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Hearn says Berlanga will be a ‘different fighter’ after Canelo fight

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Image: Hearn says Berlanga Will Be "Different Fighter" After Canelo Fight

Eddie Hearn told Edgar Berlanga that from this point on he will be a “different fighter” after his performance against Canelo Alvarez last weekend. Matchroom promoter Hearn told Berlanga (22-1, 17 KOs) that he has never fought like this before and has raised the level of his game.

Hearn is planning a prep fight for Berlanga in Fresh York or Puerto Rico in early 2025. It is not expected to be a high-profile fight that will require a rebuilding of the 27-year-old Berlanga’s roster.

Berlanga seemed to lose every round, but the judges gave him several rounds of mercy that he failed to appreciate during his one-sided unanimous decision loss in a 12-round fight with super middleweight champion Canelo (62-2-2, 39 KOs) at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

“You’ve never boxed anywhere near this level. This will improve you. This level is way above everyone else,” Eddie Hearn told Boxing in the match roompraising Edgar Berlanga after his loss to Canelo Alvarez last Saturday night.

“You matched him in the rounds. You never looked like you couldn’t handle yourself. Now when you fight someone else, you’ll be a different fighter,” Hearn said.

What helped Berlanga not look any worse was his enormous size. His hydrated weight of 193 pounds gave him an advantage over Canelo, allowing him to land punches he wouldn’t be able to handle if he fought a guy his size at lightweight heavyweight or cruiserweight. If it was Jai Opetaia or Artur Beterbiev, who Berlanga fought, he wouldn’t be able to handle the punches.

“You were unlucky to hit him in the forehead there, because if you had hit him in the chin, you would have knocked him out,” Hearn said of Canelo walking away from Berlanga in the final seconds of one of the later rounds, heading for his corner. Berlanga ran after Canelo and hit him just before the end of the round, making for a bad start.

Hearn blows smoke up Berlanga’s ass, telling him he would knock Canelo out if he landed a punch on his chin at the end of the round. Even if Berlanga landed on his chin, it wouldn’t do anything to Canelo because his feet weren’t planted and he ran across the ring looking for a affordable shot.

What Hearn doesn’t mention is that Canelo came out for the next round and really gave Berlanga a strenuous time, paying him back for a affordable shot with a lot of strenuous punches that hurt him. When the round ended, Berlanga staggered back to his corner.

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Keyshawn Davis Leaves, Calls Out Emiliano Vargas

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Image: Keyshawn Davis Goes Off, Calls Out Emiliano Vargas

Keyshawn Davis took to social media to criticize Emiliano Vargas as he responded to the praise he received for his impressive fifth-round knockout of Larry Fryers (13-7-1, 5 KOs) on Friday night during a Top Rank on ESPN event at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.

(Source: Mikey Williams/Top Rank Boxing)

Keyshawn was so furious he was literally shaking with anger when he talked about Emiliano. I want to know why Keyshawn doesn’t have the same energy for Andy Cruz as he does for Emiliano. He lost to the Cuban Cruz four times in the amateurs and looked wild and crazy when he lost to him in the 2020 Olympic finals.

ESPN commentators were constantly on Emiliano Vargas (12-0, 10 KOs), saying how great he looked after his win over Fryers. The compliments Emiliano got from ESPN were far better than any Keyshawn has received in any of his fights.

They had reason to be: Emiliano looked like future star material, showing power, speed and accuracy in his victory today. His entertainment value combined with his Hollywood looks make him a can’t-miss Top Rank superstar.

ESPN’s talking heads, Bernard Osuna, Tim Bradley and Mark Kriegel, know talent when they see it. If Keyshawn had the talent that Emiliano showed, ESPN would criticize him too but he doesn’t.

He’s more of a WWE wrestler than a boxer. Top Rank needs to think about an exit strategy with Keyshawn because he’s not going anywhere and they made a mistake signing him.

“I will defeat them all” [backsides] same night, including the father,” Keyshawn Davis said on social mediareacting to Emiliano Vargas’ impressive victory over Larry Fryers on Saturday night.

“Tell them to set it up. I’ll go to my father’s [Fernando Vargas] to the youngest brother [Emiliano] same night. Vargas brothers vs. Davis brothers. I don’t care which brother I fight, and dad gets it too.

“Tell Top Rank to set it up. I’m not even playing. I’ve got my eye on you and I heard you talking [stuff] when you had your media training. I was going to drive you by. You’re lucky you got out before I did. I had no idea.

“You’re lucky. You didn’t even know. Talking [stuff]. Although I had ears. [A friend] he called and said, “Keyshawn, the Vargas brothers are talking” [stuff] about you. Tell them to set it up, but tell them they can be under my main, anyway.

“They talk like they’re so popular. You’re a whole different culture. You think my culture knows you, bro? What the hell is he talking about? About me not being an Olympian. You think my culture knows you, bro? Nobody knows you in my culture. What are you talking about? You’re crazy. There’s no comparison between the Davis brothers and the Vargas brothers,” Keyshawn said.

