Eloy Perez (22-0-2) vs. Ira Terry (24-6) (Salinas)
Oct. 7
Tye Fields TKO 6 Rafael Butler
Oct. 3
Chauncy Welliver W 12 Rob Calloway
Oct. 1
Sergio Martinez KO 11 Darren Barker (World 160)
THE INTERNATIONAL BOXING COMMISSION | ||||||||||||
HEAVYWEIGHT RANKINGS | ||||||||||||
"THE TOP TWELVE" | ||||||||||||
As of: August, 2011 | ||||||||||||
RANKING | (PVS) | FIGHTER | AGE | RECORD | NEXT | LAST | POINTS | |||||
Champion | CH | W KLITSCHKO | 35 | 56-3 (49) | Nov. tbd | 7/2 D Haye (W 12) | 150 | |||||
1 | -- | V KLITSCHKO | 40 | 42-2 (39) | 9/10 T Adamek | 3/19 O Solis (KO 1) | 140 | |||||
2 | -- | T ADAMEK | 34 | 44-1 (28) | 9/10 V Klitschko | 4/9 K McBride (W 12) | 127 | |||||
3 | -- | A POVETKIN | 31 | 21-0 (15) | 8/27 R Chagaev | 12/18 N Firtha (W 10) | 106 | |||||
4 | -- | D HAYE | 30 | 25-2 (23) | --- | 7/2 W Klitschko (L 12) | 101 | |||||
5 | -- | R HELENIUS | 27 | 15-0 (10) | 8/27 S Liakhovich | 4/2 S Peter (KO 9) | 90 | |||||
6 | -- | E CHAMBERS | 29 | 36-2 (18) | 10/28 T Thompson | 2/11 D Rossy (W 12) | 84 | |||||
7 | -- | R CHAGAEV | 32 | 27-1-1 (17) | 8/27 A Povetkin | 11/19 T Walker (W 8) | 79 | |||||
8 | -- | A DIMITRENKO | 29 | 31-1 (21) | 9/24 M Sprout | 3/26 A Sosnowski (KO 12) | 54 | |||||
9 | -- | C ARREOLA | 30 | 33-2 (28) | --- | 7/9 F Ahyunanya (W 10) | 54 | |||||
10 | -- | T THOMPSON | 39 | 36-2 (24) | 10/28 E Chambers | 5/27 M Harris (TKO 3) | 46 | |||||
11 | -- | D BOYTSOV | 25 | 28-0 (23) | --- | 11/19 M Sheppard (KO 2) | 29 | |||||
12 | -- | O SOLIS | 31 | 17-1 (12) | 10/29 V Vekiloglu | 3/19 V Klitschko (KO by 1) | 20 | |||||
Comments | ||||||||||||
Others receiving votes: T Fury, K Pulev, N Valuev | ||||||||||||
Upcoming Bouts: #1 V Klitschko-#2 T Adamek, #3 A Povetkin-#7 R Chagaev |
(AP)
MONTREAL (AP) — Bernard Hopkins became the oldest fighter to win a major world championship, taking the WBC light heavyweight title Saturday night from Jean Pascal at the age of 46.
Hopkins (52-5-2) is the oldest fighter to take a major world belt since Geroge Foreman took the heavyweight title with a victory over Michael Moorer in 1994.
"I won't retire until I'm 50," Hopkins said.
He won the WBC, IBO and The Ring magazine titles from the 28-year-old Pascal (26-2-1), the Montreal fighter who was making his fifth defense before 17,560 at the Bell Centre.
The bout was a rematch of their Dec. 18 draw in Quebec City.
"He's a great champion. He has great defense and a lot of tricks. I was a young champion," Pascal said of Hopkins in the ring afterwards. "These two fights will help take me to the next level. I learned a lot from Bernard and his style."
The Philadelphia native played up his uncanny fitness in the pre-fight banter and looked the fresher man throughout the bout, taunting Pascal by doing push-ups as he waited for him to start the seventh round and doing them again after the fight.
