Connect with us

Boxing

Anthony Cacaca-Eduardo Núnez bid for IBF title postponed to June 25

Published

on

Anthony Cacace and Eduardo Núnez now have a fresh date to learn their fate.

The Ring has confirmed that the IBF has postponed the bidding hearing for the booked junior lightweight title fight. The session was scheduled to take place on Tuesday via Zoom. It was postponed earlier this week with no clear instructions on when the session would return to the calendar.

That changed on Thursday.

“Anthony Cacace vs. Eduardo Nuñez has been rescheduled for Tuesday, June 25 at 12:00 p.m. EST,” the IBF announced to all registered promoters.

Cacace (22-1, 8 knockouts) won the title with an eighth-round knockout of Joe Cordina on May 18 in Riyad, Saudi Arabia. gave the best performance of his career on his biggest stage yet.

The fight took place on the Oleksandr Usyk-Tyson Fury card. Cordina (17-1, 9 KO) entered the fight on hook to honor the mandatory defense with victory. That onus has now shifted to Cacace, who has won seven games in a row.

Núnez (27-1, 27 KO) burst into the top spot with an eleventh-round knockout of former champion Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov. Their title eliminator took place on February 16 and saw Núnez go on the road to exhaust himself and stop Rakhimov (17-2-1, 14 KO) in Dushanbe, Tajikistan.

The fight was the first time Núnez had his fight extended beyond the tenth round. However, he didn’t need much more to end the show. The victory extended his current streak of seventeen wins and knockouts.

Cacace and Núnez are committed to remaining committed to the fight.

Under IBF rules, failure by any champion to comply with the mandatory defense will result in his title being stripped. Likewise, challengers who opt out of the process will be ineligible to compete in any IBF-sanctioned fight for at least six months. Moreover, such a defeat for the challenger will also result in relegation outside the IBF top ten.

Follow @JakeNDaBox

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Boxing

Gervonta Davis’ next opponent has been revealed

Published

on

It appears that the next fight in the career of boxing superstar Gervonta Davis has been confirmed.

That’s because the WBA revealed today that it has given its super featherweight champion Lamont Roach special permission to fight Davis for the WBA lightweight belt on December 14.

In an article published on its website, the WBA wrote: “NoXcuse Boxing Promotions submitted a formal request on September 13, which was accepted by the committee for consideration and consultation with the team of Albert Batyrgaziev, who has a mandatory 130-pound weight. pretender.

“After appropriate consideration and based on the organization’s internal policies, it has been decided to grant Roach’s request subject to certain conditions.”

Roach defeated Hector Garcia to win the WBA 130-pound title. (Photo: David Becker/Getty Images)

If Roach defeats Davis to win the WBA lightweight championship, he will have five days to decide which of the two titles he will retain and defend. However, if Roach loses, he will have to fight an official 130-pound challenger within 120 days of the Davis fight.

In recent weeks, rumors about a fight between the two 29-year-olds have been circulating in boxing. Davis last fought in June, stopping Frank Martin in eight rounds. Thirteen days later, Roach won in similar fashion over Feargal McCrory in a successful first title defense.

Continue Reading

Boxing

On Friday, Janibek Alimkhanuly goes on the road to risk his titles against Andrei Mikhailovich

Published

on

Janibek Alimkhanuly celebrates after stopping Danny Dignum in their WBO interim middleweight title fight at Resorts World Las Vegas on May 21, 2022 in Las Vegas. Photo: Mikey Williams/Top Rank Inc via Getty Images

It wasn’t that long ago that IBF and WBO titleholder Janibek Alimkhanuly was considered the future of the middleweight division.

The 31-year-old Kazakh southerner was widely seen as the successor to his compatriot Gennady Golovkin, the last great 160-pounder who retired two years ago. However, the lack of top-class competition in the league has left Alimkhanuly with little choice but to take on all comers in anticipation of the competition that will cement his name in the public consciousness.

Next in line for Alimkhanuly is Andrei Mikhailovich, a name little known outside his native Recent Zealand and neighboring Australia. That doesn’t mean the enigmatic 26-year-old can’t fight. Clearly it can. And he firmly believes that it is his time to shine.

