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[[!OffICiaL-Tv!!@]] Diego Pacheco Vs. Enrique Collazoy Live Title Fight TV Broadcast 17 Sep 2022

Pacheco Vs. Collazoy Live.

Diego Pacheco Vs. Enrique Collazoy Live Title Fight TV Broadcast 17 Sep 2022.

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đź”´đź“şđź”´ Boxing Live: [[ https://tinyurl.com/2022-boxing-fight-live ]]

đź”´đź“şđź”´ Canelo vs GGG Live: [[ https://tinyurl.com/canelo-vs-ggg-live ]]

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Event: Boxing Fight

Date: 17.9.2022

The winner of this unexpected third fight, which takes place inside T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, could find himself as the power player in the division moving forward as the heavyweight face of record from a commercial standpoint. The good news for fans is that action is expected regardless of how it all plays out as both have been outspoken about their dislike for one another as Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs) seeks revenge for the unfounded accusations he made against Fury (30-0-1, 21 KOs) for cheating back in 2020.  

Although Wilder, 35, scored a pair of knockdowns during their controversial split draw in 2018, he has lost the majority of the 19 rounds between the two in the series. That hasn't slowed his confidence, however, even after being stopped for the first time in their rematch when now-fired assistant trainer Mark Breland threw in the towel to save Wilder from a one-sided beating. 

The two bitter rivals will now clash at T-Mobile Arena in Vegas after more than 20 months of Wilder claiming his loss was a result of a conspiracy that included his own corner working against him and Fury cheating after tampering with his gloves and using performance-enhancing drugs. Wilder has also claimed he suffered extreme fatigue after wearing an elaborate costume during his ring walk that weighed more than 40 pounds.

The undercard is as deep as it gets on the PPV level with each bout carrying a level of interest and each taking place in the heavyweight division. Cuban Frank Sanchez will battle Efe Ajagba in the co-main event between a pair of rising prospects. Adam Kowancki looks to get his revenge on Robert Helenius after Helenius scored a shocking upset knockout in March 2020. And top American prospect Jared "Big Baby" Anderson takes on veteran Vladimir Tereshkin to kick things off.

The undercard is as deep as it gets on the PPV level with each bout carrying a level of interest and each taking place in the heavyweight division. Cuban Frank Sanchez will battle Efe Ajagba in the co-main event between a pair of rising prospects. Adam Kowancki looks to get his revenge on Robert Helenius after Helenius scored a shocking upset knockout in March 2020. And top American prospect Jared "Big Baby" Anderson takes on veteran Vladimir Tereshkin to kick things off.

"It's definitely going to be a war but I don't think [Fury] is going to be able to stand toe to toe with me," Wilder told CBS Sports on Thursday. "Even on my worst day, in the condition that I was in, he couldn't get me out of there. I finished the fight on my feet. I had a disloyal trainer throw in the towel when I had told him for many years before to never throw a towel in. You don't throw a towel in on a warrior, a king like myself. You let him fight to the end because I do have the equalizer." 

The 33-year-old Fury enters as the rightful betting favorite after bulking up for the rematch and adding the offensive-based SugarHill Steward as new head trainer. The change led to Fury eschewing his slick and defensive boxing ways from their first meeting to bring the fight directly to Wilder from the opening bell.  

"I quite like Fury by decision," Blangsted-Barnor said. "While he had a very impressive KO last time out, I just think the odds have swayed too far from what they were last time, which was Fury KO +450 and Fury Dec +162. 

"He’s very good at outboxing the best of the best, and I think he would be smart to outbox and stay out the way of a dangerous Wilder, who I potentially think underestimated the knockout power of Tyson last fight."

Fury is the rightful favorite but at 1.35 it's a little wide against an opponent who possesses a nuclear weapon in his fists that could detonate at any moment. Granted, Fury was able to pull himself up off the canvas in the first fight and didn't let Wilder touch him with anything remotely dangerous in the rematch.

Can Usyk bring the power against one of the elite heavyweights and deliver when the lights are shining the brightest? 

Fury is the better boxer. We have 19 rounds of data to prove this. No one in the game has the one-punch power of Wilder, very few people in boxing history have. That power means Wilder is automatically "in" every second of every fight. Wilder's mentality is either a weakness or a strength. Either the stream of excuses is the sign of a man broken by having to suffer the harsh reality that he's a mere mortal. Or, Wilder is so overwhelmingly confident that he can't fathom a loss by any fair means and is unaffected by having been so thoroughly dominated.

