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Boxing News: Martin edges Harutyunyan in WBC eliminator » July … – Fight News

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In a WBC lightweight eliminator, undefeated WBC #6 Frank “The Ghost” Martin (18-0, 12 KOs) scored a twelve round unanimous decision over previously undefeated WBC #8 Olympic bronze medalist Artem Harutyunyan (12-1, 7 KOs) on Saturday night from the Chelsea at the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas. Many rounds were close. Martin had a big edge in round six, then closed the bout strong forcing Harutyunyan to take a knee in round twelve. Scores were 114-113, 115-112, 115-112.
IBF #13 super lightweight Elvis Rodriguez (15-1-1, 13 KOs) broke down and stopped former world champion Viktor Postol (31-5, 12 KOs) in round seven. Rodriguez dropped Postal at the end of round six and opened the seventh with a brutal assault that rocked Postol promoting a referee’s stoppage. Time was :23.
6’2 welterweight prospect Freudis Rojas (11-0, 11 KOs) stopped Diego Sanchez (19-3, 16 KOs) in round seven of a scheduled 10-rounder. Rojas was in command all the way before Sanchez’ corner requested a stoppage from referee Tony Weeks. Time was :58.
Martin better not underestimate Harutyunyan.
“brutal assault that rocked Postol”? He literally pushed him off balance and then missed with a few punches to get the stoppage. If Postol had done the same to Elvis there is no way the ref would have stopped it.
Very good fight, Artem Harutyunyan won’t the fight for me and a classy fighter
Artem Harutyunyan won the fight for me
Listen he was up by 4 or five going into the last three, but he gave away 10 11, and 12 and took a knee which means the 12th round was an extra bonus point for Frank martin. On all three judges scorecards that 12 mile round mattered, it would have gave him the win. You can’t have given him the fight. That’s four straight points that he lost at the end. He wasn’t that far ahead
Thought Harutyunyan won 5 rounds to 6 but no problem with the close decision.
Regardless, Martin looked beatable.
Same… close fight, but Martin was ascending in a big way late in the fight. It appeared Martin was naturally bigger and just didn’t fade. I only passively watched, but I had it 114-113 for Martin. A point or so either way would’ve been reasonable. I saw two very good fighters in the ring, but not sure I’d call either “great.”
and the announcers chanted martin , martin. martin the first 7 rounds of the fight as he was getting his ass kicked then at the end they show the punch stat numbers where martin landed more punches the winner is determined by the amount of rounds won. another showtime sham
Bob, Steve Farwood has the Martin losing the fight, so I’m not sure what you are talking about. Close bout, but Martin landed the cleaner shots. Many close rounds early, but the rounds Martin won late were clearcut. Too much blocking by Martin, not enough punching. Good learning experience. Martin needs to ramp up his punch out put. Was a little too tentative early on.
For every Martin clean eye popping shot, Harutyunyan landed 2-3 scoring shots…period!
Exactly, Martin’s trainer kept telling him, you are behind, we need to knock him out, get going.
Clear round for Martin: 6, 10,11, & 12
Juan, some judges will award more for those clear connects rather than pity pat shots. I didn’t see the fight yet, so I do not know if harutyunans shots were like that or not. Some judges will give more those pity pat shots that absolutely do nothing to the other fighter a la Loma vs. Haney.
Agree…Kp.. Martin punches just did not come off fast enough..not enough combinations…counters…got better in the latter rounds…good observation Kp…
Agreed, showtimes commentators showed their prejudices once again.
Saw Harutyunyan land 2-4 clean punch combinations without them acknowledging one punch, then Martin counters and lands one good shot and Bernstein and Mauro were tripping over themselves to praise Martin.
Mauro and Bernstein run their mouths with abandon. It is a distraction. I put them on mute at each fight.
Martin underestimated an opponent who fought well tonight, and Martin almost lost…I hope this scared the sh*t out of Martin.
Martin…in my opinion…did not look good early…tooooo tight….expected more…lot to work on…Artem tough…good fight…fun to watch….
Funny that Martin had already called out Tank and Stevenson, among others.
Showtime are most non biased commentators out there ..ESPN are bought and paid for ..remember hbo during a pacquiao fight ..Lampley a joke ..Bernstein is an honest guy..they even said during telecast Romero should have 2 losses and last fight not been stopped
#6 vs #8 ends as a close, “no complaints with the decision outcome”………..as one would expect
If Andy Cruz develops power, which I believe he will, Martin will get KTFO by Cruz at some junction in the next 20 months. Martin is not all that and a bag of chips. Cruz can easily beat Martin. And with a little power push, knock Martin out.
And to think Martin already called out Tank. Now that I’d love to see. I seriously doubt it would go over 4 res or less.
Martin is a dime a dozen prospect..guarantee his career won’t surpass a guy like a Russell. It wasn’t an off night..he got found
Understand your opinion…alot things should be considered though..Martin’s motivation to improve and be consistent….are amongst the elements included…give Martin a chance before you write Martin off….clearly understand your opinion though…looks as if Martin would have a problem with and athletic …slick…fighter… but time will tell…
Martin is overrated
Fight should have been a draw
Artem couldn’t see out of his left eye in the last three, two rounds and he was getting clocked, before that he was clocking Martin with hard shots. It was a draw for me.
i think it was a little bit overhyped but really good fighter barely beating a perceived no namer who apparently is a good fighter himself. i think it was a good fight and a fair decision.