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Jaime Munguia KOs Erik Bazinyan in Round 10

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JAIME Munguia bounced back from his first career loss, stopping Erik Bazinyan in Round 10 at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale. Returning to boxing under the sole tutelage of Erik Morales, Munguia’s loss to Saul “Canelo” Alvarez has now been viewed as a learning experience, with Munguia showing composure and patience in dispatching Bazinyan, an Armenian based in Canada.

Bazinyan’s left jab worked well. All he had to do was land a right hook. After four rounds, ESPN’s Mark Kriegel had the underdog on the cards. It was a different fight as Munguia planted his feet and landed solid punches. Bazinyan was down in the seventh round, and Jaime quickly picked up the pace as the remaining rounds ticked by.

Jaime Munguia’s Fight Eric Bazinyan

Caught by a powerful left hook, Bazinyan was hurt and landed ponderous punches in the 10th round as the Mexican kept the pressure on. Referee Thomas Taylor counted Bazinyan, bent over on his knees, at 2-36 in the 10th round. Munguia was ahead by a margin when the fight was stopped 88-83, 87-84 and 86-85.

Munguia improved to 44-1 (35 KOs), while Bazinyan lost for the first time, dropping to 32-1-1 (23 KOs). The winner named 168-pound contenders Caleb Plant and Edgar Berlanga, who both fought last weekend. Christian Mbilli is also on the radar.

Earlier in the evening, Richard Torrez defeated the slippery Joey Dawejko by disqualification in round five. The Philadelphia veteran was ejected from the ring by referee Wes Melton for excessive spitting out of his mouthpiece.

Emiliano Vargas pummeled Larry Fryers, winning by knockout in the fifth round after one-sided blows to the Irishman’s head and body. A pointed left hook finally knocked the brave Larry flat on his back.

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Jaime Munguia demolishes undefeated Erik Bazinyan, scoring a 10th-round knockout

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Jaime Munguia faced undefeated Erik Bazinyan on Friday and knocked him out in the tenth round of their fight at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.

The former WBO junior middleweight world titleholder applied relentless pressure throughout the fight until his left hook along the ropes allowed the Canadian-based Armenian to be counted out at 2:36.

The victory came in Munguia’s (44-1, 35 knockouts) first fight under up-to-date promoter Top Rank and allowed him to rebound from the first loss of his career, a unanimous decision loss to Saul “Canelo” Alvarez in May.

But for the 27-year-old Munguia, the fight was no ordinary, idle exercise.

“It was a fight I had to fight intelligently. He’s powerful. He hits challenging. So we had to break him down and watch out for body shots. And in the 10th round, I decided to go all out. And that’s how we got the knockout,” said Munguia, who is ranked No. 2 by The Ring at 168 pounds.

Munguia began to pull away at the time of the stoppage, with the judges having him ahead 88-83, 87-84 and 86-85 at the time of the fight’s conclusion. Bazinyan fared best on David Sutherland’s undercard, winning four of the first five rounds, then losing four straight before the knockout.

“I felt like I was winning. I felt like he was very frustrated with my jab, right hook and counterattacks. He was tired. Suddenly I was caught. I don’t know what happened there,” Bazinyan said.

Bazinyan, 29, started the first round with determination, effectively keeping Munguia at bay with jabs and overhand rights. Bazinyan, who respected Quebec trainer Marc Ramsay in his corner, kept control of the distance in the first two rounds as Munguia tried to set the pace in the third. Bazinyan regained control of the boxing in the fourth round when he began doubling and tripling his jabs, catching Munguia whenever he held his head still for too long, breaking his rhythm.

Munguia finally got his bearings in the sixth round, when he began to roll under Bazinyan’s jabs and move in with left hooks around the guard. Bazinyan, admitting he was outmatched when they were close, tried to keep his guard tight rather than trade blows. The body shots were starting to ponderous Bazinyan, who was fighting in the first 12-round of his 11-year pro career.

Bazinyan was hurt for the first time in the seventh round by a right hook that connected as he attempted his right hook, landing flat, followed by a left hook that sent him into the ropes. Bazinyan showed incredible recovery skills as he regained his balance and began looking for opportunities to counter, particularly with a right jab.

As Bazinyan’s blow began to weaken, Munguia’s pressure began to break him.

Munguia used the roll that had previously opened up his opponent to greater effect in the tenth round, hurting Bazinyan with a hook while he was standing upright. Referee Thomas Taylor advised Bazinyan to start fighting, which he did, but his willingness to return fire opened him up to the left hook that led to the final sequence of the fight.

Munguia expressed interest in fighting other top 168-pound fighters in the future, including RING No. 1 contender Christian Mbilli (28-0, 23 KOs), a Montreal-based contender who is co-promoted by Top Rank and Eye of the Tiger Management. Munguia also mentioned Edgar Berlanga and Caleb Plant.

“There are great fights and we will also have great wars.”

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