6/10 ESPN: "Ready to Die" Teofimo Lopez vs Josh Taylor (WBO & Ring Magazine Jr Welterweight Championship)

Who wins?

  • Teofimo by Decision

    Votes: 8 16.0%
  • Teofimo by KO

    Votes: 8 16.0%
  • Taylor by Decision

    Votes: 19 38.0%
  • Taylor by KO

    Votes: 15 30.0%
  • Draw

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    50
  • Poll closed .

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Tim Bradley On Teofimo Lopez: "He's Dog Food For The Top 140s"​

teofimo-lopez%20(17)_1637717176.jpg

BY HANS THEMISTODE
Published Wed Jun 07, 2023, 08:11 PM EDT
Teofimo Lopez has never been short on confidence but as his showdown against Josh Taylor gets a bit closer, his confident attitude has grown to hubris. This upcoming weekend, at the Hulu Theater in New York’s Madison Square Garden, Lopez will look to become a two-division champion.
Long before the two agreed to terms for their super lightweight clash, Lopez (18-1, 13 KOs) has always believed that Taylor has virtually no chance against him. Tim Bradley, on the other hand, after sifting through hours of game tape from both fighters, wholeheartedly disagrees with Lopez’s assertion.
“He loses,” said Bradley to K.O. Artist Sports when asked if he believes that Lopez has what it takes to pick up the win. “Josh Taylor is a dog man.”
From 2018-2021, Taylor (19-0, 13 KOs) enjoyed loads of success. Over that time span, the Scottish native not only took on five consecutive undefeated opponents but he also fully unified the division. Yet, when he was ostensibly at the top of his game, Jack Catterall gave the undisputed titlist a harsh wake-up call. Although their showdown didn't result in Taylor actually losing his titles, the controversial scorecards left a sour taste in his mouth.
From there, Catterall publicly ripped Taylor, claiming that the 32-year-old wasn't a real champion. Admittedly, Catterall’s criticism, paired with the outside noise, forced Taylor into an uncomfortable position. In an attempt to lure Catterall back into the ring and prove that his words were mendacious, Taylor dropped three of his four titles to avoid the endless parade of mandatory challengers. Still, despite relinquishing his undisputed throne, the two were unable to hammer out a deal for an immediate sequel.
According to Bradley, Taylor’s need to prove himself isn’t the only reason why Lopez will have a disastrous night.
Since moving up in weight, Lopez may have reeled off two consecutive victories but his overall performances have been lackluster. As Bradley takes a long and strong look at the rest of the super lightweight division’s elite, he surmises that whether it’s Taylor or one of the division’s upper echelons, Lopez simply won’t be able to compete.
“He’s dog food for the top 140s.”
 

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The Talented Mr. Taylor

BY CLIFF ROLD
Published Thu Jun 08, 2023, 01:18 AM EDT
It was fairly common during the 1980s for HBO to include in their on-screen graphics before a fight the amount of days it had been since a Mike Tyson or Julio Cesar Chavez had last been in a ring. Anything more than four or five months would often receive notice as “a career-long.” Longer layoffs seemed reserved for veteran fighters still engaging in only the biggest fights.

It probably wasn’t quite that way but it plays that way in the mind’s eye.

One thing can be said for certain: A year and a half without a fight used to be a long, long time in boxing for most champions.

This Saturday (ESPN, 10 PM EST), lineal World Jr. welterweight champion Josh Taylor (19-0, 12 KO) will make his first appearance since February 2022. If one is only as good as their last impression, Taylor has plenty to prove this weekend when he defends against former lineal lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez (18-1, 13 KO).

One night and a long layoff can make people forget. Taylor can make the world remember by reasserting his place atop the talented 140 lb. mountain here.

The one night of course was his defense against Jack Catterall, a split decision for the Scotsman in Glasgow. There was plenty of debate about who deserved to win, with cases for both men. Catterall may have had the better case. Catterall got off to a big start before Taylor worked his way back into the scrap in the second half despite suffering an eighth round knockdown. Each man was deducted a point in the fight and a rematch seemed natural.

It was even signed before falling apart when Taylor suffered a foot injury in January..

Taylor ended the Catterall fight having defended all the major titles in the division as undisputed king. Fast forward to now and Taylor has lost three of the belts outside the ring, still holding the WBO strap heading into the weekend.

While the other sanctioning bodies have replaced Taylor as their representative, the state of modern boxing means a year and a half didn’t matter much for anyone wanting to make a case as the new rightful king. The men who have won titles in his stead are:

Regis Prograis (28-1, 24 KO, WBC)
Subriel Matias (19-1, 19 KO, IBF)
Rolando Romero (15-1, 13 KO, WBA)
Matias and Prograis are more interesting pieces of the title picture than the well managed but limited Romero who holds a title by way of one of the worst title fight stoppages of the twenty-first century. Matias is exciting and explosive though has yet to elevate his level of competition to the level of Prograis or Taylor. Prograis is what he has been for several years: the next best fighter in the class to the only man who has defeated him in Taylor.

Since February 2022, Matias has fought once, Prograis twice, and Romero twice including his one-punch knockout loss to Gervonta Davis at lightweight. In other words, the division has all but stood still in Taylor’s absence. Part of that was the inactivity of Taylor forcing some waiting games.

A bigger part is boxing in general just doesn’t do high activity much anymore.

The best mandate for a Taylor fight is probably still with Catterall who is forced to move on forn now without the rematch he deserves.

In Lopez, Taylor has a name opponent and a chance to argue with his first that he’s still who he was before Catterall. Lopez hasn’t looked the same since a career-making win over Vasyl Lomachenko but remains a physical threat with significant speed and power. He’s someone Taylor has to take serious, and a focused Taylor has proven a formidable talent.

Prior to Catterall, Taylor was on one of the best runs in the sport. Beginning with a win over veteran former titlist Viktor Postol in 2018, Taylor’s last seven opponents prior to Lopez are 133-1. He won the World Boxing Super Series, winning the IBF belt from an undefeated Ivan Baranchyk, adding the WBA strap against undefeated Regis Prograis, and then unified the whole class with a two-knockdown decision over undefeated WBC/WBO titlist Jose Ramirez.

The softest touch in the run was the unremarkable but still undefeated mandatory contender Apinun Kohngsong. Look around the sport and there are a handful of fighters who had a similar run from 2018-2021. They’re all among the elite.

So was Taylor.

He can make a case he still is this weekend and replace absence with anticipation again.
 
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