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Boxing News 24: Clottey faces Mundine on 4/2

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Clottey faces Mundine on 4/2
Mar 6th 2014, 15:33, by admin

NEW YORK: (March 6, 2014) Former world champion Joshua “The Grand Master” Clottey will head to Newcastle, Australia on APRIL 2 to clash with former two time WBA Champion and local favorite Anthony “the man” Mundine in a twelve round junior middleweight clash, it was confirmed today by Joe DeGuardia, Founder and President of Star […]

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Boxing News 24: Lee Glover vs. Jon Kays this Saturday, March 8th

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Lee Glover vs. Jon Kays this Saturday, March 8th
Mar 6th 2014, 15:34, by admin

Lee Glover is in confident mood ahead of his English Super-Featherweight Title showdown with current champion Jon ’2smokes’ Kays on Saturday (8th March). 'The Tipton Slasher' (7-1) takes on '2 Smokes' (17-3-1) at the Oldham Sports Centre and believes he has the artillery in his locker to become just the second man, after Liam Walsh […]

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Canelo Alvarez vs. Alfredo Angulo: Fight Time, Date, TV Info and Preview

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Canelo Alvarez vs. Alfredo Angulo: Fight Time, Date, TV Info and Preview
Mar 6th 2014, 11:00, by Brian Mazique

Active boxers are only as good as their last performance. Once they retire fans reflect on their overall accomplishments and career, but when fighters are still in the game, the boxing community has a very short memory.

Because of this dynamic, Saul "Canelo" Alvarez (42-1-1, 30 KO) is in a tough spot. After suffering the first loss of his career, Canelo must rebound with an impressive win on Saturday night at the MGM Grand against Alfredo "Perro" Angulo (22-3, 18 KO).

Canelo was outclassed by Floyd "Money" Mayweather in September 2013. Even though Mayweather is the pound-for-pound king of the sport, the manner in which he dispatched Canelo made the 23-year-old Mexican star look bad.

Against Angulo, he'll be looking to restore his shine. 

On paper, it looks like an easier task, but that doesn't mean it will be an easy fight. Angulo is coming off a loss himself, but he showed well against the slick boxing Erislandy Lara in June 2013. He had dropped Lara twice before a well-placed punch from the Cuban broke Angulo's eye socket and forced him to submit.

Tough as nails, Angulo didn't go down.

He simply turned his back and forced referee Raul Caiz Jr. to call a stop to the fight in the 10th round. At the time of the stoppage, Angulo was up on one scorecard and narrowly trailing on the other two, and Lara was fatigued.

It's impossible to say Angulo would have won the fight, but he had the momentum before Lara rearranged his face.

Angulo's grit and pressure will push Canelo on Saturday night. If nothing else, this bout should be action-packed. Here's how you can catch the fight.

 

When: Saturday, March 8 at 9 p.m. ET

Where: MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev.

TV: Showtime Pay-Per-View

 

The Book on Canelo

It's really unfair for fans to be down on Canelo after losing to Mayweather. After all, the latter is the best fighter in the world. Canelo was at least able to make Mayweather work all 12 rounds. Though it was a clear win for Money, aside from C.J. Ross' inept card (114-114), the pound-for-pound king didn't look as comfortable against Alvarez as he did against Robert Guerrero.

To put it plainly: It wasn't the worst showing Canelo could have had.

Still, boxing is a brutal sport in and out of the ring. No matter how good a fighter is, if the public gets down on them, their opportunities will fade. 

In addition to his reputation, Canelo's pride took a significant hit with the loss to Mayweather. Though he has still maintained most of his popularity, his place amongst boxing's elite fighters is nowhere near as solid as it was before the Mayweather fight.

Obviously, he has made a nice living in the sport so far, but at 23 years old, he still has a lot of fight left in him physically. However, the effects on him mentally shouldn't be understated.

The loss to Mayweather was humbling for a young fighter who had enjoyed so much success in his career. Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports talked about the impact the loss had on Alvarez's psyche, despite the monetary success and popularity:

A case could be made that Alvarez, and not Manny Pacquiao, is the second-biggest drawing card in boxing.

Like Pacquiao, Alvarez became an idol of millions because of his exciting fighting style. Unlike the Filipino superstar, though, Alvarez also had a bit of a swagger to him.

Against Mayweather, though, Alvarez pressured constantly but lost much of that swagger when he was unable to put his hands on Mayweather.

