In November we counted down a number of honourable mentions for our 20 for 20. Now it's time to look at the 20 fighters who have managed to make it into the list properly, and they come from all over Asia and all over the weight classes. Some of these you may already be aware of, some are perhaps less well known, but either way these 20 men are going to be well worth following in the new year as they look to push forward in their career and move towards major success. For these fighters we will look at the the reason why you should follow them, our expectations for them in the coming year and the issues they may face going forward. The one rule with all of these fighters is that they can't have fought for a world title at the time of writing. Some of these are world ranked, and some of these may well be set for world title fights in the near future, but so far they have not had that top level bout. Without any further ado, lets take a look at the man we have ranked #16 in our list of Ones to watch in 2020, and began our count down to the man we rank #1 Who? Kento Hatanaka (10-0, 9) Age? 21 Where? Japan What weight? Flyweight Why? Youngster Kento Hatanaka has slowly created a bit of a following due to his exciting, aggressive and power punching style. The second generation fighter, the son of former world champion Kiyoshi Hatanaka, hasn't yet progressed to regional title level, but that looks likely to happen sooner rather than later and with his father's name, and the backing of local TV with CBC and stablemate Kosei Tanaka getting attention it's hard to see Hatanaka having a big 2020. The fighter really ticks all the boxes we could hope for from a Flyweight. It's also worth noting that last time out he was tested, and we really mean tested, yet came through that test successfully and showed he had heart and toughness to go with his aggressive skills. We all love seeing aggressive fighters, but when we see those aggressive fighters show more to their arsenal than just their power and combinations we begin to realise there is more to them than just their offensive work. For Hatanaka we now know that he can box, there is a lot to work on there, but he can do it. Likewise he has got genuine power, but he has shown he has a good engine as well, going 10 rounds for the first time in 2019. Titles, above that of the WBC Youth title, need to be on his mind as we enter a new year and with the backing of Hatanaka and CBC there is the money there to push him for OPBF, WBO Asia Pacific or Japanese honours. Young, good looking, exciting to watch, well backed and with real power, there is so many things that Hatanaka has that other fighters would wish to have and it's to imagine him not making a big impact in 2020. What do we expect? Although Hatanaka was given a real scare last time out by Jaysever Abcede we suspect that test will actually convince Hatanaka, and his father, that he needs to be fighting at this type of fringe regional to regional title level going forward. He needs to be tested, he needs to be given the battles to hardening him mentally and make him dig hard. With that in mind we wouldn't be surprised to see him fighting for a nationa or regional title by the end of 2020, if the right opportunity becomes available. If not he'll continue to be the main support to Kosei Tanaka and getting good experience and developing on big shows in Chubu. The longer term plan is certainly for Hatanaka to mix at world level, and whilst those are plans are years down the line they will want to have some route to the top for the youngster. That will, obviously, involve regional titles on the route there but more notably it will also involve mixing with varied styles, opponents and sparring partners. We expect to see Hatanaka off to the US at some point in 2020, hopefully for more than just a training camp. In an ideal world Hatanaka will either fight in the US in 2020 or, at very least, have a bout shown to a US audience on TV. We suspect Kosei Tanaka will fight on US TV in 2020, and if he does, it only makes sense for Hatanaka to be bundled with him, giving him a huge chance to grab eye balls and get an international audience talking about him, even if it does leave him in Tanaka's shadows for the foreseeable future. Concerns? Whilst Hatanaka ticks a lot of boxes, we did see some issues arise against Abcede, and it's clear there is a lot to work on. He was dropped, he was shown to be have a defense that needs serious work, and whilst he did do 10 rounds, at a good pace, he could certainly still work on his fitness. Bigger concerns however are more related to his surname than anything else. We've seen it time and time again, where having a famous father can be both a blessing and a curse. It certainly helps Hatanaka early in his career to share his dad's name, and whilst Kiyoshi Hatanaka wasn't a massive star he was a star in Chubu. That has certainly helped get Hatanaka attention and exposure through CBC. However longer term sharing a famous surname can cause pressure on a young fighter, who will get compared to their father when they start to create some buzz of their own. Whilst Kento has so far been able to use his surname for positive, we're maybe only a year before people really start to compare him to his father, who held the WBC back in 1991. And do so unfairly. They need to be aware of what happened to his father,who retired at a young age due to damage to his eye, and let Kento have his own career, which has the potential, long term, to out do that of Kiyoshi. (Image courtesy of boxmob)
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Thailand's Wanheng Menayothin (54-0, 18) has a record that, on paper, deserves real plaudits,. In reality his record is frustratingly padded and lacks the substances that the numbers suggest. Despite that he belongs just outside the top 10 for the Fighter of the Decade, as there is some quality there, here's very talented, and he has certainly generated more attention than your typical Minimumweight, and his longevity has been genuinely impressive.
The Thai may have one of the sports longest winning runs in recent years but unfortunately the WBC Minimumweight champion falls down on this list due to his competition and his lack of challenge. His failure to unify titles and move up in weight really harms his standing, despite a fantastic looking paper record. The very skilled and aggressive champion has gone 44-0 during the decade, making him one of the most active fighters on this list. Sadly those his stand out wins fall a long way short of almost everyone else in this list. Wins over Florante Condes, Oswaldo Novoa, Tatsuya Fukuhara and Pedro Taduran are his only ones over fighters who have held some form of world title. In the Minimumweight division, where the titles do tend to move around a lot due to fighters moving up in weight, his resume is just weak. That's not helped by a few fortunate decisions in his favour and a lack of going on the road. Wanheng's WBC title reign began in in November 2014, and it's really impressive that he has managed to held the title for over 5 years, but his competition hasn't been testing and it says more about him and his team that he never took on the likes of Katsunari Takayama, Vic Saludar, Xiong Zhao Zhong, Hekki Budler or even compatriot Knockout CP Freshmart. There were opportunities to chase career defining bouts but for one reason, or another they never materialised. It's a shame for fans that Wanheng never got a big fight, but it's a bigger shame for him, as his standing in the sport would be much higher had he forced his team to act. He had the skills and tools to be much higher up this list, he had the available opponents to be higher up this list, but unfortunately his inflated unbeaten record isn't enough to push him close to the top spots. Had he faced the top competition available at Minimumweight he could have broken on to the top 10 list. Likewise had he been willing to move up 3lbs and had success at Light Flyweight he could also have been in the top 10. But his failure to get the top fighters at 105lbs or move up has seen him miss out. His record might end up being legendary, but his career is unlikely to be remembered as well as it really should be. In November we counted down a number of honourable mentions for our 20 for 20. Now it's time to look at the 20 fighters who have managed to make it into the list properly, and they come from all over Asia and all over the weight classes. Some of these you may already be aware of, some are perhaps less well known, but either way these 20 men are going to be well worth following in the new year as they look to push forward in their career and move towards major success. For these fighters we will look at the the reason why you should follow them, our expectations for them in the coming year and the issues they may face going forward. The one rule with all of these fighters is that they can have fought for a world title at the time of writing, as the fighters who have are, essentially, already ones to watch having dabbled at world level. Some of these are world ranked, and some of these may well be set for world title fights in the near future, but so far they have not had that top level bout. Without any further ado, lets take a look at the man we have ranked #17 in our list of Ones to watch in 2020 Who? Shokichi Iwata (4-0, 3) Age? 23 Where? Japan What weight? Light Flyweight Why? The Light Flyweight division is, right now, one of the hottest in the sport, with so much fantastic talent at the top of the division. You could easily have a WBSS style tournament in the division and complain more about who isn't in the tournament than negatively talk about those who are included. The division really is stacked. As well as the top guys however the division also has a host of really exciting youngsters coming through the ranks, one of those is Teiken promoted Shokichi Iwata. The talented 23 year old was an excellent amateur, who scored wins over Takuma Inoue and Kosei Tanaka, has already made his US debut and recently had his 4th bout shown to a US audience. The belief is that he is going places, and going there quickly with Teiken expected to push him to the moon. We've already seen Iwata impress, we've seen him on US TV, we've seen him on US soil, we've seen him box and brawl, with in just 4 fights we have seen so much to get excited about. At times he has shown flaws, and his November win over Alejandro Cruz Valladares perhaps showed he was too happy to take a shot sometimes. Though we do suspect that was, at least partly, due to Valladares' lack of power. Thankfully it did show that Iwata was willing to put on a show when he wanted to, and his May over Daiki Kameyama showed he could play it safe when he needed to. What do we expect? Whilst 2020 doesn't seem likely to be the year where Iwata gets a world title fight, we do expect to see a lot of him, with potentially 3 fights against progressively better opponents through the year. A world title really does look outside of his reach for the year, but moves towards a national or regional title should be the least we expect from someone with his ability. He is such a skilled fighter that we expect to see him break into the world rankings and be up against a notable divisional name by the end off the year. It may be that he faces a faded a force, but we certainly suspect that his name will be one that is spoken about, a lot, in mid to late 2020 before he really announced himself on the world stage in 2021. Iwata's biggest issue, perhaps, is finding his identity in the ring. We have seen him fight, we have seen him box, but we suspect haven't yet seen him settle on a style that he's fully happy with. Having alternate game plans on his pocket is a great asset to have when he needs them, but in 2020 we expect to see Iwata settle on a main style. Be it the outside boxing that he showed against Kameyama, or the aggressive fighting he style he showed against Valladares. He's very good at both, but we'd like to see him stick to one if we're being honest. Concerns? For Iwata 2020 doesn't bring many concerns, but there are maybe one or two things to consider with him, notably the other fighter in and around the Light Flyweight division. Iwata is among the most accomplished, terms of his amateur pedigree, but he's certainly not alone in terms of his potential and his desire to be a big name. Iwata is likely to get opportunities that others won't, the fact he is backed by Teiken and has such a strong amateur background certainly help him, but there isn't really an easy route to a title give the competition in and around the domestic and regional scene. Even supposedly easier title fights, like a bout with Japanese national champion Yuto Takahashi, aren't as easy as they look. The youngster clearly has ambition to get in the mix quickly, and that's great, but that ambition can be a concern if it's not tempered a little bit, and Teiken will certainly want to just make sure Iwata doesn't look beyond his opponents and he doesn't race into fights that he's ready for at the time. That's likely not too much of an issue, but does need keeping in mind, at least for the next year or two. One thing that seems to sum up many Korean fighters is their insane toughness, few would be described as being classically skilled, but many of their most successfully relied on toughness, a desire to win and incredibly stamina. The great Korean fighters of the past were always a nightmare to fight due to their resilience and this is what made them fan favourites and some of the best fighters too watch. Here we look at the first bout between a little known Korean warrior, and an often forgotten Japanese anomaly in a bout that was a one sided for the most part yet thoroughly entertaining all the same, thanks to the determination of the Korean under-dog, who seemed to come close to a major upset at times. The fight Shinji Takehara (15-0, 12) vs Sung Chun Lee (1-0-1) I Japan's Shinji Takehara is a name that fans from the 1990's will be familiar with. He was the first Japanese fighter to win a world title at Middleweight, and was a huge fighter, with destructive power, freakish