Former Munior Midior Midior Middle WBC, Serhii Bohachuk (26-2, 24 KO), won more tough than the expected unanimous decision about Crafty, 6’3 ″ Mykal Fox (24-5, 5 KO) on Saturday evening at Commerce Casino in Commerce, California. It was a fight that could easily go the other way to Fox or get a draw.
Close rounds, wide results
The results were 97-93, 97-93 and 98-92. I fired a fight for FOX 97-93. There was a knockout that should be attributed to Fox.
The rounds were close, which makes it tough to say who is better than the action. Fox overtook the ponderous Bochuk with a wide margin, constantly forcing him to shots. 30 -year -old Bohachuk was an aggressor throughout the entire continuous, but he hit him many times through Fox when he was approaching forward. Gangling Fox was wearing nothing, but there were so many that it was tough to give Bohachuk many rounds.
A bit of controversy was involved in the 10th place when Fox dropped Bohachuka with a stab when he was approaching. The judge said it was a slip, but he looked like a clear knocking out. Fox perfectly wrote his stab, catching Boachuka when he got stuck and dropped him.
This would not change the result of the fight if the judge ruled that he was knocking down, but he would approach. Even with a seemingly blown up call, Fox looked like he had done enough to win or deserve a draw.
Bohachuk was not a good performance at all. Compared to the war with Vergil Ortiz Jr. In August last year, it wasn’t such a good effort. He never invented the Fox style and did not fight for the episode when a gaunt warrior began to hit him a lot.
Problems with accuracy for Boachuk
Bohachuk often left his arrows and from time to time caught Fox with a good shot. Bohachuk did not focus his blows on Fox’s body because his accuracy would augment. He left so many shots, trying to hit an elusive fox in the head, and it looked like his hand-cook coordination was turned off. He resembled Rocky Balboa, repeatedly missing shots and crashed. Sometimes it was tough to watch it.
Whereas, Lightweight Southpaw welterweight Shohjahon ergashev He was much more correct when he fought Fox in 2019. He joined with his left hands and effectively coped with the predominance of growth. Egashev would remain beyond reach and Then rush forward to catch Fox with your left hands.
Anthony Joshua’s next opponent has been revealed ahead of his fight with Tyson Fury scheduled for later this year.
Joshua and Fury have been on a collision course for almost a decade and it seemed their fight would finally be confirmed after “The Gypsy King” defeated Arslanbek Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London earlier this month.
An exchange with Joshua then ensued, but ‘AJ’ stood his ground when his team insisted there would likely be a warm-up fight before facing Fury.
Joshua’s last fight was in December when he defeated YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, but before that his last fight against a legal opponent was in September 2024 when he was knocked out by Daniel Dubois in an IBF heavyweight title fight.
“AJ” was also involved in a tragic car accident just weeks after his fight with Paul, which sadly claimed the lives of two of his close friends, so it is clear why he preferred the next fight to be a warm-up to best prepare for Fury.
A warm-up opponent has now been confirmed following the announcement that Joshua will face relatively unknown Kristian Prenga on July 25 in Riyad, Saudi Arabia.
BACK 👊@anthonyjoshua fight with Kristian Prenga (20-1, 20 KO) on July 25 in Riyad!
Prenga has a 100% knockout record and all 20 of his wins have come within the distance, but the type of opponents he has faced throughout his career are at a level below Joshua’s.
In 2017, in his fifth professional fight, he suffered a 1-2 loss to opponent Giovanni Auriemma, but since then he has won all 16 fights, the last one coming in February, when he knocked out Joe Jones in the first round 16-14-1.
Nevertheless, Joshua is expected to win comfortably before he begins preparing for his long-awaited showdown with Fury, although it has now been reported that ‘The Gypsy King’ could have another warm-up fight of his own.
Gorokhov (16-11-2) had already done damage with large shots, finishing Kalkan (7-0, 4 KO) with a spotless knockout that forced the referee to wave his hand. The task has been completed.
After being detained, Gorokhov walked to the opposite corner, where a fight began. That was enough. The cornermen ran inside, the voices became piercing, followed by punches. Within seconds, many people entered the ring.
The situation got out of the referee’s control. The horns could not be separated. Once the non-fighters make it through the ropes, the result will be written in the record books.
The footage showed flying chairs and people trading on ropes as security tried to take control of the situation. The recording shows objects thrown near the ropes. The announcements to stop the fight didn’t change anything. The ring is already gone.
The sanctioning authority has confined powers and the ruling follows standard procedure. When the ropes are broken and extra hands are involved, the score cannot stand and is removed from the scoresheet.
An investigation is ongoing and suspensions and penalties are expected once reports are submitted. The verdict now comes from the officials, not the blows that ended it.
Kalkan keeps his undefeated record in the books. Gorokhov leaves without the victory he earned. Disciplinary action is expected following the investigation.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
Although Oleksandr Usyk presented his three-fight plan, a recent challenger entered the fight with hopes of taking a shot at the Ukrainian and winning the unified world heavyweight titles.
Next month’s meeting with Dutch kickboxer Rico Verhoeven kicks off what Usyk envisioned as a series of three hand-picked fights before his planned retirement in 2027, with his next dance partner being the winner of Fabio Wardley vs. Daniel Dubois.
However, the WBC is expected to demand that Usyk fight mandatory challenger Agit Kabayel in his next fight, and promoter Frank Warren believes he will be stripped of his belt if he fails to face the undefeated German.
Meanwhile, the WBA and IBF titles are not on the line against Verhoeven, which has fight fans wondering whether Usyk could soon be stripped of those belts as well.
I’m talking to Fighting Hub TV after “Gigantic Baby” won, he told Usyk that there was nowhere to run or hide when fighting him.
“He’s a great fighter, man, but when you’re fighting a bully like me, there’s nowhere to run or hide. Usyk doesn’t really have crazy punching power, and he has trouble with guys who punch to the body and throw a lot of punches.”
This performance [against Pero] it was just a taste of what I could do. So the most essential thing is to go back and get the drawing board back. Let’s work and be ready for everyone.
I want Usyk to come back after the Rico fight and I can spank him.
If Usyk loses the WBA title, Miller could find himself in line for a title fight with current WBA Regular titleholder Murat Gassiew, who expected to be promoted to full champion. Although Moses Itauma would probably get the first shot at the proposed scrap with the Russian.
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