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Boxing News: WBA #1 Buatsi outpoints Stepien » June 29, 2023 – Fight News

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In a meaningful fight between world-rated contenders, undefeated WBA #1, WBO #2, WBC #3, IBF #13 light heavyweight and 2016 Olympic bronze medalist Joshua Buatsi (17-0, 13 KOs) scored a workmanlike ten round unanimous decision over previously unbeaten IBF #4, WBA #13, WBC #14, WBO #14 Pawel Stepien (18-1-1, 12 KOs) on Saturday night at the Resorts World Arena in Birmingham, England. Buatsi was in command all the way in a bout that never really heated up. Scores were 98-92, 97-94, 100-90.
“I’ve been out of the ring for almost a year, so I needed the 10 rounds. I wanted to knock him out, and I’m disappointed I didn’t, but we got the win. If I had lost it, everything would have changed, so I had to be smart,” Buatsi told Sky Sports after the fight.
2020 Olympics silver medallist Ben Whittaker (3-0, 2 KOs) outclassed and kayoed Jordan ‘The Game’ Grant (6-3, 1 KO) in a light heavyweight clash. Whittaker, who landed at will, dropped Grant in round two, then immediately finished him 13 seconds into round three.
2020 Olympic gold medallist Lauren Price MBE (4-0, 1 KO) outpointed former EBU European champion Kirstie Bavington (7-4-2, 2 KOs) over ten rounds to claim the vacant British women’s welterweight title. Scored 100-90 3x. This was the the inaugural British women’s championship fight.
Other Results:
Tyler Denny W8 Macaulay McGowan (middleweight)
Sean McComb W10 Kaisee Benjamin (super lightweight)
Shakan Pitters W8 Joel McIntyre (light heavyweight)
Cori Gibbs w8 Jimmy First (lightweight)
Danny Quartermaine TKO4 Christian Lopez Flores (lightweight)
Lauren Price is going to be a problem. I think she could beat Sandy Ryan right now.
I enjoy following boxing but am not familiar with how rankings are determined. Reading about the Buatsi/Stepien fight I’m wondering why the disparity in rankings for the 2 guys in the same bodies eg Buatsi IBF#13 & Stepien #4 but Buatsi WBC#3 & Stepien #14
Appreciate any advice, thanks
Alan-You and I both.
It’s a really good question with, unfortunately, probably not much of an answer; at least not a direct one. What I will say is that if you follow the rankings enough, you start to notice that all of the organizations tend to have their own ‘habits’ or things that they tend to favor. The obvious ones are that the WBC is Mexican, so they’ll have more Mexicans higher in their rankings (they also seem to be rather fond of Thailand and they also have muay thai champions). The same goes for the WBA with Panama and the WBO with Puerto Rico, but to a lesser degree. The IBF, at least for me, also tend to have strange #1’s. They’ll have a mandatory who either isn’t ranked at all by the others or if he is, is kind of lowly and it’s odd because they’re also the most likely to strip a champion for not satisfying a mandatory.
Thanks, Lucie, appreciate your response

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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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