logo
Taylor holds off Serrano to retain belt in trilogy bout

Taylor holds off Serrano to retain belt in trilogy bout

The Advertiser5 days ago
Katie Taylor has retained her undisputed super lightweight championship, completing a trilogy sweep against Amanda Serrano on a history-making night at Madison Square Garden.
The fighters brought women's boxing to new heights through their fierce rivalry as a sell-out crowd at the world's most famous arena watched the Irishwoman just edge out her opponent on Friday.
The judges scored the fight 95-95, 97-93 and 97-93.
Their first meeting at Madison Square Garden three years ago was billed as the biggest fight in women's boxing, as they were the first women to headline a fight at the arena.
Taylor triumphed by judges' decisions in their prior two meetings as well, including a controversial clash in November when the referee docked Taylor a point for head butts.
Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn't as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call.
Taylor again ruled out a fourth meeting with the Puerto Rican, but was cagey when asked whether she would continue to fight.
"I don't know, I just don't want to fight Amanda Serrano again. She punches too hard," she said after the bout.
"I have a huge ton of respect for Amanda, she's such a warrior. It's a pleasure to share a ring with her.
"We have made history three times. We are history makers forever.
"I thought I was boxing very smart, she wasn't able to catch me very much tonight. But it's always close against Amanda."
Serrano (47-4-1) never really hurt Taylor this time, the expected final fight between the two, the way she did a couple times in the previous fights.
She held her hands over her eyes when the first score announced was the even card, perhaps knowing already then she hadn't done enough to pull it out.
Serrano, who has suffered three of her four professional losses to Taylor, said she had tried to work "smarter not harder".
"We tried to stay with the long punches and one twos, and it just wasn't enough," she said.
It was the same festive atmosphere in front of another sold-out crowd split between Irish and Puerto Rican fans, just the way it was when they first fought here on April 30, 2022, in what was the first women's boxing match to headline the arena.
This time, the arena hosted its first all-women's card, many of the fighters saying during the leadup they owed their opportunity to the interest created by the Taylor-Serrano trilogy.
with agencies
Katie Taylor has retained her undisputed super lightweight championship, completing a trilogy sweep against Amanda Serrano on a history-making night at Madison Square Garden.
The fighters brought women's boxing to new heights through their fierce rivalry as a sell-out crowd at the world's most famous arena watched the Irishwoman just edge out her opponent on Friday.
The judges scored the fight 95-95, 97-93 and 97-93.
Their first meeting at Madison Square Garden three years ago was billed as the biggest fight in women's boxing, as they were the first women to headline a fight at the arena.
Taylor triumphed by judges' decisions in their prior two meetings as well, including a controversial clash in November when the referee docked Taylor a point for head butts.
Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn't as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call.
Taylor again ruled out a fourth meeting with the Puerto Rican, but was cagey when asked whether she would continue to fight.
"I don't know, I just don't want to fight Amanda Serrano again. She punches too hard," she said after the bout.
"I have a huge ton of respect for Amanda, she's such a warrior. It's a pleasure to share a ring with her.
"We have made history three times. We are history makers forever.
"I thought I was boxing very smart, she wasn't able to catch me very much tonight. But it's always close against Amanda."
Serrano (47-4-1) never really hurt Taylor this time, the expected final fight between the two, the way she did a couple times in the previous fights.
She held her hands over her eyes when the first score announced was the even card, perhaps knowing already then she hadn't done enough to pull it out.
Serrano, who has suffered three of her four professional losses to Taylor, said she had tried to work "smarter not harder".
"We tried to stay with the long punches and one twos, and it just wasn't enough," she said.
It was the same festive atmosphere in front of another sold-out crowd split between Irish and Puerto Rican fans, just the way it was when they first fought here on April 30, 2022, in what was the first women's boxing match to headline the arena.
This time, the arena hosted its first all-women's card, many of the fighters saying during the leadup they owed their opportunity to the interest created by the Taylor-Serrano trilogy.
with agencies
