Friday, 21 October 2011

Wonjongkam retained his WBC World Flyweight belt over Edgar Sosa.

The Thunder Puncher” Pongsaklek Kaiyanghadaogym aka. P. Wonjongkam retained his WBC World Flyweight belt by impressive unanimous decision won over mandatory challenger “Iron Man” Edgar Sosa who is current WBC Emeritus Champion of the world in Light Flyweight Division and also World Boxing Council (WBC) International Flyweight champion at temporary boxing stadium in 11th Infantry Regiment, King’s Guard, Bangkean District, Bangkok, Thailand on October 21, 2011.

The lefty Thai world champion who had good training under supervision with former WBC World Flyweight champion Chatchai Sasakul, used his superior boxing skill to take advantage and overwhelm the attacking from Sosa since the opening bell sound. Pongsaklek landed more effective counter straight lefts to the face and body of the Mexican challenger and got more points over Sosa. Nearly the end of round 9 both fighters got the accidental head clash causing to cut Sosa’s right eyelid and also the referee called 3 judges to deduct 1 point from the scorecard of the Thailander.

Sosa tired to do more aggressive style in last 3 rounds but Pongsaklek stilled keep hid effective counter attack until the last bell sounds. The official scorecards were read 116-111, 117-110 and 117-110 all favor for Thai champion. Pongsaklek retained his belt by an impressive unanimous decision over his fifth Mexican challenger.



Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Mudine cruises past Alvarez on points as he eyes future fight with Trout.

Anthony Mudine returned to his best to defeat Rigoberto Alvarez in Newcastle , New South Wales last night and keep alive his dream of becoming world champion in a third weight division.

In a fight that could have ended his career had he lost, Mundine was far too hungry, coming out strongly before using his quick left jab to take control of the fight.
From the beginning it was Mundine who came out firing, claiming honours in the first round before Alvarez awoke and fired back with a series of body blows to take the second. Alvarez momentarily wrested back momentum in the sixth but it was Mundine who came home the more powerful.

Two judges had 'The Man' winning comfortably 1117-111 while the third scored a tighter fight, 114-113.

"I produced something a lot of people didn't think I could," Mundine said after the fight.
"Sorry there wasn't a knockout. I was going for it."

Mundine is now expected to fight Trout sometime early next year, with the WBA champion revealing this week that US network HBO was keen to broadcast a bout between himself and Mundine. Trout must first overcome Australian light middleweight Frank LoPorto (15-4-2) on November 11.

"Bring on that sucker. He was talking crap about me, saying this, saying that ... so bring it on Austin," Mundine said.

Monday, 17 October 2011

Mundine's last chance to conquer world

Anthony Mundine knows tomorrow's fight with Rigoberto Alvarez is the first step in what is his last chance to make a name for himself on the international stage.
Anthony Mundine (42-4-0) and Rigoberto Alvarez (27-3-0) meet in Newcastle on Wednesday night, both looking to secure themselves a world title shot.

The man in their sights is American, Austin Trout, who defeated Alvarez for the interim WBA Junior Middleweight Title back in February of this year. As it happened, Rigoberto Alvarez had originally agreed to travel to Australia to defend his title against Mundine at the same time. All Mundine needed to do was beat fellow Australian and The Contender winner, Garth Wood. The knockout loss for Mundine dashed those plans – Alvarez fought Trout and lost the interim WBA Junior Middleweight Title. Mundine had been in talks with the Trout camp to have the American defend his title in Australia; however it’s reported that talks broke down when both camps could not agree on a contract, with a dispute set to have been over the amount of options that the Trout camp would hold over Mundine for future fights.

This is no easy assignment for Mundine.

Recently he has suffered a knockout loss to Garth Wood, followed by a scratchy and by no means convincing display in the rematch, despite winning. His last fight was against Xavier Toliver (23-6-0), and although more a keep busy fight, he still needed seven rounds to get past a clearly outmatched opponent. Mundine has always promised the world, and for the last two years he has been spruiking a move to America and a desire to take on the best. The move to fight Alvarez is a giant leap in the right direction, and Mundine has highlighted a clear path he wishes to follow. A win over Alvarez will see him fight Trout for the interim title, which will make him the first man to win three world titles in descending weight divisions.

