SHO 6/9: Leo Santa Cruz-Abner Mares 2 (WBA 126 Titles) / Jermell Charlo-Austin Trout (WBC 154 Title)

Who wins?


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patscorpio

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The featherweight world title rematch between Leo Santa Cruz and Abner Mares has been a long time coming since their first action-packed encounter in August 2015.

Immediately after Santa Cruz won a majority decision and vacant title in a fierce fight at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, Mares said he wanted a rematch, and Santa Cruz said he would give him one.

But it has taken time and twists and turns to get to the point where they will meet again on June 9 in the main event of a Showtime card, again at the Staples Center in another battle for Los Angles bragging rights.

"It was a really close fight the first time. Before the fight, I told him I would give him the rematch, just like I would have wanted if I lost," Santa Cruz said this week as he met Mares face to face in Los Angeles at the kickoff news conference to announce the bout. "Now is the time, and I think this fight is going to be even better than the first fight. Mares will be better with (trainer) Robert Garcia. He has many champions, and I've seen the improvement. That's great motivation for me."

Mares has had to wait for the rematch longer than he wanted to, but he is very excited that it is finally on.

"The fight is here now, and it's official. I'm eager to get this win and get redemption," Mares said. "There were things I could have done that would have made the fight easier for myself. Once you get in there, I know we all have a plan, but once you hear the crowd, it can go out the window. I'm a warrior and that type of fighter who's looking to get the win no matter what.

“This fight is dedicated to my dad as he battles cancer. The only way I can pay him back or try to lift his spirits is to train hard in the gym and give him this win. If he sees me not giving up, I think it will give him the courage to keep fighting his battle.

”- Leo Santa Cruz
"I'm not worried about the decision in the first fight. I think he landed the clearer punches, but it was definitely a close fight. I was happy with my performance as far as pleasing the crowd. I've moved on to the rematch. I'm going to make adjustments and get the win."

Since that first fight, Santa Cruz (34-1-1, 19 KOs), 29, has fought four times, including losing and regaining his title in two tremendous battles with Carl Frampton. Mares (31-2-1, 15 KOs), 32, has fought just twice, but he claimed a secondary belt while also changing trainers to work with Garcia.

The rematch was supposed to take place last fall but Santa Cruz elected to put it off for one more fight as he and fellow three-division world titleholder Mares both won on an October doubleheader.

One of the reasons for putting it off one more fight was because Santa Cruz's father and trainer, Jose Santa Cruz, was once again struggling with his health.

He was diagnosed with cancer a few years ago, and has had his ups and downs, including being forced to have a very limited role in the training camp for the first Frampton fight, for which Leo was instead trained by his brother. But the elder Santa Cruz said he will be in camp and will train his son for the rematch with Mares.

"This fight is dedicated to my dad as he battles cancer," Leo Santa Cruz said. "The only way I can pay him back or try to lift his spirits is to train hard in the gym and give him this win. If he sees me not giving up, I think it will give him the courage to keep fighting his battle."

Jose Santa Cruz has shown the sort of fight against cancer that his son has always showed in the ring. He is determined to see his son through training camp be in his corner on fight night.

"My fight with cancer is the toughest one of all. But I'm fighting very hard and I'm not going anywhere," he said. "I'm right there by Leo's side all the way for this fight. For the first fight for Frampton (in July 2016), I had to try to prepare Leo from a distance."

“I'm not worried about the decision in the first fight. I think he landed the clearer punches but it was definitely a close fight. I was happy with my performance as far as pleasing the crowd. I've moved on to the rematch. I'm going to make adjustments and get the win.

”- Abner Mares
Leo Santa Cruz lost that fight and his belt by majority decision in a classic fight of the year contender and then regained the title (with his father returning to the corner) by split decision over Frampton in his next fight in January 2017.

"This fight [against Mares] is different [from the first Frampton fight] because I'm right there every step of the way. I'm telling him what to do and guide him every day," Jose Santa Cruz said. "I think Leo is even more prepared this time than for the first fight with Mares. Leo is doing great mentally because he's such a brave kid. I tell him not to worry about me and to keep working hard. He seems really motivated right now. He knows he's doing well.

"Right now we're working on maintaining speed, being smart and not looking for too much of a clash of a fight. I know Leo can win with his speed and his brain. He's learning and growing as a fighter. I think Mares has reached his peak. Robert Garcia is a great trainer, but at a certain point, there's nothing the fighter can do to surprise anyone."

Mares has worked with Garcia for his past two fights, and they have also had plenty of time in the gym to work together. Garcia thinks he can make a big difference for Mares in the sequel.

