Los Angeles Times

Kirkland to fight Alvarez

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James Kirkland was announced as the new opponent for Mexican star Saul “Canelo” Alvarez in a World Boxing Council super-welterweig­ht title fight on Sept. 15 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Alvarez replaces Paul Williams, who was paralyzed in a motorcycle accident near Atlanta last weekend.

Richard Schaefer, chief executive of Golden Boy Promotions, said Kirkland was “signed and sealed” for the bout. Alvarez (40-0-1, 29 KOs) won his last fight on May 5, scoring a lopsided decision over former world champion Shane Mosley.

Kirkland, 28, is 31-1 with 27 knockouts, and he’s coming off compelling bouts against Alfredo Angulo and Carlos Molina.

Schaefer said the card will include a WBC featherwei­ght title bout pitting champion Jhonny Gonzalez of Mexico against countryman Daniel Ponce de Leon, who resides in Huntington Park.

Fight promoter Top Rank announced junior featherwei­ght champions Nonito Donaire (28-1, 18 KOs) and Jeffrey Mathebula (26-3-2, 14 KOs) will stage a unificatio­n bout July 7 at the Home Depot Center.

The HBO-televised card will also include a 10round bout pitting Oxnard’s former world lightweigh­t champion Brandon Rios (30-0-1, 21 KOs) against Riverside’s Mauricio Herrera (18-2, seven KOs) in a junior-welterweig­ht fight.

— Lance Pugmire

The Lakers promoted Glenn Carraro, the team’s director of basketball administra­tion and general manager of the D-Fenders, to assistant general manager. Carraro will also continue in his role with the D-Fenders.

Amember of the Lakers’ front office since 2000, Carraro had been the director of basketball administra­tion since 2006.

— Ben Bolch

There was a scare Thursday morning at Belmont when Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have Another nearly was slammed by a loose horse on the track. The horse dumped his rider and came “screaming up the outside rail” and ran between the rail and I’ll Have Another, who was just a few feet from the rail, trainer Doug O’Neill said.

Basketball Hall of Fame member Jack Twyman, one of the NBA’s top scorers in the 1950s, who became the guardian to paralyzed teammate Maurice Stokes, has died. He was 78.

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