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Benavidez goes up scale, but he’s still waiting for Canelo

By Norm Frauenheim –

David Benavidez, who won at a heavier weight and looked beatable in doing so, is back to where he was before his decision over Oleksandr Gvozdyk.

Waiting for Canelo.

On the financial scale, it makes sense. It always has. A fight with Canelo Alvarez still represents the quickest way to the biggest money. Over the last several years, that’s been the only formula in a business otherwise ruled by only chaos.

If you want to follow the money, follow Canelo. This is prizefighting, after all.

But it’s not clear what Canelo is thinking. There’s been silence on what he thought of Benavidez’ scorecard victory over Gvozdyk, a unanimous decision yet flawed in many ways on June 15 on an Amazon Prime card at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand.

Presumably, he watched and saw that Benavidez’ power and energy in the later rounds weren’t there in his 175-pound debut. Speculate all you want as to why. Benavidez said he came into the fight battling injuries undisclosed before opening bell.

There was a stitched-up cut along his left eyelid, a reason that his father-trainer, Jose Benavidez Sr., brought in Stitch Duran to

work the corner.

He said he injured a tendon in his right hand. He massaged the hand throughout the post-fight news conference. The injuries, the Phoenix-born fighter said, happened in training in Miami. Just how they impacted his preparation – his focus and conditioning — is anybody’s guess.

But Benavidez clearly did not have the energy late in the fight against Gvozdyk that had been there throughout his run at super middleweight.

At 168, he seemed to have an extra gear in the later rounds. But it was missing against the Ukrainian, a former light-heavyweight champion, who was the bigger fighter. Benavidez said he was at 189 pounds at opening bell.

He and Gvozdyk were each at 174.2 at the official weigh-in. Gvozdyk never said what his weight was at fight time, but he looked to be at about 200 pounds. With his hand speed, Benavidez scored, but his punches didn’t have the power to hurt, or even move, Gvozdyk, a former Canelo sparring partner who was at his best in the final moments.

If Canelo was watching, he had to notice. Canelo, who will be 34 in July, is moving out of his prime, but his lower-body strength is still there. In some ways, he resembles Gvozdyk. It’s hard to knock him off balance much less off his feet.

At light-heavyweight, Canelo’s ex-sparring partner might have found a weakness in Benavidez that was not apparent at super-middle. He also might have found a reason for Canelo to say, yeah, I’ll fight him.

Over the first week after Benavidez light-heavy debut, however, there’s been silence. Perhaps, Canelo has decided he’ll let the process play out.

Benavidez announced, post-fight, that he would relinquish his mandatory challenger spot for the light-heavyweight champion, which would have meant an even riskier fight against the Artur Beterbiev-Dmitry Bivol winner in October.

Instead, he said, he’d go back to super-middleweight and pursue the mandatory challenge – still Canelo — he’s been pursuing for a couple of years. He was expected to send the World Boxing Council a letter of formal declaration. Then, the WBC is expected to rule.

By now, however, we know Canelo does he what wants. Gets what the wants. He has said so, repeatedly, over the last year.

There’s already talk of Canelo fighting Edgar Berlanga in September. That speculation appeared to be the reason behind an agreement between Canelo and somebody named William Scull, a super-middleweight nobody knows yet is still a rival acronym’s mandatory challenger.

The speculation is that Scull will get step-aside money.

Then, Canelo will get Berlanga.

And Benavidez will get what he’s always had.

He’ll get to wait.

NOTES

In one of the best fights in the history of the little guys, Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez is about a 9-2 favorite over Juan Francisco Estrada for the SuperFly title next Saturday (June 29) on the Suns home floor at Footprint Center in downtown Phoenix.

Speaking of odds, what are the odds on Ryan Garcia ever fighting in another state-sanctioned bout again? He was suspended Thursday for a year by New York for testing dirty before his stoppage of Devin Haney. Garcia won’t go away. He’s a social-media freak show. Promoters will do whatever they can to get him back in the ring a year from now. There’s a market for his kind of unhinged behavior.

And the WBO orders negotiations for an Emanuel Navarrete-Oscar Valdez junior-lightweight rematch. In a futile attempt to win a lightweight title, Navarrete looked terrible in a sloppy scorecard loss – a split decision — to Denys Berinchyk in May. But a Navarrete-Valdez rematch might a hard sell. It was a good fight. But it was a blowout, Navarrete scoring a one-sided decision in August 2023 at Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale AZ. 

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