Essential The Official Boxing Random Thoughts Thread...All boxing heads ENTER.

patscorpio

It's a movement
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
120,460
Reputation
11,605
Daps
249,565
Reppin
MA/CT/Nigeria #byrdgang #RingGangRadio
Naoya Inoue vs. Nonito Donaire Rematch In Negotiations For April In Japan
inoue-donaire_2.jpg

BY MANOUK AKOPYAN
Published Mon Jan 17, 2022, 09:42 PM EST


The 2019 fight of the year is moving closer to seeing a sequel.

A bantamweight championship unification bout between WBA, IBF and Ring Magazine titlist Naoya Inoue and WBC crownholder Nonito Donaire is currently in negotiations to be staged for April in Japan, Donaire promoter and Probellum CEO Richard Schaefer told BoxingScene.com in an interview on Monday.

Schaefer said he’s currently in discussions with Inoue promoter Akihiko Honda of Teiken Promotions to bring the bout to Asia this spring. Inoue is also co-promoted by Top Rank ever since signing a deal with the American outfit shortly after defeating Donaire.

“This is definitely a fight we would love to do and Nonito would love to have it as well. We don’t have a problem going to Japan. Donaire has the balls to go into the lion's den again. This is one of the biggest fights you can make in the sport,” said Schaefer. “I can’t speak on behalf of Inoue, but I know that’s the fight he wants as well. I’ve always believed that when there is a big fight to be made, you make it – and this is a big fight. I am going to exhaust every resource and will not leave any stone unturned to pull off this fight. This is what Nonito and the fight fans want. We as a sport need to deliver it. I believe we’ll get it done.”

Inoue (22-0, 19 KOs) and Donaire (42-6, 28 KOs) met on Nov. 7, 2019 at the Super Arena in Saitama, Japan as part of the World Boxing Super Series finals, and it was the hometown hero Inoue who pulled out a spirited unanimous decision victory with scores of 111-116, 113-114 and 109-117.

Donaire suffered a knockdown in the thrilling fight, and Inoue battled through a broken right eye socket in the savage slugfest that saw Inoue land 227 punches compared to 141 by Donaire.

“Both guys have only gotten bigger since that fight, and probably even better, which is interesting to say especially in regard to Nonito,” said Schaefer.

The 28-year-old Inoue and 39-year-old Donaire have been on a collision course to meet again ever since Donaire recaptured the 118-pound WBC title by beating undefeated Frenchman Nordine Oubaali via fourth-round KO in May.

“The Filipino Flash” Donaire – a four-division champion at 115, 118, 122, and 126 pounds – also defeated fellow Filipino Reymart Gaballo with a bludgeoning fourth-round body shot on Dec. 11. Donaire, a 2012 fighter of the year, became the oldest bantamweight champion in boxing history and improved to 13-1 in the weight class. After the fight, he pleaded for another encounter with Inoue and has even since entertained the idea of dropping to 115 pounds to face the winner of the March trilogy bout between Juan Francisco Estrada and Roman Gonzalez.

Three days after Donaire bested Gaballo, on Dec. 14, “The Monster” Inoue easily handled outmatched challenger Aran Dipaen in Japan and scored a TKO in round eight. In the two fights following the Donaire affair and preceding Dipaen, Inoue has further asserted his position atop boxing’s pound-for-pound list by knocking out both Jason Moloney in October 2020 and Michael Dasmarinas in June.

Should an Inoue fight not materialize, Schaeffer said Donaire could also consider a bout at 122 pounds, specifically with WBO and WBC champion Stephen Fulton (20-0, 8 KOs).

“There are different opportunities in and around those weight classes,” said Schaeffer.

Another potential bout for Donaire could be the other champion at 118 pounds in WBO titlist John Riel Casimero. An all-Filipino fight was in the cards last summer when Casimero and Donaire had their fight announced but later scrapped after Donaire was unhappy with Casimero’s VADA enrollment.

Casimero (31-4, 21 KOs) went on to instead beat former Donaire conqueror Guillermo Rigondeaux in August and was scheduled to headline a Probellum card against mandatory Paul Butler in December, but the Filipino was forced to pull out of the bout prior to the weigh-in citing a battle with gastritis.
 

mr. smoke weed

Smoke Album Done......Wait n See #SmokeSquad
Resting in Peace
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
27,315
Reputation
3,820
Daps
52,065
Reppin
Chi


The Rat King removed Vargas and Smith from the card for committing treason by daring to call his fight a mere "co-feature" :mjgrin:

This shyt still gettin burn 4/5 years later? Like 400 ppl are gonna watch. Why we letting these old times stick around in the small weight divisions?

Sor vs Cuadras....Chocalatito..Estrada.....how are their no good young small fighters? All these dudes are my age
 

Creflo ½ Dollar

Superstar
Joined
Aug 6, 2015
Messages
4,914
Reputation
-1,751
Daps
16,492
Reppin
GA
This shyt still gettin burn 4/5 years later? Like 400 ppl are gonna watch. Why we letting these old times stick around in the small weight divisions?

Sor vs Cuadras....Chocalatito..Estrada.....how are their no good young small fighters? All these dudes are my age

It’s funny because the monster just so happen to conveniently skip over all of them :patrice:

They make decent fights…
 

reservoirdogs

Superstar
Joined
Jun 1, 2016
Messages
12,707
Reputation
1,030
Daps
25,527
This shyt still gettin burn 4/5 years later? Like 400 ppl are gonna watch. Why we letting these old times stick around in the small weight divisions?