size and an exciting style. He was flawed but fun and his win over Jorge Castro in 1995 for the WBA Middleweight title was huge, though his reign only lasted 6 months with Takehara losing the belt to William Joppy in his first defense. Rising through the ranks Takehara looked to be a monster on the regional and domestic scene, He had won the Japanese title in his 11th bout, made 4 defenses and then faced off with little known Korean Sung Chun Lee for the vacant OPBF Middleweight, in what was their first bout. Lee on the other hand was a seeming unknown, Boxrec list him as being 1-0-1 He had apparently on his debut and then took a win over domestic foe Yong Sun Kim a year later. The his record goes blank, with no listed bouts in 18 months before he took the the ring in Japan to take on he then 15-0 Takehara. It seems hard to believe he was only 1-0-1 coming into this bout, though we struggled to find anything to prove other wise. Theres a good chance he did have a more extensive record than we have details about, as some Korean records are incomplete, but regardless he was stepping up big time here. No only was he up against a big punching, unbeaten fighter, but he was also dwarfed by Takehara, who had clear reach and height advantages over him. Early on Takehara managed to use his foot work and his size to pick off Lee as he came forward. The pace wasn't electric and it was one that allowed Takehara to control the fight with relative ease. As it went on however Lee's toughness and desire began to make things interesting. No matter how much he got hit he ploughed forward, trying to drag Takehara into a war, and as the bout went on he managed to get to Takehara, particularly in the middle rounds. Starting in round 5 Lee began to close the distance, getting success on the inside and dragging Takehara into his fight. Takehara still managed to get the better of it, but it was clear that Lee was going to go through hell in an attempt to win. This turned into something very entertaining, with Takehara's chin being tested big time by Lee's hooks, and more than once it looked like Lee would go on to turn things around. Notably the two men would later have a rematch, and in that rematch the two again went to war, and amazingly scored a double knockdown in round 8 of that rematch. (Please note - The video for this fight is the TV edit and not the complete fight, but is still worth the time to watch) In November we counted down a number of honourable mentions for our 20 for 20. Now it's time to look at the 20 fighters who have managed to make it into the list properly, and they come from all over Asia and all over the weight classes. Some of these you may already be aware of, some are perhaps less well known, but either way these 20 men are going to be well worth following in the new year as they look to push forward in their career and move towards major success. For these fighters we will look at the the reason why you should follow them, our expectations for them in the coming year and the issues they may face going forward. The one rule with all of these fighters is that they can't have fought for a world title at the time of writing. Some of these are world ranked, and some of these may well be set for world title fights in the near future, but so far they have not had that top level bout. Without any further ado, lets take a look at the man we have ranked #18 in our list of Ones to watch in 2020, as we continue our count down. Who? Ryusei Kawaura (7-0, 4) Age? 25 Where? Japan What weight? Super Bantamweight Why? We love seeing fighters moved quickly, and it's fair to say that Japanese Super Flyweight hopeful Ryusei Kawaura has been moved quickly, or rather more accurately he's been moved effectively. He debuted more than 3 years ago, and took his first 3 wins against very limited Thai foes, but since then he has stepped up and been very impressive with solid wins over Marjun Pantilgan, Renoel Pael and Joy Joy Formentera. Those wins have put Kawaura in the mix for titles, and it seems clear that he will be fighting for his first title belt in 2020. It's just a shame he's been so inactive. The youngster isn't just talent, and trust us he is incredibly talented, but he's also guided by a man who knows what it takes to get to the top, with former world champion Hiroshi Kawashima being his promoter. With such a smart boxer guiding it's clear that Kawaura is learning so much between fights that even with a relatively slowly schedule he is developing rapidly. It's known that Kawashima will push Kawaura for a belt in 2020 and that, we suspect, will be when he begins to make a mark with a wider fan base. What do we expect? With Kawaura and Kawashima revealing that they are pursuing titles in 2020 the least we expect from the youngster is for him to pick up either the Japanese, OPBF or WBO Asia Pacific title. He already has wins that have shown he can compete at title level, though the question is really whether he has the experience or can do the longer distances. Given his relaxed and natural he is in the ring however we don't imagine 10, or 12, rounds will be any sort of an issue for him. Whilst we do imagine Kawaura will be fighting for his first titles in 2020 we don't see him advancing beyond Oriental level next year. That will have to wait, though given he only fights twice a year that shouldn't be any sort of a surprise. What we would like to see is for him to be a bit busier, fighting 3 times in a year would be nice as would getting to see Kawaura on TV, and we are hoping that he will feature on a G+ card at some point in the new year, giving him a chance to show what he can do to a larger audience. Concerns? Although Kawaura is managed by a former world champion the former champion in questions doesn't have a strong a strong relationship with any TV channel, nor does he have big financial backing. Kawashima has shown he's happy to build shows around Kawaura, but without financial and TV backing Kawaura will struggle to reach his potential. We suspect that TV will get behind him in 2020, but there is a risk that they don't and instead of building his name rapidly in 2020 he meanders just a touch, even with a title around his waist. It would be a shame but is certainly a possibility, and he may end up fighting some future bouts on Boxing Raise, rather than TV. Although he's been matched well, we do, obviously, have concerns about his level of activity, and 7 fights in 3 years is hugely disappointing, especially for someone with his ability and boxing brain. We hope that changes, and if it doesn't he may not fight enough to make the most of his skills. In terms of talent we have no concerns regarding Kawaura, and instead all the issues are to do with the way his career goes, not what he does in the ring. By - George Delis (@Delisketo) Cruiserweight: -Muhamad Farkhan (10-0): WBA #15 Farkhan knocked out Alexander Bajawa (43-9) in June, making him the 1st Malaysian to enter the world rankings in years. He will face Pascal Abel Ndomba (24-9) on December 29th for the vacant WBA & WBC Asia championships. Light Heavyweight: -Meng Fanlong (16-0): IBF #1 / WBC #15 Meng defeated Adam Deines (19-1) in June to become the mandatory challenger for Artur Beterbiev’s (15-0) IBF title, whom he’ll challenge next year. Welterweight -Manny Pacquiao (62-7): WBA (Super) World champion Pacman’s looks to former world champions Mikey Garcia (39-1) and Shawn Porter (30-3) as his potential next opponent for the new year. Super Lightweight: -Apinun Khongsong (16-0): IBF #1 After blasting the 13 year veteran Akihiro Kondo (32-9) with a thunderous uppercut to become the number 1 contender, the undefeated Thai fighter is now scheduled to challenge Josh Taylor (16-0) for the World championship in 2020. Lightweight: -Xiangxiang Sun (16-0): IBF #13 Sun defended his IBF Asia championship against Monico Laurente (30-15) this past March. Super Featherweight: -Joe Noynay (18-2): WBO #6 / WBC #16 Noynay earned the biggest win of his career this summer as he dominated the 2012 Olympic Bronze medalist Satoshi Shimizu (8-1) to defend his WBO Asia Pacific crown. He will return to Japan, on December 7th, in a match against Kenichi Ogawa (24-1). -Xiao Tao Su (11-1): WBO #15 The Chinese fighter dispatched Shota Yukawa (11-6) in one round to win the vacant WBO Oriental title. Featherweight: -Can Xu (18-2): WBA (Regular) World champion The Chinese star defended his belt in a one sided affair against Manny Robles III (18-1) on November 23rd. -Mark Magsayo (20-0): WBC #7 Magsayo outclassed the former 2 time World champion Panya Uthok (53-7) back in August. -Jhack Tepora (23-0): IBF #3 / WBA #10 / WBC #10 The Filipino prodigy will square off with former 2 division interim World champion Oscar Escandon (25-5) on December 21st. Super Bantamweight: -Marlon Tapales (33-2): IBF #3 In a battle of former World champions, Tapales faces Ryosuke Iwasa (26-3), on December 7th, for the interim IBF title. -Albert Pagara (32-1): WBO #1 The WBO Intercontinental champion made short work of Ratchanon Sawangsoda (12-4) in August. -Alie Laurel (17-4): WBO #15 Laurel recently scored a win over Ernesto Saulong (22-6) to capture the WBO Oriental title. -Ye Joon Kim (18-1): WBA #13 Joon defeated Ryo Kosaka (17-5) and became the new WBA Asia champion. -Jeo Santisima (18-2): WBO #5 Santisima knocked out Alvius Maufani (7-4) in a single round. Bantamweight: -John Riel Casimero (29-4): WBO World champion Casimero stopped Zolani Tete (28-4) inside 3 rounds on November 30th, becoming a 3 division world champion in the process. A unification match with the WBA (Super) & IBF title holder Naoya Inoue (19-0) in 2020 looks very possible. -Nawaphon Kaikanha (47-1): WBC #2 Nawaphon has been undefeated in his last 11 bouts, including KO victories over former World champions Sonny Boy Jaro (45-15) as well as Amnat Ruenroeng (20-3). -Michael Dasmarinas (30-2): IBF #1 / WBO #7 / WBC #11 Dasmarinas defeated Kenny Demecillo (14-5) this past March, to become the #1 contender for the IBF World title. He stopped Artid Bamrungauea (25-28) on October 26th. -Reymart Gaballo (22-0): WBA #4 / IBF #6 / WBO #14 / WBC #35 The former interim WBA champion destroyed Japanese journeyman Yuya Nakamura (9-3) earlier this year and then Yeison Vargas (17-2) in August. -Karoon Jarupianlerd (44-9): WBA #13 Karoon earned a unanimous decision over former WBC International champion Renz Rosia (15-9) this past September. -Tasana Salapat (53-1): WBC #8 / WBA #8 Salapat scored his 38th KO over Aries Buenavidez (13-4) this past weekend, in less than a minute. -Vincent Astrolabio (14-3): WBO #12 Since moving up a weight class, Astrolabio has won two back to back fights plus securing the WBO Oriental title. -Jun Zhao (12-2): WBA #15 Zhao stopped Sonin Nihei (9-5) a few months ago to become the WBA Asia champion. -Nonito Donaire (40-6): WBC #4 / WBA #5 Donaire fought valiantly against the undefeated Japanese superstar Naoya Inoue (19-0) at the finals of the WBSS but was unsuccessful in his quest to win the Ali Trophy. Super Flyweight: Jerwin Ancajas (31-1): IBF World champion Ancajas will put his championship on the line for the 8th time, on December 7th, against Miguel Gonzalez (31-2). -Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (47-5): WBC #1 The former 2 time WBC champion is expected to return to the ring early next year. -Donnie Nietes (42-1): IBF #4 / WBC #6 No news yet on the 4 division world champion’s future. -Sirichai Thaiyen (55-4): WBA #2 / WBC #19 The former interim WBA Flyweight World titlist has been 5-0 since losing to Artem Dalakian. -Froilan Saludar (31-3): WBO #12 Saludar became the WBO Asia Pacific champion, after knocking out Tsubasa Murachi (4-1) in September. -Aston Palicte (25-3): WBO #8 / WBC #10 The 2 time world title challenger takes on Crison Omayao (24-21) on December 21st. -Jade Bornea (14-0): IBF #10 / WBA #15 Bornea will face fellow unbeaten prospect Ernesto Delgadillo (11-0) on January 30th of 2020 for the vacant NABF title. Flyweight: -Wulan Tuolehazi (13-3): WBA #3 / WBO #11 After successfully defending the WBA International title twice, against Ardin Diale (35-15) as well as Satoshi Tanaka (7-6), Tuolehazi gets to challenge Kosei Tanaka (14-0) for the WBO World championship, on New Year’s Eve. -Jayson Mama (14-0): WBO #9 / WBC #27 The undefeated Filipino fighter has had quite an impressive year thus far, with victories over Teeraphong Utaida (39-7) and former WBA Strawweight World champion Ekkawit Songnui (49-7). -Giemel Magramo (24-1): WBO #1 / IBF #3 / WBC #5 / WBA #6 Magramo defeated Richard Claveras (18-7) in September. -Wenfeng Ge (11-1): WBO #6 Wenfeng earned the biggest victory of his career when he outboxed 2 division world champion Suriyan Satorn (60-8) to capture the WBO Global title. -Jayr Raquinel (12-1): WBC #14 Raquinel returned after almost an entire year of inactivity this past summer, and stopped former world title challenger Takuya Kogawa (30-6) as well as Indonesian journeyman Jack Amisa (21-47) -Genisis Libranza (19-1): IBF #7 / WBC #15 Libranza has been 8-0 since losing to the IBF World champion Moruti Mthalane. Light Flyweight: -Randy Petalcorin (31-3): WBO #9 / WBC #14 The former interim WBA titlist is set to fight Kenshiro Teraji (16-0) for the WBC World championship, on December 23rd, in Japan. -Andika Fredikson Ha'e (17-0): WBA #2 “D’Golden Boy” became the WBA Asia champion in April and defended it on August 31st. -Tibo Monabesa (20-1): WBC #10 / IBF #14 The Indonesian fought and beat Omari Kimweri (17-5) in July to win the IBO title. -Edward Heno (14-1): WBO #10 The longtime OPBF king unsuccessfully challenged the WBO World champion Elwin Soto (16-1) in October. -Christian Araneta (17-1): IBF #9 Araneta lost an IBF title eliminator against Daniel Valladares (21-1) 3 months ago. Strawweight: -Thammanoon Niyomtrong (20-0): WBA World champion The undefeated Thai champion has defended his belt 7 times. -Pedro Taduran (14-2): IBF World champion Taduran captured the vacant title when he beat Samuel Salva (17-1) in September. Chayaphon Moonsri (54-0): WBC World champion Moonsri outclassed Simpiwe Konkco (19-6) back in October to mark his 12th successful title defense. -Jing Xiang (17-4): WBO #3 / WBC #6 The Chinese star made his Strawweight debut on August 17th, capturing the WBO International title. -Lito Dante (16-10): WBC #7 / IBF #10 In a shocking turn of events, Dante managed to stop Tsubasa Koura (14-1) and become the OPBF champion. -Rene Mark Cuarto (17-2): IBF #4 / WBO #11 / WBC #35 Cuarto fought Jayson Vayson (8-0) to a draw. -Rhenrob Andales (10-2): WBA #7 / WBC #13 ”ArAr” got knocked out by Joel Lino (11-3) on November 15th. -Joey Canoy (15-3): WBO #7 / IBF #8 Canoy challenges Nkosinathi Joyi (28-5) on December 16th for the IBO title. -Robert Paradero (18-0): WBO #1 / IBF #7 / WBA #15 / WBC #19 Paradero beat Jonathan Almacen (7-3) this past April. -Melvin Jerusalem (15-2): WBC #1 / IBF #5 / WBO #8 Jerusalem defeated Reymark Taday (9-10) on August 17th. -Samuel Salva (17-1): IBF #9 Salva suffered an injury in his match with Pedro Taduran (14-2), costing him the opportunity to become the IBF champion. -Vic Saludar (19-4): WBO #4 / WBC #28 Saludar lost his WBO World title to Wilfredo Mendez (15-1). By Eric Armit
