Las Vegas Review-Journal

Satisfied Alvarez looking forward to next title fight

- SAM GORDON COMMENTARY Contact Sam Gordon at sgordon@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Bysamgordo­n on X.

THE stool in the blue corner on which Canelo Alvarez was supposed to sit between the rounds of his megafight against Jermell Charlo was deemed unnecessar­y by the Mexican superstar.

He stood instead while receiving instructio­n from trainer Eddy Reynoso — readying for each ensuing three-minute massacre.

The fatigue he felt in previous fights had been fortified into focus, the glory he’s long known burnished Saturday at Charlo’s expense inside T-mobile Arena.

“I’m so happy because I did what I supposed to do,” he said at the postfight press conference, having traded his trunks for designer pajamas, with his wife, Fernanda, by his left side, gently caressing his shoulder.

Added Alvarez: “This is Canelo. … I’m back. Finally, I’m back. I feel confident right now. I feel great. … Now, I’m back.”

In his conquering of Charlo, Alvarez (60-2-2, 39 knockouts) retained his standing among the poundfor-pound elite and his undisputed super middleweig­ht championsh­ip following his third consecutiv­e defense. He didn’t show fatigue at all during the fight, remaining spry and active while chipping away at Charlo’s rib cage — and with it his competitiv­e spirit — in a one-sided thrashing of the former undisputed junior middleweig­ht champion.

Charlo, per WBO ruling, forfeits that portion of his unified title to former mandatory challenger Tim Tszyu, whom he bypassed for a more lucrative bout with Alvarez.

“I would have loved to do more, but you have in front of you a great fighter,” Alvarez added. “He (did) his job. He moved a lot. But I’m happy (with) what I did. I’m happy, because I feel great.”

Canelo-crawford?

With Charlo (35-2-1, 19 KOS) behind him, Alvarez has two fights remaining on his deal with Premier Boxing Champions and two obvious opponents who should actually test his greatness: undisputed welterweig­ht champion and pound-for-pound king Terence Crawford and undefeated former twotime super middleweig­ht champion David Benavidez. They bring with their skills a commercial viability that could maximize Alvarez’s profitabil­ity.

Crawford watched Alvarez outclass Charlo, a 33-yearold Houstonian, from a ringside seat and continued his very public campaign to fight the 33-year-old, four-division champion.

Crawford would fare far better against Alvarez than Charlo, whom he told on X, “you went out sad. Didn’t even try to win, all you did was try to survive. You should be ashamed of yourself.”

Like Charlo, Crawford (40-0, 31 KOS) would have to elevate in weight and face a far more skillful and powerful fighter than he’s ever battled before. But he’s the same height as Alvarez and an equally motivated competitor, armed with an amorphous switch-hitting style, and more importantl­y the tactical acumen required to compensate for the difference­s in strength.

Crawford, a 36-year-old from Omaha, Nebraska, is first contractua­lly obligated to a rematch with Errol Spence Jr. that hasn’t yet been finalized or announced, leaving theoretica­l leeway in negotiatio­ns should a fight with Alvarez become available.

For what it’s worth, Alvarez said of Crawford, “I always say if a fight makes sense, why not, but he’s not in the plan. If it makes sense maybe. I don’t know right now.”

Perhaps the risk of a loss isn’t worth the reward of a victory that his 21-pound fighting advantage suggests he should easily secure.

Canelo-benavidez?

But Benavidez (27-0, 23 KOS) at this point is unavoidabl­e as a natural super middleweig­ht and the WBC’S mandatory challenger. The Phoenix native dubbed the “Mexican Monster” by Mike Tyson is a long overdue opponent for Alvarez, who cedes six inches of height and six years of youth in that prospectiv­e matchup.

Benavidez is a pressuring, voluminous power-puncher, and Alvarez is a calculatin­g counterpun­cher with a chin carved of granite and — as of Saturday — a youthful champion’s charm.

Added Alvarez: “I feel good. I feel great. I feel in my prime. I feel fresh. I’m ready.”

Cheers until Cinco de Mayo.

 ?? Madeline Carter Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Canelo Alvarez is pumped up after beating Jermell Charlo in an undisputed world super middleweig­ht title bout at T-mobile Arena.
Madeline Carter Las Vegas Review-journal Canelo Alvarez is pumped up after beating Jermell Charlo in an undisputed world super middleweig­ht title bout at T-mobile Arena.
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