10/14 ESPN: Janibek Alimkhanuly vs Vincent Gualtieri (WBO/IBF Middleweight Titles)

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Janibek “Qazaq Style” Alimkhanuly is ready to conquer the middleweight division one belt a time.

The reigning WBO world champion will lock horns against unbeaten IBF world champion Vincenzo Gualtieri in a title unification showdown on Saturday, Oct. 14 at Fort Bend Epicenter in Rosenberg, Texas. This will be the first boxing event to take place at the brand-new, state-of-the-art sports and entertainment venue, which opened its doors last week.

In the 10-round lightweight co-feature, U.S. Olympic silver medalist Keyshawn Davis takes another step up in class against Philadelphia-born contender Nahir Albright.

Promoted by Top Rank, in association with AGON Sports & Events, Janibek-Gualtieri and Davis-Albright will be broadcast live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes and ESPN+ at 10:30 p.m. ET/7:30 p.m. PT.

Tickets starting at $35 go on sale Wednesday, Sept. 6 at 2 p.m. CST via ETix.

"There’s no doubt in my mind that Janibek is the best middleweight in the world,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “He has a chance to prove that once again with a victory over a tough champion in Vincenzo Gualtieri. I’m also pleased to see the future of the lightweight division, Keyshawn Davis, take his biggest step up to date against Nahir Albright. Top Rank is thrilled to be hosting the first boxing event at Fort Bend Epicenter, where fans near the Houston area will be in for a real treat.”

Janibek (14-0, 9 KOs) is a 2016 Olympian from Zhilandy, Kazakhstan, who took the fast lane to becoming champion. In 2021, he scored knockout victories over former world champions Rob Brant and Hassan N'Dam. He captured the WBO interim middleweight world title last May with a second-round destruction of Danny Dignum and was elevated to world champion after Demetrius Andrade vacated the title. Janibek has made two defenses, beating British champion Denzel Bentley via unanimous decision last November and blasting out Canadian contender Steven Butler via second-round stoppage in May.

Janibek said, “I am grateful for the opportunity to fight a fellow world champion. This fight gets me one step closer to becoming the undisputed middleweight champion, and I thank Vincenzo Gualtieri for putting his belt on the line. He is doing what the other champions have refused to do. I will, however, return home to Kazakhstan as a unified champion.”

Gualtieri (21-0-1, 7 KOs) debuted as a professional in October 2015. He went 15-0 before fighting to a draw against fellow unbeaten German Thomas Piccirillo in August 2020. He captured his first regional title with a points victory against Billi Facundo Godoy in November 2021. He defended it twice before capturing the vacant IBF middleweight world title with a unanimous decision win against then-undefeated Brazilian Esquiva Falcao.

Gualtieri said, “Janibek is an outstanding boxer who has done it all as an amateur and a professional, just like Esquiva Falcao. Janibek is a southpaw, just like Esquiva Falcao. Janibek was the favorite, just like Falcao. In the end, Janibek, like Falcao, will lose because I have the better team and the will of a champion. Only that will decide who wins and who loses, just as it did against Falcao.”

Davis (9-0, 6 KOs), from Norfolk, Virginia, is making a rapid ascent up the lightweight rankings. After going 3-0 as a pro, he captured a silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics. In November 2021, he signed a long-term promotional contract with Top Rank and has since scored six victories, including brutal knockouts against Esteban Sanchez and Omar Tienda. In April, he pummeled Anthony Yigit en route to a ninth-round TKO victory. He shut out former European champion Francesco Patera via 10-round unanimous decision in July.

Davis said, “I’m coming to Texas to beat up Nahir Albright. Simple as that. He’s not on my level, and after I put on a show, a message will be sent. The future of the lightweight division is here.”

