and a few forgettable column inches. No, its precise appeal is that it is freighted with significance beyond the 36 minutes (likely less) of combat that will unfold in the ring on Saturday night. And that’s a breath of fresh air, considering that the value of certain titleholders today are inseparable from the presumed significance of the particular alphabet-soup trinket they hold. One thinks immediately of WBO super middleweight titleholder Billy Joe Saunders and the WBO middleweight titleholder Demetrius Andrade, both of whom have fought virtually nobody of note to merit the high perch they occupy in their respective divisions.

Commey-Lopez is the latest brick laid down by promoter Top Rank toward what figures to be the edifice that will one day house the lightweight division’s most accomplished fighter. And the company did it by dutifully adding the most consequential 135-pounders, such as Ray Beltran, to their stable. They did it by scooping up Lopez from the 2016 Olympics, by getting in touch with Commey’s promoter Lou DiBella last year, by having Lomachenko outslug the likes of Pedraza and Luke Campbell (for a vacant title) earlier this year.

Commey-Lopez: Call it the big picture approach.

Alas, the same can’t be said for the fight that follows on Saturday night. Indeed, there is an air of banality surrounding titleholder Terence Crawford’s fight against undefeated Lithuanian contender Egidijus Kavaliauskas.

Even the fight’s usual carnival barkers seem to have caught on to this and have adjusted their brand of ballyhoo accordingly. Instead of selling Crawford-Kavaliauskas as a matchup of supreme consequence, they have sought to paint it as a rare opportunity to catch one of the great improvisers in the sport in action. During an ESPN segment, Teddy Atlas compared Crawford’s ring “instincts” to Jimi Hendrix riffing on the guitar, Bobby Fischer overlooking a chess board, and Louis Armstrong blowing the trumpet. “(Crawford) creates it as he does it,” Atlas said. “He’s got the greatest instincts I’ve ever seen.” Sitting beside Atlas, Max Kellerman, no stranger to rhetorical overkill himself, guffawed upon hearing that comment.

Actually, from a contemporary standpoint, Atlas isn’t entirely wrong. Few fighters have shown themselves to be as versatile and creative in the ring as Crawford. At some point, however, such claims must be born out in the ring against the very best.

Unfortunately, Crawford is Exhibit A in the ramifications wrought by the sport’s frustrating political divide. Unlike its lightweight stable, Top Rank simply does not have the key players at welterweight to fulfill on the promise of a generational talent like Crawford. Unlike Commey-Lopez, Crawford-Kavaliauskas doesn’t lead anywhere. There is no conceivable Lomachenko for Crawford waiting in the wings. Crawford’s best possible opponents – Errol Spence, Manny Pacquiao, Shawn Porter, Danny Garcia and Keith Thurman – are all aligned with Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions, which understandably prefers to do their own round robin of fights. Moreover, whatever hope there was that the two sides could come together to stage a Crawford-Spence bout appears to have gone out the window in the wake of Spence’s harrowing car accident in October. At the very least, that fight is on the back-burner.

Crawford’s seemingly hamstrung future has had the effect of completely whitewashing his opponent, Kavaliauskas, a two-time Olympian who is known to crack with both hands. Kavaliauskas is no schlub, but his last fight, a draw against a distinctly mediocre Ray Robinson, did much to lower his stock. But Crawford, to be sure, is simply graded on a different scale. It is difficult to imagine what Kavaliauskas could bring to the ring that will trouble Crawford.

A saving grace for Crawford may be the current crop of elite junior welterweights who will all likely move up to 147 at some point, including Top Rank stablemate Jose Ramirez, Josh Taylor and Regis Prograis. But that development might take a year or more, which is an eternity for a fighter who is already 32 years old. 

The difference with Hendrix and Armstrong? They were soloists whose virtuosities did not necessarily rely on anyone else. In boxing, they call that shadowboxing.

Bob Arum believes Errol Spence could be sidelined throughout 2020

Promoter Bob Arum said he has inside information that leads him to believe Errol Spence, injured in a car crash, will not fight in 2020.

Bob Arum says he has “grave doubts” about whether Errol Spence Jr. will fight in the “foreseeable future.’’

In an interview with iFL TV, Arum said he has been told that Spence, who was thrown from his Ferrari in a scary crash on Oct. 10, will be out of the ring throughout 2020 and possibly the following year.

“I have received some inside intelligence that allows me to say that,’’ Arum said.

Arum declined to identify his source.

“I don’t think that would be appropriate, but it is good information,” Arum said. “It’s – very unfortunately –very good information.”