But the biggest thing that will throw Mundine’s plans into chaos, is standing in the opposite corner come Wednesday night. Rigoberto Alvarez is no walkover. He is a crafty southpaw, who is going to be tough to put away. Alvarez has heavy hands and the knockout power to drop Mundine if he catches him. All but one of his thirty fights have taken place in Mexico, with his only overseas fight taking place in South Africa, which ended in defeat to William Gare in their WBF Super Middleweight Title fight. Mundine has shown signs that he no longer has the ability to get outside like he used to, and his recent fights have seen him tagged on numerous occasions, and of course knocked out by Garth Wood.

The jury is still out on whether or not Mundine is comfortable with the Junior Middleweight division. Despite “campaigning” in the division for the last eighteen months, he fought in the Middleweight division in his fights with Wood, and even when fighting at Junior Middleweight, we have seen him decide to fight at catchweight rather than the true mark.

Mundine comes in with a disrupted preparation which saw the fight postponed for a number of weeks, after Mundine suffered a deep cut over his right eye in sparring. The cut is still clearly visible, which raises questions over the effect it has had on Mundines preparation, as well as what effect it may have on Mundine in the fight itself. Mundine has said the Garth Wood defeat was a blessing in disguise. He says it made him reassess his training and stop taking shortcuts, and has made him a better fighter.
Others feel Mundine’s boxing ability is in a state of decline and that there are signs that Father Time is having an effect.

Both men are fighting for a shot at redemption, and despite being the former Champion, Alvarez will go into the fight as the underdog. But for Mundine, all the pressure is on his shoulders. There is no room for empty promises or big fights that fail to materialise.

It’s either career resurrection or the end of an era.

Bradley clarifies Khan situation: We can meet at 140lbs or 147

World titlist at super lightweight, Timothy Bradley, who holds the WBO version of the championship, has indicated that number one in the division Amir Khan is on his “list of people” he wants to take out. Furthermore, he stated that the prospective punch-up could take place at either the 140lb weight limit, or at 147lbs. Bradley boxes Joel Casamayor on November 12 but, after that fight, will talk to manager Cameron Dunkin regarding his options.

"Khan… Maidana, whoever, after this fight [Casamayor], I’ll talk to Cameron Dunkin, [promoter] Bob [Arum] and everybody and see what they what they want to do,” Bradley said whilst on the Leave It In The Ring radio show recently.

“If they have a different plan then we’ll do that,” he added, before commenting on the accusations that he is avoiding a unification showdown with super lightweight rival Khan, the incumbent of the WBA/IBF world titles. “For people who say I’m running or ducking y’all trippin’, y’all don’t even know me. If you know me, I ain’t scared of no man.

“I made this decision not to do that fight based on my career,” said the 28-year-old dubbed Desert Storm. “I hear everything Khan is saying and he’s looking stupid and desperate. He’s disrespecting my manhood. He’s not getting to me at all, he’s wasting his breath and when we do get it on he’ll regret it because it’s going to be personal.”

Khan (26-1-0, 18ko) has been active in his pursuit of the 140lb elite. Following his capture of the WBA crown from Andriy Kotelnik in 2009, he has made five successful championship defences whilst also annexing the IBF title in July, due to his knockout of Zab Judah. Khan has been eager to unify all the titles and has attempted to get WBC belt holder Erik Morales in the ring for December, whilst also calling out Bradley (27-0-0, 11ko).

“I’m not ducking Amir Khan, he’s definitely one on my list,” clarified the Californian. “I’ve already talked to Cameron about it and given my list of people I want to take out… soon. Either at 140 or 147 you will definitely see Timothy Bradley and Amir Khan get it on.

He can say whatever he wants and if you believe whatever you read you have a case. Sometimes writers put things in perspectives that aren’t right. I know exactly what I’m doing. I don’t need Amir Khan. Amir Khan needs Timothy Bradley.”

