
‘We created history': Katie Taylor savors long-sought closure in Serrano trilogy
'I think I made the fight a lot easier for myself tonight,' Taylor said. 'I knew I was capable of that kind of performance. In the first two fights I just got caught up in a bit of a war with her. This time, the gameplan was to constantly move and not let her feet set and I was able to do that. It was a very smart, clever performance. That's what I'm most proud of.'
The Bray fighter's majority-decision win – scored 97–93, 97–93 and 95–95 – capped a triumphant return to Madison Square Garden, where the pair first made history in 2022 as the first women to headline the venue. This time, they topped an all-female card, a milestone Taylor described as 'an absolute privilege'.
'These are the sort of opportunities people didn't think were even possible a few years ago,' she said. 'The atmosphere was absolutely electric again tonight. I didn't think it could get any louder than the first time we were here, but tonight it was just unbelievable. I'm very, very proud to have headlined such an important event for women's sports.'
Eddie Hearn, Taylor's longtime promoter seated beside her early Saturday morning, called the performance 'lights out' and suggested the win had banished any talk of retirement. 'When you think someone might be coming to the end of their career, she just rolls back the years,' he said. 'It was a performance of skill, speed, boxing IQ. I think she's got 20 or 30 rounds left in her, easy.'
Still, the 39-year-old Taylor declined to commit to what comes next. 'I'm just going to enjoy this victory, sit back and reflect,' she said. 'But I felt fresh in there. I felt sharp. I was seeing the punches coming, using the ring better. I definitely felt like it was my kind of fight, my kind of pace.'
Asked if the performance might redefine expectations at this stage in her career, Taylor smiled. 'I hope so. That's always the plan: to box smart,' she said. 'But sometimes I just end up in a war. This time I actually listened to Ross [Enamait] in the corner. I'm just glad I was able to execute what we'd worked on for months.'
The trilogy with Serrano ends 3–0 in Taylor's direction, though the first two bouts were close enough to inspire heated debate and fuel a narrative arc stretching over more than two years. Friday's clean, conclusive win, Taylor said, was gratifying not just for the record books but for the history the pair have created together.
'I don't think anybody could have said Amanda won tonight's fight,' Taylor said. 'So yeah, it is very, very satisfying. I think we both sit back very proud right now. We created history together three times. My name will always be embedded with hers forever.'
Pressed about a possible third fight with Chantelle Cameron, who won on Friday's card and remains the only fighter to have beaten Taylor as a professional (before she reversed the result in an immediate rematch), the Irish star didn't mince words. 'Maybe,' she said. 'But I think Chantelle has to see if she can sell out a thousand-seater venue. I don't think she can sell out any stadium at all. I made her more money than she really deserves, to be quite honest.'
Taylor also paid tribute to the traveling Irish supporters who once again turned out in force at the Garden. 'These people are spending their hard-earned money to come support me,' she said. 'It just means the world. Looking back on the whole journey, what an amazing life this is: headlining a sold-out Madison Square Garden on an all-female card. These are nights I dreamed of as a kid.'
While she conceded feeling a 'bit of pressure' heading into the Friday's fight, which took place at a catch-weight of 136lb, Taylor said her experience in high-stakes contests helped keep her composed. 'Every single fight I've been involved in these last few years has been a huge event,' she said. 'There's always relief when your hand is raised, but also just complete joy. It's such a grueling sport, so when the hard work pays off, it's a great feeling.'
The fight's lone 95–95 scorecard raised some eyebrows, including Taylor's. 'I was definitely surprised to hear that,' she said. 'But it doesn't matter. At the end of the day, my hand was raised. And that's all I care about.'
