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Foster Defeats Ford and Prepares for Showdown Against Shakur Stevenson

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"Foster Defeats Ford and Prepares for Showdown Against Shakur Stevenson"

O’Shaquie Foster pulled away in the second half to outpoint Raymond Ford and retain his WBC super featherweight title on Saturday at the Fertitta Center in Houston, then turned his attention to the fighter he has been chasing, Ford’s close friend and Ring and WBO junior welterweight champion Shakur Stevenson. The Matchroom Boxing card aired on DAZN.

Foster (25-3, 12 KOs) won by majority decision after 12 rounds. One judge scored it even at 114-114, while the other two saw it 118-110 and 116-112 for the champion. Ford (18-2-1, 8 KOs), the former WBA featherweight titleholder moving up in search of a second divisional belt, was unable to close the gap on the cards. There were no knockdowns.

Foster pressed forward early behind his jab rather than settling into his usual counterpunching, and the opening round drew the two into a heated exchange along the ropes. Ford found his footing in the second, timing the champion with pointed left hands as a southpaw, digging to the body, and making Foster pay when he overcommitted. The early rounds were closely contested, with the fighters trading momentum and Ford’s pressure dictating the tempo in stretches. At the midway point, DAZN’s Chris Mannix had Ford ahead 67-66 on his unofficial card.

The fight tilted toward Foster through the middle rounds. He raised his output, stepped into range behind the jab, and mixed in the uppercut and a check right hand that repeatedly forced Ford to reset. By the seventh, Foster was largely setting the terms. Ford mounted a final push in the 10th, landing body shots and briefly backing Foster to the ropes in one of his better rounds of the second half, but he could not sustain it. Foster took the 11th and 12th to seal the decision. The spread on the scorecards, from even to 118-110, reflected differing reads of a tight contest.

The result set up a heated exchange after the final bell. Stevenson, who had publicly picked Ford to win, came face to face with Foster in the ring. Foster has repeatedly named Stevenson as the fight he wants next, a matchup that would require him to move up from 130 pounds to junior welterweight. Stevenson took the Ring and WBO 140-pound titles from Teofimo Lopez at Madison Square Garden in January to become a four-division champion, and was later stripped of his WBC lightweight title. Yahoo Sports has round-by-round coverage of the bout and the post-fight confrontation.

Undercard Results

  • Charlie Sheehy def. Nike Theran, ninth-round TKO (1:51), lightweight; Sheehy improves to 13-0 (8 KOs)
  • Omari Jones def. Diego Zuniga, unanimous decision (80-71 x3), super welterweight, with a first-round knockdown; Jones improves to 7-0
  • Javon Woodard Jr. def. Miguel Flores, eighth-round TKO (2:31); Woodard improves to 17-2 (15 KOs)
  • Zaquin Moses def. Travis Crawford, unanimous decision (60-54 x3), super featherweight
  • Jahyden Britton def. Najee West, fourth-round TKO, super middleweight
  • Frank Espinoza def. Bryce Blackwell, fourth-round retirement (corner stoppage), middleweight
  • Julian Montalvo def. Maximus Moya, fourth-round TKO, super featherweight

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Prince Naseem Hamed Reveals True Motivation for Early Retirement at 28: I Wanted to Carry On

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"Prince Naseem Hamed Reveals True Motivation for Early Retirement at 28: 'I Wanted to Carry On'"

Prince Naseem Hamed would have loved to remain in the sport but, after repeatedly experiencing an “obscene amount of pain”, he ultimately decided to retire in 2002.

The mercurial talent had become a world featherweight champion in 1995, dethroning Steve Robinson with an eighth-round stoppage to claim the WBO title.

‘Naz’ then went on to unify his division and make multiple iconic title defences, most notably scoring a fourth-round finish over Kevin Kelley in 1997.

Their thrilling battle saw both men climb off the canvas at Madison Square Garden, where Hamed endeared himself to the American audience with his flamboyance in and out the ring.

Another stunning fourth-round stoppage came in 2000, when the Sheffield man was once again sent to the deck, this time by Augie Sanchez, who is perhaps best known for defeating Floyd Mayweather in the amateurs.

