Randall Bailey Sin akiyesi si eyikeyi & gbogbo Top àtúnkọ Junior middleweights ni aye

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Undefeated Cuba heavyweight

Robert Alfonso tun impresses

(L-R) Olukọni Orlando Cuellar ati Randall “KO King” Bailey ayeye lẹhin kẹhin Saturday ká gun

Miami (June 25, 2015) – Bọ si pa 19-osu ti inactivity ati ṣiṣe awọn re Junior middleweight Uncomfortable kẹhin ìparí, Randall “KO King” Bailey (45-8, 38 KOs) yoo wa akiyesi wipe o ti n ṣiṣe kan pataki run ni sibe miiran aye akọle ni kan ti o yatọ àdánù kilasi.

 

Mẹta-akoko, meji-pipin aye asiwaju Bailey duro oniwosan Gundrick “Sho-Gun” King (18-15, 11 KOs) ni keji yika pẹlu ifikọti a osi, ko re sina ọtun, ni akọkọ iṣẹlẹ ni Riverdale ile-iṣẹ ti Arts ni Riverdale, Georgia.

 

“Ni akọkọ yika,” awọn 40-odun-atijọ Bailey salaye, “Mo ti o kan fẹ lati gba awọn lero ni iwọn ati ki o bẹrẹ lilo mi jab. Mo ti lu u pẹlu tọkọtaya kan ti o dara ọwọ ọtún, sugbon mo mọ o ti kari ati pe o ti nwa fun mi ọtun. Mo ti wá jade ninu keji nipa lilo mi jab ati osi kio, ti o bere lati lero gan o lẹẹkansi. Mo ti itemole u pẹlu mi osi ifikọti. I’ve been telling people I have more than my right but they haven’t listened. I did have a little rust in the first round but, ninu awọn keji, Mo ní mi jab ṣiṣẹ, pamọ lona meji fun u soke pẹlu o, ati ki o bere nri mi punches jọ.

 

“Ija ni 154 je, daradara, o kan miran ija. Emi kò si lero ni okun, tilẹ. Bayi? Mo ti o kan fẹ lati duro nšišẹ. O ko ni pataki ti o mo ti jà, Mo wa ko níbi nipa enikeni ni 154, sugbon Emi ko gan ti to akoko sosi lati ya omo awọn igbesẹ. Mo fẹ lati gba ọtun pada ni iwọn. O jẹ akoko fun lọ The King!”

 

“Sho-Gun” King ko le wa ni ni oke ti awọn Junior middleweight akaba sugbon, o ni a ogun-ni idanwo, RÍ alatako, paapa bi awọn ohun alatako fun Onija a bọ si pa a 1 ½ odun-layoff gẹgẹbi Bailey. Bailey esan hàn to lodi si Ọba fun ori rẹ olukọni, Orlando Cuellar , lati wa ni impressed.

 

“Eleyi je wa àkọkọ ija ṣiṣẹ pọ sugbon Mo ti sọ ri Randall ija fun years,” Cuellar wi. “A sise lori masking re ńlá ọwọ ọtún nipa gbe o nšišẹ pẹlu rẹ ọwọ osi, joko lori rẹ pada jab, ko ja bo ni, ati hooking si pa rẹ jab. O si ṣe o ni ikẹkọ ibudó sugbon sparring ati ija ni o wa ti o yatọ. O si fi ọwọ tọ alatako re pẹlu rẹ jab ni akọkọ yika bi mo ti paṣẹ fun. Mo fe lati wa si si pa ohun gbogbo rẹ jab ati fun u lati jabọ ẹtọ si awọn ara, nigbagbogbo gège awọn ti iṣaju ati ti ikẹhin Punch. Ni awọn keji yika, ti o fe lo re osi kio si ori ati ara.

 

“Randall Bailey wò dara ju ti o ni o ni ni odun meta. O si n ko nše soke. Randall ká ri ibiti o pẹlu rẹ jab, hooking si pa awọn jab, dapọ o si oke ati awọn gbigbe ni ayika, lọ si ori ati ara. Alatako re kò ri osi kio nítorí pé ó ti nwa fun awọn nla ọtun. O si gbọ ati ohun gbogbo wá si pa rẹ jab. Mo gbagbo ti o le je bi ti o dara bi o ti wà ni odun marun seyin. Bayi, ti o ni kan gidi didasilẹ ayanbon. Mo ti a ti gan impressed nipasẹ rẹ isẹ ati ki o Mo wa gidigidi ní ìrètí nipa re Boxing ojo iwaju.”

 

Bailey ká longtime faili, Si Star, nsan o soke ti o dara ju: “Eleyi je rẹ akọkọ ija ni 154 ati awọn ti o wulẹ bi tẹlẹ a asiwaju. O si je kekere kan Rusty ni akọkọ sugbon, ko ninu awọn ti o ti kọja, ti o ti bere gbigbe gbogbo awọn lori ibi. Pẹlu rẹ knockout agbara ati bayi yi ronu, osi kio si jab, Randall Bailey jẹ ani diẹ lewu ju lailai ṣaaju ki o to. Mo n Fielding diẹ ninu awọn awọn ipe nipa njà fun u. Ti o ba ti ni ńlá kan ija ati awọn owo ti wa ni o dara, a yoo gba pe tókàn. Ṣugbọn on kì yio jà fun peanuts, ki, ti o ba ti ija nla ni ko wa nibẹ nigbamii ti, a ya miiran ija ati ki o lero ni ọkan lẹhin ti o ni ńlá kan. Randall jẹ setan lati ja eyikeyi Junior middleweight ninu aye……ti o ba ti ni owo ti jẹ ọtun.”

 

Tẹle u lori TwitterKOKING_Bailey.

 

Undefeated Cuba heavyweight afojusọna Robert Alfonso shines

 

Bailey ká idurosinsin-mate, undefeated Cuba heavyweight afojusọna Robert Alfonso (6-0, 2 KOs), tun là ose lori Bailey-Ọba undercard, starching mammoth Kevin Kelley (1-4, 1 KO) pẹlu kan thunderous punches ninu awọn kẹta yika.

 

Awọn 2008 Ilẹ Cuba Olympian, ti o ngbe bayi ati awọn reluwe ni Miami, fun kuro diẹ sii ju 100 poun rẹ 353-iwon alatako. Alfonso wá jade gège fi lé punches lati šiši Belii, ọtun soke titi ija ti a halted nipasẹ awọn referee ni kẹta yika.

 

“Mo wa gan lọpọlọpọ ti Robert,” olukọni rẹ Cuellar woye. “O si ti kò mọ fun agbára rẹ sugbon Robert ká gan lagbara ati awọn ti o le gan kiraki. O si lu yi pẹlu eniyan kan ọtun-ọtun osi-o si ti lu u sọkalẹ oju akọkọ. Awọn ija yẹ ki o ti a ti duro ki o si, ṣugbọn o lu ni ka ati awọn Ref jẹ ki o tesiwaju. O fi opin si nikan kan diẹ Punch. Alatako re ti kò ti si isalẹ ki o to. Robert hàn re titun ti ohun kikọ silẹ bi a abẹ knockout olorin. O si jẹ ki ọwọ rẹ ki o si fi rẹ lọ punches papo. Yi o nran le gan kiraki! O si wà ibinu lati ibere, ti o npese agbara pẹlu gbogbo nikan Punch o tì.”

 

Stern ìdúróṣinṣin gbagbo o ni o ni kan ojo iwaju aye heavyweight asiwaju ni Alfonso. “Robert ni oṣuwọn in ni 250 poun ati awọn ti o gbà a knockout fe rẹ 363-iwon alatako ti o wà alaragbayida lati ri,” Stern remarked. “O si lọ soke ni gígùn ni air ati ki o gbe alapin lori rẹ oju. Mo ti a ti gan impressed nipasẹ Robert ká agbara. Awọn enia si fẹ ti nwo heavyweights ti o knockout awon eniyan ati Robert le ṣe pe ati ki o kan Pupo diẹ sii. O si le ni miiran mẹfa-yika jà tókàn, tabi gbe soke si mẹjọ iyipo. Miran mẹta-mẹrin njà tabi ki o si yoo wa ni ija 10-rounders. Wa ètò ni lati gba fun u lati ni ayika 15-0 pẹlu 10-11 KOs, eyi ti o yẹ ki o gba fun u sinu aye kan akọle ija.”

PREMIER BOXING CHAMPIONS ON ESPN MEDIA CONFERENCE CALL TRANSCRIPT

 

Lou DiBella

Thank you very much for joining us for this call for the PBC on ESPN show on August 1 lati Barclays ile-iṣẹ in Brooklyn. The show will be live on primetime on ESPN on Saturday, Oṣù 1st, pẹlu agbegbe bẹrẹ ni 9:00 pm ET/6:00 pm PT.