Albright (16-2, 7 KOs) lost a majority decision in his pro debut in 2016. Undeterred, he won his next 14 fights and captured his first regional title with a decision win over Jeremy Hill in July 2021. He stopped Michael Dutchover in the sixth round of their showdown two months later before suffering a decision loss against Jamaine Ortiz in February 2022. Albright bounced back seven months later by handing Brazilian standout Estivan Falcao his first loss. He is coming off an upset majority decision win against U.S. Olympian Karlos Balderas in July.

Albright said, “This is another step in the right direction. He’s another person in my way. I’m not worried about Keyshawn Davis. I just beat an Olympian in my last fight. I want to fight the best and prove I belong in the ring with the top guys.”

The ESPN+-streamed undercard will feature a host of up-and-coming talents:

U.S. Olympic Silver medalist Richard Torrez Jr. (6-0, 6 KOs) will make his third appearance of 2023 in a six-round heavyweight battle against Don Haynesworth (17-8-1, 15 KOs). Torrez hopes to notch his third first-round victory of the year after first-round stoppages over James Bryant in February and Willie Jake Jr. in August.

Junior welterweight standout Giovanni Marquez (6-0, 4 KOs), son of former world champion Raul Marquez, will put his unbeaten record on the line in a scheduled six-rounder. The Houston native is coming off a second-round TKO win against Nicky Vitone in August.

U.S. Olympic silver medalist Duke Ragan (8-0, 1 KO) will make his 2023 debut in an eight-round featherweight fight against Jose Perez (11-1-2, 5 KOs). Ragan, from Cincinnati, Ohio, turned away a stiff challenge from Puerto Rican veteran Luis Lebron last October at The Theater at Madison Square Garden.

2016 Italian Olympian Guido Vianello (10-1-1, 9 KOs) will take on Florida veteran Curtis Harper (14-9, 9 KOs) in an eight-round heavyweight tilt. In his last fight, Vianello lost his '0' after a right hand from veteran Jonnie Rice caused a cut above his left eye, forcing the referee to end the bout in the seventh round. Vianello was ahead on all three judges’ scorecards at the time of the stoppage.

Kelvin Davis (9-0, 6 KOs), the eldest of the fighting Davis Brothers from Norfolk, will see action in an eight-round junior welterweight clash. Davis returns after a fourth-round knockout win against Derrick Whitley Jr. in July.

Unbeaten lightweight prospect Alan “Kid Kansas” Garcia (9-0, 8 KOs) will face an opponent to be named in a six-rounder.
 

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Janibek “Qazaq Style” Alimkhanuly is ready to conquer the middleweight division one belt a time.

The reigning WBO world champion will lock horns against unbeaten IBF world champion Vincenzo Gualtieri in a title unification showdown on Saturday, Oct. 14 at Fort Bend Epicenter in Rosenberg, Texas. This will be the first boxing event to take place at the brand-new, state-of-the-art sports and entertainment venue, which opened its doors last week.

In the 10-round lightweight co-feature, U.S. Olympic silver medalist Keyshawn Davis takes another step up in class against Philadelphia-born contender Nahir Albright.

Promoted by Top Rank, in association with AGON Sports & Events, Janibek-Gualtieri and Davis-Albright will be broadcast live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes and ESPN+ at 10:30 p.m. ET/7:30 p.m. PT.

Tickets starting at $35 go on sale Wednesday, Sept. 6 at 2 p.m. CST via ETix.

"There’s no doubt in my mind that Janibek is the best middleweight in the world,” said Top Rank chairman Bob Arum. “He has a chance to prove that once again with a victory over a tough champion in Vincenzo Gualtieri. I’m also pleased to see the future of the lightweight division, Keyshawn Davis, take his biggest step up to date against Nahir Albright. Top Rank is thrilled to be hosting the first boxing event at Fort Bend Epicenter, where fans near the Houston area will be in for a real treat.”