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The Guardian
10 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Chelsea stun PSG to win Club World Cup after Cole Palmer's cool double
The boy from Wythenshawe who had sat on top of the Rockefeller on Friday took Chelsea to the top of the world on Sunday. It was 90F down on the pitch in New Jersey but, oh, this was cold all right. Two wonderful almost identical strikes, executed with an effortless ease, and a lovely soft-shoed assist from Cole Palmer made Chelsea the first winners of the Club World Cup, history made here. Paris Saint-Germain had seemed peerless, a side that shifted the paradigm, but they could not find a way past Robert Sánchez at one end and were picked off, victims of a perfect plan, defeated inside half an hour. It had started so well, so unexpectedly, and it ended even better, history made. 'We know that they start the games very fast, very strong,' Marc Cucurella had said but while Ousmane Dembélé, forever on the prowl for prey, almost caught Sánchez 95 seconds in, it was Chelsea who did so. The first chance was theirs inside 10 minutes and it was so close that some of this stadium celebrated, the ball bending just past Gigi Donnarumma's right post and hitting the pole holding the net up. João Pedro had teed it up, Palmer was the man whose shot with the inside of his left foot fooled them. Not for long. That, it turned out was just a sighter; next time, the MetLife could let go for real. Chelsea's plan was clear: quick into the challenge, quicker to send the ball into the space behind PSG. Luis Enrique's team took a degree of control and most of the possession, soon up at 66%, but that, it appeared, had been anticipated. This was no parked bus but space behind was denied and the ball was released rapidly, starting with Sánchez directly from his own area. And while PSG could have led, Désiré Doué's cut-back to Khvicha Kvaratskhelia being cut out by Cucurella when he might have taken the shot himself before his effort from the edge of the area was stopped by a superb low save from Sánchez, it was Chelsea who did. Sánchez's diagonal went right where Nuno Mendes leapt with Malo Gusto; the PSG defender got there first but, buffeted, didn't judge the leap well. Suddenly, he was down and Gusto was away, wide space opening on the wing before him. Reaching the area, he cut back, ready to shoot. Lucas Beraldo blocked the first effort but Gusto got it back and laid into the path of Palmer who opened up his body and curled it into the bottom of the net. Off he went, holding himself and shivering in trademark celebration. If that was similar to his first shot, his next was almost identical to this one. Coming in from the right, Palmer saw Gusto fly up outside him. So, and this was the key, did the PSG defence. A slight pause, a little shuffle of the hips was enough to clear Beraldo and Marquinhos from his path, momentarily drawn to the run, and Palmer didn't just put the ball in the same corner of the net; he put it in the exact same square. They had been playing half an hour and he had taken almost the same shot three times. Two had gone in, the other looked like it had. And nor was he finished. Just before half-time, with PSG turned again, that press broken, Palmer carried the ball from near halfway, tracing a straight line in the inside-right position and given the room to do so. When he got to the edge of the area, he slipped the ball through. The pass was smooth, João Pedro running on to it, so was the Brazilian's finish, dinked over Donnarumma as if he was playing on the beach, which 10 days ago he was. This was barely believable. They had only completed 126 passes, but that was at least partly by clinical design: three shots on target, all of them clearly constructed and calmly executed, had given them a lead that wasn't for overturning. Which isn't to say PSG didn't try after a 24-minute half-time. They were out first, waiting for Chelsea, and went for them. Sánchez almost immediately had to get to the feet of Fabián Ruiz and then scramble away a Kvaratskhelia shot. He then made a superb close-range stop from Dembélé, which really should have been taken. Chelsea got deeper, of course they did, not always in a hurry to get the ball back. When they did, they tried to keep it, each pass greeted with olés. The supporters were enjoying this. Sánchez dived to save Vitinha's dipping effort from the edge of the area, but in truth the momentum was not what PSG would have wanted, and only rarely did Chelsea feel under the kind of pressure that might prise their fingers from the trophy. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion João Neves was then given a straight red card after 86 minutes for pulling Cucurella's hair.