Golden Boy lodge protest over Hopkins TKO loss to Dawson, WBC reviewing fight

Fallen champion Bernard Hopkins surrendered his light heavyweight world championship to Chad Dawson in a second round technical knockout on October 15 as he was unable to continue after injuring his shoulder. Because of the nature of the injury – an accidental foul deemed no foul by referee Pat Russell – the sanctioning body responsible, the WBC, will now review the result following a formal protest by Golden Boy Promotions; Hopkins’ representatives.

The WBC will render a decision on the result of Hopkins versus Dawson.” an official statement released by the Council, said.

The current status of the Los Angeles showdown between two of the top 175lb operators is a second round stoppage victory to Dawson, however, the TKO was due to: “Hopkins [being] unable to continue after getting thrown from a clinch,” according to a footnote on Boxrec’s records

The WBC statement continued: “Golden Boy Promotions, the representative to Bernard Hopkins, filed a firm protest due to the decision of technical knockout after Hopkins was unable to continue the fight last Saturday after Dawson pushed him hard.”
Following the studying of video footage, the Council said they would make a decision following a vote amongst their decision-making staff.

“The WBC is reviewing the video of the WBC light heavyweight world title bout, which was held in Los Angeles, California, and is communicating with the WBC board of governors to render a decision that is strictly in accordance with justice and the regulations.
“A boxing commission can take independent decisions regarding results, but the World Boxing Council, exclusive and worldwide registered owner of its trademark WBC must take charge of the world title results that only correspond to the organisation.”

It concluded: “We think that by the end of this week, we will have the result of the world voting regarding this matter.”

Saturday, 15 October 2011

Dawson in controversal TKO!?! of Hopkins.

After a competitive opening round at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, rough-house tactics emerged in round two where both Bernard Hopkins and Chad Dawson attempted to throw each other off their game. For Dawson, it literally worked as Hopkins – in round two – complained on the canvas that he had dislocated his shoulder. The referee ruled it no foul and a contentious stoppage win, together with the WBC light heavyweight world title and The Ring belt, were awarded to Chad.

his last moment of mind games on Saturday, October 15, Hopkins was late to the referee’s last instructions after he had played showman with his mask, robe and executioner’s mimic. Despite not knocking any light heavyweight out since his move from middleweight, he retains bludgeoning as well as knockdown power.
Hopkins danced around the ring’s periphery, launching his right hand with his head swiftly followed behind. Dawson, with his portside posture, landed southpaw jabs and crosses to the midsection of B-Hop. Hopkins provided the action in the first 240 seconds but, within the final minute, Dawson burst into life, pieced together four-punch moves and looked like he would provide Hopkins with a stiff test when boxing on the front-foot.
Physically the larger man, Dawson was on the canvas midway through the second round but the referee correctly deemed it the result of a push. Perhaps in retaliation, Dawson lifted Hopkins up off of his feet, rough-housed and wrestled the 46-year-old veteran to the floor but the referee – Pat Russell – bizarrely, deemed it no foul and awarded Bad Chad the technical knockout victory.
Perhaps the result may have been better ruled as a No Contest, Hopkins – as ruled by Russell’s decision – will have suffered a career first stoppage. While the crowd, and fight fans around the world awaited for the official decision, Dawson could be heard yelling at Hopkins: “You quit! I’m gangsta; you ain’t nothing.”
Following the confirmation that Dawson had received the technical knockout win.

 Dawson told HBO: “Bernard Hopkins disappointed a lot of fans tonight, I was looking forward to a good fight. He ain’t gangster, a gangster would have gotten up and fought like a man.
“Bernard can’t touch me, man. I was getting closer and closer and he knew that. Where did he hurt his shoulder at? He landed on his back. I’m the new champion. I trained hard, hard for eight weeks, I put that into this fight. I wanted this fight for three years but he didn’t want it then and he didn’t want it tonight.”
Regarding his future ambitions, Chad added: “I want Pascal now. Pascal. Hopkins? Why would I want that.”

