Connect with us

Interviews

I’ll show Ammo Williams the level, he’s not ready for me

Published

on

Austin

Denis Douglin with Floyd Mayweather Jr, his mom and trainer after a 2am sparring session last year Photo: Instagram @mommasboy_denis
Denis Douglin with Floyd Mayweather Jr, his mom and trainer after a 2am sparring session last year Photo: Instagram @mommasboy_denis

Denis Douglin believes Saturday night in Dallas will be a step too far for Austin “Ammo” Williams.

Douglin (22-7, 14 KOs) replaced original opponent Aaron Coley, who was forced to withdraw due to injury, and the American now had the opportunity to face undefeated middleweight prospect Williams (7-0, 6 KOs) on the undercard, with the rematch between super flyweight champions Juan Estrada and Roman “Chocolatito” Gonzalez taking place live on DAZN.

The 32-year-old, who has faced the likes of George Groves, Jermell Charlo and David Benavidez in defeat, believes he will have too much experience for the 24-year-old, who is only fighting for the eighth time in his professional career.

“I sparred with Aaron Coley two weeks ago, who was preparing for his fight, and it was a great job,” Douglin said. proboxing-fans.com.

“But I think I hit him with a body shot that hurt him, and I think, I’m not sure, but now I hear he got hurt in sparring, so I think it was me, and he had to pull out of the fight unfortunately.

“But the fight landed in my lap, so I think I created my own fight, man, so it was kind of crazy. They offered me the fight, I said yes right away, and here we are.

“I think he’s a good fighter, he’s undefeated, I hear he’s a good amateur. I think he’s got a lot of good things coming his way.

“I just think I’m a little too much for him now, so I’ll show that it’s there at a certain level. He’s not ready for me yet, maybe next year he would be ready, this year he’s not ready.

“So I’m going to show that he’s bitten him off a little more than he can chew, but like I said, he’s a beast, I feel like he’s going to bounce back, that first loss is the hardest loss, but he’ll get through it.”

Austin “Ammo” Williams is unbeaten in seven fights and has six knockouts. Photo: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom
Austin “Ammo” Williams is unbeaten in seven fights and has six knockouts. Photo: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom

“Momma’s Boy” is fighting for the first time since losing a split decision to Mike Guy in November 2019 and was given a two-pound break at Friday’s weigh-in after entering the fight on just one week’s notice, with the bout scheduled for 160 pounds.

The Brooklynite, who plans to move up to middleweight after this fight after having fought at super middleweight throughout his 12-year professional career, is hoping a win over “Ammo” will earn him a rematch with Charlo, as well as a run with former sparring partner Chris Eubank Jr.

“I want to go out there [to the UK] and fight with Chris [Eubank Jr]So hopefully after this fight I can speak recklessly and get Chris to fight me at the O2 Arena,” Douglin added.

“When I was with Chris in camp before the James DeGale fight, we went to war, it was great sparring, we had a great time. Shout out to Chris, he’s a great fighter.

“I want to fight the best, no animosity, no beef, if you’re good, why not fight someone good?

Douglin is keen to fight former sparring partner Chris Eubank Jr if he beats Ammo Williams
Douglin is keen to face former sparring partner Chris Eubank Jr if he beats Ammo Williams

“I think Chris is good, I want to fight Chris who weighs 160 pounds, and then as I move up the ranks I want to fight the best, I want to fight one of the Charlos.

“I fought Jermell back in the day when I was living recklessly, so I want to fight Jermall, beat him, and then fight Jerrell, beat him.”

Douglin, who owns his own gym in Las Vegas and last year took part in late-night sparring sessions with Floyd Mayweather Jr, is adamant about inspiring the next generation of talent and showing that despite seven defeats to his name, he will not let his ambitions deter him.

“I want to be known as one of the best, one of the guys who got knocked down a lot but got back up and kept going and really believed in himself, really believed in his team and made it happen.

“That’s what I’m excited about. It’s a chance to show difficult work, dedication and perseverance.

“For me it’s something deeper than a title or a world record, it’s about being an inspiration to many people, many people call me every day, I get text messages every day, people say: “Your page is inspiring” “Whatever it is”, “you made me go back to dancing, I picked up a basketball again”.

“That’s what I want to do, man, I want to inspire people, so I feel like the best way to inspire is to live, not just talk.

“So I’m proof that if you don’t give up and you don’t give up, you can find a way for yourself, so I’m looking forward to being able to show that.”