 

The main event of the evening is Danny “Swift” Garcia against Paulie Malignaggi. The opening fight is a middleweight title bout between Danny Jacobs and Sergio Mora.

 

August 1 is the second PBC card on ESPN and the first one is going to be Keith Thurman against Brooklyn’s Luis Collazo. That’s going to be on July 11th in Tampa, Florida.

 

Tickets for August 1 ti wa ni owole ni $250, $150, $75 ati $45 ki o si ni o wa lori tita to bayi. They’re available atwww.barclayscenter.com, www.ticketmaster.com, at the American Express Box Office at Barclays Center. Lati gba agbara nipa foonu, you can call Ticketmaster at 1-800-745-3000 or to get group tickets from Barclays Center, 800-GROUPBK.

 

The opening bout is a terrific fight. Danny Jacobs is an inspirational fighter but also a super talented middleweight that’s risen to championship stature and holds the belt. He’ll fight at Barclays Center for the fourth time.

 

Danny rise from cancer to vie over the champion has been well documented. But frankly, at this point, he’s beaten that illness and he wants to focus to be on his boxing career and on being the best he can be and he’s taking on a huge challenge on August 1 in Sergio Mora, legitimately one of the best middleweight contenders out there and known very well as the winner of NBC’s “Awọn Contender” Series a number of years ago. Sergio is a former world champion at super welterweight, looking to add a middleweight crown to his resume.

 

He owns victories over Ishe Smith, Peter Manfredo Jr. ati Vernon Forrest ati ti nwọ yi ija lori kan marun-ija win ṣiṣan. And he most recently defeated Abraham Han in February of this year on ESPN.

 

So first, I’ll let Sergio Mora say a few words before we go to the champion.

 

Sergio Mora

Hey, buruku. Daradara, I’m excited to be fighting on my first PBC card. It’s been a long time coming. The last time I fought for a world title was seven years ago and I was able to defeat Vernon Forrest as a 4-1 underdog.

 

I think I’m going to be an underdog for this fight again, fighting the younger, stronger champion in his hometown. So defeating him is going to be tough with all the cards stacked against me and that’s something that I grown used to and accustomed to.

 

There’s nothing bad I can say about Daniel Jacobs, absolutely nothing. I look for something negative to say and I can’t. The guy has overall talent. He’s far younger, Yara ju, stronger and hits harder than me and he has more momentum coming his way. He’s on a nine-fight win streak and he beats me in that as well. I have five-fight going for me.

 

But the thing that I can say is that he hasn’t faced opposition that I faced. I think he’s an emotional, athletic fighter. I’m a cerebral, intelligent, strategic fighter.

 

This is going to be a really exciting card because he’s in his hometown and defending the world title. I’m hungry for that world title and I know that I’m going to have to be extra sharp and do a lot more than just have a close victory in his hometown. So I’m going to have to press action and go out of my comfort zone and I think he’s going to have to go out of his comfort zone, which is going to make an interesting fight for everybody.

 

I’m very confident coming into this fight. I’m very happy on the team that I’m with now and this opportunity. I’ve always wanted to fight in Brooklyn. I always wanted to fight in a mega arena like Barclays Center. I’m blessed to have this opportunity and part of this PBC movement. E dupe.

 

L. DiBella

 

E dupe, Sergio.

 

And now to the champion, Brooklyn ile ti ara, Danny Jacobs.

 

Daniel Jacobs

 

Daradara, after Sergio’s intro, what more can I say? That’s pretty cool.

 

I’m excited to have an opportunity to be back at Barclays Center a second time around as a champion. So this will be my second title defense. It’ll be against the most experienced guy I’ve faced thus far. I’m looking forward to testing my challenge against this slick, crafty veteran in Sergio Mora.

 

I’ve always said that I’m just trying to get that experience most importantly. It’s important to me as a young champion, I’m not where I want to be as a fighter thus far. You’re still growing, you’re still learning. I’m looking at this as just a really starting test. I’m trying to really gain as much experience as I can in fighting such a crafty, slick veteran.

 

He’s been in this position before. Nítorí, he’s already accustomed to being in this position and being an underdog but I can’t take him lightly even though he will be an underdog and even though people will pick me as a favor to win. I’m looking at him as the most devastating opponent that I’ve had thus far coming up to middleweight.

 

So there’s not a lot of fear as far as power is concerned but where he lacks that he makes up in his craftiness and his slickness and awkwardness and sometimes he does engage in the action as well. So I’m looking forward to it. It’s really a starting test but something that I’ve been preparing for a while of any camp even though I’ve been working and doing my broadcasting which I’m very happy to announce. I’ve been keeping in the gym. I’ve been keeping fit and I’m really looking forward to this test and have it at Barclays I think there’s not a better place in the world I have. So I’m looking forward to testing my skills against a crafty veteran.

 

Q

I’d like both of you to address when you receive this negative attention on Twitter and such, how do you deal with it and what’s your response to it.

 

S. Mora

Daradara, listen, I’ve been dealing with this negative criticism for my entire career. It’s something that followed me. I don’t know if it’s because I’m a reality show winner or because people hate the way that I go in to fight and I can’t knock people out. I’m sorry I wasn’t born with power. You need to be born with power. If I have a way where I can ingest power and knock out and what people want to see into my arsenal, then I’ll do it, but I can’t. I was born the way I’m born. I got to do what I can with my abilities.

 

I think I’ve come a long way with all the other athletes that lack power and I think that makes me an even better fighter. It made me evolve into a different type of boxer. So these are the things that boxing needs to understand and the fight fans need to understand that, “O dara, daradara, listen, he’s fighting a guy with a lot of power but how come the guy with no power is actually doing better than the guy with power? Because this is the sweet science and that’s how I become a champion.

 

So it doesn’t bother me. I just continue educating people about the sweet science and letting them know that power is not the number one aspect you need to be successful it’s your agility, techniques, your defense, body shots, the strategy, it’s following that strategy it’s hard.

 

So I’m happy to answer those questions for people that don’t know. But people that do know, get over it.

 

Q

Danny, what about you responding to people who want you to fight Golovkin? That say he isn’t tough enough, how do you deal with that stuff?

 

D. Jacobs

I’ve learned since my return back. I’ve got a lot of criticism on my positionwhy I’ve been facing people who wanted me to step up, people who wanted me to get in position to fight who they want me to fight. I’m passed that point. Now what I care about – daradara, not to the extent where I don’t care about what the fans think but, if you support me, I look at it as, you understand the process, you understand that it’s not going to come when you wanted to come and if you’re a fan of the sport and if you’re a fan of myself, then you just go along with the journey.

 

I want to step up. I want to be able to get in there with the best of the best. Sugbon o han ni, with everything going on in the sport of boxing right now, I’m not really in control of certain things, se o mo. I may control who I step in there with but to a certain degree. So I really don’t tend to get into things like that. I do what I do. I stay ready. As a champion, I conduct myself inside and out of the ring. Whoever I’m in there with I give my best. If you are a fan of the sport, then you’re going to like the fights regardless. It’s all about putting on a show. That’s what I’ve been doingI felt like I’ve been put in good fights.

 

Q

Is it a challenge for you that you want to take on to be the first person to stop Sergio Mora or is it pretty important for you to finally go the distance to go 12 iyipo?

 

D. Jacobs

I’d essentially wanted to go 12-rounds with Truax. I intentionally wanted to go 12-rounds with Truax. Because I felt like I could stop him a little bit earlier, maybe like in the 6th round but it was something that I wanted to prove to myself and knowing that I can go a full strong 12 rounds is something that I’m very confident with now and I feel like I’m answering my question. Nítorí, the test with Sergio Mora iswhether that he can be stopped or whether or not I can go the distance with him, he’s never been stopped before, so it will be icing on the cake to be able to not only to defeat him but to stop him in the match.

 

Ṣugbọn, he’s a crafty veteran and if I can take a win over a guy like that, a win is a win to me. But at the end of the day, what the fans want to see is knockouts. What the fans want is spectacular fights. So my thing is if we could just produce a fantastic fight and a competitive fight, I’m content with that. A knockout is just icing on the cake. But it’s something that I’m looking for but if it happens, I’m pretty sure I know how to get the job done.

 

Q

What do you think about his boxing skills? How do they match up with yours especially over the course of a 12-round fight?

 

S. Mora

That was a great question you asked Danny, bi o ti le je pe. I think he answered perfectly. I would want to knock someone out like me, se o mo, because it puts something on your resume that Vernon Forrest and Sugar Shane Mosley, two Hall of Fame greats haven’t been able to do. So that was a great question.