Summing up the incident that finished the fight, Hopkins expressed his disgust: “I was backing up, he picked me up by my two legs and threw me down and I rolled on my shoulder. There’s the knock right there and it’s popped up. I said I could continue with one arm to the referee but he said no.
“Today is what is wrong with boxing,” said B-Hop. “The crowd know Chad Dawson doesn’t deserve to be champion. [Golden Boy Promotions CEO] Richard Schaefer gotta do what he gotta do. Dawson knew he wasn’t in there with a 46-year-old man.
“This should have been a No Contest,” he exclaimed. “That was a foul. This ain’t the MMA or the UFC!”


Antonio DeMarco Claims WBC lightweight World Championp against Jorge Linares.

With cuts to his eye and tip of his nose, Jorge Linares – adorned with a mask of blood – was stopped in the eleventh round as newly crowned WBC lightweight world champion Antonio DeMarco stopped the Venezuelan in the penultimate round of a bout scheduled for 12. Linares was dishing out a boxing lesson up until the stoppage, but was ultimately taking too much punishment to continue.

Showing off his technical skillset, Linares boxed his way to the ten score in the opening round due to his shot selection, his foot skills and his general ring movement at the lightweight championship fight in the Staples Center, Los Angeles on Saturday, October 15.
A stylish fighter known for his accumulative knockout power rather than his one punch power, Linares boxed with a sprightliness on his feet throughout the opening rounds, however, the second round was a more competitive three minutes than the first as Antonio DeMarco had warmed up boxed his way into the fight. An accurate puncher, it was Linares who had maintained the edge.
A southpaw fighter, Linares had a hard portside jab and it landed often in the third round. In the final minute of the third round, Linares sent a hellacious uppercut to the chin of DeMarco.
Like the third, Linares maintained the superiority in the fourth round. Leading off on that solid right hand jab, Linares landed the southpaw lead shot to the head, but more so the body in the fourth round. DeMarco was beginning to blacken and mark under the left eye which was a result of the straight right punches from the previous stanzas.
Linares showed an ability to slip a shot as he showed good head movement when he ducked under DeMarco’s incoming shot. In the next round, discipline went out the window as the two traded shots within a tight space with neither wanting to back down. DeMarco came on strong, landing the heavier leather and the more effective shots, the result of which was a bloody, ghastly cut that opened up on the bridge of Linares’ nose.
Linares’ corner went to work on the cut between rounds but sent their man back out for action with it leaking. With blood dripping down the bridge of his nose it was arguably in good placement as it had no chance of impairing his vision.
At the beginning of the second minute of the eighth round, Linares thudded a meaningful punch into DeMarco’s chin from close range. Popping the right jab out and looping that left hand over the top, Linares attempted to regain the momentum that he had lost following his fourth round success. In the final minute of the stanza, Linares unleashed three to five punch combinations – the hook punches the most damaging.
Linares was unfazed by the cuts but he had two seconds working on them as his nose would not stop leaking and a cut, too, on his eye was also dripping claret. Linares opened proceedings in the ninth round with a solid uppercut. Fighting with urgency – most likely because of his troubling eye – Linares fired off eight punch flurries as he upped the tempo and the aggression whilst looking for an end to the contest.
Prior to the beginning of the tenth, the ringside physician inspected Linares’ cuts and informed the referee to ‘watch the eye’. The cut to the eye proved plug-able as it’s leakage was prevented, however, no coagulate, not even adrenaline nor grease stopped the thick flow of claret from the top of his nose. In the tenth round, the difference between the fighters was DeMarco’s desire to engage against Linares’ want to box.
DeMarco fought with bad intentions in the penultimate round, aggressively fighting at a fast tempo. Linares should have grabbed, but by trading with his opponent he took further punishment to cuts that were already angry at being disturbed. Two warriors, multiple shots, all of them heavy but, perhaps sensing that Linares was coasting to the victory, DeMarco stopped his man in emphatic fashion.

With the win, DeMarco claimed a slice of the lightweight championship and moved to 26-2-1, 19ko while Linares suffered his second defeat and moved to 31-2-0, 20ko.