Janibek (14-0, 9 KOs) is a 2016 Olympian from Zhilandy, Kazakhstan, who took the fast lane to becoming champion. In 2021, he scored knockout victories over former world champions Rob Brant and Hassan N'Dam. He captured the WBO interim middleweight world title last May with a second-round destruction of Danny Dignum and was elevated to world champion after Demetrius Andrade vacated the title. Janibek has made two defenses, beating British champion Denzel Bentley via unanimous decision last November and blasting out Canadian contender Steven Butler via second-round stoppage in May.

Janibek said, “I am grateful for the opportunity to fight a fellow world champion. This fight gets me one step closer to becoming the undisputed middleweight champion, and I thank Vincenzo Gualtieri for putting his belt on the line. He is doing what the other champions have refused to do. I will, however, return home to Kazakhstan as a unified champion.”

Gualtieri (21-0-1, 7 KOs) debuted as a professional in October 2015. He went 15-0 before fighting to a draw against fellow unbeaten German Thomas Piccirillo in August 2020. He captured his first regional title with a points victory against Billi Facundo Godoy in November 2021. He defended it twice before capturing the vacant IBF middleweight world title with a unanimous decision win against then-undefeated Brazilian Esquiva Falcao.

Gualtieri said, “Janibek is an outstanding boxer who has done it all as an amateur and a professional, just like Esquiva Falcao. Janibek is a southpaw, just like Esquiva Falcao. Janibek was the favorite, just like Falcao. In the end, Janibek, like Falcao, will lose because I have the better team and the will of a champion. Only that will decide who wins and who loses, just as it did against Falcao.”

Davis (9-0, 6 KOs), from Norfolk, Virginia, is making a rapid ascent up the lightweight rankings. After going 3-0 as a pro, he captured a silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics. In November 2021, he signed a long-term promotional contract with Top Rank and has since scored six victories, including brutal knockouts against Esteban Sanchez and Omar Tienda. In April, he pummeled Anthony Yigit en route to a ninth-round TKO victory. He shut out former European champion Francesco Patera via 10-round unanimous decision in July.

Davis said, “I’m coming to Texas to beat up Nahir Albright. Simple as that. He’s not on my level, and after I put on a show, a message will be sent. The future of the lightweight division is here.”

Albright (16-2, 7 KOs) lost a majority decision in his pro debut in 2016. Undeterred, he won his next 14 fights and captured his first regional title with a decision win over Jeremy Hill in July 2021. He stopped Michael Dutchover in the sixth round of their showdown two months later before suffering a decision loss against Jamaine Ortiz in February 2022. Albright bounced back seven months later by handing Brazilian standout Estivan Falcao his first loss. He is coming off an upset majority decision win against U.S. Olympian Karlos Balderas in July.

Albright said, “This is another step in the right direction. He’s another person in my way. I’m not worried about Keyshawn Davis. I just beat an Olympian in my last fight. I want to fight the best and prove I belong in the ring with the top guys.”

The ESPN+-streamed undercard will feature a host of up-and-coming talents:

U.S. Olympic Silver medalist Richard Torrez Jr. (6-0, 6 KOs) will make his third appearance of 2023 in a six-round heavyweight battle against Don Haynesworth (17-8-1, 15 KOs). Torrez hopes to notch his third first-round victory of the year after first-round stoppages over James Bryant in February and Willie Jake Jr. in August.

Junior welterweight standout Giovanni Marquez (6-0, 4 KOs), son of former world champion Raul Marquez, will put his unbeaten record on the line in a scheduled six-rounder. The Houston native is coming off a second-round TKO win against Nicky Vitone in August.

U.S. Olympic silver medalist Duke Ragan (8-0, 1 KO) will make his 2023 debut in an eight-round featherweight fight against Jose Perez (11-1-2, 5 KOs). Ragan, from Cincinnati, Ohio, turned away a stiff challenge from Puerto Rican veteran Luis Lebron last October at The Theater at Madison Square Garden.