 

Bi mo ti sọ, I think he possess everything that I don’t. But I have the experience. I think I take a better shot from experience with Danny and I think I follow my game plan more than Danny. A lot of boxers especially a lot of young athletic fighters they go out of their game plan and once they see that it’s not working. As a veteran, I know that it’s not working initially.

 

There’s a beginning, a midgame and an end game, kind of like in chess. But you just got to stick to what you practiced and don’t go out of your element and normally things go well for me. That’s how I’m going to continue doing.

 

Dajudaju, I’ve changed some things in my strategy. I’ve changed some things in my arsenal and the way I see opponents and I go about it. But ultimately, it’s still Sergio Morastill the guy that has that ability to upset a champion and that’s who’s going to be fighting August 1st.

 

Q

Can you talk about your perspective on having it been a long time since you were at this level in terms of a belt being available to you?

 

S. Mora

Daradara, anyone who’s been around the game for more than ten years or not even then. Anyone who’s been around the game will know that this is a political game. And if you’re not with the right side, you’re on the wrong side. And then even if you are on the right side, there’s another side I think that are right and they’re going to be butting heads.

 

Very political business and I think I turned a lot of people off when I fought Shane Mosley and an uneventful fight but I took all the blame for that and then after that, I was forced to go to Texas to fight a Texan. And I came up short against Brian Vera and then that just really hurt my career.

 

I was getting all the bad media, I wasn’t getting the right offers and that’s a good reason why fighters retire because they don’t have the offers coming in and it can be really depleting and depressing. I decided to go back to the drawing board and start off with a new team, have a new focus and I realized the change in the boxing as well, the same people that were in charge of courts in 2010, 2012, they’re not in charge anymore. There are new players in the game, there are new dates in the game and there’s new opportunity.

 

So because of all this new stuff that’s been added to the world of boxing, a person like myself has been able to make the comeback and I’m in a really good place and I am appreciative.

 

Q

Sergio, do you feel that you get a bit of a bad wrap?

 

S. Mora

In my head, in my stubborn, ignorant head, I’m undefeated. I thought I beat Brian Vera both of those times and I beat Vernon Forrest the first time. He beat me the second time. That’s an even draw, se o mo. So in a way, no one has really dominated, no one has really beat me convincingly. So in my head, I’m undefeated. There’s no rubber match to see who really has more wins over the other guy. But in reality, Vernon beat me the second time, I beat him the first time.

 

It’s a crazy business. People are waiting for you to just come down.

 

Q

So when you take a look at Danny’s record, what is your take on what he’s accomplished or what you think of his ability?

 

S. Mora

Daradara, exactly what you guys thought. I think with special talent and he got a piece of a world championship and he’s recognized as a champion. Nítorí, everything that people thought of him came true. Now that he’s on top, he needs to fight top fighters. I don’t think he’s faced the opposition that I faced and other champions have faced. I think that’s the only thing that he’s limited in.

 

So I’m going to be the best name on his resume and we’re going to see how he’s going to be able to handle a guy as crafty like me and a former champion like myself. So it’s a bit of success for him and it’s the best for me fighting a young, hungry champ.

 

Q

When you look over your resume of opponents you faced in your career so far, does he poses perhaps the most formidable test of your career given his experience and his crafty nature?

 

D. Jacobs

Daradara, Egba, coming into this thing I even said that I mentioned that he’s the most experienced fighter that I will be stepping in the ring with. The former world champion, beating the likes of Vernon Forrest, Shane Mosley, a couple other guys. He has that experience. He knows what it is to go the distance. He knows what it is to be in a dogfight. I’m a young champion and I haven’t seen those things thus far, otun, se o mo.

 

I’m content – daradara, not content but, I’m okay with the fact that I have fought those guys, those topnotch but that’s what I’m looking forward to is a ladder. You can’t skip the ladder. You can’t skip any steps, or you’ll fall.

 

So we take in a step by the time and we stepping up and every time you’re going to see great opposition. I’m just looking forward to this one. I don’t take him lightly whatsoever. I clearly mark him as one of the toughest, craftiest most experienced guy that I have faced.

 

Q

Daniel, what is going to be the thing that gets you over the top and helps you win this fight?

 

D. Jacobs

I don’t know what will be the main thing. But I feel like I have a lot more advantages than he does in the fight. But whatever my advantages are and whatever gets me going, will be the deciding factor for me I would stick to. So if it’s my speed, then I’ll stick to using my speed. If it’s my power, backing him down, showing him what a real middleweight feels like, then that’s what I would do.

 

But it’s all about adjusting and getting in there because, se o mo, not a lot of things may work according to the game plan. So you got to go to Plan B, Plan C and so on and so forth. So I’m just looking forward to seeing what works for me, figuring it out because it is a puzzle, it is a chess game when you fight a guy like Sergio and just making it work. I think that’s what a true champion does is just adjust and get the job done.

 

Q

What are you doing in training camp to get away from that label of spoiler and be directly concentrated on winning that title from Danny Jacobs?

 

S. Mora

Bẹẹni. I’ve been labeled the spoiler. I’ve been labeled a lot of names that I actually consider as a good thing, se o mo. You could see it as positive or negative. You come in the positive things that I’m going to go in there, I’m going to spoil Danny Jacobsplans and spoil his promotion plan and spoiler for the fans is the negative that I’m going to come in and win. I decided to go in therewhen the fight with Mosley and Vera, I decided to change my style a bit and I actually engaged a little bit more and be a little bit more offensive and take more chances to go for the knockout. But I think I’ve done that. Se o mo, in my last five fights, I knocked down three of my opponents. So I’ve kept my word and I got this opportunity to fight for a world title again.

 

With Danny, I’m going to do the same. I’m going to try to go out there and do the same thing that got me into this position. I’m showing them that I can be and I can be crafty. I mostly want to let them know that, “Hey, listen, I got this other side to my game too that I added to that slickness and that craftiness.Danny also mentioned, if that’s not working, then I got to go to Plan B and C. I’m going to give him different looks just like he’s going to give me. But I’m an excited former champion and waiting to be a new champion August 1st.

 

Q

Talk about the kinds of sparring partners you have into camp.

 

S. Mora

Bẹẹni, I like to have heavier sparring partners, harder punching sparring partners. But it’s not about the power because me and my sparring partners aren’t going to go in there and hit me with that power. So I like hitting guys with slickness, with speed, just in case Danny comes in there and he shows me a different style, I got to be ready for that. So I got younger guys, stronger guys, powerful guys, big guys, elusive guys and I like to mix it up.

 

Q

You’re a tremendous fighter, and the same time, you are great announcer, can you talk about seeing that light at the end of the tunnel and a career after boxing?

 

D. Jacobs

Daradara, thank you sir I really, really appreciate that. To answer your question, bẹẹni, ti o ni awọn ere ètò. To be able to talk and give my side on a national level. So one opportunity I don’t take for granted that I’m enjoying doing is giving me a different perspective on a sport that I love. And it’s something that it can set me up for the rest of my life as something to do post-boxing. Ṣugbọn, obviously not straying away from the main task at hand, boxing obviously is what I love to do and just the forefront. So I’m 110% focused on what we’re doing actually inside the ring.

 

But on my spare time in between fights, it’s something that I also like to do and stay busy. But the most part is just building the brand. Ti o ni ohun ti a ba ṣe. We’re building the Danny Jacobs brand and I’m having fun doing it but I’m taking it seriously because, se o mo, boxing is a very short road and I’m going to fall back on this as well.

 

So just trying to take everything serious and trying to give the best that I have and seeing that it’s been working thus far. So God has definitely blessed me and I’m just looking forward to everything in the near future. This opportunity to fight Sergio is a heck of an opportunity for me in my mind. I think it’s one heck of a step-up as well.

 

So I’m just looking forward to what life has in store for me and my career in the future.

 

L. DiBella

We’re going to move on to the main event of the evening right now. But once again, this is Premier Boxing Champions on ESPN from Barclays Center on August 1. It’s primetime in ESPN, coverage beginning at 9:00 pm ET/6:00 pm PT. Tickets are from $250 down to $45 available at BarclaysCenter.com, Ticketmaster.com, the Box Office at Barclays or by calling Ticketmaster or calling Barclays Center.

 

The main event is a classic Philadelphia versus Brooklyn matchup, featuring two of boxing’s biggest stars. And it’s a must-win situation for both fighters when Danny “Swift” Garcia takes on Paulie “Idán Eniyan” Malignaggi. O ni 12 rounds at welterweight at 147 poun.

 

Interestingly, both of these fighters participated at Barclays Center inaugural boxing card in 2012.

 

Danny Garcia, the former Unified Welterweight Champion, made five defenses Junior Welterweight Champion, made five defenses of his belt. It’ll mark Danny’s official move up to welterweight and his fifth appearance at Barclays Center. On his last fight, he had a really tough win and a really hard-fought fight with Lamont Peterson.

