Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 16 Jun 2021, 07:47

Rosario - Decision
2
20%
Rosario - T/KO
2
20%
DRAW
0
No votes
Lubin - T/KO
3
30%
Lubin- Decision
3
30%
 
Total votes: 10

Ruthless-RKO
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Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Image

PPV Press Release

Four-time world champion Gervonta “Tank” Davis will take on a career-defining challenge as he sets his sights on capturing a title in a third weight class when he faces undefeated WBA Super Lightweight Champion Mario “El Azteca” Barrios in a SHOWTIME PPV main event Saturday, June 26 at the award-winning State Farm Arena in Atlanta in an event presented by Premier Boxing Champions.

The pay-per-view undercard will feature a battle of two top 154-pound contenders as Erickson “Hammer” Lubin faces former unified champion Jeison Rosario in a WBC Super Welterweight Title Eliminator in the co-main event. Former unified super welterweight champion Julian “J-Rock” Williams returns to the ring for the first time in 18 months to take on Brian Mendoza in a 10-round showdown and hard-hitting Olympian Batyr Akhmedov steps in against former world champion Argenis Mendez in a 12-round WBA Super Lightweight Title Eliminator to kick off the pay-per-view telecast at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

Tickets for the live event at State Farm Arena, which is promoted by Mayweather Promotions, GTD Promotions and TGB Promotions, go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. ET, and can be purchased at ticketmaster.com. The Akhmedov vs. Mendez fight is promoted in association with World of Boxing.

One of boxing’s biggest stars at just 26-years-old, Davis moves up to 140-pounds for the first time in his career as he aims to add super lightweight champion to his stellar resume. Davis has already captured titles at 130 and 135-pounds. With a victory, Davis will hold world championships in three different divisions simultaneously, a feat only accomplished by a few fighters in history, including Henry Armstrong and Canelo Alvarez. Standing in his way is the undefeated 25-year-old Barrios, who owns a 9-0 record with eight knockouts during his 140-pound reign while holding a six-inch height advantage over Davis.

Davis (24-0, 23 KOs) delivered a highlight-reel knockout in his last fight, producing another sensational and memorable performance that has made him a popular draw throughout the country. Davis stopped four-division champion Leo Santa Cruz with one powerful uppercut in that October 2020 fight and put Santa Cruz down and out for the first time in his illustrious career. Promoted by Mayweather Promotions, Davis will make his second headline appearance on pay-per-view as he has asserted himself as a must-see headline attraction in his first pay-per-view

Davis first burst onto the scene with an explosive knockout victory over Jose Pedraza to win the IBF Junior Lightweight World Title in a star-making performance on SHOWTIME® in January 2017. At the time, he became the youngest world champion in boxing at age 22. The Baltimore-native also owns knockout performances in world title fights over Jesus Cuellar in 2018 and Yuriorkis Gamboa in 2019. The 2019 triumph over Gamboa came at a sold out State Farm Arena, during a year that also saw him fill venues in his hometown of Baltimore and Southern California.

Barrios (26-0, 17 KOs) captured his 140-pound championship in September 2019, scoring two knockdowns and fighting through a cut to win a unanimous decision over previously unbeaten Batyr Akhmedov. The San Antonio-native trains in Oakland, Calif., under the guidance of renowned coach Virgil Hunter. In his most recent outing, Barrios knocked out Ryan Karl in the sixth-round of their clash on the pay-per-view undercard of Davis vs. Santa Cruz.

Standing nearly six-feet tall, Barrios debuted as a pro at super bantamweight in 2013 and had success moving up the rankings in the super featherweight division. His first 140-pound bout came in 2017 and saw him increase his power from his previous performances. At super lightweight, Barrios has scored knockouts in every fight except the title-winning performance against Akhmedov, where his power was still on display with a pair of knockdowns.

