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Ashton ‘H2O’ Sylve: ‘I feel like a veteran, honestly’

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Ashton “H2O” Sylve may be only 20 years aged and has 11 fights in his professional boxing career, but the promising newborn lightweight contender smiles and admits that at times he already feels like a veteran.

“Yeah, definitely,” he told BoxingScene. “I feel like a veteran, honestly. And this is my fourth year as a pro. So yeah, I’ve been in the pro game for a while.”

He first put on gloves when he was just 7 years aged, at the request of his father, although newborn Ashton did not share his interest or fascination with the sport.

“Yeah, he basically forced me into boxing,” the Long Beach native chuckles. Ivan Sylve told his son that not only did he see the newborn man’s potential, but so did everyone who watched him; even though Ashton didn’t share that vision, he stuck with it, and then, around age 13, “I thought, I see the potential now, and I’m just going to keep doing it.”

Not everyone loves their job, even professional boxers, but Sylve (11-0, 9 KOs) says he enjoys his profession – with a caveat.

“I definitely fell in love with the sport,” he said. “I think the reason I didn’t like it at first was because it was there for me 24/7, day and night.” Things took a turn when he and his father realized he needed to have his own life, too. “Since then, boxing has been just in the gym. Outside, at home, it’s family time and everything else that comes with being a kid or whatever. Now I’m taking care of my own kid and we’re becoming a family instead of always talking about boxing, boxing, boxing. It used to burn me out.”

But outside the ring, it’s not all rest and relaxation. Sylve is acutely aware that a career in the sport can come to an abrupt end and that too many boxers have trouble hanging up their gloves, partly because they have no other prospects or interests, so even as he climbs the ranks, he’s working on a degree in business management. If his father is responsible for him becoming a boxer, he credits his grandmother with encouraging him to continue his education and keep his options open.

“She wasn’t in favor of me boxing from the start,” he recalled. “She tried to make me quit and say, ‘No, boxing is for idiots,’ and all that. So I decided I wanted to be an experienced boxer, have an education, but also be one of the best boxers.”

He turned pro at 16, fighting his first five fights in Tijuana; but after MVP Promotions co-founder Nakisa Bidarian saw him in action in Northern California in 2022, he and his business partner Jake Paul convinced Team Sylve to add the newborn fighter to their fresh group of prospects. Sylve has since fought on Paul’s undercards, most recently in the fifth installment of MVP’s Most Valuable Prospects series in February. He’ll be back in the ring on Saturday, taking on Lucas Bahdi (16-0, 14 KOs) in a sideshow to Paul’s fights with Mike Perry and Amanda Serrano’s meeting with Stevie Morgan.

Bidarian is eager to talk about his newborn warrior’s potential.

“He’s incredibly talented and has an incredible team around him,” Bidarian told BoxingScene. “And I think the future is incredibly vivid for him if he continues on the path he’s been on. He’s been on the biggest platforms and he’s shined on them as a showman and an athlete. If you look at the show we did with him in Phoenix, [against Braulio Rodriguez, underneath Paul’s defeat of Anderson Silva at Gelandale’s Gila River Arena in October 2022] he came to the ring dressed as a Minion and performed a spectacular feat [first-round] knockout. He is a infrequent and unique athlete.”

As his Minion entrance suggests, Sylve knows that boxing is an entertainment business. And besides, as O’Shaquie Foster can attest recently, the scorecards can throw up some nasty surprises. That’s why, even when he was recently cruising to a dominant decision over Estivan Falcao, he opted for a dramatic finish; while he failed to secure a knockout, he floored Falcao in the tenth round to add to the impressive performance.

“I don’t want to leave it in the judges’ hands,” he said, “and I like to feel great after a knockout. You want the audience to feel that. So I feel like the audience is always looking for something thrilling. And I want to give that to the audience.”

Like many newborn boxers, he already has some plans for how he will develop his future career, although one initial goal has already eluded him.

“I definitely had a schedule when I first started boxing, I wanted to go down in the history books as the youngest champion, but it didn’t work out because, you know, it’s tough to get fights for one,” he said. “There’s just so many things that go into it. So now that I’m learning the game more, I know there’s going to be a lot of adversity and stuff like that. But yeah, I still have a schedule of different things. The ultimate goal is to be somewhere around 33, 35. Definitely at least a two- or three-division world champion.”

