Mairis Briedis-Yuniel Dorticos WBSS final set for Sept. 26

The World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight final between Mairis Briedis and Yuniel Dorticos will take place on Sept. 26 in Munich.

The World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight final between Mairis Briedis and Yuniel Dorticos will take place behind closed doors at a television studio on Sept. 26 in Munich.

Maris Briedis, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, qualified for the championship match by defeating Noel Mikaelian (UD) and Krzysztof Glowacki (TKO 3). Dorticos, seeded No. 2, beat Mateusz Masternak (UD) and Andrew Tabiti (KO10).

The latter fights took place in June of last year, meaning Briedis (26-1, 19 KOs) and Dorticos (24-1, 22 KOs) will have been out of the ring for more than 15 months.

The Briedis-Dorticos fight was originally scheduled for March 21 but it pushed back to May 16 because of COVID-19. It was then postponed a second time.

“We are very happy about the announcement of the final,” said Briedis, who is from Latvia. “I love the fact that it will be in Munich as it reminds me of every time I went to train with the Klitschko brothers in Germany and the flights were always via Munich. Those are some great memories of the time spent with them there.”

Dorticos a Miami-based Cuban, won a vacant 200-pound title in the Tabiti fight.

“To all my fans worldwide, in Europe and especially in Munich, Germany: I am super happy the World Boxing Super Series final will take place in Munich, Germany, and I will see you all on Saturday, September 26th,” he said.

“The KO Doctor is back and ready to prescribe another dose of pain and take the Muhammad Ali Trophy back to Miami.”

The final will be streamed live on DAZN in the U.S.

[lawrence-related id=7209,7183,4969]

Mairis Briedis-Yuniel Dorticos WBSS final set for Sept. 26

The World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight final between Mairis Briedis and Yuniel Dorticos will take place on Sept. 26 in Munich.

The World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight final between Mairis Briedis and Yuniel Dorticos will take place behind closed doors at a television studio on Sept. 26 in Munich.

Maris Briedis, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, qualified for the championship match by defeating Noel Mikaelian (UD) and Krzysztof Glowacki (TKO 3). Dorticos, seeded No. 2, beat Mateusz Masternak (UD) and Andrew Tabiti (KO10).

The latter fights took place in June of last year, meaning Briedis (26-1, 19 KOs) and Dorticos (24-1, 22 KOs) will have been out of the ring for more than 15 months.

The Briedis-Dorticos fight was originally scheduled for March 21 but it pushed back to May 16 because of COVID-19. It was then postponed a second time.

“We are very happy about the announcement of the final,” said Briedis, who is from Latvia. “I love the fact that it will be in Munich as it reminds me of every time I went to train with the Klitschko brothers in Germany and the flights were always via Munich. Those are some great memories of the time spent with them there.”

Dorticos a Miami-based Cuban, won a vacant 200-pound title in the Tabiti fight.

“To all my fans worldwide, in Europe and especially in Munich, Germany: I am super happy the World Boxing Super Series final will take place in Munich, Germany, and I will see you all on Saturday, September 26th,” he said.

“The KO Doctor is back and ready to prescribe another dose of pain and take the Muhammad Ali Trophy back to Miami.”

The final will be streamed live on DAZN in the U.S.

[lawrence-related id=7209,7183,4969]

British promoters at a loss: ‘We don’t know what we’re dealing with here’

British boxing promoters find themselves in a state of doom and gloom as a result of the ravaging effects of the coronavirus…

For once, boxing promoters are tongue-tied. 

The coronavirus pandemic has wreaked havoc on the sport, forcing promoters to cancel high-profile boxing cards. In Britian, as elsewhere, the virus has left a preternaturally cutthroat group of veterans scratching their heads, wondering what’s next.

In a recent interview with the British magazine Boxing News, promoters Kalle Sauerland, Eddie Hearn, Frank Warren and Mick Hennessy described how the global pandemic has impacted their business.

Leaders in the art of fabrication, few of them could find a way to put a positive spin on the news. For once, they admit to being in a state of helplessness. 

“We’re not ‘in the know’ of anything,” said Sauerland, who had to postpone the March 21 World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight final bout between Mairis Briedis and Yuniel Dorticos. (The new date has been tentatively scheduled for May 16.)

“We don’t know anything about timelines, we don’t know anything about restrictions or the different kind of restrictions,  so we will continue being experts at what we do, but we will be under the guidelines of authorities, local and international.

“We have to look at the policies of different governments, but they’re not all aligned. … That makes it even more complicated, especially when when you run an international operation. So, for us, we are bound to what the experts are telling us because we’re not experts in this field. And I think any promoter giving any other advice, apart from talking about left hooks and uppercuts, should stick to their own business.”

Like Top Rank’s Bob Arum, Hearn is exploring the possibility of staging fights closed off to the public but admits that such endeavors come at a high financial cost. Hearn, who promotes shows on both sides of the Atlantic, recently had to postpone the March 28  Josh Kelly-David Avenesyan bout in London and the April 17 Regis Prograis-Maurice Hooker bout in Oxon Hill, Maryland.