Danny Garcia on Fire as he controls Kendall Holt

Undefeated super lightweight campaigner Danny Garcia – of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – won almost all the rounds of his distance fight against former world champion Kendall Holt at Los Angeles’ Staples Center on Saturday, October 15. Serving as an undercard bout on the Believe It Or Not card, Garcia did just enough to claim each of the ten scores aside from the opening stanza, inflicting a fifth defeat onto Holt.

The opening round was fairly even as both fighters landed a similar amount of shots (eight) but Holt returned to his corner with the ten score because of his added power. One of the most significant punches of the fight arrived in the second round as Garcia sent an accurate right cross onto Holt’s jawline.
In the third round, Holt attacked the body as he sought to sap the youthful exuberance out of the undefeated prospect’s lungs. Possessing the accuracy and the work-rate, though, Garcia took control of the fight as Holt began paying respect to his opponent’s right, one of which was crunched onto the top of Holt’s cranium.
In rounds three and four there was a noticeable difference between the punch expenditure of both fighters as Holt, at 30, looked for the big punch that could either knock Garcia down or finish the fight outright. He also only fought in spurts. Garcia, 23, on the other hand, put his punches together and possessed that greater round-winning work-rate.
Noting this, trainer Buddy McGirt implored his ward Holt to ‘let his punches go’ before sending him back to fight in the sixth round. Garcia, again, had the upper edge, though, as he landed a good straight right, a solid left hook and body punches either side of Holt’s midsection.
In round seven, a swelling continued to grow over Holt’s left eye and, when motioning into the inside, Garcia worked it over in an attempt to aggravate it. In both rounds seven and eight, perhaps because of his eye closing, Holt upped his rate of pace and doubled up on his jabs and one-two moves.
Attacking the body then the head, Holt found good success with his hook selection in the ninth round. In the final minute of the stanza, Garcia began throwing bombs – most notably, the looping right hand over the top while Holt had his left mitt low.
In the tenth round, Holt’s success was incredibly minimal. He had great power but he landed so infrequently that it was virtually redundant. In the penultimate round, Garcia struck Holt with a marvelous one-two move that was concluded with the right hand, however, he failed to follow up on his success and instead allowed Holt a respite from the pain. In the final moments of the round, Garcia showed great accuracy that was converse in nature to Holt.
Holt’s insistence on walking into Garcia’s area whilst the Philadelphian kept his hands busy ensured that he was forced to take a number of clean punches on either the chin. Holt may have had the power but he rarely made use of it compared to the much busier Garcia.

With the win, Garcia preserved his undefeated record. He now stands at 22-0-0, 14ko. Holt suffered the fifth defeat of his career and slumped to 27-5-0, 15ko.

Nathan Cleverly & Tony Bellew lived up to the Hype as Cleverly defends his WBO light heavyweight title.

After much promotional hype, the distance fight between reigning WBO light heavyweight world champion Nathan Cleverly and challenger Tony Bellew lived up to the billing as the two brave fighters traded slugs on the inside and shots on the outside. Neither boxer wilted under the pressure as they absorbed all the punishment at Liverpool’s Echo Arena.

Adrenaline-fueled, Bellew needed calming down 30 seconds into the fight for leading in with his head. Following the time-in, Cleverly unleashed his single fire shots and his combination work. An accurate jabber, Cleverly controlled the centre of the ring while Bellew boxed in circles.

