MONTREAL -- Welterweight Dmitry Mikhaylenko cruised to a near-shutout, 10-round decision win against late replacement Karim Mayfield but did little to impress in what was meant to be a showcase fight in his HBO debut.
Fighting on the undercard of unified light heavyweight titleholder Sergey Kovalev's rematch with Jean Pascal on Saturday night at the Bell Centre, Mikhaylenko was hoping to thrust himself into the deep welterweight picture. But he did not, despite winning 100-90, 100-90 and 99-91 on the judges' scorecards. ESPN.com also had Mikhaylenko winning, 99-91.
Mayfield took the fight on two weeks' notice when Philadelphia's Ray Robinson suffered a back injury in a car accident on his way home from a training session. Mayfield, however, had been training for another fight in mid-February and was already close to weight. He is also a fighter who stays in shape year round.
Mikhaylenko (21-0, 9 KOs), 29, of Russia, was happy that Mayfield took the fight, allowing him to remain on the HBO broadcast, even though he had been preparing to face a southpaw; Mayfield (19-3-1, 11 KOs) is right-handed.
In the end, the change of styles posed no difficulties for Mikhaylenko, whose jab kept Mayfield off balance in a clear victory but one that was not all that impressive.
Mayfield, 35, of San Francisco, who was fighting for the first time in 14 months, charged out of his corner at the first bell and rushed to Mikhaylenko, trying to catch him cold. He caught him with a hard right and a left that rocked Mikhaylenko, but he quickly got his footing and took over the fight. He went at Mayfield, who landed a few decent shots but also clinched often.
"It was a lot of hard work in the ring," Mikhaylenko said. "Mayfield was tougher than I thought he was going to be. He hung on me too much but I was able to throw more punches. I am happy with my performance."
According to CompuBox punch statistics, Mikhaylenko landed 220 of 756 punches (29 percent) while Mayfield connected only 104 of 487 (21 percent).
"He is tough, very durable," Mayfield said. "He was able to absorb my punches. He took some good shots from me but he was able to recover very well. Really tough guy. Future champ. You need more time to prepare for a guy with Mikahaylenko's style. I would like a rematch and have the proper time to prepare."
Lafreniere outslugs St-Juste in bloody fight
In an all-Quebec middleweight slugfest, Francis Lafreniere (11-5-2, 6 KOs) and southpaw Renan St-Juste (26-5-1, 18 KOs) went to war for 10 action-packed rounds that had the crowd going wild throughout. In the end, Lafreniere, who was a bloody mess from cuts on his face and eye, won a decision on scores of 99-90, 97-92 and 97-92 in a fight that left both fighters bleeding and out on their feet at various times.
Lafreniere rocked St-Juste with a right hand just before the end of the second round and they were both bleeding from cuts by the end of the high-contact third round, and the action never let up. Lafreniere was docked a point for a low blow in the eighth round, but he was getting the better of the insane action; he had St-Juste out on his feet in the ninth round. He bounced back and they traded toe to toe in the 10th round as the crowd gave them a standing ovation as the bout ended.
Palmdale, California, junior welterweight prospect Joel Diaz (21-0, 17 KOs), who is promoted by Pascal's company, crushed Abraham Gomez (22-12-1, 11 KOs) in a second-round knockout win. He dropped him with a right hand to the chin in the round, and although Gomez barely beat the count, he was done and the fight was waved off at 1 minute, 45 seconds.
Quebec welterweight David Theroux (9-1, 6 KOs) dropped Juan Armando Garcia (13-3-2, 6 KOs), of Mexico, with a body assault in the third round and finished him on his feet moments later at 2 minutes, 46 seconds.
Heavyweight Cassius Chaney (6-0, 4 KOs), of New London, Connecticut, who was one of heavyweight champion Tyson Fury's main sparring partners during his preparation for his upset of Wladimir Klitschko in November, stopped an overmatched Zoltan Csala (9-5, 7 KOs), of Hungary, on his feet at 2 minutes, 52 seconds of the third round.
Junior middleweight Steven Butler (14-0-1, 11 KOs), a 20-year-old prospect from Montreal, won a hard-fought rumble against Antonio Hoffman (13-1, 9 KOs), a native of Angola who fights out of Germany. Butler dropped him and battered him in the opening round, but Hoffman fought back hard before losing 79-71, 78-72 and 78-72.
Junior middleweight Virgilijus Stapulionis (26-3-1, 19 KOs), of Lithuania, stopped Laszlo Fazekas (28-24-1, 18 KOs), of Hungary, at the end of the second round. It was a one-sided fight in which Stapulionis scored three knockdowns and battered Fazekas relentlessly until the fight was waved off.
Russian junior featherweight Vislan Dalkhaev (5-0, 1 KOs), who lives in Montreal, outslugged Alan Salazar (5-2, 2 KOs), winning 40-36 on all three scorecards.