Monday, November 16, 2020

The Fight City Podcast

I joined this week's Fight City podcast with Alden Chodash to discuss the Franco-Moloney headbutt debacle, Crawford-Brook and the latest with Canelo. Also on the podcast, an interview with former heavyweight champion Chris Byrd. To listen to the podcast, click on the link below: 

https://www.thefightcity.com/fight-city-podcast-no-46-crawford-chris-byrd-boxing/

Adam Abramowitz is the founder and head writer of saturdaynightboxing.comHe's a member of Ring Magazine's Ring Ratings Panel and a Board Member for the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board. 
snboxing on twitter. SN Boxing on Facebook.  

Sunday, November 15, 2020

The Evolution of Terence Crawford

When Terence Crawford emerged on the world-level boxing scene in 2013 and 2014, he was a consummate boxer-puncher. He possessed fast hands, excellent feet and the ability to control an opponent in a conventional or southpaw stance. Many of his fights during this period of his career were one-sided domination, with Crawford patrolling the ring and his opponents lucky to win a round or two. With the exception of his shootout against Yuriorkis Gamboa in 2014, Crawford rarely faced duress in the early part of his career. When he did get touched up, which was usually in the orthodox stance, he would switch to lefty, where he would remain more defensively responsible. Unanimous decisions were more frequent than knockouts, with bouts against Prescott, Klimov, Burns, and Beltran going the distance. 

By 2020, Crawford has transformed into a much different fighter than the earlier version. Instead of using his legs to command the ring as he did against Burns or Postol, Crawford now resides mostly in the pocket. And as he has moved up from lightweight to junior welterweight to welterweight, a funny thing happened; he started knocking everyone out. Belying traditional trends in boxing, not only has Crawford's knockout percentage risen later in his career, but he has stopped everyone he has faced at welterweight, his highest weight class. After knocking out Kell Brook in the fourth round of Saturday's fight, Crawford is on an eight-fight stoppage streak, and his KO percentage is now over 75%, with 28 knockouts in 37 fights. 

Photo Courtesy of Mikey Williams/Top Rank


Crawford possesses five attributes that lead to his knockouts: power, punch variety, hand speed, accuracy and confidence. It is this last factor, confidence, where he has grown the most over his professional career. No longer shying away from contact, he has become comfortable with the give-and-take of the pocket. He believes enough in his chin and his abilities that if an opponent lands something, he can connect with a shot or a series of punches that are more incisive and destructive. 

However, as Crawford has transformed into a knockout artist, the attendant risks that accompany the style have manifested. Since moving up to welterweight, facing bigger and longer guys, Crawford hasn't been hard to hit. Part of this is a temperament issue in that he does not fear incoming fire, but another aspect is that he has been sacrificing defense for offense. 

At welterweight, Crawford has been touched up by Benavidez, Kavaliauskas (who should have been credited with a knockdown in their fight) and now Brook. Although Crawford reigns as one of the supreme finishers and the sport, it's worth devoting more attention to the defensive side of his equation. After all, he has yet to face an elite welterweight in the sport or one who can really punch. 

After Saturday's victory, I kept looking at Crawford's left eye during his post-fight interview. The eye had a significant amount of swelling. And let's remember that the damage only occurred through three-and-a-half rounds. That was concerning to me. Brook landed a number of jabs in the first two rounds and a couple of menacing right hands in the competitive third round. However, it's not as if Brook landed dozens and dozens of punches throughout the fight. Yet the damage was there to see on Crawford's face.   

Many of the sport's best recent boxers, from Mayweather to Hopkins to Lomachenko, often gave up some early rounds to opponents. After sizing up their foes, they figured out weaknesses and controlled the second half of the fight. Crawford falls squarely in this tradition. In fact, with the exception of the Indongo fight, Saturday's result was the fastest stoppage he has recorded on the world level. Usually he does most of his damage from the fifth or six round and later. 

What's worrisome about Crawford's evolution as a fighter is that he's letting opponents not just win rounds early but land big shots at the outset. It's one thing to let an opponent squeak by in some early rounds due to punch volume; it's another thing to have them connect with their Sunday Best repeatedly. A fighter can only take so many big shots with this approach. To date, Crawford hasn't come close to losing a fight on the scorecards with letting a few rounds go by early in fights, but I'm more concerned with his potential of being knocked out if adjustments aren't made. 