The problem with this is if Wilder doesn't see the flaws he brought to the ring in the first two fights -- and especially the rematch -- he may not have taken any steps to address them. There's been a lot of talk that Wilder will focus on a body attack in the rematch, but it's easy to see Fury taking advantage of Wilder trying to become a different fighter. Fury's style is a tough one to replicate in the gym and it's just hard to imagine this fight plays out too differently unless Wilder is able to land some fight-changing bombs.

The break-even point for round bets is 7.5, with the over and under both sitting at -120. Given Wilder's power and Fury having even more data on Wilder than he had when he scored the seventh-round stoppage in the rematch, the under seems like a good play there. The question becomes: How low of a round total are you willing to move? Under 6.5 is +120 and under 5.5 is +175. It wouldn't seem a smart play to go any lower than that. The most interesting play may be to combo two grouped round bets for Fury, understanding his likelihood to win and proven ability to hurt Wilder. 

Joshua has been in plenty of big fights and this is nothing new for him and should be to handle everything Usyk throws his way.

Visions of David Haye and Wladimir Klitschko from 2011 keep running through my head. I can see Usyk taking minimal risks and not being willing to venture on the inside and attempt to inflict damage on Joshua. 

Murray expects the betting volume to be solid, but he said the handle would be much higher if the fight was in July as originally planned. Bettors will be busy firing on college football, the baseball playoffs, and the NFL all weekend.

"We are writing mostly underdog money on Wilder," Murray reported. "That’s pretty standard for a fight like this. People want to bet small and win big. And Wilder literally has a puncher’s chance. He’s the hardest puncher in the division, which makes him the heaviest hitter in the boxing world.

"It’s just hard to picture him taking out Fury. If that shot he landed in the first fight didn’t do it, I’m not sure what can. And Fury is such a better boxer. We are fine with needing Tyson Fury to win again."

A Joshua win via stoppage at +110 is a tempting proposition because who doesn't fancy someone getting knocked out? The best play here, though, is the fight going to a decision and we get a replay of Klitschko-Haye..

It's not surprising that the odds are this high in favor of the two-time heavyweight champion because you can make the case that Fury's won both fights. Yes, the first fight in December 2018 was a split draw, but if you watch the fight back, Fury won 10 of the 12 rounds, with Wilder only securing the other rounds due to knockdowns in the ninth and 12th rounds. Fury took Wilder's best shots and was able to not only get up but land significant power shots. 

Then in the February 2020 rematch, Fury was relentless. He bullied the bully, dominated every round, and turned the tables on Wilder by sending him to the canvas twice as well. Fury was battering Wilder to the point where Wilder's co-trainer at the time, Mark Breland, had seen enough and threw in the towel, much to the dismay of the former WBC titlist. 

To the shock of many people inside the sport, Wilder started making a litany of excuses of why he lost. Instead of acknowledging his defeat and admitting that Fury was the better man that night, he rang off a number of excuses, including: that Breland shouldn't have thrown in the towel, that his ring outfit was too heavy, that Fury's gloves were loaded and that his water was spiked. 

Wilder changed things up coming into the trilogy. After firing Breland, Wilder made former 2014 opponent Malik Scott his new head trainer and put former head man Jay Deas into Breland's position. 

Not only did Fury expose Wilder's inability to fight going backwards, he gained a significant psychological edge by standing up to the bigger puncher while using his size and weight advantage to lean all over his wounded foe.  

Say it among fans of the sweet science, and you will instantly conjure images of Zale and Graziano, Bowe and Holyfield or Ward and Gatti depending on the ages of the audience.

The Hall of Fame rivals fought three times from 1971 to 1975 and combined for 41 of the most compelling rounds the sport—and particularly the heavyweight division—has ever seen.

Earning admission into the trilogy neighborhood are big men Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, who will meet for the third time on Saturday in Las Vegas after initially going 12 rounds for a disputed draw in Los Angeles in 2018 and returning for Fury's win by seventh-round stoppage in Las Vegas in 2020.

"He knows he's lost twice and that he's going to lose the third time," Fury said at Wednesday's final pre-fight press conference. "He's in denial, and he's getting knocked out. His legacy is in bits. I knocked him out, and now I'm going to retire him."