Highlights: -Alex Besputin wins the vacant secondary WBA welter title with unanimous decision over Radzhab Butaev -John Riel Casimero stops Zolani Tete in three rounds to win the WBO bantam title -Patrick Teixeira wins the vacant interim WBO super welter title by outpointing Carlos Adames -Carl Frampton and Oscar Valdez score wins at super featherweight WORLD TITLE SHOWS November 30 Birmingham, England: Bantam: John Riel Casimero (29-4) W TKO 3 Zolani Tete (28-4). Super Feather: Anthony Cacace (18-1) W PTS 12 Sam Bowen (15-1) . Welter: Chris Jenkins (22-3-3) TEC DRAW 4 Liam Taylor (21-1-1). Super Middle: Lerrone Richards (13-0) W PTS 12 Lennox Clarke (19-1-1). Super Light: Sam Maxwell (13-0) W TKO 7 Connor Parker (12-1). Casimero vs. Tete In an upset result Casimero becomes a three-division champion as he floors Tete twice and stops him to win the WBO bantamweight belt. Round 1 Casimero took the first. He was circling Tete then darting in with quick attacks scoring with rights to the body and then getting out before Tete could counter. Tete stuck to his right jabs but was coming up short. Score: 10-9 Casimero Round 2 Casimero continued to circle Tete in this one but Tete was anticipating Casimero’s attacks and the challenger was unable to score. Tete ended the round connecting with a couple of jabs and a left hook that got Casimero’s attention. Score 10-9 Tete TIED 19-19 Round 3 Casimero was fired-up at the start of the round piling forward throwing punches. Tete stayed cool and Casimero then became a little more cautious. He then launched another quick attack and as Tete tried to duck Casimero connected with two hard rights to the side of the head. Tete slumped to his hands and knees. He was up at five but looked unsteady and after grabbing Casimero he slipped to the floor. When the action resumed Casimero drove Tete to the ropes .Tete bent over to avoid Casimero’s punches but a couple landed and Tete tumbled face down on the canvas. He got up at six and convinced the referee he was able to continue but Casimero forced Tete to a corner and landed a couple of head punches with the referee quickly stepping in and stopping the fight. The 30-year-old former IBF light fly and fly champion was giving away 5” in height but his speed evened that out and his power did the rest. It seemed as if he might be about to hit the down slope after losing to Jonas Sultan (13-3) in 2017 but he took ten months out and in April this year knocked out favoured Ricardo Espinoza to win the interim WBO title. Now he will be looking for a unification fight with Naoya Inoue although an all-Filipino contest with Nonito Donaire would be big. Tete, 31, was making his sixth defence of the WBO title but due to injury was having his first fight for 13 months. He will recover from this shock and still has a part to play at bantam or perhaps even super bantam. Cacace vs. Bowen Cacace lifts the British title with points win over champion Bowen. The respective styles, southpaw Cacace boxing cleverly and Bowen pressing and looking to do damage on the inside melded to give an entertaining fast-pace twelve rounds, Cacace was on target with his jab over the first two rounds and already there were signs of some swelling around Bowen’s left eye. Bowen did some good work in the third with left hooks to the body and rattled Cacace with a left and looked to also have taken the fourth. Cacace had a good fifth. He was constantly switching guards and stood and traded punches and was more accurate and then Bowen lost a point in the round for being dangerous with his head but rebounded to outscore Cacace in the sixth. The fight swung to Cacace again as he took the seventh and eighth only for Bowen to up his pace and take the ninth. The tenth and eleven were close with the more accurate punching of Cacace just giving him the edge. With the point deduction Bowen may have felt his title was slipping away and he attacked hard in the last but was wild at times whereas Cacace picked and place his punches better. Scores 115-113 twice for Cacace and 115-112 for Bowen. Cacace lost his unbeaten tag in his 16th fight when he was beaten on a close decision by Martin Joseph Ward for the British and Commonwealth titles in 2017. He was inactive in 2018 and had just one fight this year in February but no rust was showing. Bowen was making the second defence of the British title and he came so close to retaining it and will fight for titles in 2020 perhaps the British one again as this was close enough to merit a return match. Jenkins vs. Taylor Disappointing end to what promised to be an entertaining scrap as a cut brings a premature finish with Jenkins retaining the Commonwealth Boxing Council and British titles on a technical draw. Taylor settled quickly and looked to have edged the first round. That led to an exciting and entertaining second. Rights from Taylor shook Jenkins who went down on one knee under the fire. Jenkins was shaken but not finished and he banged back over the remainder of the round. They traded punches wildly with Jenkins getting the better of the exchanges. Jenkins began to get into his stride in the third and fourth working well to Taylor’s body but Taylor was still very much in the fight. During the fourth a clash of heads opened a cut on the left eyebrow of Jenkins and the referee halted the action and asked the ringside doctor to examine the injury. It was decreed that the injury was too severe for Jenkins to fight on and as the fourth round was four seconds short of being completed it was ruled a technical draw. Jenkins was making the second defence of the British title and the first of the Commonwealth title. He has been plagued with cuts in his career but he retains his titles. Taylor had won his last ten fights and deserves another shot at the titles. Richards vs. Clarke Richards retains the Commonwealth title and wins the vacant British title as he takes a split verdict over Clarke. The slicker southpaw boxing of Richards gave him the edge form the opening round. He was sliding jabs through Clarke’s defence and then following in with straight lefts and hooks to the body. Clarke was hunting Richard but was too slow with attacks and Richards was able to slide around them with some quick footwork. Too often Clarke was getting in close but not letting his punches go and making it easy for Richards to score with a jab and some hooks and then get away before Clarke could counter. In the fifth it was the right jab and the straight lefts that were the scoring punches for Richards and it looked all too easy. Clarke’s pressure began to pay over the second half of the fight. Richards was still finding gaps for his jab and straight lefts but was slowing and was being dragged into mauling, brawling phases. Clarke put in a big effort in the eleventh as Richards tired and he was stronger in the last but had not done enough to overtake the big lead Richards had established. Scores 117-112 and 116-113 for Richards and 115-113 for Clarke. Following his win over Tommy Langford in April that makes it two good wins on the bounce for Richards. Clarke came close but less than ten rounds of work in his three fights since April last year may have left him with some rust to shed over those early rounds. Maxwell vs. Parker Maxwell punches too hard in the end as fellow southpaw Parker puts in an admirable but vain effort to separate Maxwell from his WBO European title. Maxwell scored well early with left hooks but Parker took then and banged back with some good punches of his own stopping Maxwell in his tracks in the fourth with a strong combination. Maxwell was working to the body and was piling up the points but Parker took the fight to Maxwell in the fifth trying to drag Maxwell into a brawl and for a while Maxwell went off the game plan and slugged with Parker. Maxwell dominated the sixth and in the seventh he rocked Parker badly with a left to the head and launched a fierce attack that had Parker reeling and the fight was stopped. The Liverpool southpaw is a former English and British amateur champion and competed at the World and European Championships and took a bronze medal at the Commonwealth Games losing to Josh Taylor in the semi-finals. First defence of the WBO European title which has handed him a No 14 rating with them. Parker’s 2019 experience consisted of just two four round fights so this was a huge step up in opposition for him. Las Vegas, NV, Super Welter: Patrick Teixeira (31-1) W PTS 12 Carlos Adames (18-1). Super Feather: Oscar Valdez (27-0) W TKO 7 Adam Lopez (13-2). Feather: Carl Frampton (27-2) W PTS 10 Tyler McCreary (16-1-1). Super Light: Arnold Barboza (23-0) W KO 5 William Silva (27-3). Welter: Larry Gomez (10-1) W PTS 8 Brian Mendoza (18-1). Heavy: Guido Vianello (6-0) W KO 1 Colby Madison (8-122). Teixeira vs. Adames In a stirring battle a bloodied Teixeira put in a strong finish to win the interim WBO title. Round 1 Not a great deal of action in the first. Teixeira was moving smoothly and probing with his right jab with Adames prowling and looking to counter. Teixeira was quick enough to move away from Adames advances and did enough with his jab and a right hook late to take the round. Score: 10-9 Teixeira Round 2 It was a different Adames in the second as he piled forward getting under Teixeira’s jab and scoring with hooks inside. Teixeira managed to get his jab working late in the round but Adames was still getting past the jab to score with rights. Score:10-9 Adames TIED 19-19 Round 3 Adames was again pressurising Teixeira in this round. The Brazilian’s jab had nuisance value but was not strong enough to keep Adames out. Adames was getting through with hooks and straight rights and Teixeira was under fire at the bell. Score: 10-9 Adames Adames 29-28 Round 4 Adames continued to march forward. He was bobbing and weaving under Teixeira’s punches and landing clubbing punches from both hands. Teixeira was connecting with jabs and straight lefts but Adames was shrugging them off and pounding at Teixeira inside. Teixeira was cut over his left eye and things were looking ominous for the Brazilian. Score: 10-9 Adames Adames 39-37 Round 5 A better round from Teixeira. He was moving and firing rights and lefts at the advancing Adames. He still had to take punishment from hooks when Adames got inside but he kept firing lefts and rights at the advancing Dominican and did enough to take the round but was now cut under the right eye. Score: 10-9 Teixeira Adames 48-47 Round 6 Adames was on the hunt again in this one and was loading up on every punch. Teixeira just could not keep Adames out or get away and was being forced to stand and trade and getting the worse of the exchanges. Score: 10-9 Adames Adames 58-56 Round 7 For most of the seventh it was a dreadful round for Teixeira. Adames was forcing him back around the ring and he snapped Teixeira’s head back with a series of uppercuts. Under that punishment and with his face covered in blood from the two cuts he was a sorry figure. Suddenly a right from Teixeira staggered Adames who moved inside on unsteady legs. Teixeira realised Adames was hurt and drove forward landing lefts and rights on an unsteady Adames and then sent him tumbling to the floor under a series of punches. Adames was up quickly but on shaky legs and luckily for him the bell went as the eight count was completed. Score: 10-8 Teixeira TIED 66-66 Round 8 Now it was Teixeira coming forward throwing punches as he tried hard to find a punch to put Adames away. He dominated the first two minutes of the round but then Adames showed he had fully recovered from the knockdown and was again connecting with some heavy punches but Teixeira did enough early to take the points in this one. Score: 10-9 Teixeira Teixeira 76-75 Round 9 Neither fighter did a great deal of useful work in this one. Teixeira was dancing around Adames but just pushing out jabs with no power. Adames found it hard to track Teixeira down but he did what scoring there was , Score: 10-9 Adames TIED 85-85 Round 10 Adames also took this one. He was reaching Teixeira with long rights and working him over to the body inside, Teixeira was moving plenty and throwing plenty but mostly was off target in another low key round. Score: 10-9 Adames Adames 95-94 Round 11 Teixeira needed a good round and he delivered it. Adames had slowed and Teixeira was bouncing punches off Adames and easily avoiding the lunging attacks of the Dominican. Over the last minute it was Teixeira coming forward and landing punches and Adames under fire and throwing very little back. Score: 10-9 Teixeira TIED 104-104 Round 12 The fight was there for the taking and Teixeira took it. He was again firing rights and lefts through the guard of the advancing Adames until Adames went on the back foot effectively handing the round to Teixeira who was winging lefts and rights with little coming back from Adames as he danced his way to victory. Score: 10-9 Teixeira Teixeira 114-113 Official Scores: Judge Tim Cheatham 116-111 Teixeira, Judge Julie Lederman 114-113 Teixeira, Judge Glenn Trowbridge 114-113 Teixeira It was close but the gutsy Brazilian deserved victory