Shields-Marshall and Mayer-Baumgardner live results and analysis

Boxing

Claressa Shields will once again try to unify all four major women’s middleweight world titles when she faces Savannah Marshall in the main event of an all-women card at the O2 arena in London on Saturday (ESPN+, 2:30 p.m. ET). This is the first of two major boxing cards on ESPN+ on the day. Devin Haney will defend his undisputed lightweight title against the man he took the belts from just a few months ago, George Kambosos, at 10:30 p.m. ET.

Shields (12-0, 2 KOs), 27, of Flint, Michigan, is a former middleweight and junior middleweight undisputed champion and a unified super middleweight champ. She vacated the middleweight WBO belt to move down to junior middleweight and now is trying to regain the undisputed title she never lost in the ring against Marshall.

Marshall (12-0, 10 KOs), 31, of County Durham, England, defeated Hannah Rankin in October 2020 to win the WBO belt and has made three successful defenses since. Marshall is the only fighter to have beaten Shields (a points victory at the 2012 world championships in China). Shields finished her amateur career with a record of 64-1 and is looking to avenge the lone loss.

In the co-main event, Mikaela Mayer takes on Alycia Baumgardner in a 10-round three-title unification bout between two fighters who have built up the fight with constant verbal jabs.

Mayer (17-0, 5 KOs), 32, of Woodland Hills, California, won the WBO belt against Ewa Brodnicka in October 2020. She added the IBF belt after defeating Maiva Hamadouche in November 2021.

Baumgardner (12-1, 7 KOs), 28, of Fremont, Ohio, stopped Terri Harper with an impressive third-round KO to win the WBC belt last November.

Follow along as Michael Rothstein recaps the action as it happens or watch the fights on ESPN+.


Next fight: Mikaela Mayer vs. Alycia Baumgardner, 10 rounds, for Mayer’s WBO and IBF junior lightweight titles and Baumgardner’s WBC junior lightweight title


Results:

Price shines, stops Belik inside four rounds

Lauren Price didn’t knock Timea Belik down. But she continued to hit her with enough consistency for referee Mark Bates to stop the welterweight fight.

It what felt like an early end to the fight, Price (2-0, 1 KO) got the first win by stoppage of her career in the fourth round after a multitude of shots that kept Belik (6-7, 2 KO) moving backward.

Price and Belik traded blows throughout the second round, the most back-and-forth action of any of the televised undercard fights. Price landed a good combination to the head of Belik at the start of the third round — Price connected often, but Belik wasn’t moving all that much to be a difficult target. By the end of the round, Price had started chasing Belik around the ring, pummeling her.

Belik has lost three of her last four fights. The 28-year-old Price, the gold medalist at middleweight in the 2020 Olympic Games, continues to be one of the more promising prospects in a welterweight division that could use an infusion of talent.


Dubois stops Koleva in Round 5

The end started in the fourth round, when Caroline Dubois landed a right hook that knocked Milena Koleva to the ground.

The real end came a round later, when Dubois landed a body shot to stun Koleva again and then put her half-down, on the ropes, with Dubois landing more shots to Koleva’s head as referee Sean McAvoy stepped in to stop the fight and give Dubois the win in the lightweight fight.

It was constant pressure for Dubois (4-0, 3 KO) over the last three rounds leading to the knockout with seven seconds to go in the fifth. The 21-year-old sister of heavyweight Daniel Dubois continued her fast rise with the dominance of the 34-year-old Koleva (10-15-1, 4 KO), who hasn’t won a fight since 2019 and has lost nine of her last 10 fights.

Most of that, though, has come against high-quality competition, including Katie Taylor and Maiva Hamadouche twice.

This fight, and how she handled it, signified that Dubois, one of more intriguing young fighters in the sport, should be ready for a step up in competition in her next fight.


Artingstall dominates Sakharov, stays unbeaten

For the last four rounds, it was a barrage. If we’re being honest, it was an impressive performance by Karriss Artingstall and a great effort by Marina Sakharov to stay up the entire fight.

Artingstall, featherweight prospect, was excellent overall in her second pro fight, scoring a 60-54 decision over Sakharov, who has now lost 10 fights in a row.

Artingstall (2-0) took control of the fight in the third round, landing a flurry of combinations, and from there the bout never really looked in doubt. By the end of the third, Sakharov (5-17-2, 3 KO) looked exhausted but continued to hang in throughout the six-round fight.

Sakharov has not won a fight since 2018, when she knocked out Branka Arambasic.


Still to come:

  • Title fight: Claressa Shields vs. Savannah Marshall, 10 rounds, for Shields’ WBC, IBF and WBA middleweight titles and Marshall’s WBO middleweight title

Articles You May Like

Man City’s slump, Real Madrid lose Militao, Chelsea-Arsenal fallout, more
Mike Tyson, even at 58 years old, continues to change the game
Vinícius is a star at Real Madrid, but why not for Brazil?
Fallows leaves Aston Martin technical director role
Warriors guard Melton ruled out with ACL sprain

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *