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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Canelo Alvarez vs. Josesito Lopez: Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez Defeats Josesito Lopez

Bleacher Report - Boxing
Bleacher Report - The open source sports network
Canelo Alvarez vs. Josesito Lopez: Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez Defeats Josesito Lopez
Sep 16th 2012, 04:01

In one of the most anticipated fights of the year, it was Saul "Canelo" Alvarez retaining his WBC light middleweight championship on Saturday night against Josesito Lopez at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. 

Alvarez had even more at stake in this fight than just a title, as he brought a 41-fight unbeaten streak into this match. He was able to make it through this contest with everything still intact and further solidified his spot as one of the top light middleweights in the world.

Lopez fought extremely hard, but three knockdowns took their toll. Alvarez used his stunning power to batter Lopez in every which way, and Lopez couldn't fight his way off the ropes.

He almost made it out of the fifth round, but Alvarez cornered him one final time. He scored a few heavy blows. The referee stopped the fight, and Alvarez retained his WBC light middleweight belt.

However, there could be some thought that Alvarez still has more to prove, as Lopez was not even supposed to be in this spot, at least that was the original plan. 

The idea for Alvarez's fight was to have him go up against Victor Ortiz. Of course, that was provided Ortiz defeated Lopez when they fought in June. 

Instead, Lopez shocked the world on that night and destroyed Ortiz to the point where he couldn't make it out after the ninth round. That victory also secured the WBC Silver welterweight title for Lopez. 

Coming into this fight, Lopez was thought to be at a disadvantage. He had to move up in weight for this bout and was six years older than Alvarez. 

The age difference probably wasn't that big of a deal, because Alvarez is a freak at just 22 years old. He is naturally bigger than Lopez, so he is able to pack a little more power into his punches. 

Alvarez is still working his way up the pound-for-pound ladder, but as his outstanding 42-0 record and increase in quality competition proves, the sky is the limit for him. 

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Sergio Martinez Escapes; Beats Chavez Jr. by Unanimous Decision

Bleacher Report - Boxing
Bleacher Report - The open source sports network
Sergio Martinez Escapes; Beats Chavez Jr. by Unanimous Decision
Sep 16th 2012, 04:48

For Sergio Martinez, it was 11.5 rounds of a boxing clinic and 1.5 minutes of sheer terror.

Martinez defeated Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. by unanimous decision on Saturday night at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas. With the victory, he claimed the WBC middleweight championship and retained The Ring Magazine title.

For the first 11 rounds, the issue was never in doubt.

Martinez outboxed, outpunched and outclassed his younger opponent. He used movement to frustrate him and gave him no openings to get into a rhythm,

Chavez, known as a slow starter, struggled to find openings, and when he did, he seemed reluctant to let his hands go. Heading into the final round, it was totally justified if you had scored all 11 previous rounds for Martinez.

And then, it happened, or at least, came close. 

With the fight seemingly out of reach, Chavez nearly channeled one of his legendary father's finest moments when he stunned, knocked down and nearly knocked out Martinez in the 12th round.

It was an absolutely stunning turn of events, given how one-sided the previous rounds had been. It was nearly a direct replay of Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., who was well behind on the scorecards going into the last round, knocking out Meldrick Taylor in 1990.

"I was 20 seconds away from knocking him out. I started way too late," Chavez told Max Kellerman in the ring after the fight.

 

"I didn't really get started until the eighth round."

But, it wasn't to be as a badly hurt Martinez, who showed his guts by refusing to hold and continuing to fight, stayed on his feet to meet the final bell.

The scorecards were never in doubt with Martinez winning 117-110, 118-109, 118-109.

Both fighters showed tremendous class toward each other in the post-fight interviews, especially in light of how personal and heated the promotion had been.

"He fought a great fight and he was a lot tougher than I expected," Martinez told Kellerman. "He showed great heart."

Martinez and Chavez both stated their desire for a rematch which could take place early next year.

"If Julio wants a rematch, we'll do a rematch," Martinez said.

One thing is for sure, if there is a rematch, Julio better fight for more than a minute and a half.

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Martinez vs. Chavez Results: Future Implications of Martinez's Win

Bleacher Report - Boxing
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Martinez vs. Chavez Results: Future Implications of Martinez's Win
Sep 16th 2012, 04:39

This was his coming out. He’s always been a superstar, at least in his mind. Sergio Martinez believed his stunted growth in boxing was just a matter of opportunity. He was willing to fight anyone anywhere. But he didn’t reap the rewards that should have come his way, like being robbed in fights against Kermit Cintron and in his first bout against Paul Williams.

Martinez was stamped an unappreciated champion, someone who deserved far more mainstream appeal and attention than he received. And he did. Saturday night he may have smashed that threshold by destroying the overmatched and overhyped Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

Martinez established himself—finally—as a superstar to the uninformed. He was already a superstar for the boxing cognoscenti. He’s considered among the top three pound-for-pound fighters in the world by the handful of respected media that still cover boxing.