for the way he came back from what looked certain defeat in the sixth to floor Adames and fight his way to victory. A second round stoppage loss against Curtis Stevens in 2016 saw Teixeira have only one fight in the next two years but he had put his career back on track with four wins. Adames let this one slip at the end but at 25 it is certain he will be back in contention and fighting for a title probably late in 2010. Valdez vs. Lopez Valdez gets the win but is given a much tougher time than expected and has to get off the floor before halting Lopez. Valdez put strong pressure on late sub Lopez in the first but once Lopez settled down he showed a sharp jab and rocked Valdez back with a straight right. Valdez was pressing hard in the second but Lopez showed some smart punching and then as Valdez ducked under a right Lopez connected with a short left hook that sent Valdez down. Valdez was up quickly but was under fire to the end of the round. Valdez upped the pace in the third and fourth landing some hefty hooks to the body and shaking Lopez with a left to the head but Lopez still showed some sharp punching of his own. In the fifth Lopez stood and traded and it was Valdez who was forced onto the back foot as Lopez blazed away with combinations. Valdez pressed and Lopez boxed in the sixth. Lopez was still jerking Valdez’s head back with jabs but he was slowing and Valdez was landing the heavier punches. After six two of the judges had Valdez in front 58-55 and 57-56 and the third saw it 57-56 for Lopez. A right cross put Lopez down in the seventh. He made it to his feet but Valdez drove him around the ring landing hooks and uppercuts to the head until the referee jumped in and stopped the fight. The former WBO feather champion was having his first fight at super feather and made hard work of beating down the inexperienced Lopez but I would take him to beat any of the current super feather title holders except Miguel Berchelt. Lopez was to have fought down the card but was thrown in with Valdez after the original opponent Andres Gutierrez came in a whopping 8lbs over the contract weight. Lopez showed good skills and at 23 is a promising young fighter. Frampton vs. McCreary Frampton being several levels above McCreary floors him twice and wins every round on the way to a wide unanimous decision. McCreary had the longer reach but from the outset Frampton was able to get away from McCreary’s jab and come inside with his own and he rattled McCreary with a right late in the first. Frampton continued to find gaps for his jab in the second and third and started to go to the body more. With his jab not working McCreary had little else to rely on and as Frampton upped his pace he dominated the fourth and fifth putting together some useful combinations and hurting McCreary with a right to the body. McCreary was being forced to stand and trade more and in the sixth Frampton connected with a left and right to the body and McCreary backed off and went down on one knee. He made it to his feet and saw out the end of the round. McCreary rallied in the seventh but it did not last long and soon Frampton was again battering to the body and two more body punches in the ninth saw McCreary dip to one knee. He survived that and the last round which is about as much as he could have hoped for from this fight. Frampton won by 100-88 on the judge's cards. Plenty of options out there for Frampton notably a shot at WBO super feather champion Jamal Herring and even a third fight with Leo Santa Cruz or even Oscar Valdez. He stated that he had injured his hand in the second round of this fight so he may need a little time to heal but it will be an interesting 2020 for Frampton. McCreary had a mixed 2019 being held to a draw by a sliding Roberto Castaneda who was 2-5 going into their fight but then outpointing 22-2-1 Jessie Cris Rosales but I can’t see that he has enough to make much progress. Barboza vs. Silva Barboza gets his tenth win by KO/TKO as he finishes Silva with a cracking body punch. Barboza was in charge in the first forcing Silva back with a strong jab and then moving inside with crisp hooks. Silva landed a good right but did little else. Barboza upped his pace in the second and began to connect with some good left hooks to the body. Barboza was putting his punches together in the third and rocked Silva with a right to the head then connected with a left hook that dropped Silva on his back. Silva was up at seven and although Barboza landed some more heavy punches he made it comfortably to the bell. Barboza tracked Silva in the fourth but just could not land anything big and Silva moved, jabbed and fired back with a left hook and a right to the head. Silva tried to take the fight to Barboza in the fifth but some sharp straight lefts and rights to the head drove him back. Just seconds before the bell Barboza stepped in and drove a wicked right into Silva’s side and the Brazilian immediately dropped to the canvas and was still writhing in agony when the court reached ten. The 27-year-old Californian already has wins over Mike Reed and Mike Alvarado and is rated WBO 5/WBC 11 and could be a real threat in a tough division. Silva, 32, was stopped in seven rounds by Teo Lopez in July last year but had won his last two fights. Gomez vs. Mendoza Not everything goes with the script. Gomez looked a safe match for Mendoza but came to fight and gave Mendoza his first loss. It was a tough fight and close over the early rounds with perhaps Mendoza slightly ahead. Gomez had a big fifth rocking Mendoza badly and used that as springboard to get into the fight and staged a strong finish to just edge out the unbeaten fighter. Scores 77-75 twice for Gomez and 77-75 for Mendoza. Gomez’s loss was against 6-1 Kevin Johnson so did not seem a threat but he had scored ten wins by KO/TKO. He hails from West Jordan which was home to the Fullmer clan. There has to be some lessons here for Mendoza and if he takes them on board he will only improve. Vianello vs. Madison “The Gladiator” Vianello brushed aside Madison and finishes the fight in 44 seconds. Vianello is very quick for a big guy and he was stabbing out jabs to put Madison on the retreat. He missed with a big right but then jabbed again and threw an overhand right that crashed onto Madison’s head and Madison skipped back and then went down on his knees and was counted out. All six of the 6’6” Italian’s fights have ended early taking him a total of less than ten rounds for the six wins. Two losses in a row for Madison. Monte Carlo, Monaco: Welter: Alex Besputin (14-0) W PTS 12 Radzhab Butaev (12-1). Super Feather: Joe Cordina (11-0) W PTS 10 Mario Tinoco (18-6-4,1ND).Heavy: Zhilei Zhang (21-0) W PTS 10 Andriy Rudenko (32-4). Besputin vs. Butaev Besputin wins the vacant secondary WBA title with unanimous decision as he outboxes a disappointing Butaev who never really got a toe hold in the fight. Round 1 Confident opening round from Besputin. He was circling Butaev threading right jabs home and coming in quickly with lefts to the body. He was anticipating Butaev’s attacks and sliding away from them. Score: 10-9 Besputin Round 2 Clever boxing from Besputin as he alternated between circling Butaev and spearing him with jabs and quick lefts and taking the fight inside where he connected with short hooks. Butaev found the target with some heavy rights but it was Besputin’s round. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 20-18 Round 3 Butaev did a much better job of cutting the ring off in this one. Besputin was still tossing out quick, light punches but Butaev was blocking most on them and scored with a couple of crisp uppercuts and a right to the head. Score: 10-9 Butaev Besputin 29-28 Round 4 Besputin buzzed around Butaev slotting home jabs and following up with quick combinations. Butaev was static in the centre of the ring and Besputin was darting in scoring and then moving. Butaev was too slow to counter and although he connected with a couple rights late in the round Besputin responded with a hard left hook to the head. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 39-37 Official Scores: Judge Jean Robert Laine 39-37 Besputin, Judge Stanley Christodoulou 39-37 Besputin, Judge Pawel Kardyni 40-36 Besputin Round 5 Besputin was flitting around the ring again but Butaev was pressing much harder. He nailed Besputin with a right to the chin then pinned Besputin to the ropes and unloaded hooks with both hands. Besputin escaped but Butaev kept the pressure on and took the round. Score: 10-9 Butaev Besputin 48-47 Round 6 Besputin outboxed Butaev in this one. He was moving and changing direction too quickly for the plodding Butaev to respond. He was threading jabs through Butaev’s guard firing quick bursts of punches and Butaev throwing just one punch at a time was a step behind all the way. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 58-56 Round 7 More of the same. Footwork and hand speed from Besputin and Butaev just too slow and predictable to do anything about it. Besputin was scoring with jabs and then quick combinations and he had Butaev staggering back from a right hook. Butaev just could not cut off the ring to force Besputin to trade and his frustration was obvious. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 68-65 Round 8 Too easy for Besputin. He was rattling five and six punch combinations off Butaev’s head. They were light punches as he was not staying still long enough to wind up on the shots but Butaev seemed to have no guard against them and Besputin had no trouble ducking under and around the few punches Butaev was throwing. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 78-74 Official Scores: Judge Laine 77-75 Besputin, Judge Christodoulou 78-74 Besputin, Judge Kardyni 79-73 Besputin Round 9 Butaev turned things around completely in this round. He was no longer trying to pad forward behind a high guard instead he was coming in behind his jab and cutting off Besputin’s escape routes. He pinned Besputin on the ropes and was finally able to unload some heavy hooks. Under the pressure Besputin's cool demeanour disappeared and he was swinging wildly just to survive. Score: 10-9 Butaev Besputin 87-84 Round 10 This was a much closer round. Butaev continued to press hard but did not have as much success as in the ninth and although Besputin was moving less and throwing less he was by far the more accurate and it was his round but a close one. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 97-93 Round 11 Besputin's round. He was back to quick movement and rapid combination punching and Butaev was back to chasing in vain and never being to cut the ring off. Besputin was slipping and sliding away from the few punches Butaev did throw and connecting with his own punches. Score: 10-9 Besputin Besputin 107-102 Round 12 Butaev needed a knockout but never looked like getting one as Besputin just did enough to stay out of trouble and practically gave away the round. He finished with a bad cut on his right eyelid that could have been a big problem if it had happened early in the fight. Score: 10-9 Butaev Besputin 116-112 Official Scores: Judge Laine 116-112 Besputin, Judge Christodoulou 116-112 Besputin, Judge Kardyni 116-112 Besputin. The 28-year-old Russian gets a title but is unlikely to get a seat at the top table against Manny Pacquiao, Errol Spence or Terrence Crawford but who know what the picture may look like later in 2020. It was a case of the Oxnard Russian beating the Brooklyn Russian and really Butaev had the power but neither the speed nor the skill to make that a factor. Cordina vs. Tinoco Cordina picks up the vacant WBA Continental title as he outboxes Mexican Tinoco. Cordina was firing speedy jabs and putting together some sharp combinations in the eagerly action. Tinoco was slower. He tried switching guards to throw Cordina off his game plan and had some success when he was able to get inside and hook to the body. Cordina was moving sweetly but Tinoco was chasing hard and bit by bit forcing Cordina to stand and trade and Cordina was scoring with some tasty hooks and uppercuts once he got in close Tinoco was firing hooks of his own catching Cordina with a series in the sixth and the eighth and making Cordina fight hard in every round. Cordina constantly found gaps for a left jab/straight right combination and although the rights landed flush he did not seem to have the punch to hurt the Mexican but his accuracy was piling up the points and despite constant aggression from Tinoco he clearly came out on top. Scores 98-92 twice and 96-94 for Cordina. Good learning fight for the 28-ywar-old Welshman, a former European Championships gold medal winner who fought at both the European Championships and the 2016 Olympics. He has already collected four title including the British and Commonwealth but needs more experience under his belt before being ready for the top fighters. Tinoco was a very live opponent having been in with Miguel Roman, Mario Barrios and Devin Haney and stopped 23-0 Jordan Gill in England in May. Zhang vs. Rudenko Zhang keeps hold of his WBO Oriental title with decision over Rudenko. Zhang was taller and had a big edge in reach and outweighed Rudenko by 24lbs. He was able to prod with his jab to keep Rudenko off balance and then scored with long southpaw lefts. The pace was slow but Zhang managed to string together some combinations and had Rudenko in trouble with a heavy lefts in the third and fifth but Rudenko has a good chin and Zhang was not able to capitalise on those occasions. Rudenko fought back well enough to take a couple of rounds having a good seventh when he connected with clubbing punches on a tiring Zhang but generally Zhang was in control and dominated the mauling in the last two rounds. Scores 99-91, 98-92 and 97-93 for Zhang. The 36-year-old Chinese fighter is big, 6’6” and was 278lbs for this fight, and very strong with 16 wins by KO/TKO but is slow and has very little footwork so he will struggle against more mobile opposition and better opposition than the easy jobs he has been fed so far. Rudenko, 36, hardly counts as active with just one fight in 2017 and one in 2018 and in his last fight in March was