Porter stops Berto in ninth round of welterweight bout

Shawn Porter knocks down Andre Berto in the ninth round during their WBC welterweight eliminator bout at the Barclays Center on Saturday in New York City. (AFP)
Updated 23 April 2017
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Porter stops Berto in ninth round of welterweight bout

NEW YORK: Shawn Porter did not live up to his nickname, Showtime.
What mattered to Porter, though, was that he earned another title shot at Keith Thurman.
Porter stopped Andre Berto in the ninth round of a sloppy, often inartistic WBC welterweight elimination bout Saturday night at Barclays Center. Porter was in control for much of the bout, which resembled a street brawl more than a prize fight. There was some wrestling, lots of clutching, even a near chop-block, and lots of blood, mainly from head butts.
“I got to clean up those head butts,” Porter admitted.
He will need to for a rematch with Thurman, who outpointed Porter at this arena last June.
“I was just up here wishing he said yes — that’s the fight I want next,” Porter said.
In the end of this one, it was Berto’s inability to get off the ropes against the relentless Porter, who figures to get that title shot before year’s end.
“We tried to use the whole ring but sometimes in the heat of the battle, I’m a fighter and Mr. Berto is a fighter as well,” Porter said. “Those head butts were just the two of us going in and fighting.”
Porter, 29, of Las Vegas, had lost two of his last four fights, including last June at this arena to Keith Thurman. The former champion was well ahead when the fight was stopped at 1:31 in the ninth as Berto stumbled around. Porter outlanded Berto 60-12 in last two rounds.
Overall, 51 of Porter’s 138 landed power shots were to the body.
Porter is 27-2-1 with 17 knockouts. Berto is now 31-5.
“I got a lot of head butts, and he did, too,” said Berto, who won the WBC title in 2008, had five successful defenses, then lost it to Victor Ortiz by decision in 2011. He also was the IBF champion and was the loser to Floyd Mayweather in “Money Man’s” final fight.
“Shawn is a tough competitor. We had a good, competitive fight until the head butts got to be a little too much for me.”
Thurman, who beat Danny Garcia in March at Barclays Center, was on hand to see the win by Porter, who previously has held the WBO and IBF crowns. Porter will need to be sharper and better defensively against Thurman.
“Me and Berto are different fighters,” Thurman said. “’There were a lot of head butts, but I know to watch out for that. Berto is a little more flat-footed than me and that played in Shawn’s favor.”
Referee Mark Nelson often stopped the fight to have doctors look at each boxer’s eyes. Porter, 147 pounds, was cut first and bled profusely near his left eye in the second round. But it also was one of his best rounds, and he knocked down Berto (146 1-2 pounds) with a left-right combination — his sharpest of a mostly clumsy showing.
In the undercard, unbeaten Jermell Charlo knocked out Charles Hatley just 32 seconds into the sixth round to retain his World Boxing Council super welterweight title in an all-American showdown.
Charlo landed a flurry of punches to open the sixth round, the decisive one a stunning right hook to the chin that caused the challenger to fall forward to the canvas, prompting an immediate stoppage.
“I knew Charles Hatley goes down sometimes and gets back up — he’s a warrior and won’t go down easily,” Charlo said. “I knew I had to be a lion in there.”
Charlo improved to 29-0 with 14 knockouts while Hatley fell to 26-2 with one drawn.
Asked after the triumph whom he might like the fight next, Charlo said was interested in a unification bout against compatriot Jarrett Hurd, the International Boxing Federation champion.
Charlo’s unbeaten brother, Jermall, vacated the IBF crown in the 154-pound weight class two months ago to advance into the middleweight ranks, Hurd winning a February fight to claim the crown.
Charlo, making his first title defense, had not fought since last May, when he won the crown with an eighth-round knockout of US Virgin Islands fighter John Jackson.
The bout was a matchup of Texas rivals, but Houston’s Charlo, 26, dominated Dallas-based Hatley, 31.
Charlo, who suffered a cut over his left eye in a second-round clash of heads, knocked Hatley into the ropes with a hard right at the end of the round and flattened the challenger once before the knockout blow.
Hatley, who saw a nine-fight win streak snapped, had not fought for 17 months, since knocking out Australian ex-champ Anthony Mundine in November 2015.
The fight was on the undercard of an all-US welterweight matchup at Barclays Center between former champions Shawn Porter and Andre Berto.


Djokovic ready to suffer one more time in Australian Open final

Updated 3 sec ago
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Djokovic ready to suffer one more time in Australian Open final

  • Serbian veteran must fire up his weary body one more time with history at stake
  • Novak Djokovic is striving to win a record-extending 11th Melbourne crown
MELBOURNE: Novak Djokovic compared his five-set Australian Open semifinal takedown of Jannik Sinner to winning a Grand Slam and now the Serbian veteran must fire up his weary body one more time with history at stake on Sunday.
The 38-year-old stunned two-time champion Sinner to set up a bumper final on Rod Laver Arena against world number one Carlos Alcaraz, who is 16 years his junior.
The Spaniard was also forced through five sets to beat Alexander Zverev, spending more than five hours on court.
Both men are aiming to etch their names in tennis history.
Djokovic is striving to win a record-extending 11th Melbourne crown and with it a 25th major title to finally surpass Margaret Court’s long-standing landmark.
Should he do so, he will also become the oldest man to lift the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup at the Australian Open.
The 22-year-old Alcaraz has already won six Grand Slams and is bidding to become the youngest man to complete a career sweep of all four majors.
Fellow Spaniard Rafael Nadal, who is in Melbourne, did it at 24.
“My preparation is as it should be, and I won against him last year here, you know, also in a grueling match,” said Djokovic, who will be making a first major finals appearance since Wimbledon in 2024.
“Let’s see. Let’s see how fresh are we both able to be.
“He also had a big match, but he has 15, 16 years on me. You know, biologically I think it’s going to be a bit easier for him to recover.”
The fourth seed last claimed a Grand Slam title at the US Open in 2023 with Sinner and Alcaraz dominating since.
Recovery will be key, with Alcaraz cramping badly against Zverev, where he battled back from a 5-3 deficit in the fifth set.
“Obviously my body could be better, to be honest, but I think that’s normal after five hours and a half,” he said after the grueling test, suggesting he may have an abductor issue.
“Hopefully it’s not going to be anything at all, but after five-hours-and-a-half match and that high level physically, I think the muscles are going to be tight.
“I just got to do whatever it takes to be as good as I can for the final.”
Djokovic leads 5-4 in their head-to-heads, but the margins have often been razor-thin.
Alcaraz won their most recent clash, at the US Open last year, but Djokovic came out on top at the Australian Open in 2025 with a gutsy four-set quarter-final victory.
Regardless of what happens, Alcaraz will remain world number one and Sinner two, with Djokovic moving up a place to three ahead of Zverev.