Crawford and Brook mixing it up on the inside
Photo Courtesy of Mikey Williams/Top Rank

A limited offensive fighter like Mean Machine Kavaliauskas should not be landing knockdown blows on Crawford. After that bout, Crawford admitted that he didn't necessarily fight the way that his trainers wanted him to. In addition, I don't know why Crawford didn't start the Brook fight in the southpaw stance, where he remains more defensively responsible. As soon as he switched in the third round, the fight became a lot easier for him. Interestingly, Crawford fought almost the entirety of the Mean Machine fight in the orthodox stance. 

What we are seeing with Crawford is an arrogance and a lack of respect for his opponents. Much of this is good. We want our best fighters to have destructive attitudes and seek knockouts. Crawford will never be accused of not going for it. However, he may be a knockout waiting to happen if he doesn't respect his opponents more. Clearly his defense in the orthodox stance has deteriorated and it's not a question of who's touched him recently, but who hasn't. In addition, the old axiom "the other guy gets paid too" applies here. Crawford can only take so many flush shots from big punchers. And with him, it's not a lack of defensive fundamentals; he just has dispensed with them. 

Terence Crawford is one of the best boxers in the world. There can be no argument about that. He has won titles in three divisions and was also the undisputed champion at junior welterweight. However, he has left the girl with whom he came to the dance. The boxing part of his game – the hit and not be hit – is now firmly in the past. He has won a shootout at lightweight against an undersized Gamboa, but could he prevail in the same type of battle against a top welterweight? Wouldn't it be much easier to box and move against a guy like Danny Garcia than to try to outslug him in the pocket? Would it not benefit him to be more elusive against Errol Spence than exchange bombs at mid-range? 

Perhaps Crawford will remember his boxing skills the next time that he faces elite competition, but I have a sneaking suspicion that some bad habits have crept into his ring persona. His power won't always be able to bail him out. Giving away early rounds can come back to be deadly on the cards. And his defense in its current iteration won't be sound enough against guys who can really crack. 

All of this, his strengths and some potential weaknesses, make Crawford a must-watch fighter. He's great television. The days of him being called boring against Klimov are now in the distant past. He's now in the big money stage of his career and knockouts certainly do bring eyeballs and attention. 

But ultimately self-preservation needs to play a role as well, not to mention the pursuit of all-around greatness. There is now some sloppiness that has become a part of Crawford's game. He's been getting his tactics wrong to start fights. He's more hittable than he's ever been. In short, he's now beatable for the right type of opponent. And Crawford's slippage cannot be attributed to too many wars or Father Time suddenly taking over, but an overall contempt for his opponents. He fights angry. He wants to wreak havoc. He doesn't care whom he's up against. To him, his opponents are all beneath him. And recently, that has certainly been the case, but they all won't be. In addition, even these lesser opponents have had some very good moments against Crawford recently. 

If Crawford has his way, he will be facing an elite opponent in 2021. I worry if he and his team realize that what he has been giving us in the ring recently, while electrifying, is far short of his best all-around performance. Crawford sure loves being the destructor, but will that be his undoing? 

Adam Abramowitz is the founder and head writer of saturdaynightboxing.comHe's a member of Ring Magazine's Ring Ratings Panel and a Board Member for the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board. 
snboxing on twitter. SN Boxing on Facebook.  

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Punch 2 the Face Podcast

In this week's Punch 2 the Face Radio, Brandon and I previewed Crawford-Brook and the intriguing Franco-Moloney rematch. We tackled all of the Canelo drama. Also, what should we make of Devin Haney's performance last weekend? We also covered a number of fight announcements and cancellations. 

To listen to the podcast, click on the links below: 

Also, find us on Spotify: Punch 2 the Face Radio: Episode 198. 

Adam Abramowitz is the founder and head writer of saturdaynightboxing.comHe's a member of Ring Magazine's Ring Ratings Panel and a Board Member for the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board. 
snboxing on twitter. SN Boxing on Facebook. 

Monday, November 9, 2020

Pound-for-Pound Update 11-9-20

It's been over seven months since the last full update of the Saturday Night Boxing Pound-for-Pound List, and with many top fighters in action in October, it's time to see how things stand. The most consequential shake-up in the Rankings can be attributed to Teofimo Lopez's unanimous decision victory over Vasiliy Lomachenko. With the impressive win, Lopez enters the Rankings at #5 while Lomachenko drops to #14.  

