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Bakhram Murtazaliev wins the IBF super welterweight title

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Bakhram Murtazaliev wins the IBF super welterweight title

In the latest strangely consistent trend for 2024, Russian Bakhram Murtazaliev won the vacant IBF super welterweight title today with a dramatic championship round knockout of local favorite Jack Culcay.

Murtazaliev (22-0, 16 KO), who first became the mandatory challenger in 2019, entered the ring in Brandenburg after an almost 16-month break. Culcay (33-5, 14 KO) didn’t give him time to recover, clenching his fists and trading leather with the younger, bigger man in what was, by all accounts, a great donnybrook.

But by the time the eleventh hour rolled around, the 38-year-old Culcay had run out of steam. Murtazaliev’s shocking left hook marked the beginning of the end, and although Culcay survived another broadside to beat the count, the referee rightly waved it off.

Every scorecard I saw online at the time had Culcay in the lead, and although two judges disagreed with the sporadic occurrence of Inverse German Judging, I can confidently call it a comeback. Murtazaliev follows in the footsteps of Raymond Ford, who avoided a split decision defeat by stopping Otabek Kholmatov in the dying seconds of last month’s featherweight title fight for the vacant title, and Masanori Rikiishi, who stopped Michael Magnesi in the 12th round of a WBC super featherweight eliminator less than two weeks ago.

Thanks to this victory, last week’s defeat of Sebastian Fundora to Tim Tszyu and the knockout of Magomed Kurbanov by Israil Madrimov, all four of Jermell Charlo’s previous titles gained recent homes. We’ll see how this eclectic lineup performs in the coming months.

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Analysis

Mairis Briedis retires from boxing at the age of 39

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Mairis Briedis retires from boxing at the age of 39

Three-time cruiserweight champion Mairis Briedis announced on Twitter that after almost 15 years in the ring, he calls it a career.

The Latvian had previously spent his first six years as a gigantic fish in a compact pond on the Euro circuit moving up to heavyweight to destroy Mahmoud Charr with one punch. Two years later, he won his first world title by defeating Marco Huck in Germany, thus earning a place in the inaugural WBSS cruiserweight tournament. There he defeated Mike Perez before giving Oleksandr Usyk probably the toughest fight of his professional career, losing by majority decision.

When WBSS got going again, Briedis reached the semi-finals with a controversial decision over Noel Mikaelian, who has since gone on to win the world title. What followed was an ugly, foul-filled fight with Krzysztof Głowacki, which culminated in Briedis Glowacki brutally hitting the bell in the second second and then getting there in the third.

Briedis ultimately relinquished the WBO belt during another 15-month break. Half a year into the pandemic, he finally had the opportunity to finish his run by defeating Yuniel Dorticos for the IBF title.

After defending his djme title against Artur Mann in his hometown of Riga, Briedis put on a show against Jai Opetaia, fighting in the early rounds but in return breaking his jaw and racing down the stretch en route to another narrow defeat. Their second meeting last May was not as competitive as the aging and rusty Briedis did not impose his will but once again gave Opetaia hell.

It was a career to be proud of; Briedis has remained at or near the top for many eras in the cruiserweight divisions, including some of the most talent-heavy periods in recent memory. Good luck with your future work, champ.

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Analysis

Mbilli vs Derevyanchenko: Live scores, RBR, how to watch

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Mbilli vs Derevyanchenko: Live scores, RBR, how to watch

Results

  • Christian Mbilla UD-10 Sergiy Derevyanchenko (98-92, 99-91, 100-90)
  • Guido Vianello TKO-8 Arslanbek Makhmudov (0:01)

Christian Mbilli puts his undefeated record on the line today against tough veteran Sergiy Derevyanchenko in the gala broadcast from Quebec City on ESPN.

Live coverage will begin at 10 p.m. ET on ESPN and ESPN+, with early prelim action beginning at 5 p.m. ET on ESPN+.

Mbilli (27-0, 23 KO) is potentially in prime position to face Canelo Alvarez in 2025, which isn’t a guarantee, but he needs to win today to even stay in that potential lineup. Derevyanchenko (15-5, 10 KO) doesn’t have the best record in the WL, but if you’ve seen him fight, you know he can fight, and he’s only lost to top-class fighters. It’s a test Mbilli may yet pass.

Also on the card: Arslanbek Makhmudov (19-1, 18 KO) will fight Guido Vianello (12-2-1, 10 KO) in heavyweight, and Osleys Iglesias (11-0, 10 KO) will fight Sena in super middleweight Agbeko (28-3, 22 KO) will be for many people the first chance to see Iglesias, a Cuban who started his professional career mainly in Germany, and is currently fighting in Quebec, following consecutive first-round knockouts of Marcelo Coceres and Yevgeny Szwedenko.

Live updates, highlights and results will appear in the stream below:

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Analysis

Shakur Stevenson talks about the expectations surrounding his boxing legacy

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Shakur Stevenson talks about the expectations surrounding his boxing legacy

Shakur Stevenson spent some time in-depth chatting with his mentor Andre Ward to discuss a number of topics including being a free agent, his latest fight and fan criticism, Gervonta Davis and more. Watch the full video interview in the link at the top, plus some excerpts from what Stevenson had to say below.

Stevenson on what he looks for when signing his next endorsement deal

“I just want to be in the biggest and best fights… the same fight I just had, with Artem. If it was a name that people knew and it was like a gigantic name and I had the exact same fight, they would do it. say it’s a masterpiece. They’d say it’s the greatest thing they’ve ever seen defensively and in the pocket.

“I just want to perform in front of the names, I want to be in front of the guys that they think are so good so that I can show what level I am at. So whatever situation puts me in front of my biggest and best fights, I’m OK with that.”

On whether his beef with Gervonta Davis is real or just “boxing beef”

“It’s bigger than boxing, I guess you could say, because I like the story and everything that happened… I know [that fight] will happen. I mean, I’m the best, he’s the best. You have two best players, how can you not fight? The only way you couldn’t fight is if one of them isn’t like that and someone leaves to lose, or someone takes the L. But I think for both of us, we’re fighters who are really good fighters and that’s it level.”

About what he expects from his boxing legacy

“I think I’ll go down in history as probably the best defensive player to ever do it. I want to be one of the best, I want to be on that GOAT mountain you’re sitting on, Pernell Whitaker, Floyd Mayweather, Sugar Ray Leonard, Sugar Ray Robinson, Muhammad Ali… I’m just trying to climb it and get there.

“When all is said and done, they will respect me.”

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