Nick Ball calls Goodman himself as his “The most hard test” His careers in 12-round coefficients’ clashes on Saturday, August 16 at Dazn PPV, Riyjad. Ball (22-0-1, 13 KO) defends his title of Pentecla WBA against Goodman (20-0, 8 KO), a warrior before he chose from Super Bantamweight Division to defend.
“He will come. He is undefeated. He has such a great opportunity and will want to become a world champion and take what I have [WBA featherweight title] From me and it doesn’t happen. It will be invigorating – said Nick Ball New boxingS on your fight with Sam Goodman on Saturday.
Goodman: 122-punting, not 126
The real question is: why did Ball choose Goodman as his opponent? She is a super Bantamwette, not a feather scale, and is not perceived as one of the talented fighters from the Division 122 pounds. If the idea was to comb this weight class for his pretender, why he did not choose Ramon Cardenas? At least this guy can hit and try to beat him.
“Well, he is, right? He is the most hard test Because he is next in the queue. You can’t look next to him. It has already disappeared [38-year-old TJ Doheny]. This is the next one, said Ball.
Who is joking with the ball? Goodman himself is not his “most hard test” of his career. This is a sizzling, like his last two fights with an aged veteran, i.e. Doheny and 34-year-old Ronny Rios.
Goodman cannot hit and is a super bantamwet, like the two previous opponents of Ball, Doheny and Rios, whom he chose to defend his title WBA. Ray Ford Is the most hard Ball career test so far, and Rey Vargas appeared in second place.
Real result of Vargas Fight
“Bad feeling. I robbed” Ball said about his lack of victory against Master WBC Feather Wweight Rey Vargas in March 2024.
Interestingly, the ball is Still bitter About the results of his fight with Vargas, despite the fact that he was endowed with a 12-round draw in this fight. He should have lost the fight. Ball did not let go and deny what actually happened in this fight. Vargas won in a real sense, but blowing up a judge with knocking down in eighth place caused that the fight was won as a draw.
Ball Fight in question is his title challenge against the WBC Rey Vargas featherweight master last March 11, 2024 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He was captured by judges as a 12-round draw, with results 114-112 for Vargas, 113-113 and 116-110 for the ball.
Many Ball fans believe that he deserved victory because he dropped Vargas twice, putting him on eight and eleven. However, the ball roughly pushed Vargas, and when he fell, he hit him.
It was apparently not knockingBut the judge, Giovanni Poggi, ruled it as knocking. If you take a false push, Vargas should have won the fight. As such, it was not a “robbery”. On the contrary, it was a fight that should have been going to Vargas.
Roy Jones Jr has no doubt who would win in a fantastic fight between Floyd Mayweather and Sugar Ray Leonard.
Boxing legends Mayweather and Leonard both have the honor of being world champions in five weight divisions, but perhaps it was their welterweight days when each was at the peak of their powers.
Mayweather defeated the likes of Manny Pacquiao, Shane Mosley and Juan Manuel Marquez in the 147-pound division, and Leonard became the undisputed welterweight champion after victories over fellow “Four Kings” icons Roberto Duran and Thomas Hearns.
This has often led fans to debate how the clash between Mayweather and Leonard would have gone had they met in prime welterweight form, and Jones, a Hall of Famer, is confident of what the outcome would have been.
“For me, people don’t give him enough credit. People always say, ‘Well, Floyd would beat Sugar,’ no, honey, Floyd isn’t as mean as Sugar.
“How? [would Mayweather win]. How are you going to keep him away from him? Sugar is a dog. People don’t understand. Just because her name is Sugar doesn’t mean anything! Sugar is a dog, people don’t pay enough attention to him.
Jones is extremely confident that Leonard would have put his hand up, which he did when he faced Mayweather’s father, Floyd Sr., in September 1978, winning after a 10th-round stoppage.
Luis Ortiz has already made two appearances in the Team Boxing League and the one-round format seems to be perfect for his aging body at 47 years elderly.
The former two-time heavyweight title challenger returned to action for the Miami Assassins at the War Memorial Auditorium in Fort Lauderdale, helping his team remain undefeated following a 24-6 victory over Recent York.
However, the biggest debate wasn’t the victory itself, but the moment Ortiz hit the canvas.
Luis Ortiz was eliminated in TBL
Edward Millard entered the competition with a professional record of 2-0 and a similar record of 2-0 in TBL. The Recent Yorker proved exactly why anything is possible in a growing format, releasing Ortiz at a moment few expected.
By comparison, Deontay Wilder needed five rounds to knock down Ortiz for the first time in his original heavyweight title fight. Millard managed to achieve this with just three minutes at his disposal.
Ortiz looked visibly irritated by what happened.
The Cuban veteran immediately increased the intensity of the fight and reacted as many expected from a fighter of his pedigree. It was then reminded that even at the age of 47, Ortiz still possesses the strength that once made him one of the most feared heavyweights in boxing.
“King Kong” crushed Millard and helped Miami continue its balmy streak since he joined the team.
Ortiz has now stopped two opponents in TBL, both fighters who would normally never get a chance to fight in the ring with a former world title challenger in time-honored boxing structures.
Team Boxing League
Team Boxing League Format
Millard may have failed in the end, but he also showed why this format works.
The heavyweight with only two career wins knocked Luis Ortiz to the floor and briefly threatened one of the biggest names competing in the league.
Team Boxing League continues to prove that there is room for both.
Ortiz wasn’t the only veteran who turned back the years.
Former cruiserweight world champion Steve Cunninghamwho turns 50 himself next month, stopped Miguel Teo as the Philly Smoke defeated Boston 14-11.
Established names continue to gain a platform to compete, while younger and less experienced fighters are given opportunities they likely wouldn’t receive elsewhere.
Millard proved that anything can happen in one round. Ortiz proved what can happen when you make him enraged.
All videos and full results are available on the Team Boxing League YouTube channel.
About the author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.
Mosley was asked where Keyshawn fits into the situation and gave his take on how this fight would go.
Mosley pointed to Garcia’s upset win over Haney as the type of performance Keyshawn should try to repeat.
“I think Keyshawn would take the Ryan Garcia method and jump on him. Dev will try him out for the first two or three rounds, but when that doesn’t work, he’ll get on his bike and be gone,” Mosley told MillCity Boxing.
“He’s got to make sure he’s ready because if he’s not like he was when he started, you know, you’ve got to go with Devin because Devin, you know, he’s going to be ready,” Mosley said.
The father of the former three-division world champion also suggested that Haney and his father, Bill Haney, have developed a reputation for gaining the upper hand before a fight even starts.
“They’re really good at talking and having fun with the guy. That’s the fight before the fight,” Mosley said. “This mental war. It’s definitely working.”
Keyshawn, who is currently ranked No. 1 in the WBO welterweight division, has repeatedly called for a fight with Haney since he became the mandatory challenger. Meanwhile, Haney continued to say he wanted to face Shakur next.
The WBO ordered Haney to fight Keyshawn, while Haney also publicly discussed fighting Stevenson. The decision in which direction it will go may determine the immediate future of the division.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
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