Katie Taylor has retained her undisputed super lightweight championship, completing a trilogy sweep against Amanda Serrano on a history-making night at Madison Square Garden.
The fighters brought women's boxing to new heights through their fierce rivalry as a sell-out crowd at the world's most famous arena watched the Irishwoman just edge out her opponent on Friday.
The judges scored the fight 95-95, 97-93 and 97-93.
Their first meeting at Madison Square Garden three years ago was billed as the biggest fight in women's boxing, as they were the first women to headline a fight at the arena.
Taylor triumphed by judges' decisions in their prior two meetings as well, including a controversial clash in November when the referee docked Taylor a point for head butts.
Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn't as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call.
Taylor again ruled out a fourth meeting with the Puerto Rican, but was cagey when asked whether she would continue to fight.
"I don't know, I just don't want to fight Amanda Serrano again. She punches too hard," she said after the bout.
"I have a huge ton of respect for Amanda, she's such a warrior. It's a pleasure to share a ring with her.
"We have made history three times. We are history makers forever.
"I thought I was boxing very smart, she wasn't able to catch me very much tonight. But it's always close against Amanda."
Serrano (47-4-1) never really hurt Taylor this time, the expected final fight between the two, the way she did a couple times in the previous fights.
She held her hands over her eyes when the first score announced was the even card, perhaps knowing already then she hadn't done enough to pull it out.
Serrano, who has suffered three of her four professional losses to Taylor, said she had tried to work "smarter not harder".
"We tried to stay with the long punches and one twos, and it just wasn't enough," she said.
It was the same festive atmosphere in front of another sold-out crowd split between Irish and Puerto Rican fans, just the way it was when they first fought here on April 30, 2022, in what was the first women's boxing match to headline the arena.
This time, the arena hosted its first all-women's card, many of the fighters saying during the leadup they owed their opportunity to the interest created by the Taylor-Serrano trilogy.
with agencies
Katie Taylor has retained her undisputed super lightweight championship, completing a trilogy sweep against Amanda Serrano on a history-making night at Madison Square Garden.
The fighters brought women's boxing to new heights through their fierce rivalry as a sell-out crowd at the world's most famous arena watched the Irishwoman just edge out her opponent on Friday.
The judges scored the fight 95-95, 97-93 and 97-93.
Their first meeting at Madison Square Garden three years ago was billed as the biggest fight in women's boxing, as they were the first women to headline a fight at the arena.
Taylor triumphed by judges' decisions in their prior two meetings as well, including a controversial clash in November when the referee docked Taylor a point for head butts.
Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn't as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call.
Taylor again ruled out a fourth meeting with the Puerto Rican, but was cagey when asked whether she would continue to fight.
"I don't know, I just don't want to fight Amanda Serrano again. She punches too hard," she said after the bout.
"I have a huge ton of respect for Amanda, she's such a warrior. It's a pleasure to share a ring with her.
"We have made history three times. We are history makers forever.
"I thought I was boxing very smart, she wasn't able to catch me very much tonight. But it's always close against Amanda."
Serrano (47-4-1) never really hurt Taylor this time, the expected final fight between the two, the way she did a couple times in the previous fights.
She held her hands over her eyes when the first score announced was the even card, perhaps knowing already then she hadn't done enough to pull it out.
Serrano, who has suffered three of her four professional losses to Taylor, said she had tried to work "smarter not harder".
"We tried to stay with the long punches and one twos, and it just wasn't enough," she said.
It was the same festive atmosphere in front of another sold-out crowd split between Irish and Puerto Rican fans, just the way it was when they first fought here on April 30, 2022, in what was the first women's boxing match to headline the arena.
This time, the arena hosted its first all-women's card, many of the fighters saying during the leadup they owed their opportunity to the interest created by the Taylor-Serrano trilogy.
with agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Business time as Farrell makes tough first Test calls
Business time as Farrell makes tough first Test calls