Planning a career into your early 30s is looking far into the future for a 20-year-old. But for someone who has been in the ring since he was seven, he’s already halfway there.

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Will Artur Beterbiev prove too powerful for Dmitry Bivol?

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Image: Beterbiev Hints at Cruiserweight Move After Bivol Fight

Dmitry Bivol will face the greatest boxer of his career in the delicate heavyweight division[ited championship fight against unified champ Artur Beterbiev in 19 days on October 12th in Riyadh. Beterbiev might have too much power for Bivol, who likes to throw combinations and leaves himself open. Getting countered by Beterbiev will be bad for Bivol.

WBA champion Bivol (23-0, 12 KOs) is known for his movement and boxing skills, which he’s used to defeat the likes of Canelo Alvarez and Gilberto Ramirez. He’s not faced anyone like IBF, WBC and WBO champion Beterbiev (20-0, 20 KOs), though.

Bivol hasn’t fought anyone like Beterbiev, and we don’t know if he’ll be able to use his in-and-out attacking style effectively against this kind of puncher.

Canelo, a natural middleweight in size, was too small to fight at light heavyweight against Bivol in 2022. Zurdo Ramirez was slow and limited in his fight against Bivol in November 2022. Bivol might not be as good as some fans had thought, and Beterbiev may expose that.

“When I think of what is a machine? It’s Beterbiev more than any other boxer in recent years,” said Ade Oladipo on his YouTube channel, talking about unified light heavyweight champion Artur Beterbiev ahead of his fight against Dmitry Bivol on October 12th.

“Some thought Callum Smith was going to go to Canada and take the titles from him. Beterbiev destroyed him. That’s when I thought this guy is the real deal. Then there’s Dmitry Bivol. I think he’s poetry in motion.

“You have someone [Beterbiev] it will break you, and you have someone who is poetry in motion. Bivol does not have such a distinguished CV as Beterbiev,” Ade said.

Beterbiev’s greatest victories:

– Oleksandr Gvozdyk
-Callum Smith
-Callum Johnson
-Marcus Browne
-Anthony Yarde
–Joe Smith Jr.

Bivol’s best wins include defeats over Joe Smith Jr., Canelo, and Gilberto Ramirez. His resume is similar to Beterbiev’s, but not quite as good.

“Bivol shut Canelo down. You can’t sleep after a performance like that. That was Canelo in the run-up to the fight, on the run.”

“I didn’t think it was anything out of the ordinary at the time, but of course it was. In retrospect, it was like he hit me in the arms and knocked me down,” Callum Johnson told Secondsout of his 2018 fight with Artur Beterbiev.

“Will his age affect him? At some point, yes. Will knee surgery affect him?” Johnson asked of Beterbiev.

Beterbiev’s recent knee surgery raises questions about whether he’ll be able to handle the stress of facing a fighter like Bivol. Not just the movement. Bivol could decide to lean on Beterbiev in the clinches to wear down the knee and weaken it.

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Jerwin Ancajas wins by disqualification over habitual fouler Sukpraserd Ponpitak in the Philippines

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Jerwin Ancajas trains for his fight with Takuma Inoue in February 2024. (Photo: Naoki Fukuda)

MANILA, Philippines – Jerwin Ancajas’ homecoming ended with a somewhat disappointing victory as he secured a disqualification victory over Thailand’s Sukpraserd Ponpitak in a 10-round featherweight bout scheduled for Sunday at Mandaluyong City College Gym. The fight, part of the “Blow-By-Blow” boxing series, was marred by repeated fouls from the Thai veteran, ultimately leading to an abrupt stoppage in the fifth round.

Ancajas, a former IBF junior bantamweight champion, wasted no time in proving his point. The Filipino left-hander floored Ponpitak early in the first round with a powerful right hook, halting the Thai and setting the pace for the rest of the fight. While Ponpitak was recovering from the knockdown, Ancajas continued to find his rhythm, landing a series of tidy combinations to take control of the fight.

However, what started as a dominant performance by Ancajas soon turned ugly. Ponpitak, at 36 and clearly outclassed, resorted to brutal tactics. In the third round, the Taj was warned for excessive holding and sweeping Ancajas to the canvas, which cost him a point. Despite the warnings, Ponpitak persisted in using illegal moves, repeatedly clinching and forcing Ancajas to the ground.

