Anthony Cacace (24-1, 9 KO) says he feels like he is getting elderly like a film character “Benjamin Button” Advanced age 36, along with its ninth technical rune knockout of the former two-time featherweight champion WBA Leigh Wood (28-4, 17 KO) on Saturday evening at Motorpoint Arena in Nothingham, England.
Wood was poured and overtaken by a higher, better qualified cocoa. In the ninth round, Cacace finished, discharging the intention of blows, sending wood staggering to the ropes. Judge John Latham gave him eight constant. Leigh tried to fight later, but Cacace continued his relentless attack, nailing him with hooks, mountains and body arrows.
Towel of surrender
Finally, Wood desperately tried to withdraw through the ring, turning his back on the cocoa. Coach Wooda saw that his warrior was in a desperate position and decided to throw a towel. Davison gets quite good in throwing towels, as he did with wood before. He should stand and fight like a warrior to the end, but he turned and escaped. I don’t know what to say about it. It speaks a little for herself, right? The stop time was 2:15 round of nine.
Cacace showed with his performance that he was still fighting at a high level, and he lost nothing of his wins last year against Joe Cordin and Josh Warrington. However, Wood, 36 years elderly, was not an ideal meter to say how much Irish Kokakk remained in the tank. Leigh came out of a 19-month release and was never considered a real world-class warrior at the elite level.
Wood’s claim to fame was to defeat Can Xu, Mauricio Lara and Michael Conlan. None of these fighters are in the same galaxy as the killer in Feather Wweight: Rafael Espinosis, Stephen Fulton, Nick Ball and Angelo Leo. Even pretenders from Feather Wweight, fighters such as Bruce Carrington and Brandon Figueroa, would be a pure nightmare for wood.
Age objected
“I feel that I am Benjamin boxing. I work from elderly age,” said Anthony Cacace Ring magazineAbout a high level at which he still appeared, fighting like a warrior in the behind schedule 1920s.
“To get this one tonight. I’m very elated [for Leigh Wood]. “
Conor Benn’s manager has provided an update on Ryan Garcia’s situation, admitting there is a possibility of negotiations “falling apart” in the coming weeks.
Talks about their potential reunion are apparently progressing gradually, with the pair expected to fight for Garcia’s WBC welterweight world title later this year.
It was his first victory since 2023, and the American’s previous two appearances ended with a points defeat against Rolando Romero and a no-contest against Devin Haney.
Between these two fights, Garcia received a one-year ban after testing positive for the banned substance ostarine, which called into question the credibility of his performance against Haney.
Benn also previously tested positive for a performance-enhancing substance – specifically clomiphene – but nonetheless emerged as a top contender for the WBC 147-pound title.
After missing the weight since 2022, the 29-year-old is coming off a 10-round points victory over the retired Regis Prograis, whom he fought at the 150-pound catchweight on the undercard of the Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov fight last month.
Benn has since doubled down on his desire to face Garcia, while manager Keith Connolly told Boxing News the odds of the fight happening are basically 50/50.
“We are in negotiations [Garcia-Benn]along with several other large fights. I’ve seen it happen; I saw it fall apart, but right now we’re focused on this fight.
“I think it’s a great fight for both fighters. It will be a huge fight if it takes place here [in the UK] and it will be a fierce battle in which it is fought [Las] Vegas. It’s a sale wherever it goes.
“I think we’ll know in the next few weeks where we’re going, but it’s definitely a fight we want.”
Benn’s victory over Prograis followed his middleweight triumph over Chris Eubank Jr in November, when “The Destroyer” gained revenge after losing their opening bout by unanimous decision.
Keyshawn Davis says he still doesn’t know why a fight never broke out with Devin Haney after talks between both camps earlier this year.
Davis was talking about Haney after he dominated Nahir Albright for 12 rounds on Saturday night in Norfolk. Although Keyshawn won a wide unanimous decision over Albright, he later admitted that he had been in bigger fights before the rematch was finalized.
“I went up to Bill in January and he told me to keep my word after the fight,” Keyshawn later told the media. “Why it didn’t happen, I don’t know.”
Davis also revealed that he tried to secure fights with Lamont Roach Jr. and Oscar Duarte before returning to fight Albright.
“I was on the phone with Lamont Roach trying to make this happen,” Davis said. “I also tried to contact Oscar Duarte.”
The Norfolk native made it clear after the fight that he viewed a rematch with Albright as an inferior option compared to the opponents he originally wanted.
“I wanted to fight a better opponent,” Davis said. “He’s actually a decent player. He’s just not at the highest level.”
Davis dominated most of the rematch despite a two-point deduction after Albright hit the clinch in the seventh round. He controlled the action with faster hands, cleaner combinations and stronger work towards the end of the fight.
After the victory, Davis reiterated that he is open to more fights with bigger names.
“Whoever wants to fight the businessman, let them do it,” Davis said.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fighting landscape. His reports focus on the most essential fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
Filip Hrgovic made it basic for Dave Allen and took advantage of the moments after the fight to send a chilling message to rising star Moses Itauma.
Doncaster fans were unable to lift hometown hero Allen to the level of Hrgovic, who dominated from the opening bell until coach Jamie Moore threw in the towel to spare his players another day.
Croatian Hrgovic quickly apologized to the fans in the stadium.
“I’m sorry guys. I know I’m not the favorite guy here. That’s the way it is, that’s boxing. Thank you to Dave Allen, his team, Queensberry and DAZN for this event. I’m pushing forward to become the heavyweight champion of the world.
“I started quickly because I saw all my punches connecting. He was very awkward from the beginning, so I wanted to finish him quickly to make a statement.”
“I want to fight anyone in the division. Moses, anyone. I just have to sit down with the manager and the team, see if there are any injuries or cuts. Give me a mirror, I’ll sign a contract now… I never run away from any opponent… Listen, if I’m fit, there’s no problem for me. We have to see what’s going on. I need to rest. Moses will never make it to the promised land. Do you know what I mean?”
Promoter George Warren has made it clear that Itauma-Hrgovic is the target, but he is aware that the next few days will be crucial to see if the schedule is right for the Croatian, who had a miniature cut on his skin before going to the towel.
“Yes, we can… This fight is already here. Finished. Filip, when he re-signed with Queensberry, was left on the contract on the basis that this fight was one of the options we could offer him. As he said, he has a slight scratch in his eye and he needs to go and make sure everything is OK.
“Moses is booked for August. As soon as we get back to the office next week, that’s my job. To finish and announce this fight. This guy is a world-class operator and if Moses wants to be world champion, Filip wants to be world champion; they’re going to have to deal with it at some point, so let’s deal with it now.”
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