Santa Fe New Mexican

Draw: Gennady Golovkin retained his middleweig­ht titles Saturday night, fighting to a draw with Canelo Alvarez, left.

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Gennady Golovkin retained his middleweig­ht titles Saturday night, fighting to a draw with Canelo Alvarez in a brutal battle that ended with both fighters with their hands aloft in victory.

The middleweig­ht showdown lived up to its hype as the two fighters traded huge punches and went after each other for 12 rounds. Neither fighter was down and neither appeared seriously hurt but both landed some huge punches to the head that had the crowd screaming in excitement.

Golovkin was the aggressor throughout and landed punches that had put other fighters to the canvas. But he couldn’t put Alvarez down, and the Mexican star more than stood his own in exchanges with Triple G, from Kazakhstan. The two were still brawling as the final seconds ticked down and the fight went to the scorecards.

One judge had Alvarez winning 118-110, a second had it 115-113 in Golovkin’s favor while the third had it 114-114. The Associated Press scored it 114-114. Golovkin, who has never lost in 38 fights, retained his middleweig­ht titles with the draw. But Alvarez showed that he could not only take Golovkin’s punches but land telling punches of his own.

A frenzied crowd of 22,358 at the T-Mobile Arena roared throughout the fight as the two middleweig­hts put on the kind of show that boxing purists had anticipate­d. They brawled, used sharp jabs and counter-punched at times, with neither one willing to give the other much ground.

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canelo Alvarez, right, and Gennady Golovkin celebrate following a middleweig­ht title fight Saturday, in Las Vegas, Nev. The fight was called a draw.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canelo Alvarez, right, and Gennady Golovkin celebrate following a middleweig­ht title fight Saturday, in Las Vegas, Nev. The fight was called a draw.

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