Sat. Dec 28th, 2024


05.15 BST

Gervonta Davis wins by eighth-round knockout!

Round 8

Martin backs himself into a corner, yet again, but this time Davis stuns him with an left uppercut then finishes him with a hook. And Martin is down! Davis is dancing on the turnbuckle as referee Harvey Dock counts Martin out!

https://x.com/SportsonPrime/status/1802193338860290317

Updated at 05.18 BST

05.10 BST

Round 7

Davis lands a couple of shots and Martin reels backwards, but doesn’t look hurt. These punches might be getting through by now. The champion has Martin up against the ropes and is throwing punches in rapid combinations. Martin avoids the majority of them but the pressure is building. And Martin lands a counter left hook against the run of play! That was a good shot near the end of the frame, but it doesn’t cancel out all of Davis’s fine work over the session. For Davis, it was clearly his best round of the fight.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 10-9 Martin (Davis 66-67 Martin)

Updated at 05.10 BST

05.06 BST

Round 6

Davis traps Martin in a corner and lets his hands go, but Martin blocks or parries most of them. Davis is stepping up his offense but Martin sticks with a gameplan that’s worked for him so far. Martin’s crafty defense is really limiting Davis’s opportunities to counter. This was another very close round, but we’ll shade it to Davis on activity.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 10-9 Martin (Davis 56-58 Martin)

Updated at 05.06 BST

05.03 BST

Round 5

Davis is starting to get Martin’s timing down. He lands a right hook flush to Martin’s nose, his best shot of the fight. The challenger is moving almost exclusively in reverse, throwing (and landing) punches off the back foot, scoring effectively even as the looming menace seems to favor Davis. Davis lunges in with a right hook that lands, but Martin’s backward movement absorbed a lot of the power. Another close round for Martin.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 9-10 Martin (Davis 46-49 Martin)

Updated at 05.03 BST

04.59 BST

Round 4

Davis, still walking Martin down, catches his foe with a thudding body shot along the ropes but it doesn’t seem to hurt the challenger. More of the same for the first half of the fourth round, until Davis starts to open up. He lands an uppercut to Martin’s body and misses with a couple of sweeping power shots. Davis is really beginning to let his hands go and the crowd swells with anticipation.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 10-9 Martin (Davis 37-39 Martin)

Updated at 04.59 BST

04.54 BST

Round 3

Another strong round for Martin, who’s doing everything right so far. He’s outthrowing and outlanding the champion, nullifying his foe’s attack with the job, tying up when he needs to and using footwork to make himself an elusive target. Whether he can keep it up for nine more rounds is the question. Only two of Gervonta Davis’s 29 fights to date have made it to the cards.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 9-10 Martin (Davis 27-30 Martin)

Updated at 04.54 BST

04.51 BST

Round 2

Martin is throwing and landing more shots in the early going but we’ve seen this before in Davis, who’s like a tightly wound spring waiting for his moment to strike. Some very deft footwork by the challenger to get out of harm’s way before Davis can pin him down. Davis lands a counter left to the body. Then another. Martin continues to look to establish the jab to keep Davis at bay. The champion unloads with a flurry of punches but Martin wraps him up before he can inflict any damage. Another round for Martin but he’s done nothing so far to gain Davis’s respect.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 9-10 Martin (Davis 18-20 Martin)

Updated at 04.51 BST

04.46 BST

Round 1

There’s the bell! And Davis looks tiny in there. The champion is known for his slow starts but he’s already walking Martin down behind a Philly shell defense. Martin lands a couple of shots to Davis’s ribs. Martin is backing himself up into a corner but landing shots off the back foot. Davis hasn’t thrown much but he’s timing his opponent. Davis throws a hard left hand and Martin wraps up. Not much to choose from in a feeling-out round for both men, but Martin landed a few more shots.

Guardian’s unofficial score: Davis 9-10 Martin (Davis 9-10 Martin)

Updated at 04.46 BST

04.24 BST

“I think it’s a 7 out of 10, honestly,” Benavidez says when asked to rate his performance. “Oleksandr’s a great fighter, you know? No wonder he’s the ex-champion and an Olympic medalist. I felt like I had a great fight [against a] tough fighter and we’re we’re looking to move on.”

Asked why he seemed like a different fighter tonight, Benavidez cites the move up in weight.

“I was trying to get the feel of the light heavyweight division,” he says. “They hit a little bit harder up here, so I had to get a feel for it. I’m just happy I was able to make it tonight because two weeks ago, I suffered a cut in my eye. I also had a a torn tendon on my right hand. I didn’t think I was gonna make it tonight, but we pushed through it and thank God that we’re we’re here to get this fight.”

Updated at 04.24 BST

03.52 BST

David Benavidez and Oleksandr Gvozdyk are into the seventh round of the scheduled 12-round fight. It’s a complete shutout for Benavidez on our card. Gvozdyk, a 2012 Olympic bronze medalist who ended Adonis Stevenson’s lengthy title reign at 175lbs back in 2018, is past his best at 37 years old and being served up to a younger, primer opponent.

Shortly after this fight ends, Davis and Martin will make their entrances for the main event.

David Benavidez, left, takes a punch from Oleksandr Gvozdyk during a Saturday’s fight. Photograph: Steve Marcus/Getty Images

Updated at 04.30 BST

03.34 BST

It’s been 14 months since Davis last fought. One of the reasons for the layoff involves last year’s guilty plea to charges stemming from a hit-and-run crash that left four people hospitalized, including a pregnant woman. Davis was sentenced to 90 days of home detention at the home of his trainer.

A judge ruled in June that Davis violated the terms of his house arrest after he moved to a luxury hotel and then a new home, but he was released from a Baltimore jail in July after 44 days at a detention center.

Now the 29-year-old southpaw, one of America’s most prodigious athletes and an unrepentant batterer of women whose history of gender-based violence is well-documented, is ready to get his career back on track.

“I’ve been locked in for a long time now,” Davis said. “My give-back is going to be a great performance on Saturday night.”

Gervonta Davis mugs for the cameras at Friday’s weigh-in. Photograph: Mikael Ona/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock

Updated at 03.34 BST

03.05 BST

Preamble

Hello and welcome to tonight’s WBA lightweight championship fight between Gervonta Davis and Frank Martin. The popular Davis, a Baltimore native unbeaten in 29 professional fights, is back in action for the first time since last year’s seventh-round knockout of Ryan Garcia, which appeared to confer his status as the face of American boxing. He will be defending his title at 135lbs against Martin, an undefeated challenger from Indianapolis.

Most boxing fans would rather see Davis in with the other stars at or around his weight class like Devin Haney or Shakur Stevenson. Those fights may happen, but for now we’ll settle for Martin, who has done nothing but defeat the names in front of him while building a record of 18-0 with 12 knockouts.

One bout of note on the undercard is a title fight scheduled for 12 rounds between David Benavidez and Oleksandr Gvozdyk for the vacant WBC interim light heavyweight strap. That should be under way in the next 15 minutes or so. Then it will be time for the main event.

Plenty more to come.

Updated at 03.05 BST




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#Gervonta #Davis #Frank #Martin #WBA #lightweight #championship #live #Boxing

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