 

Lori August 1, he has his hands full with Paulie Malignaggi, former Welterweight and Junior Welterweight World Champion, ni a gba ti 33-6. It’s Paulie’s fourth fight at Barclays Center. He defeated Pablo Cesar Cano and Zab Judah there and he lost close split decision to Adrien Broner.

 

Paulie, do you want to start by saying a few words?

 

Paulie Malignaggi

E dupe, Lou. Bẹẹni, I’m just really feeling blessed to have the opportunity. It was an opportunity that I didn’t see coming my way after pulling out of the O’Connor fight earlier in the summer and then now trying to back up into the fall. I’m just really trying to sit back and enjoy the summer more so than training and whatnot.

 

This kind of opportunity just fell into my lap. It was unexpected. But I’m all about competing against the best. As surprised that I was, it was also an opportunity I couldn’t say no to. It’s a chance to, be back in the main spotlight with that kind of a fight, be at the forefront which are the kind of fights that I crave, anyway, and the kind of fights that really get my adrenaline flowing and get me motivated.

 

I’m fighting one of the best fighters in the world today at any weight. Like Danny Garcia, it’s a motivation to test myself against the best. I always want to test myself against the best, and so here I am.

 

L. DiBella

E dupe, Paulie. Danny “Swift” Garcia, still undefeated, 30-0 pẹlu 17 KOs. Danny?

 

Danny Garcia

Bawo ni o ṣe buruku? First, Mo fẹ lati sọ ti o dara fun enia Friday. Mo lero biotijẹpe gbogbo enia ni nini kan ti o dara ọjọ. O ṣeun fun nini mi lori yi ipe alapejọ.

 

August 1st yi ti ni lilọ lati wa ni miiran nla oru ni Barclays Center. O jẹ mi karun ija nibẹ ati awọn mi akọkọ ija ni 147. Nítorí náà, mo lero bi yi ni a nla matchup, stylistically, si awọn egeb gbogbo ayika aye.

 

Wá August 1st, Mo n lilọ si jẹ setan. Mo n ṣiṣẹ lile. Mo n ikẹkọ lile. Emi ko le duro lati gba ni nibẹ, Trust mi ogbon ati ninu awọn àdánù kilasi.

 

Q

Bawo ni o ṣe rilara, Danny, now moving up to welter?

 

D. Garcia

O kan lara nla. For the first time in a long time, I could worry about training to get better and not training to lose weight. I’ve been fighting at 140 my whole career.

 

I just feel felt like losing the weight was affecting my performances, mostly in the later rounds of big fights because I will use a lot of my energy losing weight. I think I’m just going toI’ve been feeling a lot stronger and a lot better at 147. I think I should have been moved up maybe after the Mattysse fight.

 

But I’m here now and I feel good. Mo lero lagbara. Mo n ikẹkọ lile. And we’re working on new things just to get faster and stronger at 147.

 

Q

Did the weight loss hurt you against Lamont Peterson you think?

 

D. Garcia

I’m not making any excuses. He had a good game plan. I just didn’t feel strong at that weight class anymore.

 

Ṣaaju ki o to, when I hit guys, I could feel the power going through my arms. And when I land a shot, I knew I would hurt them. I just didn’t feel strong at the weight class no more. I just felt like I was hurt myself. I just didn’t feel as strong at 140 anymore.

 

Q

Paulie, just talk about getting back in the ring after the Porter fight and this opportunity for you.

 

P. Malignaggi

I feel blessed just to get the opportunity and to get a chance to continue to test myself against one of the best fighters in the world.

 

You get to the point when you’re not in the ring for a while. It’s going through my mind that maybe I don’t want to fight. But as time went by and I started working out again, I started realizing that it was something I missed. It was something I was still craving. I wanted to be back in there.

 

Odun yi, gegebi bi, has been different than a lot of years. I’ve always had my fight and then I’ve gone right back into just hanging out. I’ve spent almost the entire year in the gym. And I’ve been able to balance it out with all my travel with my commentating. I was in Sadam Ali’s camp for his fight.. I went right into my own training camp for Danny O’Connor and I got cut just two weeks before that scheduled fight. Then I got a call for this fight not long after that.

 

I’ve spent a large chunk of the year in the gym, which is something that hasn’t happened in a long time. And I feel sharp before that. If we’re going to talk about the layoff, people are going to talk about the fact that, I haven’t fought for a long time. But in reality, I actually haven’t trained this consistently in a decade, I mean literally a decade. Since I fought Miguel Cotto, I started making pretty good money after that and I haven’t stayed all year in the gym. Ṣaaju ki o to pe, I was in the gym all year, se o mo.

 

I didn’t even mean to do it by design. It’s not like I said, “Oh, odun yi, I’m going to spend the whole year in the gym.I didn’tit’s not something I planned. It’s just something that ended up happening going from one camp into another camp, into another camp. And I guess it’s just an accident.

 

But I do feel the sharpness in a gym. I do feel the timing is really good. Obviously my weight has come down. Nítorí, that’s a good feeling knowing that I have to drop a lot of weight during the training camp just working on the sharpness and keep getting better.

 

Q

Was there ever any serious consideration about retiring after the Porter fight or was that just suddenly flowing around out there?

 

P. Malignaggi

It wasn’t even something I considered. It was just something that I felt like I was going to do, se o mo. I just felt like, I don’t really want to do this, in the time, the way I felt, where my mind was at. And it was just something I didn’t want to do anymore.

 

So I think that’s probably the best thing that happened to me in terms of thinking it like that. Not talking about the loss, but in terms of my mindset in that moment was probably the best thing because if you start to tell yourself you’re going to have a layoff and you’re going to come back, in the back of your mind, you’re never going to take that time off the right way. You’re going to be thinking about you should be back in a gym or when is the right time to get back in the gym.

 

But because I wasn’t thinking that, I was just thinking, “Ṣe o mọ kini, Mo ti ṣe,” I gave myself plenty of time to kind of rejuvenate a little bit before I got back in the gym. And then I just decided, “Hey, you know what, I miss this. I want to get back in the gym.

 

So I think the change of my mind was probably a good thing as opposed to just telling myself, “Ṣe o mọ kini, I’m going to take some time off and then come back.” Mo gan ko ro Mo ti lilọ lati wa si pada. Nítorí náà, nígbà Mo si mu awọn akoko pipa, o je looto bi akoko kan tí mo ti wà legitimately, ninu mi lokan, inú simi ati ki o ni ara mi rejuvenated lai ani fun mimo ti o. Ati ki o si nipa awọn akoko ti mo ni pada ninu awọn idaraya, o wà bi lati gbiyanju Títún titun kan fun mi, bẹ si sọrọ.

 

Q

Ṣe o ro wipe eyi le jẹ ju Elo ti a stepup lẹhin ti o ba ti wa ni lilọ si ija Danny O'Connor lẹhin ti awọn gun layoff?

 

P. Malignaggi

Mo ti a ti ya kosi. First, I didn’t realize Danny was actually going to move to welter right away. I figured like he was having trouble making the junior welterweight limit. But I had heard rumblings that he still wanted to stay a junior welter for a little longer.

 

I was surprised just in general that he’s moving to welterweight. And then I was surprised, coming off the layoff, I thought maybe that we’ll get somebody else, instead of me to fight Danny.

 

When I got the call, Mo ti wà yà. But it was almost like pleasantly surprised. And not because I don’t respect Danny because I do, I got a lot of respect for Danny and family and his father and everything, but I’m a competitor. I haven’t had a big fight in over a year. So it’s just like, ọkan, this is an opportunity for me to kind of put myself back in the mix with one really good performance as opposed to slowly getting back in the mix over the course of three, four fights.

 

I’m 34-years-old. I’m not 24. So I don’t really have that kind of patience anymore. Ni akoko kan naa, when I got the call, I also realized how good I had felt in the gym sparring and how good I’ve been feeling in the gym just getting shaped or whatnot. So I felt like I could just flow right into another training camp, because I hadn’t taken that long a time off after I had been cut for the O’Connor camp. I actually still kept training.

 

So my weight was still good. It kind of made sense on a lot of fronts. I didn’t tell myself, “Oh, it’s a big step-up after a layoff.I didn’t look at it like that. I looked at it from more of a positive perspective.

 

Q

Are there any health concerns for you or just heading into this fight?

 

P. Malignaggi

I don’t ever think about this stuff, ọkan. You have to have a short memory in boxing. And that applies to both when you look good and when you look bad. So whatever has happened to you in the past, it doesn’t matter whether it was good or bad. You can’t take that in the ring with you in your next performance. You’re starting a new chapter every time you step in the ring for round one in your next fight.

