Boxing
Women’s Ratings Update: Scotney and Alaniz Fresh Champions, Huge Changes in Multiple Weight Classes
Published
8 months agoon
By
J. HumzaA busy few weeks in women’s boxing and some not-so-busy careers for some boxing practitioners have led to a number of changes in most weight classes.
Here’s a summary of our latest pioneering evaluations:
Flyweight:
Celeste Alaniz took revenge on Marlen Esparza in another thriller and thus became the first Argentine fighter to win the Ring belt. After two needy performances and the added problem of missing weight in the rematch with Alaniz, the committee felt that Esparza was now worth moving up to second place, behind Gabriela Fundora.
“The rematch was an even tighter and harder to judge fight than the first, but I personally liked Alaniz’s aggression and high volume, which in my opinion barely helped her, despite Espara’s impressive work behind her jab and her proficiency in fighting from behind,” stated writer Christopher Benedict , justifying his vote.
Junior bantamweight:
Carla Merino defeated Micaela Lujan and Ashley Gonzalez was inactive for a long time. This led to a reshuffle in the weight class, with Japanese Mizuki Hiruta entering the fight and Merino also joining the fight. Thanks to these results and a vote by the entire panel on how to handle them all, Hiruta finished in 3rd place, Merino in 4th place, and Irma Garcia dropped to 5th place in the same process.
Junior featherweight:
Ellie Scotney won the vacant Ring magazine belt following her victory over France’s Segolene Lefebvre a few weeks ago. A great performance for both women, with Scotney’s excellent skills becoming more and more evident as the fight progressed, securing her the win and her inaugural belt in the division.
“I thought Scotney really tried and gave a attractive performance. She fought effortlessly the entire time and was clearly having fun. “I was very touched when she received the Ricky Hatton Ring belt,” said historian Malissa Smith, author of the newly published book “The promise of women’s boxing“ in reference to the former champion’s gesture of lending her the Scotney ring belt to take a ceremonial post-fight photo. As a result, Lefebvre remains our number 1, and the place left by Scotney is now occupied by Mexican Mayeli Flores with number 5.
Junior lightweight:
Beatriz Ferreira won the lightweight belt after fighting at 130 pounds throughout her career, and Hyun Mi Choi also moved up to 135 pounds only to lose her title fight to Jessica Camara, in a tumultuous division that ultimately descended into chaos. The group of fighters includes Australian Mea Motu, who scored a TKO in the fight against Noppraket Srisawas to finally make herself noticed in this rather narrow division and find herself at the end of our list. Spain’s Jennifer Miranda also took advantage of this situation and took 4th place in our rankings.
Airy:
A few weeks ago, Rhiannon Dixon defeated Karen Carabajal, and then Brazilian Beatriz Ferreira became the world champion after defeating Yanina Lescano. Both impressive victories, but in the head-to-head, Ferreira received more votes than Dixon in an effort to improve our rankings.
“Ferreira was probably more impressive against Lezcano than Dubois, whom we had rated No. 1. I suggest we rate Ferreira at No. 2 and move Dixon to No. 3,” columnist Mark Jones argued in an opinion piece that found agreement across the panel.
“I would also choose Ferreyra over Dixon,” said writer Irene Deserti. “The difference in boxing between the two is brutal. Beatriz swept everything. Fighting Dubois should be the next step and it would be a great fight without a doubt.”
Medium weight: :
Historically, women’s boxing has had the smallest talent pool above 160 pounds, and a series of moves prompted the panel to consider an entirely novel lineup based on recent defections, changes in weight classes and more. Savannah Marshall remains our No. 1, followed by Mapule Ngubane, Melinda Watpool, Adriana Dos Santos Araujo and Jesikah Guerra.
“I like the middleweight lineup,” said Lupi Gutierrez-Beagle of Pretty Brawlers. “I won’t be surprised if Adriana Araujo ranks higher than Melinda in the future. And that will probably delicate a fire under juvenile California pro Jesikah Guerra.”
Super middleweight:
The same as 160, but even slightly worse. Raquel Miller and Maricela Cornejo were eliminated due to inactivity. Olivia Curry (previously ranked 4th at 168) finally jumped up to 160 to tie her 1-1. The thinnest division in all of boxing, regardless of gender, is currently on life support and a literal invasion of talented women would cause some changes in this division, with Savannah Marshall being the current Ring Champion, followed by our former inaugural champion Franchon Crews -Dezurn, Shadasia Green, Lani Daniels, Mary Casamassa and Citlalli Ortiz.