The 25-year-old Lubin (23-1, 16 KOs) has put together an impressive five-bout winning streak since a loss to unified 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo in 2017. In his most recent outing, he defeated U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha by unanimous decision in September of last year. Prior to the victory over Gausha, he became the first person to stop former champion Ishe Smith, in addition to a dominating victory over Nathaniel Gallimore in October 2019. A native of Orlando, Fla., Lubin is trained by acclaimed coach Kevin Cunningham as he continues his quest toward another title opportunity. After a stellar amateur career, Lubin turned pro at 18 years old in 2013, eventually being named “Prospect Of The Year” by ESPN and Ring Magazine in 2016.

Rosario (20-2-1, 14 KOs) will look to climb back into world title contention after losing his 154-pound belts to Jermell Charlo in their September 2020 clash. The 26-year-old captured the WBA and IBF belts by stopping Julian Williams in one of 2020’s biggest upsets. Born in the Dominican Republic and now fighting out of Miami, Rosario rode an eight-fight unbeaten streak into the showdown with Williams, including victories over 154-pound contenders Jamontay Clark, Justin DeLoach, Jorge Cota and Marcos Hernandez. Coming into the Charlo matchup, Rosario had established his power by earning a stoppage victory or scoring a knockdown in seven of his previous nine contests.

Philadelphia’s Williams (27-2-1, 16 KOs) became a unified world champion at 154-pounds in May 2019 when he upset Jarrett Hurd in one of the year’s best fights, winning a close-quarters brawl by unanimous decision. The 31-year-old dropped the titles in his first defense, losing to Jeison Rosario in January 2020. Williams had been riding a five-fight winning streak going into the Rosario matchup, in which he added victories over former champion Ishe Smith and hard-hitting contender Nathaniel Gallimore to his ledger.

Mendoza (19-1, 13 KOs) earned a career best-victory in his last outing, beating veteran contender Thomas LaManna by unanimous decision in August 2020. The 27-year-old has fought professionally since 2014, with his only defeat coming by a narrow split-decision in November 2019 against Larry Gomez. Mendoza was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he won two New Mexico Golden Gloves Championships as an amateur, and currently fights out of Las Vegas.

Born in Uzbekistan and now fighting out of Los Angeles, Akhmedov (8-1, 7 KOs) represented Turkey at the 2016 Olympic games. The 30-year-old turned pro in 2017 and won his first seven pro fights, with six coming by knockout. His lone blemish came in an action-packed title fight against Mario Barrios in September 2019, where he was able to survive two knockdowns to make it a close fight, before eventually losing by decision. Most recently, Akhmedov blasted out Ray Perez in the first round of their September 2020 clash.

A former super featherweight champion, Mendez (25-6-3, 12 KOs) has a reputation for providing stiff challenges to the sport’s best and has proven to be a durable contender at 140-pounds, including his most recent outing that saw him drop a split-decision to Richardson Hitchins last December. In 2019, Mendez fought to back-to-back draws against super lightweight contenders Anthony Peterson and Juan Heraldez. Born in San Juan de La Maguana, Dominican Republic, Mendez now fights out of Yonkers, N.Y. and owns victories over Eddie Ramirez, Ivan Redkach and former titlist Miguel Vazquez. He has also gone toe-to-toe with former champions Rances Barthelemy and Robert Easter Jr.

Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 21 Jun 2021, 05:50, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 2021

Post by bobcatbox »

:TU: Good fight. Gonna take “Banana” by unanimous decision.
margaret thatcher
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 2021

Post by margaret thatcher »

'rick gonna peel that banana
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Gervonta Davis-Mario Barrios, Lubin-Rosario On Showtime PPV June 26; Site TBD

Gervonta Davis’ move up to the 140-pound division is official.

Premier Boxing Champions and Showtime announced Thursday that the undefeated Davis will meet Mario Barrios in a Showtime Pay-Per-View main event June 26 at a site to be determined. The four-fight show also will include an intriguing 12-round, 154-pound bout between former IBF/IBO/WBA champ Jeison Rosario and Erickson Lubin.

The 26-year-old Davis (24-0, 23 KOs) will jump up two weight classes in an attempt to become a three-division champion. The 25-year-old Barrios (26-0, 17 KOs) holds the WBA’s secondary title in the 140-pound division.