The Williams vs. Douglin fight will air live Saturday night on DAZN

Watch the full interview with Denis Douglin below:

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Interviews

Natasha Jonas vs. Ivana Habazin

Published

on

Jonas dominated Habazin Photo Credit: Chris Dean/ Boxxer

Natasha Jonas became the unified welterweight world champion after defeating Ivana Habazin in Liverpool on Saturday. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Natasha Jonas became the unified welterweight world champion after defeating Ivana Habazin in Liverpool on Saturday. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer

Natasha Jonas unified the welterweight division by defeating Ivana Habazin by clear points on Saturday to add the WBC title to her IBF crown at the Exhibition Center in Liverpool.

Jonas (16-2-1, 9 KO) was last seen defending her title in January in a hard-fought split decision over Mikaela Mayer, while Habazin (23-6, 7 KO) won the vacant WBC welterweight title in her home country. time out, winning by wide points over Kinga Magyar.

After a technical opening round, Jonas settled into a steady rhythm before landing a powerful right hand in the fourth round that crushed Habazin.

There was a rivalry, but the home favorite was much better in the rallies and seemed to be losing round after round.

This situation lasted until the final bell, when Jonas became the winner by scores of 100-90, 99-91 and 99-92.

Jonas dominated Habazin. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Jonas dominated Habazin. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Price is closing in on Jonas’ match

Lauren Price definitely stayed on as a collision course with Jonas and easily defended her WBA and IBO welterweight titles after a third-round fight against Bexcy Mateus.

Mateus (7-1, 6 KO) was on board in the first round, after the Welshman landed a powerful left hand, and the Colombian struggled to match Price’s speed.

The same shot caused the 29-year-old to repeat the punch in the second round, and the round later ended when another stinging left hand stunned Meteus and she fell to the canvas, after which the fight was stopped.

Price (8-0, 2 KO) has agreed to face Jonas next, and promoter Ben Shalom revealed it could be announced next week.

Knife edge passes McKenna

Lee Cutler scored an upset victory to claim the silver WBC International welterweight title after winning a majority decision against Stephen McKenna.

McKenna (15-1, 14 KO) was eliminated in the first round, his knee touching the canvas after being tagged, and Cutler (15-1, 7 KO) took full advantage of his opponent’s weakness in the seventh round when his right hand plunged into his knee. The Irishman who ultimately fell once again.

McKenna was relentless in his attacks and landed a huge number of punches.

The balance of 94-94 was surpassed by the scores of 95-93 and 96-92, which ensured the victory for Cutler.

Jeffers stopped Quartey

Mark Jeffers is on track for large fights in 2025 after defeating Joshua Quartey to defend his silver Commonwealth super middleweight title.

A pair of right hands put Quartey (10-1, 9 KO) on the board, and although he broke the count, a well-placed body shot after the restart by Jeffers (19-0, 6 KO) blew the guy away again.

A crazy attack after the restart forced a stoppage.

Jeffers destroyed Quartey. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Jeffers destroyed Quartey. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Riley secures Chamberlain’s face-off with a stoppage

Viddal Riley finished the heavyweight fight and stopped Dan Garber in the second of the scheduled six rounds.

Riley (12-0, 7 KO) hit Garber (7-4, 2 KO) with his right hand, and then his next attack forced the referee’s intervention.

Riley’s next match will be against Isaac Chamberlain on February 1.

Riley and Chamberlain will fight on February 1. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Riley and Chamberlain will fight on February 1. Photo: Chris Dean/Boxxer
Undercard remaining

Mason Cartwright (21-4-1, 8 KO) won all six rounds at super welterweight against Dzmitry Atrokhau (16-25, 7 KO), and Hope lightweight Frankie Stringer (9-0, 1 KO) did the same in the fight against Tatenda Mangombe (3-9-1).

In the flyweight division, Mikie Tallon (6-0) defeated Benn Norman (7-7) with a body shot in the first round of the match, and then settled for a 59-54 victory.

The only fighter to fight four rounds in the super featherweight division was Mason Devine (6-0, 1 KO), who won every session against Jayo Fernando Duran (15-34-1, 14 KO).

Continue Reading

Interviews

Dillian Whyte explains how Tyson Fury can defeat Oleksandr Usyk

Published

on

Usyk put in a sublime performance to beat Fury in May Photo Credit: Mikey Williams/Top Rank

Whyte gave Fury's former opponent some advice. Photo: Scott Kirkland/FOX Sports/Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing
Whyte gave Fury’s former opponent some advice. Photo: Scott Kirkland/FOX Sports/Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing

Dillian Whyte has revealed his predictions for the hotly anticipated rematch between Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury on December 21.

