Crawford crushes Kavaliauskas in 9th round to retain WBO title

Agence France-Presse

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Crawford crushes Kavaliauskas in 9th round to retain WBO title

AFP

In a tougher than expected tussle, Terence Crawford survives an early scare before knocking out Olympian Egidijus Kavaliauskas

 

 

LOS ANGELES, USA – Terence Crawford survived some early jitters to retain his WBO welterweight title with a 9th round knockout of former Olympian Egidijus Kavaliauskas at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, December 14 (Sunday, December 15, Philippine time).

Crawford, who improved to 36-0 with 27 knockouts, survived a scare in the 3rd round before finding his rhythm in the 5th, knocking the Lithuanian down once in the 7th, and then twice in the final round.

In a tougher than expected tussle, Crawford finished the heavy underdog challenger off with a right hook to the left ear 44 seconds into the 9th.

“When I let my hands go that’s when I started landing more favorable shots,” the American said. “After I dropped him with my uppercut I was like, I am going to face his jab, and come out with my right hook.”

Kavaliauskas barely survived the end of the 8th round and Crawford wasted no time going to work in the 9th. He landed a barrage of punches to start the round, beginning with a left hook followed by a right that sent Kavaliauskas staggering back towards the ropes.

Crawford then moved in for the finish and connected with a right hook that floored Kavaliauskas (21-1-1, 17 KOs) for the third and final time as the referee stopped the bout.

Kavaliauskas, who competed in the 2008 and 2012 Olympics, appeared to score the first knockdown of the fight in the 3rd round. But the ref ruled that Crawford slipped. Regardless Crawford was in a load of trouble after absorbing an overhand right on the chin.

Crawford collected his thoughts and survived the round, but it wasn’t until the 5th that he really started to look like his old self.

In trouble

Crawford’s early troubles aside, he did a superb job of figuring out a tough opponent who came into the bout in excellent shape.

“He’s a strong fighter, durable,” said Crawford who denied he was in trouble in the 3rd. “I wasn’t hurt at all. I went straight for him. He caught me with a good punch.”

Crawford and his promoters are hoping to eventually land a fight with former two-time welterweight champ Shawn Porter.

Whoever he fights it will surely be a much bigger test, which means Crawford can’t afford to fiddle away 5 rounds before he gets comfortable throwing meaningful combinations.

“The rounds before my coaches were telling me to stop loading up. I was trying to give the crowd a knockout,” he said. 

“I am not ducking anybody. Listen man, everybody knows who I want to fight. I don’t have to name names. I want all the top guys.”

On the undercard, Teofimo Lopez captured his first world title by knocking out Ghana’s Richard Commey in the 2nd round to take Commey’s IBF lightweight crown in emphatic fashion.

“I’m at a loss for words right now. This is a dream come true,” said Lopez, 15-0 with 12 KOs. “(Commey) is a bad man. His shot could’ve done the same to me if he hit me with that shot.”

Veteran Commey (29-3, 26 KOs) suffered just his third career loss but he had never been dominated by an opponent like this before.

Commey was making his second title defense and looked solid in the opening round, but then Lopez destroyed him in the 2nd. – Rappler.com

 

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