outpointed by Agit Kabayel in a challenge for the EBU title. November 27 Windham, NH, USA: Heavy: Cassius Chaney (18-0) W KO 3 Nick Jones (7-3). Super Welter: LeShawn Rodriguez (12-0) W TKO 8 Francisco Castro (28-12). Chaney vs. Jones Chaney extends his streak of inside the distance wins to seven as he knocks out Jones in the third round for the vacant WBC USNBC title. Chaney was much the bigger man and he used his additional poundage to bully Jones around in the first. He staggered Jones with right in the second and after a series of left hooks softened Jones up in the third a wicked right uppercut floored him heavily. After starting the count the referee just waived the finish. The 32-year-old 6’6” Chaney was an outstanding basketball player before winning the New England Golden Gloves and turning pro in 2015. He had won his previous three fights in 2019 in the first round so almost doubled his 2019 ring time in this contests. He had a 42lbs edge in weight over Jones who has now lost three in a row by KO/TKO and was having his first fight almost a year. Rodriguez vs. Castro Former Elite level amateur Rodriguez moves up to eight rounds class for the first time with last round stoppage of Castro. Nine wins by KO/TKO for Rodriguez so steady progress by the former US National champion. He lost to Charles Conwell in the final of the US Olympic Trials for a place in the US Team for the Rio Games. Texas-based Mexican Castro has won only one of his last nine fights Florence, Italy: Light Heavy: Davide Faraci (14-0) W TEC DEC 8 Vigan Mustafa (21-4). Faraci makes a successful first defence of the national title with technical decision over oldie Mustafa. This was a poor fight with both contestants missing more than hitting and the referee working harder than the boxers. As heads bumped in the eighth Mustafa suffered a bad cut and the outcome was decided on the cards. Scores 77-75 twice and 79-75 for Faraci. The tall Swiss-born Faraci was putting his title on the line for the first time. Kosovon-born Mustafa, 40, a former Italian champion, was out of the ring for five years and was 6-1 since returning. Panama City, Panama: Feather: Anselmo Moreno (38-6-1) W DISQ 7 Luis Nino (15-6). Moreno continues his campaign for a world title shot with disqualification win over Venezuelan. Southpaw Moreno had too much skill for the crude Nino who chased the former WBA bantam champion in vain. A frustrated Nino lost points in the sixth and seventh for punches kidney punches. As he charged forward early in the eighth he landed a right hook way below to belt sending Moreno down in some pain and the referee disqualified Nino. Moreno, now 34, is somehow No 8 with the WBA but I can’t see him as a threat in this division. As usual for a Venezuelan Nino’s record is heavily padded. Having won his last eight fights by KO/TKO might have made him seem a dangerous choice but those eight victims had only mustered two wins between them. Quincy MA, USA: Cruiser: Chris Traietti (28-4) W TKO 1 Fabio Garrido (29-7-1). Predictably easy win for Quincy favourite Traietti as he stops Brazilian Garrido in 112 seconds. When you are the promoter, matchmaker and fighter you get to choose the opponent. In his first fight for a year Traietti wins the American Boxing Federation Continental Americas belt with victory No 22 by KO/TKO. Garrido, 40, lost his last fight just 27 days before this one and that also lasted less than a round as he was knocked out in 106 seconds! November 29 Sheffield, England: Fly: Tommy Frank (13-0) W PTS 10 Martin Tecuapetla (15-12-4). Feather: Josh Wale (30-11-2) W PTS 10 Felix Williams (27-12). Heavy: Kash Ali (16-1) W TKO 2 Artur Kubiak (2-5). Frank vs. Tecuapetla Local fighter Frank wins the vacant IBO Inter-Continental title as he decisions unpredictable Mexican Tecuapetla. Frank, the Commonwealth and WBC International Silver belt holder at super fly dropped to flyweight for this one. Tecuapetla is an aggressive, tough but limited fighter and although he pressed Frank hard for all ten rounds the better skills of the local fighter frustrated his efforts to get a foothold in the fight. On aggression alone Tecuapetla took a couple of rounds but Frank boxed coolly and cleverly without taking any chances and came out with the unanimous decision. Scores 97-93 twice and 97-94. Good test for the 26-year-old Frank and a third title after just thirteen fights. Tecuapetla lost a split decision to Akira Yaegashi for the IBF light flyweight title and last year was 1-1in fights with world title challenger Dewayne Beamon. Wale vs. Williams Williams came in with a heavily padded record and a reputation as a puncher, Wale was unconcerned by the Ghanaian’s reputation and his southpaw stance and took a majority decision which should have been unanimous. Wale took the fight to Williams forcing him on to the back foot out-throwing and outlanding Williams who was often pinned to the ropes for long periods. Williams had his moments but they were too few to threaten Wale’s dominance and the vacant IBO International title went to Wale. Scores 99-91, 97-93 and a strange 95-95. The 31-year-old former British champion from Barnsley lost back-to-back fights for the vacant European and British titles but has worked his way back with three wins. Williams had won his last eleven fights but Wale was too big a step up in quality for him. Ali vs. Kubiak Ali commences his rehabilitation with stoppage of Pole Kubiak. With Kubiak down twice and cut over his left eye the referee had seen enough and called a halt early in the second round. The Birmingham heavyweight may never live down his disqualification for taking a bite out of David Price but this, his eighth win by KO/TKO, is a step in the right direction. Fourth loss in a row for Kubiak. Elk, Poland: Super Light: Michal Syrowatka (21-3) W Atilla Kayabasi (11-1). Fighting in his home town Syrowatka gets unanimous verdict over Kayabasi. Syrowatka had height and reach on his side but a gutsy little Kayabasi just kept marching forward. Syrowatka was spearing the German with jabs and connecting with left hooks to the body but Kayabasi kept pressing in every round. In the sixth Syrowatka caught Kayabasi with a series of rights to the head which put Kayabasi down. The German beat the count and stood up under a ferocious attack from Syrowatka even staggering the Pole with a left hook late in the round. Both tired over the last two rounds. Syrowatka continued to outscore Kayabasi and the German continued to drive forward throwing punches. Scores 79-72, 79-73 and 78-73. Syrowatka’s best result was a late stoppage of unbeaten Robbie Davies but he was stopped by Davies in a return match and lost to Enock Paulsen for the vacant EU title in June this year. Kayabasi lived up to his “Rock” nickname but at 5’5” was too small to be a threat to Syrowatka, Moscow, Russia: Super Light: Georgi Chelokhsaev (17-1-1) W PTS 10 He Su-Khan (6-5-1). Chelokhsaev has to put his birthday celebrations on hold to defend the Russian title against less experienced He. Chelokhsaev had to climb off the floor and find a way past the jab of the taller He to take the unanimous decision. Chelokhsaev turned 28 the day before this fight and was making the first defence of the national title. Twelve wins in a row for Chelokhsaev. He, a Russian of Korean antecedents, has boxed in Spain and Japan and is a better fighter than his record indicates. Madrid, Spain: Super Middle: Damian Biacho (10-0) W PTS 10 Eusebio Arias (7-2). Biacho wins the vacant national title with unanimous decision over Arias. Their respective styles mixed well with Biacho boxing, moving and countering and Arias aggressive marching in behind his jab and applying pressure. Biacho, a little too flashy at times, boxed his way into a lead but it was close after the eighth with neither fighter able to dominate. Arias launches a fierce attack at the start of the ninth but was leaving himself open and was nailed by clubbing rights and shaken by a right uppercut. Biacho piled on the punches and Arias dropped to one knee. He was up at eight and managed to stay out of trouble for the rest of the round. Biacho took the last to be a clear winner. Scores 99-90, 97-92 and 96-93 all for Biacho with the last score looking the best refection of the action. Biacho, 28, was twice Spanish amateur champion. Dar-Es-Salaam, Tanzania: Super Welter: Hassan Mwakinyo (16-2) W PTS 10 Arnel Tinampay (26-25-1). Mwakinyo gets the decision but Tinampay looked to have won this one clearly. In the early rounds Mwakinyo used his longer reach to outbox Tinampay but as the fight developed the pressure from the smaller visitor saw him take control. Mwakinyo was constantly forced to the ropes and although he with some hard counters he was outlanded by Tinampay. The Filipino set a higher work rate and kept that going to the final bell and he was the one celebrating at the end-but not when the local judges somehow saw Mwakinyo as the winner. Now six wins in a row for Mwakinyo including an upset stoppage of Sam Eggington last September. Tinampay gets an undeserved loss but he should be used to local bias as in his last 13 fights he has fought in Thailand, South Korea, Australia , Japan, China, Russia and now Tanzania. Some of those fights he lost clearly but some were close enough for him to feel hard done by. Bangkok, Thailand: Bantam: Petch Sor Chitpattana (53-1) W TKO 3 Aries Buenavidez (13-4). Fly: Petchmanee (29-1) W TKO 2 Petchwiset Sithoei (0-1). Sor Chitpattana vs. Buenavidez Filipino Buenavidez no match for Thai Sor Chitpattana (Tasana Salapat) and is blown away inside three rounds. Buenavidez was competitive in the first but Sor Chitpattana handed out fierce punishment in the second and floored Buenavidez in the third with the referee stopping the fight. Sor Chitpattana retains the OPBF Silver title. His only loss was a decision against Takuma Inoue for the interim WBC title in December with this his fifth inside the distance in 2019. Buenavidez was 9-1 in his last 10 fights but in way over his head here. Petchmanee vs. Sithoei Petchmanee (Panya Pradabsri) rolls over novice Sithoei. Really just public sparring for world rated Petchmanee who put Sithoei down with a body shot in the second to end the match. The WBO No 3 light fly has only fought outside Thailand once and lost that fight. He has won twelve on the trot but six of those victims had never won a fight-make that seven with novice Sithoei November 30 Brisbane, Australia: John Wayne Parr (11-3) W PTS 10 Anthony Mundine (48-10). Super Welter: Ben Mahoney (9-0) W TKO 3 John Ruba (19-7-1). Parr vs. Mundine Parr wins unanimous decision over Mundine with both fighters retiring after the ten rounds. Parr was only one year younger than the 44-year-old Mundine but he set a work rate that Mundine could not match and did not try to match. Mundine relied on his defensive skills and more accurate punching. Mundine looked close to victory when hr staggered Parr with a heavy right just before the bell in the third which almost sent Parr stumbling to the canvas. He then connected with a series of hooks but Parr absorbed the punches well. In the fourth under a furious attack from Parr Mundine slip sideways and fell out through the middle ropes and almost out of the ring and he was given a count . Mundine was down in the fifth but the referee decided that it had been the result of a straight arm push so ruled it a slip. The pace naturally slowed late but the tactics stayed the same with Parr driving forward throwing punches and Mundine slipping and sliding around them and countering so it was volume vs. accuracy and volume won out. Scores 96-93, 95-93 and 95-94 all for Parr but without the fourth round when Mundine slid through the ropes it would have been a split draw. Parr was having his first boxing contest for 16 years but had been very active in kickboxing and Muay Thai and won numerous titles in a 110-37-1 record. He announced his retirement and was going to have a hip replacement. Mundine has been a controversial character partially due to his strident stance over rights of his fellow indigenous people but has won titles from light middle to super middle including the IBO middle title and WBA secondary title. In addition he was a very successful Rugby League player. Mahoney vs. Ruba Australian Mahoney wins the vacant IBO Asia Pacific title and makes it a double for former Muay Thai fighters. Mahoney looked on his was to victory when the fight was stopped in the third round due to a cut over Ruba’s left eye which had been caused by a punch. Mahoney gets his fifth inside the distance win. Indonesian Ruba suffers his second loss by KO/TKO. Qingdao, China: Light: Yongqiang Yang (13-0) W KO 2 JR Magboo (18-4-2). Super Bantam: Xiaolu Mou (16-0-1) W TKO 2 Brian Lobetania (14-7-3). Yang vs. Magboo Yang wins the vacant WBO Global title with kayo of Filipino Magboo. The 5’9” Yang was able to use his longer reach to score with jabs as Magboo desperately tried to get within range. Yang’s jab and movement were frustrating Magboo. In the second as Magboo lunged forward to get inside Yang blasted him with right and left hooks to the body which put Magboo down and ended the fight. Tenth win by KO/TKO for Yang and although neither fighter was rated in the WBO top 15 this win could open the door to a world title fight next year for Yang. Former Philippines bantam champion Magboo is 3-4 in his last 7 bouts. Mou vs. Lobetania Southpaw Mou overwhelms Lobetania for his seventh inside the distance win. Mou was in control from the opener forcing Lobetania onto the back foot with some aggressive attacks. He ended it in the second driving Lobetania along the ropes with southpaw lefts until Lobetania was pinned in a corner and as Mou was unloading to head and body the referee stopped the fight. Twelve wins on the bounce for the 23-year-old Chinese hope. Only one win in his last five fights for Filipino Lobetania Narva, Estonia: Heavy: Robert Helenius (29-3) W KO 2 Mateus Osorio (9-5). This was awful. Anyone dumb enough to pay to watch this does not deserve to have their money back. Helenius towered over the small tubby Osorio who started the fight by throwing a wild punch missing by a mile and