“We are certainly open to events behind closed doors, but the bigger events are always dependent on the revenue generated at the box office,” Hearn said. “There are plenty of moving parts, but we are thinking on our feet to make sure our fighters are taken care of and the public safety is of course considered.”

Said Hennessy, the former promoter of Tyson Fury: “The whole situation is crazy, it’s on another level. I’ve never experienced anything as potentially devastating to boxing in all my career. There is no insurance to cover us for this. We’ve made lots of plans and payments.”

Of all the promoters it was Warren, the oldest of the group, who sounded the most distraught.

“When you think about it, our industry is in trouble,” Warren said. “The boxers don’t get a wage. Unlike footballers, they get paid when they fight. So if they don’t fight, they don’t get a wage.

“All I care about is the long-term health of the sport, and at the moment, that’s at a risk. The TV companies make money by showing sport on their channels, but they’ve got no sport to show at the moment. Those same TV companies bring a lot of money into boxing, so it’s quite challenge to say the least.

“We don’t know what we’re dealing with here.”

Mairis Briedis vs. Yuniel Dorticos pushed back to May 16

The Mairis Briedis-Yuniel Dorticos fight, scheduled for March 21 in Latvia, has been pushed back to May 16 as a result of coronavirus.

Now it’s the turn of Mairis Briedis vs. Yuniel Dorticos.

The World Boxing Super Series final and cruiserweight title fight between Briedis and Dorticos, scheduled for March 21 in Riga, Latvia, has been pushed back to May 16 as a result of the coronavirus threat, the BBC reported.

The site remains the same. And tickets for March 21 will be honored on May 16.

Latvian officials have banned events with more than 200 people until April.

“We will adapt to the new situation, keep training and wait for the green light,” said Briedis, a Latvian who will be challenging for Dorticos’ 200-pound title.

“Looking forward to fighting in front of my fans when it’s safe! Take care of yourself, people.”

Said Dorticos: “I understand the impracticality and therefore l will have to wait until May to win the tournament. I ask that everyone be careful and take the necessary steps to stay healthy during these challenging times.”

Read more:

Mairis Breidis-Yunier Dorticos fight could be moved and/or delayed

Mairis Breidis-Yunier Dorticos fight could be moved and/or delayed

The Mairis Breidis-Yunier Dorticos cruiserweight showdown might have to moved and/or be postponed because of a Latvian ban on public events.

Another significant fight is in jeopardy because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Mairis Breidis-Yunier Dorticos cruiserweight final in the World Boxing Super Series might have to moved and/or be postponed because of a Latvian ban on public events.

The bout is scheduled for March 21 in Riga, Breidis’ hometown. Latvia has imposed a month-long ban, starting Friday.

“The World Boxing Super Series has learned, as a consequence of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, the government of Latvia has decided that all public events, meetings, processions and pickets with more than 200 participants are banned as of March 13 (until) April 14,” the WBSS said in a statement.

“We are assessing the consequences for the WBSS cruiserweight final, scheduled for March 21 in Riga, with local authorities and the fighters’ teams. We will make a further statement in the coming days.”

The bout has already been subjected to delays. Neither Briedis (26-1, 19 KOs) nor Dorticos (24-1, 22 KOs), a Cuban living in Miami, has fought in about nine months.

Season 3 of WBSS to start in ‘September, October’

The World Boxing Super Series will return for a third season later this fall, according to WBSS organizer Nisse Sauerland.

The third season of the World Boxing Super Series has a working date, but the weight classes are still up in the air.

Nisse Sauerland, who runs the WBSS with his brother Kalle, told FightHubTV at the Caleb Plant-Vincent Feigenbutz post-fight press conference in Nashville that he expects the next installment of the tournament will begin in the last quarter of the year.

“We’re gearing up for season three, which will start September, October time,” Sauerland said.

The season two cruiserweight finals between Yunier Dorticos and Mairis Briedis has been set for March 21 in Riga, Latvia.

Sauerland, however, wouldn’t tip his hand as to which weight classes they would be concentrating on for their next installment. 

“Me and my brother have sort of given up calling weights,” Sauerland said. “Because whenever (somebody says), ‘ah, that would be a great weight, middleweights,’ then suddenly loads of things happens and it just doesn’t become possible. It’s just like a dream that doesn’t come true.We’ll start calling that closer to the time. Boxing can change very quickly.”

Sauerland says he expects to finalize which weight classes will be featured in the next season by “May, June time.”

As for the weight classes that he’s most personally keen on, Sauerland cited a few.

“Lightweights would be great. There’s a lot of weight classes I like at the moment,” he said. “Middleweight, super middles again. Lots of interesting weights out there.” 

Since its inception in 2017, the WBSS has been heavily lauded for finding a way to get the best fighters to face each other in an otherwise fragmented sport beleaguered by internal politics. Cruiserweight Oleksandr Usyk and super middleweight Callum Smith were anointed as the winners of the first season. Last year, the WBSS crowned Josh Taylor and Naoya Inoue as (partially) unified titleholders in the junior welterweight and bantamweight tournaments, respectively.