Hopkins landed more punches and was able to slip many of Pascal's power shots, answering with clever jabs and scoring more than once on right-hand leads.
In the co-feature, Chad Dawson showed masterful defense and crisp punching in scoring a 12-round unanimous decision over Montreal's Adrian Diaconu in a light heavyweight elimination bout.
Hopkins will next fight Dawson (30-1).
Roy Jones Jr. lost for the seventh time in 12 fights when suffering a 10th-round knock out defeat against Denis Lebedev in Moscow on Saturday.
The 42-year-old former multiple world champion was caught with a flurry of punches in the final round of their light-heavyweight non-title bout.
Four fierce lefts did the damage before a final right hand prompted referee Steve Smoger to wave it off, before Jones then collapsed to the canvas moments later.
He said: "I really don't know what I'm going to do now. I'm going to think about it.
"It was a great fight. I love Moscow and hope to come back here again. Denis is a good fighter but I think overall, it was a close fight.
"I just lost concentration near the end and didn't see his punch coming."
Lebedev, 31, improved his record to 22 wins with 17 knockouts and one defeat, suffered against German Marco Huck in his previous fight for the WBO cruiserweight title in December.
"I was prepared for a long fight," he said.
"I knew it would be a tough fight because Roy is a legend. People, who had said it would be easy, just don't know anything about boxing."
LAS VEGAS – Manny Pacquiao caught Shane Mosley early, then chased him the rest of the night. Not much more he could do against an aging fighter who seemed only to want to survive.
Pacquiao won a lopsided 12-round decision Saturday night, retaining his version of the welterweight title in a fight that was roundly booed over the late rounds because Mosley refused to trade punches.
Pacquiao won every round on two ringside scorecards in extending the remarkable run that has made him the most exciting fighter in the sport.
He also won the ungrudging respect of a veteran fighter who has been in with some of the best in the world.
"I fought the best fighter in the world," Mosley said. "He has exceptional power, power that I've never been hit like this before."
Pacquiao knocked down Mosley with a left hook in the third round, a punch that sapped Mosley's willingness to engage. Pacquiao ran after Mosley the rest of the fight, but the former champion who has never been stopped in 18 years in the ring managed to stay away enough to finish the 12th round upright.
Pacquiao won 120-108 on one scorecard, 120-107 on a second and 119-108 on the third. The Associated Press had him winning 118-110.
(From Copenhagen Post) - May 7, 2011
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Evander Holyfield proved too strong for Brian Nielsen in his comeback fight
Nielsen lands one of the blows during Saturday's bout that had his Danish fans hoping he mark his return to the ring with a win (Photo: Scanpix)
Nielsen was on the ropes throughout most of the fight, while a superior Holyfield was heading for a points victory. The referee stopped the fight in the tenth round after a technical knockout by Holyfield.
Shortly after midnight on Saturday night the legendary ring-announcer Michael Buffer – the man famous for the phrase “let’s get ready to rumble” – stepped into the ring to announce the four-time world heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield, followed by an announcement saying it was ‘teddy bear time’ again after nine years, as Brian Nielsen approached the ring at public broadcaster DR’s concert hall to a standing ovation.
Nielsen took a blow in the first round, but shrugged it off with a gesture that seemed to signal “is that the best you’ve got?” While the 46-year-old Danish heavyweight lacked depth in his punches, he worked well with his blocks.
By the end of the third round, however, Holyfield took control of the fight, helped along with two quick left hooks which sent Nielsen to the canvas. Nielsen was back on his feet in no time, but it had become clear to the audience that it was only a matter of time before he ran out of breath, inviting his American opponent in for a decisive blow.
During round four and five Nielsen hit the ropes again several times while Holyfield was punching away. That didn’t stop Nielsen, though, as he made a comeback in rounds eight and nine, getting back to level terms with Holyfield, who was starting to look tired.
In round ten, however, Holyfield landed a big punch to Nielsen’s stomach, which sent him to the floor. After that Holyfield was in total control and after a short series of blows from the American legend, the referee stopped the fight and Nielsen lost on a technical knockout.