Boxing
Terenka Crawford claims that the 168-pound unquestioned championship in the decisive victory over Canelo Alvarez
Published
9 months agoon
The undisputed master of the super medium medium weight Saul “Canelo” Alvarez (63-3-2 (39) lost his belts to Terenka “Bud” Crawford (42-0 (31) as a result of a 12-round unanimous decision on Saturday evening at the Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.
The results were 116-112, 115-113 and 115-113.
In the first round, starting 90 minutes after the advertised time, Canelo followed Crawford around the ring, landing his left body hooks, while Crawford landed shots from time to time. In the second round, by a minute, Canelo landed with his left hook on the chin, while Southpaw Crawford counteracting the advantage to the left to the chin – the next round for Canelo.
In the third round, Canelo continued to cut the ring to Crawford, which moved in the first two minutes earlier, in the last minute, standing before Canelo, taking the round. In the last minute of the fourth round, Canelo landed on the chin when Crawford tried to slip. Round Canelo.
In the fifth round, Crawford uses effective stab, while Canelo lands from time to time the left left. Round Canelo. In the sixth round, Crawford worked well on the ring, using his stab when Canelo followed him. At the end of the round, Canelo’s right eye was swollen.
In the seventh round, Crawford uses the speed of his hands and foot to counteract Canelo. In the eighth round, Crawford continued in the close round.
In the ninth round, Crawford scored well to half the point, when the start of the head caused a slight cut on the right eyebrow of Crawford. In the tenth round Crawford has one step before Canelo.
In the eleventh round another close from Canelo took him with a few rights to the chin. In the twelfth and final round of Crawford won the round and could win a fight or draw.
Thomas Taylor was a judge.
The average weight of Serhia “El Flaco” Bohachuk (26-3 (24) lost to Brandon “Cannon” Adams (26-4 (16) as a result of a 10-round unanimous decision in the rematch.
The results were 98-92, 98-92 and 99-91. Mark Nelson was a judge.
The short-lived master of the super medium weight WBC Christian “Solude” Mbilli (29-0-1, 24 KO) and Lester Martinez (19-0-1, 16 KO) fought with 10 rounds.
In the first two rounds, both mixed him well, with Mbilla Outlanding Martinez. In the third round Martinez won the round during the war. In the fourth and fifth round Martinez passed close.
In the last minute of the sixth round, Martinez landed firmly on the chin of Mbilla. Mbilli seemed to have a little advantage. In the seventh round Martinez returned from Mbilla. In the eighth round Mbilli withdrew from the round, ending the stronger. In the ninth round it went back and Martinez started stronger. In the tenth and final round the last minute was a non-stop of both.
The results were 97-93 for Martinez, 96-94 for Mbilla and 95-95. Allen Huggins was a judge.
The ponderous Ivan Dychko (15-1 (14 KO) was nervous about the disputed decision for Jermaine Franklin, Jr. (24-2, 15 KO).
In the first four rounds Dychko had an advantage. In the seventh round Franklin improved the action. In the eighth and ninth round it was close. In the tenth and final round of Dychko ended well when the exhausted Franklin barely reached the bell.
The results were 98-96 for Dychko, 95-94 and 97-92 for Franklin. Harvey Dock was a judge.
Medium medium-sized junior collaborator “King” Callum Walsh (15-0 (11) defeated Southpaw Fernando “El Feroz” Vargas, Jr. (17-1 (15) according to a 10-round unanimous decision.
In the first three rounds, Walsh had a little advantage, landing more blows on Vargas’s body. In the fourth round, Vargas had a better round. In the fifth round, Vargas was warned about low blows by judge Harvey Dock.
In the sixth round, Vargas had a good round, although Walsh ended stronger. In the seventh round, Vargas is ahead of Walsh, who is ahead of Vargas mainly to the body. In the eighth round, Vargas did a good job, but Walsh finished more, taking the round.
In the ninth round, Walsh continues to process Vargas. In the tenth and final round, halfway, Walsh drew blood from the mouth of Vargas, taking the last round.
The results are 99-91, 99-91 and 100-90.
