Manny Pacquiao plans to return to ring in June or July

Manny Pacquiao representative Sean Gibbons told ESPN that the titleholder plans to fight in the summer, against three potential opponents.

Welterweight titleholder Manny Pacquiao will return to the ring later this summer, and it won’t involve Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Sean Gibbons, Pacquiao’s chief representative, told ESPN on Wednesday that the plan is for the Filipino star to fight in “June or July.” The current shortlist of opponents Pacquiao is considering includes titleholder Errol Spence Jr., Shawn Porter and Danny Garcia.

Spence might be a long shot given that the Texan is coming off a gruesome car crash last October. He stated in December that he expects to fight again in the summer. Porter’s last fight was title-unification loss to Spence last September. And Garcia outpointed Ivan Redkach in January. Garcia’s father and trainer told Boxing Junkie that they would move on from a Pacquiao fight if they aren’t given a concrete answer by the end of this month.

As for Mayweather, Gibbons shot down that possibility. “’Mayweather told us, ‘I’m retired, I’m not fighting,’” Gibbons sai

Mayweather has repeatedly hinted that he plans to return to the ring in 2020, most likely in some kind of crossover bout in collaboration with the UFC’s Dana White.

Gibbons added that Pacquiao expects to fight more than once in 2020, even with the potential late start.

Pacquiao (62-7-2, 39 KOs) had a late-career banner year in 2019, in which he defeated Adrien Broner and Keith Thurman, both of whom are considered elite welterweights in their prime.

Frustrated Terence Crawford lashes out at Errol Spence Jr.

Terence Crawford, apparently fed up, called out Errol Spence on social media on Sunday, accusing him of ducking a fight.

Welterweight titleholder Terence Crawford appears to have least one New Year’s resolution: tweet more often. That is, tweet more often at division rival Errol Spence Jr.

The Omaha, Nebraska native unleashed a slew of fiery tweets directed at Spence on Sunday night, apparently in response to a tweet that Spence posted earlier about his willingness to fight anyone in the weight class.

Crawford flexed his fingers and responded in kind.

“So what’s been the hold up homie?” Crawford wrote. “When I came to the division y’all all said I had to get a title first. Now you changed yo mind and talking about wrong side of the street. So I’m just here for another excuse what’s up.”

A Spence-Crawford unification fight is one of the best possible matchups in the sport. But efforts to make it are borderline nonexistent because both fighters are aligned with rival entities. Bob Arum’s Top Rank, which promotes Crawford, generally doesn’t do business with Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions, which manages Spence. The Feb. 22 Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder fight is an exception.

The 32-year-old Crawford (36-0, 27 knockouts) is coming off an entertaining beat down of competent but unknown Egidijus Kavaliauskas on Dec. 14 in New York City. Spence (26-0, 21 KOs) is recovering from a car crash in October, in which he was ejected from his Lamborghini. He appeared to be in good health when he was interviewed during the Tony Harrison-Jermell Charlo card on Dec. 21. He said he would return to the ring in the summer. In his last fight, Spence outpointed Shawn Porter in a thrilling title-unification bout on Sept 28.

The promotional gridlock hurts Crawford more than it does Spence, 29. Therein lies the source of Crawford’s evident frustration. Crawford’s 2018 campaign was dogged by his inability to land a significant fight, as Top Rank simply does not have access to the best welterweights in the division. PBC, on the other hand, has a host of viable options for Spence to keep things in-house, including titleholder Manny Pacquiao and Danny Garcia. A Pacquiao-Spence fight, in particular, would do great business.

Crawford isn’t buying that as a legitimate argument. He accused Spence – and for that matter, every other PBC welterweight – of hiding behind their handlers. “… Stop using the f- promoters, managers and advisors for that weak ass excuse y’all doing they work for us y’all dumb mf if you really want a fight you tell them i don’t give two f—s that’s who I want to fight. let yo nuts drop you say you yo own boss…”

 

There is also the question of whether Spence will be ready to engage in a high-level bout anytime soon. If the plan is for Spence to take a tune-up and then aim for showdowns against Pacquiao and Garcia, it may be close to two years before a Crawford fight enters the realm of possibility.

In other words, brace yourselves for more tweets.

Alexander Besputin outpoints Radzhab Butaev in heated 12-rounder

Add Alexander Besputin to the short list of opponents for Terence Crawford. The southpaw Russian outpointed hard-hitting countryman Radzhab Butaev over 12 hard-fought rounds at the Casino de Monte Carlo in Monte Carlo. All three judges scored it …

Add Alexander Besputin to the short list of opponents for Terence Crawford.

The southpaw Russian outpointed hard-hitting countryman Radzhab Butaev over 12 hard-fought rounds at the Casino de Monte Carlo in Monte Carlo. 

All three judges scored it 116-112 for Besputin, who is aligned with Top Rank, the promoter of Crawford. Eddie Hearn promoted Butaev-Besputin, as he turned in a winning purse bid for the chance to stage the fight. Hearn acknowledged beforehand that he was rooting for Butaev, a Lou DiBella-promoted fighter. 

It was a closely contested fight, as evidenced by Besputin’s ruby-red face when it was over. Besputin controlled the fight with a busy jab and overcame a few vulnerable moments.

“Yes, I was very confident that I was winning the fight,” Besputin said afterward. “I was getting tired at the end. I couldn’t punch hard, but I was trying to take aim at my target.

“It was a very difficult fight. We have a big history going back to the amateurs. I did everything, and I showed that I am ready for the big (fights).”

It was a fight of two styles, with Besputin continually moving around the ring while throwing more shots than his opponent. Butaev was more economical, as he tried to hunt down the fluttering Besputin with powerful hooks. After a slow start, Butaev found his stride in Round 3, landing hard counter rights to the body. In Round 9, Butaev had his best round of the fight, hounding Besputin on the ropes with winging hooks before the bell rang. 

Just when it looked like Besputin might be slipping, he came back in the final rounds to separate himself from Butaev, boxing on the outside and preventing Butaev from setting up his power shots.

Afterward, Besputin said he wants to fight the winner of the Terence Crawford-Egidijus Kavaliauskas welterweight title fight on December 14 at Madison Square Garden.