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Boxing
Brooklyn heavyweight Pryce Taylor is looking forward to 2025
Published
16 minutes agoon
December 18, 2024Fighting for the first time with the full support of his promoter, Salita Promotions, undefeated Brooklyn heavyweight Pryce Taylor later said he was confident and confident he could do well in boxing.
Taylor (5-0, 3 KO), 28, defeated KeShawn Jackson last Thursday night in Flint, Michigan, fighting in an exhibition put on by his promoter in which he recorded an impressive third-round stoppage to finish his 2024 campaign on a high. year note.
“It was good to fight on a bigger stage, in a compact arena, in a nice atmosphere,” Taylor said about his first fight with a promotional contract. “My manager, Keith Sullivan, supported me by agreeing to sign with Salita Promotions. He talked to several promoters, but we felt that Dimitri Salita would be the right candidate for me.
“I felt like I had succeeded; I felt essential, but that was just the beginning. It was the same on fight night, I felt respect and appreciation from the entire Salita promotional company. My goal is to be a more recognizable player and be recognized by the fans. I’m hungry to perform in the coming year.”
“Four knockdowns were counted. I really hurt him with a body shot and when he felt my power he was done. I threw a barrage of punches into the corner (ss photo below) and he tried to hit me with a windmill punch. Then I hit him with a check hook, which ended the fight. He (Jackson) didn’t want to get knocked out, so he tried to show he was still fighting.”
“Of course,” Sullivan commented, “I’m joyful with the victory. This was another developmental fight and Pryce is learning and developing as a fighter. We had a busy year with 8 fights scheduled and 5 that actually crossed the line, so it was a very good first year for him as a pro. Right after that, I talked to Dimitri to arrange the next fight. We hope to have it scheduled in the coming weeks.”
Looking ahead to 2025, Taylor wants his next fight to be a six-rounder scheduled for his next outing, then move up to eight to fight for the junior title.
“I will now train to play 10 rounds,” Taylor concluded, “so that I will be ready when it comes time to play 12 rounds.”
Boxing
AI referee ‘free from bias and human error’ during audit of Usyk vs. Fury 2 match
Published
17 hours agoon
December 17, 2024Oleksandr Usyk’s rematch with Tyson Fury on Saturday night will go down in history for several reasons, but now there are more of them than any other.
Turki Alalshikh has confirmed that the Usyk vs. Fury 2 fight will be supervised by an AI referee in a first-of-its-kind boxing event. Artificial intelligence statistics are nothing recent in sports and have been developed for years by companies such as JABBR, which claim that “technological progress eliminates elements of human error from sports.”
AI referee overseeing the Usyk vs Fury 2 fight
Riyad’s season leader, Alalshikh, has taken the first step to ensure the future of the sport where all boxers who deserve to win receive their reward. The fourth scorer will only be present this time to check the score, but if he proves successful, he may become a indefinite player in the sport.
Explaining his intentions, Alalshikh said: “For the first time in history, the fight will be monitored by an artificial intelligence referee. [The judge will be] Free from bias and human error, which The Ring offers you [his recently purchased magazine].
“This groundbreaking experiment, which will have no impact on official results, will debut during the biggest fight of the century, Usyk vs. Fury 2, on December 21. Don’t miss the history in the making,” he added.
The news came during the Grand Arrivals event, which featured a monumental clash that will see Usyk and Fury fight for a unified heavyweight crown at the Kingdom Arena. Usyk [20-0, 13 KOs] puts his WBC, WBA and WBO belts on the line against former two-time heavyweight champion Fury [33-1-1, 24 KOs]. The highly anticipated rematch will take place on Saturday, December 21, worldwide on DAZN PPV at 11:00 a.m. ET.
Usyk vs Fury card information updated
Former interim WBC 154-pound titleholder Serhii Bohachuk [24-2, 23 KOs] Now he will face British boxer Ishmael Davis [13-1, 6 KOs] in a 12-round super welterweight fight after Israil Madrimov was forced to withdraw due to illness.
Rising heavyweight star Moses Itauma [22-0, 10 KOs] and his opponent, Australian Demsey McKean (22-1, 14 KO), are ready to fight. Undefeated Johnny Fisher [12-0, 11 KOs[ squares off against former Commonwealth title challenger Dave Allen [23-6, 18 KOs].
Meanwhile, former Commonwealth Games gold medalist Peter McGrail [10-1, 6 KOs] takes over from Rhys Edwards at the last minute [16-0, 4 KOs] in a super featherweight fight. Isaac Lowe is also on the bill [25-2-3, 8 KOs[ will face Lee McGregor [14-1-1, 11 KOs] in a featherweight fight.