Wilder remains a live underdog because of his punching power but also due to the positive changes he made during the nearly two-year break between fights. Wilder recalibrated the team around him, adding new trainers Malik Scott and Don House. He also posted multiple videos from training camp showing his newfound commitment to body punching. 

For Wilder to join Fury as a two-time heavyweight champion, he needs to mix things up. The 2008 Olympic bronze medalist can't be so reliant on his detonating right hand, despite it quite arguably being the most devastating shot in all of boxing. He possesses a better jab than people think and along with it, a solid left hook that's underrated. If Wilder goes the variety route, he has a good shot at catching Fury. 

For the champion, he's just got to be Tyson Fury. Mix things up a little bit to keep Wilder on his toes but still use wrinkles in what he did 20 months ago by going right at Wilder and making him fight off the back foot. Wilder proved in the rematch when you do that, he has no answer. 

It's hard to see this fight being any different than what we saw in the rematch. A new trainer doesn't mean Wilder's going to instantly change his stripes. However, if Fury applies constant pressure and walks Wilder down, it's hard to imagine Wilder staying patient and not trying to swing for the fences to help him get out of trouble. You need at least two fights with a new trainer to fully feel comfortable with what they want you to do. 

Wilder has three rounds to get Fury out of there, or it's going to be a long night at the office. Fury's going to not only make it past the third round, but he will stop the "Bronze Bomber" in the first round of the fight and win the trilogy. 

Up for grabs for the third consecutive time will be the WBC title strap that Wilder had won and defended 10 times before suffering the first loss of his career in the second fight. He'll arrive to T-Mobile Arena with new trainer Malik Scott, who was promoted amid Wilder's post-Fury excuse tour that included his bizarre suggestion that previous trainer Mark Breland was secretly working for his foe.

"I went into Deontay's toolbox and pulled everything out that he did well," Scott said. "I wanted to make sure that we drilled it over and over again. I didn't teach him anything new. Deontay Wilder can do it all. I just pulled some of those things out of him."

The third fight was initially pushed aside in favor of a Fury duel with Anthony Joshua, but Wilder earned a ruling from an arbitrator that mandated he get the third date before Fury and Joshua squared off.

The trilogy fight was then set for June 24 but was postponed when Fury tested positive for COVID-19.

The fight will top a pay-per-view card that's set to begin at 9 p.m. ET and will be distributed by both Fox Sports and ESPN+.

It will cost $79.99 to see how it turns out, but before you lay out cash, three members of the B/R combat sports team—Scott Harris, Tom Taylor and Lyle Fitzsimmons—got together to predict the result.

Wilder has stuck by his assertion that everyone from Fury to the referee, the Nevada commission and even members of his own team contributed to a conspiracy meant to bring him down during their rematch. And even though he blamed the 40-pound costume he wore to the ring on that night for weakening him during the fight, he still plans on just as elaborate an entrance for Saturday night, as well.  

It's a wild juxtaposition to behold. Yet it's clear Wilder isn't worried about what his comments have done for his public reputation, which makes even an armchair psychologist realize it's all part of what fuels him to be his best.  

"I don't have nothing to prove," Wilder said. "I'm in a great place, a great state of mind and have always been. I have a lot of great people around me that have been covering me all this time. There is nothing to prove at all. This right here is redemption, retaliation and retribution; all of the above." 

"It just shows you that I'm living in Wilder's mind rent free, the whole time, two years," Fury said. "Every time he looks in the mirror, he sees Tyson Fury. Every time he goes to bed before he closes his eyes at night, he sees the 'Gypsy King.' And when he wakes up and thinks about it in the morning, he thinks of Tyson Fury. It must be crazy to be obsessed with a man like me, so much of his life. It's just crazy." 

Had the best-laid plans of boxing's heavyweight division come to fruition this summer, unified champion Anthony Joshua would have already faced lineal and WBC beltholder Tyson Fury to declare the first undisputed champion of the four-belt era.  

This is boxing, however, where nothing ever quite goes to plan. The good news, however, is that the consolation prize offered to fans over the next two weeks in the form of an unofficial four-man tournament to hopefully declare the undisputed best heavyweight of this era early next year appears to be in motion.  