 

So I know as far as round one, it’s a new chapter for me. And so I don’t consider, I don’t think about what’s happened to me in the past, whether it was good or bad. But it’s something that I haven’t thought about in a long time and it doesn’t go through my mind.

 

Q

Danny is this an effort for you to feel what a 147-fight feels like?

 

D. Garcia

This is a fight my manager wanted. He gave me the call. He made this fight. And like any other fight, he did ask me, “Hey, do you want to fight this guy?” And then we say, “Bẹẹni, we want to fight this guy.

 

So I didn’t go say, “Gee, I want to fight Paulie because he’s not a big puncher,” se o mo, nitori, power is just one of the many skills you need in boxing. I don’t choose the opponent. I don’t hand choose the opponent. Sugbon mo ro wipe ìwò, this is going to be a great fight.

 

Q

And what are you looking for this fight to do in terms of advancing your career should you win the fight? What would be next for you? What are you aiming to do in this division?

 

D. Garcia

Emi ko mo ohun ti ni tókàn. O han ni, ọkan ija ni akoko kan. I got a task in front of me. I got to go in there 110% mentally and physically prepared and just get the job done. Then after that, we can see what’s next for us.

 

Q

Paulie, how do you view a fighter like Danny, a former champion, coming up from 140 si 147?

 

P. Malignaggi

Oh, I think he’s a phenomenal fighter. I even told Danny myself, early on, I wasn’t high on him. Ṣugbọn, I know when he was in the prospect stages, he was beating some really good names and he was hitting a harder road up and a lot of prospects to do, in terms of a guy he has to fight. And he grew on me. I started realizing I’m not looking at this kid the right way. This kid is actually good on a lot of fronts, both from a physical perspective and from a mental perspective, really strong.

 

I’ve always had a lot of respect for him. But in terms of 140, 147, he’s no different than me. I was a junior welterweight champion; I moved into welterweight. So from that front, I don’t even look at myself as a bigger guy or anything. As a matter of fact, he moved up to welterweight at a younger age than when I moved up to welterweight, se o mo. So his body grew into the division a little sooner than my body grew into the division.

 

So I think from that point of view, we both have that in common that we’re both ex-junior welterweight. So from a physical standpoint, I’m not looking at it as having any advantages. It’s just a matter of matching of my skills to his skills.

 

Q

Moving up to 147, do you really feel like you’re going to be able to put a staple on a lot of people’s mouths to shut them up about all the criticism that comes with Danny Garcia?

 

D. Garcia

That’s just boxing. Because I’ve been the underdog before, I’ve been the underdog before and I won. And there was like, “Oh, he got lucky.So it’s either I’m the favorite or the underdog. I can’t listen to none of that stuff after just going through each fight like I was, mentally prepared, physically prepared going in and get the job done.

 

If it’s good enough for the media and it’s good enough for the fans, Inu mi dun. I’m still happy because, it takes a real man to go in there and put gloves on and fight another man for 12 iyipo. It takes a lot of discipline. It’s usually hard work for ten weeks straight waking up every day, doing the same thing, sweat, ẹjẹ, tears, all that stuff.

 

So I would love for the fans and the media to love me. Ṣugbọn, it is what it is, they’re tough on me and that’s what keeps the chip on my shoulder and that’s going to make me train hard every day.

 

Q

Do you see your craftiness advantages that you may have over him that Danny may have a little bit of difficulty with skilled boxers?

 

P. Malignaggi

I think styles make fight. From a style point of view there are things that I feel like I’ll be able to do against Danny. But I also expect Danny had made some adjustments since those fights.

 

When it comes to the Lamont Peterson fight, as I was watching that fight and Lamont started turning things around, I started thinking, maybe Danny, he got in his mind after the first three, four, five rounds that this was the kind of fight this is going to be all night.

 

And when you kind of get into that role in your mind where, hey, ọkan, this is going to be at a slow pace fight and you’re going to go through the motions in the fourth round. And then suddenly the script gets switched on you; you weren’t ready.

 

I felt like Lamont almost caught Danny in a sleep. And so from there, I don’t know that Danny would make a mistake again. The pace was so slow early on. I felt like I put myself in Danny’s shoes and I said, “Ṣe o mọ kini, if I was Danny, I would probably be thinking two, mẹta, four rounds. O n niyen. This is the kind of fight we’re going to fight for 12 iyipo. So I wouldn’t be ready when suddenly he got turned off. Because if in your mind you put inif you put in your mindset that’s how the fight is going to be and then things switched, then you kind of get caught sleeping.

 

So I felt like maybe it was a learning experience for Danny. But as far as from the stylistic point of view, yes I like the way my boxing skills match up to his. I’m sure there’s things he feels he can do to me as well. And that’s kind of why we get in the ring, we compete with each other and you match up skills. But I’m sure both of us have certain advantages over the other that we’re both going to try to apply once the bell rings on August 1st.

 

Q

Do you see that as a must-win situation for you especially coming off the loss with Shawn Porter?

 

P. Malignaggi

I think it’s more must-win for me as far as my own boxing career is concerned. I think there’s no question that from my professional boxing career, not my commentating career; take everything else aside. For the life of my professional boxing career to continue, I feel like this is a must win for sure. I don’t think that there’s much of a must-win for Danny as it is for me.

 

At this level, they’re allyou always feel like it’s must win because you’re always in the mix for a bigger fight if you can win. So it’s always must win. But in reality, I feel like the burden falls on me more than Danny for it to be that kind of must-win.

 

But it’s also nothing new to me. I’ve been written off before. My career was supposed to end in 2009 when I went to Houston, Texas. I just came off the Ricky Hatton loss and I went to Houston to fight Juan Diaz. And no matter what I said in the press conferences, no matter what I’ve said in interviews, I remember just within one year they just kind of felt like this was going to be the end of my career. And so I had to go in there and prove it myself that it wasn’t yet, se o mo.

 

So I had everybodyif I allowed myself to listen to what everybody says, I would have long gone a long time ago because you figure, you teach everybody their lessons and then it happened again in 2012. I got sent to Ukraine. I hadn’t really had a big fight in a couple of years and people just thought I was again sent to Ukraine as a fight just to make a little bit of money and be done. I was surprised that everybody was thinking about me like that again. I was like, “Wow. These people really don’t learn their lesson, you know.

 

And so I went to Ukraine and I’d come back with the WBA Welterweight title at that time. And I was able to turn things around again fromin my career. And those are really two key situations because losses in those two fights would really have erased me from the sport.

 

So I found myself again in this kind of situation. I’m not travelling to anybody’s hometown this time. I’m fighting in my own hometown. But it’s the same situation. It’s kind of the same thing. No matter what I say going into this fight, people are still going to look at it the same way that I’m the opponent and I’m the guy that Danny beats and this is my last fight and I’m just taking this for a payday and all this stuff.

 

So if I hadn’t already been through this, maybe I would worry about it. I remember in 2009, going to Houston, being kind of worried about it, complaining about all kinds of stuff and just not really knowing what I was walking into. I was walking into a dark room. But I’m not walking into a dark room on August 1st. I know exactly what’s going on. I know exactly what the rumblings are in the boxing world. And I know exactly what everybody is saying about the fight.

 

Regardless, ko ṣe pataki. None of it matters. I go in the gym; I do my work every day. I know my mindset. It’s focused. It’s ready. And I know I’m going there to do work on August 1st. And nobody’s opinion is going to matter when the bell rings. But you can’t take people’s opinions in the ring with you, lẹẹkansi, whether they’d be good or whether they’d be bad. Nobody’s opinion comes in the ring with you. It has absolutely no bearing on who wins each and every single round.

 

Q

Danny, what things have you been able to do this time around doing training that you could not do in the past because you had to make 140?

 

D. Garcia

We added things to our workout now. We added a lot of explosive workouts, a lot of agility, a lot of footwork, a lot of things to making you more explosive, things I couldn’t do at 140 because I didn’t have the energy for it. But now the extra weight is really helping me. I’m eatingI’m adding more meals to my base to make me stronger, like before I had to skip meals. I was always weak.

 

Q

When we’re thinking about this, your training in the gym, do you 100% know how good you’re going to be as far as the sharpness and what you have left at 34? Or does it remain to be seen, you’ll only know on fight night?

 

P. Malignaggi

Fight night you can feel any which way. You can have a good camp but sometimes have a bad night. You can have a bad camp and have a good night. You don’t know how you’re going to be on fight night until you wake up the morning of the fight.

 

But I will say this, I’m having a good camp. And it mainly has to do with the fact that I’ve flown from one camp to another to another and I’ve been able to keep working on my skills and keep working on my sharpness. My weight has stayed low because of the fact that I have consistent training, consistent sparring.

 

I really like the way I’m feeling right now. I like the rhythm that I’m in when I’m in the gym. I like the flow. We’re just going to try to bring this sharp camp into the fight.

 

Q

Do you believe that you got the fight because they believed that you were a faded fighter?

 

P. Malignaggi

I didn’t go that deep into thinking. When I got the call, I was just surprised. Rhen I got the thinking, bi, ọkan, that’s a big fight. Any competitor wants big fights and wants to be in the limelight and wants to be on the big stage. I was wondering if I would ever get a chance to fight on this stage again.

 

I was more just surprised than anything else. I didn’t really go into thinking as to why I got the fight or why I got offered the fight or whatnot. I think that’s more your guys’ ise. And I’m sure they let me know about it on Twitter and in the media why I’ve got this fight. Even if I didn’t think about it, just seeing what everybody says about it, I kind of get the gist of it.

 

If that’s the reason I got offered the fight, it’s the same reason I got offered the Juan Diaz fight in Houston in ’09. It’s the same reason I got the Vyacheslav Senchenko fight in Ukraine in 2012. And my confidence comes from me knowing I have the mental capacity to not let that kind of pressure bother me and have the mental capacity to just go into my zone and eliminate all the negativity from my mind.

 

Danny said earlier he would love the media and the fans to love him. I couldn’t care less whether anybody loves me or hates me. And I think the body of my work throughout my career or the things that I said, the things that I do, shows that I could care less whether anybody loves me or hates. I go out there to do a job. I’m a competitor. I love competing. I love the adrenaline rush of combat at the highest level and testing myself against the best fighters in the world.

 

That’s why I do this. Mo ni ife lati ja – I love to see where I’m at. And on August 1st, I’ll show myself.

 

Q

Danny, where is dad, Angel Garcia?

 

D. Garcia

My dad is doing well. Ni bayi, he’s at a shop. He owns and runs a business. Angel is just being Angel right now. I won’t see him until 5 wakati kẹsan. Only the Lord knows what he’s doing right now.

 

Q

I would say some of the best work that you have done in the ring is by out-foxing heavy-handed opponents. How much of the old fox are we going to see? How is he again against Danny Garcia?

 

P. Malignaggi

I think for the most part, people know Danny’s style, people know my style. We’re going to make some adjustments to each other, both as part of the game plan and once we see each other in the ring.

 

I can’t really tell you exactly how I’m going to play it out until I’m in the ring myself. I plan on being the best me possible. I plan on being the sharpest me possible. And right now, in training, Mo lero gan ti o dara. The plan is to flow this training camp into a sharp night on August 1st.

 

Q

How long have you been thinking about the move up to welter?

 

D. Garcia

I believe right after the Matthysse fight I wanted to move up. I felt like that was a perfect time for me to move up because I beat the best 140-pounder at that time. I had beat Khan and then I came back and beat Morales and Matthysse.

 

I beat two of the best 140-pounders, so I feel like it’s time for me to go up to 147. But they had different plans for me. Me and my team, we decided to stay at 140 for a little longer to see how it played out. I just wasn’t fully strong at the weight class anymore. I just wasn’t fully strong anymore. So I felt like it’s time for me to go up to 147.

 

Q

How confident do you feel that you can become world champion again against the likes of Thurman, Kell Brook, perhaps a rematch against Amir Khan?

 

D. Garcia

Mo wa gan igboya. I faced a lot of good fighters. I faced a lot of great fighters in my career. I have a lot of experience. I was a big 140-pound fighter. I’ve never faced a 140-pound fighter who was taller than me or who looked better than me.

 

I was just squeezing my body down to 140. And I feel like I’m going to be a way better fighter at 147 and be able to use my legs more. Ni 140, I felt like I wasn’t strong no more, so I just had to walk forward all night and knock my opponents out.

 

But I feel like at 147, you’re going to see a more athletic Danny Garcia and be able to use my legs more, using my jab more and see punches clearer. When you drain yourself as hard to see punches, then you get hit with a lot of dumb punches because your vision is not clear.

 

I feel like my vision is going to be a lot clearer and be able to move my head, see the punches better, use my feet. And I think I’m going to be a champion at 147, ju. I know so.

 

L. DiBella

Pẹlu ti, e dupe, gbogbo ènìyàn, for joining us for this PBC on ESPN call.

 

Lẹẹkansi, it’ll be Danny “Swift” Garcia against Paulie “Idán Eniyan” Malignaggi, and Danny Jacobs against Sergio Mora in the opening bout at Barclays Center, August 1, primetime on ESPN, coverage beginning at 9:00 pm ET/6:00 pm PT.

 

# # #

Ni afikun si awọn aṣalẹ ile akọkọ iṣẹlẹ ati àjọ-akọkọ iṣẹlẹ, yan undercard bouts yoo wa ni ti gbe ifiwe lori ESPN3. ESPN Deportes yoo tun televise ni ija ifiwe bi ara ti awọn oniwe- Night njà jara ati ESPN International yio si mu ifiwe agbegbe kọja awọn oniwe-nẹtiwọki ni Latin America, Brazil, Caribbea ati Pacific rim. Live agbegbe ni yio tun je wa nipasẹ WatchESPN lori kọmputa, fonutologbolori, -kóró, Amazon Fire TV ati Fire TV Stick, Apple TV, Chromecast, Odun, Xbox 360 ati Xbox Ọkan nipasẹ ohun to olupese fidio.

 

Fun alaye diẹ ẹ ibewo www.premierboxingchampions.com, www.barclayscenter.com atiwww.dbe1.com. Tẹle lori TwitterPremierBoxing, DannySwift, PaulMalignaggi, LouDiBella, ESPNBoxing, BarclaysCenter AtiSwanson_Comm ki o si di kan àìpẹ lori Facebook niwww.Facebook.com/PremierBoxingChampions, www.facebook.com/fanpagedannyswiftgarcia,www.facebook.com/PaulMalignaggi, www.facebook.com/barclayscenteratiwww.facebook.com/ESPN. Tẹle awọn ibaraẹnisọrọ nipa lilo #PBConESPN ati #BrooklynBoxing.

Alistair Overeem pataki alejo ni M-1 Ipenija 59: Ogun ti Narts 5

 

Kharitonov vs. Garner 2 awọn akọle July 3 in Astana, Kasakisitani

ST. Petersburg, Russia (June 25, 2015) – MMA Star Alistair Overeem ni yio je pataki kan alejo ti M-1 Global ati akọkọ iṣẹlẹ Onija Sergei “The Paratrooper” Kharitonov on July 3 ni M-1 Ipenija 59: Ogun ti nomads 5 in Astana, Kasakisitani.

Kharitonov (22-5-0, 12 KO / TKO, 9 Iha), ti o dojukọ Kenny “Deuce” Garner (16-8-0, 9 KO / TKO, 4 Iha) ni won ti ifojusọna gíga rematch, ati Overeem ni o wa longtime ikẹkọ awọn alabašepọ. Ni pato, awọn mejeji ti ja lemeji. Ni 2006, Kharitonov dislocated rẹ ejika o si tapped jade lodi si Overeem ni Igberaga 31 in Japan. Ni awọn K-1 akoni ká figagbaga 1 ½ ọdun nigbamii, Kharitonov duro lori Overeem punches ni šiši yika.

Overeem (39-14-0, 1 NC), ti a bí ni England ati njà jade kuro ninu The Netherlands, jà ni M-1 Agbaye pada ni 2002. O si fi agbara mu Sergey Kaznovsky sinu kan akọkọ-yika ifakalẹ nipasẹ awọn ẹya apa-titiipa ni M-1 MFC: Russia vs. World 3 ni St. Petersburg, Russia.

M-1 Ipenija 59 ao si san ifiwe lati Kasakisitani ni giga definition loriwww.M1Global.TV. Awọn oluwo yoo ni anfani lati wo awọn alakoko ti njà ati akọkọ kaadi nípa wíwọlé lori lati forukọsilẹ ni www.M1Global.TV. Egeb le wo gbogbo awọn ti awọn igbese lori wọn kọmputa, bi daradara bi lori Andriod ati Apple smati awọn foonu ati awọn tabulẹti.

Ja Network yoo air M-1 Ipenija 59 gbe lori Cablevision ká iṣẹ ni TV, Grande Communications, Shentel Cable ati Armstrong Cable ni U.S., bi daradara bi orilẹ-in Canada, Roku ẹrọ kọja North America, ki o si agbaye ni diẹ ju 30 awọn orilẹ-ede jakejado Europe, Africa ati awọn Aringbungbun East.