The delicate ponderous Steven Nelson (20-2 (16 KO) was detained by Raiko Santana (13-4 (7 KO) at 2:38 of the first round planned 10 rounds.
In the first round in the last minute Santana shook Nelson Right on the chin, and followed the tow truck when Judge Robert Hoyle stopped fighting prematurely.
The delicate “powerful” Mohammed Alakel (6-0 (1 KO) defeated Travis Crawford (7-5 (2) according to a 10-round unanimous decision.
In the first three rounds, Alakel controlled its range. In the fifth round Alakel landed a left hook, drawing blood from Crawford’s nose. His hand speed is too high for Crawford.
In the eighth round, Alakel won each round. In the last seconds of the ninth round, Crawford shook Alakel right on the chin, taking a round. In the tenth and final round, Alakel went on a distance for his first ten rounds, winning the last round and fight.
The results are 99-91, 99-91 and 98-92. Robert Hoyle was a judge.
Silver Olympic medalist Marco “Green” Verde (3-1 (1 KO) stopped “Slink proper” Akale (9-4 (4 KO) at 1:11 Fourth round of the planned eight rounds.
In the first round, Verde dropped Akale on 8-net from judge Marek Nelson. In the fourth round, knocked by Verde forced Judge Nelson to stop.
Super Featheweight Southpaw Reito Tsutsumi (3-0 (2 KO) knocked out Javier Martinez (7-3 (4 KO) at 2:18 of the first round of the planned six rounds.
In the first round Tsutsumi landed a few right mountains, ending it with his left hook on the chin, which is counted by judge Allen Huggins.
The delicate Sultan Almohamed (1-0) defeated Martin Caraballo (0-1-1) by a four-way decision.
Judge Thomas Taylor shot him 40-36.
Mikhael Buffer was ring.
Ken Hissner is an experienced boxing journalist with over 20 years of experience covering the global fight scene. As an older writer Boxing News 24He is well known in the boxing community for its detailed results of results, in -depth historical works and reports on the main events.
During his career, Ken wrote about several main boxing points, building a reputation of accuracy, consistency and insight. His work often emphasizes both established masters and growing perspectives, ensuring a context that combines a affluent history of boxing with today’s action.
When there is no ring, Ken still studies the past and present of sport, he ensures that its range reflects both deep knowledge and current meaning.
Last updated on 14.09.2025
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Boxing
Dana White had to sell Fury vs. Joshua to random US players
Published
2 hours agoon
June 14, 2026
Fury and Joshua remain linked to the highly anticipated all-British heavyweight clash, with recent discussions focusing not only on whether the fight will eventually happen, but also on who will oversee its promotion. Although Fury has spent much of his career working with Frank Warren and Joshua was Matchroom Boxing’s banner star under Eddie Hearn, Sauerland sees value in bringing a different voice.
Addressing growing speculation about White’s possible role, Sauerland explained why he thinks the UFC president could support expand the event’s reach beyond the UK.
“If Turki wants Dana to run him, it makes total sense because he has American eyes,” Sauerland told Seconds Out.
“There will be a strategic reason if they want to bring in Dana White. If they are going to bring in Dana White, it will have something to do, I assume, with America, where this fight means very little.
“It’s a huge fight in the UK at the moment. I mean, huge doesn’t really do it justice. Here it’s gigantic, but in America people don’t queue to watch this fight.”
Sauerland also pointed to White’s success in building the UFC as a dominant force in the U.S. combat sports market.
“Bringing in Dana brings a UFC element to the fight,” Sauerland said. “Let’s face it, MMA in America has been the dominant combat sport in America for the last 15, 20 years.
“Boxing, if boxing works in America, is still by far the biggest sport. So I understand from a business standpoint why they would do it.”
White is becoming an increasingly influential figure in boxing thanks to his collaboration with Turki Alalshikh and the launch of Zuffa Boxing. While no agreement has been announced for Fury and Joshua to finally meet in the ring, Sauerland’s comments underscore why White’s involvement may go beyond promotional news.