I have the same objection to this trilogy fight as most of its naysayers: Tyson Fury is clearly a better boxer than Deontay Wilder. No matter how you scored their 2018 draw, Fury was obviously the more skilled man in the ring that night. He made that even clearer in their 2020 rematch, when he battered a bewildered Wilder to a seventh-round stoppage.

It's been almost two years since that second fight, and both men have ostensibly been hard at work for the majority of that time, but it's difficult to imagine Wilder completely closing the gaping holes in his skill set that left him so exposed in his first two fights with Fury. He was as evasive as a parking meter last time out. He might be a little more fleet-footed this time around, but it probably won't change much.

I expect the third fight to look like the second but go on for longer. Fury might be a bit more patient, and Wilder might keep himself out of trouble a little more effectively, but the themes will be the same. Fury will push the action, land punches and bunches and Wilder's nuclear option will become more and more of a long shot as the damage accumulates. It's just a question of how long he can survive.

On Saturday, Joshua (24-1, 22 KOs) will put his WBA, WBO and IBF titles on the line in a mandatory defense against former undisputed cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk (18-0, 13 KOs) in a massive event at England's Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (1 p.m. ET, DAZN). Two weeks later on Oct. 9, Las Vegas will be home for a trilogy fight pairing Fury (30-0-1, 21 KOs) against former WBC champion Deontay Wilder (42-1-1, 41 KOs).  

Yet for all of the talk regarding who might be the one boxer of the four with the best shot at being the last one standing when all is said and done, most of said discussions have circled around the trio of incumbent giants.  

As it pertains to handicapping how the third fight will play out, the good news for Wilder is that the same equation is in play that has always been there throughout his career.  

"My favorite quote is that these guys have to be perfect for 12 rounds. I only have to be perfect for two seconds," Wilder said. "I'm one of the most dangerous -- if not the most dangerous – fighters in the sport of boxing history with my knockout power and it doesn't diminish. It goes all the way from the first [round] to the 12th and that's what makes me very dangerous."

The undercard is as deep as it gets on the PPV level with each bout carrying a level of interest and each taking place in the heavyweight division. Cuban Frank Sanchez will battle Efe Ajagba in the co-main event between a pair of rising prospects. Adam Kowancki looks to get his revenge on Robert Helenius after Helenius scored a shocking upset knockout in March 2020. And top American prospect Jared "Big Baby" Anderson takes on veteran Vladimir Tereshkin to kick things off.

But that's not all you need to know about this weekend. The prelims features another heavy hitter making his return to the ring when Edgar Berlanga enters a super middleweight showdown with Marcelo Esteban Coceres. Berlanga tied the all-time record for a start to a career with 16 consecutive first-round knockouts. That streak ended in April when he earned a decision against Demond Nicholson, but he looks to restart that streak on Saturday night. 

“There’s a question about this one, he’s fighting an undefeated Olympic champion,” he said of Usyk, who came up from the cruiserweight as undisputed champion.

That being said, Fury could certainly knock Wilder out again but there should be an expectation that Wilder will improve enough to stay upright. There are two lines with value and that's Fury by decision at 3.40 and Wilder by stoppage at 3.75. Although some may feel that the third fight will be a repeat performance by Fury, Wilder has his back against the wall and will likely approach this fight with a little more caution by using his jab and trying to control distance. 

Fury is a phenomenal boxer himself and won't put himself in danger unnecessarily. He may want to put Wilder away again but he's conscious of what Wilder brings to the table and cannot expect his opponent to be the same fighter he was last February. But the reality is that Wilder doesn't throw enough punches, uses his offense as his defense and, most importantly, facing an opponent who is bigger than him and knows how to use it.

Tyson Fury is the complete package. He's defensively sound, has fantastic footwork and has power in both hands. Wilder only needs one shot but, even then, there's no guarantee that it'll put Fury away. Wilder's pride is on the line and he won't allow his corner to throw in the towel this time. He's going to leave it all in the ring and likely come up short by decision. 

Fury will outbox Wilder "if." Fury is the tougher fighter "if." He's the crafty veteran who should take Wilder into deep waters, you know, "if." That "if" is a euphemism for the baseball bat Wilder carries around where most humans have just a regular human arm. To paraphrase Mike Tyson, everyone has a game plan until they get hit with a baseball bat.

