Los Angeles Times

Alvarez all about bigger and better

Not one to shy away from a tough test, he calls Jacobs a superior boxer to Golovkin.

- By Lance Pugmire

LAS VEGAS — Three years ago, Canelo Alvarez was tasked with opening the $375-million T-Mobile Arena in his first Cinco de Mayo main event in Las Vegas.

He followed that up with consecutiv­e bouts against Gennady Golovkin, the long-reigning, powerpunch­ing middleweig­ht champion.

Now, as the leading draw for the new streaming service DAZN’s push to exceed 1 million subscriber­s by next month, Alvarez shoulders both business and ring pressure by meeting fellow champion Daniel Jacobs in perhaps boxing’s best division.

“I concentrat­e. I work hard. And things unfold and fall into place — like the contract, like the opponents, like everything that’s happened. It’s just me continuing to do my thing,” Alvarez explained Tuesday following his grand arrival at MGM Grand.

It was the 28-year-old’s interest in challengin­g himself that helped convince DAZN to make Alvarez the richest deal for a North American athlete, a $365-million, 10-fight deal that has World Boxing Council/World Boxing Assn. champion Alvarez (51-1-2, 35 knockouts) positioned to potentiall­y unify all four belts in the middleweig­ht di

vision.

Jacobs (35-2, 29 KOs) has the Internatio­nal Boxing Federation belt, stripped from Golovkin last year. Jacobs fought Golovkin in 2017 and was defeated by a narrow decision at Madison Square Garden.

That bout, to many, first revealed vulnerabil­ity in Golovkin and Alvarez, who edged Golovkin by majority decision in September, says he rates Jacobs as a superior boxer.

“Technicall­y, yes, he’s a much better fighter,” Alvarez said. “His abilities are much better … he has one of the most complicate­d styles in boxing.”

Jacobs said given the depth of the division — which includes World Boxing Organizati­on champion Demetrius Andrade, former champion Billy Joe Saunders and unbeaten Jermall Charlo — the competitio­n hasn’t been this strong since Bernard Hopkins, Roy Jones Jr. and James Toney occupied it in the mid-1990s.

“It’s perfect timing for us because we all have so many options, and I’m at the pinnacle, and I have the key right now,” said Jacobs, a near 4-1 betting underdog. “Focus on this job, show everything I know and the sky’s the limit. So many opportunit­ies can arise by winning this.”

While Alvarez stands as the sport’s most powerful draw as Mexico’s most prominent fighter, Jacobs offers the compelling human-interest story of conquering cancer, a subject that connects him with a mainstream audience.

“I was sleeping on my mom’s couch. Even at that time, it was really hard for me to maneuver and walk and do all these different things … sleepless nights, times when I used to cry, times when I used to doubt if I could even walk again,” Jacobs recounted of his cancer battle. “I never thought about this opportunit­y … this is the greatest opportunit­y I can even have, let alone dream about. I’m looking forward to taking advantage of it.”

The fighters’ stories moved LeBron James and his partner Maverick Carter to produce the two-part DAZN documentar­y series “40 Days” that has accompanie­d fight-preview coverage.

Alvarez said he didn’t mind embracing the challenge of Jacobs, and Alvarez’s promoter, Oscar De La Hoya, maintained that a victory over Jacobs makes him the sport’s No. 1 pound-forpound fighter.

“I’ve never rejected any opponent,” Alvarez said. “I don’t focus on if I’m No. 1 or 2 or 3 … I just keep doing these fights to keep me as one of the best.

“I’m not focused on the contract. I worked hard for it. My thing is to continue taking the best fights … [because] I love boxing. I love what I do.”

Alvarez can invoke a rematch clause should he lose to Jacobs, and can fight him at a date of his discretion, Golden Boy Promotions President Eric Gomez said.

In a nod to his ambition, Alvarez recently hedged from a full commitment to fighting Golovkin for a third time in September, should he defeat Jacobs.

Because instead of pursuing Andrade’s WBO belt, Golovkin selected a likely one-sided match June 8 against obscure Canadian Steve Rolls at Madison Square Garden.

Would Alvarez actually punish Golovkin for playing it safe?

“He holds all the leverage,” Gomez said of Alvarez. “It’s going to be his decision.”

 ?? RICHARD DREW Associated Press ?? CANELO ALVAREZ will defend his WBA and WBC middleweig­ht belts in Saturday’s fight against IBF champion Daniel Jacobs in Las Vegas.
RICHARD DREW Associated Press CANELO ALVAREZ will defend his WBA and WBC middleweig­ht belts in Saturday’s fight against IBF champion Daniel Jacobs in Las Vegas.
 ?? ALEX TRAUTWIG Getty Images ?? DANIEL JACOBS on his mind-set: “Focus on this job, show everything I know and the sky’s the limit. So many opportunit­ies can arise by winning this.”
ALEX TRAUTWIG Getty Images DANIEL JACOBS on his mind-set: “Focus on this job, show everything I know and the sky’s the limit. So many opportunit­ies can arise by winning this.”

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