The Sun
13 minutes ago
- The Sun
Chelsea player ratings: Cole Palmer talks himself into Ballon d'Or contention with scintillating Club World Cup display
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Here's how SunSport's Tony Robertson rated the Blues in the final. Robert Sanchez - 8 6 Great save down to his left to deny Desire Doue in the 19th minute. Moments later it was his pass which found Gusto for the opening goal. And was sharp after the break with a wonderful reflex save to preserve the Blues clean sheet before adding another save stretching down to his right. He's come in for his share of criticism since joining Chelsea, but credit where credit is due, his performance was stellar. Malo Gusto - 7 Provided the width down the right to allow Palmer the freedom to roam and provided the assist when he raced past Nuno Mendes. Also had the better of Khvicha Kvaratskhelia in their battle but did pick up a yellow just before half-time for his enthusiasm in one tackle. Trevoh Chalobah - 6 Made a tackle which got the crowd roaring right before the first cooling break but was seldom involved in much real defensive work aside from nodding long passes back into Sanchez's grateful arms. Levi Colwill - 6 They say when a defender has a quiet game that's usually a good thing and was exactly the case for Colwill today. A pretty nonchalant performance in many respects, but one that deserves its share of praise. Marc Cucurella - 6 6 Made a superb interception in the 16th minute in the penalty area which would have been a certain goal for PSG otherwise. Conducted the half-time interview and was visibly knackered from running around. Bizarrely got picked up by Joao Neves while clutching his ankle for some clever time wasting in the closing stages. Neves was later sent off for pulling the Spaniard's hair, so Cucurella clearly seemed to have him rattled. Reece James - 6 Maresca opted for James in midfield to partner Caicedo and worked a treat with the Englishman more involved on the ball than his team-mate. Saying that, his game was composed if not remarkable. Went down in the 70th minute Moises Caicedo - 6 Put out a good number of fires in midfield and showed some classy shoulder faints to get away from opponents. Picked up a harsh yellow for a push in the first half. Enzo Fernandez - 4 6 Played as the No10 but had a quiet game. Did more rolling around on the floor complaining about injury than he had touches of the ball. Hooked in the 60th minute for Andrey Santos through injury. Cole Palmer - 9 Should have scored inside eight minutes after whipping a shot around the goal post from a Pedro lay off but made up for it by slotting home the opener in minute 21 after combining with Gusto and opening up the goal on his left. His second was almost a carbon copy of the first, jinking inside and beating two players before angling a shot into the bottom left corner. Exquisite pass to assist Pedro for the third of the game. The Manchester lad is certainly making a case to be included in the conversation amongst the best players in the world. Might he even be a late outsider for the Ballon d'Or (and would have been a perfect 10 out of 10 were it not for that early miss). Pedro Neto - 6 First real act of note was to pick up a yellow card in the 35th minute, oddly after he had been fouled. Had a great chance to produce something in behind the PSG defence after a classy volley forward by Pedro, but his cross was nothing short of shocking. Put in the hard yards but was found wanting in terms of quality. Joao Pedro - 8 Expertly laid off a pass to Palmer early on which somehow did not end up in an assist. Led the line well by stretching the play and certainly justified his selection ahead of Liam Delap and Nicolas Jackson. Superb chip to score Chelsea's third with a curved run into the penalty area. Arguably could have had a penalty after the break following a shirt pull inside the area, but the ref ultimately waved play on. Subbed for Delap. Andrey Santos (on for Fernandez, 60 mins) - 5 Had a quiet game off the bench. Liam Delap (on for Pedro, 67 mins) - 6 Seconds after coming in he tried to chip Gianluigi Donnarumma from miles outside of the box, but the cheeky effort was saved by the Italian - not that he was too happy with the audacity to even attempt it based on the verbals he gave the English attacker at the resulting corner. Relentless pressing almost saw him sneak in to grab a goal only for him to be denied by Donnarumma again. Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall (on for James, 77 mins) - N/A Going through the motions after coming on so didn't have the chance to impact the game. Christopher Nkunku (on for Neto, 78 mins) - N/A Same for Nkunku.


Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Tom Brady spotted in Donald Trump's luxury suite at Club World Cup final amid Sofia Vergara fling rumors
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