I have an article in the September edition of Ring Magazine on former three-division world champion Mike McCallum, who died earlier this year. The article examines McCallum in the ring, his successes, where he was vulnerable, an analysis of his style, and his legacy. It's available on newsstands now or via digital subscription.
The big fights, the best fighters and the colorful characters in the world of boxing.
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Tuesday, September 16, 2025
Mike McCallum Article in Ring Magazine
Monday, September 15, 2025
Opinions and Observations: Canelo-Crawford
Let's start by answering the essential question posed by Saturday's Saul "Canelo" Alvarez-Terence Crawford matchup: even though Crawford was moving up two weight classes from junior middleweight to super middleweight, his chin held up just fine. Whatever else Crawford accomplished in the fight, he was able to succeed because he could take Canelo's power.
But even more telling, Crawford didn't show visible signs of distress from Canelo's power punches. He was never dropped or wobbled or seriously buzzed. He didn't have those rocky moments where he needed to survive or clear his head. Yeah, he got hit with some solid shots, but that had happened in other fights before. There was nothing particularly special to Crawford about Canelo's power.
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Crawford after the fight Photo courtesy of Ed Mulholland/TKO Boxing Promotions |
And once it became clear that Canelo didn't hold a significant power edge, the bout came down to simple math. Canelo mostly could only throw one punch at a time. And in the second half of the fight, where Crawford was more expansive with his offense, leading and countering with combinations, Canelo couldn't match Crawford shot for shot.
In addition to Crawford's chin holding up, I also believe that his defense was as good as I can remember, and I haven't always loved his defense. Even Bivol was hit by Canelo with bigger shots than Crawford was on Saturday. Crawford essentially limited Canelo's home run bombs. Maybe Canelo landed one or two devastating punches, but most of what he landed were solid connects thrown more for accuracy than for destructive power.
***
Crawford started the fight with a basic offensive output. Exclusively out of the southpaw stance, he'd throw a jab, a single lead punch or a counter, but not much more than that. He was mostly on his back foot or using lateral movement to be evasive. He didn't want to show Canelo too much of his offensive arsenal, but he also didn't want to give Canelo much to work with either. His essential missions early in the fight were to ensure that his defense was on point and to observe what Canelo was bringing to the table.
By the sixth round he had seen what he had needed to see. He realized that Canelo wanted to lead with single shots and wasn't looking to counter. Crawford also perceived that once he countered a single Canelo power shot, that Canelo wasn't ready to counter the counter. Canelo also wasn't throwing combinations. Crawford was now ready to open up more. It was time to let the hands go.
In rounds eight and nine, Canelo decided to throw with more abandon. There were a number of fiery exchanges where both fighters had success. But by the
10th, Canelo was back to one punch at a time. He didn't want to deal with Crawford's five-punch combinations. He lacked the athletic agility to match Crawford and he had to protect himself from Crawford's incoming firepower.
By the 11th round, Canelo was visibly frustrated. At multiple times in the round, he looked away from Crawford. Whether he was trying to eye his corner or just mentally reset, he understood that he was being outfought and he couldn't figure out how to turn the tide.
It was Crawford's work in the championship rounds that won him the fight on my scorecard and those of the judges. Flowing freely with combinations and multi-punch counters, Crawford clearly separated himself from Canelo during these rounds. He didn't just win them 10-9; they were easily the best rounds from either fighter in the match.
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Crawford celebrates with his team Photo courtesy of Ed Mulholland/TKO Boxing Promotions |
It had been a long time since a fighter opened up on Canelo with four- and five-punch combinations. Clearly Crawford felt more than comfortable taking those types of risks. By the end of the fight, he had solved Canelo's defensive construct and mindset for the fight. His combinations dissuaded Canelo from countering with ferocity. In short, Crawford had tamed Canelo.
As good as Crawford was late, Canelo wasn't summarily outboxed during the entirety of the fight. Like two of the judges, I scored the bout for Crawford 115-113 (the other judge had it for him 116-112). To my eyes, I had Canelo winning rounds 1, 4, 5, 8 and 9. Especially early in the fight, I was impressed by Canelo's hand speed with landing single shots. When they both were throwing one punch at a time, Canelo more than held his own. His left hooks to the body were punishing and he landed a few sneaky straight rights and right hooks that got Crawford's attention.
