Pacman vs Broner
#1
Pacquiao-Broner off-TV undercard

By David Robinett at ringside

Manny Pacquiao sparring partner and protégé, George Kambosos, Jr., (16-0, 9 KOs), earned a workmanlike eight round unanimous decision over faded contender Ray Perez (24-11, 8 KOs). Scores were 80-72 on all three cards for the lightweight bout. Kambosos was in control the entire fight, but was very measured, probably too much so, in his attack. Working patiently behind the jab, Kambosos would work his way into Perez and land a solid left or right hook, but rarely attempted combinations or a sustained flurry, despite the fact that Perez offered very little resistance beyond a weak jab or counter. That made for a one-sided affair lacking drama, but enough to keep Kambosos undefeated and on to the next challenge.
Desmond Jarmon, (8-0, 4 KOs) an undefeated prospect under Adrien Broner’s About Billions promotional stable, squeezed out a tactical majority decision over Canton Miller (3-2-1, 1 KO) in a six-round super featherweight bout. One judge scored the fight a 57-57 draw, overruled by the other two judges, 58-56 and 59-55. Neither fighter seemed eager to engage, with Jarmon content to throw one or two punches in occasional spurts and Miller countering with only limited success. Jarmon had his best round in the fourth, when a right uppercut appeared to hurt Miller near the end of the round, though Jarmon was unable to land a finisher before the bell. Jarmon showed little urgency after that, allowing Miller to stay in the fight, but Miller was never able to land anything significant enough to take advantage.
Welterweight Destyne Butler (5-0, 3 KOs) cruised to four-round unanimous decision over game but outclassed former MMA fighter David Payne (3-2-1, 1 KO) by scores of 40-36 on all three cards. After a competitive first round where Payne was surprisingly aggressive and caused Butler to keep his distance, Butler began to assert himself in round two, planting his feet and firing two hand combinations through the guard of Payne. Butler continued to rely on superior speed and power to batter Payne over the last two rounds, despite some flashes of moxie by Payne, who refused to go down and got in some nice work to the body despite the losing effort.
In the opening bout of the Pacquiao vs. Broner undercard at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, former British national team member Viddal Riley (2-0, 2 KOs) needed all of three punches to earn a first-round stoppage over debuting opponent Mitchell Spangler in a scheduled four-round cruiserweight bout. Riley, who at this stage may be best known for training YouTube star KSI for his PPV exhibition match against Logan Paul, knocked down Spangler with his first two punches, a left jab, right hand combination. Moments later Riley finished it with his third punch, a left hook that dropped Spangler hard and prompted the referee to quickly wave the mismatch over. Official time of the stoppage was 33 seconds.
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#2
Browne tops Jack for WBA 175lb interim belt

By David Robinett at ringside

2012 United States Olympian Marcus Browne (23-0, 16 KOs) earned his first major title, winning the interim WBA light heavyweight belt with a twelve round unanimous decision over a bloodied Badou Jack (22-2-3, 13 KOs) on Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. Scores were 116-111, 117-110, and 119-108 in a fight that may be most remembered for the profuse amount of blood spilled from Jack’s head over the last half of the fight, covering both fighters and referee Tony Weeks in a seemingly endless stream of crimson.

From the start it was clear that the younger Browne was the fresher, more active fighter as the southpaw consistently worked behind his right jab, mixing in lead left and right hands, particularly to the body. For the first half of the fight Jack appeared sluggish, with his ineffective counterpunches slow to develop.

The tenor of the fight changed in round seven, when a clash of heads ripped open a long vertical cut on Jack’s forehead. Almost immediately, blood started flowing freely and continuously from the cut, which itself got larger as the rounds progressed until it covered nearly the length of Jack’s forehead from the bridge of his nose to just below his hairline. The cut seemed to inject some urgency into Jack, as he began to throw more punches and counter more aggressively over the remaining rounds, while repeatedly pawing at the spigot on his head. Jack also received the benefit of a questionable point taken away from Browne for holding later in the seventh round, which seemed a bit arbitrary since both Browne and Jack were equally guilty of excessive grappling at times.

Ultimately Browne would not be deterred though, effectively targeting both the cut and Jack’s body over the remaining rounds en route to a convincing victory.
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#3
Pacman by UD. Easy win. Story to follow...
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#4
Pacquiao dominates Broner, still WBA welter champ
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By David Robinett at ringside

WBA welterweight champion Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao (61-7-2, 39 KOs) scored a one-sided twelve round unanimous decision over Adrien “The Problem” Broner (33-4-1, 24 KOs) on Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. The 40-year-old Pacman took the fight to Broner, doubling Broner’s punch output. Scores were 117-111, 116-112, 116-112.

More the come…
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#5
What now then?
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#6
I think some of those scores were generous to Broner. He offered nothing. Seemed content just to survive.
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#7
Boyz on Eastside said Broner was pathetic and ran in the later rounds. Here's the scorecard:

https://fightnews.com/broner-claims-robbery/38276
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#8
Pacquiao dominates Broner, still WBA welter champ

By David Robinett at ringside

Marching on in defiance of Father Time, the incomparable Manny Pacquiao cruised to a convincing unanimous decision victory over four-division champion Adrien Broner (33-4-1, 24 KOs), retaining his WBA welterweight belt via scores of 116-112, 116-112, and 117-111 on Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

The 40-year old Pacquiao (61-7-2, 39 KOs), boxing’s only eight-division champion, took a few rounds to figure out “The Problem,” but once he did it was a one-sided domination, partly due to Senator Pacquiao’s still formidable skills, and partly due, as is often the case, to Broner’s lack of offensive urgency.

In the early rounds both fighters took their time feeling things out, with Broner content to try and time Pacquiao coming in and stealing a couple of rounds by catching Pacquiao once or twice with some solid shots, despite Pacquiao being the more active, aggressive fighter.

It wasn’t until round seven when momentum clearly turned in favor of Pacquiao, when he appeared to hurt Broner with a straight left and spent the remainder of the round trapping Broner along the ropes and unloading brief, violent flurries reminiscent of the younger, more dynamic Pacquiao. In round nine, another Pacquiao left hand caused Broner to stumble back dramatically along the ropes, as Pacquiao again attempted to close the show.

Although he didn’t have the finishing kick of his younger self, Pacquiao still dominated these later rounds, swarming Broner for portions of each round while Broner offered little in return. Things cooled off in the championship rounds as Broner retreated into safety mode, giving Pacquiao a wide berth in an obvious effort to make it to the final bell without further damage. Although Pacquiao wasn’t able to chase Broner down for the stoppage, he made it clear that, even at age 40, he still belongs among the elite of the division.
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#9
Nasty cut suffered by Badou Jack in round 7 v Marcus Browne in light heavyweight fight on Pacman -Broner undercard!

https://img.blesk.cz/img/2/full/5474292_.jpg

https://img.blesk.cz/img/2/full/5474293_.jpg
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