Josh Taylor is widely viewed as the WBA’s legitimate champion in that weight class. Scotland’s Taylor (17-0, 13 KOs) is scheduled to face Jose Ramirez (26-0, 17 KOs) on May 22 in Las Vegas for Taylor’s IBF and WBA belts, as well as Ramirez’s WBC and WBO championships.

Nevertheless, the Barrios bout is a risky proposition for Davis. San Antonio’s Barrios stands 5-feet-10, five inches taller than Davis, and has competed in the 140-pound division for the past four years.

Davis, a powerful southpaw from Baltimore, will make his debut in Barrios’ weight class. He easily beat Cuba’s Yuriorkis Gamboa in his only noteworthy fight at the lightweight limit of 135 pounds – a 12-round, unanimous-decision win in December 2019 at State Farm Arena – but Davis mostly has competed at or near the junior lightweight maximum of 130 pounds in his eight years as a pro.

Davis viciously knocked out Leo Santa Cruz with a left uppercut in the sixth round of his most recent appearance, a 130-pound championship match October 31 at Alamodome in San Antonio. Davis won the WBA “super” 130-pound championship from Santa Cruz (37-2-1, 19 KOs) in that Showtime Pay-Per-View main event.

Barrios beat Houston’s Ryan Karl (18-3, 12 KOs) by sixth-round knockout on the Davis-Santa Cruz undercard.

In the co-feature before Davis-Barrios, Rosario and Lubin will engage in a high-stakes fight that’ll help keep the winner in position for another 154-pound title shot.

The Dominican Republic’s Rosario (20-2-1, 14 KOs) lost the IBF and WBA titles to Jermell Charlo in his last fight. Houston’s Charlo (34-1, 18 KOs), also the WBC champion, knocked out Rosario with a body shot in the eighth round of that September 26 bout at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut.

Lubin, a southpaw from Orlando, Florida, has won five straight bouts since Charlo knocked him out with one punch in their fight for Charlo’s WBC super welterweight title in October 2017 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. In his most recent action, Lubin (23-1, 16 KOs) defeated Cleveland’s Terrell Gausha (22-2-1, 11 KOs) by unanimous decision in a 12-rounder September 19 at Mohegan Sun Arena.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by JxhDel. »

Lubin with forceful intentions.
Cent0089
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Cent0089 »

Didnt noticed this one. 154 lbs division is pretty hot :box:
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Cent0089 wrote: 09 May 2021, 15:41 Didnt noticed this one. 154 lbs division is pretty hot :box:
PBC run the division.. apart from a couple of names.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Cent0089 »

Ruthless-RKO wrote: 09 May 2021, 16:32
Cent0089 wrote: 09 May 2021, 15:41 Didnt noticed this one. 154 lbs division is pretty hot :box:
PBC run the division.. apart from a couple of names.
yeah, thats good, at least fights will happen :box: :box: :box:
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Jeison Rosario Vows To Get a Knockout Win Over Erickson Lubin

Former unified junior middleweight champion Jeison Rosario is eager to bounce back when he faces top contender Erickson “Hammer” Lubin in a WBC super welterweight title eliminator.

Their fight has been set down as the Showtime pay-per-view co-feature, with Gervonta “Tank” Davis returning in the main event against WBA "regular" super lightweight champion Mario “El Azteca” Barrios.

The event will take place on Saturday, June 26, at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia.

Rosario (20-2-1, 14 KOs) is looking to recover from his last outing, when he was knocked out by Jermell Charlo in their three belt unification in September 2020.

Earlier in the year, the 26-year-old captured the WBA and IBF belts when he stopped Julian Williams in a major upset.

The 25-year-old Lubin (23-1, 16 KOs) also suffered a knockout loss to Charlo, in 2017. Since then he's put together a five-bout winning streak.

He saw action back in September when he won a twelve round unanimous decision over U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha.

The winner of the upcoming outing will find himself in position to get another crack at the WBC belt - and potentially revenge against Charlo.

Rosario, who made changes to his team, is not making any excuses for his last performance.

However, he wants to come away from the upcoming fight with a knockout victory over Lubin.

“I make no excuses for losing the fight to Charlo, but that was then, and this is now,” said Rosario.