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Business time as Farrell makes tough first Test calls

Andy Farrell has overlooked son Owen for a British and Irish Lions berth in their Brisbane opener and resisted the temptation to blood excitement machine Henry Pollock. The Lions coach on Thursday confirmed his side for Saturday's series opener against the Wallabies at Suncorp Stadium. Farrell was a late call-up to his fourth tour after Elliot Daly (arm) suffered a tour-ending injury, despite not playing international rugby for nearly two years and enduring an injury-hit season in France with Racing 92. But he impressed off the bench in Saturday's thrashing of the AUNZ Invitational XV and looked a chance to provide cover in the centres and No.10 for the Test opener. English flyer Marcus Smith has instead won the utility spot on the bench, able to cover flyhalf and fullback. Pollock, the high-octane 20-year-old with just one Test under his belt, and fellow in-form back-rower Jac Morgan were other unlucky omissions. England's Ellis Genge teams up with Leinster pair Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong, two of 11 Irish players in the 23. Irish duo Jack Conan and Tadhg Beirne won back-row spots alongside England's Tom Curry, while Leinster scrumhalf Jamison Gibson-Park will partner Scottish gun Finn Russell in the halves. Andy Farrell said the selection of his back row was a real challenge. "That is the hotly contested part of the team that has been talked about for quite some time, and rightly so because of the quality we have got there," he said. "We feel that is the right combination for the first Test ... Tadhg with his quality in the set piece, but also his ability on the floor or as a ball-playing No.6. That complements Jack in a similar regard, with Tom being the engine we all know you need in Test match football." Morgan was stiff to miss out after he was player of the match against the Queensland Reds, and the coach was asked how close he was to being involved. "As close as you can imagine. I am gutted for players like that ... and Henry (Pollock) as well because they could easily be in this side, but that shows the good place we are in as a group," Farrell said. The coach said his son Owen was a hot chance of being involved in the clash against First Nations and Pasifika on Tuesday in Melbourne. "He was in contention, but I feel like Tuesday will be good for someone like Owen," Farrell said. Scottish pair Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones will occupy the centres, while two more Leinster products - Hugo Keenan and James Lowe - join England speedster Tommy Freeman in the back three. Lock Maro Itoje will captain the side for the first time. Farrell played for Wigan Warriors in the 1994 World Club Challenge final win in rugby league over Brisbane. He recently said it was one of the highlights of his dual-code career, but was then asked how it would compare with getting one over the Wallabies. "I actually met (former Broncos captain) Gorden Tallis today and was reminiscing on a few things, and '94 was a great memory," he said. "This seems a little bit bigger. This is huge. This would mean the world to me." LIONS: Ellis Genge, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong, Maro Itoje, Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne, Tom Curry, Jack Conan, Jamison Gibson-Park, Finn Russell, James Lowe, Sione Tuipulotu, Huw Jones, Tommy Freeman, Hugo Keenan. Bench: Ronan Kelleher, Andrew Porter, Will Stuart, Ollie Chessum, Ben Earl, Alex Mitchell, Marcus Smith, Bundee Aki Andy Farrell has overlooked son Owen for a British and Irish Lions berth in their Brisbane opener and resisted the temptation to blood excitement machine Henry Pollock. The Lions coach on Thursday confirmed his side for Saturday's series opener against the Wallabies at Suncorp Stadium. Farrell was a late call-up to his fourth tour after Elliot Daly (arm) suffered a tour-ending injury, despite not playing international rugby for nearly two years and enduring an injury-hit season in France with Racing 92. But he impressed off the bench in Saturday's thrashing of the AUNZ Invitational XV and looked a chance to provide cover in the centres and No.10 for the Test opener. English flyer Marcus Smith has instead won the utility spot on the bench, able to cover flyhalf and fullback. Pollock, the high-octane 20-year-old with just one Test under his belt, and fellow in-form back-rower Jac Morgan were other unlucky omissions. England's Ellis Genge teams up with Leinster pair Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong, two of 11 Irish players in the 23. Irish duo Jack Conan and Tadhg Beirne won back-row spots alongside England's Tom Curry, while Leinster scrumhalf Jamison Gibson-Park will partner Scottish gun Finn Russell in the halves. Andy Farrell said the selection of his back row was a real challenge. "That is the hotly contested part of the team that has been talked about for quite some time, and rightly so because of the quality we have got there," he said. "We feel that is the right combination for the first Test ... Tadhg with his quality in the set piece, but also his ability on the floor or as a ball-playing No.6. That complements