By the third round, Chavez had a bloody nose. By the fifth round, it was obvious that Martinez was in a totally different class than the slower, awkward Chavez.

Chavez was terribly exposed, hardly getting off anything, and Martinez never allowed Chavez him to set up. In the last round, Chavez, to his credit, had Martinez in serious trouble with a right to the temple. But in the end, a wobbly Martinez held on and won convincingly 117-110 and 118-109 twice on the scorecards.

That wasn’t what Chavez trained for in his living room—moving his chairs around. The chairs didn’t move. Martinez did. He landed 322 punches of 908 punches thrown, to Chavez's 178 connects of 390 punches thrown.

Julio Chavez Jr. was everything bad about boxing—and in a larger sense—society today. He lived a privileged life as the son of a boxing legend. He did nothing to warrant being propped up to lofty heights.

For a disparity in justice, all one needed to know was Chavez received $3 million with additional pay-per-view revenue for this fight, while Martinez, the true world middleweight champion, got $1.4 million and some PPV crumbs.

How fair was that?

Then again, hardly anything has been fair for Martinez. He’s everything that’s good about boxing. Bullied as a child and shot at, Martinez grew up in one of Argentina’s worst slums, lugging hammers and nails to his father’s construction sites.

He didn’t get into the sport until the relatively late age of 20. It’s why he drives himself the way he does and why he sleeps in a hyperbaric chamber,. He appreciates the commitment and dedication that goes into success. He didn't want to go back to that life.

Chavez never appreciated success because of his famous surname. Martinez grabbed it any chance he had.

As he did Saturday night.

Stopping his last four opponents wasn’t enough. Martinez was still stripped of the WBC title by WBC czar Jose Sulaiman, who happens to be Chavez Jr.’s godfather—a move to make it available for Junior. Beating the likes of Williams, Kelly Pavlik, a pair of undefeated fighters in Serhiy Dzinziruk and Darren Barker and stopping Alex Bunema wasn’t enough—not for Martinez.

All Chavez had to do was beat the game Andy Lee, halting past-his-prime Peter Manfredo Jr. and decisioning Marco Antonio Rubio hardly counts in comparison to whom Martinez has been in with.

This was supposed to Chavez's showcase. The whole thing was set up to pass the torch from his Hall of Fame father to him. Who was kidding whom here? Chavez never possessed his old man’s skills. He never deserved to get the title shot against a superstar like Martinez.

Martinez proved that. It’s probably why it galled him so much how the media and promoters all fawned over Chavez.

But in the end, justice was delivered. The future now belongs to someone who’s worked to achieve a better future—not someone who had been handed a title.

The future looks very bright for Martinez, hopefully setting up something against Floyd Mayweather, since Martinez is a smallish middleweight or a deserved megafight with the fighter who was down the street, Canelo Alvarez.

It’s what is right and just. Martinez deserves it. He’s a superstar. He knew it. It’s about time the rest of the world notices.

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Boxing News: Sergio Martinez defeats Chavez Jr, captures WBC 160 lb title

Boxing News
Sergio Martinez defeats Chavez Jr, captures WBC 160 lb title
Sep 16th 2012, 05:39

By Patrick McConnell: Boxing at its best. Yet when we look at it a little closer the corruption runs skin deep. Listen and read up folks. Tonight we had the Middleweight title on the line. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr vs Sergio Martinez. Forget about the four major belt in every division ranging from heavyweight, this [...]

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ESPN.com - Boxing: Martinez hangs on to take title from Chavez Jr.

ESPN.com - Boxing
Latest Boxing news from ESPN.com
Martinez hangs on to take title from Chavez Jr.
Sep 16th 2012, 05:24

Sergio Martinez gave Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. the beating he promised for 11 rounds, then barely survived being knocked out in the final round Saturday night to regain the middleweight title.

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Boxing News: Arum wants Mercito Gesta vs. Miguel Vazquez on Pacquiao-Marquez 4 undercard on December 8th

Boxing News
Arum wants Mercito Gesta vs. Miguel Vazquez on Pacquiao-Marquez 4 undercard on December 8th
Sep 15th 2012, 21:15

By Chris Williams: Top Rank promoter Bob Arum is hoping to match IBF lightweight champion Miguel Vazquez (31-3, 13 KO’s) against his fighter unbeaten lightweight contender Mercito Gesta (26-0-1, 14 KO’s) on the undercard of the Manny Pacquiao vs. Juan Manuel Marquez 4 fight on December 8th at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada. [...]

