Orlando Sentinel

Alvarez sees KO against Triple G

- By Tim Dahlberg

LAS VEGAS — Canelo Alvarez was just Saul Alvarez back then, a red-haired 15-year-old who wanted nothing more than to make some money boxing.

He got his chance on a summer night in 2005 in a suburb of Guadalajar­a, Mexico, where he grew up. His opponent was another teenager named Abraham Gonzalez, but he could have been anyone.

Alvarez showed some potential by stopping Gonzalez in fourth round. Afterward he collected his first real payday.

“Eighty pesos,” Alvarez recalled this week. “I think it was like $6.”

A dozen years later, the pay has gotten a lot better. On Saturday night Alvarez will make millions as he meets knockout specialist Gennady Golovkin in a middleweig­ht showdown that boxing purists are comparing to some of the division's great fights of years past .

Some 40 million of his countrymen are expected to be watching on television as the fighter who is arguably Mexico's biggest sports hero takes on the fearsome Golovkin in a fight that could define the career of both fighters. The fight will be televised on HBO pay-perview in the U.S.

“This is for my country and my people,” Alvarez said. “Simply put, the people wanted this fight.”

It won't be a fight for the faint of heart. Golovkin had a 23-fight knockout streak before going the distance in his last fight, while Alvarez is a masterful counterpun­cher who is not afraid to mix it up.

Between them they have only one loss in 88 fights. Alvarez suffered it in 2013 against Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a fight he admitted he took too early in his career.

By contrast, he may have waited until just the right time to fight Golovkin. Alvarez and his promoter, Oscar De La Hoya, were widely criticized for avoiding Golovkin for the last two years, but now Alvarez has grown into a full-fledged middleweig­ht and both fighters seem to be in their prime.

There shouldn't be many surprises. And there will certainly be no excuses.

“Every night before I go to bed I visualize a knockout,” Alvarez said

Alvarez has been on the big stage before. He and Mayweather delivered more than 2 million pay-per-view buys in their fight, and he has consistent­ly drawn big crowds and big television numbers over the last five years.

If he can beat Golovkin — and he's a slight underdog — he'll have a handful of championsh­ip belts and a signature win that will resonate throughout the sport. It's something he thought would happen if he beat Mayweather, but at 23, he wasn't ready for the defensive master.

“I was too young and it showed,” Alvarez said through an interprete­r.

In Golovkin, Alvarez will be fighting a boxer who hasn't lost since the gold medal match in the 2004 Olympics. He'll also be facing a slugger who has 33 knockouts in 37 fights and is defending his middleweig­ht titles for the 19th time.

But Golovkin looked somewhat vulnerable in his last fight, where he went 12 rounds with Danny Jacobs. He won, but the fight that may have convinced De La Hoya to risk his most marketable fighter against Triple G.

“It has all the ingredient­s to be one of the best fights ever,” Alvarez said

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