Jermell Charlo also makes his debut in the Rankings. With his knockout victory over Jeison Rosario, he now has three belts at 154 lbs., and a very impressive resume at the weight. He enters the Rankings at #9. 

Stopping Carlos Cuadras in a highly entertaining rematch of their 2017 fight, Juan Estrada moves up one place in the Rankings from #7 to #6. Estrada's 115-lb. rival, Roman Gonzalez, won a unanimous decision on the same card, defeating Israel Gonzalez. With the victory, Gonzalez, the former pound-for-pound king, moves up a spot to #18.  

Leo Santa Cruz and Josh Warrington dropped out of the Rankings. Santa Cruz lost by knockout to Gervonta Davis last month. He had been ranked #16. Warrington had been ranked at #20.  

Below is the complete Saturday Night Boxing Pound-for-Pound List:

  1. Naoya Inoue
  2. Saul Alvarez
  3. Terence Crawford
  4. Oleksandr Usyk
  5. Teofimo Lopez
  6. Juan Estrada
  7. Gennadiy Golovkin
  8. Errol Spence
  9. Jermell Charlo
  10. Artur Beterbiev
  11. Srisaket Sor Rungvisai
  12. Manny Pacquiao
  13. Tyson Fury
  14. Vasiliy Lomachenko
  15. Mikey Garcia
  16. Kosei Tanaka
  17. Josh Taylor
  18. Roman Gonzalez
  19. Miguel Berchelt
  20. Kenshiro Teraji
Adam Abramowitz is the founder and head writer of saturdaynightboxing.comHe's a member of Ring Magazine's Ring Ratings Panel and a Board Member for the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board. 
snboxing on twitter. SN Boxing on Facebook. 

Sunday, November 1, 2020

Opinions and Observations: Tank, Monster, Usyk and Munguia

The left uppercut that Gervonta "Tank" Davis detonated on Leo Santa Cruz in the sixth round on Saturday will forever be a part of his career highlight reel. The concluding sequence was almost a perfect approximation of the fight. Santa Cruz landed two hard right hands, and then Davis evaded another right hand, slipped to the outside, and uncorked a wicked shot that originated from almost below his knee cap. Santa Cruz never saw the punch coming and upon impact his body limply slumped underneath the ropes. The referee wasted no time in administering the count; that was all she wrote.   

Although some corners of the boxing world had objected to the matchup between Davis and Santa Cruz, I was not among the group of dissenters. To me it was an intriguing matchup. If you were to devise a fighter that could give Davis some real problems, Santa Cruz would be close to it. Santa Cruz usually featured a lot of volume, whereas Davis could be outworked. In addition, Santa Cruz had decent hand speed, he could throw off the front or back foot, he certainly had length and reach, and perhaps, most importantly, he wouldn't be intimidated by his power-punching opponent. 

Davis lands an uppercut on Santa Cruz
Davis lands an uppercut on Santa Cruz
Photo courtesy of Esther Lin/Showtime


Ultimately, the fight was damn intriguing in the ring. Santa Cruz had a lively start, firing power punches and throwing the type of volume that Davis rarely had seen. Davis was happy to trade heavy artillery, but he was getting hit frequently and from unusual angles. It took Davis until the fifth round to get control of the fight. By that time, Davis had landed his fair share of right hooks and left uppercuts to the body, which forced Santa Cruz to keep his hands much closer to home. 

But the sixth and final round was, for me, one of the most enjoyable frames I've seen all year. Both fighters had the action where they wanted. Instead of trying to march forward behind power punches, Santa Cruz retreated to the ropes and had a lot of success pasting Davis with slinging right hands, straight right hands and left hooks. It was here where Santa Cruz really demonstrated his class and creativity. His angles and improvisation were new looks for Davis and Santa Cruz may have landed more in the sixth round than any opponent has against Tank. 

Even though Santa Cruz was finding a lot of success with his back against the ropes, this position was catnip for Davis, who loves a stationary target. Despite being strafed with incoming fire, Davis, an excellent infighter, kept his poise and ripped shots to the body during the round. And in fact, both fighters took turns stealing momentum from the other throughout the round. In the final moment, Davis was able to absorb Santa Cruz's shots, make a defensive adjustment and fire off a match-winner in a blink of an eye. It was an elite boxing move and a prodigious thunderbolt that echoed around the boxing world.

