Canelo Álvarez throws a punch during his loss to Dmitry Bivol in Las Vegas on Saturday. Bivol is open to a rematch against Álvarez, but there’s no guarantee it will happen. (John Locher / Associated Press)
All eyes were finally on Dmitry Bivol late Saturday night. The Russian boxer basked in the spotlight in the ring at T-Mobile Arena after defending his light-heavyweight title in the biggest fight of his life against Canelo Álvarez.
He was drenched in sweat. His left arm was bright red from Álvarez’s failed attempts to crack his defense. There were no other signs of a 12-round fight against the consensus top pound-for-pound fighter in the world.
Bivol confidently answered questions in English. He joked. He wished the fans, nearly all there to support Álvarez, a happy Cinco de Mayo. The disappointed crowd booed. Bivol continued undeterred.
“If you don’t believe in yourself,” Bivol said, “you achieve nothing.”
Bivol, who is 20-0 with 11 knockouts, was quietly confident all week. He knew he was Álvarez’s stiffest challenge since the Mexican suffered his only other professional loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr. nine years earlier. Álvarez was stepping out of his comfort zone to 175 pounds for just the second time. He knocked out Sergey Kovalev in his first try, but Kovalev was battered and overmatched. Bivol, 31, is in his prime.
Yet Bivol was a 5-to-1 underdog who was treated more like a speed bump on Álvarez’s path than an undefeated champion. Born in Kyrgyzstan but raised in Russia, Bivol was dismissed and his background was avoided all week. On Saturday, he was introduced as fighting out of Indio. The Russian flag was absent. The Russian anthem wasn’t played.
The lead-up to the fight focused on everything but the fight. On the return of the Mexican superstar to the Strip on Cinco de Mayo weekend. On where the 31-year-old Álvarez stood among the all-time greats. On what was next for him.
Gennadiy Golovkin originally was scheduled to attend the fight. He was supposed to sit in the crowd to watch Álvarez topple Bivol before Golovkin and Álvarez partnered to hype the completion of their trilogy.
The date of their third fight was tentatively set for Sept. 17, the day after Mexican Independence Day. Eddie Hearn, Álvarez’s promotor, openly spoke about the fight all week. All Álvarez needed to do was beat Bivol. In the end, Golovkin decided not to travel to Vegas. That avoided some awkwardness.
Now the question becomes whether that third bout will be delayed for a rematch against Bivol. Following his loss, Álvarez said he wants a rematch, a natural response for a competitor after taking a beating.
“It doesn’t end this way,” Álvarez said.
That doesn’t mean it won’t.
It’ll be on Álvarez to exercise the rematch clause in his contract with Bivol. In his post-fight news conference, Álvarez reiterated multiple times that his best weight is 168. He said he didn’t feel completely comfortable fighting at 175. He speculated that’s why he was fatigued at the end of the fight.
Dmitry Bivol, right, throws a punch against Canelo Álvarez during their fight on Saturday. (John Locher / Associated Press)
“That’s where we feel best,” said Álvarez (57-2-2, 39 KOs). “We’re going to see if we’re going to take on this rematch.”
If he doesn’t invoke the rematch clause, he’d return to 168 pounds and continue with his plans to fight Golovkin. It would be a huge pay day against a 40-year-old fighter far from his peak. Less risk and more reward.
Bivol said he’s open to a rematch but hinted that he would want to renegotiate the terms in the contract for a second fight.
“I just want to make sure I can be treated like a champion now,” Bivol said.
Bivol’s other option is to try to unify the titles at 175 pounds. Artur Beterbiev owns two of the other belts in the division. Joe Smith Jr. has the fourth. They’re slated to fight in June. Bivol could fight the winner for the division’s unification.
Bivol said his dream is to be the unified light-heavyweight champion. There’s a chance he’ll assume that title by the end of the year. But nothing in his career will top what happened Saturday, when he finally was given the attention he deserved.
MIAMI – FIU baseball head coach Mervyl Melendez announced Wednesday that he is stepping down following the conclusion of the 2022 season, following this weekend’s series vs. Rice.
“During my six years at FIU, I devoted my heart and soul into our student-athletes and this program. I am proud of the upgrades that we have made and the resources we have been able to secure for this program so that we are able to leave this program in better shape than when I arrived,” Melendez said. “I will miss the relationships that have been built. Each of our student-athletes has a bright future ahead of them, and I am proud to have been their coach.”
“I want to thank Coach Melendez for leading the FIU Baseball program the past six years,” FIU Athletics Director Scott Carr said. “Merv is a high-character, servant-leader who cares deeply about everyone, especially the young men that played for him. We wish Merv, Aixa, and the entire Melendez family the best in their future endeavors.”
Melendez was named head coach at FIU in June 2016. His overall record at FIU was 126-154. During his tenure, the Panthers achieved numerous postseason awards, including seven All-C-USA selections, seven Freshman All-Americans and six C-USA All-Freshman honors. Additionally, 14 Panthers have been selected in the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft.
Melendez also led the charge on numerous baseball facility upgrades during his time at FIU, with an indoor batting cage and weight room, artificial turf home bullpen, renovated players’ locker room, lounge and kitchen topping the list.