Daniel Lapin completes the card [10-0, 4 KOs]in which he will face another undefeated lightweight champion prospect, Dylan Colin [14-0, 4 KOs]and heavyweight knockout artist Andrii Novytskyi [14-0, 10 KOs] will face Edgar Ramirez [10-1-1, 4 KOs].
As is the tradition of the season, Riyad will feature local talent as Mohammed Alakel looks for a 2-0 win over Joshua Ocampo [8-33-5, 6 KOs].
Boxing
Billy Dib wins the final battle after a successful battle with cancer
Published
2 days agoon
December 16, 2024Former two-time world champion and cancer survivor Billy Dib won an eight-round super lightweight farewell bout against Game, the brave but outclassed Atilla Kayabasi.
The Z’s, aka all-time greats Carlos Zarate and Alfonso Zamora, brought “Billy The Kid” to the ring accompanied by the sweet tones of Frank Sinatra singing My…what else? Adolescent Bridger Walker performed Round Card duties between rounds.
Billy gave us a virtuoso performance, making Atilla’s face turn red with every strike on the book. The gulf of experience and a cascade of blows would have defeated a weaker man, Atilla survived it. Billy raised his hand moments before the bell rang to end the eighth and final round.
By winning his last fight, the WBC Champion of Hope achieved the impossible. He and Atilla embraced, and WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman entered the ring to say: “This is an extraordinary dream come true. Now we welcome Billy outside the ring.”
Dib said, “Alhamdulillah, I won and left on my own terms. There’s no better way to close this chapter. Thank you to Mauricio Sulaiman, my wife, my son Laith, my family and my amazing fans for all the love. I dedicate this victory to Israel Vázquez, every cancer warrior, and to my brother Vames.”
Billy brave. Billy the fearless one who fought against the darkest and most pressing adversities. Our tears of joy and admiration for the Hero who always smiles, even in the darkest hour, before the dawn.
The results of the glorious fight night organized at the 62nd World Boxing Council Convention at the Grand Elysee Hotel saw several hard-fought fights for the WBC championship from nuclear to heavyweight.
In the main fight of the evening, WBC super flyweight champion Asley González successfully defended her title against Mary Romero.
The more compact and harder-hitting Asley pursued a longer-armed, short-haired opponent who was constantly spinning in retreat.
There was some heated exchanges when they came together, but the lasting combinations came from Asley, who actually got caught with some tough, but single, solitary rights. Her level of work, more precise, concise beam punches and high-pressure fighting forcing Mary to constantly retreat won UD over.
Tough-hitting southpaw striker Mourad Aliev defended his WBC International Silver heavyweight title with a sixth-round KO victory over Davide Brito. Physically more imposing, Mourad made contact and often.
In the third round, David suffered a nosebleed and his mouthguard was broken, causing him to fall from one side of the ring to the other. He tried to fight back sporadically, but in round six he was trapped on the ropes and dropped by a massive right hand. Everything is over.
Serkay Comert won the WBC International silver title by defeating Yassin Hermi via UD. In the third round, it turned into an all-out war, which continued into the next round.
Serkay often struggled against the ropes and landed frequently. Yassin’s face swelled and in the sixth round a series of punches landed on him, and before the eighth round the ring doctor looked at him for a long time. He fought tough but got hit, especially down the stretch.
Ermal Hadribeaj won the MD title by defeating Eddy Colnenares to win the WBC International super welterweight belt. The lanky, much taller Eddy, who has the reach of an albatross, was shaky for the first three rounds. He then came to life and there was a lively exchange of words.
Southpaw Ermal was constantly jumping and weaving to avoid those long ramrod arms. He was more concerned with getting the win.
Benjamin Gavazi defeated Branimir Malencia in the tenth and final round to win the WBC international silver featherlight heavyweight title. Ben was catching Bran with right hands and various uppercuts. While Bran tried to crowd him and deal damage from head to toe. Two left-right headshot combinations in round ten convinced Bran to throw in the red towel at 1.41. So… TKO.
Esneidy Rodriguez defeated Sana Hazuki via UD for the WBC Silver Atomweight belt. The taller Suri tried to keep him at bay, but was relentlessly pursued by the more compact and powerful and grimly determined Esneidy, who landed several piercing combos and uppercuts. Suri had some success with long straight rights, but paid the price when Esneidy negated the range.
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