Putting his hands on his opponent isn't likely to be an issue on Saturday against Angulo. Perro is a pressure fighter who comes into every fight looking for the KO. In 18 of his 25 fights, he's found it.

Canelo knows what to expect from his opponent, and he says he's ready. Speaking to Santos A. Perez of the Miami Herald, Canelo said:

Obviously, he’s a fighter that comes forward, that hits hard, that can take a punch, and that’s what’s going to make the fight live up, and that’s what the people want to see. They want to see action, and that’s what they will see [Saturday], a lot of action.

Can Canelo bounce back against a fighter like this in such an intense environment? Per Showtime Sports, one very notable ex-opponent believes he can:

On Saturday, we'll find out if Canelo can use those tools to restore the aspects of his reputation that have taken a hit.

 

The Book on Angulo

This fight has an element of desperation and a bit of nastiness as well.

Both fighters are looking to get back on track, but there's a Mexican rivalry and a popularity struggle. Canelo told Douglass Fischer of The Ring Magazine, "I know he [Angulo] doesn't like me, so there's no reason I should like him."

What's the reason for the malice? Angulo told Fischer:

I think that he is a boxer that has had his career handed to him. Canelo hasn't fought anyone aside from Mayweather. I've earned my respect through my fights.

The ole privileged vs. non-privileged angle. It's always a great story line. 

Angulo also talked about the cultural significance when speaking with Lem Satterfield of The Ring Magazine. Angulo said:

Every fight is important, but this one is more special because all of the fans in Mexico will know that the winner of this fight is the No. 1 Mexican fighter.

Obviously there is a lot of pride involved with that mythical title, but there's also a ton of potential revenue for the man who holds it. Being the top Mexican fighter in the world means you'll probably become a solid pay-per-view draw and could be in line to fight Mayweather in the next year.

Everyone knows, Money makes everyone he fights money. He also has made a career out of targeting the top Hispanic fighters throughout his career.

How can Angulo reach his goal? Angulo's trainer Virgil Hunter pulled no punches with Fischer:

We'll find out if Canelo can handle Angulo's pressure.

 

Prediction

Angulo is great for boxing. He looks like a level boss on a video game. He's rugged, punches hard and has good stamina. That said, he'll be in the ring with a fighter who has more technical boxing skill, faster hands and good power.

He'll have to absorb a lot of punishment from a good fighter to pull the upset. Does he have a puncher's chance? Absolutely, but it's hard to see him beating a motivated and eager to please Canelo.

Alvarez will win by eighth-round TKO.

 

Follow me. I'm addicted to the Sweet Science.

@BMaziqueFPBR

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Canelo vs. Angulo: Alfredo Angulo Goes from the Pen to Pay-Per-View

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Canelo vs. Angulo: Alfredo Angulo Goes from the Pen to Pay-Per-View
Mar 6th 2014, 14:00, by Jonathan Snowden

In 2012 Alfredo "El Perro" Angulo, a former Mexican Olympian and the kind of all-action boxer who leaves an imprint on fans even when he comes up short, walked into the El Centro Service Processing Center, just 14 miles from the United States' Mexican border, for what he expected to be a routine immigration proceeding. 

It turned out, due to a mistake by his manager or promoter or lawyer, depending on where the finger was pointing at any given moment, Angulo's visa to live and compete in America had expired. Securing an immigration bond, he thought, would take two or three days, tops. 

Seven months later he was still there, his career and life in limbo, just one of 544 prisoners living in a series of barracks, awaiting justice.

The center cycles through more than 5,000 detainees a year. Angulo, however, for reasons that remain unclear, attracted some special attention. Denied basic privileges and rights, simple items like sneakers or a book to read, Angulo was told at one point he might be there forever. 

"I saw what hundreds of thousands of immigrants have gone through and endured. I respect all those who sacrificed to bring their families better lives in America," he told Bleacher Report through his translator and lawyer Lucy Haro. "It was very difficult there. I thought of retiring from boxing. I only had my lawyer who assured me justice had to be done."

Before El Centro, hardship for Angulo had become, as it is for most fighters, defined in boxing terms. The loss to James Kirkland just two months before his immigration nightmare began, for example, seemed like a complete disaster.

After knocking Kirkland down in the first, Angulo quickly punched himself out looking for a finish. The remaining five rounds featured Kirkland starring in a glorified snuff film as Angulo gamely fought on. 

After El Centro, he knows things could be much worse.

