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Denzel Bentley is real and wants to prove his worth in the middleweight division

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Interview with Shaun Brown


BN: Have you and Derrick Ozaze, who are both based in London, ever met?

DB: Yeah, we have a lot of mutual friends, so I know him personally. We sparred about six years ago. He came down for a week to see his family and was at the gym all week, so we sparred all week.

It’s entertaining because I was telling someone just a few weeks before I found out we might be fighting, that we were messaging each other. So when that came up I was like, oh man, this is awkward, but listen, it is what it is.


BN: I remember talking to you after your win over Kieran Smith and you were a bit frustrated with the lack of activity in your career. You must be joyful to be fighting regularly again.

DB: Definitely. I like to be energetic. We’re always in the gym, working strenuous and stuff like that because there’s so many people there and someone might have a date, so I’ll be at camp with them and stuff like that. I’m always in the gym, I’m always ready to go, I’m always ready to fight. It’s not like I take a lot of time off after fights and I have to get back in shape.

I’m always in decent shape and like I’ve said a million times, I’m competitive, I love fighting. I enjoy it. So when I’m not energetic, I feel like I’m just wasting my time in the gym and I could be doing something else, spending time with my family or doing something else, but I’m sitting in the gym waiting for a date and I don’t get it. It can be really frustrating. I put a lot of time and life into this sport and I don’t have a lot of time for it. I want to do everything now, as much as I can, so when I retire from the sport, I’m joyful with how my career has turned out.


BN: You beat Danny Dignum and are expected to beat Ozaze as well. If you win on Saturday, you’ll definitely be hanging around Queensberry’s door looking for a bigger fight.

DB: Honestly, I understood my position. If I had defeated [Nathan] Heaney, I would have been there. I know I had to go back against [Danny] Dignum and that was a great performance and it showed that it was just a bad night against Heaney. I’m a contender in the middleweight division but it’s just one fight. I have to do it again before I start saying, great, can we move on? I understand the loss.

I understand that I have to go back to go forward again and that’s what I’m doing. This fight is a good fight. Ozaze is a good fighter. He’s a good fighter. I’m expected to win because I’m more celebrated than him. He’s just not that celebrated.

So it’s like, oh, who is this guy? But he’s a tough fighter. He’s a good fighter. He’s sturdy and he’s got character. I think it could turn out to be a dog fight, but regardless of what kind of fight it is, I have to make sure I get my hand raised at the end. I can’t take him lightly and have another slip-up. I have to get through this and then I can start asking myself other questions like how do I move forward.


BN: You said about knowing your position, which is a very straightforward and realistic assessment. Have you always been a realist?

DB: Yes, 100%. You have to be realistic in life. We all have expectations. We all want to be in places and we all want to be at the top, whatever we do. But you have to ask yourself, do you deserve it? What did you do to deserve it? In this game, you have to be a little bit of a cheater.

You have to feel like you’re the best to compete with the best. I don’t doubt that, but you also have to understand your journey and where you stand. Like I’ve said a million times, I didn’t come into boxing the conventional way. I came in behind schedule. I didn’t do much as an amateur. So I started in petite shows and then I got noticed by Frank. [Warren] because of our relationships and we jumped on the show at the last minute and I was impressed.

No one expected me to do anything. So why should I feel like I need to be pushed around, just because I feel like I should be pushed around? I need to show my worth. I know what I feel like I’m worth, but I need to show everyone else what I feel like I’m worth and what I feel like I can do. And I feel like the more realistic you are, the less nervous you’ll be. I know I’m a good fighter, but I also understand my position. I understand that I need to prove myself.

I have to get the opportunities, take advantage of them and win. Just because I think I’m a good fighter doesn’t mean I should be here, there and there. I have to earn the right to be put in those positions. That being said, I feel like there are a lot of fighters in good positions that have something else that helps them grow. They can sell a lot of tickets or they can have a social media presence. But I just don’t feel like they’re the fighters that people think they are, but other things justify them being in that position. I’m not a substantial fan of social media. I’m not a substantial personality outside of that.


BN: We recently saw your senior adversary Nathan Heaney lose to Brad Pauls. And Tyler Denny got the biggest win of his career against Felix Cash. Did you expect those results?

DB: Honestly, I thought Pauls would win the first fight and then draw. Then I thought, coming back, Heaney must know what he did wrong and Heaney will beat him.

It was an stimulating fight. I think when he knocked Heaney down, the fight went to Brad Pauls. I think the first three rounds were Heaney’s and I thought, yeah, he’s running away with this.

When he got knocked down, Brad Pauls started winning almost every round from that point for me, and then he stopped him at the end. Cash and Tyler Denny, I didn’t expect that. I thought Cash was going to get him, but I thought, how good is Cash? How fresh is he? He’s been out for a really long time. He’s got a novel trainer, how does that work? But just because of the level we’ve seen Cash box, I expected Cash to beat him on points. I didn’t think he’d stop him on points. So when I saw Tyler beat him, I knew he was stopped on the cut, but he still won every round for me.