"I was there live for the first fight, and it was a great matchup. I knew then that Abner was much better than the fight he gave that night," Garcia said. "He left the fans happy, which is all that matters to him. But with me in the corner, it should be a different fight. I think the fans have seen what we've done with Abner for his last two fights and they know that it's going to lead to a totally different outcome in this fight."


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LOS ANGELES — The 154-pound division continues to heat up as undefeated world champion Jermell Charlo defends his belt against former world champion Austin “No Doubt” Trout Saturday, June 9 in a 12-round showdown live on SHOWTIME from STAPLES Center in Los Angeles.

The Premier Boxing Champions event is headlined by WBA Super World Featherweight World Champion Leo Santa Cruz battling WBA Regular Featherweight World Champion Abner Mares in an anticipated world title rematch.

Tickets for the live event, which is promoted by Ringstar Sports and TGB Promotions, begin at $50, plus applicable fees, and are on sale now To purchase tickets visit AXS.com or click HERE.

Super welterweight is one of the deepest and most ferociously contested divisions in boxing with unified champion Jarrett Hurd and Charlo on a collision course for supremacy in the weight class. Virtually all of the most significant fights in the division are taking place in 2018 on SHOWTIME, with the three consensus best fighters, and at least five of the consensus top-10, facing off in what has become an unofficial tournament.

Charlo (30-0, 15 KOs) has blasted his way to the top of the division, having stopped four of his last opponents by knockout. The 27-year-old from Houston won his WBC title with a knockout victory over John Jackson in 2016. Since then he has successfully defended it twice, including scoring a devastating first-round knockout victory over top contender Erickson Lubin in his last fight in October and a Knockout of the Year contender against Charles Hatley in April. Charlo and his twin brother, Jermall, were the only twin brothers to hold world titles in the same weight class simultaneously before Jermall relinquished his 154-pound championship to campaign at 160 pounds.

“Trout is no journeyman. He’s a former world champion, someone who has a name and he comes to fight. The name means he’s worthy of another title challenge," Charlo said. “Trout is the man that has been chosen for me and I have to take care of him. I’m super excited to be fighting and defending my title again.

“The only thing I’m going to tell you about what I’m going to do against Trout is, I’m going to surprise you guys. I plan to show my skills and show why I’m the best at 154 pounds. The most important thing is to make my mark and claim my territory."

The 32-year-old Trout (31-4, 17 KOs) is one of most accomplished boxers in the 154-pound division, having stepped into the ring against champions like Miguel Cotto, Saul “Canelo’’ Alvarez, Erislandy Lara, Jermall Charlo and Jarrett Hurd. Representing Las Cruces, New Mexico, he won the super welterweight title with a unanimous decision victory over Rigoberto Alvarez in 2011. He successfully defended the title four times, including a victory over Cotto, before losing the championship to Alvarez in 2013 and a decision to Lara eight months later.

After winning four straight, Trout stepped in for a world championship against Jermall Charlo but lost a close unanimous decision in 2016, although he is the only person to go the distance with Jermall since 2015. Last October he took on Hurd for the title, but lost via 10th round TKO — the first time in his career that he’d ever been stopped. Trout is coming off a unanimous decision victory over Juan De Angel on Feb. 17.

“I’m more than excited. I’m happy because I’m still a threat in this game,” said Trout. “People can write me off all they want. Even when I was a champion people wrote me off. This is an opportunity of a lifetime. I’m approaching it is as my last opportunity. Everybody is counting me out and I’m hoping he is too. I’m going to shock him and the world.

“I feel like I’ve done this before because I fought his brother. Jermell uses more of his skills where Jermall uses more of his brute strength. I fought the bigger one and I fought Hurd who was like his bigger brother. Now I get to fight someone who is closer to my size."
 

KENNY DA COOKER

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It's interesting that Crawford fighting Horn is getting more than attention than this card


yeah the Horn / Crawford been getting alot of damn press as opposed to this card

and what's funny is that it's not being broadcasted on a gottdamn espn app :russ:

guess it's that "white boy stimulus package" :manny:
 

patscorpio

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yeah the Horn / Crawford been getting alot of damn press as opposed to this card

and what's funny is that it's not being broadcasted on a gottdamn espn app :russ:

guess it's that "white boy stimulus package" :manny:

i dont think horn is the reason why the fight is getting attention..if this was a stimulus they'd be fighting on regular espn lol
 

aceboon

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It's interesting that Crawford fighting Horn is getting more than attention than this card
Crawford going for another belt in one of boxing's "glamour" divisions>a rematch nobody wanted + Trout getting yet another title shot. Charlo the 2nd most intriguing fighter of the night imo, but PBC/Showtime still not doing the Charlos any favors by not having them headline a major card when they got a lot of momentum behind them.
 
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