Dmitry Bivol took the “0” from Artur Beterbiev, as Beterbiev did to him last year | Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing

Dmitry Bivol took the “0” from Artur Beterbiev, as Beterbiev did to him last year, plus more from Riyadh and elsewhere in boxing!

Dmitry Bivol gets revenge, goes undisputed at 175

The obvious biggest story of the week is that Dmitry Bivol rallied to cleanly beat Artur Beterbiev in Saturday’s huge rematch from Riyadh, taking the undisputed light heavyweight championship in another excellent fight between two of the best of an entire generation, and the obvious two best 175 lb fighters of said generation.

Bivol was down early this time around, sort of a flip from the first fight, and he weathered some impressive storms from Beterbiev, who faded in the middle but did work hard to take the fight back late, resulting in a tight but fairly scored majority decision win for Bivol.

A neat extra note: The scores of this fight (114-114, 115-113, 116-112) were exactly the same as the scores from the first fight, just in reverse. So after 24 rounds, these two are literally as even as they can possibly be by the official scores; if you add them up, you can say they are are even at 228-228 on three cards.

A third fight beckons and seems highly likely.

ApoptosisJones
I really don’t have anything eloquent or intelligent to say about this fight, so I’ll leave it with this:
Absolutely top-quality boxing from two masters of the sport. Thanks to both Beterbiev and Bivol for leaving it all out there tonight, and to the whole BLH community for being the best place to watch boxing. I’ve been waltzing around the rest of the evening with a stupid grin on my face from a great afternoon topped off by a masterclass in the sweet science.
Breadking
A really great fight with more momentum swings than the first, and I though Bivol well and truly deserved it this time. Both guys were borderline hall of famers prior to the first match (relative to current standards anyway), and ironically a win a piece over each other is likely what puts them in.
maxxxrockusa
Man, if you’d told me at the end of round 6 that not only would Biv make it to the final bell, but I’d have him up 7-5, I’d have asked if it was your first day.
Superhuman shit. I think part of the story is that Beef was so shocked that Biv didn’t break that he didn’t know what to do. Kind of the Kane-Batman thing, but it actually fucking happened.

(Yes, he meant Bane. It was addressed.)

DKSAB
Bivol is a fighter I love watching but he so rarely kicks it out of first gear that I started to get worried that he didn’t really have it in him. I figured if he got into a really tough fight we’d see something special out of him. In the Canelo fight he looked better and more focused than usual but he never really had to dig deep. In the first Beterbiev fight he dug in but there wasn’t a huge shift.
His rally in this fight was the elevated version of that I’ve been waiting to see for ages now and it was beautiful. He put it all together and took the fight to Beterbiev in a way that didn’t seem possible after Beterbiev got his roll going. I love boxing.

Parker destroys Bakole, Shakur makes Riyadh debut, Ortiz rallies, more

Even with two late adjustments — Joseph Parker fought Martin Bakole instead of Daniel Dubois and Shakur Stevenson faced Josh Padley instead of Floyd Schofield — the undercard from Riyadh was big and eventful, with plenty of notable happenings.

Parker smashed Bakole in the second round, landing a right hand to the top of the head that demolished Bakole’s equilibrium. The loss won’t ruin Bakole, though it will make his path to a world title fight tougher, but giving Turki Alalshikh one real bit of credit as something more than “guy who has loads of money,” the man who now rules boxing does not have the modern era promoter disease of caring terribly that someone lost a fight. Bakole took a risk, saved a fight date for Joe Parker, and lost, because when you match good fighters, one of them loses. He’ll get his chances at redemption.

Parker is right in position for either a rescheduled date with IBF titlist Dubois or a fight with WBC/WBA/WBO titleholder and obvious true king Oleksandr Usyk, which he pitched after the win, but not everyone sees him as a true threat to the top dogs.

obviated
Some of these comments are hyping up Parker way too much. To my eyes this is the same boxer who lost decisively to AJ and lost to Whyte and Joyce. He’s a very solid operator with no glaring weaknesses and a good gas tank but also no real elite skills. I would still favor Dubois if they fought today and don’t think he has a chance against Usyk.
Wilder was mentally shot, Zhang (who he barely beat) has obviously always been very flawed and has extreme gas tank issues, Bakole was out of shape and not really ready to fight. I don’t really think Parker has noticeably improved at all.

It’s commendable to stay in great mental and physical shape as a heavyweight, which seems pretty hard, props to Parker for a remarkably consistent career, but he still gets beat easily by a true top tier guy.

Stevenson’s win over Padley, a ninth round TKO in a one-sided mismatch, drew mixed reviews, too.

Shadoobie
Zzzzzzzz…. The Shakur Stevenson story. He has to fight Tank soon if he wants his reputation to be considered. Padley was game, but the difference in skill was huge, and SS should have stopped him much earlier.
Jed5150
I think Shakur is a solid favourite against anyone near lightweight. I’d like to see the fight with Tank but I’ve seen Davis out boxed for long periods of time by B level boxers to think he has a chance. Too soon for me to get him in the ring with Keyshawn or Andy Cruz. Cruz’s height and length could give Stevenson trouble eventually.

Carlos Adames retained his WBC middleweight title in a draw with Hamzah Sheeraz, whose stock took a hit, as has happened to several other would-be saviors of the recently dreadful middleweight division. Several commenters felt Adames truly deserved the win in the fight:

ozzy616
Total robbery of Adames for me and I think Sheeraz knew it.
I think the event got to Sheeraz but also I think he needs a better trainer and team around him.
Dorrian_Grey
I want it known that I told everyone that Hamzah is a hype-job ages ago. Adames got robbed but at least he showed that Hamzah is not the boogeyman some folks were making him out to be.

Vergil Ortiz Jr put things together over the course of the fight and took a decision over Israil Madrimov:

scooby120
I’m proud of Ortiz. He showed he can box with the best in the world. I see him as a future champion. He does have some flaws, but no fighter is perfect. I want to see him pull the trigger more, rather than just apply pressure more without throwing. That may have been Madrimov’s skills, but at least I know now that he is worthy of fighting the best.

Heavyweight Agit Kabayel continued his wild rise up the ranks by knocking out Zhilei Zhang, continuing to impress:

Flavormix
I think Agit showed again that he is the most unterated Heavyweight right now out there. He shows he is championship caliber because he can adjust his game plan if neccesary every round as we saw today against Zilei Zhang.

In the first round you could clearly see the gameplan was to avoid the shots from zhang by moving but zhang had a good game plan for that and made Agit uncofortable fighting thats when in the second round Agit Kabayel adjusted his gameplan an stood toe to toe with Zilei Zhang what a fight and what a spectacular win! 🙂

And Callum Smith gave his career a shot in the arm with a win over Joshua Buatsi, taking an interim light heavyweight title and keeping himself right in the mix at 175:

RoidingOldMan
Callum Smith winning this was a shock for me. He’s fought so few top level opponents. And so few guys his age (34) win fights like that. Huge credit to him. Buatsi showed up too.
Eoin_not_ian
Smith was really impressive and Buatsi has an incredible chin if nothing else. Cracking fight.

More from this week:

  • Kind of a short week otherwise, because so much of everything was focused on the lead-in to this fight card, but there was a bit.
  • There was another Redneck Brawl, and John watched all the Cooters, Pooters, and Dick Trickles hit each other.
  • Josh Taylor’s return — and move up to welterweight — against Ekow Essuman is officially set for May 17 in Glasgow.
  • Daud Yordan, who hasn’t won a meaningful fight in over a decade and is most-known for losses, says he’ll end George Kambosos Jr’s career when they fight next month. Kambosos seems unbothered by the threat.
  • Christian Mbilli will not be facing Kevin Sadjo in a super middleweight eliminator, with Mbilli’s team citing the failure of the French promoter who won the purse bid to put Mbilli’s purse in escrow. Their new target is a WBC interim fight, which should work out, because the sport is handing out interim titles like Halloween candy these days. The Riyadh card on Saturday had a hilarious four interim title fights, two from the WBC and two from the WBO.

Read the full article here