In the end, Hamed emerged victorious but suffered his only professional defeat, against Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera, in his following outing.

Yet it was not for this reason that he retired at 28 years ancient, but rather because the sport had taken its toll on his hands.

Speaking with talkSPORTHamed explained that such injuries prevented him from having another roll of the dice at world level.

“I would’ve loved to carry on … but I just felt like: what’s the employ in trying to do what you [want to] do [when] it won’t work?

“If your hands keep breaking, and every time you hit [someone] you get an obscene amount of pain … I won the world title and defended it 15 times. What more should I want?”

Following his unanimous decision defeat to Barrera‘Naz’ convincingly outpointed Manuel Calvo but nonetheless called time on his career in 2002.

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Prince Naseem Hamed Reveals True Reason for Early Retirement at 28: I Wanted to Carry On

Published

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"Prince Naseem Hamed Reveals True Reason for Early Retirement at 28: 'I Wanted to Carry On'"

Prince Naseem Hamed would have loved to remain in the sport but, after repeatedly experiencing an “obscene amount of pain”, he ultimately decided to retire in 2002.

The mercurial talent had become a world featherweight champion in 1995, dethroning Steve Robinson with an eighth-round stoppage to claim the WBO title.

‘Naz’ then went on to unify his division and make multiple iconic title defences, most notably scoring a fourth-round finish over Kevin Kelley in 1997.

Their thrilling battle saw both men climb off the canvas at Madison Square Garden, where Hamed endeared himself to the American audience with his flamboyance in and out the ring.

Another stunning fourth-round stoppage came in 2000, when the Sheffield man was once again sent to the deck, this time by Augie Sanchez, who is perhaps best known for defeating Floyd Mayweather in the amateurs.

In the end, Hamed emerged victorious but suffered his only professional defeat, against Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera, in his following outing.

Yet it was not for this reason that he retired at 28 years aged, but rather because the sport had taken its toll on his hands.

Speaking with talkSPORTHamed explained that such injuries prevented him from having another roll of the dice at world level.

“I would’ve loved to carry on … but I just felt like: what’s the utilize in trying to do what you [want to] do [when] it won’t work?

“If your hands keep breaking, and every time you hit [someone] you get an obscene amount of pain … I won the world title and defended it 15 times. What more should I want?”

Following his unanimous decision defeat to Barrera‘Naz’ convincingly outpointed Manuel Calvo but nonetheless called time on his career in 2002.

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Anthony Joshua Reveals His Favorite Opponent: The First Man to Knock Him Down

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"Anthony Joshua Reveals His Favorite Opponent: The First Man to Knock Him Down"

Anthony Joshua has named his favourite ever opponent ahead of facing domestic rival Tyson Fury later this year.

Their long-awaited showdown is set to be staged in November, yet there has still been no announcement regarding a specific date, location and promoter.

Perhaps more importantly, Joshua and Fury must also come through their respective warm-up fights against Kristian Prenga and Mariusz Wach, which will take place at the end of this month in Saudi Arabia and Thailand.

Both are heavily favoured to emerge victorious on that particular weekend, yet there is always the possibility of an injury or upset.

It is more likely, however, that the two British heavyweights will eventually lock horns, albeit at a time when they are long past their primes.

Both were considered close to their best when they secured respective victories over Wladimir Klitschko, who ‘AJ’ defeated with an 11th-round finish in 2017.

This came after Fury dethroned the long-reigning champion in 2015, yet Joshua’s triumph was nonetheless considered an impressive result at the time.

And with no shortage of respect between the Brit and Ukrainian, it is hardly surprising that Joshua has named Klitschko as his favourite ever opponent.

Speaking with DAZNthe 36-year-old immediately said “Wladimir” when asked the question, perhaps reflecting on their thrilling encounter at Wembley Stadium.

Both heavyweights had suffered ponderous knockdowns, with ‘AJ’ being sent to the canvas for the first time in his career in the sixth roundbut it was Joshua who ultimately floored his older opponent on two more occasions in round 11.

Having already claimed the IBF belt, the then-unbeaten champion added the vacant WBA strap to his collection and reigned as the unified king until 2019, when he suffered a major upset defeat to Andy Ruiz Jr.

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