Errol Spence Dominates Errol Spence

TERENCE CRAWFORD DOMINATES ERROL SPENCE TO BECOME THE BEST IN BOXING – VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS, POST PRESSER & SOCIAL MEDIA REACTION

TERENCE CRAWFORD MAKES HISTORY WITH NINTH-ROUND TKO OVER ERROL SPENCE JR. IN SHOWTIME PPV®  MAIN EVENT SATURDAY NIGHT FROM T-MOBILE ARENA IN LAS VEGAS

Isaac Cruz Edges Giovanni Cabrera

by Split-Decision in Co-Main Event

Alexandro Santiago Captures Vacant Bantamweight World Title and Yoenis Tellez Scores Highlight-Reel Knockout in Pay-Per-View Undercard Action

Click HERE for Photos from Esther Lin/SHOWTIME

Click HERE for Photos from Ryan Hafey/

Premier Boxing Champions

Recap By Robert Brizel, Head Real Combat Media Boxing Correspondent

Las Vegas, NV (July 30th, 2023)– In the main event of a 10 bout Showtime Pay-Per-View card at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, on July 29, 2023, Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford, 40-0 with 31 knockouts, Omaha, Nebraska, became the first male undisputed champion in two weight classes in the four belt era, now holding the World Boxing Council, World Boxing Association Super, World Boxing Organization, and International Boxing Federation World Welterweight championship with a ninth round stoppage of Errol Spence Jr., 28-1 with 22 knockouts, Desoto, Texas, in a battle of undefeated world welterweight champions at –T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

This fight was world title hype reminiscent of the Muhammad Ali versus Joe Frazier Fight of The Century on March 8, 1971, between the two undefeated world heavyweight champions.

In the Ali versus Frazier I bout, Frazier dropped Ali in the fifteenth round with a tremendous left hook to retain the World Heavyweight title. In this scenario, Crawford, fighting this particular world title bout as a southpaw versus a southpaw, dropped Spence in the second round and twice in the seventh round, and was ahead 90-78 on the Real Combat Media scorecard (including the partial ninth round) after winning eight rounds in a row. The physical and visual acumen of Spence was in question after he was in a catastrophic car accident in October 2019, and suffering a detached retina in his left eye during sparring preparation in August 2021 for his then scheduled bout with Manny Pacquiao.

Crawford spotted Spence the first round, holding his gloves high in defense and blocking shots as Spence came forward, assessing the game plan of Spence and planning his methodical counterattack. A simple yet explosively powerful short left jab knocked a surprised Spence to the canvas in round two for an insignificant flash knockdown, though at that point the incredible accuracy and power of Crawford was obvious.

Spence was coming forward with his jab, working it hard, though ineffectively. Bud used superior footwork and incredible hand speed pinpoint counters, to turn the face of Spence into a view of battered mushy jelly by the end of round four. Spence was not able to turn Crawford, who created incredible angles and landed punches with power accuracy even at close quarters with limited punching space. Spence was not able to solve the riddle. By the end of round four, the ringside physician was in the Spence corner, questioning whether Spence wanted to continue on with one appeared to be a one-sided massacre.

Bud landed pinpoint body shots, and pinpoint power shots to the chin of Spence, along with some power shot combinations. Spence landed some good power shots, but as Shawn porter noted from his fight with Crawford, nothing seemed to hurt Crawford or bother him to any degree. Bud’s ring generalship had Spence in retreat getting backed up.

Crawford continued to land devastating power counters with evil intent whether Spence landed any punch of significance or consequence. Bud’s counters left Spence on the canvas twice in round seven, more embarrassed than anything else, but the handwriting was on the wall by that point in the bout, not if, but when. Spence was taking a beating. One question this reporter had was how well Spence was seeing out of his surgically corrected right eye.

The end came late in the ninth round. Bud came forward and walked Spence down, landing pinpoint shots to the head which had Spence staggering around the ring. After Bud staggered Spence helpless along the ring ropes, and moved in for the atom bomb kill, referee Harvey Dock wisely stepped in and stopped the bout with Spence ready to go for the count, much like Alfredo Angulo got stopped ready to go along the ropes against James Kirkland at Central de Cancun, Mexico, in November 2011.

Throughout this entire bout, Bud Crawford looked like a wise bearded man with eyes of maturity, an old master of his craft poised to do his job, intensely mature, and totally focused on the job at hand. Spence never even had a chance at reaching the championship rounds. However, one must consider the possibility the accident survivor and detached retina recovered version of Errol Spence Jr. was not the best version of Spence which Bud Crawford could have faced. This bout was a tit-for-tat brouhaha bubbling for five years. In the end, as Shakespeare would have told you, this supposed mega bout proved to be a lopsided much ado about nothing.

The late boxing commentator Howard Cosell was a strong supporter of ring safety. While fighters such as Sugar Ray Leonard, Julian Jackson, and Errol Spence Jr. underwent retinal reattachment surgery and resumed their career, Cosell was against it, as much as he was opposed to the damaged version of the late Muhammad Ali being allowed to fight Larry Holmes and Trevor Berbick against sound medical advice. Cosell would have been opposed to the 40-year-old Nonito Donaire fighting 12 rounds and losing in a bid for the vacant world bantamweight championship on the Crawford-Spence undercard. Crawford and Spence cashed out. This reporter, however, agrees with the late Mr. Cosell, at least where eye injuries are concerned. Fighters like Sugar Ray Seales and the late Aaron Pryor were lucky to have successful eye surgery. Heavyweight Calvin Brock was not. This reporter feels strongly with Cosell that fighters who incur serious eye injuries should be retired. With or without the injuries he recovered from, Spence was thoroughly outclassed by Crawford, who added the Ring Magazine World Welterweight championship belt to his collection.

For boxing experts who notice there is one belt missing, the so-called fifth belt, the international Boxing Organization World Welterweight title, is currently vacant. It was last held by Kazakhstan fighter Daniyar Yeleussinov in December 2021.

Real Combat Media predicted the win for Crawford, the betting favorite. Crawford did not manhandle Spence. Crawford did meticulously outwork Spence and land with sparkling and devastating accuracy. Spence had never met such opposition with power at 147 pounds. Crawford could make a move up to 154 pounds now, which could prove interesting.

Result: Terence ‘Bud’ Crawford TKO 9 Errol Spence Jr., Welterweights (2:32)

Crawford retains World Boxing Organization World Welterweight title

WBO Supervisor: Francisco Valcarcel

Crawford wins World Boxing Council World Welterweight title

WBC Supervisor: Mauricio Sulaiman

Crawford wins World Boxing Association Super World Welterweight title

WBA Supervisor: Julio Thyme

Crawford wins International Boxing Federation World Welterweight title

IBF Supervisor: Daryl Peoples

Crawford wins vacant Ring Magazine World Welterweight title

Spence was knocked down in round two, and twice in round seven.

Referee: Harvey Dock

Crawford becomes first undisputed world champion in two weight classes in the four major belt WBC-WBA-WBO-IBF era

Undercard Results at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas

Isaac ‘Pitbull’ Cruz Win Split Decision 12 Giovanni Cabrera, Lightweights

25-2-1 Mexican Cruz wins WBC Silver Lightweight and vacant WBO Latino Light titles in a crossroads eliminator bout over 21-0 Freddie Roach Chicago fighter Cabrera. The shorter Cruz had a consistent offense and tight defense. The taller Cabrera had good footwork but did not seem to land very much. Scoring: 115-114, 114-113 for Cruz, 114-113 for Cabrera.

Alexandro Santiago Win 12 Nonito Donaire, Bantamweights

Santiago Wins vacant World Boxing Council World Bantamweight title

Both fighters landed punches by the CompuBox. Statistics. Mexico’s 28-3-5 Santiago got the scorecards 116-112, 116-112, 115-113. 42-8 Filipino Donaire, age 40, did well and gave a good accounting of himself, but clearly did not win the last three rounds and therefore the bout.

Yoenis Tellez TKO 3 Sergio Garcia, Super Welterweights

6-0 Cuban Tellez exposes 34-2 the visiting Spaniard Garcia

Steven Nelson Win 12 Rowdy Legend Montgomery, Super Middleweights

19-0 Omaha Nebraska prospect Nelson gets taken the 10 round distance for the first time by 10-5-1 California veteran Montgomery. One judge had it 100-90 for Nelson. Not a close bout.

Jose Salas Reyes TKO 4 Aston Palicte, Super Bantamweights

13-0 Tijuana Mexico southpaw prospect ‘El Chapulin’ Reyes worthy of better opposition.

Demler Zamora Win 8 Nikolai Buzolin, Lightweights

12-0 Las Vegas Southpaw Demler ‘The War Machine’ Zamora gets taken the eight round distance for the first time by 9-5-1 Russian Buzulin, who hung tough and would not go.

Julio Viloria TKO 4 Pedro Penunuri Borgaro, Super Featherweights

3-0 California southpaw Viloria wins battle of unbeaten prospects over Mexico’s Borgaro

Deshawn Prather Win 6 Kevin Ceja Ventura, Welterweights

Surprise! 16-1 Missouri welter Prather upsets 11-0 Omaha Nebraska’s Ventura

Jabin Choliet TKO 2 Michael Portales, Lightweights

8-0 San Diego, California lightweight prospect opens the Showtime Pay-Per-View card.

Showtime PBC Recap:

LAS VEGAS – July 29, 2023 – Undefeated three-division champion Terence “Bud” Crawford emphatically stamped his place in the history books with a ninth-round TKO over the previously unbeaten Errol “The Truth” Spence Jr. to become the first undisputed welterweight champion of the four-belt era in the SHOWTIME PPV main event Saturday night from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas in an event presented by Premier Boxing Champions.

“It means everything because of who I took the belts from,” said Crawford. “They talked bad about me. They said I wasn’t good enough and I couldn’t beat these welterweights. I just kept my head to the sky and kept praying to God that I would get the opportunity to show the world how great Terence Crawford is. Tonight, I believe I showed how great I am.”

“He was just better tonight,” said Spence. “He was using the jab. My timing was a little bit off. He was just the better man tonight.”

In addition to adding the WBC, WBA and IBF titles to his WBO belt, Crawford became the first male fighter to become an undisputed champion in two weight classes, having previously won all four belts at 140-pounds. In a fight where Spence had already been down three times, Crawford’s ninth round onslaught of hooks forced referee Harvey Dock to wave off the action 2:32 in the frame.

After years of build-up, Spence came out aggressively in the opening round, jabbing and attacking Crawford’s body. Crawford, who is known for fighting from both the southpaw and orthodox stances, fought primarily as a southpaw and scored his first knockdown in round two with a powerful right cross that caught Spence off balance and sent him down for the first time in his career.

“We practice that,” said Crawford. “Normally in camp we do a flick and jab. But we knew that wasn’t going to work with Errol Spence because he’s durable, he’s strong. So we had to practice a strong firm jab. The jab hit him and stopped him in his tracks.”

“He was just throwing the hard jab,” said Spence. “He was timing with his jab. His timing was just on point. I wasn’t surprised by his speed or his accuracy. It was everything I thought.”

Spence came out in round three determined to turn the tide after the knockdown, throwing big shots, including a left hook that landed cleanly early. However, Crawford was able to withstand the attack and showed his precision by landing a clean counter right that again staggered Spence.

“Errol Spence is a tremendous talent and he’s got a great jab,” said Crawford. “We were worried about the jab coming in because that’s how he sets up all of his shots.  Our main focus was the jab. You take away his best attribute. The rest is history.”

In round seven, Crawford dropped Spence twice, once with a clean right uppercut early on and again late in the round with a right hook. Crawford led 79-70 on all three cards at the time of the stoppage and dominated the CompuBox stats with an 185 to 96 advantage in punches landed and an astounding 50% connect rate.

Post-fight, Crawford showed his respect for Spence stepping up to the plate and making the super fight happen and spoke to the historic nature of the matchup, while Spence expressed his interest in a rematch later this year.

“We gotta do it again,” said Spence. “I’m going to be a lot better. It’ll be a lot closer. It’ll probably be in December and the end of the year. I say we gotta do it again.”

“Like I said before, I only dreamed of being a world champion,” said Crawford. “I’m an overachiever. Nobody believed in me when I was coming up, but I made everybody a believer. I want to thank Spence and his team because without him none of this would have been possible.”