"I value every moment of my life, and every moment with my daughter," Angulo said. "God shall have to forgive that warden for separating me from my daughter and taking time from me."

Even at his lowest point, however, Haro said Angulo's focus was often on others. He had been very fortunate in his life, fighting often on HBO in exchange for six-figure pay days.

Many of the people biding their time in the processing center came from extreme poverty in Central America and Mexico. They lacked his high-priced legal team, often left in the lurch by scam artists who promised advice and solutions and then disappeared into the wind.

While he waited and endured, Angulo insisted his legal team, Haro and Kelly O'Reilly, help many of the people he met. They looked over hundreds of cases besides his own.

"Alfredo's strength came from helping those in there with him...it saddened all of us to witness his struggle and the other immigrants," Haro said. "If Alfredo lost his case, I would have lost faith in our American justice system, in everything I believe in, as an attorney."     

Fast forward two years and it's clear Angulo has come out the other side, if not unscathed at least unbowed. His career, sidetracked by an absence of more than a year all told, has reached new heights under trainer Virgil Hunter.

Despite a loss to the slick Erislandy Lara, a fight many ringside observers thought Angulo was winning before an injury withdrawal in the 10th round, he was hand-picked by promoter Richard Schaefer to face budding star Saul "Canelo" Alvarez.

It's Canelo's first fight since falling way short of the mark against Floyd Mayweather. In a sense, the fight is also a lifetime achievement award for Angulo's willingness to bravely trade punches, no matter the circumstances or opponent.

"Basically, the reason why we chose him is because we made a decision that he was the best style for me," Canelo said during a media conference call. "He's a very strong fighter. He comes forward. He makes good fights, and I feel that this was the best fight for the fight fans style-wise."

That's a nice way of saying Angulo is expected to be willing cannon fodder for the young star. Angulo is never going to be mistaken for a sophisticated boxer. After Mayweather, that's likely welcome relief for Canelo. But not everyone is so sure this fight is a blowout, including Bad Left Hook's Scott Christ:

Can Alvarez deal with the 100 mph, straight ahead style of Angulo? Tactically, sure, he can handle it. But for how long? Can he be broken down to the body by Angulo? Will he wilt in the heat of a battle that allows him no room or time to breathe?

That's the danger on Saturday night for Canelo Alvarez. It's not that Alfredo Angulo is an elite fighter. It's that Alfredo Angulo has to be knocked half-blind to stop bulldozing at his opponents.

It's more than worth finding out if Canelo Alvarez can stay calm and logical against that sort of attack, and nobody available does it better than Alfredo Angulo. Even if Alvarez wins as is favored, Angulo can be counted on for a legitimate gut-check.

Christ is not alone. Although he's calling the fight, and thus not exactly impartial, Showtime commentator Paulie Malignaggi is known for speaking his mind. He told Bleacher Report the fight was much closer than the odds suggest.

"The intriguing thing about Angulo is that Mexican passion he brings to the table," Ring Magazine's eighth- ranked welterweight Malignaggi said. "Any time you have a fighter who brings this level of, dare I say it, machismo, it makes for a great fight. Especially when both guys want to show who's more Mexican. Who has more fire in their belly?"

"He's not a guy who dominates the camera when he walks into the room," Malignaggi continued. "So he gets thrown into the opponent role. But he's a good fighter. And when a good fighter gets thrown into that opponent role, you use it as motivation and something to drive you.

"But at the same time, you try to take something positive out of it. You can say, 'At least I'm here. I'm at least getting the opportunity to upset the apple cart.' It's one night to change the entire look of things. You have an hour of your life to change a lot of things." 

In our interview Wednesday, Angulo was all Canelo-ed out, perhaps weary after months of talking. In just days the talking will, blissfully, be over. Soon it will be time to fight.

"I don't worry about Canelo," he said simply. "I have to always be strong and fight for my fans."

In a January media call, however, he was more willing to expound on the matchup.

"Look, everybody knows my style, everybody knows how I fight, my pro record proves that, you can see my fights, and I'm always in very, very good fights," Angulo told the media. "I always give great fights. I always give 100 percent of me. So it's going to be a very interesting fight because he's trying to come back from his first loss, and I just feel that it's the right time for this fight."

Already speculation has begun. A win over Canelo, perhaps, would put him in the hunt for a fight with Mayweather. Even if that doesn't come to fruition, a win changes everything for Angulo, opening the door wide for bouts with a variety of prominent fighters.

