Las Vegas Review-Journal

Refocused Haney poised for showdown with Diaz

- By Sam Gordon Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Bysamgordo­n on Twitter.

It was too easy for WBC lightweigh­t champion Devin Haney to evade Jorge Linares on May 29 at Michelob Ultra Arena. Too easy for him to land scoring shots. Win round after round.

So easy that it became too hard to focus.

“I kind of fell asleep in there. And I got a little lax. … Linares hit me with a good shot, and it woke me up,” Haney said, recalling his last title defense. “He hit me right on the chin. I might have been hurt, but he didn’t put me down. He didn’t come in the next round and knock me out.

“At the end of the day, we finished the fight, we got the job done. Now we’re on to the next.”

Haney (26-0, 15 knockouts) is refocused and will return to the ring Saturday to face former two-weight world champion Jojo Diaz Jr. (32-11, 15 KOS) at the MGM Grand Garden in the most significan­t fight of Haney’s career. A win could trigger a showdown with unified lightweigh­t champion George Kambosos Jr., who claimed the WBA, IBF, WBO and WBC franchise titles last week with an upset of Teofimo Lopez.

Kambosos said he would be interested in fighting Haney for the undisputed lightweigh­t championsh­ip. Other opponents such as Gervonta Davis and Vasiliy Lomachenko also intrigue Kambosos.

“We can’t look past Jojo Diaz, but we can’t help see George Kambosos in our city parading around as if he’s an undisputed champion,” said Haney’s father, trainer and manager, Bill. “We hope after this fight George Kambosos and his team are a man of their word and stick behind it. Let’s make this happen.”

The fight is Haney’s first since he beat Linares, and he said he learned from his victory over the former threeweigh­t world champion. Haney, a 23-year-old Las Vegan, boxed brilliantl­y through the first nine rounds, using his snapping jab and superior reach to control the pace.

But he was too aggressive toward the end of the 10th and wobbled by a two-punch combinatio­n. Haney avoided a knockout to win a unanimous decision but realizes it wasn’t his most impressive showing.

A better showing Saturday is crucial to securing a bout with Kambosos, whose status as unified champion allows for more autonomy and flexibilit­y.

“If I go in there and I just beat Jojo Diaz clean, 12 rounds, win every round, then (critics are) going to say, ‘Oh, yeah, it was good, but it wasn’t good enough,’” Haney said. “I want to go in there and beat Jojo Diaz worse than he’s ever been beat. … I always want to beat my opponent the best way possible.”

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