Sor vs Cuadras....Chocalatito..Estrada.....how are their no good young small fighters? All these dudes are my age
I'm happy while they are here :yeshrug: Plus Ioka who's also a veteran already.
But there are some other 115ers who are nice. Joshua Franco is good. Moloney is not bad though he's delusional thinking he deserves the Ioka fight now that he lost to Franco again.
Other than them Yafai and Ancajas were supposed to be the next generation here but Yafai lost to Chocolatito and Ancajas never really stepped up. He was about to but covid fukked it up, I hope they reschedule Ioka vs Ancajas.
Tanaka tried his luck too at 115, got stopped by Ioka. Francisco Rodriguez gave Ioka a good fight though.

This current crop of 115ers is just exceptionally good so it's hard to dethrone them even when they are in their mid 30s. Cuadras not a bad fighter either but hasn't got the achievements of Sor, Ioka, Choc or Estrada. He did beat Sor though but that was a TD and he was looking raggedy, the fight coming to a halt came just the right time for Cuadras.

Sor hasn't always been looking like his best lately so I can imagine anything here tbh but I hope it was just down to Sor fighting on the level of his opponents and he gonna be in top form here.

115 is overall one of the stronger divisions in boxing
 

mr. smoke weed

Smoke Album Done......Wait n See #SmokeSquad
Resting in Peace
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
27,315
Reputation
3,820
Daps
52,065
Reppin
Chi
It’s funny because the monster just so happen to conveniently skip over all of them :patrice:

They make decent fights…
Ah yes MONSTER whos never been a betting under dog in any fights he's been in.....they're all in the same weight class?!?!

:heh:
 

Creflo ½ Dollar

Superstar
Joined
Aug 6, 2015
Messages
4,914
Reputation
-1,751
Daps
16,492
Reppin
GA
Ah yes MONSTER whos never been a betting under dog in any fights he's been in.....they're all in the same weight class?!?!

:heh:


Well he was only at 115 briefly IIRC or he may have skipped 115 all together I forget but idk see why because outside of monster there are the only other “big” names under 118 that people may know. That could have easily upped his brand. Plus that would have been some dope fights:wow:
 

patscorpio

It's a movement
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
120,460
Reputation
11,605
Daps
249,565
Reppin
MA/CT/Nigeria #byrdgang #RingGangRadio
Bradley: Spence Running Away From Crawford, I'm Worried About His Eye in Ugas Fight
errol-spence-232.jpg

BY MANOUK AKOPYAN
Published Tue Jan 18, 2022, 08:25 AM EST


Timothy Bradley Jr. has developed into one of boxing’s most brutally honest analysts ever since retiring in 2016 with a record of 33 wins, 2 losses, and 1 draw.

The former 140 and 147-pound champion currently serves as a color commentator for ESPN, and the boxer-turned-broadcaster joined Max Kellerman’s show “Max on Boxing” to breakdown the current welterweight picture involving its three titlists in WBC and IBF crown holder Errol Spence Jr, WBA champion Yordenis Ugas and WBO belt holder Terrence Crawford.

Spence and Ugas are slated to slug it out this spring in a title unification fight, while Crawford, a promotional free agent coming off a convincing KO win against Shawn Porter in November, is picking a fight with Top Rank by suing the company he’d been tied with throughout his ascent as a three-division champion.

“Yeah, [Spence] is a next-level super-type of fighter. I believe that, but I still think he’s running from Terence Crawford, to be honest with you,” said Bradley. “How do I see [Spence vs. Ugas]? It’s a tough fight but an easier fight than Terence Crawford. Yordenis Ugas, he’s a waiter. He’s a counter puncher. We’ve seen Errol in the ring against counter punchers. Danny Garcia was a counter puncher, and Mikey Garcia was a counter puncher. We’ve seen what [Spence] can do against those types of guys. He can orchestrate his jab from the outside. He can dominate from the outside, and he can come around the guards of these guys. He can dictate the pace. That’s what he’s going to do against Ugas.

“My only concern is in this fight is [Spence’s] eye. You got to understand – you can have no hands, you can have no feet, you got to have eyes to be able to see inside the ring. And when one of your lenses is messed up, you got to understand that tells your brain what you’re seeing. Your eyes are telling your brain what you’re seeing. So, I think with Spence, I’m worried about his eye. It’s not going to be 100%. Once you get surgery on something, it’s never the same. It’s different.”

Over the summer, Spence announced he’d suffered a torn left retina that required surgery days before his Aug. 21 scheduled fight against Manny Pacquiao.

Ugas ended up serving as a late replacement opponent and upset the legendary Filipino fighter in a convincing unanimous decision victory.

Bradley also fought Pacquiao three times, winning a controversial split decision in 2012 and dropping unanimous decisions in 2014 and 2016, the last fight of his 12-year career.

“Going into [Spence vs. Ugas], I worry about coordination and how [Spence is] feeling and how he’s seeing, and all these things are affected by his vision. So, I think it’s going to be a good fight,” Bradley said. “I think Spence will come up on top, but I think it’s a challenging fight for him in that sense. Stylistically, I think his style favors Ugas.”
 
Top