ending up on the floor. Helenius just padded after Osorio connecting with an occasional jab and some body punches (he could hardly miss that body) before knocking Osorio down with a left and a right just before the bell. Helenius shook Osorio with a right in the second and was landing clubbing punches on an unresponsive Osorio. He twice invited the referee to stop the fight but the referee let it continue. Osorio charged forward and then fell to the canvas indicating there had been a clash of heads. The referee declined to take any action but helped Osorio to his feet so the fight could continue and mercifully Helenius landed a body punch and Osorio went down on his hands and knees and was counted out. Farce and Helenius showed his anger at being in such a ridiculous match. Helenius is now aiming to head for American to try his luck there. Only in Brazil could there be nine opponents Osorio could beat and none of his fights have gone beyond three rounds-winning or losing. Salo, Finland: Cruiser: Jarkko Ojapalo (7-0) W PTS 10 Samuli Karkkainen (10-0). Super Light: Damian Yapur (16-15-3) W PTS 8 Jarkko Putkonen (16-7-2). Karkkainen vs. Ojapalo Ojapalo collects the vacant Finnish title with split decision victory over Karkkainen. This all-southpaw clash took a couple of rounds to catch alight and Karkkainen fought his way into an early lead as the traded furiously in every round. Ojapalo came into the fight over the middle rounds and was outworking Karkkainen from there although many rounds were close but Ojapalo just did enough to earn the decision. Scores 98-92 and 98-94 for Ojapalo and 96-95 for Karkkainen. Both fighters were in their first ten round fight and provided plenty of entertainment. Putkonen vs. Yapur Wins have been scarce for Argentinian Yapur but he scored a well deserved one here. Yapur came in as a late substitute but he had given a good account of himself in losing over ten rounds in Holland on 7 November so was in some kind of shape. In a close fight Yapur scored a knockdown in the fourth and rocked Putkonen a couple of times in the late rounds to take the split decision. Scores 78-75 and 77-75 for Yapur and 76-75 for Putkonen. The Madrid-based Yapur was on an eight bout losing streak before this one. Putkonen, 35, had lost 3 of his last 4 fights but the losses were all against unbeaten opposition on their territory. La Paz, Mexico: Fly: Joselito Velazquez (12-0) W PTS 10 Adrian Curiel (15-3). Super Feather: Carlos Ornelas (25-2) W PTS 8 Jose Guzman (21-3-3). Velazquez vs. Curiel Olympian Velazquez keeps his 100% record with hard fought unanimous decision over Curiel. With Freddy Roach in his corner Velasquez made a fiery start getting inside and bombarding Curiel with body punches. Velasquez dominated the early action scoring heavily with hooks but late in the round a series of hooks from Curiel stopped Velasquez in his tracks and the fight was on. They traded left hooks throughout the third with Velazquez just having the edge and he dominated the fourth connecting with some rights to the head before again working the body. They continued to go toe-to-toe in the fifth and not surprisingly the pace dropped a little in the sixth. There were more fierce exchanges in the seventh with Curiel more than holding his own and he outscored Velazquez in a torrid eighth only for a counter from Velazquez to knock him off balance and his glove touched the canvas and he was given a count. They traded punches in the ninth and tenth with neither fighter willing to take a step back. Velazquez had built a lead but with Curiel finishing the stronger this was a close one with that count in the eighth making the difference. Scores 95-94 twice and 97-93 for Velazquez. He competed for Mexico in Rio and won a gold medal at the PanAmerican Games. It is in a furnace such as this contest that the fighting spirit of Mexican fighters is forged and the 20-year-old Curiel showed he is going to heard from in the future. Ornelas vs. Guzman In another no quarter clash local southpaw Ornelas outscored Guzman. He outboxed and outscored Guzman who was willing to walk through punishment to get inside. Ornelas just could not find the punch to punctuate his superiority with a stoppage but he emerged a clear winner taking the unanimous decision. Despite his impressive looking figures the two losses Ornelas has suffered have been to modest opposituion. Guzman was 11-0-2 before this one so a very live threat. Zakopane, Poland: Cruiser: Krzys Wlodarczyk (58-4-1) W PTS 10 Taylor Mabika (19-5-1). Wlodarczyk outpoints Mabika but he was far from impressive. He stunned Mabika with a left hook in an otherwise quiet first round and then patiently worked himself in front. His left jab was not working as well as it usually does and Mabika was rarely under strong pressure over the second half of the fight as Wlodarczyk seemed to run out of ideas and too often was not pressing home his attacks even after landing a heavy shot. Mabika had a good seventh round but never looked like winning and Wlodarczyk eased his way to victory. Scores 98-92, 97-93 and 96-94 for Wlodarczyk. The Pole, now 38 and a former IBF and WBC champion, is said to be in line for a fight with Ilunga Makabu for the vacant WBC title but will have to improve on this performance if he is to become a cruiserweight champion for the third time. In fairness to Wlodarczyk this is his first fight for eight months as he has been recovering from hand and knee injuries. French-based Gambian Mabika, 40, had a twelve bout unbeaten run which saw him collect the WBFederation, WBC Mediterranean and WBC Francophone belts but was coming off two losses including one against Makabu. Maykop, Russia: Cruiser: Ruslan Fayer (25-1) W PTS 12 Yury Kashinsky (18-1). Light Heavy: Maksim Vlasov (45-3) W PTS 10 Emmanuel Martey (15-1). Fayer vs. Kashinsky Fayer gets the win but only just. Fayer had the superior skills but Kashinsky was busier and stronger. Fayer did his best work when he used his jab and stepped in with hooks and uppercuts. Kashinsky was the one coming forward and doing better work there. Fayer was not looking to work inside so there was too much clinching for the fight to flow. Kashinsky lost a point in the third but for what it was hard to figure as initially the referee indicated it was for pushing Fayer’s head down and then for holding. Kashinsky continued to take the fight to Fayer scoring with hooks and uppercuts as he came forward and Fayer did his scoring with his jab and counters. Kashinsky was cut over his right eye but luckily the blood was running down the side of his face so not into his eye. Gradually the better boxing saw Fayer edge into the lead but as they both tired Kashinsky seemed the stronger but when he lost another point in the eleventh for a couple of innocuous low punches that really wrapped up the decision for Fayer who spent the last round just avoiding trouble. Scores 115-111 twice and 114-112 for Fayer. The 28-year-old Russian lost on points to Andrew Tabiti in a WBSS quarter-final but is still rated IBF 5(3)/WBC 8/WBO 12 so could get a title shot next year when the smoke clears from the WBSS. Kashinsky, 33, made Fayer work hard for the win but he has a heavily padded record. Vlasov vs. Martey Vlasov wins every round against unbeaten Ghanaian Martey. Vlasov had height and reach over Ghanaian southpaw Martey who decided his best tactic was to adopt a high guard and march through Vlasov’s punches. Vlasov was able to pierce Martey’s guard with jabs and used clever upper body movement to slip Martey’s punches. Martey was not coming forward quickly enough or strongly enough to put any real pressure on Vlasov who never seemed to be in top gear. On the occasions where he did seem to have Martey hurt he did not follow through and seemed happy to get in some rounds. Too often Martey found himself pinned to the ropes whilst Vlasov picked his spots and connected with straight punches, hooks and uppercuts as Martey just tried to cover up. Martey showed a useful jab and countered when he could but never came close to winning a round. Scores 100-90 for Vlasov on the three cards. Vlasov, 33, has lost at crucial times in his career against Isaac Chilemba and Gilberto Ramirez. He was outpointed in November by Krzys Glowacki for the interim WBO title in the WBSS but regained some ground with a revenge victory over Chilemba in July. First fight outside Ghana for Martey he showed some skills and a good chin but at 5’6 ½” was too small to ever threaten the 6’3 ½” Vlasov. Kempton Park, South Africa: Light Heavy: Rowan Campbell (12-0) W TKO 4 Nicholas Radley (9-1) Super Welter: Brandon Thysse (12-2-1) W KO 7 Roarke Knapp (9-1-1). Super Welter: Boyd Allen (5-0-1) W TKO 10 Tristan Truter (8-2) W. Super Fly: Ricardo Malajika (6-0) W TKO 8 Mngobi Mkhize (8-1). Campbell vs. Radley Campbell beats down the taller Radley for a stoppage in the fourth round. This was a clash of South African champions but without a title at stake. Super middle Campbell was giving away a lot of height and reach against light heavy title holder Radley but proved stronger and was able to move in behind a high guard to work on Radley in close. Campbell bossed the action over the first three rounds before bringing the end in the fourth. He forced Radley to a corner and then landed a huge right to the head. Radley tried to escape along the ropes but Cameron reached him with lefts and rights to the head driving Radley back along the ropes and was unloading more heavy hooks when the referee stopped the fight. Campbell, who also holds the IBO All-African title gets his eighth inside the distance win and looks ready for better opposition. Despite having won 8 of his 9 fights by KO/TKO Radley just did not have the power to hold Cameron off. Thysse vs. Knapp Thysse wins the first semi-final of a super welter tournament with stoppage of Knapp. Although the records looked very similar Thysse had twice the ring time behind him the Knapp did. Thysse made the brighter start clearly taking the first couple of rounds but being shaken by a right in the third. Thysse looked to have edged the fourth but Knapp banged back in the next two rounds to even things up. The end came unexpectedly in the seventh when Thysse broke through and put Knapp down three times to force the stoppage,. Former South African champion Thysse gets his tenth win by KO/TKO and a chance to gain revenge against Boyd Allen. At 21 Knapp can come again. Allen vs. Truter Allen comes from behind to stop Truter in the second bout in the super welterweight tournament. Truter looked to have moved in front early but Allen was stronger and kept pressing to close the gap and it was all up for grabs by the tenth. In the tenth a huge right cross from Allen unhinged Truter’s legs and he pushed and punched Truter to the ropes. Once there Allen landed some neck-jerking punches from both hands and the referee jumped in to save Truter. Whilst having less fights Allen, the WBA Pan African champion, had twice gone into the twelfth round and the experience of that helped here. Truter had won his last seven fights but had never been past four rounds. Allen will now go on to fight Thysse in the final of the tournament. He beat Thysse over twelve rounds for the WBA Pan African title in May but it was a split decision so it should make a good final. Malajika vs. Mkhize Malajika retains the ABU SADC belt as he halts Mkhize in a fight that sees both fighters on the canvas, Not a lot of skill on show from these two novices. Malajika scored the first knockdown flooring Mkhize in the first. Mkhize returned the favour by flooring Malajika in the second. They continued to flail away. With Malajika cut and floored in the sixth it seemed to have swung towards Mkhize’s but he tired badly in the seventh and was docked a point for spitting out his mouthguard. A big right in the eighth had Mkhize staggering and stumbling to the ropes and after a series of head punches from Malajika Mkhize turned away and dropped his hands and the referee stopped the fight. Fifth win by KO/TKO for South African Malajika. Mkhize had won his last five fights by KO/TKO and was South African No 6 Barcelona, Spain: Super Feather: Moussa Gholam (14-0) W Chonlatarn (61-5). Super Light Alejandro Moya (13-0) W TKO 6 Ruben Rodriguez (8-5-1). Super Welter: Kerman Lejarraga (29-2) W KO 1 Anderson Clayton (41-15-2). Gholam vs. Chonlatarn Thai former world title challenger Chonlatarn took another big slide down the slope in this fight. At 5’10” to the 5’5 ½” Thai Moroccan Gholam had huge advantages in height and reach over Chonlatarn. The Thai drove forward constantly but was being caught with punches at distance and with hooks and uppercuts when coming forward. Gholam scored a knockdown with a left hook to the body in the seventh and was punishing Chonlatarn heavily in the last when the fight was stopped. The 24-year-old Gholan wins the vacant WBO Inter-Continental title with his eighth win by KO/TKO but he will face bigger tests than this and it is difficult to assess his potential. Chonlatarn (Suriya Tatakhun), 34, could not win the title as he was 3kgs over the contract weight. He was 51-1 before losing on points against Vasyl Lomachenko for the WBO feather title in 2014 and his only other inside the distance loss was against Miguel Berchelt for the interim WBO title in 2016 but he is only a shadow now. Moya vs. Rodriguez Moya wins his first title as he stops Rodriguez in the sixth for the vacant national crown. With his superior power and accuracy Moya was in control from the first bell. He rocked Rodriguez in the second and fourth rounds. Moya also took the fifth and ended it in the sixth. He connected with two lefts to the head and then a rib crunching left hook to the body which shook Rodriguez then put him down with a right. Rodriguez managed to rise but was in no state to continue and the fight was over. Moya, 27, has nine early ending on his record now. Rodriguez has three early losses. Lejarraga vs. Clayton Ridiculously easy win for Lejarraga as he finished ancient Brazilian Clayton in the opening round. Lejarraga’s strong left had Clayton going into survival mode and Lejarraga took Clayton to the ropes and connected