2016 Italian Olympian Guido Vianello (10-1-1, 9 KOs) will take on Florida veteran Curtis Harper (14-9, 9 KOs) in an eight-round heavyweight tilt. In his last fight, Vianello lost his '0' after a right hand from veteran Jonnie Rice caused a cut above his left eye, forcing the referee to end the bout in the seventh round. Vianello was ahead on all three judges’ scorecards at the time of the stoppage.

Kelvin Davis (9-0, 6 KOs), the eldest of the fighting Davis Brothers from Norfolk, will see action in an eight-round junior welterweight clash. Davis returns after a fourth-round knockout win against Derrick Whitley Jr. in July.

Unbeaten lightweight prospect Alan “Kid Kansas” Garcia (9-0, 8 KOs) will face an opponent to be named in a six-rounder.
Got my tickets this morning. Been awhile since I've been able to go to a fight. I think Charlo/Castano 1 was the last fight I went to. Really looking forward to this.
 

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Denzel Bentley Breaks Down Janibek Alimkhanuly vs. Vincenzo Gaultieri​

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BY JOHN EVANS
Published Thu Oct 12, 2023, 11:18 AM EDT
Denzel Bentley will take a brief break from his own fight preparations this weekend and pay close attention to the middleweight unification battle between WBO champion, Janibek Alimkhanuly, and his IBF counterpart, Vincenzo Gaultieri.
Bentley (18-2-1, 15 KO’s) dropped a unanimous decision to Janibek last November. The 27 year old from Battersea started slowly in his first foray into world class but grew in confidence as the rounds passed by. As the fight entered the middle rounds, he was fighting on even terms with the avoided Kazakh southpaw. Although he didn’t leave Las Vegas with the WBO title, he did establish himself a genuine threat in the 160lb division.
Bentley has appeared once since, scoring a devastating first round knockout of Kieran Smith to defend his British middleweight title and can win the famous Lonsdale Belt outright by beating unbeaten ticket seller, Nathan Heaney, on Queensberry Promotions’ ‘Magnificent Seven’ show on November 18th.
Alimkhanuly (14-0, 9 KO’s) has been calling for unification fights since winning the WBO interim title last May. The Kazakh southpaw gets his wish this weekend. Gaultieri (21-0-1, 7 KO’s) bounces straight into the fight having beaten Esquiva Falcao for the vacant IBF belt in July in a real upset. The unbeaten German dropped the Brazilian twice en route to a unanimous decision victory but will again be a sizeable underdog.
Bentley is desperate for another world title shot and hasn’t been shy about calling for a rematch with Janibek. He feels the Kazakh will still be a champion after Saturday night and that any future revenge mission will come with the added bonus of two belts instead of one.
“I think it’ll be Janibek. Gaultieri is a good fighter though. I remember watching his fight Falcao and I didn’t think he was gonna win that because I hadn’t seen much of him before,” Bentley told Queensberry at a press conference to promote his fight with Heaney. “He put him over early in the fight and literally just took the fight away and won it wide. He’s a good fighter. He’s got a lot of skill. He’s got good movement. He’s got fast hands as well. He doesn’t carry much power though or maybe he just doesn’t use his power much.
“Janibek’s smart. He’s a calculated fighter. He punches very sharp. He hits hard enough - like you saw in his last fight - to knock anybody out. He’s skillful as well. I don’t think he’ll lack in any of the departments. I think he has everything over Gaultieri but Gaultieri’s probably got that little bit more foot speed.
“I think Janibek wins.”
 