 

 

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CANCER SURVIVOR AND MIDDLEWEIGHT WORLD CHAMPION DANIEL “Iyanu ENIYAN” Jacobs Bẹ ỌMỌDE fowo nipa akàn

NIU YOKI (June 25, 2015) – Akàn kù ati Middleweight World asiwaju Daniel “Awọn siseyanu Eniyan” Jacobs (29-1, 26 KOs) tesiwaju lati tan re iwunilori itan ti perseverance ose yi nipa ṣiṣe ọdọọdun si Gilda ká ​​Club ni Warminster, PA lojo tuside ati Morgan Stanley Children ká Iwosan ni New York ni ojo wedineside bi ara rẹ Get In The Ring Foundation awujo noya. Jacobs si mu akoko ti jade ikẹkọ fun re Saturday, August 1 Ijoba Boxing Awọn aṣaju-ija lori ESPN akọle olugbeja lodi si Sergio “The Latin Ejo” Mora (28-3-2, 9 KOs) ni Barclays ile-iṣẹ ni ilu ti Brooklyn.

 

Photo: Daniel Jacobs pẹlu awọn ọmọ ni Gilda ká ​​Club

Ike: Kathryn Brown / Gba Ni The Iwọn Foundation

 

Jacobs bori rẹ ija pẹlu osteosarcoma, kan toje fọọmu ti egungun akàn, ati awọn ti o ireti wipe re ìyanu imularada ati apadabọ le sin lati ru awọn ọmọde ti o ti a ti fowo nipasẹ akàn.

 

“Wọnyi awọn ọmọ wẹwẹ mọ italaya ti akàn le mu,” Jacobs si wi. “Ṣugbọn nigbati o ri ẹnikan ninu mi ipo — a aye asiwaju ti o bori akàn ati ti wa ni ṣe bẹ Elo lẹhin ti imularada — o le fun wọn kan ori ti ireti. Mo fẹ lati pin awọn ogun Mo ti sọ ní, ki o le fun awọn ọmọ wẹwẹ o kan kekere kan diẹ ara rþ ni awọn ogun ati awọn sisegun ti won ba ti nkọju si ọna bayi.”

 

Bi Jacobs n murasilẹ soke fun ija re pada inu awọn squared Circle lori August 1, o jẹ ireti pe rẹ akitiyan ose yi yoo ran awọn ọmọ ni Gilda ká ​​Club ati Morgan Stanley Children ká Hospital gbagbo pe won ni o wa ninu aye aṣaju-an gẹgẹ bí ó ti jẹ ninu awọn iwọn.

 

# # #

Tiketi: Tiketi fun awọn ifiwe iṣẹlẹ, eyi ti o ti ni igbega nipa DiBella Idanilaraya, ti wa ni owole ni $250, $150, $75 ati $45, ko pẹlu wulo iṣẹ owo ati ori, ki o si ni o wa lori tita to bayi. Tiketi wa ni www.barclayscenter.com,www.ticketmaster.com and at the American Express Box Office at Barclays Center now. Lati gba agbara nipa foonu, pe Ticketmaster ni (800) 745-3000. Fun ẹgbẹ tiketi, jọwọ pe 855-Group-BK.

 

Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii lori Get Ni The Iwọn Foundation imeeli kathrynbrown@getinthering.net.

Adam Lopez – Eliecer Aquino bayi fun WBA FEDELATIN & WBC adele Latino Super Bantamweight akọle lori ShoBox , July 17 ni Sands Casino asegbeyin ti Betlehemu

Antoine Douglas – Istavan Szili ni 10-yika Middleweight akọkọ iṣẹlẹ; Derrick Webster lati ya lori Arif Magomedov ati Jerry Odom lati ogun Samuel Clarkson ni šiši ija ti televised quadruple-akọsori

Betlehemu, PA (June 25, 2015)–Lori Friday, July 17 ni Sands Casino asegbeyin ti Betlehemu, Adam Lopez (12-0, 6 KO ká) ti San Antonio, Texas yoo gba lori Eliecer Aquino fun awọn WBA FEDELATIN & WBC adele Latino Super Bantamweight akọle eyi ti yoo sin bi awọn 2nd ija ti a ńlá quadruple-akọsori ti yoo wa ni ifiwe televised lori Showtime ká eye gba ShoBox: The New generation.

Awọn ija ti wa ni igbega nipa GH3 ni igbega ati ki o yoo ni atilẹyin 10-yika Middleweight akọkọ iṣẹlẹ iṣẹlẹ laarin undefeated Onija ká Antoine Douglas (17-0-1, 11 KO ká) ti Burke, Orúkọàyè Istavan ati awọn Silicones (18-0-2, 8 KO ká) ti Frenkendorf, Switzerland. Ni awọn àjọ-ẹya-ara, Derrick Webster (19-0, 10 KO ká) ti Glassboro, Awon ara New Jersey yoo gba lori Arif Magomedov (15-0, 9 KO ká) ti Chekhov, Russia ni a 10-yika Middleweight ija. Awọn šiši ija yoo ọfin Super Middleweights Jerry Odom (13-1, 11 KO ká) ti Washington, DC ati Samuel Clarkson (14-3, 8 KO ká) ti Ceder Hill, TX ni a se eto fun ija-8 iyipo.

Diẹ ninu awọn ti o dara ju Talent ni orile-ede yio jẹ lori ifihan lori awọn ti kii-televised undercard bi eto lati han yoo jẹ Boxcino 2015 Jr. Middleweight asiwaju John Thompson (17-1, 6 KO ká) ti Newark, Awon ara New Jersey; Light Heavyweight Lavarn Harvell (14-1, 7 KO ká) ti Atlantic City, Awon ara New Jersey; Super Middleweight Christopher Brooker (3-0, 3 KO ká) ti Philadelphia, PA; Super Bantamweight Manny wère (4-0, 3 KO ká) ti Philadelphia, PA; Lightweight Samuel Seah (5-1, 3 KO ká) ati Lightweight Bienvenidio Diaz (2-0, 2 KO ká) ti Paterson, Awon ara New Jersey yoo ri gbogbo igbese.

Tun lori kaadi yio je kan 4-yika Jr. Middleweight ija laarin Ricky Nuno (1-0) ti Betlehemu, PA mu lori Tim Kunkel.

Tiketi ti wa ni owole ni $100, $75 ati $50 ati ki o le wa ni ra ni Ticketmaster ati www.ticketmaster.com

GH3 ni igbega ẹya undefeated Middleweight Antoine Douglas, Super Middleweight ká Jerry Odom & Derrick Webster, undefeated Super Bantamweight Adam Lopez bi daradara bi Boxcino 2015 Jr. Middleweight asiwaju John Thompson, Jr., undefeated Welterweight Jerrell Harris,undefeated Super Bantamweight Qa'id Muhammad, lightweight Oscar Bonilla, Heavyweight Natu Visinia ati Light Heavyweight Lavarn Harvell si GH3 ni igbega idurosinsin.

Sonny Fredrickson si maa wa pipe nipa idekun Juan Santiago ni 2 iyipo lori Andre Ward – Paul Smith kaadi in Oakland

Photo by Tom Hogan / Roc Nation idaraya

Toledo, Iyen (Oṣù 25, 2015)–This past Saturday night at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., top lightweight prospect SONNY FREDRICKSON (9-0, 6 KO ká) had to dig down deep and get up from the canvas on his way to stopping tough 29-fight veteran Juan Santiago in the second round of their scheduled six-round bout which took place on the Andre Ward vs. Paul Smith undercard.

Fredrickson dominated the first round and it was looking like an easy night as he scored a knockdown at the end of the frame. As Fredrickson went in for the finish, he was a little careless and got caught with a perfect counterpunch that sent him the canvas for the first time as a pro or amateur.

Fredrickson fi pari ti a asiwaju ninu sise, came back in round two and landed some booming shots that hurt Santiago and the fight was rightfully waved off.

“O je kan nla iriri eko,” wi Fredrickson ti akọkọ
yika knockdown. “Santiago je alakikanju, I got a little reckless and paid the price. Ani a odaran alatako jẹ stilldangerous, ki Mo ti yoo pato mu eyi ẹkọ si ọkàn mi lati ṣe abetter Onija.”

“Mo wa dun pẹlu awọn gun ati lati fun egeb ohun moriwu show. I’m going to get right back in the gym and look forward to fighting again very soon.

Fredrickson ti wa ni itọju rẹ nipa Boxing attorney Rick Torres ti Gun idaraya Idanilaraya.