***
In talking to a friend after the
fight, we highlighted similar details from the bout. One key we both
focused on was that Canelo could no longer counter like he once did. Now we may
need to go back several years here, but there was a time when Canelo was among
the best counterpunchers in the sport. Not only was he accurate but he was
creative. He threw multi-punch counters with unusual punch sequences. He could
be incredible in the pocket when someone came to him.
But clearly Father Time and the
higher weights have caught up with him. Though he was the younger fighter in the
matchup chronologically, Canelo had hundreds of more professional rounds than
Crawford and had endured many tougher fights in the ring. He just isn't the athlete that he once
was.
Furthermore, as Canelo moved up
to 168, he had physical disadvantages that precluded him from being a
counterpuncher. He was short and had short arms. He was dealing with much
longer punchers who could pick him off from the outside. Thus, Canelo found a
walk-down pressure style that suited him perfectly against super middleweights. The dimensions of his opponents didn't allow for Canelo to open
up with threes and fours like he once did, but Canelo understood that the single,
hard, well-placed shot could do a lot of damage.
As he got older, he also refined
other parts of his game. His defense became far more advanced. He also knew how to cut
the ring off on an opponent with agile footwork, despite not having the best athletic ability.
These additions to his game helped him offset the decline of his athletic
gifts. Unfortunately for Canelo, against Crawford, more was required to win. Maybe the Canelo of the second Golovkin fight (a bout
that took place at middleweight) could have done more with this version of
Crawford. There Canelo actually outslugged Golovkin in the pocket through
large stretches of the fight. However, that bout was seven years ago!
***
Whenever a fighter accomplishes the
unfathomable, it takes a long time to process the achievement in an appropriate context.
The absurdity of the same fighter winning a title at lightweight and super
middleweight seems more myth-like than reality. But Crawford in fact has
accomplished this. Even when considering recent greats who have made similar leaps through weight classes, like
Pacquiao going from flyweight to junior middleweight or Ray Leonard going from
welterweight to light heavyweight, those fighters took losses along the way,
whereas Crawford's record remains unblemished. Even the great Roy Jones had a
loss to Montell Griffin on his way from middleweight to heavyweight, and we can
all agree that John Ruiz wasn't lineal or undisputed when Jones beat him.
Crawford has not just won belts
in multiple weight classes. He has been undisputed in three of them. He has
settled the argument of his greatness in his era. He beat a guy in Canelo who
had four titles at 168. In Errol Spence he defeated an opponent who held the
other three belts in the division.
You still won't see a long
list of great names on Crawford's resume. He has a win over a clear Hall of
Famer in Canelo and another over a solid candidate in Spence. There are several fighters such as Gamboa, Porter, Khan, Brook, and others who were
sterling for the era but don't really have claims to be among the
best boxers of their time.
So, much about Crawford is still
subject to speculation. We know that among those he has fought, he has beaten all.
There was a deep bench of welterweights when he was there and didn't have
opportunities to fight Pacquiao or Garcia. The division he just left after one
fight, junior middleweight, has tons of talented fighter. Would he have still remained undefeated against a few of those other top fighters? We will never know.
But in those all-time conversations, it's time to add Crawford to the mix. A man who can be undisputed at both 140 and 168 lbs. has forced himself into all sorts of serious discussions. Is Crawford the best of his era? Which fighters are we sure can beat him from 135 to 168? These are of course parlor games, but they are the eternal conversations among boxing fans. Crawford is now in the historical category. He's a data point in comparison for how future fighters will be measured. His attributes must now be considered and measured against the best who have done it.
But more than conjecture, Crawford is a fighter who has accomplished. He refused to accept the limitations placed on him by others. Never anyone's first choice for boxing stardom, or even greatness, Crawford ignored those who didn't believe in him and tore down those who stood in his way. He wouldn't be denied, by opponents, the boxing industry or even himself. He pursued a singular path to greatness and succeeded. His dreams were big, but his talent was even greater. He no longer has to worry about fantasy fights or what ifs. He has conquered.