The heavyweight competition has long been one of boxing’s biggest unrealized events. While the contest would likely sell out a stadium in the UK regardless of who promoted it, Sauerland believes Dana White’s ability to reach grassroots combat sports fans in the United States could make the Joshua vs. Fury fight a truly global spectacle.

Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most critical fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
Boxing
Tim Bradley names the heavyweight who can beat Oleksandr Usyk: ‘This could be his time’
Published
4 hours agoon
June 14, 2026
Tim Bradley listed probably the biggest challenge for Oleksandr Usyk, who some say should hang up his gloves after the clash with Rico Verhoeven.
Last month, the Ukrainian endured a tougher-than-expected test against Verhoeven, which ended with a controversial suspension following an 11th-round knockout.
Until then Usyk was losing on one of the judges’ scorecards However, he managed to inspire the intervention of referee Mark Lyson, who waved at Verhoeven after the bell.
Indeed, it was controversial while on duty, however, the real story is that Verhoeven, a former kickboxer, was able to last 11 rounds with the heavyweight king.
Perhaps it was because Usyk underestimated his opponent, or perhaps his performance would be better explained by a text message he received from his daughter, who contacted him from a bomb shelter in Ukraine before the fight.
Either way, the 39-year-old would need to significantly improve his performance if he faces WBC “interim” champion Agit Kabayel in his next fight.
I keep talking his YouTube channelBradley said Kabayel, who has previously stopped fighters such as Zhilei Zhang and Frank Sanchez, posed a real threat to Usyk’s dominance as WBC, IBF and WBA world champion.
“You have a guy like Kabayel who has been waiting for a while. This might be the right time for him [to defeat Usyk].
“Usyk’s aged manager [Alex Krassyuk] he said, “You must go ahead and retire, because if you don’t retire, you will be defeated.”
“[Krassyuk] I didn’t like what he saw against Rico, but I have hope for him in this fight [with Kabayel] what’s happening next. Fighting Kabayel will be tough for him.
“This guy can punch, he can punch the body very well, he can move and box, he can get forward, he can counter-punch – he can do a little bit of everything.”
Having been ordered to defend his WBC title against Kabayel, Usyk must now decide whether to face the undefeated challenger or vacate the belt and pursue alternative options.
Boxing
Diego Pacheco Immanuwel Aleem and Andy Cruz-Albert Bell fight on July 18 DAZN card
Published
6 hours agoon
June 14, 2026
Pacheco (25-0 (18 KO)) will defend his WBC Silver and WBO International super middleweight belts against Aleem 22-4-3 (14 KO). The 25-year-old Los Angeles native is coming off a unanimous decision win over Kevin Lele Sadjo last December.
Pacheco was knocked out in the eighth round following a unanimous decision victory over Kevin Lele Sadjo last December.
Since then, Pacheco has made significant changes outside the ring, joining Sheer Sports and bringing Hall of Fame trainer Buddy McGirt into his corner. Matchroom has also renewed a promotional deal with a highly-rated super middleweight.
“I can’t wait to take him to a world title,” Robert Diaz of Sheer Sports said of Pacheco.
This common feature can have solemn consequences in the lightweight division. Cruz (6-1 (3 KO)) will try to recover from the first defeat of his professional career when he faces Bell (28-1 (9 KO)) in the IBF final.
On January 24, the 2020 Olympic gold medalist lost a 12-round majority decision to Muratalla, failing in his attempt to win the IBF lightweight title. Despite the setback, Cruz received an immediate opportunity to return to title contention.
Bell enters the fight on a long winning streak and has spent years climbing the rankings in search of a breakthrough opportunity. The winner will strengthen his position before the next meeting with Muratalla, who is scheduled to defend his title against Robson Conceicao on August 1.
The lightweight world title eliminator and one of the most highly rated super middleweights in boxing returns to action, with the July 18 card providing significant stakes in two divisions as Matchroom continues to shape the title picture for the second half of 2026.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
Dana White had to sell Fury vs. Joshua to random US players
Tim Bradley names the heavyweight who can beat Oleksandr Usyk: ‘This could be his time’
Diego Pacheco Immanuwel Aleem and Andy Cruz-Albert Bell fight on July 18 DAZN card
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