Arum made the comments in relation to a question about the chances of Terence Crawford fighting Spence in a welterweight unification bout. Arum, Top Rank’s chairman, promotes Crawford, who faces Lithuanian Egidjius Kavaliauskas on Saturday night at New York’s Madison Square Garden on ESPN. Spence is tied to Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions.

“I don’t think (Crawford-Spence) will happen next year,” Arum said. “I don’t think it’ll happen the year after. And it’s not because promoters don’t want it to happen.’’

There have been no updates from Spence or PBC regarding his future since the single-car crash in Dallas. Spence, who scored a split decision over Shawn Porter on Sept. 28 in Los Angeles, reportedly suffered facial lacerations and damage to his teeth. He was charged with DUI after his release from a Dallas hospital.

“Let’s pass on Errol Spence because until we see him face-to-face, until he appears in public, until we can establish that he’s ready to go back into the ring, it’s unfortunate, but let’s not talk about him,’’ Arum said. “He’s a lovely young man. That was a horrible accident that he had. And just leave it at that.”

Jarrell Miller takes his first steps back into boxing fold

Jarrell Miller, who threw away a chance to fight Anthony Joshua when he tested positive for PEDs, is working his way back into the sport.

Jarrell Miller is getting the red carpet treatment.

Not even six months out from his PED bust, the disgraced heavyweight contender has signed with noted manager James Prince, the fighter announced recently on his Instagram.

The news comes on the heels of a reported multi-year deal being mulled between Miller and Top Rank. Prince, also a music executive, currently manages Top Rank-promoted 126-pound titleholder Shakur Stevenson and Bryant Jennings. He is best known in boxing for managing the career of Andre Ward.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B5as_AHhh9Y/

Miller drew headlines when he tested positive multiple times for banned substances leading up to his June 1 fight against Anthony Joshua. Aside from losing out on what would have been a career high payday, reported to be $6.5 million, Miller was stripped of his license in New York and banned for six months by the WBA.

Should Miller sign with Top Rank, he will join a heavyweight stable that includes Tyson Fury and Kubrat Pulev.

Miller (23-0-1, 20 knockouts) hasn’t fought since a fourth-round knockout of Bogdan Dinu in November of last year.

Terence Crawford: Inability to lure PBC fighters into ring, ‘It’s frustrating’

Terence Crawford admits that the inability to make deals to face his PBC rivals is frustrating.

Terence Crawford wants to fight his welterweight counterparts at Premier Boxing Champions. The fact he can’t, he said, “It’s frustrating.”

Crawford (35-0, 26 knockouts) is scheduled to defend his 147-pound belt against mandatory challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas (21-0-1, 17 KOs) on Dec. 14 in New York City. He’d rather be fighting Errol Spence, Shawn Porter, Manny Pacquiao or Keith Thurman, all of whom are managed by PBC.

The problem is the fighters’ affiliations. Crawford is promoted by Top Rank, whose fights are televised on ESPN. PBC has a deal with Fox and Showtime. And cross-platform agreements are hard to reach, especially when one side (PBC) has all the fighters it needs to make good matchups.

Crawford expressed his feelings in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.

“It’s frustrating but I look at it as a business move by them not to fight me,” said Crawford, referring to the inability to make these fights. “I’m not going to knock them or be a hater, but I know where I stand and I know the game they’re playing and there’s nothing I can do about it.

“I just have to focus on what I can do and keep making a living and keeping my name up there as the best pound-for-pound fighter.”

Crawford seems particularly pessimistic about a possible matchup with Spence, his greatest rival for welterweight supremacy. Spence, recovering from injuries suffered in a car accident, is expected to fight next year.

“I don’t know if that fight will ever happen,” he said. “That’s not something I can decide. It takes two people to fight, and it takes two companies to sit down and figure it out and decide what network we’re going to fight on, where we’re going to fight, what the purses are going to be. It’s not as easy as people think it is, but it could be easy if we finally sat down at the same table and made it happen.”

He went on: “I’m willing to fight all those guys, but it’s not up to me to decide if I’m going to fight them or if I’m not going to fight them. I’m open to fighting all those guys. I’ve been saying that from Day 1. Nothing has changed. I’m the best fighter in the division and I’m always willing to prove it.”

“… Bob is willing to make any fight happen,” Crawford said. “At the end of the day, it’s not up to Bob. It’s up to me. The fighters are the ones that fight, and without us, there’s no promotion. So if a fighter really wants a fight to happen, he can make it happen. You can tell them, ‘Listen, this is the fight I want and I’m not fighting until I get that fight.’ It’s simple. At the end of the day, they work for us. If we don’t fight, nobody is going to get paid, so they have to make the fights that the fighters want.”