Crawford is the supreme interloper of his era in boxing. He wasn't invited to the party, but he crashed it, leaving an impressive trail of wreckage along his way. No cash cow or beltholder has been safe near his presence. He has bent the sport of boxing to his will. He is a Hagler figure with a Ray Leonard pedigree, a package that has been unsolvable for any of his contemporaries. It is his reign.
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
Canelo-Crawford: Preview and Prediction
The best fighters in the world all believe in their supremacy. Their confidence is what helps drive them to be what they are in the ring. And when fighters jump up multiple weight classes to challenge a top opponent, this scenario illustrates unshakeable self-belief. Who needs weight divisions when a fighter thinks that he possesses greatness?
Or is it deception? And might the deception swing both ways? How does the guy moving up beat the bigger man? Does he have a legitimate game plan? If he's not the more powerful puncher, what can he do to deceive the bigger man? What tricks can he bring to the table, or is he deceiving himself? And
does the bigger man perceive the threat? Is he taking the threat seriously? Is
he deceived by his own superiority? Does he understand the risks in play?
The showdown between Saul "Canelo" Alvarez (63-2-2, 39 KOs) and Terence Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) takes place on Saturday at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. The fight will be contested at 168 lbs., where Canelo is the division's undisputed champion. Crawford, who has only had one fight at 154 lbs., will be moving up two weight classes for the bout. Both are among the top fighters in the sport. Both believe that they have what it takes to win. But when the opening bell rings, who will be the fighter that gets the better of the action and which fighter will be guilty of deceiving himself?
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Image courtesy of Sela Promotions |
Let's start with a basic question: Is Canelo-Crawford a legitimate fight or are we as boxing fans being deceived? Will Canelo-Crawford be Spence vs. Garcia, where Garcia was completely uncompetitive, or might this matchup contain a bit of magic, such as when Bernard Hopkins moved up two divisions to beat Antonio Tarver?
Canelo-Crawford has divided
opinion among boxing fans, not just in terms of who might win, but whether or
not the fight should even be taking place. To some observers, Crawford moving
up two divisions at age 37 is a bridge too far. Although he had been a champ at
135 lbs. and undisputed at 140 and 147, he struggled to beat Israil
Madrimov in his last fight, which was his lone appearance at 154. Whereas Crawford was a pulverizer
at welterweight, his power didn't carry the same oomph at 154 lbs. And Canelo
has been at 168 for years and has even fought, and scored a knockout, up at
175 lbs. To these observers, this fight is boxing deceiving its fans. It's not a real contest.
Although more than a few might view Canelo-Crawford as a gimmick fight, I don't place myself in this category. I think it's a highly intriguing battle between one of the absolute best fighters in the sport (Crawford) and a long-reigning popular champion who is probably on the backside of his career (Canelo).
But can Crawford avoid winding up on HIS backside
during the matchup? Well, that is one of the more important questions in this matchup. But there are others.
It was just two years ago when an
undisputed junior middleweight champion (Jermell Charlo) moved up to face
Canelo at 168 and despite all the bluster and the belief that Charlo
was daring to be great, on fight night, the bout was a dud. Charlo
couldn't handle Canelo's power. He was too gun shy to let his hands go and was
happy to survive to the final bell. When he felt those first big blows
from Canelo, he went into a shell. His confidence left the
building in a hurry.
Well, what will be different for
Crawford?
First of all, I think that
Crawford has the X-factor of having an almost pathological need to win. I don't
see him being happy to pick up a paycheck. We've seen him get hit hard, we've seen him lose early rounds, but he has done
whatever it takes to turn a fight in his favor. Even against Madrimov, what
saved Crawford in the end was his jab. He couldn't land his power shots
consistently to the head, so he just scored with that stick over and over in the
fight's closing rounds. Crawford isn't considered a jabber by nature, but when
the situation required it, he understood that the jab was what was going to get
him to victory.
But that's Crawford. He has always found a way. He has every tool in the toolbox. He can win going forward or backward, southpaw or orthodox, leading or countering. He has a punch for every scenario.
And although Crawford will be the
older fighter on Saturday (37 to 35), he probably has far fewer miles on his
odometer. Consider that Canelo has gone the 12-round distance 20 times in his
career, while Crawford has only fought 12 full rounds just four times, a
staggering difference. And it's also clear that the late-model Canelo doesn't
let his combinations go like he once did. He's a guy who loads up on single
power shots. But even when he does hurt an opponent, he no longer goes for the
stoppage with abandon. It's been eight fights since he's had a stoppage (Caleb
Plant) but since then, he's knocked down Ryder, Charlo, Munguia and Berlanga,
but has been content to go the distance.
This, in my mind is the crucial
aspect of Saturday's fight. I have no doubt that Canelo will land something
hard; he always does. But he may no longer have the gas or the willingness to
get Crawford out of there. Furthermore, you will have to go back past ten
fights since Canelo has had a one-shot knockout. In short, I think if Crawford is
hurt, he will have an opportunity to survive.
Crawford and Usyk are the two
fighters in boxing who I believe make the best adjustments in the ring. But
that doesn't always mean that Crawford gets it right from the jump. Crawford has had more than a few fights where he started orthodox and just wasn't up to par
defensively, so he turned southpaw. In addition, he's given up rounds early in fights. It can often take
him several rounds until he really understands what's working for him in the
ring.
Despite Crawford having the
athletic advantages in the matchup, I believe that Canelo could make the early
statement in the fight. Crawford, despite sparring bigger guys in camp, will
not have had the reps taking power punches from a big hitter at 168 with 10 oz.
gloves. Canelo will have the element of surprise. In addition, Canelo has more
than one big power punch. The left hook is his money shot, but so many forget
the overhand right that ended Sergey Kovalev's night. I have no doubt that
Canelo's first few connects of the fight will have a real effect.
On Saturday Crawford must minimize damage early in the fight. Canelo's big connects must be few and far between. Crawford also needs to make sure that he's really out-of-reach when backing away; Canelo has surprising range.
But Crawford is going to get hit. Let's not pretend that he will be able to shut Canelo out. Even against Bivol where Canelo clearly lost, he still landed four or five absolute bombs. Crawford's going to have to take those punches. He'll need to think clearly under duress and execute his game plan.
For Canelo, he must change his recent calculus about how to win a fight. Although he has a great understanding of when he
has prevailed in a round, that won't be enough for him early in the match. Crawford is a
terrific second-half fighter. It's not sufficient for Canelo to win a few 10-9
rounds in the early rounds of the bout based on coming forward and
unfurling a couple of huge punches that excite the crowd. No, he must do
damage. He must deplete Crawford. He must punish him with head and body shots.
Winning a cagey boxing match through six rounds won't cut it. He needs to make
Crawford a lesser fighter for the second half of the bout.
While Canelo must try to deplete
Crawford, Crawford must fatigue Canelo. He needs to move around enough to
frustrate Canelo so that Canelo won't feel comfortable letting his hands go
with regularity. He must be the better athlete in the fight and not try to slug
it out during the early rounds when Canelo is at his
freshest.
I do expect Crawford to become more liberal with incorporating his punch arsenal in the second half of the fight. I
also think that he will find opportunistic moments to let combinations go. He
will pick up on Canelo not wanting to throw his own combinations. Crawford will have the ability to get in and out more as Canelo tires and waits for one,
hard counter.
Ultimately, I like Crawford to
peck and claw his way to a victory. I think that his jab, lateral movement, single straight lefts from the
southpaw position, and quick-strike combos will be enough to frustrate Canelo
and get the better of him on the scorecards. Certainly, Canelo will have the
crowd on his side and judges have been kind to him at many moments throughout
his career, but I think that Crawford will do enough to get the victory in a
competitive fight. I expect Canelo to land some telling punches in the fight,
and it wouldn't surprise me if he gets a knockdown, but I believe that Crawford
is cagey enough to survive the rough moments. Most importantly, Crawford will be the
fresher fighter with more tools at his disposal down the stretch. He will need to keep the fight close early, not get caught with too many big shots, and then use his superior athletic and technical gifts to pull out the victory in the second half.
Terence Crawford defeats
Canelo Alvarez 7 rounds to 5, which could be 115-113 or 114-113, depending on
if Canelo scores a knockdown.