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I think Richard Torrez is going to be on this card too. Just watched an interview of him. Looks like a great kid
 

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Alimkhanuly, Gualtieri Make Weight For WBO/IBF Middleweight Title Unification Bout​

alimkhanuly-gualtieri-3.jpg

BY JAKE DONOVAN
Published Fri Oct 13, 2023, 02:40 PM EDT
Janibek Alimkhanuly and Vincenzo Gualtieri will attempt to provide much-needed leadership in the barren middleweight division.
The pair of unbeaten titlists began with their obligatory staredown immediately after they both made weight for their WBO and IBF unification bout this Saturday from Fort Bend Epicenter in Rosenberg, Texas. Kazakhstan’s Alimkhanuly was 159.3 pounds while Germany’s Gualtieri checked in at 159 ½ pounds for their ESPN-televised main event.
The two then met face-to-face and refused to turn away, even after being instructed by Top Rank staff to turn and face the cameras. Alimkhanuly offered an evil grin before he slowly ended the session, while Gualtieri never broke eye contact.
Alimkhanuly (14-0, 9KOs) will attempt his third title defense. He claimed the interim version of the WBO middleweight title and was upgraded to full titlist once Demetrius Andrade (32-0, 19KOs) opted to move up in weight in lieu of a mandatory title defense. Alimkhanuly most recently beat Steven Butler via second-round knockout on May 13 in Stockton, California.
Gualtieri (21-0-1, 7KOs) makes his U.S. debut in what also serves as his first title defense.
The 30-year-old German boxer of Italian heritage won the vacant IBF title in a lopsided twelve-round, unanimous decision over previously unbeaten Esquiva Falcao on July 1 in Wuppertal, Germany. The IBF belt was previously held by former two-time unified middleweight titlist Gennadiy Golovkin, who GGGave up the title rather than proceed with what he deemed as an undesirable mandatory versus Falcao.
Rising lightweight Keyshawn Davis (9-0, 6KOs) was a rock-solid 135 pounds for his scheduled ten-round ESPN-televised co-feature versus Philadelphia’s Nahir Albright (16-2, 7KOs), who was 134.9 pounds.
Davis fights for the third time this year and with room for one more should he win and escape unscathed on Saturday. The 2020 Olympic Silver medalist for the U.S. is rumored to land on the December 9 ESPN show headlined by the Robeisy Ramirez-Rafael Espinoza WBO featherweight title fight.
Albright has won his last two starts. His most recent win came in a minor upset when he earned an eight-round, majority decision over Karlos Balderas on July 28 in Las Vegas.
ESPN+ Preliminary Undercard, 5:55 p.m. ET/4:55 p.m. local time
Richard Torrez Jr (6-0, 6KOs), Tulare, California, 233.1 pounds vs. Tyrrell Anthony Herndon (21-4, 14KOs), San Antonio, 234.8 pounds—6 rounds, heavyweight
Guido Vianello (10-1-1, 9KOs), Las Vegas via Roma, Italy, 241.3 pounds vs. Curtis Harper (14-9, 9KOs), Jacksonville, Florida, 275 ½ pounds—8 rounds, heavyweight
Giovanni Marquez (6-0, 4KOs), Houston, 141.3 pounds vs. Donte Strayhorn (12-4-1, 4KOs), Las Vegas via Cincinnati, 140.2 pounds—6 rounds, junior welterweight
Duke Ragan (8-0, 1KO), Cincinnati, 125.3 pounds vs. Jose Perez (11-1-2, 5KOs), Oak Hill, California, 126.4 pounds—8 rounds, featherweight
Kelvin Davis (9-0, 6KOs), Norfolk, Virginia, 142 pounds vs. Narciso Carmona (11-1-1, 6KOs), Sevilla, Spain, 142.6 pounds—8 rounds, junior welterweight
Alan Garcia (9-0, 8KOs), Ulysses, Kansas, 137.8 pounds vs. Nelson Hampton (10-7, 6KOs), Donna, Texas, 137.3 pounds—6 rounds, lightweight
Humberto Galindo (14-3-1, 11KOs), Tijuana, Mexico, 130.7 pounds vs. Oscar Bravo (25-13, 11KOs), Santiago, Chile, 130.8 pounds—8 rounds, lightweight
Jakhongir Zokirov (pro debut), Dzhizak, Uzbekistan, 265 pounds vs. Guillermo Del Rio (4-4-1, 2KOs), Monterrey, Mexico, 27.1 pounds—4 rounds, heavyweight
 
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