A national search for the Panthers’ next head baseball coach will begin immediately.
A 7-3 loss on Tuesday night finished off the Miami Hurricanes schedule of mid-week games in 2022. The Hurricanes are now 37-15 (18-9 ACC) this season, and will need to have a good weekend against Notre Dame after back-to-back losses in conference series and a three game losing streak.
FGCU got out to a quick start on Tuesday, with Brian Ellis hitting a lead off home run on the fourth pitch of the game to give the Eagles the lead almost immediately. Miami did respond to tie the game in the bottom of the inning though. Back-to-back singles from CJ Kayfus and Yohandy Morales, and a one-out hit-by-pitch, loaded the bases for Miami. With two outs, Dominic Pitelli was hit by a pitch to tie the game, but a groundout meant the Hurricanes stranded the bases loaded.
The third inning was similar to the first inning, with FGCU scoring a run to take the lead in the top of the inning before Miami tied the game in the bottom of the inning. Two singles put a runner in scoring position for FGCU with two outs, and Alejandro Rodriguez hit an RBI-single to make the score 2-1. Fortunately for Miami, Jacob Burke hit a 440 foot solo home run to tie the game in the bottom of the inning.
In the bottom of the fifth inning Miami took their first lead of the game. Zach Levenson hit a one-out single and advanced to second on a walk from Dorian Gonzalez. FGCU got the second out of the inning, but a clutch two-out RBI-single from Ariel Garcia put Miami ahead 3-2.
The Hurricanes got within six outs of a victory, but a four-run top of the eighth inning gave FGCU the win. Alejandro Figueredo led off the inning with a game-tying solo home run, and two straight batters reached afterwards to give the Eagles the chance to take the lead. Harrison Povey took advantage, hitting an RBI-double to give FGCU their first lead in the game since the top of the third inning. A walk loaded the bases after the double, and a balk scored the third run of the inning before a sac-fly scored the final run and made the score 6-3.
A Joe Kinker solo home run scored the final run of the game in the top of the ninth inning, and in the bottom of the inning the Hurricanes left two men on base after a strikeout ended the game. In total, Miami stranded 12 runners on base in Tuesday’s game while allowing 15 hits from FGCU to go along with three home runs.
The loss makes the path to the Hurricanes finishing the season as a Top 8 seed, and a Super-regional host in the NCAA Tournament, considerably more difficult. Miami will likely need a strong weekend against Notre Dame and an appearance in the semi-finals, and possibly even the championship game, of next week’s ACC Tournament to return to the top eight.
First pitch of the Hurricanes series against Notre Dame is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. on Thursday night. Miami remains in first place in the ACC heading into the weekend, but multiple teams remain in contention to win the conference, including Notre Dame.
CORAL GABLES, Fla. — The ninth-ranked University of Miami baseball team dropped its final midweek game of the year, falling to the FGCU Eagles, 7-3, Tuesday evening at Alex Rodriguez Park at Mark Light Field.
“We just didn’t play well,” Miami head coach Gino DiMare said. “I thought the guys were in a good state of mind going into the game. I felt like everybody had good body language and was positive, moving forward from the weekend series. I told them the game of baseball is about as close to life as it can throw at you. There’s so much adversity that you have to deal with. We didn’t do anything to help us win in any phase. Overall, just a disappointing game.”
The Hurricanes (37-15, 18-9 ACC) held a 3-2 lead after the seventh inning, but the Eagles (32-20, 15-12 ASUN) rallied for four runs in the eighth.
FGCU third baseman Alejandro Figueredo launched a game-tying solo shot to spark the Eagles late.
Three batters later, right fielder Harrison Povey put the visitors in front for good with an RBI double.
The Eagles tacked on two more tallies in the inning, capitalizing on a balk and a sacrifice fly.
FGCU punctuated its late offensive outburst in the ninth behind a Joe Kinker solo blast.
“We got to be able to handle it,” DiMare said. “We can’t feel sorry for ourselves. We have a big, big opportunity this weekend to put ourselves back on track to what we want to be doing.”
Miami had its chances early in the contest, but the Eagles kept the Hurricanes in check.
The Canes loaded the bases with no outs in the opening inning, but only mounted one run.
Then, with two down in the fourth, Miami put three runners on, but couldn’t cash in.
“We didn’t take advantage of them,” DiMare said. “We have to make sure we don’t try and do too much and give good at-bats. You can look at many things in this game and we just didn’t execute in all phases.”
Miami starter Jake Garland earned a no-decision, tossing six solid innings. The right-hander surrendered two earned runs, firing 54 of his 77 pitches for strikes.
Freshman reliever Gage Ziehl (1-2) was tagged with the loss, while FGCU right-hander Tyler Tipton (4-3) picked up the win, following 5 1/3 innings of one-run baseball out of the bullpen.
With the loss, the Hurricanes finished the year 9-3 in midweek games.
Miami wraps up its regular season slate with a three-game set against No. 14 Notre Dame. The series opener is scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday at Mark Light Field.