Canelo Alvarez legacy on line in Gennady Golovkin trilogy
Saul “Canelo” Alvarez has been warned that his legacy is in danger if Gennady Golovkin wins the third fight of their epic trilogy in Las Vegas on Saturday.
The Mexican superstar is putting his super middleweight titles on the line against his bitter rival from Kazakhstan knowing a second loss in succession following his light-heavyweight defeat to Dmitry Bivol earlier this year would be a disaster.
Article continues after this advertisementPromoter Eddie Hearn reckons Alvarez can’t afford a second defeat on the spin, but the 32 year-old looked in excellent shape during the weigh-in on Friday which was attended by hundreds of his fans in the sweltering Nevada heat.
Alvarez tipped the scales at 167.4 pounds (75.93 kg) with Golovkin slightly heavier at 167.8 lbs.
The Matchroom promoter said: “If Canelo loses I think he’s in a terrible position coming off back to back defeats. He was pound for pound number one, all of a sudden, you probably put him outside of the top 10 if Golovkin wins.
Article continues after this advertisement“It will be such an epic fight and victory that everyone will want to see it again. (Golovkin)has already shared 24 rounds with Canelo. He knows how to fight him. It’s not like he’s got to go in and find out the best way to beat him on the night.”
Granite chins
While Alvarez is the firm favorite with the bookmakers in Las Vegas, Golovkin, 40, should not be underestimated and has a serious chance of avenging the only defeat of career which was administered by Alvarez in the pair’s second fight back in 2018 which ended in a very tight points decision for the Mexican.
“This is a trilogy fight between two of the modern greats, two warriors desperate to win,” added Hearn, who believes Golovkin is far better suited to the super-middleweight class than trying to make 160lbs for the division below where he holds three belts.
“The first two were tremendous fights. Both of them can’t stand each other and have granite chins.
“They’re desperate to win. Both of them are brilliant, one is the undisputed champion, the other a unified middleweight world champion. I think when you look back at the three fights, we’ll talk about them in the future for sure.”
Many are pointing to Golovkin’s age as a potential barrier to victory, but the Kazakh smiles at suggestions his career could be over if Alvarez emerges victorious.
“He thinks that he is in a position to voice those accusations and say that he can knock me out, that he can finish my career. Who is he to start, finish anybody’s career,” Golovkin said.
“Maybe he just tries to, I don’t know, score some points. But based on his age and his position, it’s not up to him. If he wanted this fight back then, if he thought that it’s personal, that fight should have happened immediately. Why was he waiting for four years?”
Despite the lengthy time gap, Golovkin said, familiarity will make for a difficult fight.
“We know each other very well and it is going to be a very tough fight for both of us based on that,” he said.