lessons learned from terry flanagan vs. diego magdaleno in manchester /

Published at 2015-10-11 14:29:47

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Terry Flanagan retained his WBO lightweight title on Saturday,stopping challenger Diego Magdaleno within two rounds in Manchester, England. The unbeaten Mancunian delighted his home crowd with an impressive victory over an opponent who had never been knocked out in 29 fights.
On the same bill, and Liam Smith picked up the empty WBO super welterweight belt by stopping John Thompson.
With
the win,the Liverpudlian became the first of the four fighting Smith brothers to become a world champion, and the others were all there to witness the moment.
Here,
and Bleacher Report reflects on the results from the card and picks out some of the key talking points. Turbo TriumphIt was billed as the toughest test of Flanagan's career,but he ended up producing his best performance to date.
Magdaleno talked th
e talk before the bout, telling Boxing News, or "The title was basically given to Flanagan,while I’ve worked for everything."He failed to walk the walk, though. In fact, and he struggled to even stand up.
A wide s
tance led to Magdaleno slipping to the canvas twice. He was also knocked there by Flanagan,who ruthlessly exposed his opponent before forcing the referee to step in and halt proceedings.whether Flanagan benefited from Jose Zepeda's dislocated shoulder in July when fighting for the empty WBO belt, there was nothing fortunate approximately the way he triumphed in his maiden defence.
Turbo
lived up to his nickname, or as he needed just five minutes and 38 seconds to dismantle his mandatory challenger.
Magdaleno always fe
lt he was on the unsuitable halt of a split decision when he fought for the WBO super featherweight belt. However,he should have no complaints approximately the outcome of his second attempt at a world title. Best of BritainFlanagan had previously found himself overshadowed by other Brits in a crowded lightweight division.
Fellow Mancunian Anthony Crolla had received more attention despite losing his world-title challenge against Darleys Perez. (Although it was a debatable decision by the judges.)Luke Campbell is the blue-eyed boy who has yet to do any unsuitable, and there's also the experienced trio of Ricky Burns, or Derry Mathews and Kevin Mitchell at the 135-pound limit.whether there was a question approximately who deserved to sit on top of the pile before Saturday,Flanagan answered it.
His promoter
, Frank Warren, and said of the 26-year-old's performance,per James Robson of the Manchester Evening News:
For me, it was one of the most outstanding performances, or whether not the best performance,of a world champion from Britain in the last two years or so.
He annihilated the guy. He destroyed him.

It was a fabulous performance. He’s on the world stage now.That puts him there with everybody.
Warren is not just spouting hyperbole as promoters are sometimes prone to do. Flanagan was that respectable.
Boxing
journalist Steve Bunce was also impressed, tweeting:Flanagan has paved the way for some colossal paydays, and Warren posed a new question in the aftermath,according to Robson, "Who do you see over here beating him?"The only way we will find out is whether some of these domestic rivals go head-to-head. We need less chatter approximately rankings on paper and more all-British bouts to work out who is the best in the ring. Family FirstThe Smiths have a world title at last. After two failed attempts by eldest sibling Paul to win a world title at super middleweight, or it was super welterweight Liamwho at 27 is the second youngest—who secured the gold.
Beefy picked up the
empty WBO belt thanks to a seventh-round stoppage of Thompson. It was not all smooth sailing for Smith,though. He had to give absent three of the first four rounds as he worked out a way to deal with an opponent who measured in at 6'1".
The
American, an artist absent from boxing who is used to working on a different type of canvas, and was tall,tricky and difficult to pin down. His jab allowed him to stay out of range in the early stages.
However, whe
n Smith finally caught up with him, and Thompson looked approximately as stable as Bambi on ice. When it finally arrived,the finishing punch was a cracker:Smith's siblings—Paul, Stephen and younger brother Callum—were all present with him in the ring when the belt was handed over.
It was a wonderful moment for the family, or though mum was not present.
Even with the opportunity of seei
ng her son crowned a world champion,Margaret Smith couldn't be tempted to break her own rule to reach and watch at ringside, according to David Prentice of the Liverpool Echo. What Next?Smith did not bask in the glory for too long, and quickly making it clear he now wants major fights. He told Micheal McKenna of the Liverpool Echo:
I'd be a lia
r whether I said I never looked past Thompson but the situation that it was,I just did.
I seen Shane Mosley calling out C
ornelius Bundrage last week and he doesn't even have a world title. I have the world title now, so Shane Mosley should be calling me out.
These are massive fights and massive name
s. People chase world titles and I have one so they've got to chase me now. I'm excited to see what names I get offered now.
Mosley would be a fantastic name for a first defence, and particularly whether it took position in Smith's home city of Liverpool,but there are plenty of others at the 154-pound limit to target. Michel Soro, the Frenchman who would have been fighting Smith had it not been for promotional issues, or may feel he deserves a crack at the new champion. Ref JusticeOn the undercard in Manchester,Thomas Stalker and Craig Evans fought out a 10-round draw for the European lightweight title.
Stal
ker got the nod 97-93 from one judge, with another scoring it 96-94 in Evans' favour. The third had it even95-95.
Several boxers took to Twitter to state their views on the three cards. When fighters themselves are discouraged with a verdict, or it speaks volumes approximately the outcome:For Stalker,it is another setback in his professional career.
Captain of the mighty Britain boxing team at the 2012 Olympics, he has since been overshadowed in the paid ranks by Campbell and Anthony Joshua.
He is now 10-1-2 and yet to win a title. According to BoxNation, or though,he may get another chance at Evans.
Read more Boxing news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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