Taylor edges Serrano as boxing history made at Madison Square Garden | Inquirer Sports

Taylor edges Serrano as boxing history made at Madison Square Garden

/ 02:33 PM May 01, 2022

Katie Taylor Amanda Serrano

Katie Taylor of Ireland (L) trades punches with Amanda Serrano of Puerto Rico (R) for the World Lightweight Title fight at Madison Square Garden on April 30, 2022 in New York, New York. This bout marks the first women’s boxing fight to headline Madison Square Garden in the venue’s history. Taylor defeated Serrano on a judges decision. Sarah Stier/Getty Images/AFP

Ireland’s Katie Taylor retained her undisputed lightweight world championship with a split decision win over Puerto Rican Amanda Serrano Saturday in a history-making, epic fight at Madison Square Garden.

The first women’s bout to headline a fight card at the iconic New York venue in its 140-year history did not disappoint.

Article continues after this advertisement

Brooklyn-based Serrano pummelled Taylor in the fifth round, but the bloodied champion held on and reasserted herself as the pair went toe-to-toe over the final rounds of a breathless contest to edge the decision and remain unbeaten after 21 professional bouts.

FEATURED STORIES

“I had to dig deep,” Taylor said. “I knew I’d be in the trenches at some stage. She is a phenomenal fighter, a great, great person.”

Article continues after this advertisement

Serrano, the unified featherweight world champion, has 42 prior victories including 30 knockouts.

Article continues after this advertisement

Despite stepping up two weight divisions to face Taylor, Serrano was more effective in the middle rounds and staggered the Irishwoman in the fifth.

Article continues after this advertisement

Blood was flowing freely from Taylor’s nose by the end of the sixth, but Serrano failed to press home the advantage and the Irishwoman regrouped to land the more telling shots in the seventh, eighth and ninth.

The 10th and final round saw them battling blow-for-blow until the final bell, when Canadian referee Michael Griffin gathered them in and the fighters exchanged a hug.

Article continues after this advertisement

Judge Benoit Rousel scored it 96-94 for Serrano, but judge Guido Cavalleri saw it 96-93 for Taylor and Glenn Feldman scored it 97-93 for the champion.

“We put on a hell of a show,” Serrano said in the ring. “Women can sell! Women can fight! We put on a show.”

With a sellout crowd of 19,187 offering fierce support for both fighters, southpaw Serrano boxed on the front foot with a series of punishing blows snapping Taylor’s head back in the fifth.

Serrano targeted Taylor’s body in the sixth, but the champion fought back fiercely and the cheers were so loud at the end of the round that they drowned out the closing bell.

The 10th was a dogfight, the fighters trading punches in the center of the ring before Taylor emerged with her sixth defense of the undisputed title she has held since beating Delfine Persoon in 2019 to capture all four belts.

Her dominant professional career followed a stellar amateur career that included Olympic gold in London in 2012.

Serrano suffered only her second loss and her first for a decade having won 28 straight bouts since defeat to Frida Wallberg in April, 2012.

The prospects are that she could get another shot at Taylor with a lucrative rematch tempting both fighters.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

“Let’s do it again, Amanda,” Taylor said, as they were interviewed in the ring.

“Whatever she wants,” Serrano replied.

RELATED STORIES

Shields makes history with unanimous decision win over Dicaire

Olympics give Katie Taylor stage to show her stuff

TAGS: Katie Taylor

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.