In round two, both fighters traded sickening body blows. Attempting to gain the edge, Bellew sought to attack Cleverly and give him a taste of his power early on. Forcing the defending champion back onto the ropes, Bellew unleashed his characteristic bombs, however, when he took a step back, Cleverly showboated by sending his arms into the air, shook his arse and stuck his tongue out.
Due to a stern upright guard, Bellew’s lead shots would often be blocked or cushioned by Cleverly’s shield in the opening stages of the third round. If his first jab failed to connect, though, the second would be the one that landed as the speed of his double jab proved difficult for Cleverly to work against.
By the fourth, Bellew exacted a superiority with the jab, out-jabbed Cleverly and was also out-boxing the Welshman. Cleverly slipped shots with his head and upper body movement as his defensive skills foiled some of the incoming blows yet the difference in their attacks was marked as it was the challenger who had built up the early lead.
Uppercutting, body-shotting and sending in short-range hook punches, Cleverly’s work-rate reached his regular standards in the fourth, however, he had to be warned for low-blowing midway through the round. Toe-to-toe battling, both Bellew and Cleverly refused to back off and proudly battled it out from the centre of the ring to the ropes.
Cleverly’s best shots of the fight up to the midway stage had all been the right uppercut. He went to the body first looking to soften up Bellew, before tagging the Liverpudlian with the chin bound upper. Leaking claret from his nose, Bellew returned to the corner having taken harsh punishment in round six.
Sensing Bellew was slowing down, Cleverly went to work in the seventh. Bellew was double-jabbing only seldomly and his power punches lacked the pop from his second round performance thereby making his punches easier to avoid. Bellew backed himself into a neutral corner toward the end of the round, goading Cleverly onto him as he refused to back down, finished the round strongly and stole the ten score that the champion had been grasping.
In the eighth, Cleverly clubbed right hands over the top, landed his jab and was getting the better of Bellew because of his preserved stamina. Showing good foot skills in the ninth, Cleverly jigged into and out of the pocket. When inside, he connected and, when zipping outside, he avoided Bellew’s jab. It was Bellew, though, who had control of the centre of the ring as Cleverly was reduced to moving around the ring’s periphery.
Bellew tested Cleverly’s chin numerous times in the tenth, in particular with the left hook and then the right hand but Cleverly hung on, against the ropes, and even raised his hands like he had done earlier as if to say he was not damaged. This, after Cleverly punished Bellew with his own right cross.
In the penultimate round, Cleverly attempted to take the fight back into the inside and targeted his body before teeing off on his head. Bellew, meanwhile, wanted the contest to be fought with Cleverly’s back to the ropes.
Putting the rivalry to one side in order to pay respect, both fighters bumped gloves before the beginning of play in the final stanza. Bellew landed a body shot of note during the opening minute while his attentions to the head were blocked by Cleverly’s guard. It was the Welshman who appeared to have the greater accuracy with left hooks and right hands. Requiring a good finish to safeguard title retention, it was Cleverly who looked sharper at the end of the championship.

Both fighters celebrated at the finish as Bellew mounted a turnbuckle and saluted his home support while Cleverly punched the air sent growling smiles around the ground.
“I knew he was going to be dangerous after the first three,” Cleverly said following confirmation he had been awarded a majority decision win. “I thought he’d tire more than he did. He was a brilliant challenger.
“What I wanted to do tonight was come to Liverpool and fight in a dangerous opponent’s backyard. It was a crowd pleasing fight and congratulations to Tony. We both took big shots. It’s inevitable. It’s boxing. I took big shots, I didn’t panic under pressure and came up with shots of my own, the uppercuts and the body punches.”
He continued by declaring his intention to seek a unification contest at light heavyweight: “I’m going to watch Bernard Hopkins and Chad Dawson very closely. I’d like to fight the winner, if not then Beibut Shumenov.”
Sweat soaked and with tear-filled eyes, an emotional Bellew said: “I’m devastated. I can only apologise to my two kids. I give him all the credit in the world. I might have thrown the bigger punchers but he threw more. He took them well. He’s a good champion. I’m telling you – he’s got a good chin. I just want to say sorry to my two little boys.”
With the win, Cleverly rose to 23-0-0, 11ko while Bellew fell to 16-1-0, 10ko.


- By Blog Team @ Last Gasp Boxing.

James DeGale had to dig deep to win Piotr Wilczewski's EBU super middleweight title.