“I have turned to a new page in my career with my new trainer Herman Caicedo. I will not lose again, especially in this fight against Lubin. He’s a great contender, and I respect his abilities, but I will knock him out on June 26.”
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Image

PPV Press Release

Four-time world champion Gervonta “Tank” Davis will take on a career-defining challenge as he sets his sights on capturing a title in a third weight class when he faces undefeated WBA Super Lightweight Champion Mario “El Azteca” Barrios in a SHOWTIME PPV main event Saturday, June 26 at the award-winning State Farm Arena in Atlanta in an event presented by Premier Boxing Champions.

The pay-per-view undercard will feature a battle of two top 154-pound contenders as Erickson “Hammer” Lubin faces former unified champion Jeison Rosario in a WBC Super Welterweight Title Eliminator in the co-main event. Former unified super welterweight champion Julian “J-Rock” Williams returns to the ring for the first time in 18 months to take on Brian Mendoza in a 10-round showdown and hard-hitting Olympian Batyr Akhmedov steps in against former world champion Argenis Mendez in a 12-round WBA Super Lightweight Title Eliminator to kick off the pay-per-view telecast at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

Tickets for the live event at State Farm Arena, which is promoted by Mayweather Promotions, GTD Promotions and TGB Promotions, go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. ET, and can be purchased at ticketmaster.com. The Akhmedov vs. Mendez fight is promoted in association with World of Boxing.

One of boxing’s biggest stars at just 26-years-old, Davis moves up to 140-pounds for the first time in his career as he aims to add super lightweight champion to his stellar resume. Davis has already captured titles at 130 and 135-pounds. With a victory, Davis will hold world championships in three different divisions simultaneously, a feat only accomplished by a few fighters in history, including Henry Armstrong and Canelo Alvarez. Standing in his way is the undefeated 25-year-old Barrios, who owns a 9-0 record with eight knockouts during his 140-pound reign while holding a six-inch height advantage over Davis.

Davis (24-0, 23 KOs) delivered a highlight-reel knockout in his last fight, producing another sensational and memorable performance that has made him a popular draw throughout the country. Davis stopped four-division champion Leo Santa Cruz with one powerful uppercut in that October 2020 fight and put Santa Cruz down and out for the first time in his illustrious career. Promoted by Mayweather Promotions, Davis will make his second headline appearance on pay-per-view as he has asserted himself as a must-see headline attraction in his first pay-per-view

Davis first burst onto the scene with an explosive knockout victory over Jose Pedraza to win the IBF Junior Lightweight World Title in a star-making performance on SHOWTIME® in January 2017. At the time, he became the youngest world champion in boxing at age 22. The Baltimore-native also owns knockout performances in world title fights over Jesus Cuellar in 2018 and Yuriorkis Gamboa in 2019. The 2019 triumph over Gamboa came at a sold out State Farm Arena, during a year that also saw him fill venues in his hometown of Baltimore and Southern California.

Barrios (26-0, 17 KOs) captured his 140-pound championship in September 2019, scoring two knockdowns and fighting through a cut to win a unanimous decision over previously unbeaten Batyr Akhmedov. The San Antonio-native trains in Oakland, Calif., under the guidance of renowned coach Virgil Hunter. In his most recent outing, Barrios knocked out Ryan Karl in the sixth-round of their clash on the pay-per-view undercard of Davis vs. Santa Cruz.

Standing nearly six-feet tall, Barrios debuted as a pro at super bantamweight in 2013 and had success moving up the rankings in the super featherweight division. His first 140-pound bout came in 2017 and saw him increase his power from his previous performances. At super lightweight, Barrios has scored knockouts in every fight except the title-winning performance against Akhmedov, where his power was still on display with a pair of knockdowns.

The 25-year-old Lubin (23-1, 16 KOs) has put together an impressive five-bout winning streak since a loss to unified 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo in 2017. In his most recent outing, he defeated U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha by unanimous decision in September of last year. Prior to the victory over Gausha, he became the first person to stop former champion Ishe Smith, in addition to a dominating victory over Nathaniel Gallimore in October 2019. A native of Orlando, Fla., Lubin is trained by acclaimed coach Kevin Cunningham as he continues his quest toward another title opportunity. After a stellar amateur career, Lubin turned pro at 18 years old in 2013, eventually being named “Prospect Of The Year” by ESPN and Ring Magazine in 2016.