At 33, Fury is still in his prime, but not by much. And with fighters, the end comes fast. If you want to push in your chips on the notion that Fury will steer clear of trouble indefinitely, that's a bet I'm willing to take. With that kind of power, Wilder can hit and miss. Fury has to fight a mistake-free fight. He can use that toughness and output to get it done, but here's guessing the fates swing the pendulum toward the underdog. And who can blame them? He has a baseball bat for an arm.

This has all the makings to be a firefight for as long as it lasts. Although Fury's outward motives were questioned ahead of their 2020 rematch when he boldly announced he was going for the knockout, his prediction proved gospel given his performance, which included a noted lack of resistance from a shellshocked Wilder.  

Fury has predicted yet another early stoppage and there's plenty of reason to believe both that it's possible and that it remains his best strategy. Although everyone from critics to Fury himself should expect an improved Wilder with nothing to lose as he enters his last shot at redemption, the best way to beat a bully remains standing up to him.  

It goes without saying that Fury will need to balance his aggression smartly without bordering on being reckless. One mistake can be one too many against a foe this dangerous. Yet Fury's unique combo of size, speed and elusiveness should be enough to do so.  

Barak Bess agreed, saying: “He's someone that can’t be slept on. Everyone’s looking at the advantages of the bigger guy. 

With the time for talking just about over entering Saturday's heavyweight championship bout pairing unified titleholder Anthony Joshua against former undisputed cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk, probably the most remarkable part is how little has been actually said between them.

In a division filled with larger-than-life personalities from Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder to Dereck Chisora and Dillian Whyte, the two combatants who will share the ring inside Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in England have been noticeably short on headline-filling words while showing each other a healthy amount of respect (1 p.m. ET, DAZN).

Usyk, 34, brings a skill set to heavyweight that is as unique to the division as what the 6-foot-9 Fury brings with his speed, length and elusiveness. Usyk might not be as tall as Fury, and the jury remains out after just two appearances at heavyweight throughout an injury plagued last three years whether he truly has the punch resistance and power to be an elite threat. Yet it's just as equally hard to overlook his combination of creativity, sublime technical skill and fearlessness when it comes to determining just how much of a live dog he is expected to be against Joshua.  

A master of using comedy as a front for his attempts a pre-fight mental warfare, Usyk showed up to Thursday's final press conference dressed in a wild three-piece suit that looked straight out of the late actor Heath Ledger's closet for his reprisal of the Joker character in Christopher Nolan's "Dark Knight" series about Batman. While the humorous and nostalgic reference by Usyk isn't by accident, his antics only hide just how great of a pure boxer he actually is.  

So for anyone to opine that he's got no chance to defeat Fury—a man he dropped two times when they first met in 2018—well, let's just say that person isn't particularly boxing-aware.

In fact, across 18-plus rounds against the Bronze Bomber, Fury has shown a quality that none of Wilder's other 41 opponents have displayed: the ability to take his best punch and reply with his own.

That's why Fury was able to get off the floor twice to get a draw in the first match.

And that's why Fury was confident enough to walk toward his man with his own arsenal in the rematch, something no one else had ever done with success against the 10-defense WBC champion.

The reality that Fury is a highly skilled, extremely confident and undeniably brave guy is impressive enough. That he can be all those things in a 6'9" frame while carrying better than 270 pounds makes him nothing less than a marvel to watch.

From the standpoint of Usyk (18-0, 13 KOs), a 34-year-old native of Ukraine and, like Joshua, a 2012 Olympic gold medalist, the strategy appears to be very much calculated. Dressed in a suit from the Joker's closet of "Batman" fame during Thursday's press conference, Usyk perfectly embodied physically what goes on inside of his genius and very maniacal mind. 

Unlike his title reign, which often came against smaller foes not even remotely as skilled as Fury, Wilder has often relied upon waiting for his opponents to tire just enough to make a crucial mistake to open up angles for his big power to finish the fight. Wilder simply doesn't have that luxury against this version of Fury and will need to channel the aggression he showed in his 2017 rematch with Bermane Stiverne by essentially going for broke in hopes of creating a shootout.  

Don't be surprised if Fury gets clipped or even knocked down on his road to victory in this third fight. Just be prepared for him to get up -- again -- before using his guile and technique to finish the job in the most violent and exciting chapter of their rivalry. 

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