5/4 ESPN: Artur Beterbiev vs Radivoje “Hot Rod” Kalajdzic (IBF Light Heavyweight Title)

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patscorpio

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LIVE on ESPN and ESPN Deportes at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT
Entire Undercard LIVE on ESPN+ at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT


STOCKTON, Calif. (March 19, 2019) — IBF light heavyweight world champion Artur Beterbiev, the only current world champion with a 100 percent knockout ratio, will take his iron fists to California for the second defense of his title.

Beterbiev, who recently signed a long-term pact with Top Rank, will face top contender Radivoje “Hot Rod” Kalajdzic in the main event Saturday, May 4 at Stockton Arena. In the co-feature, Jerwin “Pretty Boy” Ancajas, the world’s longest-reigning 115-pound world champion, will make the seventh defense of his IBF junior bantamweight title against No. 1 contender Ryuichi Funai.

And, in a six-round lightweight special attraction, 18-year-old Stockton native and blue-chip prospect Gabriel Flores Jr. will face off against Eduardo Pereira.

Beterbiev-Kalajdzic, Ancajas-Funai, and Flores-Pereira will be televised live on ESPN and ESPN Deportes (Spanish) at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m PT. The soon-to-be announced undercard will stream live beginning at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT on ESPN+, the direct-to-consumer sports streaming service from The Walt Disney Company’s Direct-to-Consumer & International segment and ESPN.

Promoted by Top Rank, tickets priced at $175, $100, $65, $40, and $25 go on sale TODAY, March 19 at 12 p.m. PT, and can be purchased at Ticketmaster.com, by phone at 800-745-3000 or at the Stockton Arena Ticket Office Monday-Friday from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. and beginning three hours prior to event time on event days.

“Top Rank is really excited to bring big-time boxing to Stockton on May 4,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “The light heavyweight championship between Beterbiev and Hot Rod will be a thrilling brawl. Gabriel Flores Jr. will have the opportunity to perform before his hometown fans, and we welcome Jerwin Ancajas back in a great fight against Funai.”

“I am very excited to defend my IBF light heavyweight title on May 4 against a high-quality opponent like Radivoje Kalajdzic,” Beterbiev said. “This will be a great fight, and I can’t wait to get in the ring and show once again why I am the best 175-pound boxer in the world.”

“I’m thrilled to get this opportunity to challenge for a world title against a great fighter like Artur Beterbiev,” Kalajdzic said. “It will be a very exciting fight. Both of us hit hard, so expect fireworks. I am focused on securing a victory and will take full advantage of this shot. A win opens so many doors for me and will change my life. On May 4, the light heavyweight division will have a new world champion.”

Beterbiev (13-0, 13 KOs), a 34-year-old native of Russia, turned pro in 2013 following an amateur career that included a pair of European Championships gold medals and a gold medal at the 2009 World Championships. In only his sixth pro bout, he knocked out former world champion Tavoris Cloud. He won the IBF crown in November 2017 with a fourth-round stoppage over Enrico Kölling in Fresno, California. Beterbiev defended his belt the following October, recovering from a second-round knockdown to stop Callum Johnson in the fourth. Kalajdzic (24-1, 17 KOs) has won three in a row since a highly controversial split decision loss to Marcus Browne, including a fifth-round stoppage over then-unbeaten Travis Peterkin.

Flores (12-0, 5 KOs) was one of the great U.S. amateurs in recent memory, a boxing prodigy who signed with Top Rank in 2016 at the age of 16. He became the youngest fighter ever to sign a pro contract with Top Rank and will turn 19 three days before his bout against Pereira. He went 6-0 in 2018 and last fought on Feb. 10, cruising to a six-round unanimous decision over Alex Torres Rynn. Flores is returning home to raise awareness for bullying in his community, a cause that is near and dear to his heart.

“I was born and raised in Stockton, and it is the city I still call home. To get the opportunity to fight at the big arena in front of my friends, family, and biggest fans is a dream come true,” Flores said. “This is only the beginning of my journey. One day, I will fill up that arena as a world champion. I am excited to use my platform to show kids that bullying is unacceptable and that we must treat everyone with dignity and respect.”

“This fight card in Stockton is two-and-a-half years in the making,” said Rick Mirigian, event organizer and Flores’ adviser. “This gorgeous arena sits on the waterfront, and Stockton is a real fight town. Look for fireworks from Flores Jr. in his homecoming in what will be the biggest televised sporting event the city has ever seen.”

Ancajas (30-1-2, 20 KOs), a 27-year-old Filipino native, has been one of the most active world champions in modern boxing, defending his belt three times apiece in 2017 and 2018. Unbeaten in 18 fights dating back to 2012, Ancajas is coming off a competitive draw versus Alejandro Santiago and is seeking to rebound against Funai (31-7, 22 KOs), who has won seven consecutive fights. A native of Tokyo, Funai is a former Japanese super flyweight champion who earned top contender status last June with an eighth-round KO over Warlito Parrenas. In his last bout, he knocked out Victor Emanuel Olivo in the second round to extend his KO streak to three.

“I was hard at work three weeks after my last fight with Santiago,” Ancajas said. “I am going to be in the best shape in my upcoming fight with Funai. Coming off my last fight, I really want to give a great performance and defend my world title in style for the fans in Stockton and everyone watching on ESPN.”