Rosario (20-2-1, 14 KOs) will look to climb back into world title contention after losing his 154-pound belts to Jermell Charlo in their September 2020 clash. The 26-year-old captured the WBA and IBF belts by stopping Julian Williams in one of 2020’s biggest upsets. Born in the Dominican Republic and now fighting out of Miami, Rosario rode an eight-fight unbeaten streak into the showdown with Williams, including victories over 154-pound contenders Jamontay Clark, Justin DeLoach, Jorge Cota and Marcos Hernandez. Coming into the Charlo matchup, Rosario had established his power by earning a stoppage victory or scoring a knockdown in seven of his previous nine contests.

Philadelphia’s Williams (27-2-1, 16 KOs) became a unified world champion at 154-pounds in May 2019 when he upset Jarrett Hurd in one of the year’s best fights, winning a close-quarters brawl by unanimous decision. The 31-year-old dropped the titles in his first defense, losing to Jeison Rosario in January 2020. Williams had been riding a five-fight winning streak going into the Rosario matchup, in which he added victories over former champion Ishe Smith and hard-hitting contender Nathaniel Gallimore to his ledger.

Mendoza (19-1, 13 KOs) earned a career best-victory in his last outing, beating veteran contender Thomas LaManna by unanimous decision in August 2020. The 27-year-old has fought professionally since 2014, with his only defeat coming by a narrow split-decision in November 2019 against Larry Gomez. Mendoza was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he won two New Mexico Golden Gloves Championships as an amateur, and currently fights out of Las Vegas.

Born in Uzbekistan and now fighting out of Los Angeles, Akhmedov (8-1, 7 KOs) represented Turkey at the 2016 Olympic games. The 30-year-old turned pro in 2017 and won his first seven pro fights, with six coming by knockout. His lone blemish came in an action-packed title fight against Mario Barrios in September 2019, where he was able to survive two knockdowns to make it a close fight, before eventually losing by decision. Most recently, Akhmedov blasted out Ray Perez in the first round of their September 2020 clash.

A former super featherweight champion, Mendez (25-6-3, 12 KOs) has a reputation for providing stiff challenges to the sport’s best and has proven to be a durable contender at 140-pounds, including his most recent outing that saw him drop a split-decision to Richardson Hitchins last December. In 2019, Mendez fought to back-to-back draws against super lightweight contenders Anthony Peterson and Juan Heraldez. Born in San Juan de La Maguana, Dominican Republic, Mendez now fights out of Yonkers, N.Y. and owns victories over Eddie Ramirez, Ivan Redkach and former titlist Miguel Vazquez. He has also gone toe-to-toe with former champions Rances Barthelemy and Robert Easter Jr.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

This’ll be fight of the night
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Week :box:
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Lubin-Rosario in action Saturday

Super welterweights Erickson “Hammer” Lubin faces former unified champion Jeison Rosario in a WBC title eliminator in the Davis-Barrios PPV co-main event on Saturday in Atlanta.

“I think this is the wrong fight for Rosario to take coming off a knockout loss,” said Lubin in the lead up to the fight. “It doesn’t matter if I knock Rosario out or if I don’t. My job is to look good and come out victorious. I’m going to go in there and show the world that I can make anyone in this division look bad.”

Rosario stated, “First and foremost, I have the power to knockout Lubin and anybody in the 154-pound division. The camp that I’ve had, and the little tidbits of southpaw knowledge that I’ve picked up on, make me confident that I can knock Lubin out."

He also spoke about losing his WBA and IBF belts to Jermell Charlo last September. “What happened in the Charlo fight was the fluke. Me winning the titles was not the fluke. I’m going to show everybody that I will bounce back from that loss and win my next fight. I have no problem taking this fight. It’s not a mistake at all. This is what we do. We fight.”
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

BLH Predictions

Scott Christ (38-11-2)

I’ve said before that I really like the way Lubin has bounced back from that 2017 loss to Jermell Charlo. He was flat-out not ready for that fight, and while probably nine times out of 10 he doesn’t get wiped out in the first round, he did in the one time out of one that happened. That could have wrecked a young fighter’s confidence, but Lubin buckled down and got better.

