WBC and IBF light welterweight champion Devon Alexander was putting his belts on the line against Ukrainian Andriy Kotelnik in Alexander's hometown of St Louis, Missouri last Saturday.
Alexander, a slick southpaw, won the WBC belt when he defended England's Junior Witter in August 2009. Then in March of this year he added the IBF to his collection by stopping Juan Urango after having him down twice in the fight.
Targeted: Alexander got hit with clean shots even though he was against a light puncher
Urango suffered his first KO loss giving Alexander an impressive win since Urango had faced some big names like Ricky Hatton and Andre Berto, who hadn't been able to hurt him.
Kotelnik is a former 2000 Olympic silver medalist who won his WBA belt when he defeated Welshman Gavin Rees in March 2008 and then lost in his most recent fight against Amir Khan in July 2009.
Alexander certainly didn't look like a future superstar while he was fighting a slightly above average European fighter.
Wayne McCullough
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He defended the belt twice, once impressively beating hard punching, top contender Marcos Maidana by split decision in his second defence.
He hasn't fought since the Khan fight which was over a year ago so this fighter, who depends a lot on his reflexes, may not have his timing right.
Kotelnik may have been a champion but was probably the weakest in the division and isn't really a top contender, however he got his chance against Alexander.
Skills
Kotelnik pushed forward in the fight landing right and left hooks off Alexander's head but was mostly beaten to the punch by his opponent's hand speed.
Alexander moved around using his quick double and triple right jabs to set up his straight left but most of the time they were missing or Kotelnik was blocking them with his high guard.
Alexander is similar to the other champions Timothy Bradley and Amir Khan, in that they are not big punchers and rely on their skills rather than power.
He got cut over his right eye in the fourth and although he was moving and boxing well enough he wasn't in complete control with Kotelnik still the one forcing the fight.
The rounds were close to score but they were being given to Alexander. Kotelnik clearly won the fifth and sixth rounds with his good scoring lefts and rights to Alexander's head.
Touted as a future star, Alexander didn't have everything his own way and he was getting hit with clean shots against a light puncher. He certainly didn't look like a future superstar while he was fighting a slightly above average European fighter.
Harder
Alexander was jabbing and moving to his right which is good for a southpaw to do against an orthodox fighter but he was dropping his right hand and was getting caught with left hooks.
In the eighth, Alexander showed a little of what he may be when he pushed Kotelnik and worked his body and head with quick, hard combinations but he didn't do it enough to convince his fans that he may be the next big thing.
Kotelnik looked surprisingly sharp even though he'd had a long layoff and was, as always, well conditioned. By the 10th Kotelnik's left jabs were landing and scoring well and from this point on until the final bell he was the one scoring. He finished stronger in what seemed to be a very close fight to score.
Neither fighter really switched anything up throughout the fight and it was the same pattern round after round with no-one taking control.
Kotelnik proved his worth and pushed the champion but came up short as Alexander was awarded the fight on the three judge's scorecards 116-112.
That means Alexander won eight rounds out of 12 proving that the close rounds were going to the hometown champion. I scored it 115-113 for Alexander and even though he won the fight the TV commentators gave him more credit than he deserved for punches that didn't land.
He said he wants to fight Timothy Bradley next in a unification match but this fight now looks good for Amir Khan who incidentally had no problems with Kotelnik. Alexander made this fight harder for himself than it should have been.
Comments (6)
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Michael Pantoja says...
Kotelnik is younger then both Marquez and Mosley, and is bigger then Marquez as compared to Mayweather, so it''s not the same as when Mayweather beat a smaller older JMM, or simply an over trained ancient Mosley. How anyone can make that comparison is reaching like a magician reaching for a rabbit out of his hat. While I agree what Khan was able to do against Kotelnik as compared to Devon was masterful.
Posted 17:42 12th August 2010
Kevin Docherty says...
Lets not start making bold predictions about what Amir Khan would do to Devon Alexander following his fight with Kotelnik! Just the same as we can have an off day so can boxers also! And anyway Khan seems more interested in chasing Marquez, who is a much smaller guy than Khan and who consequently has already failed at a move up in weight albeit against Mayweather. Khan has ran from fighting Maidana, Alexander, Bradley and in fact any fighter he feels would pose him any apparent difficulty. I mean c''mon Malignaggi, he is fnished in terms of world class championship boxing. Khan needs to fight a "live" opponent. As for Alexander I have heard that a match with Bradley could be signed, sealed and delivered next week, an intriguing match up and one which I feel Bradley wins. Hopefully after that he fights Khan and then we see whether or not Khan can live with an opponent who will pose him some questions.
Posted 15:27 12th August 2010
Shujat Khalid says...
I hope this fight will convince some people that Khan''s victory over Kotelnik was a masterclass. Kotelnik is a very good fighter but Khan made him look poor. Mayweather did this to Marquez and Mosley. I''m sure if these two fighters fought again at 145lbs against someone else they would look great. Their and Kotelnik''s poor performances were simply a tribute to their great opponents.
Posted 14:43 10th August 2010
Joe Mitchell says...
Alexander showed he is not gonna be the special fighter people expected. I would like to see him vs Ortiz or Maidana next. Let Khan vs Bradley happen in the UK it makes the most sense for the fans and financially.
Posted 18:41 9th August 2010
Brian Hamill says...
Many, many people criticized Amir Khan for cherrypicking when it was announced he was fighting Kotelnik for the world title - Kotelnik himself has proved this is nonsense with his performances against both Maidana and now Alexander. Khan almost shut Kotelnik out, whereas most people seem to think he beat Devon Alexander. I think most people (myself included) got too excited about Alexander''s highlight reel KO of Urango, Devon is definitely too raw and green to be considered a top class fighter yet. Right now, I think Khan looks better than either Alexander or the limited Timothy Bradley.
Posted 18:34 9th August 2010
Psilas Milas says...
Good analysis Wayne but I myself along with many others think you''ve got the wrong winner. Alexanders punch ratio was terrible and when looking at CompuBox you see just how many he was missing. Something like 643 jabs thrown yet only 60 or so landing is REALLY poor for the so called next superstar. Kotelnik landed more yet threw almost half the punches of Alexander. To me Kotelnik outboxed, out jabbed and basically outclassed Alexander who at times looked like a frightened amateur, flailing about and shadow boxing while missing constantly. Kotelnik''s record denotes he IS world class not Euro and as you said,not only had a genuine title (WBA) but also a win over the feared Maidana, a man no one wants to fight, especially Khan. Kotelnik has also never been stopped and lets not forget that Khan was on his toe''s for 12 rounds against him, avoiding going toe to toe with Kotelnik. I think yourself, like the Americans pre-Saturday underestimate how good Kotelnik really is. Kotelnik won the fight and should be champion now and had the fight been in Europe, he would be.
Posted 17:47 9th August 2010
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