In the co-main event, hard-hitting Mexican contender Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz (25-2-1, 17 KOs) edged out the previously unbeaten Giovanni Cabrera (21-1, 7 KOs) via split decision to emerge victorious in their WBC and WBA Lightweight Title Eliminator. Cruz, who was deducted a point in round eight due to headbutts, won the bout with scores of 115-112 and 114-113, with one judge scoring the action 114-113 for Cabrera.

“I was superior tonight, but I do respect all of my opponents, and he was very good today,” said Cruz. “I was frustrated a little. He thought it was my birthday because he was hugging me all night.”

The typically aggressive Cruz started patiently as the southpaw Cabrera used his height and jab to try to keep Cruz from getting into position to land his power shots across the early action. Cruz began to find his offense in rounds three through six, landing numerous strong hooks, including a counter left that gave Cabrera problems time and time again.

“Cabrera’s height didn’t frustrate me as much as the fact that I was coming off a considerably long period of inactivity,” said Cruz. “That’s not an excuse though, and I still won.”

“In the middle rounds I was pulling back and he was catching me with punches that were turning my head around,” said Cabrera. “He’s a ‘Pitbull’ and we gave the fans a good fight.”

Cabrera was able to adjust in the later rounds and nearly pulled off the upset by winning at least two of the last three rounds on all three cards. Cruz held a significant edge in power punches landed (152-55) and was the more accurate fighter overall by landing 31% of his shots compared to 13.5% from Cabrera.

“I waited a little too long waiting to see how much he had,” said Cabrera. “Then I started turning up my punches when I saw that was all he had. I thought I took control at the end of the fight, but I don’t make any excuses.

Cabrera expressed his belief post fight that he had done enough to earn a career-best victory, while Cruz reiterated his intention to seek a rematch against unbeaten superstar Gervonta Davis after losing a competitive decision to Davis in December 2021.

“I really thought I did enough in the early rounds and the closing rounds,” said Cabrera. “It was a close fight. His energy started going down toward the end of the fight and I was tagging him with uppercuts.”

“I respect Gervonta, and at the same time I’m sure that I will have the opportunity to redeem myself,” said Cruz. “When that opportunity comes, I’ll be ready.”

The pay-per-view also saw Mexico’s Alexandro Santiago (28-3-5, 14 KOs) use his superior speed to out-point future Hall of Famer Nonito Donaire (42-8, 28 KOs) and capture the vacant WBC Bantamweight World Championship after 12 rounds of action with scores of 116-112 twice and 15-113.

“It is so hard to explain this moment right now,” said Santiago, who became the 90th fighter to compete on SHOBOX: The New Generation® and later become champion. “All the work we put in for just this moment. It’s amazing just to win this title.”

“I’m disappointed,” said Donaire. “This is a blessing to do this for a very long time. I feel good still. Congratulations to Alexandro. He deserves it. He is a tough guy.”

The 27-year-old Santiago came in as the underdog against the four-division champion Donaire, but consistently beat Donaire to the punch with a variety of jabs, straight rights and left hooks. Donaire was able to land his signature power left hook at several moments throughout the fight, but Santiago hung tough and never showed any sign of being hurt.

“I was trying to counter so much and put so much power into it,” said Donaire. “I tried to fight like a warrior, which was something we didn’t train to do.”

The two fighters each landed 130 punches over the 12 rounds, with Santiago owning a slight edge in power punches landed (62-53). Donaire actually out-landed Santiago in each of the first six rounds before Santiago took control of the second half of the fight. Santiago won each of the last six rounds on one card, five of the last six on another and four of the final six on the third card.

At 40-years-old, Donaire had been looking to break his own record as the oldest fighter to ever win a bantamweight world title, but will now regroup as he considers if he’ll continue his illustrious career.

“I love the sport so much,” said Donaire. “We just have to go back to the locker room, talk about it, and see where we go from there. There were just some times there where I didn’t pull the trigger. That was my biggest problem.”

An emotional Santiago broke down in tears after he was announced as the winner and received words of encouragement from the defeated Donaire.

“It has been an honor to fight such a legend like Nonito Donaire,” said Santiago. “He said thank you for giving me this great fight and I appreciated him saying that.”

Opening the pay-per-view, top prospect Yoenis Tellez (6-0, 5 KOs) announced himself as a 154-pounder to watch with a sensational third-round knockout over Spanish contender Sergio Garcia (34-3, 14 KOs).