How much better? I don’t know, the opposition since then was rightly stepped back and just starting to tick back in the right direction, and Rosario is a more dangerous opponent than anyone Lubin’s faced since Charlo. Part of that is Rosario can punch; he won’t be as awkward as Terrell Gausha was at times, but he brings a lot more thunder. Rosario may well have had his One Big Moment against Julian Williams, but I love this as a matchup because it figures to be a firefight at some point.

Lubin may try to box, but he’s not so slick or skilled that he can keep Rosario from throwing fire at him. I’m crystal balling this one, and I see Lubin having a solid but not overwhelming lead before he gets caught with something big and doesn’t recover. But I think this is about as 50/50 as we really get at this level, and can imagine either one of them having a really impressive performance — Rosario if he overpowers Lubin, and Lubin if he just out-boxes Rosario, which could also lead to a big finish. Rosario TKO-9

Wil Esco (40-9-2)

This fight just might be the biggest toss-up of the weekend as it’s truly a fight that could go either way. Lubin certainly has the technical advantage here, but Rosario has the power advantage. When I break down their styles I think it’s a fight that Lubin should be able to outscore Rosario but Lubin has shown vulnerabilities in taking a good shot and that could well mean that Rosario turns things around or even ends things at any moment.

Lubin has had some scares he’s survived recently and he’s going to have to walk another tightrope here in order to secure the win. If Rosario can land he can certainly do damage, but I’ve never been all that impressed by Rosario’s style and think he might’ve peaked when he won the title and just might not have that same desire anymore. I’m not predicting this one with any real confidence, but I’m going to take Lubin to edge out a decision the hard way. Lubin MD-12

Patrick L. Stumberg (39-10-2)

Underwhelming against a sound technician like Terrell Gausha isn’t exactly damning for Lubin, but getting rocked the way he did is a bad look for someone still trying to get over his one-round mauling from Jermell Charlo. He’s got a lot to prove here against a legitimately dangerous puncher in Rosario, who if nothing else will press forward and try to take his head off from bell to bell.

While I’m far from convinced he’s title material, at least against the likes of Jermell and Brian Castano, I do think Lubin’s got the skills to win this. If it turns into a boxing match, his speed and crispness win the day, especially with a 4.5-inch reach advantage on his side. If it turns into a slugfest, I have less faith in Rosario’s chin than I do Lubin’s. “The Hammer” makes his case for a Charlo rematch with a mid-round stoppage, working behind a steady jab until Rosario leaves himself open enough for a finisher. Lubin TKO-7

And the staff winner is...

Erickson Lubin (2-1)!
margaret thatcher
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by margaret thatcher »

beautiful low blow ko :box:
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by KiwiRider »

margaret thatcher wrote: 26 Jun 2021, 23:04 beautiful low blow ko :box:
Yeah, classic nut crusher.
I liked the hitting him when he was down on the second KD, another classic.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Done the dirty
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by DrDuke »

The fight was fun, although it ended in an arguable fashion. Rosario looked ready to go in the 3rd, but managed to bounce back and rock Lubin in the 4th. Lubin aslo got his butt kicked hard by his coach after the 4th. Both KDs of Rosario were controversial actually. The first featured the low blow, although it didn't seemed to be exactly to the balls. During the second one Rosario was hit to the head while down, but it didn't look like a hard shot and Rosario was bothered with the body.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by margaret thatcher »

lubin looks really good at times but dude is straight up chinny, got hurt by a jab

banana seems to have a weak body. i think he was a flash in the pan vs jrock and i dont really rate him all too much despite having been unified
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Cent0089
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Cent0089 »

referees should pay much more atention for low blows man.
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Re: Jeison Rosario vs. Erickson Lubin - June 26, 2021

Post by Jeff_lacy_ko »

Lubin is another massive ko waiting to happen.
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