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Martinez vs. Chavez Jr.: Sergio Martinez Defeats Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

Bleacher Report - Boxing
Bleacher Report - The open source sports network
Martinez vs. Chavez Jr.: Sergio Martinez Defeats Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.
Sep 16th 2012, 04:29

After a year of trying to get Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. to fight him, Sergio Martinez finally got his wish. And he certainly took advantage of the opportunity.

Martinez justified his reputation as one of the top-three pound-for-pound fighters in the world in the eyes of many, as he defeated Chavez and claimed the WBC middleweight belt Saturday night.

Martinez dominated the early and middle parts of the fight, but that didn't stop both fighters from a furious finish. Chavez started gaining momentum in the 11th round, and he even scored a knockdown in the 12th.

However, Martinez was saved by the bell. He won via unanimous decision, winning the coveted middleweight belt.

It was an exciting fight, and the finish was one of the best in recent memory. Both fighters put forth a tremendous effort, but Chavez couldn't get the knockout he needed at the end.

Martinez had everything to lose in this fight. Had he not been able to secure the middleweight title, it's possible the 37-year-old would have slowly faded into boxing irrelevance as the sport looked toward younger contenders to challenge Chavez. 

It's what makes this win so impressive. He wasn't just fighting Chavez; he was fighting off the inevitability of eventually sacrificing his place among boxing's elite as well. To a certain extent, his reputation was on the line.

For Chavez, this is certainly a setback, but likely just a temporary one. He's still a big draw. He's still considered one of the elite middleweights around. He'll be back.

Still, you can't help but wonder if this will only embolden those fans that whisper that Chavez is overrated, that he is only such a huge draw because he is the son of the greatest Mexican fighter of all time. 

On this night, the Chavez name couldn't save him. And for one more fight, Martinez quieted the talk that he was slowing down and his time among the elite was drawing to a close.

Martinez has the belt he probably deserved to hold much sooner. He won't go gently into the night, at least not yet.

 

Hit me up on Twitter—my tweets always have a backup long snapper.

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ESPN.com - NYFightBlog: Martinez survives for UD win over Chavez

ESPN.com - NYFightBlog
ESPN.com presents Boxing
Martinez survives for UD win over Chavez
Sep 16th 2012, 04:56

Sergio Martinez schooled Julio Cesar Chavez in the art of pugilism, and looked like he'd coast to a wide decision win, until he got caught with a right hand with 1:20 left in the twelfth and final round at the Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas on Saturday evening, which buzzed him badly. "Maravilla" needed to summon all his wits and guts, just to make it to the final bell, as the WBC middleweight Chavez raked him with lefts, and sent him to the mat.

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Boxing News: Sergio Martinez beats Chavez Jr. by lopsided decision after surviving 12th round scare

Boxing News
Sergio Martinez beats Chavez Jr. by lopsided decision after surviving 12th round scare
Sep 16th 2012, 04:39

By Jim Dower: WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (46-1-1, 32 KO’s) came close to pulling out a last round knockout victory against Sergio Martinez (50-2-2, 28 KO’s) after knocking Martinez down in the 12th on Saturday night at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. However, Martinez got back up and [...]

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ESPN.com - Boxing: Canelo Alvarez defends belt, stops Lopez in 5th

ESPN.com - Boxing
Latest Boxing news from ESPN.com
Canelo Alvarez defends belt, stops Lopez in 5th
Sep 16th 2012, 04:37

Saul "Canelo" Alvarez stopped Josesito Lopez late in the fifth round Saturday night, defending his WBC 154-pound title with a relentless display of power from the 22-year-old Mexican star.

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Boxing News: Arum: This the last Pacquiao-Marquez fight

Boxing News
Arum: This the last Pacquiao-Marquez fight
Sep 15th 2012, 20:59

By Chris Williams: Manny Pacquiao (54-4-2, 38 KO’s) and Juan Manuel Marquez (54-6-1, 39 KO’s) will be fighting each other for the fourth time in their careers when they meet on December 8th at the MGM Grand, Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. This hasn’t pleased a lot of boxing fans, many of [...]

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr: How Light Schedule Will Help vs. Martinez

Bleacher Report - Boxing
Bleacher Report - The open source sports network
Julio Cesar Chavez Jr: How Light Schedule Will Help vs. Martinez
Sep 16th 2012, 00:28

One of the biggest criticisms leveled at Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. entering his middleweight fight against Sergio Martinez is his relatively light schedule in the opponents he's faced throughout his career.

There is some validity to the heat Chavez takes, but the unconventional path that has led him to Saturday's bout will actually be his biggest asset against the more experienced Argentine fighter 12 years his senior.

Both the WBC and The Ring middleweight titles are at stake, with Chavez holding the former and Martinez the latter. Even before the two have entered the ring, neither has pulled any punches in the press, taking vocal jabs at each other all week to stir the tension.

On the weekend of Mexican Independence Day, Chavez will look have the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas mostly in his corner, as ESPN.com's Dan Rafael observes.

