Connect with us

Boxing

Terence Crawford defeats Israil Madrimov on points in chess match, wins WBA 154-pound title

Published

on

Terence Crawford and Israil Madrimov seek revenge in their WBA 154-pound title fight. Photo: Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

Terence Crawford defeated Israil Madrimov on points in a tense, 12-round chess match on Saturday to win the WBA 154-pound belt and cement his place as a generational talent. But his latest victory, which gave the 36-year-old American a four-division title, didn’t come simple.

Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs), who went the distance for the first time in 11 fights in eight years, won by scores of 116-112 and 115-113 (twice), his first junior middleweight fight, in which The Ring ranks Madrimov (10-1-1, 7 KOs) as the No. 3 154-pounder in the world.

Most observers consider the fight, which took place at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, to be very close and very tough to score. Some believe it could have been scored a draw or 115-113 for Madrimov (including Yours Truly). Madrimov applied extremely cautious pressure throughout, tiptoeing in and out of range, using more feints than consistent attack. Neither boxer let go of his hands in the opening rounds, but Madrimov, a Southern California native from Uzbekistan, troubled Crawford with his nervous rhythm and caused the American to miss more often than fans have ever seen.

Israil Madrimov had his moments in his fight with Terence Crawford. Photo: Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

In Round 6, Crawford’s right eye began to swell, but the wily two-hander also found range with jabs and body shots. Madrimov’s best punch was his sneaky, well-placed right hook, which landed just enough to create a sense of urgency in Crawford’s corner between rounds. In Round 8, the reigning Ring Magazine welterweight champion and future Hall of Famer stepped on the gas and initiated an exchange that the sold-out crowd of fans and celebrities in Los Angeles had come to expect.

It was retaliation for retaliation that led to back-to-back close calls in the pay-per-view main event. Madrimov continued to land right jabs and the occasional hook in rounds 9 and 10, while Crawford focused on the 29-year-old’s body in the championship rounds. The Nebraska native stayed on his feet but came back behind schedule in rounds 11 and 12, landing harder, cleaner punches.

Terence Crawford had to mobilize towards the end of his fight with Israil Madrimov. Photo: Mark Robinson / Matchroom Boxing

“Israil was a tough opponent,” said Crawford, No. 3 in The Ring’s pound-for-pound rankings. “He’s really powerful, strong, he beat me in 12 (rounds). He had quick feet, good rhythm up top and he was powerful. He had good discipline, like me.”

Madrimov has introduced Crawford to a different style of fighting. Crawford’s previous five fights, dating back to December 2019, have come against aggressive boxers and pressure fighters — Egidjus “Mean Machine” Kavaliauskas, Kell Brook, Shawn Porter, David Avanesyan and Errol Spence, whom Crawford defeated a little over a year ago. Crawford has fought just once a year since 2020, and one has to wonder if that inactivity (as well as his age) has played a part in Madrimov’s athleticism being tough to understand. Of course, Crawford says he was just being cautious.

“I saw (the style) right away,” he told DAZN’s Chris Mannix during his post-fight interview, “but I was very patient, I didn’t want to get caught. I just did my thing.”

Indeed, he did his part against a talented former amateur who has 11 professional fights. Can he do his part against super middleweight champion and future Hall of Famer Canelo Alvarez? This is the fight that His Excellency, Turki Alalshikh — the money behind Crawford-Madrimov and SuperCard on August 3 — and most of the boxing world, want to see next.

“If the money is right, we’ll have to fight,” Crawford said.

Alvarez is expected to take care of business with Edgar Berlanga in September, paving the way for a potential clash with Crawford in early 2025. When asked if his fight with Madrimov has made him consider moving up two weight classes, Crawford replied:

“Not at all. I’m pretty sure (Madrimov) could fight at 168.”

Madrimov is expected to remain at junior middleweight. There is plenty of action in the 154-pound division, including Saturday’s showdown between undefeated knockout artist Vergil Ortiz Jr. and No. 4-ranked Serhiy Bohachuk, and the return of No. 2-ranked Tim Tszyu in September.

During the pay-per-view broadcast (broadcast on DAZN, ESPN+ and PPV.COM), Alalshikh said he would like to see Crawford fight Ortiz if Canelo is not interested.

“I fought the best non-weight fighter in the world and I think I did enough (to win) because I was the champion,” Madrimov said through an interpreter. “At least I deserve a rematch. I held back a lot too. I thought every round was competitive, that I was doing well in every round. I can push harder in the rematch.”