with a right uppercut and a left hook to the body. Clayton staggered back a couple of steps and then went down and was unable to beat the count. After his two inside the distance losses to David Avanesyan Lejarraga has a major rebuilding task on his hands. Brazilian Clayton has lost his last four fights-all to unbeaten opposition- and this is his seventh defeat by KO/TKO. London, England: Super Feather: Liam Dillon (9-0-1) DREW 10 Youssef Khoumari (10-0-1). Welter: Ekow Essuman (13-0) W TKO 8 Curtis Felix (10-1). Super Bantam: Ryan Walker (11-1) W PTS 10 Piotr Mirga (5-1). Middle: Linus Udofia (15-0) W PTS 10 Tyler Denny (12-2-2). Dillon vs. Khoumari A draw in this fight meant that the BBB of C English title remained vacant but then neither fighter deserved to lose or did enough to convince the three officials they were the winner. It was very much a close quarters battle fought at a fast pace. Dillon was mainly the aggressor but Khoumari defensive work and sharp counters kept him in the fight. Dillon looked to have just edged it but a draw was a popular outcome. Scores 97-94 Dillon, 96-95 Khoumari and 95-95. Dillon, 23, is the Southern Area champion. Londoner Khoumari was going past six rounds for the first time . Essuman vs. Felix Botswanan Essuman retains the English title with stoppage of Felix. The challenger was in the fight over the early rounds with some clever boxing Essuman just kept on pressing and Felix did not have the punch to stop Essuman’s progress. A tired Felix was floored in the seventh and when he went down again in the eighth the fight was halted. Essuman was making the second defence of the English title and he has a useful win over experienced Tyrone Nurse. Felix just did not have the power to compete here. Walker vs. Mirag Walker outpoints British-base Pole Mirag. Walker simply outworked Mirag in most rounds. Mirag tried to use his slightly longer reach to give him some punching space but Walker was strong and continually got past Mira’s jab and outscored him on the inside. Mirag did enough to make it close but Walker was a clear winner. Referee’s score 97-94. The win gives Walker the vacant BBB of C Southern Area title. After being floored twice and stopped inside a round by Mike Ramabeletsa in November Walker has regrouped well with three wins. Perhaps this fight came a bit too early for the 22-year-old Mirag but he too can rebuild. Udofia vs. Denny In another close fight on the excellently matched show Nigerian-born Udofia became the English champion with a majority decision over Denny. It was Udofia who showed up best in the early rounds outboxing the aggressive Denny but Denny brought on the pressure late. Southpaw Denny looked to have turned things his way with a flash knockdown in the eighth but the referee did not consider it a knockdown and that proved important in a close fought encounter. Scores 97-94 and 96-94 for Udofia and 95-95. Excellent learning fight for the 26-year-old Udofia against his toughest opponent so far. Denny’s only previous loss was due to facial damage against 21-1 Reece Cartwright for this same title and he had scored three wins since then. Swindon, England: Welter: Ryan Martin (13-2-1) W KO 2 Mziwoxolo Ndwayana (18-5-2). Super Middle: Germaine Brown (8-0) W RTD 4 Sam Smith (8-3). Martin vs. Ndwayana Martin wins a Commonwealth Boxing Council eliminator with second round victory over Ndwayana. The more experienced South African champion Ndwayana looked a stiff test for Martin in an even first round. Early in the second Martin hurt Ndwayana with a body punch and when Martin spotted that he went to the body again dropping Ndwayana to his knees and being counted out. Sixth win by KO/TKO for the 25-year-old from Swindon. Ndwayana was 7-1 before this fight, his first in England. Brown vs. Smith Surrey’s Brown made sure it was not a local double as he forced Brown to retire after four rounds. Despite giving away height to the 6’3” Smith Brown was landing the heavier punches which caused a large swelling over Smith’s left eye and Smith did not come out for the fifth round. Third inside the distance win in a row for Brown who lifts the vacant BBB of C Southern Area title. Smith had won his last three fights. Fight of the week (Significance): John Riel Casimero’s win over Zolani Tete opens up some good possibilities in the bantamweight division for 2020 Fight of the week (Entertainment) : Patrick Teixeira vs. Carlos Adames had plenty of action and a drop or two of drama. Honourable mention to the war between Jose Velazquez and Adrian Curiel Fighter of the week: Difficult to see past a bloodied but unbowed Teixeira Punch of the week: Arnold Barboza’s rib bending right that finished William Silva was special Upset of the week: Casimero was a slight outside against Tete and 9-1 Larry Gomez was not expected to give 18-0 Brian Mendoza too much trouble. Prospect watch: Heavy weight Guido Vianello 6-0 6 wins by KO/TKO looks quick and has power By - George Delis (@Delisketo) Heavyweight: -Alexander Povetkin (35-2): WBC #6 / WBA #6 / IBF #10 The former Olympic & World champion faces Michael Hunter (18-1) on December 7th, in a WBA eliminator bout. -Evgeny Romanov (14-0): WBO #9 / WBC #20 Romanov has kept his undefeated record intact throughout 2019 and has also become the inaugural WBO Global Heavyweight champion. -Sergey Kuzmin (15-1): WBA #12 / IBF 14 / WBC #27 Kuzmin’s fight with Zhang Zhilei (21-0) was cancelled due to the Russian suffering an injury during training. Cruiserweight: -Aleksei Egorov (9-0): WBA Gold champion Egorov bested Ukrainian veteran Roman Golovashchenko (20-4) within 3 rounds to be declared the new WBA Gold champion. He will defend his belt on December 7th against Serhiy Radchenko (7-4). -Beibut Shumenov (18-2): WBA (Regular) World champion Shumenov’s next fight could take place at a major boxing event, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, promoted by Don King. -Evgeny Tishchenko (6-0): WBO #10 / IBF #13 / WBC #25 The 2016 Olympic champion won the vacant WBO Intercontinental title after knocking out Abraham Tabul (16-2) in the opening round and defended it against Issa Akberbayev (20-1) on November 2nd. -Ruslan Fayfer (25-1): IBF #5 / WBC #8 / WBA #11 / WBO #12 Fayfer defeated Yury Kashinsky for the right to become the mandatory challenger for the IBF World championship. -Dmitry Kudryashov (23-3): WBC #9 The former WBC Silver & WBA International champion faces Vaclav Pejsar (14-8) on December 21st. -Yury Kashinsky (18-1): IBF #3 / WBO #4 / WBC #6 As mentioned above, Kashinsky lost an IBF eliminator to Ruslan Fayfer, on November 30th. -Aleksei Papin (11-1): WBC #11 The former Kickboxing star & 2 time IBF International champion has expressed his wish for a revenge match with Ilunga Makabu (26-2). Light Heavyweight: -Artur Beterbiev (15-0): IBF & WBC World champion Beterbiev ended Oleksandr Gvozdyk’s (17-1) undefeated streak and unified the IBF & WBC World Championships. -Dmitry Bivol (17-0): WBA (Super) World champion Bivol successfully defended his title for the 6th time this October and was finally promoted to Super champion by the WBA. -Maksim Vlasov (45-3): WBO #5 / IBF #11 Vlasov defended his WBO Global title against 2 time world title challenger Isaac Chilemba (25-7) in July, plus avenging his 1st professional loss. He also beat Emmanuel Martey (15-1) on November 30th. -Umar Salamov (25-1): WBO #2 / IBF #5 / WBA #9 Salamov retained the WBO International title for the 3rd time after knocking out Emmanuel Danso (31-5) in September. -Igor Mikhalkin (23-2): WBC #5 / IBF #13 / WBA #14 / WBO #15 Mikhalkin earned a unanimous decision victory over Timur Nikarkhoev (21-3) thus becoming the interim IBO champion. -Sergey Kovalev (34-4): WBO #4 / WBC #8 The former WBA, WBC, WBO, IBF World champion aims to continue his career in 2020. Super Middleweight: -Fedor Chudinov (21-2): WBA #1 / IBF #6 / WBC #6 / WBO #11 Fedor fights for the 4th time this year, on December 13th. The former WBA World champion will meet Hassan N'Dam N'Jikam (37-4) in Vladikavkaz, Russia. -Aidos Yerbossynuly (12-0): WBA #2 / WBO #8 / WBC #33 The unified WBA International, WBO Global & WBC Asia Continental champion will put his belts on the line, on December 21st, against Obodai Sai (35-3). -Aslambek Idigov (17-0): WBO #6 Idigov picked up a unanimous decision victory over Robert Racz (22-2) on September 19th and remained the WBO & IBF European champion. -Vladimir Shishkin (9-0): WBC #11 The undefeated Russian stopped DeAndre Ware (13-2) in August. -Ali Akhmedov (16-0): WBC #14 Akhmedov defended his WBC International Silver title against Andrew Hernandez (20-8) on October 5th. -Evgeny Shvedenko (13-0): IBF #9 / WBC #27 Shvedenko has remained unbeaten in 2019, with victories over Nadjib Mohammedi (42-8) and Nuhu Lawal (27-6). -Azizbek Abdugofurov (13-0): WBC #2 The WBC Silver champion made a successful comeback this past summer. Middleweight: -Gennady Golovkin (40-1): IBF World champion Triple G earned a decision victory over Sergiy Derevyanchenko (13-2) on October 5th to become a 2 time IBF champion. His inaugural title defense will take place either in February or March. The undefeated Kamil Szeremeta (21-0) will most likely be his opponent. -Kanat Islam (27-0): WBO #5 The 2008 Olympic Bronze medalist made his triumphant return after a 2 year hiatus and demolished Julio De Jesus (27-2) in 14 seconds to become the new WBO International champion. He marked his inaugural title defense, on October 26th, against former world title challenger Walter Kautondokwa (18-2). -Matvey Korobov (28-2): WBA #3 Korobov and Chris Eubank Jr. (28-2) will face each other for the interim WBA title on December 7th. -Magomed Madiev (13-0): WBA #4 Madiev went to war with Evgeny Terentiev (14-2) in July and defended his WBA Asia title for the 3rd time. -Janibek Alimkhanuly (8-0): WBO #6 / IBF #14 / WBC #15 The 2013 AIBA World champion knocked out Albert Onolunose (24-3) on November 9th to successfully defend his WBO Global & WBC Continental Americas titles. -Meiirim Nursultanov (13-0): IBF #9 / WBC #25 Nursultanov took a unanimous decision over Christian Olivas (16-6) to win the WBC US title earlier this month. -Mikalai Vesialou (11-0): WBA #9 The WBA Continental champion defended his belt for the 3rd time, in October, against Abdul Khattab (18-3). -Anatoli Muratov (22-2): WBA #12 Muratov knocked out Ilias Essaoudi (15-2) in September to capture the WBA Intercontinental championship. Super Welterweight: -Bakhram Murtazaliev (17-0): IBF #1 / WBO #4 / WBC #13 Murtazaliev has scored victories this year over Elvin Ayala (29-13), Bruno Leonardo Romay (21-8) and Jorge Fortea (20-2). -Magomed Kurbanov (18-0): WBA #5 / WBO #9 / WBC #8 Kurbanov defeated former interim WBA World titlist Diego Gabriel Chaves (27-5), on November 2nd, and became a 2 time WBO International champion. -Israil Madrimov (4-0): WBA #4 / WBC #34 Madrimov has fought and beat Frank Rojas (24-3), Norberto Gonzalez (24-14) and Alejandro Barrera (29-6) in 2019, earning the WBA Intercontinental championship in the process. -Artem Oganesyan (11-0): WBO #15 The Russian rising star has added 3 more victories to his perfect record this year. Welterweight: -Alexander Besputin (14-0): WBA (Regular) World champion Besputin went to war with Radzhab Butaev (12-1) on November 30th and emerged the new WBA champion. -Kudratillo Abdukakhorov (17-0): IBF #1 / WBC #5 / WBO #10 Kudratillo bested Keita Obara (22-4) to become the #1 contender for the IBF title. He then defeated former WBA World champion Luis Collazo (39-8) in October. Rumor has it that Kudratillo and Lipinets might face each other for the interim IBF World championship on February 22nd of 2020. -David Avanesyan (25-3): IBF #6 / WBC #6 / WBA #10 / WBO #12 The former interim WBA World title holder stopped Kerman Lejarraga (29-2) to become the EBU European champion. Those 2 met again in September with the same result. His next defense will take place on December 12th against Jose Del Rio (29-8). -Sergey Lipinets (16-1): IBF #3 / WBO #4 / WBC #8 Lipinets stopped 2 division World champion Lamont Peterson (35-5) earlier this year. He added another finish to his record in July, after he dropped Jayar Inson (18-3) to win the vacant WBO Intercontinental title. As mentioned above, he and Kudratillo could fight for the interim IBF strap next year. -Nursultan Zhangabayev (8-0): WBA #6 / IBF #8 / WBC #30 Zhangabayev defends his WBA Intercontinental title against Ernesto Espana (30-2) on December 21st. Super Lightweight: -Shakhram Giyasov (9-0): WBA #7 / IBF #15 / WBC #22 The 2016 Olympic Silver medalist knocked out the former interim WBA World champion Darleys Perez (34-5), on August 24th, in less than a minute, to defend his WBA International title. -Zhankosh Turarov (24-0) WBO #9 Turarov made short work of Mauro Maximiliano Godoy (32-5) in July, thus becoming the new WBO Intercontinental champion. -Eduard Troyanovsky (28-2): WBC #8 The former IBF World champion defeated Josef Zahradnik (11-4) in his comeback match a few weeks ago. -Shohjahon Ergashev (17-0): WBA #6 / IBF #6 / WBO #11 / WBC #28 Undefeated prospects collide as Ergashev goes up against Keith Hunter (11-0) on January 10th of 2020. -Batyrzhan Jukembayev (17-0): IBF #11 / WBC #12 Jukembayev scored a major victory, this past September, defeating longtime World Lightweight title holder Miguel Vazquez (41-9) to become the WBA Continental & IBF Intercontinental champion. -Ivan Baranchyk (20-1): IBF #4 / WBC #5 The former IBF World champion stopped Gabriel Bracero (25-4) on October 5th to capture the WBA Intercontinental title. -Batyr Akhmedov (7-1): WBA #5 / WBC #17 Akhmedov and Mario Barrios (25-0) are very likely to meet again for the WBA (Regular) title in 2020. Lightweight: -Roman Andreev (23-0): WBO #3 / IBF #10 / WBC #37 The former WBO European & Intercontinental champion has signed with Top Rank. He will make his US debut in 2020. -Pavel Malikov (16-1): IBF #9 / WBO #14 / WBC #38 Malikov earned a majority decision against former world title challenger Isa Chaniev on October 12th. -Zaur Abdullaev (11-1): WBC #7 Zaur suffered an injury during his interim WBC title fight with Devin Haney (24-0) and couldn’t capture the gold. Super