Jack in a similar regard, with Tom being the engine we all know you need in Test match football." Morgan was stiff to miss out after he was player of the match against the Queensland Reds, and the coach was asked how close he was to being involved. "As close as you can imagine. I am gutted for players like that ... and Henry (Pollock) as well because they could easily be in this side, but that shows the good place we are in as a group," Farrell said. The coach said his son Owen was a hot chance of being involved in the clash against First Nations and Pasifika on Tuesday in Melbourne. "He was in contention, but I feel like Tuesday will be good for someone like Owen," Farrell said. Scottish pair Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones will occupy the centres, while two more Leinster products - Hugo Keenan and James Lowe - join England speedster Tommy Freeman in the back three. Lock Maro Itoje will captain the side for the first time. Farrell played for Wigan Warriors in the 1994 World Club Challenge final win in rugby league over Brisbane. He recently said it was one of the highlights of his dual-code career, but was then asked how it would compare with getting one over the Wallabies. "I actually met (former Broncos captain) Gorden Tallis today and was reminiscing on a few things, and '94 was a great memory," he said. "This seems a little bit bigger. This is huge. This would mean the world to me." LIONS: Ellis Genge, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong, Maro Itoje, Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne, Tom Curry, Jack Conan, Jamison Gibson-Park, Finn Russell, James Lowe, Sione Tuipulotu, Huw Jones, Tommy Freeman, Hugo Keenan. Bench: Ronan Kelleher, Andrew Porter, Will Stuart, Ollie Chessum, Ben Earl, Alex Mitchell, Marcus Smith, Bundee Aki Andy Farrell has overlooked son Owen for a British and Irish Lions berth in their Brisbane opener and resisted the temptation to blood excitement machine Henry Pollock. The Lions coach on Thursday confirmed his side for Saturday's series opener against the Wallabies at Suncorp Stadium. Farrell was a late call-up to his fourth tour after Elliot Daly (arm) suffered a tour-ending injury, despite not playing international rugby for nearly two years and enduring an injury-hit season in France with Racing 92. But he impressed off the bench in Saturday's thrashing of the AUNZ Invitational XV and looked a chance to provide cover in the centres and No.10 for the Test opener. English flyer Marcus Smith has instead won the utility spot on the bench, able to cover flyhalf and fullback. Pollock, the high-octane 20-year-old with just one Test under his belt, and fellow in-form back-rower Jac Morgan were other unlucky omissions. England's Ellis Genge teams up with Leinster pair Dan Sheehan and Tadhg Furlong, two of 11 Irish players in the 23. Irish duo Jack Conan and Tadhg Beirne won back-row spots alongside England's Tom Curry, while Leinster scrumhalf Jamison Gibson-Park will partner Scottish gun Finn Russell in the halves. Andy Farrell said the selection of his back row was a real challenge. "That is the hotly contested part of the team that has been talked about for quite some time, and rightly so because of the quality we have got there," he said. "We feel that is the right combination for the first Test ... Tadhg with his quality in the set piece, but also his ability on the floor or as a ball-playing No.6. That complements Jack in a similar regard, with Tom being the engine we all know you need in Test match football." Morgan was stiff to miss out after he was player of the match against the Queensland Reds, and the coach was asked how close he was to being involved. "As close as you can imagine. I am gutted for players like that ... and Henry (Pollock) as well because they could easily be in this side, but that shows the good place we are in as a group," Farrell said. The coach said his son Owen was a hot chance of being involved in the clash against First Nations and Pasifika on Tuesday in Melbourne. "He was in contention, but I feel like Tuesday will be good for someone like Owen," Farrell said. Scottish pair Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones will occupy the centres, while two more Leinster products - Hugo Keenan and James Lowe - join England speedster Tommy Freeman in the back three. Lock Maro Itoje will captain the side for the first time. Farrell played for Wigan Warriors in the 1994 World Club Challenge final win in rugby league over Brisbane. He recently said it was one of the highlights of his dual-code career, but was then asked how it would compare with getting one over the Wallabies. "I actually met (former Broncos captain) Gorden Tallis today and was reminiscing on a few things, and '94 was a great memory," he said. "This seems a little bit bigger. This is huge. This would mean the world to me." LIONS: Ellis Genge, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong, Maro Itoje, Joe McCarthy, Tadhg Beirne, Tom Curry, Jack Conan, Jamison Gibson-Park, Finn Russell, James Lowe, Sione Tuipulotu, Huw Jones, Tommy Freeman, Hugo Keenan. Bench: Ronan Kelleher, Andrew Porter, Will Stuart, Ollie Chessum, Ben Earl, Alex Mitchell, Marcus Smith, Bundee Aki