James DeGale had to dig deep into his reserves to get his career back on track with a battling win over Piotr Wilczewski to claim the EBU super middleweight title.
DeGale was thrust straight into a title fight on the back of his defeat to George Groves and it proved a real war for the Londoner who took some powerful shots before prevailing on points.
DeGale was marked early, with Wilczewski finding his range with the right hand. DeGale was content to work the ring as his Polish opponent kept coming forward and he landed a big uppercut in the second.
Wilczewski is a dangerous operator and he rocked DeGale with a snapping right hand that opened up a cut above the right eye. Things got worse for DeGale in the fifth, as a huge right turned his legs to jelly and he had to cling on for the final 30 seconds to avoid being put on the canvas.
To DeGale's credit, he upped his workrate in the sixth and seventh to get himself back in the fight. He had to prove his chin again when taking a stiff shot in the eighth, but came back with a big uppercut which slowed Wilczewski.
Wilczewski looked a spent force in the ninth, but was not prepared to let his title go without a fight and the pair fired up the crowd by trading shots in the past couple of rounds. The contest went to the judges following a real war in the 12th - with DeGale prevailing by way of a majority decision:114-114, 113-115, 113-115.


Caballero dominated Barros to claim WBA Featherweight Championship

In a WBA-mandated rematch, Celestino Caballero (35-4, 23 KOs) of Panama won the WBA featherweight championship by way of unanimous decision over now former champion Jonathan Victor Barros (33-2-1, 18 KOs) on Friday night at the famous Estadio Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Caballero erased all controversy from the first fight that he lost by split decision and completely dominated this fight from beginning to end. Caballero almost was able to get Barros out of there in round 11 but Barros survived the round. The official scores were 116-111, 118-111, 116-112 all in favor of Caballero, who previously was a unified champion at 122.
Also in action Light heavyweight Roberto Feliciano Bolonti (27-1, 17 KOs) scored a fouth round stoppage of Jose Hilton Dos Santos (31-15-1, 20 KOs). Bolonti dropped Dos Santos in round one and got the stoppage with a series of unanswered right hands in the fourth round. Bolonti retains his WBC Latino belt.

Elsewhere on the card Former WBA light heavyweight champion Hugo Garay (34-7, 18 KOs) was surprisingly stopped in round five by Cesar Crenz (20-5, 13 Os). In his first bout since his unsuccessful WBO cruiserweight title challenge against Marco Huck in July, Garay was dropped by a right left combination in round five and got the stoppage with his followup barrage.

Thursday, 13 October 2011

McCloskey vs Maidana Negotiations Falling Apart!

It looks like Paul McCloskey (23-1, 12 KO’s) is going to have to wait a little while longer before he gets a shot at fighting WBA light welterweight champion Marcos Maidana (31-2, 28 KO’s), as Maidana isn’t pleased with the offer for the fight. McCloskey and his promoter Eddie Hearn of Matchroom Sports, were hoping to fight Maidana in Ireland in February in front of a large crowd. Maidana, a fearless fighter, was open to fighting McCloskey in Northern Ireland, even though McCloskey recently beat Breidis Prescott by a controversial 12 round decision Belfast, Northern Ireland last month. Maidana didn’t seem to mind that and was willing to take his chances that he would knock McCloskey out before the final bell to take the decision making away from the judges.

However, Maidana wasn’t pleased with the financial offer from McCloskey’s promoter, and so he’s moving on according to Irish-boxing.com. Maidana has better options fighting in the United States for bigger purses and he’s not going to put himself in a situation where he’s fighting on the challenger’s home country and not getting the money he feels he deserves.

I can’t blame Maidana for moving on. It’s not worth taking the small money to have to fight in your challenger’s home town, especially after the challenger won a controversial decision there. I saw the Prescott-McCloskey fight I only gave McCloskey a couple of rounds at best. No way did he win that fight. The pro-McCloskey crowd was cheering his every miss and believe me, McCloskey was missing a lot in the second half of the fight and eating constant jabs. He did look to have the more energy, but he was missing and eating jabs. You can’t give a guy rounds for eating jabs and missing. McCloskey did zero in the first half of the fight and was knocked down in the 1st round. It was a terrible decision and you got to feel for Prescott.

We all would like to see McCloskey and Maidana fight, but only if the fight takes place in a neutral venue like the United States. Letting McCloskey fight at home against a champion like Maidana is just asking for trouble.

By - William MacKay @ BoxingNews24

Blog Team @ LastGasp Boxing News




David "The Hayemaker" Haye (27-0-2) Has Confirmed His Retirement.

