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Alycia Baumgardner: “Every Fight Has Something Earnest In It”

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Alycia Baumgardner can be forgiven if, years from now, she doesn’t look back on the period from August 2023 to September 2024 as the happiest time of her life.

She’s a boxer who couldn’t box. She tested positive for banned substances and spent about six months fighting to clear her name (and she knows that fight for her reputation could last the rest of her career). In April, her father, Mario Guzman, the man who first introduced her to boxing, died at the age of 56. And she continued to deal with the threats and distractions of a man accused of stalking her until he was finally convicted in July—for the second time, since the stalking resurfaced after his first release from prison.

Baumgardner last fought on July 15, 2023, when she convincingly defeated Christina Linardatou (with a PED controversy after the fact) on points to avenge the only loss of her career. A year, two months, and 12 days later, she will return to the ring on September 27 to defend one of her junior lightweight titles against Delfine Persoon.

It’s secure to say that Baumgardner, who went from 20 to 30 during her break from work, has a lot of pent-up frustration she can take out on the Belgian veteran.

“I’ve been through so much,” Baumgardner told Boxing Scene. “This win has so much history and I know what it’s going to be like. I have so much to fight for. It all reminds me of how I felt when I became world champion against Terri Harper. And you know how that ended.”

(In case anyone reading this didn’t know: a violent right hook in the fourth round that pinned Harper and knocked her to her feet.)

So, considering everything she has been through – the mourning, the stress, the criticism, the lack of activity – will Baumgardner struggle with the proverbial grief on September 27?

“Yeah, well… every fight I have something to prove,” she replied. “It seems like every fight I go in with something to prove.”

The only time in her career that Baumgardner, 15-1 (7 KOs), hasn’t fought for an extended period of time was a 20-month layoff from December 2019 to August 2021, due to a combination of ACL surgery and a global pandemic that has thrown a wrench in everyone’s plans. But she’s not worried about the 14-month layoff affecting her. She’s been in the gym all year and expects to be in tip-top shape for the Persoon showdown.

However, she admits that the reason for her dismissal – the doping controversy – has weakened her momentum and damaged her reputation.

Reminder: She tested positive for mesterolone and methenolone metabolites before her win over Linardatou, and the results were released a month later. The test was conducted by Drug Free Sport, a voluntary third-party agency, and Baumgardner has consistently maintained her innocence — which may or may not mean anything, since most boxers who test positive deny the results. The WBC, whose title she will defend later this month, conducted an investigation and concluded that Baumgardner was “not guilty of intentionally ingesting or consuming a banned substance for the purpose of enhancing performance.”

She was given a one-year probation period from the alphabetical order backdated to July 2023, the Association of Boxing Commissions lifted her suspension, and here we are. Linardatou’s triumph remained a triumph. The positive test was expunged from her record.

But it can’t be erased from everyone’s memory.

“I know it’s a blemish, for sure,” Baumgardner said. “Of course, I don’t like it, but it is what it is and I can only move forward and just continue to prove who I am and stand for neat sports and stand for honesty in being heard. Boxing is one of those sports where some people don’t get a chance to be heard, and I was fortunate enough to be heard and show everything I needed to show to be found innocent. I know the truth. I know who I am and what my integrity is as an athlete. I can only continue on my own path to continue to show up in my real self.”

Her path now runs through Persoon, who is no simple target. The only losses on her 49-3 (19 KO) record are a TKO loss suffered well before the midterm elections in Barack Obama’s first term in office and two incredibly close decisions — one of them highly disputed — to Katie Taylor. She has defeated the best of the rest that the 130- and 135-pound divisions have had to offer over the past decade, including Linardatou, Maiva Hamadouche and Elhem Mekhaled, who all handed Persoon their first career losses.

Although she is 39 years elderly, she is probably not yet in top form, but she has remained undefeated for the past four years.

“I think a lot of people might not see this fight, but I have a great opponent in front of me and I love this fight,” Baumgardner said. “It’s not like I came back and just picked Joe Schmoe off the street to fight. I have someone in front of me who’s going to come fight. And when I win, I’m going to show that I can do what Katie Taylor couldn’t do with Delfine.”

Baumgardner will be trying to do that in the transition phase on several fronts. She has a novel training team, as Tony Harrison has left, and Ramon Carlos Matthews is now the main voice in the gym and in her corner. Additionally, this is “The Bomb’s” final fight under her Matchroom contract, and she has launched her own promotional company, Baumgardner Promotions, before becoming a free agent.

“I think it’s essential for a female athlete to understand the business side of boxing,” she explained. “When I started, I knew I wanted to be my own boss eventually. With Baumgardner Promotions, it’s a lot of extra work, but I’m willing to do it. I don’t know everything. I learn as I go. But it’s so essential for athletes to understand the business and be able to negotiate for themselves.”

The launch of Baumgardner Promotions isn’t the only way she’s trying something novel. The entire card, an all-women event taking place on the Lux Stage at Trilith Studios in Atlanta, is full of experimentation. It’s being billed as the first fight card in an “immersive world environment,” taking place on an LED stage where graphic designers build a virtual backdrop.

It’s also being aired/streamed for free on Brinx.TV and Fubo Sports, both of which are taking boxing on for the first time. Spokesperson Josh Weissman connected Global Combat Collective (who won the $500,000 mandatory fight) to Brinx.TV, while Global Combat Collective CEO Nelson Lopez Jr. had connections to Fubo and they decided to strike deals with both operators.

For Baumgardner it was especially essential to make the fight free.

“When it comes to boxing, all eyes are good,” she said.

Interestingly, Baumgardner isn’t a substantial fan of the event’s promotional slogan: “Hit like a girl, fight like a champion.” She’s not a fan of using the word “girl” when all the fighters on the card are adult women, and she’d like to see the focus put on the quality of the fights, not the gender of the fighters.

“Look, I understand why they operate that phrase,” she said. “But to me it’s kind of a cliché. And I want it to be like that, when we talk about sports, we just talk about I want to change the concept of constantly considering that it is boxing. And these aren’t juvenile girls on the card. We’re all women, adults, fighting on the card. So I don’t mind saying that, but I have to be truthful: I don’t like it.”

Let’s focus on the second part of the slogan. Let’s assume Baumgardner fights like a champion. Let’s assume she defeats Persoon. What happens to her?

I’m going to win this fight,” she said, emphasizing that it’s not an “if” situation, “and that allows me to pole vault for a superfight that we’ve wanted for a while. I think the Katie Taylor fight makes sense. I want to fight Katie, I want to fight Amanda [Serrano]. People want to see that. I want to see that. I want to know where I am in my career and what my skills are. These are superfights. We want superfights. We want substantial fights. I’m undisputed at 130, and moving up is no problem.”

Taylor and Serrano are scheduled to meet in a rematch on November 15 on Netflix for the Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight. So if Baumgardner wins on September 27 — sorry, wins on September 27th — don’t be surprised if you see her in Arlington, Texas a month and a half later, announcing the winner in person.

Until then, she’ll likely take out most of her pent-up frustration on Persoon. But Baumgardner is one of those players who always seems to have something in store for whoever comes next.

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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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