Crawford, 32, told The Times that he wants to accomplish as much as possible before he retires in three to four years.

“I still want to be the undisputed welterweight champion of the world,” he said, “and I believe I’ll be the first to be undisputed in two divisions, back-to-back. I just want to leave a mark on the sport of boxing so people talk about me like they talk about the other great champions before me. That’s my goal before I retire.”

Buddy McGirt on Adam Lopez: ‘He lost the battle but won the war’

Buddy McGirt believes Adam Lopez is primed for big things after his seventh-round TKO loss to Oscar Valdez on Saturday night in Las Vegas.

Adam Lopez was deprived of a career-changing win on Saturday night but his future remains bright, according to his trainer, Buddy McGirt.

“I’m proud of Adam,” McGirt told Boxing Junkie. “To me, Adam won the fight. He lost the battle but won the war.”

The 23-year-old career featherweight moved up a division as a last-minute replacement to fight Oscar Valdez, a former featherweight titleholder making his debut at the junior lightweight limit. Valdez’s original opponent, Andres Gutierrez, was dropped from the scheduled 10-rounder after weighing in 11 pounds over the 130-pound limit.

Of course, Lopez was recruited simply as a fill-in to preserve the main event so that the A-side’s three-month training camp would not go to waste. Instead, Lopez veered from the intended script, pasting Valdez all night with sharp jabs, quick straight rights and hard left hooks, one of which sent Valdez to the canvas in the second round. 

“Kid can fight, man,” McGirt said. “He’s a future superstar. He’s the real deal man. The sky’s the limit for this young man. I told him, ‘Don’t lose focus, man.’”

In the seventh, however, Valdez, answered back with a crushing left hook that hurt Lopez and led to a knockdown. When he got up, Valdez jumped on his opponent with a flurry of punches that prompted referee Russell to stop the fight, cutting short what might have been a colossal upset win for the unheralded Lopez.

While many observers criticized Mora’s decision, McGirt respected the call.

“I’m gonna say this: The referees see more than I do, since he’s the closest man to the action,” said McGirt, who lost a fighter in the ring earlier this year in Maxim Dadashev. “I’m not mad at anybody. Maybe he saw something and just had to lean with it. He felt what he needed to do.”

Bad call or not, Lopez left the ring with an enhanced profile.

“By (stopping the fight), Mora made Adam the biggest star,” McGirt said. “It was better than going to the scorecards and getting robbed. Either way, it made Adam the bigger star.”

Indeed, two of the three judges had Valdez leading after six rounds, including an egregious 58-55 – five rounds to one – from Dave Moretti.

The real loser, McGirt insisted, is Valdez, who has to contend with the reality that he struggled visibly against a prospect who was still fighting in six-to-eight-round fights.

“Valdez has to second guess himself now,” McGirt said. “He fought a 126-pounder moving up the day before and you get your ass kicked like that for seven rounds, know what I mean? It’s going to make Valdez think. He was an Olympian and former champion. Adam knows he belongs and in 2020, God willing, he becomes a world champion.”

McGirt said Lopez was consoled by a pair of former world champions, who were called the fight on ESPN+.

“He was very disappointed but Andre Ward and Timothy Bradley had a nice talk with him,” McGirt said. “They shot straight from the hip and said they were Adam Lopez fans. They told him we didn’t want to be fans but you made us fans.”

The crowd at the Cosmopolitan apparently felt the same way, as it booed Valdez when he gave his post-fight remarks inside the ring.

“You heard the crowd cheering Adam and booing Valdez on the way out,” McGirt said. “What better feeling is that? Tyson Fury didn’t win against Deontay Wilder and he’s a bigger star.”

McGirt also said that promoter Bob Arum offered words of encouragement. Lopez will continue to work with Top Rank, “without a doubt,” McGirt added.

Maybe there are moral victories in boxing, after all.

 

Radzhab Butaev vs. Alexander Besputin: Who will take next step?

Russians Radzhab Butaev and Alexander Besputin will face each other this Saturday at the Casino de Monte-Carlo in Monte Carlo.

Two highly regarded welterweight prospects will try to take the next toward title contention this Saturday.

Russians Radzhab Butaev and Alexander Besputin will face each other at the Casino de Monte-Carlo in Monte Carlo. The match will stream live on DAZN and is promoted by Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Promotions, even though Hearn does not have promotional rights to either main event fighter. Butaev is promoted by Lou DiBella and Besputin by Top Rank. Matchroom put in the winning purse bid for the fight in September with an offer of $505,555. That beat out bids submitted by Top Rank ($315,000) and Patriot Promotions ($415,000).