So its the news we were expecting David "The Hayemaker" Haye (27-0-2) has retired from professional boxing for now anyways... Since telling the BBBC that he would not
be renewing his boxing licence on Monday various confilcting reports state that a early 2012 fight with Vitali Klitschko is still on the cards.

Public opinion on his so called "Legacy" is now up for debate! Yes David went after the biggest prize in boxing the Heavyweight Championship of the World and achieved that feet in a tactial display of boxing which is not always seen in a modern day heavyweight contest against Nikolai Valuev, but somewhere along the line he got lost, chaught up in the media and trying to promote himself instead of keeping his eye on the prize "The Klitschko Brothers" the main reason he made the jump to heavyweight.

David will look back on his carrer and can be proud he is up there with the best Cruiserweight Weights of all time with the exception of Evander Holyfield but will look back on his fights thinking he lost the big one "Wladimir Klitschko". Alot of fight fans who watched that night in Hamburg would have been bermused at the way he fought that fight, Is Wladimir that good that he controled David, or did Wladimir win that fight in 2009 when the media circus started. Haye attracted scorn from the way the he seemed to blame a toe-injury for the landslide points loss, leaving many experts saying the londoner didn't have a chance of dethroning the bigger Klitschko Brothers.

In the coming weeks and months alot of soul searching needs to be done and If he announces a fight with Vitali Klitschko, he better be ready to go though war to secure the "Legacy" he is destanced for? Fight fans want to see David "Rule the World" a flashy, quick powerfull boxer who takes people back in time to when a division was great. A division that in its brillance required heart!! The Question is Can David show his if a future bout was confirmed!?!

If we are never to see David Haye in the ring again it would be a great shame but a look back in time will show David as a former WBA Heavyweight Champion of the World, A forner Unified WBA, WBC, WBO & The Ring Cruiserweight Champion of the World. A Former EBU Cruiserweight Champion. A Dazzling Star of Boxing. The only question thats remains for David is What If? .... If David Haye is happy to to live with the What If? Then maybe the best 2 people are ruling the division now!

By - Blog Team @ Last Gasp Boxing News.



Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Last Gasp's Pound for Pound Top Ten

By - Blog Team @ Last Gasp Boxing News. 13/10/2011

1. Floyd Mayweather, Jr. (42-0-0)
    Age: 34
    Current Title: WBC Welterweight Champion.
    Next Fight : N/A

2. Manny Pacquiao (53-3-2)
    Age: 32
    Current Title: WBO Welterweight Champion
    Next Fight: Juan Manuel Marquez. November 12th, 2011

3. Nonito Donaire (27-0-1)
    Age: 28
    Current Title: WBC & WBO Bantamweight Champion
    Next Fight: Omar Narvaez. October 22nd, 2011

4. Sergio Martínez (48-2-2)
    Age: 36
    Current Title: WBC "Diamond" Middleweight Champion
    Next Fight: N/A

5.  Juan Manuel Márquez (53-1-5)
     Age:38
     Current Tilte: WBA (Super), WBO & The Ring Lightweight Champion.
     Next Fight: Manny Pacquiao. November 12th, 2011

6. Bernard Hopkins (52-2-5) 1 NC
    Age: 46
    Current Title: WBC & The Ring Light-Heavyweight Champion
    Next Fight: Chad Dawson, October 15th, 2011

7. Andre Ward (24-0-0)
    Age: 27
    Current Title: WBA (Super) World Super Middleweight Champion
    Next Fight:  Carl Froch, Decemeber 17th, 2011

8. Carl Froch (29-0-1)
    Age:34
    Current Title: WBC Super Middleweight Champion
    Next Fight: Andre Ward, Decemebr 17th, 2011

9.  Timothy Bradley (27-0-0) 1 NC
     Age: 28
     Current Title: WBO Light Welterweight Champion
     Next Fight: Joel Casamayor , Novemebr 12th, 2011

10. Wladimir Klitschko (56-0-3)
      Age: 35
      Current Title: WBA (Super), IBF, WBO (Super), IBO & Ring World Heavyweight Champion.
      Next Fight: Jean-Marc Mormeck,  December 10th, 2011