A rematch with Crawford is unlikely, but matchups with the Bohachuk-Ortiz winner, Tszyu, and No. 1-ranked Sebastian Fundora are welcome.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Boxing

Josh Kelly vs Liam Smith clash won’t be repeated, says coach

Published

on

JOSH KELLY will hopefully fight for a world title instead of fighting Liam Smith again.

Smith was due to face Kelly on Saturday night as part of the Riyadh series at Wembley Stadium but withdrew due to a virus.

The Liverpool fighter’s slow replacement was “Black Panther” Ishmael Davis, whom Kelly defeated by a majority decision on points (115-113, 115-114, 114-114), which stunned the winner and his team.

Saturday night’s fight took place at middleweight, but Kelly is currently ranked second by the WBO and fifth by the IBF in the super welterweight division.

Kelly’s trainer Adam Booth spoke to him at Wembley Stadium on Saturday night and dismissed any ideas of a confrontation with Smith.

“That’s in the past,” Booth said. “Wasted months on this. World title or the massive fight (next).”

Booth, who has trained fighters including David Haye, George Groves and Michael Conlan, also shared his feelings on Kelly-Davis’ results.

“I scored it 9-3. I’m just disappointed with what the judges did. Winning is the most significant thing and you move on, but when judges do that to fighters, it can destroy their careers because you know perfectly well that if you win, the payouts go up and if you lose, they go down.”

Continue Reading

Boxing

Daniel Dubois pulls off a shocking stoppage of Anthony Joshua to retain his IBF title

Published

on

London, UK: Anthony Joshua vs. Daniel Dubois, IBF heavyweight title. September 21, 2024. Photo: Mark Robinson Matchroom Boxing.

by Joseph Santoliquito |

Once upon a time, not so long ago, some called Daniel Dubois a “coward.” They questioned his heart, his integrity, and whether deep down he was truly a champion.

The critical thing is that he never questioned himself. Dubois fought the stigma. He rejuvenated his career with victories over Jarrell Miller (TKO 10) and Filip Hrgovic (TKO 8). His victory over Hrgovic earned him the interim IBF title, which was later elevated to the “full” list of titles.

Still, he and Anthony Joshua needed each other. They were two wounded boxing souls, connected by a common denominator—each had lost to the undefeated Ringo and world heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk. Both needed to reclaim their heavyweight positions, both needed redemption in a strange way against each other.

Dubois won the belt Saturday night in a stunning fifth-round knockout of Joshua at “Riyadh Season: Wembley Edition” before a record crowd of 96,000 at Wembley Stadium in London, England, defending the IBF heavyweight title that Usyk vacated for a rematch with Tyson Fury in December.

The Ring’s No. 6 heavyweight contender, the 27-year-old Dubois (22-2, 21 knockouts) floored the 34-year-old Joshua (28-4, 25 KOs) in the first, third, fourth and fifth rounds. The end officially came at :59 of the fifth round when Dubois caught Joshua in the jaw with a counter right punch.

“I just have a few things to say: ‘Aren’t you entertained!’” Dubois shouted to the energetic crowd. “It’s been a long journey. I’m grateful to be in this position. I’m a gladiator and a warrior who fights to the bitter end. Behind the scenes, working with my dad and having a mighty team helped me get through it. I’ve been on a rollercoaster and this is my redemption story.”

Dubois landed 91 of 230 punches (46%), including 27 power punches, while Joshua landed 60 of 139 (48%) and 16 power punches.

“Credit to (Dubois) and his team,” Joshua said. “We rolled the dice and we didn’t get it. You know I’m pissed off. You know I want to kick it. We’re still rolling the dice. I had a tough opponent, a swift opponent, but I made a lot of mistakes. That’s the game, as pissed off as I am.”

Daniel Dubois catches Anthony Joshua in round 1. From that point on, Joshua had no chance against Dubois. (Photo by Mark Robinson Matchroom Boxing)

Early on, Dubois attacked Joshua in the first minute. Dubois, dressed in black, entered the ring very composed, almost seemingly too relaxed. Joshua, in white trunks, seemed tense during his walk around the ring.

Dubois, weighing 248.6 pounds, his career-high, dropped Joshua with a powerful right hook to the chin in the final five seconds of the first round, after Joshua missed Dubois with a right hook.

Not wanting to lose momentum, Dubois came at Joshua in the opening minutes of the second round. Dubois looked to have Joshua in trouble again, but by the middle of the round Joshua seemed to have settled down. Joshua survived the round despite being struck in the back of the head by a right from Dubois.

