2017-02-14



Ivan Baranchyk (right) vs. Abel Ramos. Photo credit: Stephanie Trapp/Showtime

Before the final bell sounded on Friday night, Showtime color man and 2017 IBHOF inductee Steve Farhood was already compelled to proclaim this fight as one of the Top 5 fights he’s seen in the 16-year history of the “ShoBox: The New Generation” series. Farhood wasn’t caught up in a hyperbolic moment as Ivan Baranchyk and Abel Ramos put themselves through a meat grinder at an Indian Casino in Oklahoma.

Rounds three through seven, in particular were where the back-and-forth action was sustained the most. It all started when Baranchyk landed an overhand right that sent Ramos to the canvas with a minute remaining in the third. Ramos, 25, was in control in the time leading up to that knockdown, using a counter left hand that prodded the forward-moving, and sometimes wild, Russian. Ramos got up quickly – hinting it was merely a flash knockdown – and that became even truer as he let his hands go, until the final seconds of the round. Just before the bell sounded, Ramos landed a left hook that buckled Baranchyk to the canvas for a knockdown, repaying his debt.

If it hadn’t already happened at the end of the third, hell broke loose from the fourth round on. Baranchyk and Ramos traded nothing but toe-to-toe power shots and the fight quickly turned into a war of attrition. Baranchyk managed to connect on a left hook that sent Ramos into a stumbling backpedal in the fourth. He couldn’t gather his feet but wasn’t hurt after getting sent to the canvas for the second time. Once getting back to his feet, Ramos got back to work and the fight resumed it’s back-and-forth theme.



Ivan Baranchyk (left) vs. Abel Ramos. Photo credit: Stephanie Trapp/Showtime

Round six was perhaps the fight’s best even though neither man was knocked down. Their aggression to start the round was noticeably intensified as it started but Ramos slowed Baranchyk down with a brutal body shot that momentarily had him breathing heavily out of his mouth. Ramos let his hands go, once he realized Baranchyk was sputtering but, by round’s end, Abel tired himself out and Ivan found his second wind.

Baranchyk, 14-0 (10), consistently found a home for his right hand in the final moments of a great sixth round. He parlayed that success into the seventh and that’s when he started to separate himself from his opponent. Ramos, 17-2-2 (12), was still using his counter left hand effectively but the luster in his shots had dwindled at this point in the fight. Baranchyk seemed fresher, when compared to his foe, and, by the end of the eighth round, Ramos’ left eye was starting to swell shut. Baranchyk eventually closed that eye by fight’s end and, while the final scorecards (97-92, 99-91, 97-93) didn’t reflect the tremendous effort by Ramos, the right man won the fight.

Nicknamed “The Beast”, Baranchyk had an elaborate ring entrance that involved a blackout of the lights, an elaborate cage, in which he was encased, and fake chains he broke off his wrists once exiting the cage. Gimmicky, sure, but not when it precedes a fight such as this one.

Fight of the Week

Ivan Baranchyk UD 10 Abel Ramos (140) | Feb. 10 – Miami, Oklahoma

Honorable mentions

Zhanat Zhakiyanov SD 12 Rau’shee Warren (WBA 118) | Feb. 10 – Toledo, Ohio

Jon Fernandez TKO 3 Ernesto Garza III (130) | Feb. 10 – Miami, Oklahoma

KO of the Week

Jairo Llanes KO 1 Emmanuel Valenzuela (135) | Feb. 11 – Guadalajara, Mexico

Honorable mention

Alexander Villa KO 1 Leonardo Cervantes (130) | February 10 – Guadalajara, Mexico

Fighter of the Week

Zhanat Zhakiyanov, 27-1 (18)



Ricky Hatton (left) and WBA bantamweight titlist Zhanat Zhakiyanov. Photo courtesy of Ricky Hatton on Twitter

Things looked bleak in the opening round for the 33-year-old from Kazakhstan.

A precise combination from Rau’shee Warren had Zhakiyanov hurt with a little over two minutes into the bantamweight world title bout,and, while referee Gary Rosato shouted his count, the crowd at the Huntington Center in Toledo, Ohio, was on its feet. Warren, who’s from Cincinnati, spurred that crowd on with his excitement while Zhakiyanov regained his footing and the next right hook he landed sent “ZZ” back to the mat. The crowd was now jumping.