Any dismissal of Chavez for being coddled by his promoters—as Martinez himself suggests—or as simply a beneficiary of his legendary father's boxing career have been proved wrong through his fighting. In 48 career fights, Chavez has yet to lose a decision. All he knows how to do is win, and apparently it runs in his family.

A composed Chavez has been on display throughout the week, as he refuses to give in to any of the trash talk that Martinez is spouting, opting to take the high road and suggest that Martinez is scared of fighting him.

Martinez is arguably the best middleweight fighter in the world, having held three different championship belts all at once back in 2010 as the Fighter of the Year recipient.

One of Chavez's top promoters is Bob Arum, and in Rafael's story, he answers why Chavez didn't fight Martinez sooner. He points to Chavez's most recent, first-ever bout with a southpaw in Andy Lee, who Chavez TKO'd in the seventh round:

There was no way we would ever think of making a Martinez fight unless he had the performance he had against Andy Lee...no friggin' way, because otherwise we could very well have been leading him to slaughter.

Whether that scant experience against the unorthodox style will translate to a great fight with Martinez remains to be seen. However, the lower level of punishment on Chavez's body and his tendency to fight heavier than his opponent may justify the slow development process that so many have criticized during his successful career.

The big Vegas stage awaits, and with it a shot for Chavez to prove that he has finally arrived, and is ready to carve out his own legacy from the shadow of his father.

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Canelo Alvarez vs. Josesito Lopez Live Blog: Round-by-Round Scores, Reaction

Bleacher Report - Boxing
Bleacher Report - The open source sports network
Canelo Alvarez vs. Josesito Lopez Live Blog: Round-by-Round Scores, Reaction
Sep 15th 2012, 23:54

Six months I ago I doubt even Josesito Lopez would have imagined that on the biggest boxing weekend of the year—Mexican Independence Day—he would be headlining a premium cable card against one of the sport's hottest young stars. 

But when Lopez (30-4, 18 KOs) broke Victor Ortiz's jaw last June 23, he earned the opportunity to challenge Saul Alvarez (40-0-1, 29 KOs) for his WBC junior middleweight belt, bumping Ortiz from the spot he had already been announced for. 

They will meet tonight, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada. The fight will be broadcast live on Showtime. 

Lopez will be a heavy underdog in the betting, but nobody doubts that he will show up tonight looking to make a fight of it. He is a pressure fighter with a solid chin and respectable power. Expect him to stay within range of Alvarez, looking to exchange up close. 

But he will be facing a bigger man. His TKO of Ortiz was his first major fight at welterweight, after spending almost his entire career at 140. 

Now he will step up in weight once again, to challenge Alvarez at 154. 

A major star in Mexico since his teenage years, the 22-year-old Alvarez is viewed by many as a boxing prodigy, a young champion at the start of a legendary career. 

Both men are aggressive, yet intelligent, brawler-boxers. I have to give Alvarez the advantages in strength, explosiveness and overall athleticism, but Lopez has a gritty, intangible aspect that keeps him in fights and in position to win. 

I will be blogging with round-by-round scoring in the main event and highlights from the under card, starting at 9 p.m.

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Bleacher Report - Boxing: Martinez vs. Chavez Jr.: Live Round-by-Round Results and Review

Bleacher Report - Boxing
Bleacher Report - The open source sports network
Martinez vs. Chavez Jr.: Live Round-by-Round Results and Review
Sep 15th 2012, 20:35

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. versus Sergio Martinez is a deadly rivalry.

Martinez says his world title was stolen. Chavez says he's earned it fair and square, and will prove himself worthy to hold it when they meet in the ring.

Martinez is quick, powerful and smart, with four vicious knockouts in his last four fights including 2010's knockout of the year against the iron-chinned Paul Williams.

Chavez is a taller, bigger, stronger and younger opponent at age 26. The 37-year-old Martinez may be the more experienced opponent, but will Chavez's size and ambition prove too much?

That is the question that will be answered Saturday night when both men enter the ring to fight for the prestigious WBC middleweight world title as well as the The Ring Magazine championship.

The HBO pay-per-view fight as well as its televised undercard will be analyzed here live as it happens. Bleacher Report will have a round-by-round breakdown and scorecard from yours truly as well as a second scorecard and occasional comments from B/R veteran Dave Carlson.

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Boxing News: A shot in the arm: Chavez Jr. vs. Sergio Martinez

Boxing News
A shot in the arm: Chavez Jr. vs. Sergio Martinez
Sep 16th 2012, 00:30

By Scott Brown: The sport of boxing is in desperate need of a shot in the arm. Not a steroid, or a testosterone, but perhaps a Vitamin B-12 shot to get it back on its feet. There were whispers of that when half-dollar (50 cent) threw in his hat as a promoter. With 50cent ability [...]

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