In the fifth round, after Ponpitak once again backed Ancajas into the corner, the referee decided he had had enough and disqualified the Thai for repeated fouls, awarding the win to Ancajas via disqualification.

It was a bittersweet triumph for Ancajas, who was fighting in front of a home crowd for the first time since losing to Takuma Inoue (20-1, 5 KOs) for the WBA bantamweight title in February. The disqualification victory improves his record to 35-4-2 (23 KOs), but the nature of the victory left many in the field wishing for a more decisive finish. Ponpitak, whose brutal tactics marred what could have been a more even fight, drops to 30-20 (20 KOs).

Despite the less than ideal finish, Ancajas still showed the sharpness and power that made him a champion. His precise combinations and ring command were on full display, even if the premature end to the fight robbed him of a potential knockout.

With this win, Ancajas can now focus on returning to world title contention. Whether he stays at featherweight or decides to drop down to junior bantamweight, “Pretty Boy” still has plenty of fight left in him. While Ancajas continues to rebuild after his recent setbacks, he remains a hazardous presence in any division he chooses to campaign in.

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Yoenis Téllez-Johan González, Mateo Tapia-Endry Saavedra added to the October 19 PBC bill

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Talented Cuban junior middleweight Yoenis Téllez will face the hard-hitting Johan González on October 19, while the main event will be headlined by an IBF title fight between Bakhram Murtazaliev and Tim Tszyu.

The event at the Caribe Royale Resort in Orlando, Florida will also feature a fight between middleweight contenders Mateo Tapia and Endry Saavedra.

Ronnie Shields’ protégé Téllez will be fighting at the venue for the fifth time, with the 24-year-old holding an 8-0 (6 KO) record.

Téllez defeated Sergio Garcia last July and has since won two fights at Caribe Royale.

“Fighting an experienced fighter like Johan González is a great opportunity to show the world what I’m made of,” Téllez said. “He fought at an elite level and I expect a tough fight. I’ll leave everything in the ring.”

Gonzalez, a native of Valencia, Venezuela, currently trains in Las Vegas and is 34-3 (33 KOs). He made his U.S. debut last year but lost a decision to former world title challenger Magomed Kurbanov in 2022. Gonzalez surrendered in 2017 and won his first 22 fights before losing a split decision in 2018.

“This fight means everything to me, I have to win it,” González said. “I work tough every day to make sure I leave with my hand raised. Right now, I’m just focused on doing everything I can to keep my career moving forward.”

Tapia is a friend and sparring partner of main event contender Tszyu, while Saavedra has seven stoppages in his last seven wins.

The 26-year-old Tapia (17-0, 10 KOs) was born in Tijuana, Mexico, and has spent most of his career fighting out of Australia, as well as sparring hundreds of rounds with Tszyu. He now trains in St. Petersburg, Florida, and hopes a win over Saavedra will put him one step closer to a title shot.

“This fight is a huge opportunity for me and I’m here to take it with both hands,” Tapia said. “I’m excited to be fighting on Tim Tszyu’s undercard and I’m grateful to my team for making it happen. It’s been a long camp and I’ll definitely be ready when that bell rings on October 19th. I can’t wait to showcase my skills and proudly represent Australia and Mexico on the world stage.”

Saavedra (16-1, 13 KOs), a Venezuelan fighting out of Tijuana, Mexico, enters the fight having knocked out his last three opponents since suffering his only career loss, a decision win over Etoundi Michel William in October 2022.

The 33-year-old turned pro in 2018 and has won his first 13 fights after a lengthy amateur career, most recently traveling to Australia in March where he stopped Isaac Hardman on home turf in the eighth round of a fight he was trailing on two of three cards.

“I can’t wait to take advantage of what’s ahead of me on Oct. 19,” Saavedra said. “I plan on showing the world why I belong at the top of the middleweight division. I’m up against a tough Australian fighter who represents Mexico, so I expect a war, just like I bring it to every fight.”

TGB Promotions President Tom Brown added, “Yoenis Téllez can add his name to the star-studded lineup of top 154-pound contenders when he takes on the formidable Johan González, while Mateo Tapia is poised to make a splash in the middleweight division if he can defeat the on-the-fly Endry Saavedra in his first fight.”

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