Monday, September 7, 2015

Premier Boxing Champions 9/6/2015 Results




Former WBC Super-Middleweight world champion Anthony Dirrell successfully returned to the ring on Sunday afternoon at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, TX by scoring a workmanlike ten round unanimous decision over longtime contender and multi-time world title challenger Marco Antonio Rubio in the main event of a Premier Boxing Champions card broadcast in the United States by CBS. Dirrell was able to consistently get his offense off first and kept Rubio on the defensive for much of the fight.


Although it appeared for a time that Rubio’s strategy may have been to play the role of counter puncher, he was simply unable to time Dirrell’s offense and was sporadic in letting his hands go. Official scores were 100-90 (on all three scorecards) in favor of Anthony Dirrell. Unofficially, I scored this bout the same as the three official judges scoring every round in favor of Dirrell.


There is simply not much to say about this fight. Dirrell forced the action, dictated how the fight was fought from start to finish, and simply did what he had to do to secure a victory. Anthony Dirrell advances to 28-1-1, with 22 Knockouts. Marco Antonio Rubio falls to 59-8-1, with 51 Knockouts.


Prior to this fight this observer stated that if Dirrell managed to look impressive and give himself back in the win column that it is not difficult to envision him possibly getting a rematch with Badou Jack, the man who defeated Dirrell for the WBC world championship earlier this year at some point in the near future.


Before a rematch can be signed however, Jack must defend his world title against former world title challenger George Groves on September 12th on the undercard of the Floyd Mayweather-Andre Berto bout in Las Vegas, NV. Although there was not much excitement in the fight between Dirrell and Rubio, Dirrell did what he had to do and at the end of the day should be considered a likely candidate to face the winner of Jack-Groves perhaps as early as next year.


As for Marco Antonio Rubio, I stated prior to the fight that the main question I had going into it was what Rubio had left to give as a fighter at thirty-five years old. Rubio did take significant punishment throughout the fight with Dirrell and to his credit was able to stand up to it. This observer however, wonders whether the defensive manner in which Rubio fought this fight was perhaps an attempt to avoid being caught in exchanges as has been the case throughout his career where he has suffered knockout losses, or whether it is a sign that Rubio is now a fighter in decline and cannot let his hands go as frequently as in previous fights over the years. We will have to simply wait and see what the future may hold for Rubio going forward.


Also on this card, former IBF world Bantamweight champion Jamie McDonnell scored a controversial twelve round unanimous decision over former WBO Bantamweight world champion Tomoki Kameda. In a rematch of what was an extremely close fight earlier this year, Kameda seemed to dictate how this fight was fought from the outset by using lateral movement to pick his spots and make McDonnell miss. Kameda’s combination punching to the body and head and ability to move in and out of McDonnell’s range, despite being the shorter of the two fighters was the story of the fight in the eyes of this observer.


Although many observers, this one included felt that Kameda landed the cleaner more effective punches throughout and appeared to have a decent lead on the scorecards, the three official judges Glenn Feldmann, Jesse Reyes, and Steve Weisfeld turned in scores of 115-112, 116-111, and 117-110 in favor of McDonnell.


Unofficially, I scored this fight 116-111 in favor of Kameda. Although I scored a couple of rounds in favor of McDonnell in the later stages of the fight, including the twelfth and final round where McDonnell was able to score with some might call a questionable knockdown of Kameda where Kameda was struck by a punch while in the process of slipping on the canvas, I felt that Kameda controlled the majority of this fight and landed the more effective punches.


The fight, which was to determine interim/regular champion status in the WBA’s Bantamweight ratings quite frankly could lead to a third encounter between the two. The first fight between the two was an extremely close battle that saw McDonnell earn a victory by just one point on all three official scorecards. The rematch was not as close in that it appeared Kameda did enough to win the fight decisively. The decision of the rematch however, which may be seen as controversial would seem to warrant a third fight between the two at some point down the road. It will be interesting however, to see whether or not McDonnell, who has held interim/regular champion status in the WBA’s ratings since May of last year will be in position to challenge current WBA world Bantamweight champion Juan Carlos Payano in the near future.



Jamie McDonnell advances to 27-2-1, with 12 Knockouts. Tomoki Kameda falls to 31-2, with 19 Knockouts.


In other bouts:


In the Jr. Bantamweight division Victor Ruiz (20-5, with 14 Knockouts) scored an eight round split decision over former two-division world champion Daiki Kameda (29-5, with 18 Knockouts) as of this writing there is no word as to why this bout, which was originally scheduled to be a ten round contest was shortened to eight rounds.


In a Jr. Lightweight bout Miguel Flores (17-0, with 8 Knockouts) scored a fourth round knockout over Carlos Padilla (15-3-1, with 9 Knockouts).


