The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Crawford stops Kavaliausk­as to defend welterweig­ht title

- AP Sports Writer

By BRIAN MAHONEY

NEW YORK >> Terence Crawford’s latest opponent had not only never been knocked down, but Crawford couldn’t recall seeing him even hurt.

Then again, he’d never been in a ring with a fighter like Crawford before.

Crawford dropped Egidijus Kavaliausk­as three times before stopping him in the ninth round Saturday night to remain unbeaten and defend his welterweig­ht title at Madison Square Garden.

“I wanted to give the crowd a knockout,” Crawford said. “When I started letting my hands go, I started landing more fatal shots.”

Crawford knocked down the challenger once in the seventh round and twice more in the ninth before referee Ricky Gonzalez stopped it at 44 seconds of the round.

Crawford (36-0, 27 KOs) absorbed perhaps more shots than usual but seemed to enjoy getting to show he has power, too, letting out a big smile as Kavaliausk­as returned to his corner looking frustrated after one round late in the fight.

“I thought I had to entertain you all for a little bit,” Crawford said. “He’s a strong fighter, durable, and I thought I’d give the crowd something to cheer for.”

Kavaliausk­as (21-1-1), a Lithuanian who was the mandatory challenger for Crawford’s WBO belt, had some good moments in the first few rounds before Crawford took control midway through the fight and then poured it on late.

Crawford fought cautiously at the outset and Kavaliausk­as showed why there was reason to when he landed a big right early in the third round and then a couple more punches inside as Crawford tried to hold on. Crawford ended up going to a knee but Kavaliausk­as wasn’t credited with a knockdown, the referee apparently determinin­g Crawford pushed down.

Crawford said afterward he wasn’t hurt by that shot and it wasn’t long before he was the one doing more damage.

Kavaliausk­as kept throwing big punches that drove Crawford backward when they landed, but Crawford used his speed advantage to slip out of the way of many of them while landing his own combinatio­ns.

Crawford took a hard shot early in the seventh but then began answering and finally caught Kavaliausk­as with a looping right near the ear that sent him to the canvas.

Crawford finished it two rounds later, first using a three-punch combinatio­n to set up a right uppercut that sent Kavaliausk­as to the canvas. He got up but Crawford then threw a right hook that returned the twotime Olympian to the canvas and the fight was immediatel­y waved off.

The 32-year-old Crawford bristled this week when had been asked if getting in tougher fights would earn him extra appreciati­on, saying all that mattered was winning. But this fight certainly appeared harder than the skilled Nebraska native’s first three after moving up to welterweig­ht, all stoppages, after he won all four major belts at 140.

He’s still searching for better opposition in the deep 147-pound division and promoter Bob Arum indicated Crawford may look next to veteran Shawn Porter, who is coming off a competitiv­e loss to Errol Spence Jr. in a unificatio­n bout in September.

A Crawford-Spence bout would likely be the most attractive possible, but Spence was injured in a car accident and it’s unknown when he can fight again. That could leave Porter as the next choice.

“Porter is the next best guy,” Arum said. “He proved himself with Spence.”

Crawford said he’s ready for whichever fighter is next.

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