JAXCUSE
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Good fight for a unified divisional title. First six rounds were really good. IMO, 5th rd was as exciting as any I’ve watched this year so far.I tired keeping track of the Jermell Charlo Brian Castano rematch while also checking in with my Mets, who lost a 4-0 lead only to win it on a home run by the catcher they just called up to replace McCann.
Carlo an Castano had had a hugely competitive fight last year that produced widely varied scoring and a ‘split draw’, (each fighter won one judge’s card and the other was even). That was a great action fight and so was this one. Charlo had prepared for it by getting a defensive expert to help train him, (I didn’t get the name). He exhibited great footwork that prevented him from being trapped against the ropes, good head movement and a great jab to dominate the early rounds. But Castano is indefatigable and possessed of a cranium seemingly made of cement, (which is not a deficit for a boxer). He absorbed numerous punches that would have ended other Charlo fights and kept coming forward. And he could slug, too and he started to narrow the distance between he and Charlo, whose footwork, head movement and jabs slowed down. Halfway through the fight it looked like Castano was taking control. Charlo responded by trying slug it out and both fighters got plenty of whacks in, Charlo planting himself in front of the rope in full hitting position and countering well. But Castano seemed to have the edge in their exchanges.
Then in the 7th, Charlo’s corner got through to him and the footwork and jab returned and he dominated the rest of the fight from the middle of the ring. Still, Castano ate all the leather that came his way and was remarkably unmarked by all the punches that landed, (so was Charlo). The fight seemed obviously headed for a decision. I had Charlo ahead 88-83 after the 9th round. Steve Farhood had it 87-74. The judges had it 89-82, 88-83 and 87-84.
Boxing is a funny business, (funny strange, not funny hilarious). Punches from all angles reign over the faces and body of each competitor. Castano landed 194 of them to Charlo’s 173. But both of them were still there on their feet after each punch landed, ready to respond in kind – until a short left hook by Charlo actually bounced off of Castano’s right glove and moved on to hit him around the nose. Castano stiffened up and collapsed like a demolished building. He was able to get up but staggered backwards. The ref grabbed his hands and looked into his eyes and made the mistake of allowing the fight to continue. Charlo unloaded on the helpless Castano and he went down, ironically against the ropes. The ref then stopped it.
Charlo said after the fight that he didn’t know what his next step would be. Will it be Canelo? GGG? Spence? Somebody else? Stay tuned.
When Charlo jabs, he is very good (Rds 1-3). When he doesn’t (rds 4-6), he get’s hit and can be vulnerable. IMO, that’s both brothers in a nut shell.
To Jermell’s credit, he seems to fight better in rematches (Harrison and this one). KO’d both opponents the second time around when many/most believe he lost the initial bout. Was in better shape this time. In my estimation, that is the mark of an excellent pro fighter. Goes back to the gym, absorbs what he learned, improves and beats the guy the next time. Ali and Robinson built their legacies (in part) that way.
I agree - think Castano slowed down from the 7th on. Stayed center of ring and lost pocket distance. Less effective cutting off the ring, no body work and failed to jab his way inside (Canelo made same mistake/had same problem last weekend). Let Charlo load up the LH. Finisher was a pretty shot.
I bet PBC lines Tzyu the younger up for Charlo next. Just gut. Easier fight to make since both are now with same promoter.
I’m interested to see who Haymon matches Ennis with next at Welterweight. Time for him to stop fighting tomato cans (like he did again tonight on the undercard). Hope Thurman (or maybe a Danny Garcia) takes the challenge. Would be a better test/showcase for the youngster.
I don’t see anything really compelling on the fight schedule until after Memorial Day. Kambosos/Haney on 4 June - first real Lightweight “Knock-Off” among the young undefeated 135 lbers. Saw that Bam Rodriguez was signed to defend his SuperFly belt against Sor Rungvisai on 25 June. Sor Rungvisai owns two victories over Choclatito Gonzalez (one by brutal KO). Tough matchup for the young Rodriguez. I give him credit for taking it.
Just gut again, but sensing (based on what fighters are saying and what I’m reading) that Spence/Crawford will sign and fight by end of the year. We can only hope…