Early in the third round, Dubois stunned Joshua with a quick combination. He forced Joshua to retreat and still look for his feet. In the final minute of the round, Dubois sent Joshua to the canvas for the second time. Dubois crushed Joshua with a left to the chin, and referee Marcus McDonnell did a very needy job of not seeing Joshua’s gloves touch the cloth.

Dubois dropped Joshua — officially — early in the fourth round. Perhaps it was a rebound from the previous round, as it looked more like a slip than a punch-induced knockdown.

Joshua was everywhere. Dubois looked tired, but Joshua looked to be on his feet. With 1:29 left in the round, Dubois threw a right jab at Joshua that sent him sprawling backwards against the ropes. Slow in the fourth, Joshua didn’t seem to have much to lose.

As Joshua looked to be coming back in the fifth round, Dubois caught Joshua with a counter right to the chin with 2:11 left in the round. Joshua went down in the corner for the fourth time, and this time McDonnell made the right decision and turned it down at :59.

Joshua’s future is something to consider. He was supposed to eat Andy Ruiz Jr. in June 2019 and was knocked out in the seventh round, losing his IBF and WBO titles. He lost those same titles to Usyk in 2021 and lost to Usyk in a rematch in 2022.

He is now on his third trainer after parting ways with Robert McCracken following his first loss to Usyk in September 2021. He was previously coached by Derrick James and Robert Garcia before settling on his current trainer, Ben Davison.

“AJ kept fighting, never gave up and never stopped trying to get up when he couldn’t get up,” said Matchroom Promotions CEO Eddie Hearn, Joshua’s promoter. “A huge, huge congratulations to Daniel Dubois. I’m sure AJ will exercise his rematch clause. Daniel Dubois deserves all the credit.”

When it comes to the number of missed opportunities Joshua has had, Dubois is on the opposite side. Dubois appeared to have knocked Usyk down in the fifth round of their August 2023 fight, which was considered a low blow, although some thought it was controversial. Usyk outlasted Dubois, stopping him in the ninth round.

When asked who he would like to fight next, Dubois said Usyk. He will have to wait for that chance.

Meanwhile, no one will call him a “give up” anymore.

Follow @JSantoliquito [twitter.com]

Continue Reading

Boxing

Daniel Dubois crushes Anthony Joshua in front of 96,000 fans at WEmbley Stadium

Published

on

By: Sean Crose

If the Oasis show and the fireworks weren’t enough to get the excitement going on Saturday, the heavyweight title fight between Daniel Dubois and Anthony Joshua promised to be a huge hit. These were the two biggest names in boxing’s biggest division, fighting in their own country. Indeed, nearly 100,000 people (you read that right) packed into Wembley Stadium in London, England to watch the two men fight for the IBF heavyweight title. It’s no wonder the legendary band and all the bells and whistles that advanced technology could offer got the crowd pumped up. Promoted by Saudi sports chief Turki Alalshikh, this was, to say the least, a HUGE. SPORTS. EVENT.

But it all came down to the fight – a 12-round fight between two highly skilled, hard-hitting professionals, ready to answer the question of who was the better man. Dubois landed tough almost immediately in the first round. But Joshua was able to land his punches well throughout the entire chapter. Then, as the round drew to a close, Joshua was sent to the mat. Joshua beat the count, but Dubois continued to pummel the two-time champion in the second round. Again, Joshua survived the round – but Dubois’s jabs and power punches proved effective.

Joshua landed a good punch in the third round – before being knocked down again before the bell. He got back to his feet to beat the count. Joshua went down for the third time in the first fifteen seconds of the fourth round. After getting back up, he went down again, thanks to a slip. No matter. The statuesque Englishman was being whipped by his countryman. The fight was over in the fifth round.

Joshua, to his credit, managed to take Dubois down in the final round. But chasing his opponent into the corner, the tough Joshua was sent to the ground by a devastatingly brief, correct and powerful right from Dubois, straight out of the Joe Louis playbook. The referee didn’t have to count – but he did anyway. Suffice it to say Joshua couldn’t get back to his feet in time. It was a stunningly one-sided fight.

“Aren’t you having fun?” Dubois asked the crowd afterward, imitating Russell Crowe’s renowned line from the film. “I’m a gladiator. I’m a warrior, to the end, to the bitter end.” Having now defeated Joshua and possibly Oleksandr Usyk, Dubois is undoubtedly in the running to become the undisputed heavyweight king. Dubois, who has been largely sidelined in conversations about the best heavyweights, is now clearly part of the conversation… and an critical one at that.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending