(JUNE 20) LAS VEGAS — Last
night at the Virgins Hotel, in Las Vegas, Nevada, there was
atop-notch female world title belt on the card, featuring
Mikaela Mayer vs. Erica Farias. In a press release by Top
Rank, they reported the following:
Nobody said defending a world title is easy. WBO junior
lightweight champion Mikaela Mayer successfully defended her
title for the first time, turning back the stiff challenge of
former two-weight world champion Erica Farias via unanimous
decision (98-92 2x and 97-93).
Mayer (15-0, 5 KOs), one of female boxing's most recognizable
names, bested the most seasoned opponent of her career, a
relentless woman who has fought in 19 world title fights and
threw 400 punches in 10 rounds. Mayer outlanded Farias 118-86
and now has her sights on IBF world champion Maïva Hamadouche.
Mayer and Hamadouche are scheduled to fight in a unification
bout later this year.
Mayer said, "“I was just waiting to get through this fight to
get to Maïva. Remind her that I’ll see her soon."
In men's boxing action, Top Rank Press Release wrote the
following:
All
hail "The Monster." Naoya Inoue did it again, knocking out IBF
No. 1 contender Michael Dasmarinas in the third round with a
left hook to the liver to retain his WBA and IBF bantamweight
world titles at The Theater at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas.
Inoue (21-0, 18 KOs) improved to 16-0 in world title fights,
knocking down Dasmarinas three times, all with pulverizing body
blows. Dasmarinas (30-3-1, 20 KOs) had not tasted defeat since
2014, a 12-0-1 run that earned him the shot at perhaps the
world's top pound-for-pound fighter.
It soon became clear that Dasmarinas was no match for Inoue, who
won the opening round and scored a knockdown in the second. Two
more knockdowns in the third was all she wrote.
With the win, Inoue now wants to fully unify the division, which
could happen after WBO champion John Riel Casimero and WBC
champion Nonito Donaire fight this summer.
Inoue said, “Against the number one ranked fighter, Dasmarinas,
I think I had a great win.
“I prepare myself to knock them out, whether with a head shot or
a body shot. I came prepared and to get a win by knockout is
good for me.
“The first round, I just wanted to see what he had. It depended
on how he came out, and after a little while, yeah, I thought I
could get him out.
“Getting the win makes me smile, but to be able to fight the
winner of Casimero and Donaire, that brings me another smile.”
Added Top Rank chairman Bob Arum, “Naoya Inoue is a unique force
of nature inside that ring. Another incredible performance from
‘The Monster.’ We are seeing a great fighter at work here, and
he is only going to get better.”
Dogboe edges Lopez in 10-round classic
Isaac "Royal Storm" Dogboe is officially back. The former junior
featherweight world champion, two fights removed from a pair of
title fight defeats to Emanuel Navarrete, edged Adam Lopez via
10-round majority decision (95-95, 96-94 and 97-93) to win the
NABF featherweight title.
Dogboe (22-2, 15 KOs) jumped out to an early lead, but Lopez
(15-3, 6 KOs) charged back in the second half of the bout,
muscling Dogboe around the ring and buzzing him on more than one
occasion.
The 10th round — a back-and-forth three minutes — was a
microcosm of the phone booth battle that played out the previous
nine rounds. After the final bell, both men thought they'd done
enough, but it was the former champ who came out ahead.
Dogboe said, “I was pretty confident I’d get that decision
because I controlled the fight for the first six rounds. I was
posing too much and got a little too careless. Every now and
then, I stayed in the pocket a little too long and forced too
much. But, listen, Adam is a great guy. He showed the pedigree.
We promised it would be a firefight. It takes two to tango.
“A lot of people wrote me off after those losses to Navarrete
and said I was over-hyped. People like me, we don’t stay down
forever. We get back up. I have to thank my team. They’re not
just trainers, they are family. God wanted me to be there.”
Junior Welterweight: Lindolfo Delgado (12-0, 11 KOs) UD 8
Salvador Briceno (17-7, 11 KOs). Scores: 80-72 and 79-73 2x. The
knockout streak ended, but 2016 Mexican Olympian Delgado shook
off nearly two years of ring rust with a one-sided decision over
Briceno. Delgado stepped on the gas in the eighth round, but the
resilient Briceno weathered the storm made the final bell.
Lightweight: Eric Puente (6-0) UD 6 Jose Antonio Meza (7-6, 2
KOs). Scores: 57-56 and 58-55 2x. It was a disappointing start
for Puente, who suffered the first knockdown of his career in
the opening round. The San Diego native recovered and dominated
the rest of the way to secure a convincing decision over Meza, a
Mexican veteran who has never stopped as a pro.
Junior Welterweight: Omar Rosario (4-0, 2 KOs ) TKO 4, :47, JJ
Mariano (3-1, 2 KOs). Puerto Rican prospect Rosario impressed in
the evening's opening bout, knocking down Mariano in the second
and ending matters in the fourth with a swift combination that
prompted referee Russell Mora to stop the fight.
Rosario said, "We took full advantage of the opportunity and put
on a good performance on a great card. We got the job done
against an opponent who was undefeated and who came to put up a
great fight."
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