BN: Do you expect another surprise for Tyler in the fight against Hamza Sheeraz?

DB: I know it sounds crazy because I’m doubting him again, but Hamzah is a different kind of fighter. Cash is talented and good, but he’s very undisciplined. He’s inactive, he’s not really disciplined. He lives a reckless life outside of boxing, and as you get older, it all catches up with you. You can’t handle all that stress. Hamzah is the opposite, especially in the ring.

I think it’s going to be tough to break through Hamzah’s defense. It’s going to be tough to break him down and get him out of his rhythm. To make him do something he’s not used to because he’s very disciplined and he listens to his coaches. If his coach says one thing, he’ll go out there and do it. Like in the Ammo Williams fight, he got caught with a huge left hook. He got rattled, he didn’t panic. He just sat in his shell, waited for the storm to pass and then started throwing his punches and catching them in between. I think it’s going to be a pretty similar fight.

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Andrew Moloney is confident that if given the chance, he would have beaten Phumelele Cafu and Kosei Tanaka

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Andrew Moloney (left) attacks Pedro Guevara – photo: Mikey Williams/Top Rank

Few people were more disappointed than Andrew Moloney when Kosei Tanaka lost his WBO super flyweight belt to Phumelele Cafu at the Ariake Arena in Tokyo, Japan on Monday night.

The 33-year-old Australian veteran was hoping to get a shot at beating Tanaka in the lucrative Japanese market.

Those dreams were dashed when South Africa’s Cafu delivered the performance of his life, knocking out Tanaka in the fifth round and finishing the fight strongly, beating the four-weight world champion by split decision.

“The plan was to target the WBO and really chase the Tanaka fight, but it all fell apart on Monday night,” Moloney (26-4-1NC, 16 KO) told The Ring. “I think the WBO is probably still the direction we go, but I’m not sure if they have a rematch clause or if Tanaka will take it. But after watching the fight yesterday, I would be really confident that I could fight one of these guys and win. We would like to follow this path.

“I would love to fight Tanaka in Japan as a four-division world champion. He’s definitely someone I’ve looked up to and wanted to fight for a long time.

“Last night was a little hard to watch. The way he performed, I’m more confident than ever that I have what it takes to beat Tanaka.

I assume there will be a rematch and I hope that Tanaka will regain the belt and I will be able to return to the ring and climb the rankings, and maybe this fight will still happen.

Tanaka entered Moloney’s orbit four years ago when he debuted at 115 pounds. Earlier this year, it looked like they were also on a collision course, with Moloney being number one in the WBO rankings. However, when an offer was made for the vacant IBF lightweight title fight between Vasily Lomachenko and George Kambosos Jr. in May in Perth, Western Australia, Moloney felt he couldn’t turn her down.

This decision ended in disaster. Moloney faced Carlos Cuadras, who withdrew from the fight with a ruptured Achilles tendon and was replaced by Pedro Guevara. Moloney entered the fight with a torn bicep and was largely reduced to boxing with one hand, which circumscribed his punching power.

Still, Moloney felt he did more than enough to win, and was shocked when Guevara was declared the winner by split decision. He was so disappointed that he announced immediately after the fight that he was leaving the ring, but a few days later he withdrew these comments.

It was a breakthrough moment in his career.

“Looking back, it’s a wonderful thing, but watching the Tanaka-Cafu fight made me think that maybe I would do a lot of things if I could turn back time a little bit,” Moloney explained.

“Before my last fight, I was number one in the WBO rankings and I rejected the option of waiting to fight Tanaka. But the opportunity arose to fight Guevara in Australia for the interim WBC title on a major card, and to be candid, I kind of regretted that the Tanaka fight was hanging in the balance, but ultimately we decided to stay busy and take the opportunity to fight in Australia.

“Also, the injury before the fight was another thing I thought about: will I undergo surgery, keep the top spot and wait for Tanaka, but I made the decision to go ahead with the fight with Guevara. Looking back now, maybe it wasn’t the smartest thing to do. And looking at the way Tanaka fought last night, I thought maybe I should have waited. I’m sure I could beat Tanaka and take the belt away from him.

“So I take some consolation, but unfortunately you can’t turn back time.”

It’s been a frustrating year for Moloney, but he’s still hitting the gym and his team is working to get him another fight. The window of opportunity to box again this year is closing quickly, but he still hopes to return to the ring in December, most likely in his native Australia.

“I really hope so,” he said. “That’s what I’ve been working on. I have been training strenuous at the gym for some time, quite a few months. I hope to return before the end of the year.

“At this stage it will probably be December. I’m trying to block something, but so far no luck. I’m still training away as if the fight was to take place in December, the team is currently working on it and I’m keeping my fingers crossed that we’ll be able to finish it.

“I just hope we can get out before the end of the year, get back into the winner’s circle and start climbing the rankings again.”