Zhanat Zhakiyanov (right) vs. Rau’shee Warren. Photo credit: Leo Wilson/Premier Boxing Champions

Zhakiyanov wasn’t deterred after a seemingly disastrous opening three minutes. Quickly he began to stalk a swift-footed Warren around the ring in the second round and, in the final moments of the third, an overhand right cracked Rau’shee with his back against the ropes. The shot slowly slumped him forward and onto the canvas but Rosato didn’t rule it a knockdown. However, with his nose bloodied as he returned to his corner, Warren was given a clear indication that Zhakiyanov was only getting started.

Warren, 14-2 (4), was mauled by the Kazakh throughout the rest of the fight. He couldn’t establish a strong enough jab to ward his stalker off and constantly found himself eating right hands with his back against the ropes in the middle rounds. Making things even tougher, the leaking blood from Warren’s nose never let up. Former undisputed junior welterweight champion Ricky Hatton, Zhakiyanov’s promoter and trainer, reminded his pupil between every round that his pressure could not stop and his fighter was conditioned well enough to deliver.

Warren had sporadic moments of success in the late going against an opponent, who opened himself up, but he certainly didn’t hurt Zhakiyanov again since the opening round. Given Warren’s distressed effort, Zhakiyanov was the dictator in the ring on this night and, therefore, the true winner of the fight.

Zhanat Zhakiyanov (left) vs. Rau’shee Warren. Photo credit: Leo Wilson/Premier Boxing Champions

Before that could be made official, however, Zhakiyanov and Hatton nervously stood side by side as they awaited a decision that took awhile to get announced. It was a split decision (116-110 and 115-111 Zhakiyanov, 111-115 Warren) and, as the scorecards were read, you could sense the beginning of disgust on Hatton’s face as the first card was for Warren but the moment ended with a joyous hug as Zhakiyanov got Hitman Promotions its first world titleholder. Now the holder of the WBA bantamweight belt, Zhakiyanov joins middleweight champion Gennady “GGG” Golovkin (unified IBF/WBA/WBC) as the two current world titleholders from Kazakhstan.

Rest assured, Hatton painted Toledo red on Friday night.

He's only gone & done it. Been with me years. Couldn't be prouder.x pic.twitter.com/c0oFbLVsT1

— Ricky Hatton MBE (@HitmanHatton) February 11, 2017

Hostile Agent of the Week

Vacant

Results

Last week’s results in order of weight class

World title bouts

IBF lightweight titlist Robert Easter Jr. Photo credit: Leo Wilson/Premier Boxing Champions

Robert Easter Jr. UD 12 Luis Cruz (IBF 135) | 119-106, 118-107, 117-108 | Easter defends his IBF lightweight title for the first time.

Zhanat Zhakiyanov SD 12 Rau’shee Warren (WBA 118) | 116-110, 115-111, 111-115 | Zhakiyanov is the new WBA bantamweight titleholder.

Notables

Cedric Agnew TKO 1 Martin Verdin (200)

Doudou Ngumbu SD 12 Bilal Laggoune (175) | 116-112, 115-113, 112-116

Joseph Williams MD 8 Lenin Castillo (175) | 77-75, 78-74, 76-76

Derrick Findley UD 10 Daniel Heinz (168) | 96-93 twice, 95-94

Terrell Gausha UD 10 Luis Hernandez (160) | 98-90 twice, 97-91

Eric Walker TKO 2 Zack Kuhn (154)

Giovanni Santillan UD 8 Omar Tienda (147) | 80-72 on all three scorecards

Mykal Fox MD 8 Tre’Sean Wiggins (147) | 77-75, 78-74, 76-76

Antonio DeMarco UD 10 Luis Solis (147) | 99-89 on all three scorecards

Juan Jose Velasco UD 10 Fernando Martin (147) | 95-94, 98-91, 97-92

Regis Prograis TKO 1 Wilfredo Buelvas (140)

Ivan Baranchyk UD 10 Abel Ramos (140) | 97-93, 97-92, 99-91

Anthony Yigit UD 12 Lenny Daws (140) | 118-110 twice, 116-112

Jamel Herring RTD 3 Art Hovhannisyan (135)