Fury, who knocked out Whyte at Wembley Stadium in 2022, will seek revenge for the only defeat of his career in just 11 days, after losing to Usyk by split decision earlier this year.

Despite losing the night, “The Gypsy King” was a major success and many are struggling to pick a winner in his second battle against the imperious Ukrainian.

Some experts believe Fury needs to be more aggressive and take the lead if he is to win.

I’m talking to Social boxingWhyte revealed he shared that view, asking the Morecambe man to return to the game plan that saw him destroy Deontay Wilder in the return leg.

Usyk puts in a great performance beating Fury in May. Photo: Mikey Williams/top position
Usyk puts in a great performance beating Fury in May. Photo: Mikey Williams/Top Rank

“It’s a great fight, man, I’m still trying to think – how will this fight go?

“Okay, Fury can make changes, but Usyk can make changes too. It’s a tough fight, a very, very tough fight for both fighters.

“If I were Fury’s coach, I would tell him he has to play aggressively.

“Fight him like you fought Wilder the second time.

“Bring back the aggression, bring back the tyrant!

Whyte was brutally stopped by Fury Photo Credit: Queensberry Promotions
Whyte was brutally stopped by Fury Photo Credit: Queensberry Promotions

“This is heavyweight boxing – you never know.”

It is unclear whether Fury will heed the advice of Whyte and others in the boxing world who have advised him to take the fight to Usyk, but looks noticeably heavier than before the first fight.

Win or lose, the 36-year-old could face a long-awaited home fight against Anthony Joshua, even though “A.J.” interrupted defeat against Daniel Dubois in September.

While it may not have been as great a spectacle as it once was, a clash between Joshua and Fury would still be by far the biggest all-British fight in recent memory.

As for Whyte, he returns to the ring next Sunday night and will face Ghanaian heavyweight Ebenezer Tetteh live on DAZN in Gibraltar.

Continue Reading

Interviews

Gervonta Davis asks why he should fight Shakur Stevenson

Published

on

Davis will face Lamont Roach on March 1st (Photo Credit: Eshter Lin, PBC)

It looks like the Davis vs. Stevenson fight won't happen anytime soon. (Amanda Wescott, Showtime + Mikey Williams, top position)
It looks like the Davis vs. Stevenson fight won’t happen anytime soon. (Amanda Wescott, Showtime + Mikey Williams, top position)

The All-American fight between lightweight world champions Gervonta Davis and Shakur Stevenson is one of the most anticipated fights in all of boxing.

Both Davis and Stevenson are undefeated multi-weight champions and are staples on any respected pound-for-pound list.

With this in mind, you could be forgiven for assuming that the pair locking corners in their prime years is a given, but that doesn’t seem likely to happen in the near future.

“Tank” spoke to the media at the press conference inaugurating his performance March 1 fight with Lamont Roach, and when the prospect of fighting Stevenson arose, he didn’t seem particularly interested.

The Baltimore hitter even went so far as to question what his compatriot did to deserve him.

Davis will face Lamont Roach on March 1 (Photo: Eshter Lin, PBC)
Davis will face Lamont Roach on March 1 (Photo: Eshter Lin, PBC)

“What for? Who has Shakur [beat]? What did Shakur do?

“What has he achieved in sports? He didn’t do anything! Juvenile people look better than him!”

“Keyshawn [Davis] you look so much better than that nigga! Shout it out nigga, he ain’t done nothing!

“Why the hell are you saying his name?”

Like Davis, Stevenson will also return to action in the first quarter of next year, fighting against up-and-comer Floyd Schofield on the February 22 Riyad season card.

Stevenson returns to action on February 22 in Riyad. Photo: Mikey Williams Top Rank
Stevenson returns to action on February 22 in Riyad. Photo: Mikey Williams Top Rank

The Newark southpaw has been sidelined since his July decision victory over Artem Harutyunyan after he had to withdraw from a proposed October fight with Joe Cordina due to injury.

Saudi boxing boss Turki Alalshikh has expressed his willingness to have a fight between the two virtuosos, provided both are successful in their upcoming fights.

While he undoubtedly has the talent to rival Davis, Stevenson is not as commercial a star as his rival, and some critics believe he needs to start giving more entertaining performances if he wants to get substantial names.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending