Gennady Golovkin vs David Lemieux Live Stream
Turn around and the feel your sense. Gennady Golovkin vs David Lemieux Live Stream is here. Andrzej Fonfara and Nathan Cleverly consolidated to set CompuBox records Friday night for most joined punches tossed and arrived in a light heavyweight battle. They additionally gave boxing fans a true blue contender for battle of the year.
Watch here: Crawford vs Jean Live Stream.
Fonfara outlived Cleverly more than 12 amusing rounds to claim a triumph by consistent choice at Chicago's UIC Pavilion in the headliner of a Premier Boxing Champions card. The judges scored it 115-113, 116-112, 116-112 for Fonfara.
Fonfara and Cleverly joined to toss 2,524 punches and land 936, both CompuBox records.
A local of Poland who battles out of Chicago, Fonfara (28-3, 16 KOs) likewise set individual CompuBox records for a light heavyweight via landing 474 punches and endeavoring 1,413.
Regardless of seeping from an abnormally swollen nose throughout the second 50% of the battle, Cleverly (29-3, 15 KOs), of Wales, basically never quit approaching. A previous 175-pound titlist, Cleverly tested Fonfara's gas tank by setting a wild pace.
"Keenly has an extraordinary jaw," Fonfara said. "He's an incredible warrior. He was taking a great deal of punches and not separating. Despite everything he needed to go ahead and battle. He trusted he could win until the very end."
The battle had an old-school feel from the opening chime, with every warrior alternating teeing off on the other. Neither one of the mans focused on guard of any sort, and infrequently did they go to the body.
Shrewdly, 28, who tumbled to 3-3 in the course of recent years, routinely joked Fonfara in the center rounds by talking junk and waving him forward with his gloves. In any case, he went down his bombast with a gutsy exertion, and neither one of the fighters hit the canvas in spite of every arrival more than 50 percent of their energy shots.
"I thought I would thump him out before the battle," Fonfara said. "I had no clue he could take such a large number of punches and still be in the battle. I understood it would be difficult to thump him out. I regard him all that much."
Ordinarily a smooth boxer, Cleverly, who dropped down in weight after a four-battle keep running at cruiserweight, decided to fight within and routinely discovered a home for uppercuts with both hands. In any case, it was a style that played under the control of Fonfara, who is the greater puncher and energized to hurt Cleverly in Round 7, bloodying his nose.
A rebellious Cleverly turned out in Round 8 to back Fonfara up against the ropes with a whirlwind before Fonfara revitalized again with enormous punches late.
The ringside specialist halted the battle quickly to investigate Cleverly's nose in Round 10 preceding Fonfara made a decisive last stand in the last two rounds.
"It was a phenomenal battle," Cleverly said. "I had an inclination that our styles were going to solidify and that is what happened. It was a war from the first ringer, and I am not astounded that it broke the records for the most punches tossed, on the grounds that when we began we simply didn't stop.
"[Fonfara] can truly blast. He's not far-removed Sergey Kovalev for force," he said, alluding to the brought together light heavyweight titlist. "However, I thought I had him until the nose went, and I imagine that without that, I could have the win."
The triumph was the third straight for Fonfara, 27, since dropping division champion Adonis Stevenson late in a 2014 choice misfortune.
Watch here: Crawford vs Jean Live Stream.
Fonfara outlived Cleverly more than 12 amusing rounds to claim a triumph by consistent choice at Chicago's UIC Pavilion in the headliner of a Premier Boxing Champions card. The judges scored it 115-113, 116-112, 116-112 for Fonfara.
Fonfara and Cleverly joined to toss 2,524 punches and land 936, both CompuBox records.
A local of Poland who battles out of Chicago, Fonfara (28-3, 16 KOs) likewise set individual CompuBox records for a light heavyweight via landing 474 punches and endeavoring 1,413.
Regardless of seeping from an abnormally swollen nose throughout the second 50% of the battle, Cleverly (29-3, 15 KOs), of Wales, basically never quit approaching. A previous 175-pound titlist, Cleverly tested Fonfara's gas tank by setting a wild pace.
"Keenly has an extraordinary jaw," Fonfara said. "He's an incredible warrior. He was taking a great deal of punches and not separating. Despite everything he needed to go ahead and battle. He trusted he could win until the very end."
The battle had an old-school feel from the opening chime, with every warrior alternating teeing off on the other. Neither one of the mans focused on guard of any sort, and infrequently did they go to the body.
Shrewdly, 28, who tumbled to 3-3 in the course of recent years, routinely joked Fonfara in the center rounds by talking junk and waving him forward with his gloves. In any case, he went down his bombast with a gutsy exertion, and neither one of the fighters hit the canvas in spite of every arrival more than 50 percent of their energy shots.
"I thought I would thump him out before the battle," Fonfara said. "I had no clue he could take such a large number of punches and still be in the battle. I understood it would be difficult to thump him out. I regard him all that much."
Ordinarily a smooth boxer, Cleverly, who dropped down in weight after a four-battle keep running at cruiserweight, decided to fight within and routinely discovered a home for uppercuts with both hands. In any case, it was a style that played under the control of Fonfara, who is the greater puncher and energized to hurt Cleverly in Round 7, bloodying his nose.
A rebellious Cleverly turned out in Round 8 to back Fonfara up against the ropes with a whirlwind before Fonfara revitalized again with enormous punches late.
The ringside specialist halted the battle quickly to investigate Cleverly's nose in Round 10 preceding Fonfara made a decisive last stand in the last two rounds.
"It was a phenomenal battle," Cleverly said. "I had an inclination that our styles were going to solidify and that is what happened. It was a war from the first ringer, and I am not astounded that it broke the records for the most punches tossed, on the grounds that when we began we simply didn't stop.
"[Fonfara] can truly blast. He's not far-removed Sergey Kovalev for force," he said, alluding to the brought together light heavyweight titlist. "However, I thought I had him until the nose went, and I imagine that without that, I could have the win."
The triumph was the third straight for Fonfara, 27, since dropping division champion Adonis Stevenson late in a 2014 choice misfortune.
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