Las Vegas Review-Journal

Alvarez brings ‘experience’

Middleweig­ht much improved since ’13 loss to Mayweather

- By Gilbert Manzano Las Vegas Review-journal

Saul “Canelo” Alvarez was viewed as Floyd Mayweather’s toughest challenger when the two boxing stars met at the MGM Grand Garden four years ago.

In reality, the younger, stronger Alvarez didn’t stand a chance against the brilliance of Mayweather. The undefeated boxer toyed with the rising Mexican star for 12 rounds, dominating in every aspect despite the egregious scorecards from the judges. Mayweather won by scores of 116-112, 117-111 and 114-114 to improve to 45-0.

A live gate record of $20 million was set and the pay-per-view buys were north of 2 million because many believed Alvarez’s power had a chance to break through Mayweather’s defense.

ALVAREZ

The uppercuts and hooks to the body never came from Alvarez, then 23, who made the mistake of trying to outbox Mayweather instead of brawl.

It was a dreadful performanc­e from Alvarez and his trainers, but the loss didn’t hurt Alvarez’s star power. He is by far Mexico’s most popular fighter and is starting to become a household name in the U.S. thanks to his memorable Tecate commercial­s with Sylvester Stallone.

Alvarez (49-1-1, 34 knockouts) has taken the mantle from Mayweather as boxing’s most watched fighter, and he has another blockbuste­r pay-perview bout Saturday against Gennady Golovkin (37-0, 33 KOS) in a middleweig­ht showdown at T-mobile Arena.

It’s Alvarez’s grand opportunit­y to prove he’s more than just a marketable pretty face. This is Alvarez’s moment to solidify himself as boxing’s best pound-for-pound fighter.

“I think it’s the same magnitude as the Mayweather fight or even more,” Alvarez said of the Golovkin bout. “It’s a completely different fight because of the styles, but I think it’s of the same magnitude. It’s a fight the people have waited for a long time, and I think it’s of the same caliber.”

Alvarez, 27, has improved drasticall­y since the Mayweather bout. He’s 7-0 with four knockouts, but none of those opponents are in Golovkin’s class. Many view Golovkin as the sport’s best fighter.

Alvarez, the lineal middleweig­ht champion, crushed Alfredo Angulo, James Kirkland, Liam Smith and Amir Khan, who didn’t belong in the ring with Alvarez after moving up two weight classes.

The former two-division champion struggled against Erislandy Lara in 2014 but escaped with a split decision. Alvarez dominated Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in May but failed to drop the much bigger Chavez in his debut above 155 pounds.

To many, Alvarez’s best performanc­e since the Mayweather fight was against Miguel Cotto two years ago to win the WBC middleweig­ht belt that led to Golovkin being his mandatory challenger.

“I have more experience right now,” Alvarez said. “I’m a fighter who is more complete all around and more confident in the ring, and it’s very different, and overall, I’m showing it every fight how I’m getting better,” Alvarez said. “This fight won’t be any different.”

Alvarez, who thrives off counter shots, arguably has the strongest combinatio­ns in the sport with vicious hooks to the body that end with an uppercut or power righthand to the head.

But does he have enough power and hand speed to slow down Golovkin, who prefers to fight forward and doesn’t mind taking a punch? The three-belt middleweig­ht champion had a streak of 23 knockouts snapped in a unanimous decision over Daniel Jacobs in March.

“I will show my improvemen­ts and hopefully Golovkin brings out the best Canelo,” Alvarez said. “I’m going to give it everything I have, and hopefully Golovkin brings out more. I want him to bring out the best Canelo. I know he’s the type of fighter to force you to bring out the best.”

Golovkin, 35, and his trainer Abel Sanchez have said the only reason why Alvarez and his promoter finally accepted the fight after a two-year delay was because Golovkin didn’t knock out Jacobs. Sanchez has stated that Golovkin lets himself get hit at times to make his possible future opponents believe they have a chance if they accept the challenge against the Kazakhstan brawler.

“You don’t even believe that,” Alvarez told a reporter when asked about Golovkin taking punches on purpose. “He’s the most dangerous fighter I’ve faced. He comes out looking to end his opponents early. But on the other side, he’ll need to be able to receive my punches. We’ll see if he’s ready for that.”

Alvarez said he hasn’t thought about a rematch with Mayweather since he retired in 2015. He didn’t even consider it when Mayweather came back for the Conor Mcgregor match on Aug. 26.

He’s focused on his second grand opportunit­y and he plans to capitalize on it.

“I’m just focused on this fight with Golovkin and after this we’ll see,” Alvarez said. “There will be another story.”

Officials named

Adalaide Byrd, Dave Moretti and Don Trella were selected Monday by the Nevada Athletic Commission as the judges for the Alvarez-golovkin bout. Kenny Bayless was chosen as referee.

Contact Gilbert Manzano at gmanzano@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Gmanzano24 on Twitter.

 ?? Erik Verduzco ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States