Vasiliy Lomachenko stopped George Kambosos Jr. by TKO in the 11th round of their lightweight bout in Perth, Australia, and won the vacant IBF world lightweight championship.
Lomachenko, the 36-year-old Ukrainian star, improved to 18-3 while winning his sixth world title.
From start to finish, Lomachenko battered his opponent and he dropped Kambosos in the 11th with a body shot. Kambosos made it back on his feet before Lomachenko ended it with more ferocious body shots, prompting the referee to stop the fight.
“My plan was to adjust to my opponent, and this is what I did during the fight,’’ Lomachenko said, noting he intentionally attacked Kambosos’ body in the final three rounds.
That strategy paid off.
Kambosos, the 30-year-old Australian fighting in his home country, lost for the third time in four fights and fell to 21-3.
“He’s a true champion,’’ Kambosos said. “He’s a legend of this sport. …There’s no shame in losing to a man like Lomachenko.’’
This marked Lomachenko’s first fight in nearly a year, since he lost a close unanimous decision to Devin Haney.
Kambosos throws a couple of body punches, but no early highlights. Throws two more. Crowd rooting for Kambosos, the Australian – the least surprising development of the fight. Lomachenko stalking and finally unleashes a combo and is attacking late. Lomachenko 10, Kambosos 9.
Lomachenko looking comfortable as he fires jabs and chases after Kambosos. Lomachenko strikes again, with a combo. Kambosos awkwardly attacks, then lands a right to the body. But it’s Lomachenko with a flurry in the final seconds. Lomachenko 20, Kambosos 18.
Lomachenko strikes early with a left. Appears to be in control, strikes again. Occasionally looks like a matador when Kambosos charges bull style. Kambosos landing now. Furious exchange as the round ends, with Kambosos grinning. Lomachenko 29, Kambosos 28.
Lomachenko throwing cobra-quick strikes, but Kambosos firing too. Lomachenko getting surgical here, lands a big left. Kambosos’ face swelling fast. Lomachenko 39, Kambosos 37.
Hey, bettors, Lomachenko money line plummeting as he takes control of this fight. Using his signature footwork and assaulting from different angles. Lomachenko looking like a young 36. Kambosos lands but in exchange eats another punch. Kambosos staggered by a left, but stays on his feet. Lomachenko 49, Kambosos 46.
Lomachenko has a 73 to 16 connect advantage, according to ESPN’s broadcast, and Kambosos’ swollen face is a testament to that. Kambosos strikes with a left and follows up with a flurry while turning aggressive. Lomachenko looks unbothered. Lomachenko 59, Kambosos 55.
Under pressure, Kambosos is down, but it’s ruled a slip. Lomachenko steadily landing, digging into the body. Kambosos bleeding from over the right eye. Lomachenko 69, Kambosos 65.
Kambosos’ face looks, well, messy. As Lomachenko pounds away with flair. Kambosos bleeding from the nose now. And he seems to be growing frustrated by Lomachenko’s artful defense, too. Kambosos heads to his corner with lots of blood to mop off his face. Lomachenko 79, Kambosos 73.
Kambosos shows some fire, lands a couple of body blows. Kambosos trying to tie up Lomachenko and turning the fight dirty might be his only chance here. The punch count is getting more lopsided by the second, it seems. Lomachenko 89, Kambosos 82.
Kambosos fires punches, swinging wildly, and then comes pressure from Lomachenko. No quit in Kambosos, and for that toughness he gets two more blows to the face. Blood pouring again down Kambosos’ face. Lomachenko 99, Kambosos 91.
Lomachenko has 157 punches to 38 punches for Kambosos, according to ESPN’s broadcast. And the gap is widening as I type. Kambosos still throwing punches. Down goes Kambosos after absorbing a body shot! He’s up, but Lomachenko delivers two more body shots and in flies the white towel from Kambosos’ corner. KO in the 11th.
Cherneka Johnson beat reigning WBA bantamweight champion Nina Hughes in a fight that ended in utter confusion.
Initially, the in-ring announcer read the scorecards and Hughes was declared the winner. One problem: the announcer misread the scorecards.
