The Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York offers up a
fantastic night of boxing tonight. The event will host four world title fights
as well as an action-packed undercard.
Danny Garcia, coming off of a huge win over Amir Khan,
will defend his titles against former foe Erik Morales. The Mexican legend has
been in the news for all the wrong reasons these last couple of days because of
a supposed failed drug test which jeopardises the bout. It looks like it will
go through though.
I don’t see anything other than a Danny Garcia winner.
Erik Morales is long past his best and never reached the heights of glory that
he one reached at super bantamweight up to super featherweight all those years
ago. I think we will see Garcia consolidate his place as one of the world’s top
light welterweights and stop Erik Morales late on. Verdict: Garcia KO 10.
Devon Alexander and Randall Bailey fight in an
intriguing bout for the IBF welterweight title Bailey won off of the previously
undefeated Mike Jones in his last outing. If there is thing which is utterly
predictable in this fight it is that both fighters are totally unpredictable.
It wouldn’t be out of place to say these two both have a
case of Jekyll and Hyde about them. Devon Alexander once looked like he could
be the next big thing at light welterweight after big wins over Junior Witter
and Juan Urango. But poor showings against Andriy Kotelnyk, Timothy Bradley and
Lucas Matthysse made people question his heart and talent.
However, a step up to welterweight back in February
against the tough Marcos Maidana put Alexander’s name right back out there. It
was arguably Alexander’s most impressive win to date and has lead to his world
title shot against the newly crowned champion Bailey.
Bailey also has his ups and downs in the ring. Although
he has fought some of the best fighters of his generation, he has tended to
leave the ring empty-handed when he has come up against the top opponents. His
world title glory of 1999 seemed a long time ago until June when he managed to
dethrone Mike Jones in one of the biggest shocks this year. Down on all three
scorecards going into round 11, he pulled off an unlikely stoppage to win his
second world title. He may be 38 years old but the power remains and as long as
it does, he will always have a puncher’s chance.
Verdict: I
do give Bailey a chance of pulling off a stoppage win at some point late on but
I think the smart money is definitely on Alexander running rings around him and
boxing his way to a unanimous decision. Alexander
UD.
Paulie Malignaggi has been on a good run recently
notching up four wins on the bounce, the last of which was against Vyacheslav
Senchenko in which he won the WBA welterweight title. He has always been known
for his sharp boxing skills, tough chin and resilience and should prove too
much for his Mexican opponent whose biggest claim to fame up until now was his
10th round loss to Erik Morales a year ago.
Verdict:
The smart money is on Malignaggi to win a unanimous decision but I’m thinking
he’s good enough to get the stoppage in this one. Malignaggi to win between rounds 9 and 11.
In possibly the toughest fight to call on the night, WBO
middleweight champion Hassan N’Dam N’Jikam makes his first defence since
inheriting the title from Dmitry Pirog against fellow undefeated fighter Peter
Quillin.
On paper I think this fight is about as 50-50 as they
come. But personally I don’t see anything other than a Quillin victory. Quillin
has recorded some good victories to date over the likes of Winky Wright (UD)
and Craig McEwan (TKO 6) and has shown he is one of the top prospects at the
weight.
N’Jikam has been a bit of an unknown quantity and
somewhat avoided fighter in the last year or so. His title shot never seemed to
materialise but now that he has one I’m not sure how long he can hold onto it
for. I see a lot of flaws in his game; He moves too much and doesn’t really
plant his feet when he punches, he gets hit too often and he seems to lack
power.
Both Quillin and N’Jikam like to fight on the back foot
but I think Quillin does it more efficiently. I can’t see both fighters
fighting in a more defensive stance in this fight so I expect Quillin to do the
pressuring. I think this pressuring will eventually lead to a stoppage win for
Quillin.
Verdict:
Quillin TKO 8.
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