The fight was originally scheduled for July 13 at the Palms Casino in Las Vegas, but was canceled at the eleventh hour after Alimkhanuly was hospitalized with dehydration following an acute weight cut.

To complicate matters for Alimkhanuly, the rescheduled fight will now take place at The Star in Sydney, Australia on October 4, after Mikhailovich’s promoter No Limit won the bid with a bid of $351,000. Alimkhanuly’s promoter, Top Rank, offered $350,000.

This prompted Alimkhanuly (15-0, 10 KO) to post on social media with an X: “I have no words. What is @toprank @BobArum @CarlMoretti?”

Alimkhanuly, rated No. 1 by The Ring and weighing 160 pounds, has since put on a calmer demeanor, insisting he has no problem traveling to Sydney to box.

“At the Sydney Olympics, two Kazakh boxers won gold. Bekzat Sattarkhanov and Yermakhan Ibraimov inspired many Kazakhs. I grew up with a dream to glorify my country like them,” Alimkhanuly said in a recent press release.

“I am very ecstatic that I will be boxing in Sydney. I want to show my flag to the world once again in Sydney, just like our Olympic champions did in 2000. The fight with Andrei is very crucial to me. Because he is the official challenger to my title.

“He’s like a cloud to me now. I have to get rid of the clouds quickly to see the sun. Everyone knows and understands that this is an straightforward job for me. I will knock him out very quickly!”

From Mikhailovich’s perspective, everything falls into place. While Alimkhanuly was recovering from his illness, Mikhailovich trained constantly, continuing to sharpen his tools. Mikhailovich is so confident that he predicts victory in the early stages of the match.

“I live in the present, but I certainly haven’t forgotten the past,” said Mikhailovich (21-0, 13 KO), who is currently not rated by The Ring. “I respect him as a champion, but I know he doesn’t respect me. That’s why I can’t wait to take absolutely everything from him.

“I will write my name in the history books with Joseph Parker and Maselino Masoe as world champions. This is my destiny, this is my everything. “I will stop at nothing to make the world remember the name of Andrei Mikhailovich.”

In this fight, Alimkhanuly has little to gain but a lot to lose. If he beats Mikhailovich, many people will say it was expected. If he fights, let alone loses, his stock will suffer. In the fickle world of boxing, where perfection is expected 100% of the time, few will consider the fact that he had to travel halfway around the globe or his apparent difficulty in getting his vast frame down to the 160-pound weight limit, let alone his strained relationship with his promoter . The only thing they will remember is his performance.

And herein lies the point. Will Mikhailovich claim Alimchanula at the right moment, or will the fight titleholder once again prove why he is the class of the division?

We’ll find out on Friday night.

Continue Reading

Boxing

Devin Haney’s ‘damaged image’ lawsuit against Ryan Garcia

Published

on

Teofimo Lopez Sr. believes that Devin Haney is only suing Ryan Garcia to save his “damaged image.”

Garcia earned a decision over Haney in April in Fresh York, where he also recorded three knockdowns. His majority decision was later declared invalid after Garcia tested positive for the banned substance ostarine.

Haney filed a lawsuit against Garcia alleging fraud, battery and unjust enrichment – five months after he first filed the lawsuit fined $1.1 million and suspended for one year.

“Devin Haney is just playing chess and trying to put the right pieces in the right places to make the most of what happened to him and his image because Ryan Garcia destroyed his image” – Lopez Snr, father and trainer of the WBO junior weight champion lightweight – and therefore Haney’s rival – Teofimo Jnr, told Fight Hub TV.

The 25-year-old Haney is still scheduled to return to the ring since his fight with the 26-year-old Garcia, and there’s already some question as to whether he’ll be the same fighter when he does.

“I don’t know if it’s true, but Ryan Garcia said you can take a little bit of salt and throw it into an Olympic-size swimming pool and that’s all the stuff you have in your body,” Lopez Snr continued.

“I don’t know how true that is. But if that’s the case, man, you know what I’m saying?”

Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending