Daily Dispatch

Saunders challenges Golovkin

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UNBEATEN Billy Joe Saunders threw down the gauntlet to four-belt champion Gennady Golovkin with a systematic dismantlin­g of David Lemieux in his North American profession­al boxing debut on Saturday.

The 28-year-old Englishman kept his World Boxing Organisati­on middleweig­ht title by scoring a lopsided unanimous decision victory over Canadian crowd favourite Lemieux. Saunders holds the only world title in his weight class that is not in the hands of Golovkin.

The Englishman is now eyeing a unificatio­n fight with the Kazakhstan­i fighter after racking up 25 straight victories before making his first appearance in North America on Saturday.

“Now fight me. We will see a different story. You’ll be punching fresh air,” Saunders said of Golovkin.

Golovkin is in talks for a rematch with Canelo Alvarez on May 5 and if the pieces fall together the way Saunders hopes, the Brit could challenge Golovkin or Alvarez soon.

Golovkin holds the WBA, WBC, IBF and IBO middleweig­ht titles.

Saunders relied on his ring savvy and hand speed to bloody and disarm the explosive punching power of Lemieux, who had 33 knockouts in 38 victories heading into Saturd contest at the Place Bell arena in Laval, Quebec. He won by scores of 120-108, 117-111 and 118-110.

Saunders got the upper hand from the opening bell as he peppered the Canadian with jabs and combinatio­ns, winning every round on one judge’s scorecard.

“I knew what he [Lemieux] was coming for,” Saunders said. “I look easy to whip. I look easy to put down. I look like I could run out of gas. But you can’t hit me. I like to come into someone’s backyard because I perform better.”

Saunders said he owes everything to his new coach Dominic Ingle. Without him, “my career would be finished,” he said. Saunders (26-0, 12 knockouts) made the third defence of the title he won by outpointin­g Ireland’s Andy Lee two years ago.

Lemieux said his attack was blunted after he hurt his left hand in the second round. He also complained that Saunders did too much running away instead of fighting in the centre of the ring. — AFP

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