Also in the Jr. Lightweight division Mario Barrios (11-0, with 7 Knockouts) scored a fourth round knockout over Jose Cen Torres (13-9, 1 with Knockout).


In the Lightweight division Robert Vela (13-1-2, with 6 Knockouts) scored a six round unanimous decision over Cesar Martinez (0-6-3, with 0 Knockouts).


In a Jr. Welterweight bout Anibal Resendez (4-2, 1 with 1 Knockout) scored a six round unanimous decision over Alberto Navarro (3-11-2, with 1 Knockout).


In a Jr. Lightweight bout Jeremy Longoria (8-5, with 2 Knockouts) scored a fourth round knockout over Jesse Anguiano (2-6-3, with 1 Knockout).


In a Jr. Welterweight bout Rickey Edwards (8-0, with 3 Knockouts) scored a second round knockout over Marco Antonio Solis (3-2, with 1 Knockout).




A scheduled six round Welterweight bout between Ryan Karl (8-0, with 6 Knockouts) and Malcolm Terry (6-5, 6 Knockouts) did not take place. Although both fighters weighed in on Saturday for the fight, there is no word as to why the fight was scratched as of this writing.




As has become the norm this Premier Boxing Champions card produced action.  Although a potential title shot may be in Anthony Dirrell’s future following a convincing victory over Marco Antonio Rubio, the main storyline that emerged out of this card in the eyes of this observer was the controversial decision in the McDonnell-Kameda rematch.  It will be interesting to see if the controversy surrounding the decision of that fight will ultimately lead to a third encounter between the two.




“And That’s The Boxing Truth. “




The Boxing Truth® is a registered trademark of Beau Denison All Rights Reserved.




Follow Beau Denison on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Beau_Denison 

 








Saturday, September 5, 2015

Premier Boxing Champions 9/6/2015 Weigh-In Results



Former WBC Super-Middleweight world champion Anthony Dirrell and longtime contender Marco Antonio Rubio weighed-in today in Texas for their bout on Sunday afternoon as part of the latest installment of the Premier Boxing Champions series.  The official weigh-in results for the entire card are as follows.


*Light-Heavyweights – 10Rds.

Anthony Dirrell 169 3/4lbs.  vs.   Marco Antonio Rubio 169 1/2lbs.

(* Originally announced as a Super-Middleweight bout, but now being called a Light-Heavyweight bout due to both fighters weighing in over the 168lb. Super-Middleweight limit.)


*Bantamweights – 12Rds.

Jamie McDonnell 117 3/4lbs.  vs.       Tomoki Kameda  117 3/4lbs.

(*Bout is a rematch from earlier this year. Interim/Regular champion status in the WBA's Bantamweight ratings will be at stake.)


*Jr. Bantamweights – 10Rds.

Daiki Kameda 120lbs.  vs.          Victor Ruiz 116 3/4lbs.

(* Both fighters weighed in over the 115lb. Jr. Bantamweight limit.  Fight will go on as scheduled as of this writing.)


Jr. Lightweights – 8Rds.

Miguel Flores 127lbs.  vs.              Carlos Padilla 128lbs.


Jr. Lightweights – 8Rds.
Mario Barrios  127lbs.  vs.      Jose Cen Torres 130lbs.


Lightweights – 6Rds.

Robert Vela 133 1/2lbs. vs.        Cesar Martinez 133 1/2lbs.


Jr. Lightweights – 6Rds.

Jeremy Longoria 129 3/4lbs.  vs.       Jesse Anguiano 129lbs.


*Jr. Welterweights – 6Rds.

Alberto Navarro 135lbs.  vs.         Anibal Resendez 141lbs.


(Resendez one pound over the 140lb. Jr. Welterweight limit. Fight will go on as scheduled as of this writing.)


Jr. Welterweights – 6Rds.

Rickey Edwards 140lbs.  vs.     Marco Antonio Solis 138 3/4lbs.


Welterweights – 6Rds.

Ryan Karl 144 3/4lbs.  vs.          Malcolm Terry 145 1/4lbs.


As of this writing only the Dirrell-Rubio bout as well the rematch between Jaime McDonnell and Tomoki Kemeda are scheduled for the live CBS portion of this card.


Premier Boxing Champions: Dirrell-Rubio/McDonnell-Kameda II takes place Sunday, September 6th at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, TX. The card will be televised in the United States by CBS at 4PM Eastern/ 1PM Pacific. Check your listings internationally.



For more information on the Premier Boxing Champions series please visit: www.PremierBoxingChampions.com


The Boxing Truth® is a registered trademark of Beau Denison All Rights Reserved.


Follow Beau Denison on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Beau_Denison




Friday, September 4, 2015

Premier Boxing Champions 9/6/2015 Preview




The Premier Boxing Champions series will kick off the month of September with an interesting doubleheader on Sunday, September 6th at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, TX. In the main event former WBC Super-Middleweight world champion Anthony Dirrell will return to the ring for the first time since losing his world title in April this year in a razor thin twelve round majority decision to Badou Jack. Dirrell will face longtime Jr. Middleweight and Middleweight contender Marco Antonio Rubio in a fight scheduled for ten rounds.