After a 115-year wait, another piece of ‘Australian' history for the Lions
After a 115-year wait, another piece of ‘Australian' history for the Lions

Sydney Morning Herald

time8 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

After a 115-year wait, another piece of ‘Australian' history for the Lions

The father of Sione Tuipulotu said his family were 'in tears' after hearing that the Melbourne-raised Scotland centre had been selected to start for the British and Irish Lions against the Wallabies in Brisbane on Saturday. Named in the Lions No.12 jersey, Tuipulotu will become the first Australian-raised player to play in a Test match for the Lions in 115 years, and the third ever, at Suncorp Stadium. The last to do it was the feted Tom Richards in 1910. Lions coach Andy Farrell opted for a Scottish streak in a side dominated by Irishmen, with eight in the starting side and another three on the bench. Of the 11 in the 23, eight are from Irish club Leinster. With the squad's only Welshman, Jac Morgan, missing out on a spot, the Lions will not have a player from Wales in the Test team for the first time since the 1899 tour of Australia. Tuipulotu, the former Junior Wallaby and Rebels player, won the battle for the inside centre role over Bundee Aki; capping a remarkable journey that began when the 28-year-old left Australia in 2019 to pursue a career in Japan, and then with Glasgow in Scotland. Qualifying for Scotland via grandmother Jacqueline Thompson - his 'Greenock Granny' who has become a minor celebrity in her own right - Tuipulotu debuted for the Scots in 2021 and last year became Scottish captain. After being selected in the Lions squad, he impressed in games against Argentina, the Western Force, NSW and the AUNZ side, and was given the nod to make history by becoming a 'Test Lion' in Brisbane. Fohe Tuipulotu said he'd been messaged by his son with the news, and he and his wife Angelina and youngest son Ottavio had plans to fly to Brisbane on Friday.

After a 115-year wait, another piece of ‘Australian' history for the Lions
After a 115-year wait, another piece of ‘Australian' history for the Lions

The Age

time8 hours ago

  • The Age

After a 115-year wait, another piece of ‘Australian' history for the Lions

The father of Sione Tuipulotu said his family were 'in tears' after hearing that the Melbourne-raised Scotland centre had been selected to start for the British and Irish Lions against the Wallabies in Brisbane on Saturday. Named in the Lions No.12 jersey, Tuipulotu will become the first Australian-raised player to play in a Test match for the Lions in 115 years, and the third ever, at Suncorp Stadium. The last to do it was the feted Tom Richards in 1910. Lions coach Andy Farrell opted for a Scottish streak in a side dominated by Irishmen, with eight in the starting side and another three on the bench. Of the 11 in the 23, eight are from Irish club Leinster. With the squad's only Welshman, Jac Morgan, missing out on a spot, the Lions will not have a player from Wales in the Test team for the first time since the 1899 tour of Australia. Tuipulotu, the former Junior Wallaby and Rebels player, won the battle for the inside centre role over Bundee Aki; capping a remarkable journey that began when the 28-year-old left Australia in 2019 to pursue a career in Japan, and then with Glasgow in Scotland. Qualifying for Scotland via grandmother Jacqueline Thompson - his 'Greenock Granny' who has become a minor celebrity in her own right - Tuipulotu debuted for the Scots in 2021 and last year became Scottish captain. After being selected in the Lions squad, he impressed in games against Argentina, the Western Force, NSW and the AUNZ side, and was given the nod to make history by becoming a 'Test Lion' in Brisbane. Fohe Tuipulotu said he'd been messaged by his son with the news, and he and his wife Angelina and youngest son Ottavio had plans to fly to Brisbane on Friday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store