“I am excited for this opportunity to challenge for a world title and to make my professional debut in America,” Funai said. “I know I have the experience and the skills to become the new IBF champion of the world. Jerwin and I respect one another, but this is boxing, and I am going to fight my heart out.”
 

chosenaledge13

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Def will be watching this, Hot Rod would be a household name right now if he didn't get robbed in that Marcus Browne fight a couple years back. Would be dope to see him get the W
 

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Kalajdzic: Beterbiev is Hittable, He's Been Down, This Will Be Fun
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By Thomas Gerbasi

Radivoje Kalajdzic doesn’t know how he’ll feel should he leave Stockton, California with the IBF world light heavyweight title the morning after his bout with Artur Beterbiev.

Oh, it will feel good to change his life and the lives of his family as a world champion, but as far as the actual emotions in the ring on Saturday night go, he hasn’t even thought about them. All that matters to him right now is the fight. The title is a bonus, one he never even thought would be part of his journey.

“Right now, all I’m picturing is how the fight’s gonna play out and my game plan,” said Kalajdzic. “I’m picturing me going in the ring, what I’m gonna do, executing it, and I just want the win. But of course when I get the win, the belt is gonna come with it, so when they say, “And the new…” I don’t know how I’m gonna feel, honestly, because I never dreamed of winning a championship. I actually quit boxing before and somebody talked me into going into the pros, so I never thought about fighting on this stage and never had a dream of being a champion. So I really don’t know how I’m gonna feel after I win.”

If you want to go back even further, it’s a wonder that the 27-year-old is even here, considering that he survived being born just before the Bosnian war broke out in 1992. And after he and his family lived as refugees for several years after leaving home for a better life, ultimately settling in the United States when Kalajdzic was seven, the 175-pound contender credits his parents for being the ones that fought and suffered to give him a better life.

“I went through it, but I was small,” he said. “My parents were the ones having me go from place to place, but I don’t remember it. I was young when that was happening, and my parents had a tough life, but I didn’t. They provided everything for me and they made sure we had everything good.”

Twenty years later, the Floridian is the one in the role of fighter and provider as a father of two children, with one on the way. It’s the job he truly embraces, and like his parents, he’s willing to do whatever it takes to make sure his kids are taken care of. So when his right hand was injured and only getting worse following his 2016 stoppage of previously unbeaten Travis Peterkin, he was not only willing to walk away, but he did, getting a job working construction with his father to keep food on the table. And as far as he was concerned, his days in the ring were over.

“Big time,” Kalajdzic said. “I told myself I was done with boxing. I got a job and I wasn’t even thinking about boxing because my hand was getting worse and worse. I had surgery, I had PRP injections, everything. My hand was so bad I gave up on boxing.”

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It was a quiet end to a promising career, and despite scoring 22 pro wins, what most would remember Kalajdzic for was the one loss on his record, a highly controversial 2016 defeat to unbeaten Olympian Marcus Browne at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. It was a bitter defeat for Kalajdzic to take, but knowing that most observers believed he deserved to take the split decision victory eased the sting a bit. And as he admits, he may have gotten more attention for losing than he would have by getting the judges’ nod.

“It hurts on my record because I would like to be undefeated, but I got over it the next day from all the social media support,” he said. “Clearly in my heart, I knew I won, so it didn’t hurt me that bad other than having that one loss on my record. But everybody, when they bring my name up, they’re like, ‘Oh, he lost to Browne but he really won that fight.’ I think I got more exposure because of the loss.”

Handing Peterkin his first pro loss five months later raised the stock of “Hot Rod” even higher, but having only one hand to work with in the ring was a handicap he just couldn’t bear if he was going to fight the best light heavyweights in the world.

“My hand got so bad, I stopped boxing and got a job,” he said, but eventually, hope arrived in an unlikely form.

“I got stem cell injections, and that was the only thing that worked, so after a while it started getting better and better and it changed everything around. Now it’s fully healed and better than it ever was.”

Kalajdzic lost a year of his career in 2017, but in 2018, he returned, stopping Brad Austin and Alex Theran in a round each. Now he wanted more, and he got it.

“Once I started training again, they told me that I was gonna get a big fight and just to be patient,” said the DiBella Entertainment roster member. “I believed in them, and I landed the big fight and everything worked out perfectly.”

That’s the good news. The bad is that to get that world title belt, he’ll have to go through Russian wrecking machine Beterbiev, who is 13-0 with 13 knockouts heading into Saturday’s bout at Stockton Arena. But Kalajdzic is far from intimidated by the champion, who is coming off a fourth-round finish of Callum Johnson last October.

“I see a power puncher that comes forward, but he’s hittable,” said Kalajdzic. “He’s been dropped twice, and I have power as well, so it’s gonna be a fun night. I’m a come forward fighter too. All my fights, I come forward and press the issue so it’s going to be interesting.”

It will be for those of us watching simply because of the possibility for mayhem in Stockton. But for Kalajdzic, interesting means a big fight against a world champion with the possibility of going back home to Florida as a world champion. Not bad for someone who thought his career was over in 2017.

“Ever since I came back from my hand injury I’ve been wanting a big fight,” Kalajdzic said. “I didn’t want to fight locally or on someone’s undercard. I wanted a big fight so I could showcase my skills, and I got it and I think this is the perfect opponent. It’s crazy. Two years ago I was working construction. Look at me now, on ESPN fighting for a world title.”
 

reservoirdogs

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If Beterbeast wins this will be his nicest win. Everybody who knows Kalajdzic knows him from "the dude who supposed to beat Browne but got robbed" and Browne proved lately that he isn't some bum either by beating Jack quite convincingly.
 

malbaker86

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Man when is Beterbiev going to get a unification fight? I'm tired of him facing guys who don't move the needle for me. Not crapping on this fight, but you know what I mean. Wanna see him prove himself vs the ELITE of 175
 
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