Dirrell (27-1-1, with 22 Knockouts) has gone 1-1-1 in his last three fights including a draw and winning his world championship in two fights against former WBC champion Sakio Bika. In his last fight Dirrell came out on the losing end of a fight that could have gone either way in losing a twelve round majority decision to Badou Jack. In what was an extremely close fight that was very difficult to score Jack was able outwork Dirrell to earn a victory that some considered an upset.


Coming off of that loss Dirrell, who will come into the fight ranked number five by the World Boxing Council (WBC) in the Super-Middleweight division will look to get back in the win column when he takes on Marco Antonio Rubio. Rubio, a veteran of sixty-seven professional fights will be returning to the Super-Middleweight division where he is undefeated in three previous bouts in the 168lb. weight class.


In his last fight in October of last year Rubio was knocked out in two rounds at the hands of unified WBA/IBO Middleweight world champion Gennady Golovkin. Some readers may recall following that fight this observer speculated that if Rubio, who failed to make weight for the fight with Golovkin that it would be interesting if Rubio could no longer make the 160lb. Middleweight limit if he would see what potential options would be available to him in the 168lb. Super-Middleweight division.


The question I have coming into this fight centers on what Marco Antonio Rubio has left to give as a fighter. At thirty-five years of age and having competed in sixty-seven professional fights in his career one may be justified in wondering what Rubio (59-7-1, with 51 Knockouts) will have to offer in this fight. It is important to remember that Rubio has fought for a world title three times in his career. Rubio certainly has more than enough experience against top level opposition including a knockout win in 2011 against recently crowned IBF Middleweight world champion David Lemieux.


Rubio however, was unable to provide much resistance in his fight against Golovkin. Although Rubio was able to land some offense against Golovkin he was not able to land anything that prevented Golovkin’s consistent pressure and punching power. Although Rubio lost that fight he is a fighter that has compiled a career knockout percentage of 76% in his career and should still be considered a dangerous fighter even coming off of a knockout loss.


For Anthony Dirrell it will be interesting to see if he will attempt to pressure Rubio from the outset and test whether the loss to Golovkin has had any effect on Rubio’s ability to take a punch. Dirrell has scored twenty-two knockouts in his twenty-nine professional fights and has a career knockout percentage of 76% in his own right. It will also be interesting to see if this fight goes into the middle and late rounds whether Dirrell will be able to maintain a consistent work rate throughout the entire fight. An argument can be made that although his fight with Badou Jack was very close that one thing that may have worked against him in that fight was the inconsistent work rate he put forth in the first half of that fight.


If Dirrell manages to look impressive in this fight and can get himself back in the win column it is not difficult to envision a potential rematch with Jack at some point in the near future. For Marco Antonio Rubio however, this could be a “Must Win” scenario at this stage in his career.


Also on this card  there will be a rematch between former Bantamweight world champions former IBF world Bantamweight champion Jamie McDonnell (26-2-1, with 12 Knockouts) and former WBO world Bantamweight champion Tomoki Kameda (31-1, with 19 Knockouts) in a twelve round bout to determine interim/regular champion status in the WBA’s Bantamweight ratings. In their first fight in May of this year McDonnell overcame a third round knockdown to win a twelve round unanimous decision winning the fight by just one point on all three official judges scorecards.


The first encounter between the two was an extremely close fight that could have gone either way. It will be interesting to see whether the rematch will resemble the first fight in that Kameda seemed to have the edge in the early rounds, but it was McDonnell who was able to come on in the middle and late rounds to win the fight. Although opinions differed among Boxing fans and experts alike as to who won the first fight between the two, it was a highly competitive battle that shined the spotlight on a weight class, the 118lb. Bantamweight division that does not always receive the kind of exposure in the United States as compared to other weight classes.


As was the case with the first fight, the rematch will be televised as the co-feature of a Premier Boxing Champions card on CBS in the United States. No matter what happens in this fight the increased exposure for one of Boxing’s lower weight divisions, but an extremely competitive division should be viewed as extremely positive for not only the fighters themselves, but the sport overall.


An interesting doubleheader featuring two compelling storylines. A former world champion in Anthony Dirrell looking to get back in the win column going against a grizzled veteran in Marco Antonio Rubio who may be fighting for his career. The second storyline a compelling rematch between  Jamie McDonnell  and Tomoki Kameda, two former world champions in a fight that for the winner could lead to a potential world title opportunity down the line.


We will see what happens on Sunday afternoon.


“And That’s The Boxing Truth.”