Before the fantasy matchmaking begins, however, Angulo needs to win. As far as he's concerned, that makes this a bout no different than any other in his career, despite it being the brightest spotlight of his life.

"I don't think of it that way. It's another fight which are all important to me. I do my job," he said, before conceding this was, indeed, a powerful opportunity. "...it opens doors for more good fights."

 

"Toe to Toe: Canelo vs. Angulo," a 12-round super welterweight fight, takes place Saturday, March 8 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. The four-fight telecast, distributed live by SHOWTIME PPV, begins at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

Jonathan Snowden is Bleacher Report's lead combat sports writer. Unless otherwise noted, all quotes were gathered firsthand or via participation in media conference calls.

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ESPN.com - Boxing: Five keys for Alfredo Angulo against Canelo Alvarez

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Five keys for Alfredo Angulo against Canelo Alvarez
Mar 6th 2014, 13:53, by Bernardo Pilatti

Plotting a path to victory in Saturday's 154-pound bout against Canelo Alvarez

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Carlos Molina vs. Jermall Charlo: Fight Time, Date, TV Info and Preview

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Carlos Molina vs. Jermall Charlo: Fight Time, Date, TV Info and Preview
Mar 6th 2014, 11:00, by Brian Mazique

Jermall Charlo (17-0, 13 KO) is about to get the biggest test and opportunity of his young career. On Saturday night, as part of the undercard that features Saul "Canelo" Alvarez vs. Alfredo Angulo at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Charlo will face IBF light middleweight champion "King" Carlos Molina (22-5-2, 6 KO).

The 23-year-old Charlo is set to take a major step up in competition, much like his twin brother Jermell did in his last bout against another member of nickname royalty, "King" Gabriel Rosado.

Jermall hopes to follow the pattern created by Jermell. The latter out-boxed Rosado, and now Jermall will be looking to dethrone a king as well.

Molina won his title in his last bout. He captured a split-decision victory over Ishe Smith in September 2013. This bout with Charlo will be his first defense.

Here's how you can catch the action.

 

When: Saturday, March 8 at 9 p.m. ET

Where: MGM Grand in Las Vegas

TV: Showtime pay-per-view

 

The Book on Charlo

After a stellar amateur career, Charlo has been just as impressive as a professional. He's undefeated, but he hasn't faced anyone with the experience and skill that Molina possesses. 

That said, Charlo is an exceptional athlete. The Houston native is fired up and ready to take Molina's strap. He told Peter Lim of the Houston Chronicle, "I'm super ready. I feel like I'm on an elite level already. The record don't mean nothing. This is the best training camp I've ever had, hands down. I actually fought in December so I was already in good quality shape since."

There's no doubt Charlo's speed and power are superior to Molina's, but the champion is slick and knows how to gain advantages against physically superior opponents.

Still, Charlo remains confident in his approach. Per Thomas Gerbasi of Boxing Scene, Charlo said, "If I come in fresh, and come in spraying nothing but Lysol all over him, I can’t lose. His game plan is to make me look ugly, so the more confident and the more comfortable I feel in there, I won’t have a problem with it going to the scorecards."

Will Charlo get a boxing lesson, or will Molina become another conquered opponent?

 

The Book on Molina

Respect is hard to come by for Molina. Despite the fact that he's a world champion, his very modest KO total and ugly style don't exactly generate a lot of fan fare.

Those two detractions can cause opponents to overlook him. It appeared that's what happened in his last bout with Smith. Molina ultimately out-worked him and took his title.

Even with that respectable victory, Molina is still not well known and respected. Charlo told Kevin Idec of Boxing Scene that Molina was just a stepping stone.

At a press event for the bout, Fight Hype asked Molina how many fights he'd have to win to gain some respect. Molina replied, "I don't know how many fights it's going to take or how many wins, but all I can worry about is the fight in front of me, so all I have to do is keep winning every single fight…I know it's going to be tough; nothing's easy. I don't want it easy either."

(You can see the entire interview in the video below.)

On Saturday, he'll again be fighting to prove himself.

 

Prediction

This is going to be a very tough fight for Charlo. Molina is great at what he does. He makes the fight ugly. He frustrates opponents and he has good defense and a solid chin.

Charlo's biggest challenge is going to be remaining poised and fighting off frustration. The fight is going to go the distance.

There will likely be a good number of rounds that are difficult to score. However, Charlo will walk away with the title by a close majority decision.

 

Follow me. I'm addicted to The Sweet Science.

@BMaziqueFPBR

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