WBO BRIAN Norman JR, Brian Sr. Master, overthrew after his single-speed pretender Jin Sasaki (19-2-1, 17 KO) on Thursday evening at the OTA-CITY Junior High School General Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan. Brian Sr. He believes that the win has proved something and scared off by Jaron “Boots” Ennis, who announced that he would move to 154.
Norman Jr. He batted Sasaki with power arrows, knocking him down three times and left him seriously because of the third knocking out in the fifth round. He had to be pulled out of the ring.
Brian Sr. Gloats, Rips Ennis
“You heard what Brian Jr. said when a storm is coming. You grab your shoes and run,” said Brian Norman Sr. Social mediaEnjoying his son’s victory over Jin Sasaki on Thursday evening, and slamming Jaron Ennis for running to 154, and not stay in the fight. “People didn’t know why he [Ennis] He worked. Now you will see why he was running. “
Norman Jr. CV: good enough?
Boxing fans would buy the idea of Ennis shoes escaping from the 147 pounds division to avoid Norman Jr. if the WBO master is fighting a better opposition. Defeating training bags such as Jin Sasaki, it is not enough for Norman Jr. He made people believe that he had tried in Ennis. To be taken seriously, Norman Jr. He must add these names to his CV:
“He knew what was going on, he knew what was going on, said Norman Sr. about Ennis shoes.” A man [Brian Norman Jr.] He is 24 years venerable, sleeping people, sending them from the ring on a stretcher. Everything do you want this part? I would not like any part of this if I was [Ennis]. In a completely different country, allowing people. “
Why ennis avoided Norman Jr.
ENNISA promoter, Eddie Hearn, says that he moves to 154 because he had only 50% after gaining his last fight with Stanionis. Hearn says that Boots told him that he did not feel mighty after gaining weight, and felt that he would have his strength at the age of 154. Of course, time is suspicious, approaching when Norman Jr. He defends against Sasaki. This makes the shoes look away from him after watching the victory.
“Brick by brick. Lack of vision test titles. Earned. This s *** was earned. All this earned. [Norman Jr] The last last opponents had a total 78-2 record with a 50-year knockout, “said Brian Sr.” Do research. Jin Sasaki, took 2nd place in WBO. He took 6th place in the Ring magazine Giovani Santillon took first place in WBO. He took 4th place now after he was defeated by my son and magazine Ring. “
Those guys who were defeated by Brian Norman Jr. were not so good. Santillon and Sasaki never beat anyone good. What’s more, the WBO decision to order Sasaki in second place was strange because his CV is completely empty from his names.
The final decision may come after the Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao rematch drama ends.
Earlier this year, it was announced that Mayweather and Pacquiao were set to fight professionally more than 10 years after their first meeting, with the event streaming live on Netflix and taking place on September 19 at The Sphere in Las Vegas.
In recent weeks the duel was in doubt, after Mayweather stated that the fight would instead be an exhibition, while Pacquiao continues to insist that it must be a fully sanctioned fight.
Since it is currently unknown whether this will actually come to fruition, this has probably given the clearest signal that this will no longer happen.
Conversation with FightHypepromoter Eddie Hearn said he thinks Netflix can now focus on the WBC welterweight title fight between Ryan Garcia and Conor Benn, essentially replacing the Mayweather-Pacquiao event.
“It’s all a mess. I’m surprised Netflix got into this whole circus… Netflix is modern to boxing, but they need to be a little more solid in the routine because you can’t actually call the fight and it just falls by the wayside and it just doesn’t look great.”
“NO [I don’t believe it will happen]not now. Netflix is only going to do so many fights and the Benn-Garcia fight is now said to be on September 12 or whenever that happens, so obviously this is the fight to replace Mayweather-Pacquiao.
“If it happened Mayweather-Pacquiao, they are committed to that fight, but if it doesn’t happen they will want another fight and from the sound of it it will be Garcia vs. Benn.”
The world title fight between Garcia and Benn has been widely discussed this month, and if Hearn is right, it could spell the end of any hopes of Mayweather and Pacquiao fighting again.
“I think my size and youth should be a gigantic advantage. It gives me an even better chance to win,” Nakatani told The Ring.
Inoue’s reluctance to make the jump to 126 pounds at featherweight may be the most truthful admission of his physical limitations.
Inoue has fought fighters who hydrated to be hefty, but Nakatani is elevated. At 5’7″ or 5’8″, he has the skeletal leverage of a natural featherweight or super featherweight.
Most of Inoue’s opponents end up with confined time as they have to rush to hit him. Nakatani can theoretically sit outside and throw a punch without putting his chin in the red zone.
The numbers support this belief on paper. Nakatani will enter with a three-inch height advantage, a slight reach advantage and a five-year age difference. He also has natural size from climbing three weight classes, which he plans to exploit for the full distance rather than chasing an early finish.
“This fight will 100% be a war and I think I will win by decision once I overcome everything Inoue throws at me,” Nakatani said.
In his December victory over Sebastian Hernandez, Nakatani was forced into a fierce fight in which both men landed heavily, taking 273 punches in a back-and-forth fight that went the distance. He showed toughness, but also suggested he could get hit when exchanges open up.
It’s not that Inoue is afraid of fighting a bigger opponent, but more that he is a perfectionist who knows that when you lose your physical advantage, you have to rely completely on your endurance. Nakatani is the first fighter in a long time who can actually make Inoue look petite in the ring.
Mexican boxing legend Erik Morales, who is the same age as Floyd Mayweather, presented his version of the 49-year-old’s expected rematch with Manny Pacquiao.
The two pound-for-pound icons will face off in a professional competition on September 19, headlining the Netflix event at The Sphere in Las Vegas.
However, their second meeting seemed to be in jeopardy after Mayweather stated last month that it would be an exhibition match.
Pacquiao and his team have since stated that it will be a fully sanctioned fight, but we are still waiting for an official announcement.
Their first meeting took place in 2015 and earned Mayweather a unanimous decision victory in an event that quickly became known as the most lucrative boxing event of all time.
But now the 47-year-old hopes to break Mayweather’s 50-0 record after ending his nearly four-year hiatus from professional boxing last July.
But while the Filipino drew with Mario Barrios, the then-WBC welterweight champion, many suggested he and Mayweather shouldn’t be entering the ring at this stage of their lives.
One of them is Morales, who fought Pacquiao three times, winning the first meeting but losing the next two. He told Fight Hub TV that the rematch would be won by the Hall of Famer who turned down the fight the least.
“We’re not at the age to get into fights. But hey, it’ll be intriguing. Whoever arrives the least injured and a little faster, [will win]”
Erik Morales Predicts Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2‼️‼️
“We’re not at the age to get into fights… This will be intriguing. Whoever wins must come to fight less hurt and a little faster!” – Erik Morales
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