Los Angeles Times

Perfect punch puts it away

Lomachenko stops Linares with body shot in 10th, becomes fastest to third belt.

- By Lance Pugmire

NEW YORK — Vasiliy Lomachenko lifted himself off the canvas, regained his faculties and figured out a way to bury a disabling punch to the ribs of Jorge Linares.

That damaging blow closed his thrilling pursuit to become the fastest man to wear a third weight-class belt, as Lomachenko scored a gritty 10th-round technical knockout of the veteran champion Saturday night at Madison Square Garden.

“Perfectly landed,” Linares lamented of the punch by Lomachenko (11-1), who added the World Boxing Assn. lightweigh­t belt to the featherwei­ght and superfeath­erweight titles he won.

Linares (44-4), in his eighth straight lightweigh­t title fight, stunned the proLomache­nko crowd in the sixth round by landing a right straight to the nose, knocking the Ukrainian down.

“He got hit on the kisser, but it was not a concussive punch,” promoter Bob Arum said of the knockdown, Lomachenko’s first since more than a decade ago as an amateur.

While Lomachenko retreated for the final seconds of that round, his mind remained sharp and he maintained his composure as the 10th round began, at which point the fight was even.

“I prepared for the last few rounds and my father told me, ‘You need to go to the body,’ ” Lomachenko said, illustrati­ng the calm and direction that led him and his father to sweep the Boxing Writers Assn. of America awards for fighter and trainer of the year the night before.

Lomachenko swept the ninth round, according to judges Julie Lederman, Robin Taylor and Steve Weisfeld, and maintained that energy in the 10th, as a tiring Linares dealt with swelling that nearly closed his left eye.

After combinatio­ns and uppercuts landed, Lomachenko delivered the decisive punch that dropped Linares. The 32-year-old Venezuelan took awhile to rise and reached his feet with both arms down. Referee Ricky Gonzalez lifted them, looked him in the eyes and waved the bout over.

“The fight was getting interestin­g. It was very close. But he did surprise me with that body shot,” Linares said. “I wanted to continue, to keep working, but the referee stopped the fight.”

Lomachenko (11-1) barely out-landed Linares, 213-207, in total punches, but kept the champion on guard by throwing 112 more punches, with his jab an effective weapon while Linares landed more power shots.

Arum said he expects Lomachenko to fight again Aug. 25 at the Forum, likely against World Boxing Organizati­on lightweigh­t champion Ray Beltran, but it was clear that moving up five pounds from super-featherwei­ght presented a more complex test of physicalit­y.

Lomachenko, 30, had stopped four consecutiv­e smaller opponents on their stool. But Linares weighed 152 pounds Saturday after rehydratin­g from his 134.6 pounds the day before at the weigh-in, while Lomachenko weighed only 138, according to Top Rank President Todd duBoef.

“He was so much quicker [than Linares], but the guy clearly outsized him,” Arum said.

Instead of cruising as in those recent routs, Lomachenko could savor digging deep to find his way to victory and stand as one of 47 men in boxing history with world titles in three divisions.

“We always knew how good he was, but he was in a real fight,” Arum said. “This guy [Linares] was not going to quit. Lomachenko stood up to him and showed deep-down guts to knock him out. Tremendous.”

Said Lomachenko: “Thank you to Jorge Linares for giving me one more lesson in this interestin­g sport.”

In the co-main event, Indio-trained welterweig­ht Carlos Adames of the Dominican Republic landed some heavy punches on Mexico’s Alejandro Barrera, but couldn’t stop him and had to settle for victory by unanimous-decision scores of 97-93, 96-94, 98-92.

Ireland’s Michael Conlan (7-0) cruised to a unanimous decision victory by three 80-72 scores over Spain’s Ibon Larrinaga (10-2) by outworking him and flashing more speed with several flush head shots in the featherwei­ght bout.

Mikaela Mayer, a U.S. Olympian from the San Fernando Valley, improved to 5-0 with a six-round, unanimous decision victory over New Zealand lightweigh­t Baby Nansen (6-3-1).

And Brooklyn prospect Teofimo Lopez (9-0, 7 KOs) needed just 1:04 to knock out Brazil’s Vitor Freitas (14-2) in a lightweigh­t bout.

 ?? Al Bello Getty Images ?? VASILIY LOMACHENKO does damage to Jorge Linares before stopping him in the 10th round.
Al Bello Getty Images VASILIY LOMACHENKO does damage to Jorge Linares before stopping him in the 10th round.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States