Premier Boxing Champions: Dirrell-Rubio/McDonnell-Kameda II takes place Sunday, September 6th at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, TX. The card will be televised in the United States by CBS at 4PM Eastern/ 1PM Pacific. Check your listings internationally.


For more information on the Premier Boxing Champions series please visit: www.PremierBoxingChampions.com


The Boxing Truth® is a registered trademark of Beau Denison All Rights Reserved.


Follow Beau Denison on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Beau_Denison

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Why Santa Cruz-Mares Deserves An Encore




The highly anticipated clash on August 29th at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, CA between current WBC Jr. Featherweight world champion Leo Santa Cruz and former three-division world champion Abner Mares certainly lived up to the anticipation that preceded it. In one corner stood Leo Santa Cruz a fighter who was undefeated in thirty-one professional fights who was fighting for the second time in the 126lb. Featherweight division. Standing across the ring from Santa Cruz was Abner Mares a fighter who had only been defeated once in thirty-one career bouts of his own prior to this fight.


Stylistically this was a fight that had action written all over it. Both fighters are boxer/punchers, who are both capable of ending fights early and both have the ability to out box their opposition. The question this observer had prior to this fight was whether the 5’4 Mares, who has a sixty-six inch reach would be able to get on the inside of the 5’7 Santa Cruz, who had a three inch reach advantage for extended periods of time. I also wondered whether this will be a tactical Boxing match or if it would develop into a shootout.


It was no surprise given that this was a battle between two offensive-minded fighters to see this fight fought at a high pace from the outset with both fighters being willing to engage. In some ways, one could make an argument that it was a bout where two different types of fights took place in one fight. Mares had a clear advantage during periods where he was able to close distance between himself and Santa Cruz and get on the inside. During those periods although there were several exchanges between the two fighters it appeared that Mares was able to get the better of the action.


In contrast to Mares, Santa Cruz appeared to be most effective during periods where he was able to control distance and thus nullify Mares’ pressure. Santa Cruz was also effective in being able to catch Mares with his offense as Mares came forward as the fight progressed.


Although Mares was the more aggressive of the two fighters throughout much of this fight, one thing that was noticeably absent was the use of his jab as he came forward. As the fight progressed Santa Cruz was able to stand out a little more from Mares by being effective with his counter punches, being able to control the distance of the fight more, and landing the more effective punches of the two.


When it comes to fights that are fought at a high pace where both fighters are able to execute their offense, it can often boil down to which fighter was able to be more effective. Although the task of determining who is able to be more effective may appear to be one that is simple to some, it can be and often is an extremely difficult task especially for judges who have the responsibility of scoring a fight. Such fights are often close and end up with differing scores from the official judges, fans, and experts alike.


After twelve hard-fought rounds it was not surprising to see this fight end up with differing opinions. Two official judges Jesse Reyes and Steve Morrow turned in identical scores of 117-111 or nine rounds to three in favor of Santa Cruz giving him a twelve round majority decision victory. Although the two official scores which resulted in Santa Cruz winning this fight may appear to be lopsided, if one watches the fight round by round as the official judges who score fights on a round by round basis, it is much closer.


It is certainly understandable that fans and experts alike could have this fight scored much closer as the third official judge Max DeLuca had scored the fight 114-114 or six rounds to six a draw or how some could see Mares as the winner by differing scores that may not be unlike the scores of judges Reyes and Morrow. 


Unofficially, I scored this fight 116-112 or eight rounds to four in favor of Santa Cruz. In this observer’s eyes it came down to how Santa Cruz was able to gradually control distance and land the cleaner more effective punches as the fight progressed, particularly in the middle and late rounds. It was however, a very difficult fight to score and frankly I can see an argument for either fighter having won the fight.


The fight, which was to determine a new WBA Featherweight world champion following former champion Nicholas Walters being stripped of the title for failing to make weight prior to his fight with Miguel Marriaga in June of this year turned out to be a fight of the year candidate. For Leo Santa Cruz now an unbeaten two-division world champion and a former three-division world champion in Abner Mares the battle solidified their standing as a rising stars in the sport. If the action this fight produced as well as the significant television ratings for the fight, which headlined a Premier Boxing Champions card on ESPN in the United States averaging 1.2 million viewers is any indication Santa Cruz-Mares is certainly deserving of an encore.


Whether or not a rematch between the two comes in the immediate future remains to be seen. For the increasingly popular Premier Boxing Champions series, which airs across several networks across broadcast and cable television this was essentially the type fight that the series is all about. To bring Boxing to the masses and put on the best fights possible for Boxing fans. If a rematch between Santa Cruz and Mares is signed, it would not surprise this observer to see it headline a future Premier Boxing Champions card.


“And That’s The Boxing Truth.”


The Boxing Truth® is a registered trademark of Beau Denison All Rights Reserved.


Follow Beau Denison on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Beau_Denison