Suddenly it was Johnson’s right arm aloft in victory with the judges having scored the fight 95-95, 96-94, 98-92 – a split decision in favor of Johnson.
Hughes, 41, was relentless. But Johnson, 29, landed the heavier blows.
Breaking down the bantamweight fight:
Round 1: Hughes comes out swinging, looking a lot younger than 41. Johnson responds with a left jab and is capitalizing on her reach advantage. Hughes 10, Johnson 9.
Round 2: Hughes looks wild but she’s landing. Johnson looks more controlled. Maybe too controlled as Hughes swings away and strikes often enough. Hughes 20, Johnson 18.
Round 3: Hughes just relentless. Can she continue this pace? Johnson methodically looking for an opening, and Hughes does what she does – fire away. Hughes 30, Johnson 27.
Round 4: Johnson grows more assertive, and Hughes makes her pay with a right hand. Hughes still getting the better of these exchanges. Hughes loses her mouthguard – about the only thing that can slow her as the referee walks the equipment to Hughes’ corner and its re-inserted. Hughes 40, Johnson 36.
Round 5: Johnson sticking with her strategy – patiently picking her spots. Hughes not complying as she stays active. But Johnson strikes hard at the end of the round. Hughes 49, Johnson 46.
Round 6: It’s Déjà vu. Johnson landing jabs. Hughes answers with a flurry. But Johnson may be muscling through and Hughes tiring. Hughes 58, Johnson 56.
Round 7: Johnson landing jabs but fails to follow up with right hands. Hughes digging in, resuming her frenetic pace. Hughes lands a hard right and draws blood from Johnson. Hughes 68, Johnson 65.
Round 8: Johnson stalks and Hughes pushes back. Now Hughes relents. Johnson lands her best punch of the fight – a powerful right. But she’s bleeding badly and Hughes is unloading flurries of punches. Hughes 78, Johnson 74.
Round 9: Johnson the aggressor again, taking shots as she powers forward. Hughes’ face may tell an important story – lots of swelling. Hughes 87, Johnson 84.
Round 10: Johnson storming forward. Landing punches with more authority, but Hughes with greater frequency. Hughes 96, Johnson 94.
Mexico’s Pedro Guevara, a heavy underdog heading into the bout, upset Andrew Moloney of Australia by split decision in their 12-round super flyweight fight.
Guevara, 34, attacked Moloney’s body, landed about 25 more punches and won over the judges. They scored the fight 115-113, 113-116, 115-113 in favor of Guevara, who won the WBC interim world super flyweight title.
Angry about the result, Moloney, 33, abruptly announced his retirement during an in-ring interview. His record fell to 26-4 and Guevara’s improved to 42-4-1.
Breaking down the super flyweight fight:
Round 1: Moloney comes out active. Guevara is game. Boxers trading lots of punches, none electric. Moloney 10, Guevara 9.
Round 2: Moloney initiates the action again. Delivers a solid right, then eats an uppercut. Moloney continues to throw punches in exchange for taking them, too. Guevara lands a nice combo, and the right lands hard. Moloney 19, Guevara 19.
Round 3: Neither fighter backing up, content to trade punches. Guevara working the body. Moloney targeting the head. Moloney pouring it on late. Moloney 29, Guevara 28.
Round 4: A bevvy of punches being exchanged. Seeing no KO power. But Moloney lands punches square. Guevara responds with a solid uppercut, then drives left hooks into Moloney’s body. Moloney 38, Guevara 38.
Round 5: Guevara still targeting the body, and Moloney the head. Now Guevara snaps back Moloney’s head with a straight right, later lands a nice uppercut. Guevara 48, Moloney 47.
Round 6: The pace continues. So does the theme. Both fighters landing punches, neither fighter staggered. Guevara still working the body, and Moloney’s punches looked crisper. Guevara 57, Moloney 57.
Round 7: A headbutt, second of the night. No blood drawn. Both leaning into left hooks. Compubox says Guevara landing slightly more punches. But to my eye, Moloney looking slightly better now. Moloney 67, Guevara 66.
Round 8: Still a quick pace here. Guevara initiating the action. Guevara scoring with counterpunches. Moloney firing back, but too late to win the round. Moloney 76, Guevara 76.