It wasn't a 100% clean performance from Davis. He got hit a lot. He was outworked at points. But he was able to best his most difficult opponent to date with a striking display of skill and power. He may be one of the hardest punchers in the sport on a pound-for-pound basis, but perhaps we knew that going into Saturday's bout. What we learned from this fight was that he didn't wilt when facing some resistance. He was able to make instinctive adjustments and he maintained his self-belief even when everything wasn't going his way. Santa Cruz was an important opponent for Davis' development, and if Tank can keep himself in shape and in the gym, he's going to have some huge opportunities in the sport over the next few years. In my opinion, Saturday's bout was his final fight of the first phase of his career. Now there will be real expectations. If things break right, Davis may soon be hobnobbing with the one-percenters in Bermuda or St. Tropez.

***

Jason Moloney is a perfectly capable bantamweight contender. He features skills on the inside and outside. He has a significant punch arsenal. His legs are pretty good. Although not a ferocious puncher, he has enough pop and guile to keep opponents honest. However, "capable" was just not good enough against one of the best fighters in the sport on Saturday. Naoya "The Monster" Inoue, the Japanese dynamo, feasts on the merely capable.

When Moloney didn't throw his best jab, Inoue would pepper him with lightning-quick and powerful right hands. In the moments where Moloney didn't return his hands fast enough to a responsible defensive position, he would be punished by power shots. When Moloney leaned in to initiate his offense, Inoue met him with uppercuts and check hooks. 

Inoue (right) scoring with an uppercut
Photo courtesy of Mikey Williams

And it wasn't just punishing counter shots from Inoue. He exploited gaps in Moloney's glove positioning and consistently landed during combinations, especially second and third shots. He also varied his attack to the body and head expertly, and with a full array of punches. By the fourth round, Moloney, traditionally a front foot fighter, was in retreat. And it soon became a matter of "when" not "if" for Inoue. 

The first knockdown of the fight in the sixth, from a beautiful check left hook, was a warning sign for Moloney. He never saw the shot coming. Although Moloney made it to his feet without an issue, the brutality of Inoue's offense was clearly having an effect. In the seventh round, a perfect counter right hand over an ineffectual jab ended the fight. Moloney looked like he was going to be able to beat the count, but the pain was too much to bear; he was counted out, giving Inoue his 20th win of his career, 17 by stoppage. 

Inoue is as complete of an offensive fighter as there is in the sport today. All of his power punches are knockout weapons. His jab can be piercing. He delights in body punches as much as head shots. He doesn't force his work and he never wastes punches. Everything is purposeful. 

Last year Inoue was tested for perhaps the only real time in his career when he faced former champion Nonito Donaire. Unlike Moloney, who was just good, or even very good, Donaire featured something great: his left hook, one of the best punches in boxing over the past 15 years. He landed that punch in the second round and it destroyed Inoue's right eye socket. Even still, Inoue was able to drop Donaire later in the fight, and had him hurt on several occasions. It's going to take something great, like Donaire's left hook, to beat Inoue. The bantamweight division is currently filled with impressive talents. But there has to be something sublime to get the better of Inoue: a perfect shot or a magnificent counter. Absent a moment of brilliance, I expect Inoue to mow through this, his third division, like he did the other two. He's a truly exceptional fighter. 

***

Oleksandr Usyk electrified boxing fans with his run through the cruiserweight World Boxing Super Series and his subsequent knockout of Tony Bellew. With nothing left to prove at cruiserweight, he took the expected step of moving to heavyweight. Due to a last-minute opponent switch for his first fight at the new weight last year, some injuries, and a pandemic-forced delay, Usyk finally faced his first significant test in the division on Saturday, against gatekeeper Dereck Chisora. 

Chisora, a mercurial fighter who has taken inconsistent approaches to training throughout his career, came into this match in excellent shape and determined to cause damage. Stalking Usyk during the first quarter of the match, he landed his fair share of overhand rights and hooks to the body. During the first round especially, Usyk looked uncomfortable with the physicality of the bout, and he took some time to find his way into the fight. Eventually, his sublime angles, footwork and punch placement started to have their desired effect. By the ninth round, Chisora looked like he might be ready to go. 

Usyk gets through with a straight left
Photo courtesy of Mark Robinson

But then a strange thing occurred. Chisora caught a second wind and continued his march forward as if the previous five or six rounds had never happened. Although he never had Usyk seriously hurt, he certainly made him leave the pocket. Usyk spent the majority of the championship rounds on his bike. Yes, he might have won some of them, but it was far from a commanding performance. 