Featherweight: -Shavkat Rakhimov (15-0): WBC #3 / IBF #5 Rakhimov knocked out Azinga Fuzile (14-1) on September 29th to become the number 1 contender for the IBF World championship. -Akzhol Sulaimanbek Uulu (15-0): WBA #6 Sulaimanbek stopped both Pipat Chaiporn (47-13) and Milner Marcano (21-8) this year to defend his WBA Asia title. -Muhammadkhuja Yaqubov (15-0): WBC #7 / WBO #12 / IBF #15 The undefeated WBC International champion marked his inaugural title defense against former interim WBA World titlist Emanuel Lopez (30-12) this past February and his second one against Abraham Montoya (18-2). -Mark Urvanov (17-2): WBO #14 Urvanov earned the biggest win of his career on November 2nd when he knocked out former world title challenger Evgeny Chuprakov (21-2) to capture the WBO International championship. -Denis Shafikov (40-4): IBF #10 Shafikov fought Gaybatulla Gadzhialiev (6-2) to a draw. Featherweight: -Tugstsogt Nyambayar (11-0): WBC #1 / IBF #4 The 2012 Olympic Silver medalist will challenge Gary Russell Jr. (30-1) for the WBC title in April of next year. Super Bantamweight: -Murodjon Akhmadaliev (7-0): WBA #1 The 2016 Olympic Bronze medalist has stopped Wilner Soto (22-7) as well as former world title challenger Carlos Carlson (24-6) in 2019. Bantamweight: -Nikolai Potapov (21-2): WBO #9 / IBF #11 / WBC #20 Potapov got the DQ victory over Nasibu Ramadhani (29-15) on October 30th. Flyweight: -Olimjon Nazarov (20-5): WBO #12 Nazarov has been on an impressive 7 fight winning streak since 2018 and has also captured the WBO Oriental championship. He recently earned a unanimous decision over Chaiwat Buadkratok (32-2) in Vietnam.By - George Delis (@Delisketo) In November we counted down a number of honourable mentions for our 20 for 20. Now it's time to look at the 20 fighters who have managed to make it into the list properly, and they come from all over Asia and all over the weight classes. Some of these you may already be aware of, some are perhaps less well known, but either way these 20 men are going to be well worth following in the new year as they look to push forward in their career and move towards major success. For these fighters we will look at the the reason why you should follow them, our expectations for them in the coming year and the issues they may face going forward. The one rule with all of these fighters is that they can't have fought for a world title at the time of writing. Some of these are world ranked, and some of these may well be set for world title fights in the near future, but so far they have not had that top level bout. Without any further ado, lets take a look at the man we have ranked #19 in our list of the top 20 Ones to watch in 2020. Who? Ye Joon Kim (18-1-2, 10) Age? 27 Where? South Korea What weight? Super Bantamweight Why? South Korea desperately needs a fighter that the country can get behind, and the only one who seems to have the skills to really make a mark is Ye Joon Kim, who is a real natural talent. Kim can be frustrating at times, cruising through portions of bouts, but when he moves through the gears he looks like a genuinely fantastic talent. If his team can keep him on the right track, which is a challenge in it's self, and he can avoid another big injury, an issue that forced him to cancel a 2019 bout, then Kim is very much one to watch in 2020. The problem with Korean boxing is that it feels really badly structured, with bouts falling through, and a lot of political issues, further adding to the frustrations fans can have with a fighter as frustrating as Kim. Despite that he's an enigma, a character, and boxing fans do enjoy characters. That is especially true when the fighter in question is talented, and can appeal to fan who want to see them beat as well as fans who want to enjoy their skills. Kim probably isn't known well enough to have genuine haters yet, but his personality could well make him a fighter you want to see What do we expect? If Kim can get his act sorted then we genuinely see 2020 being a career year for the Korean who should be in the mix for either the OPBF or WBO Asia Pacific title. Korea has lacked a genuine Oriental level fighter, but Kim has the ability to do just that! And more. We don't see Kim winning a world title in 2020, but by the end of the year he should be in the mix, even in the stacked Super Bantamweight division. Sadly, though, it all depends on whether his team can keep him active and get him the bouts he needs. In Korea the political mess can really hamper a fighter, with the KBC, KBF and KBM all having their own little games, but it does seem like better bouts are being made in Korea and 2019 has seen some good fighters travel to the peninsula for fights. If that continues in 2020 then Kim is likely to be one of the fighters who does get to face notable opponents and there really is no excuse for him to not be mixing at top regional level. Concerns? We won't dwell on the issue of Korean boxing too much here, as it does appear to be going in the right direction and we suspect that all of the political machinations would be wanting a Korean world champion to spearhead the sports revival in the country. The bigger worry with Kim is Kim himself. The talented enigma has lacked consistency, both in terms of when he fights and how he fights. One fight he can look like the talent Korean boxing has been wishing for, and in his next fight he looks like a lazy, wild fighter, full of arrogance and lacking a boxing brain. We don't have a problem with Kim having fun in the ring and putting on a show for the fans, but he does need to put on more intelligent performances. Winning in style is great, but willing and looking a bit like you don't care is a less great and Kim, at times, has looked like he doesn't care. As well as the arrogance and underwhelming performance we also have concerns about Kim's longer term ambitions and every time he seems to have built some momentum something has stopped it dead. Be it a lay off, an injury, or something else we've never seem Kim manage to snowball success into more success. In 2020 we hope that changes, but we will always suspect something, just lurking out of sight, will be an issue for Kim. By - George Delis (@Delisketo) Heavyweight: -Kyotaro Fujimoto (21-1): WBA #13 The former K-1 star will face his biggest challenge to date, on December 21st, as he tales on the British, Commonwealth & WBO International champion Daniel Dubois (13-0). Middleweight: -Ryota Murata (15-2): WBA (Regular) World champion The 2012 Olympic Gold medalist got his revenge on Rob Brant (25-2) in Osaka, reclaiming his WBA title. He will mark his inaugural defense on December 23rd against the WBC International champion Steven Butler (28-1). Super Welterweight: -Takeshi Inoue (15-1): WBO #11 / IBF #15 / WBC #22 Inoue made short work of Thai veteran Komsan Polsan (39-11) in August, to become the WBO Asia Pacific champion for the second time. He is scheduled to fight again next year, on January 18th. Welterweight: -Keita Obara (22-4): IBF #4 After losing to Kudratillo Abdukakhorov (17-0) earlier this year, Obara bounced back with victories Indonesian journeyman Yosmar Kefi (9-12) and Toshiro Tarumi (12-4). Super Lightweight: -Andy Hiraoka (15-0): IBF #14 The Japanese youngster earned the biggest win of his career, this past July, against former world title challenger Akihiro Kondo (32-9). Hiraoka made a successful US debut against Rogelio Casarez (13-9) on November 30th. Lightweight: -Shuichiro Yoshino (11-0): WBO #13 / WBC #23 Yoshino knocked out Harmonito Dela Torre (20-3) in the very first round to become the unified Japanese, OBPF & WBO Asia Pacific champion and to finally enter the world rankings. Super Featherweight: -Kenichi Ogawa (24-1): IBF #3 / WBA #4 / WBO #10 / WBC #24 Ogawa will challenge Joe Noynay (18-2) for the WBO Asia Pacific championship, on December 7th, at the legendary Korakuen Hall. -Masaru Sueyoshi (19-1): WBO #3 / WBC #21 Sueyoshi will meet Kosuke Saka (19-5), on December 7th, for the 5th defense of his Japanese title. -Kazuhiro Nishitani (20-4): IBF #12 Nishitani has been 5-0 since 2016, knocking out every single one of his opponents. He will compete again on December 7th, against Chikato Sumida (8-3). Featherweight: -Musashi Mori (10-0): WBO #7 / WBC #24 Mori defended his WBO Asia Pacific title against the former champion Richard Pumicpic (21-10) this past April. His second one will take place on December 8th as he faces Takuya Mizuno (17-1). -Hiroshige Osawa (36-5): WBA #1 / IBF #13 / WBC #19 The former world title challenger defeated Indonesian veteran Jason Butar Butar (30-27) on October 1st. -Ryo Sagawa (8-1): WBC #13 / WBO #15 The new Japanese champion will put his title on the line for the first time, on December 12th, against Ryo Hino (13-1). Super Bantamweight: -Ryosuke Iwasa (26-3): IBF #1 In a clash of former World champions, Iwasa meets Marlon Tapales (33-2), on December 7th, for the interim IBF Super Bantamweight title, in New York. -Hiroaki Teshigawara (20-2): IBF #7 Teshigawara will defend his OPBF championship for the 3rd time, on December 12th, against Shohei Kawashima (18-3). -Yukinori Oguni (21-2): WBA #3 The former IBF World champion defeated Sukpraserd Ponpitak (24-10) in May. -Yusaku Kuga (19-3): WBC #7 The 2 time Japanese champion will square off with Jhunriel Ramonal (16-8) on December 31st for the vacant WBO Asia Pacific title. -Tomoki Kameda (36-3): WBC #5 The former WBO Bantamweight & interim WBC Super Bantamweight champion is aiming to compete for a Featherweight World championship in 2020. Bantamweight -Naoya Inoue (19-0): WBA (Super) & IBF World champion Inoue went to war with Nonito Donaire (40-6) and emerged the 4th WBSS tournament winner. He now holds the IBF, WBA (Super) and the RING Bantamweight titles. The Monster expressed interest in fighting 3 division World champion John Riel Casimero (29-4) after the Filipino stopped Zolani Tete for the WBO crown. -Daigo Higa (15-1): WBC #7 The former WBC Flyweight World champion has been training for his upcoming return to the ring in early 2020. -Keita Kurihara (15-5): IBF #9 / WBC #15 Kurihara defended his OPBF title in May, after knocking out former world title challenger Warlito Parrenas (26-10). He then made short work of the IBF Pan Pacific champion Sukpraserd Ponpitak (24-11) on November 15th. After the match, he declared that he wishes to face the returning Daigo Higa. -Yuki Strong Kobayashi (15-8): IBF #12 / WBO #15 / WBC #26 Kobayashi won the WBO Asia Pacific title, this past May, from Ben Mananquil (17-2). He will defend it against Korean fighter Ki Chang Go (8-3) on December 22nd. -Takuma Inoue (13-1): WBC #5 The former interim WBC champion came up short in the unification battle with Nordine Oubaali (17-0). Super Flyweight: -Kazuto Ioka (24-2): WBO World champion. Ioka defeated Aston Palicte (25-3) in June to capture the vacant WBO strap and to become the 1st ever Japanese 4 division World champion. His inaguaral defense will take place on December 31st, against the undefeated Jeyvier Cintron (11-0), in Japan. -Sho Ishida (28-1): IBF #5 / WBC #12 In a battle of former world title challengers, Ishida takes on Israel Gonzalez (24-3) in an IBF eliminator, on December 28th. -Takayuki Okumoto (23-8): IBF #13 / WBC #20 The Japanese champion will defend his belt for the 5th time against Kenta Nakagawa (17-3) on December 8th. -Koki Eto (24-5): IBF #7 / WBO #13 / WBC #26 Eto lost to Jeyvier Cintron (11-0) in August. Flyweight: -Kosei Tanaka (14-0): WBO World champion Tanaka will put his title on the line for the 3rd time this year, on New Year’s Eve, when he defends against the WBA International champion Wulan Tuolehazi (13-3). -Akira Yaegashi (28-6): IBF #14 The 3 division World champion will challenge Moruti Mthalane (38-2) for the IBF title, on December 23rd, at the Yokohama Arena, in Japan. -Yusuke Sakashita (19-8): WBO #13 / WBC #31 Sakashita stopped former world title contender Masahiro Sakamoto (13-3) to become the new WBO Asia Pacific champion. He then knocked out Naoki Mochizuki (16-5), in a revenge match from 2016. -Masayuki Kuroda (30-8): IBF #11 / WBC #18 Kuroda went to war with Moruti Mthalane (38-2) for the IBF World title, this past May, but couldn’t bring the belt back home. Light Flyweight: -Hiroto Kyoguchi (14-0): WBA (Super) World champion. Kyoguchi has defended the WBA strap twice this year, against Muay Thai champion Tanawat Nakoon (11-1) as well as 15 year veteran Tetsuya Hisada (34-10). -Kenshiro Teraji (16-0): WBC World champion. The unstoppable Kenshiro will mark his 7th title defense, on December 23rd, over former interim WBA champion Randy Petalcorin (31-3). -Daiki Tomita (14-1): WBO #14 Tomita earned the vacant WBO Asia Pacific championship after defeating Hayato Yamaguchi (15-8) in September. -Yuto Takahashi (11-4): WBC #6 / IBF #7 Takahashi defeated the veteran Kenichi Horikawa (40-16) to become the new Japanese champion. -Reiya Konishi (17-2): IBF #8 / WBC #16 Konishi failed to capture the IBF title from Felix Alvarado (35-2). -Sho Kimura (18-3): WBO #7 / WBA #10 The former WBO Flyweight World champion lost a unanimous decision to Carlos Canizales (22-0) for the WBA (Regular) World title in China. Rumor has it that he might rematch Olympic champion Shiming Zou, although nothing has been confirmed. -Tetsuya Hisada (34-10): WBC #4 / IBF #5 Hisada’s impressive 13 fight winning streak came to an end, when he challenged Hiroto Kyoguchi for the WBA (Super) title 2 months ago. -Kenichi Horikawa (40-16): WBC #8 / IBF #13 Horikawa lost the Japanese title to Yuto Takahashi (11-4) on October 10th. Strawweight: -Norihito Tanaka (19-7): WBC #3 / IBF #4 / WBO #6 / WBA #13 Tanaka won the Japanese title this past January, and defended it in June against Naoya Haruguchi (15-11). -Masataka Taniguchi (12-3): WBO #5 / WBC #10 Taniguchi defeated Kai Ishizawa (6-1) in September. -Takumi Sakae (22-3): WBO #12 / IBF #13 / WBC #36 Sakae has fought thrice this year and has knocked out all of his opponents. -Tsubasa Koura (14-1): WBC #8 / IBF #14 The former OPBF champion was scheduled to face Silem Serang (15-20) on November 9th but the match was cancelled. |
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