Tyler McCreary UD 8 Jonathan Perez (135) | 80-71 twice, 79-72

Raynell Williams TKO 2 Justin Savi (135)

Jon Fernandez TKO 3 Ernesto Garza III (130)

Jose Matias Romero TKO 2 Bernardo Gomez Uribe (130)

Rafael Rivera TD 7 Giovanni Cano (130) | 70-64 on all three socrecards

Dewayne Beamon TKO 10 Christian Esquivel (115)

Kenichi Horikawa UD 12 Koji Itagaki (115) | 116-112 twice, 117-111

Angel Acosta TKO 10 Japhet Uutoni (108)

Koki Ono UD 8 Ryoya Ikema (108) | 79-74, 79-75, 78-74

Declarations of War

Fights made official this past week

Andrzej Fonfara vs. Chad Dawson (175) | March 4 – Brooklyn, New York

Claressa Shields vs. Szilvia Szabados (160) | March 10 – Detroit, Michigan

Michael Katsidis vs. Josh King (147) | March 11 – Australia

Antonio Orozco vs. KeAndre Gibson (140) | April 1 – Las Vegas, Nevada

Nehomar Cermeno vs. Shun Kubo (118) | April 9 – Osaka, Japan

Zolani Tete vs. Arthur Villanueva (115) | April 8 – Manchester, England

Imminent Conflicts

This week’s boxing schedule

Television (U.S.)

Friday, Feb. 17

Estrella TV/RingTV.com (10:00 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT) | Belasco Theater – Los Angeles, California

Robert Manzanarez vs. Gamaliel Diaz (135)

Genaro Gamez vs. Alejandro Ochoa (135)

Luis Feliciano vs. TBA (140)

UniMas (11:00 p.m. ET/8 p.m. PT) | Don Haskins Convention Center – El Paso, Texas

Jose Felix Jr. vs. Johnathan Maicelo (135)

Esquiva Falcao vs. Jaime Barboza (160)

Jennifer Han vs. Olivia Gerula (IBF 126)

Pay-Per-View at www.firststatefights.com (9:00 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT) | Chase Center – Wilmington, Delaware

Roy Jones Jr. vs. Bobby Gunn (200)

Frank DeAlba vs. Ivan Najera (130)

Kanat Islam vs. Robson Assis (154)

Saturday, Feb. 18

Showtime (9:00 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT) | Cintas Center – Cincinnati, Ohio

Adrien Broner vs. Adrian Granados (147)

David Avanesyan vs. Lamont Peterson (147)

Marcus Browne vs. Thomas Williams Jr. (175)

Notable fights not on TV

Thursday, Feb. 16

Mike Lee vs. Justin Thomas (175) | Costa Mesa, California

Friday, Feb. 17

Sam Rapira vs. Ryan Ford (175) | Singapore

Lennox Clarke vs. Bartlomiej Grafka (168) | Walsall, England

Saturday, Feb. 18

Ismayl Sillakh vs. Karama Nyilawila (200) | Nairobi, Kenya

Yuri Kashinsky vs. Kristijan Krstacic (200) | Chelyabinsk, Russia

Avni Yildrim vs. Aliaksandr Sushchyts (168) | Milan, Italy

Luka Pupek vs. Jean Michel Hamilcaro (160) | Zagreb, Croatia

Dominik Britsch vs. TBA (160) | Koblenz, Germany

Isaac Real vs. TBA (154) | Leon, Spain

Pedro Campa vs. Marvin Quintero (140) | Guaymas, Mexico

Steve Claggett vs. Juan Bedolla Orozco (140) | Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Ruben Gouveia vs. Patrick Kingamazi (135) | Annemasse, France

Zoltan Kovacs vs. Nicola Cipolleta (130) | Papa, Hungary

Tevin Farmer vs. TBA (130) | Cincinnati, Ohio

Shavkat Rakhimov vs. Rogelio Jun Doliguez (130) | Chelyabinsk, Russia

Simpiwe Vetyeka vs. David Berna (126) | Casablanca, Morocco

Isaac Sackey vs. TBA (122) | Accra, Ghana

You can reach Michael Baca II at mikebaca2@gmail.com and follow him at twitter.com/mikebaca2.

The post The War Report: Meat grinder (Week 6, 2017) appeared first on Undisputed Champion Network.

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