The final scores were all in Usyk's favor, 115-113 (x2) and 117-112, which fairly reflected the fight action. In the post-fight interview Usyk graded himself a three out of ten on his performance and admitted that he fought much of the contest in Chisora's preferred style. 

Ultimately, Usyk's performance didn't answer many questions about his future success in the division. He still has great feet, a sturdy chin and quick hands. But it doesn't appear that his punching power will be an asset in the new weight class. He remains a fighter who is far more talented offensively than defensively. His myriad angles are used primarily to set up punches and not evade shots. He's been hit consistently by Bellew and Chisora, fighters not necessarily known for their hand speed or offensive creativity. 

Nevertheless, it's way too early to issue a prognosis for Usyk in the heavyweight division. There are very few southpaw movers in the weight class and he won't be an easy fighter to prepare for (I imagine that Otto Wallin could get some excellent money for sparring work in the coming years in that he's the only other half-decent southpaw mover in the division). If Usyk's chin holds up and he can remain injury-free, he could present several matchup difficulties for top heavyweights. However, no one will be shaking in their boots from Saturday's display. The aura that he had in the cruiserweight division has yet to manifest at the heavier weight. Whatever wins he gets in the new division will need to be hard-earned in the ring; there is nothing inevitable about his future success among the tall giants in the sport. 

***

The fickle boxing public can be odd when it comes to choosing which fighters to embrace. On paper, an all-action Mexican puncher such as Jaime Munguia would seemingly engender rapt affection from boxing fans. Munguia's new trainer, Erik Morales, was certainly more skilled than Munguia, but fought in a similar style, and he was revered by the boxing fans who didn't outright loathe him (many boxing fans were either Team Erik Morales or Team Marco Antonio Barrera – never both). But either way, Morales inspired passion. With Munguia it's mostly apathy or disdain. 

After winning a title at junior middleweight in an impressive performance against Sadam Ali in 2018, Munguia made five title defenses. Although his opposition wasn't what anyone would call A-level, he only had one fight that was relatively close, which was against Dennis Hogan (and Hogan certainly had a case for winning that one). Although Munguia was still a young champ, he seemed to have plateaued. His defense could be wretched. And there was an untidiness about his work on occasion. When knockouts didn't come easily, he could seem pedestrian, lacking creativity to open up his opponents. 

Jaime Munguia at Thursday's weigh-in
Photo courtesy of Tom Hogan/Hogan Photos


However, with Munguia, too much focus has been made on what he isn't rather than what he is. Now at middleweight, and still only 24 years old, he destroyed the lip of Tureano Johnson with a picture perfect uppercut in the sixth round on Friday. The punch landed with such thudding ferocity that a piece of Johnson's lip travelled several feet away. The fight was stopped after the round, with the officials correctly deeming that Johnson was physically unable to continue with that ghastly gash. 

Johnson has been a capable gatekeeper at middleweight for almost a decade and he gave Munguia solid work throughout the fight. Featuring a ferocious assault, Johnson forced Munguia onto his back foot, which was certainly not his preferred style. But by the second round Munguia was delivering those vicious uppercuts right between the gloves like a seasoned pro. And he stuck with it. For all that has been made about what Munguia can't do in the ring, he demonstrated with those uppercuts that he is a natural fighter. He didn't need to be told to throw that shot. He didn't look awkward when firing; they seemed like second-nature to him. 

Munguia remains a TV-friendly action fighter. Perhaps he has been a victim of the expectations that accompanied his title belt earlier in his career. Maybe he will never win a belt in a second division. But he can punch, he has several offensive weapons and he doesn't shy away from combat. That fighter is fine by me. 

I also wouldn't write off Munguia's ability to perform in the upper reaches of the middleweight division. He will struggle with movement and classy operators, but he knows that at a certain point a fighter will have to try to score points on him to win. He will have opportunities to assert his offense even against the best fighters at 160. And he has enough punching power, self-belief and natural ability to hold his own. He's the definition of a "live dog" against top middleweights. Underrate him at your own risk.   

Adam Abramowitz is the founder and head writer of saturdaynightboxing.comHe's a member of Ring Magazine's Ring Ratings Panel and a Board Member for the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board. 
snboxing on twitter. SN Boxing on Facebook.