Moloney, who fought at bantamweight for the first three years of his professional career before dropping down to super flyweight, surprisingly, said he would even consider moving up to another weight class given the right opportunity.

“It’s a tough time in the super flyweight division,” said Moloney, the eighth challenger to The Ring’s 115-pound title. “There’s a lot going on and it’s always strenuous to plan which route to take because everything changes so quickly. I’d pick Bam Rodriguez to beat Guevara, then there’s talk of a rematch between Kazuto Ioka and Fernando Martinez on Up-to-date Year’s Eve. And then there’s talk of Bama, if they win, fighting the winner of that game in unification. The WBO seems to me the fastest way to win the title, so that’s the path we will follow.

“We have also rejected for some time the idea of ​​moving up to flyweight and getting crack there. There’s also some engaging scene going on there right now, but it’s still uncertain. I’d probably feel a little better at super flyweight, but we’ll have to wait and see what happens with Cafu and Tanaka, but like I said, I’d feel comfortable and confident against either of them, so hopefully he can make it it will happen sooner rather than later.”

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Doubts that fuel 19-year-old Benjamin Johnson

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Despite an impressive amateur resume, welterweight Benjamin Johnson of Springdale, Maryland, enters the professional ring with a shoulder injury.

Johnson will face Kevin Pantoja in a four-round fight at Rosecroft Raceway in Fort Washington, Maryland, promoted by his trainer Lamont Roach Snr’s NoXcuses Promotions. The fight will be broadcast on Saturday on ProBox TV.

Johnson, 1-0 (1 KO), spent just 2:23 in the ring in his professional debut, displaying the quick, aggressive hands that won him multiple national titles. However, 19-year-old Johnson feels an advantage, believing he is being overlooked by his NoXcuses Boxing Gym teammates.

Pantoja, 1-1, 27, has never stopped being a professional – Johnson aims to change that.

“People underestimate me,” Johnson said. “It’s been like that since I was an amateur.”

He added that this underestimation increases his motivation in the gym. Johnson is determined to prove his worth not only to himself, but also to those who doubt him or, worse, don’t recognize him. “I never felt like I was recognized as that guy, so I feel like I’m underappreciated,” Johnson said of his amateur and now professional career.

Johnson sees the fight as a key step in his career, compared to feared forward David Benavidez by some teammates and touted by others as one of the most ready-to-fight prospects in the country.

“I train as much as I can,” Johnson said. “It’s about making a statement. The way you win shows people what you’re capable of, and I’m ready to show my best.

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Benavidez Sr. wants Artur Beterbiev after David Morrell

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Image: Benavidez Sr. Wants Artur Beterbiev After David Morrell

David Benavidez’s father, Jose Benavidez Sr., says he wants undisputed lightweight heavyweight champion Artur Beterbiev if he can defeat “regular” WBA champion David Morrell in a Jan. 25 fight.

Jose Senior believes Beterbiew would be a good fight for Benavidez (29-0, 24 KO). He would also like his son to have Dmitry Bivol because it would give him a chance to beat someone who beat Canelo Alvarez in 2022.

Jose Sr. is still bitter that Canelo chose not to fight Benavidez all these years, and recently mentioned a $200 million asking price to fight him. If Bivol loses the rematch with Beterbiev, it is not worth fighting him.

Artur Beterbiev (21-0, 20 KO) will be the guy Benavidez fights if he defeats Bivol in a rematch in 2025. The second fight is still not confirmed, but it is likely.

Benavidez’s worst nightmare would be if Beterbiev lost his rematch with Bivol and then the two fighters met in a trilogy fight. Benavidez will have to wait until the third fight between these fighters takes place before he can claim the belts.

“David’s next fight will be David Morrell. Everyone is very excited about it. We tried to make this fight for three years, but I think David Morrell needed a little more experience to show the world that he deserves this fight,” said Jose Benavidez Sr. Probox TV David Benavidez’s next fight with Cuban David Morrell will take place on January 25.

Of course, Team Benavidez hasn’t tried challenging to fight Morrell over the last three years because they’ve been the ones ignoring him. If they wanted a fight with Morrell, it would have happened a long time ago.

They waited until now, after Morrell’s unimpressive performance against Radivoje Kalajdzic on August 3 at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, before deciding they wanted to fight him.

“David called him and said, ‘Hey, I want to do this fight. Let’s make it happen. It was done right away. I’m very excited to fight a newborn talent, a sturdy fighter, and I think it’s going to be a tough fight,” said Jose Senior on how the fight with Morrell ultimately came about.

I hope we get a chance to fight Beterbiev. He won only on Saturday. Hopefully we can achieve that, but right now our focus is on David Morrell. We have to look impressive to get to the next level,” Benavidez Sr. said.

If Benavidez loses to Morrell, Jose Sr. will have to decide which direction to take his son. Will he move it back to 168 pounds or stay at 175, hoping to win one of the belts after Beterbiev’s vacation?

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