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Big 12 announces conference schedule – Texas Tech Red Raiders – TexasTech.com

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September 26, 2023 | Men's Basketball
By: Wes Bloomquist
Ready for the fight.

??? https://t.co/u76U8y6Xpf pic.twitter.com/SVfd7iX1PK
© 2023 Texas Tech University
2500 Broadway, Lubbock, Texas 79409

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Is the Canelo Alvarez fight perfect timing for Jermell Charlo? Age … – Sporting News

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Since putting on gloves at 13 years old, Canelo Alvarez has gone from red-haired rookie sensation to boxing royalty.
Born in Guadalajara, the Mexican star has won gold in four divisions and he’s the current undisputed super middleweight champion. He has beaten the best in boxing, including Shane Mosley, Miguel Cotto, Amir Khan, and Gennadiy Golovkin.
Now 33, the battle-hardened Canelo has transitioned into the “veteran” category and some feel his best years are behind him. He now seeks to prove his doubters wrong when he defends his titles against Jermell Charlo on September 30. 
“I always believe that I’m number one, my whole career,” Canelo said at a media workout. “You need to believe in yourself, I still believe I’m number one. But I believe there is more than just one fighter alone at the top, there are a few. I still feel young and fresh. I never think about the end of my career. I just train and fight year after year. I still feel that I’m at my best.”
The Canelo-Charlo fight takes place at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, a familiar home for Canelo, whereas Charlo is headlining there for the first time. The 12-round bout, plus undercard action, will air on Showtime PPV in the U.S. and DAZN in the U.K.
MORE: The best five years in boxing history revisited
Per Sports Interaction, Canelo is the -388 favorite, while Charlo, the undisputed super welterweight champion, is the +288 underdog. Despite those odds, Charlo, also 33, sees himself as the better fighter.
“This is the biggest fight in boxing, and I’m coming to leave it all in the ring like I do every time,” Charlo said. “I manifested this fight into existence and earned it with everything I’ve done in this sport so far. Canelo is a great fighter, but he’s gonna see what Lions Only is all about. When the fight’s over, people are gonna have to recognize that I’m the best fighter in the sport.” 
Charlo is not worried about the weight gain, having to move up two weight classes to take on Canelo. Sparring big men and working alongside his brother Jermall, the WBC middleweight champion, Jermell believes this is the perfect time to fight Canelo.
Does Charlo have a fair point? Could Canelo be overlooking the supposedly smaller man?

Canelo already announced his intentions on The Breakfast Club to retire around 36-37. He even teased retirement if he lost to John Ryder in May, which is a fight he would go on to win by unanimous decision. A former pound-for-pound No. 1, Canelo has tough challenges ahead of him outside of Charlo, including David Benavidez and a potential rematch against light heavyweight champion Dmitry Bivol. 
Boxing great Bernard Hopkins believes Charlo is a different challenge for Canelo, who hasn’t fought below super middleweight since 2019.
WATCH: Canelo Alvarez vs. Jermell Charlo, live on DAZN
“His style is totally different from the styles that Canelo has fought. [Charlo is] younger, more determined to prove that Canelo’s time has been great, but it’s up,” Hopkins told Fight Hype via Boxing Social. “I just believe that Canelo will have to get him out of there early. The later the fight goes, the more Canelo will start showing not only his age but he’ll start showing the success he’s been enjoying for so long is starting to look different.
“I see hard-earned, skillful moments in that fight where [Charlo], who wants to prove himself, will come out and show us something that we knew he had, but he’s never had to show it till he steps in with Canelo. Canelo elevates Charlo. I just think he has the skills, and if he maintains that mentality, it can be really a nightmare for Canelo, based on style.”
Charlo was supposed to fight Tim Tszyu for super welterweight gold before a hand injury nixed a planned bout. He wants to become undisputed at 168, return to 154, and potentially take on pound-for-pound No. 1 Terence Crawford. Regardless of his upcoming plans, Charlo’s focus is solely on beating Canelo, the man who has had beef with both brothers. 
Holding more gold and honoring family is enough motivation for Charlo. Though he has proven everyone wrong over the years, the current uncertainty surrounding Canelo may be the perfect time for the Louisiana-born Charlo to face the super middleweight king.

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US says to complete offshore wind auctions on schedule next year – ETEnergyWorld

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US says to complete offshore wind auctions on schedule next year  ETEnergyWorld
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