The fighters gathered for the final press conference on Wednesday.

“It’s a privilege to be on this show in the casino, especially as the main event,” said Butaev (12-0, 9 knockouts). “I’ll do my best to make a beautiful show, and come Saturday night you won’t regret watching. I hope it is going to be a war. I hope he is going to stay and not quit.”

Both Butaev and Besputin were standout amateurs, with 700 fights between them in the unpaid ranks.

“It’s a really good fight between to great fighters with brilliant amateur careers,” said Besputin (13-0, 9 KOs). “We both have a little bit of history. We were both in the Russian team, but we never met in the ring. I think it’s going to be a very interesting fight for the Russian fans, and many people in Russia will be watching this fight. On November 30th it’s going to be a great night.”

The undercard will feature unified welterweight champion Cecilia Braekhus (35-0, 9 KOs) against Victoria Bustos (19-5, 0 KOs). This is Braekhus’ first fight under the Matchroom banner.

Undefeated Chinese heavyweight Zhilei Zhang (20-0, 16 KOs) will take on late replacement Andriy Rudenko (32-6, 20 KOs) in a 10-rounder. Rudenko is subbing in for Sergey Kuzmin, who bowed out with an injury sustained during training. Zhang is coming off a knockout win over Don Haynesworth last year.

Heavyweight Hughie Fury (23-3, 13 KOs), hoping to rebound from his loss to Alexander Povetkin, faces Pavel Sour (11-2, 6 KOs) in a 10-rounder.

Rounding out the card, junior lightweights Joe Cordina (10-0, 7 KOs) and Enrique Tinoco (18-5-4, 13 KOs) will face each other in a 12-rounder.

Jose Ramirez vs. Viktor Postol set for Feb. 1 in China

Junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez will take on Viktor Postol in the main event of a boxing card to take place in Hainan, China.

The pride of California’s Central Valley is taking his high-octane act to China.

Junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez will defend his belts against mandatory challenger Viktor Postol on Feb. 1 at the Mission Hills Haikou in the port city of Haikou, Hainan, Top Rank announced earlier this week. The fight will be broadcast live on ESPN.

Ramirez (25-0, 17 knockouts) is coming off a career-best win over Maurice Hooker to unify two of the four major belts in the division. He had surgery on his left hand following the fight. Ramirez, of Avenal, won his first title against Amir Imam at the Theatre at Madison Square Garden in 2018.

“I am excited to defend my belts against Viktor Postol to kick off my 2020 schedule,” Ramirez said. “I am a world champion, so it is my honor to defend my titles in front of the great fans in China. It is going to be a great experience, and I am glad that my fans back home will be able to watch me live on ESPN. As a unified champion, I am hungrier than ever.”

A former titleholder, Postol (31-2, 12 KOs) emerged on the world scene in 2015 when he knocked out Lucas Matthysse in the 10th round to win a vacant title. He lost it to Terence Crawford the following year and later came up short against Josh Taylor, the division’s other partially unified champion, in the World Boxing Super Series. Postol became the mandatory challenger for Ramirez’s WBC belt after his points win over Mohamed Mimoune in April.

“It’s a big opportunity for me and a big honor to share the ring with one of the best fighters in my division,” Postol said. “I know Ramirez, as we sparred together in the past. I’m looking forward to a great fight in China.”

Top Rank has staged fights in China in the past, most notably with Zou Shiming and Manny Pacquiao in the Chinese outpost of Macau.

Fans cannot sue over Mayweather-Pacquiao bout, U.S. appeals court rules

Fans who were unhappy with the highly anticipated fight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao cannot pursue a lawsuit on that basis.

Fans who felt swindled after learning that Manny Pacquiao was injured going into his long-awaited fight with Floyd Mayweather in 2015 cannot follow through with a class-action lawsuit because they were disappointed with the outcome, according to a verdict by the U.S. appeals court Thursday.

The ruling applies to both those who watched the fight on pay-per-view and fans in attendance at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

“The Fight of the Century” fell short of expectations, as Mayweather cruised to a unanimous decision victory. The fans turned their ire on defendants Pacquiao, Mayweather, HBO (which distributed the pay-per-view) and promoter Top Rank and its CEO Bob Arum.  However, The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 3-0 that the fans “got what they paid for” even if Pacquiao’s alleged injury was one of the reasons that the fight turned out to be a dud.

