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Devin Haney vs Joseph Diaz Jr. Preview & Prediction

By Ian S Palmer

Unbeaten WBC Lightweight Champion Devin Haney of San Francisco will be defending his title for the fourth time this Saturday December 4th when he takes on former IBF Junior Lightweight Champion Joseph Diaz Jr of Downey, California. The fight from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas can be seen live in most nations on DAZN. Haney last fought in May when he beat former world champion Jorge Linares by unanimous decision while Diaz beat Javier Fortuna by 12-round unanimous decision in July. Haney originally won the interim WBC belt when he stopped Zaur Abdullaev after four rounds in September, 2019.

The 23-year-old Haney has evolved from being a can’t-miss prospect to a world champion following his excellent 138-bout amateur career after getting into the sport as a seven-year-old. He won a silver medal at the USA Junior National Championships in 2013 and reached the quarterfinals of the World Juniors the same year. He then won a gold medal at the 2014 US Junior National Championships and the 2015 USA Youth National Championships.

He was the youngest boxer ever to win the Youth World Championships and captured a total of seven national titles along the way. Haney, who was born in San Francisco and fights out of Las Vegas, then turned pro in December of 2015 as a 16-year-old and has a perfect record of 26-0 with 15 Kos and has 150 rounds under his belt. He’s also won several regional and minor titles along the way including the WBC Youth World, USBA, IBF North American, WBC International, and WBO Inter-Continental Lightweight Belts.

Haney stands 5-feet-8-inches tall with a 71-inch reach and possesses tremendous skills and speed. He’s not the most powerful puncher out there but has a current knockout ratio of 57.7 per cent. His first four pro fights took place in Mexico since he was too young to box professionally in America at the time. He’s beaten everybody in front of him so far with his toughest opponents being Linares, Yuriorkis Gamboa, Alfredo Santiago, Antonio Moran, Mason Menard, Juan Carlos Burgos and Xolisani Ndongeni.

The 29-year-old Diaz Jr. lost his first world title shot when he dropped a unanimous decision to WBC Featherweight Champion Gary Russell Jr. in May, 2018. He then beat WBA Titleholder Jesus Rojas by unanimous decision three months later but came in overweight for the fight and wasn’t able to win the belt. It was third time lucky for him though when he beat Tevin Farmer for the IBF Super Featherweight Title via unanimous decision in 2020.

Diaz will climb through the ropes with a mark of 32-1-1with 15 Kos with his ;lone draw coming over 12 rounds against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov in February. He was a member of the U.S. Olympic Boxing Team at the 2012 Games in London, England where he went 1-1 as a bantamweight. He also reached the quarterfinals of the 2011 World Amateur Championships. Diaz turned pro in December, 2012 and has fought 251 rounds since. He has average power with a current knockout ratio of 44.1 per cent.

Diaz stands 5-feet-6-inches tall with a 64-inch reach which means he gives up two inches in height and a big seven inches in reach to Haney. Since turning pro he’s also captured the NABF and WBO-NABO Featherweight Titles and the WBA Gold Super Featherweight Crown. Along with meeting Fortuna, Rakhimov, Russell Jesus Rojas and Farmer his toughest opponents have been Jesus Cuadro, Freddy Fonseca, Victor Terrazas, Rafael Rivera, Manuel Avila, Horacio Garcia, Jayson Velez, Hugo Partida, Rene Alvarado, Roberto Castaneda and Ruben Tamayo.

Prediction…

Diaz is a tough, aggressive customer who possesses good boxing skills while Haney is quicker, younger and owns better boxing skills. That being said, Diaz will give Haney all he can handle in this fight but I think the champion will do just enough to defend his title, the same way he did in his last fight against Jorge Linares.

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Lyndon Arthur vs Anthony Yarde Preview & Prediction

By Ian S Palmer

Light Heavyweight prospect Anthony Yarde faces unbeaten Lyndon Arthur of Manchester, England in a rematch this Saturday, December 4th at the Copper Box Arena in Yarde’s hometown of London. The two fought last December with Arthur winning a 12-round split decision for the vacant WBO Inter-Continental and Arthur’s Commonwealth Titles. Yarde last fought in August when he stopped Alex Theran in the first round while Arthur stopped David Faraci in the ninth round in July. This weekend’s rematch can be seen on BT Sport in the UK.

The 30-year-old Arthur enters the ring with a perfect mark of 19-0 with 13 Kos and has boxed 83 rounds since making his pro debut in 2016 following his amateur career. Since then he captured the vacant British Commonwealth Light Heavyweight Title in October, 2019 via a 12-round unanimous decision over Emmanuel Amin. He defended it against Doc Spelman by unanimous decision before meeting Yarde last year when he also won the vacant WBO Inter-Continental Crown.

Arthur’s first 10 opponents had losing records before meeting Charles Adamu. Yarde is basically his only well-known opponent and he used his boxing skills to upset him in a close split decision. Arthur has good power and a solid chin and stands 6-feet-2-inches with an unlisted reach. His current knockout ratio stands at 68.4 per cent.

As for Yarde, he’s also 30 years old and owns a record of 21-2 with 20 Kos. At 6-feet tall he gives up two inches in height to Arthur and also has an unlisted reach. He carries quite a bit of power in his fists with a current knockout ratio of 87 per cent. He also fought a steady diet of limited opponents until facing Sergey Kovalev in 2019 for a shot at the WBO Light Heavyweight Belt. Yarde had Kovalev in serious trouble but was eventually stopped in the 11th round.

He turned pro back in 2015 and has boxed 83 rounds since then, the same as Arthur. Before that he he had a short amateur career with a mark of 11-1 with 11 Kos. Since turning pro, Yarde has captured the English Southern Area and and WBO European Light Heavyweight Titles as well as the WBO Inter-Continental Crown, which he defended five times before losing it to Arthur. He also has wins over the likes of Walter Gabriel Sequeira, Dariusz Zek, Doc Spelman Tony Averlant, Nikola Sjekloca, Norbert Nemesapati, Richard Baranyi and Ferenc Albert.

Prediction…

The first fight was as close as the scorecards indicated with Arthur pulling off an upset with a determined performance. Yarde hasn’t really done anything on the world stage since losing to Kovalev and another loss here will be a big setback. I think he’ll be better prepared this time around though and should force a trilogy with Arthur by avenging last year’s defeat.

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