Gulf News

‘Knockout king’ wins on unanimous decision

Stretched to 12 rounds for the first time by cancer survivor Jacobs

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Gennady Golovkin earned a unanimous decision over Daniel Jacobs on Saturday to retain his middleweig­ht belts but not before boxing’s knockout king was taken the distance for the first time.

Golovkin was forced to go 12 rounds as Jacobs gave the middleweig­ht superstar all he could handle in front of a boisterous crowd of 19,000 at Madison Square Garden.

Golovkin retained his WBC and WBO belts as two of boxing’s pre-eminent punchers put on an entertaini­ng show against the best opponents of their respective careers.

“I couldn’t destroy him,” said Golovkin. “He is a very clean, very good fighter. It is my first test for 12 rounds.”

Judges Don Trella and Steve Weisfeld both scored the fight 115-112 and Max DeLuca had it 114-113 for Golovkin.

Cancer survivor Jacobs was an underdog going in but he used his 10-pound weight and reach to his advantage and possibly provided the blueprint for Canelo Alvarez to use against the 35-year-old Kazakh in a future title fight.

Golovkin, who improved to 37-0, floored Jacobs early in the fourth round with two rapid fire overhand rights to record the only knockdown of the fight.

Golovkin denied suggestion­s that he should have thrown more punches in the early rounds.

Boxing history

“This is sport. I am a boxer, I am not a killer. I respect his game,” Golovkin said.

Golovkin had won 33 of his previous 36 fights by knockout as his 23 fight knockout streak, which dated back to 2008, came to a halt. He has a 92 per cent knockout rate, the best ratio of any middleweig­ht in boxing history.

Golovkin’s IBF title was not on the line because Jacobs declined to attend the Saturday morning weigh in. Jacobs needed to be within 10 pounds of Friday’s official weigh-in weight or lose the chance to fight for the IBF title.

The 30-year-old Jacobs decided the extra weight in the ring was more important than fighting for all of Golovkin’s titles and the gamble almost paid off. He dropped to 32-2, with 29 knockouts. “At times I stood toe-to-toe with him to see what the power was like, what everybody was talking about, and it wasn’t that bad,” Jacobs said.

 ?? AP ?? Gennady Golovkin celebrates his victory over Daniel Jacobs in New York on Saturday.
AP Gennady Golovkin celebrates his victory over Daniel Jacobs in New York on Saturday.

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