“Right now my goal is not defined, but I want to face the best 154-pounders that are out there,” said Tellez, who recorded the stoppage 2:02 into the frame.

The early action saw the significantly more experienced Garcia press forward from the outset as he looked to close down the distance on Tellez and wing power shots from the inside. He appeared to fluster the Ronnie Shields-trained Tellez over the first two frames, as Tellez had more success from distance.

“My strategy didn’t change once the fight started,” said Garcia. “My goal was to tire him out, and I didn’t get the opportunity to do so. He got me with a good shot and screwed the fight up for me.”

In round three, Tellez was able to adjust to the pressure and land a brilliant right-left combo that staggered Garcia, who miraculously was not sent to the mat from the shots. Tellez stayed alert and landed a straight right moments later that sent the determined Garcia to the canvas.

“My trainer Ronnie Shields and my whole team behind me – we worked on this during training camp, especially the right hand, and it came out just the way it was supposed to come out,” said Tellez.

Garcia was able to rise to his feet, but Tellez showed poise to keep the pressure on and deliver a series of powerful blows that eventually forced referee Robert Hoyle to jump in and call the fight.

“I’m so disappointed,” said Garcia. “I told the ref that I could keep going, but I guess that’s his job and they are there to stop the fight when they feel it’s right. As a fighter, I’m always going to want to continue and persevere.”

“The finish was the assassin instinct that us Cubans have,” said Tellez. “As soon as I saw him hurt, I knew it was time and that he was done, so I went for it.”

Preceding the pay-per-view, the SHOWTIME PPV COUNTDOWN show streamed two undercard fights live on the SHOWTIME SPORTS YouTube channel and SHOWTIME Boxing® Facebook page. Topping the streaming presentation was Crawford-training partner Steven Nelson (19-0, 15 KOs) earning a unanimous decision over Rowdy Legend Montgomery (10-5-1, 7 KOs) after 10 rounds of super middleweight action. Montgomery was game throughout the contest, but was consistently outworked by Nelson, who was victorious by scores of 100-90 and 99-91 twice.

Kicking off the live stream, rising super bantamweight Jose Salas Reyes (13-0, 10 KOs) swarmed Aston Palicte (28-6-1, 23 KOs) in round four to earn a TKO victory. Reyes dropped Palicte with a series of punches midway through the round, forcing him to take a knee that prompted referee Allen Huggins to stop the fight at 1:30 into the frame.

Veteran sportscaster Brian Custer hosted the SHOWTIME PPV telecast while versatile combat sports voice Mauro Ranallo handled blow-by-blow action alongside Hall of Fame analyst Al Bernstein and three-division world champion Abner Mares. Three Hall of Famers rounded out the telecast team – Emmy®-winning reporter Jim Gray, world-renowned ring announcer Jimmy Lennon, Jr., and boxing historian Steve Farhood, who served as unofficial scorer. Four-time Emmy® Award winner David Dinkins, Jr. executive-produced the telecast with Bob Dunphy directing. Sportscaster Alejandro Luna called the action in Spanish on Secondary Audio Programming (SAP) with former world champion and SHOBOX: The New Generation commentator Raúl “El Diamante” Marquez serving as the expert analyst.

The SHOWTIME PPV COUNTDOWN show was hosted by award-winning MORNING KOMBAT live digital talk show co-host Luke Thomas, renowned combat sports journalist Ariel Helwani and accomplished sports broadcaster Kate Abdo.

The main event of Spence vs. Crawford will premiere on SHOWTIME on Saturday, August 5 at 9 p.m. ET/PT followed by the premier of the EMMY Award winning series ALL ACCESS: SPENCE VS. CRAWFORD EPILOGUE.

The event was promoted by Man Down Promotions, TBC Promotions and TGB Promotions.

VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS, POST PRESSER & SOCIAL MEDIA REACTIONS:





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Robert Brizel - Head Boxing Correspondent
Robert Brizel - Head Boxing Correspondent
Robert is the Head Boxing Correspondent for Real Combat Media Boxing since 2013. Robert is also a photographer and ringside reporter for the RCM Tri State region which includes NJ, NY and PA. Robert conducts exclusive interviews, provides historical boxing articles and provides editorial ringside coverage of major boxing events. You can contact or follow Robert on Facebook and by email at [email protected].