Gun idaraya & Idanilaraya jẹ a ṣẹṣẹ akoso elere-ije isakoso ile-pẹlu awọn ifiweranṣẹ ni New York ati Las fegasi. Founded by noted sports attorney Rick Torres and boxing trainer Michael Leanardi, Gun ti ni imurasilẹ kọ ohun ìkan-idurosinsin ti odo asesewa ti o ireti lati ọkọ iyawo fun ojo iwaju stardom. Gun idaraya’ aaye ayelujara ni www.victorysportsent.com

Boxing TÍ iwon-FUN-iwon asiwaju Floyd “Owo” MAYWEATHER yiya lati gba Espy yiyan FUN “Ti o dara ju Onija” OF 2015

(Photo Ike: Stephanie Trapp / Mayweather ni igbega)

Las fegasi (June 24, 2015) – Mejila-aye akoko asiwaju ati ki o Ikinilẹṣẹ ká nọmba kan ifamọra Floyd “Owo” Mayweather tẹsiwaju lati agbeko soke ọmọ accolades bi o ti kede loni tí ó ti a ti yan fun awọn 2015 Espy Eye fun “Ti o dara ju Onija.” Pẹlu yi yiyan, Mayweather ni o ni anfaani lati win rẹ keje “Ti o dara ju Onija” Espy ati awọn kẹrin ni ọna kan.

 

Egeb le dibo ko ni http://espn.go.com/espys/2015/. Idibo tilekun lori Wednesday, July 15 saju si Espy ká telecast ni 8 p.m. ATI.

 

Mayweather jẹ alabapade pipa rẹ itan ìṣẹgun ni May lori Manny Pacquiao ni a ija ti o kó awọn akiyesi ti aye nigba ti kikan afonifoji igbasilẹ. Eleyi iṣẹlẹ ti ipilẹṣẹ ohun ìyanu $600 million, ṣiṣe awọn ti o julọ awọn julọ lucrative ọkan-ọjọ akariaye iṣẹlẹ ninu itan.

 

Ni afikun, Mayweather a npè ni agbaye ga san elere-ije by Forbes Iwe irohin fun awọn keji odun itẹlera nigba ti laipe gbigba awọn “Gẹgẹ” (The o dara ju Lailai) eye ni Spike ká buruku fẹ Awards kẹhin Thursday.

 

The Nevada Boxing Hall ti loruko ti tun lola u bi a nominee fun “Onija ti Odun”, ohun eye ti o ti gba kọọkan ninu awọn meji ti tẹlẹ odun ti o ti fi jade.

 

“O ti a miran nla odun fun mi, ati egbe mi ati ki o Mo wa gidigidi appreciative lati wa ni yan fun yi eye,” Said Mayweather. “Mi egeb ti se iranwo gba mi si yi ipo ninu mi ọmọ, ati awọn ti wọn support kò lọ lekunrere.”

 

Mayweather ti wa ni tun yan fun awọn tẹtẹ Eye fun Sportsman ti Odun, pẹlú pẹlu NBA irawọ LeBron James, Chris Paul, Stephen Curry ati Seattle Seahawks NFL Star Marshawn Lynch. Awọn Winner ti awọn eye yoo wa ni kede yi Sunday, June 28 ni tẹtẹ Awards ni Los Angeles.

 

“O ko ni gba eyikeyi tobi ju Floyd Mayweather,” Said Leonard Ellerbe, CEO ti Mayweather ni igbega. “Floyd ni nọmba ọkan ifamọra ninu ija ere ati ki o fẹrí hàn pé ó jẹ ọkan ninu awọn tobi fa ni gbogbo awọn ti idaraya. Bi o ti ni igbega ati Mayweather tesiwaju lati adehun igbasilẹ, a ko le dúpẹ lọwọ àwọn egeb to fun won support ati awọn ti a se iwuri fun gbogbo eniyan lati dibo fun Floyd 'o dara ju Onija.'”

Bryan Vera- Rocky Fielding Media Day ntun ati awọn aworan

Liverpool, England (June 24, 2015)– Super Middleweight contender Bryan Vera (23-9, 14 KO ká) ati Rocky Fielding (20-0, 11 KO ká) ti o waye a media sere ise Tuesday ni ilosiwaju ti won ija lori Friday.

Awọn ija yoo gba ibi ni iwoyi Arena, ati awọn ti o jẹ pẹlu rẹ egbe ti o oriširiši arakunrin rẹ Gilbert, faili David Watson ati Matthew Rowland, Igbakeji Aare-of Banner ni igbega.

“A ṣe kan media ọjọ ni iwaju kan ti o dara enia ni Liverpool. A ṣe kan kekere sere ise fun awọn enia. Rocky Fielding fihan soke lẹhin mi, o si ṣe ohun rẹ fun awọn enia,” Said Vera

“Mo mura tan lati mu pada ni igbanu. Mo mura tan ki o si lero nla ni ija 168. Mo ti ja ọpọlọpọ nla onija. Mo ti a ti ni idanwo akoko ati akoko lẹẹkansi. Rocky Fielding mọ pé yi ni ko aṣoju rẹ ija. O si n ija kan akọni ati ki o Mo n bọ lati win. Ki emi ki o mọ.”

San ounje àmì lori bi Title onigbowo ti World jara ti Gbigbogun

Oxnard, California – June 24, 2015 – San ounje, pẹlu kan to lagbara itan ti ni atilẹyin Gbajumo elere idaraya akariaye ati, kede loni pe o ti jimọ soke lori kan ni ileri titun afowopaowo bi akọle onigbowo ti Las fegasi-orisun World jara ti Gbigbogun (WSOF.com).

WSOF jẹ ẹya agbaye dagba ile-iṣẹ igbega si aye asiwaju ọjọgbọn ADALU ologun Arts (MMA) ifiwe isele fun pinpin lori NBCSN ni U.S. bi daradara bi tẹlifisiọnu ni lori 100 awọn orilẹ-ede agbaye. Ni ni ọna kanna ti o ti wa ni San daju lati pese onibara ati oludije pẹlu awọn tobi awọn ọja, WSOF ti wa ni igbẹhin si pese egeb ati awọn onija pẹlu awọn Gbẹhin eré ìdárayá Idanilaraya iriri.

"A ti sọ ti dagba ibasepo pẹlu MMA elere idaraya bi ẹni-kọọkan, pẹlu wa igbowo ti MMA Welterweight asiwaju ati nọmba kan contender Johny Hendricks bi daradara bi nọmba ọkan wa ni ipo Lightweight phenom Khabib Nurmagomedov,"Sọ pé Matt Boldt, San ká Aare, “ati awọn ti a ba iwongba ti nwa siwaju si wa titun tiraka ni atilẹyin iru kan aye-kilasi agbari bi WSOF.

A ti wa ni yiya si orogun pẹlu kan akọkọ-oṣuwọn ounje ile-bi San ti o ti ya iru kan ona lati ṣakoso iṣẹlẹ tita awọn oniwe-oke-ti-ni-ila ọja to MMA ká lailai-dagba jepe,"Wi WSOF Aare, mefa-aye akoko asiwaju ati meji-akoko Hall ti Famer Baba olori.

"Èyí ni, laisi iyemeji a,"Tesiwaju awọn olori, "A nla anfani fun WSOF lati mö ara pẹlu miiran onigbowo alabaṣepọ ti o ti wa ni hù si iperegede ninu awọn oniwe-aaye, ati awọn ti a wa ni igboya pe yi ajọṣepọ yoo ran San significantly faagun awọn oniwe-ifẹsẹtẹ ni MMA ki o si de ọdọ kan ti o tobi nọmba ti awọn onibara afojusun ju lailai ṣaaju ki o to. "

MMA-gbale ti wa ni titi dagba ati WSOF ká agbegbe lori NBCSN, NBC ati agbaye ti wa ni titari si idagba ani siwaju sii. San ti sile kan lailai npo-iwulo ipele lati awọn onija pẹlu iyi si mimu ki agbara ati ìfaradà, ki awọn ti ibasepọ ni pipe baramu.

San oruko yoo han lori titun pakà awọn maati logo, aarin posts, tale of the tape television graphics, ati awọn WSOF yika kaadi omobirin yoo wa ni outfitted pẹlu titun aso ti nso si awọn San logo.

San ounje ti di julọ gbẹkẹle ile-ni awọn ile ise nitori ti awọn esi rere waye nipa eniyan ti o lo San awọn ọja. Lona imo ijinle sayensi nipa sanlalu iwadi, San ounje nigbagbogbo ndagba awọn alagbara julọ ki o si safest awọn afikun wa.

Nipa “World jara ti Gbigbogun” (WSOF)
“World jara ti Gbigbogun” (WSOF) ni a jakejado aye time ọjọgbọn ADALU ologun Arts (MMA) ja igbega igbẹhin si fi awọn ti o dara ju igbese-aba ti njà fun ija egeb nipa producing awọn ti o dara ju ti ṣee ṣe baramu-pipade laarin Gbajumo awọn onija lati kakiri aye. Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii jọwọ lọsi WSOF.com. Tẹle “World jara ti Gbigbogun” on Twitter MMAWorldSeries ati “World jara ti Gbigbogun” Aare Ray Sefo SugarRaySefo.

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