Round 9: Hey bettors, the price to win on Moloney, a heavy favorite, is plummeting as Guevara continues to dig into Moloney’s body. Guevara now aiming upstairs too – and landing. Guevara 86, Moloney 85.
Round 10: Nice exchange here at the outset of the round. Guevara looking strong and Moloney appears to be tiring. I repeat, appears. Guevara hitting the bull’s-eye and swinging with force. Guevara 96, Moloney 94.
Round 11: Moloney opening up. Worried he may be trailing on the scorecards? Guevara the more aggressive fighter. Moloney grinning. Not sure now’s the time to be smiling. Guevara 106, Moloney 103.
Round 12: Guevara lands a flurry of punches. Follows up with more. Moloney landing now. Guevara 115, Moloney 113.
The Lomachenko-Kambosos broadcast is set to begin Saturday at 10 p.m. ET.
The Lomachenko-Kambosos fight will air on ESPN.
The Lomachenko-Kambosos fight will be available to stream on ESPN+.
- Matt Verri, The Evening Standard: “Kambosos will be roared on by thousands of Australian fans, but he cannot match Lomachenko if this turns into a tactical bout at distance.” Prediction: Lomachenko by unanimous decision.
- Norm Frauenheim, The Ring: “Lomachenko has a chance to remind the world and perhaps himself that he still possesses much of the skill so aptly defined by his original nickname: Hi-Tech.” Prediction: TKO, 10th round.
- Alex Ballentine, Bleacher Report: “Ultimately, it’s hard to see Lomachenko not winning this one unless he’s fallen off the age cliff.” Prediction: Lomachenko by unanimous decision.
- Shawn Porter, former world champion: “(Lomachenko) is very precise. He’s a sharpshooter in there. One of the very few precise punchers that has a heckuva power in both hands.’’ Prediction: Lomachenko by decision.
- Teddy Atlas, boxing analyst: “I think it’s going to be a competitive fight. …The question mark for me is, how much does Loma have left?’’ Prediction: Lomachenko wins
- Action: Lomachenko -750 favorite, Kambosos +460 underdog
- Bet MGM: Lomachenko -650 favorite, Kambosos +450 underdog
- DraftKings: Lomachenko -700 favorite, Kambosos +475 underdog
- FanDuel: Lomachenko -750 favorite, Kambosos +460 underdog
- Vasiliy Lomachenko vs. George Kambosos, 12 rounds, for the vacant IBF lightweight title
- Andrew Moloney vs. Pedro Guevara, 12 rounds, for the WBC interim super flyweight title
- Nina Hughes vs. Cherneka Johnson, 10 rounds, for the WBA bantamweight championship
Lomachenko weighed in at 135 pounds for the fight. Kambosos weighed in at 134.25 pounds.
The required championship limit was 135 pounds.
Lomachenko is 17-3 with 11 knockouts. As an amateur, Lomachenko was 396-1 and won Olympic gold medals in 2008 and 2012. Kambosos is 21-2 with 11 KOs.
Lomachenko won world title fast
Lomachenko won the WBO featherweight title in his third fight, tying the record for fewest fights needed before winning a world championship. He also has won world titles in the super featherweight and lightweight divisions and five world championships overall.
Lomachenko lost his lightweight titles to Teofimo Lopez in 2020 after losing their fight by unanimous decision.
Lomachenko started boxing when he was 4 years old. After an amateur career that saw him go 396-1 and win two Olympic gold medals, he made his professional debut in 2013 at the age of 25.
At his father’s direction, Lomachenko took a four-year sabbatical from boxing between 9 and 13 to focus on dance. With that, he developed his famous footwork that has served him well in the ring.
Throwing in the towel became a trendy way to exit early against Lomachenko in 2016 and 2017. His opponents took that route during consecutive bouts.
Nicholas Walters quit after the seventh round in 2016; Jason Sosa’s trainer threw in the towel after the ninth round in 2016; Miguel Marriaga’s corner stopped the fight after the seventh round in 2017; and Guillermo Rigondeaux quit after the sixth round in 2017.