Judge Jacqueline Nguyen wrote: “Although the match may have lacked the drama worthy of the pre-fight hype, Pacquiao’s shoulder condition did not prevent him from going the full 12 rounds. Plaintiffs therefore essentially got what they paid for – a full-length regulation fight between these two boxing legends.”

Pacquiao revealed immediately after the fight that he had injured his right shoulder nearly four weeks earlier. His team believed that the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which presided over the fight, would have allowed Pacquiao to take an anti-inflammatory drug to numb the pain but paperwork reportedly was bungled. As a result, the commission learned of the injury three hours before the fight started. The commission denied the team’s request for a shot at that time. 

“We are very pleased,” Daniel Petrocelli, a lawyer for Top Rank and Arum, told Reuters. “The court established the very important principle that while sports fans may be zealous and passionate they do not have the right to sue because they are disappointed in how a contest was conducted, or in the outcome.”

As unsatisfactory as the fight was, Mayweather-Pacquiao generated a record 4.6 million pay-per-view buys and more than $400 million in revenue.

Sergey Kovalev says he had to lose 35-plus pounds for Canelo Alvarez fight

Sergey Kovalev posted an Instagram Live video over the weekend complaining about his knockout loss to Canelo Alvarez on November 3.

Excuses? Explanations? You decide.

In an Instagram Live video posted recently, former light heavyweight titleholder Sergey Kovalev sounded off – in Russian – about his knockout loss to Canelo Alvarez on Nov. 2, claiming that the deck was stacked against him from the very start and that he did not have an ideal training camp.

Alvarez, moving up from middleweight, scored a vicious knockout of Kovalev in the 11th round to take Kovalev’s piece of the light heavyweight crown. For his trouble, Kovalev earned a reported $12 million payday, a portion of which went to co-promoters Top Rank and Main Events.

Kovalev’s spiel on a recent episode of the Everlast Talk Box podcast was translated. Here are four takeaways:

  • He entered entered training camp for the Alvarez fight weighing 211 pounds (96 kilograms), when he normally walks around at 190 pounds (86 kilograms).
  • There is no guarantee that he will return to the light heavyweight division, as he suffered from insomnia and loss of appetite as he was trying to make weight.
  • He admitted that he accepted the Alvarez fight for money and asserted that he didn’t have enough time to recover from his fight against Anthony Yarde in August. Kovalev stopped the Briton in the 11th round after nearly getting knocked out himself earlier in the fight.
  • And people who bet on him to win in an attempt to “get rich quick,” as opposed to his true fans, were “losers”

 

Manny Pacquiao could be back in the ring ‘in March, April’: report

Manny Pacquiao said he could fight again this Spring, with many possible opponents.

Manny Pacquiao hopes to return to the ring early next year during a break from his duties as a Filipino senator.

Pacquiao told the Manila Bulletin Sunday that “he can fight in March, April.’’

Pacquiao’s hopes for a spring bout re-ignited speculation about his opponent. In a political season, the senator, who will be 41 on December 17, has more aspiring opponents than he might have running mates or rival candidates in his oft-rumored plans for a run at the Filipino presidency.

The list appears to be led by Danny Garcia and Mikey Garcia. Danny Garcia had been in line to fight Errol Spence Jr. after Spence’s decision over Shawn Porter on September 28 in Los Angeles. But it’s not clear what’s next for Spence after he was thrown from his Ferrari in a scary crash in Dallas on Oct. 10.

Meanwhile, Mikey Garcia has not fought since jumping up in weight and losing a one-sided decision to Spence in Dallas on March 16.

Not on the list – not yet, anyway – is Keith Thurman, who lost a split decision to Pacquiao for a welterweight belt on July 20 in Las Vegas.

Thurman disclosed in mid-September that he underwent surgery on his left hand after the bout. Pain in the hand bothered him throughout the fight, he said. The surgery was a bone fusion. He said he would not be able to fight until next year.

Thurman, who battled back from a first-round knockdown, turned the next 11 rounds into a back-and-forth battle that ended with Pacquiao winning 115-113, 115-113 and 113-114. It was a heck of a fight.

“I would love the rematch,’’ Thurman said then.

If the hand heals in time for March or April, Thurman figures to say much the same thing as speculation mounts about who’s next for Pacquiao.

Also, not on the list is Terence Crawford, perhaps the best welterweight on the planet. But that’s not exactly a surprise. Crawford is a Top Rank fighter, Pacquaio is a Premier Boxing Champions fighter and – blah, blah, blah – never the twain shall meet.