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Canelo Alvarez was easily able to get through the defences of Alfredo Angulo in their junior middleweight bout in Las Vegas. Photo: AFP

Canelo Alvarez finds a much easier target

Dominated in his last fight by Mayweather, the Mexican rebounds to batter outclassed Angulo

NYT

Frustrated in his big fight against Floyd Mayweather Jnr, Canelo Alvarez found a much easier target in Alfredo Angulo.

Alvarez battered a game, but outclassed Angulo before stopping him with an uppercut that prompted referee Tony Weeks to move in at 47 seconds of the 10th round of their junior middleweight fight.

Alvarez (43-1-1) never put down Angulo (22-4), but hit him throughout the fight with hard combinations that almost always found their mark. By the middle rounds, the only suspense left was whether Angulo could go the distance.

The fight was in marked contrast to the last bout for Alvarez, who was dominated by Mayweather in the richest bout yet. But while Mayweather was the master of defence, Angulo was there to be hit all night long - and Alvarez did just that.

"Tonight, I was the best fighter and definitely rebounded from the Mayweather fight with my performance," Alvarez said.

Angulo, who was never close to going down, protested when Weeks moved in to stop the fight after a big left uppercut to the head. Before the 10th round began, Angulo's corner had pleaded with the ring doctor to give their fighter one more round to try to turn things around.

"I'm upset because they should have let the fight go on," Angulo said. "I'm fine and I was fighting."

Angulo never stopped going forward, but he paid a price, taking shot after shot to the head as Alvarez teed off at will. Alvarez won all but one of the first nine rounds on two ringside scorecards, and two on the third. Boxing writers had had him winning eight of the first nine rounds.

Ringside punching stats were just as lopsided, with Alvarez landing 295 punches to 104 for Angulo.

The ending was booed by many in the crowd that filled the MGM Grand arena for the junior middleweight showdown between the two Mexican fighters. There was no title at stake, but the 23-year-old Alvarez seemed determined to win big to erase memories of the loss to Mayweather, the only one of his career.

He landed the first left hook he threw seconds into the fight and it was quickly apparent that Angulo would have no answer for his speed and power.

"He wanted to please the fans because he felt in the Mayweather fight he let a lot of people down," promoter Richard Schaefer said. "Canelo was not satisfied with just the win. He came to make a statement and you saw that."

Alvarez was already a big star when he met Mayweather in September, but the red-haired fan favourite was frustrated by Mayweather's defence and lost almost every round. He said before this fight that he learned a lot against Mayweather, and vowed to show it in his comeback fight.

"I was so secure in my jab and my stamina was there," Alvarez said. "Of course, I was a little tired. "But I was ready to finish the fight and even go 10 more rounds."

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Alvarez finds a much easier target
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