Irish Daily Mirror

Shakur has dynamite in his fists

- Follow Barry on Twitter at @Clonescycl­one @ Mcguigans_gym @Cyclonepro­mo

WHEN Shakur Stevenson rolled off the amateur production line with a silver medal at the Rio Olympics, he was an American superstar in waiting.

That medal should have been gold. It may yet be should the recently-launched corruption investigat­ion into Olympic boxing reverse a decision that made a winner of Cuba’s Robeisy Ramirez.

Though Stevenson won a world title, the WBO featherwei­ght crown, in his 13th profession­al fight, the bells and whistles have been missing so far.

The reputation for caution he has acquired is not only unfair, it could be shredded when he steps up to super feather to challenge WBO champion Jamel Herring in Atlanta this weekend.

Stevenson was circumspec­t in his last bout against Jeremiah Nakathila in June. He was self-critical about that performanc­e and promises to be better.

Stevenson (landing a beauty on Felix Caraballo, above) is a southpaw who fights on reflexes. Nakathila had lost only once and, as 18 knockout wins suggest, he can obviously punch.

A boxer who fights on reflexes is going to be wary. Stevenson trades on fast hands, but he can punch as well as box.

Herring, 35, is one tough hombre, as you might expect from an ex-us marine who spent two tours of duty in Iraq.

At 5ft 10in he has a reach advantage too, one that proved too much for Carl Frampton last time out.

That won’t be the case with Stevenson. Against Nakathila, Stevenson was slow to commit. He never does until he is sure there is nothing coming back. With experience he will get more self-assured in bigger fights.

There were times when Tommy Hearns didn’t look great, Sugar Ray Leonard too.

Like Leonard at his best, Stevenson loads his power onto the last shot. Watch Leonard’s show reel, pop, pop with the jab then every ounce of energy with the last shot takes them out.

Stevenson likes to set you up with quick combinatio­ns and then the money is on the last punch, the dynamite strike.

Herring is durable but Stevenson is exceptiona­l. We will be talking about him a lot in the coming years, a fighter who will end up at least a three-weight world champion. At 24 you might see this as his coming-of-age party.

It might go the distance, but I suspect Stevenson will end it in the championsh­ip rounds to prove his class.

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