Terence Crawford beats Canelo Alvarez in Las Vegas to becomes first male to notch three unified division titles

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Terence Crawford has become the first male boxer to capture three unified division titles after defeating Canelo Alvarez by unanimous decision to win the super middleweight championship.

Two judges awarded Crawford (42-0, 31 KOs) the match 115-113 and the third 116-112 before a crowd of 70,482 in Las Vegas.

Crawford, who moved up two weight classes, went down to a knee even before the decision was announced and then wept after he was named the winner.

He won before a pro-Alvarez crowd, but there were significant chants of "Crawford" in the bout's later rounds, and even Canelo backers didn't try to boo them down.

This was the first defeat for Alvarez (63-3-2, 39 KOs), the 35-year-old champion from Mexico, since losing by unanimous decision to Dmitrii Bivol on May 7, 2022.

This fight already was being compared with some of the greatest in Las Vegas's rich history well before the two contestants tapped gloves.

The setting of Allegiant Stadium itself separated this bout because it was the first match at this venue. Never in question was the attendance record for a Las Vegas fight — 29,214 in 1982 for heavyweight champion Larry Holmes's 13th-round knockout of Gerry Cooney at Caesars Palace's specially constructed outdoor stadium — would fall on this night.

It also surpassed the largest attendance for a sporting event in the five-year-old stadium. The previous record of 63,969 was set September 1 of last year when Southern California defeated LSU 27-20 to open the college football season.

There was plenty of star power in the stands, including boxing Hall of Famers, Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, Roy Jones Jr., Thomas Hearns and Julio Cesar Chavez. Actors Sofia Vergara, Michael J. Fox and Charlize Theron, comedians Dave Chappelle and Tracy Morgan, and ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith — who was booed — were among the fans.

But this fight's impact went beyond Las Vegas. Because it was on Netflix rather than pay-per-view, promoters hoped the card would draw in viewing numbers not seen since perhaps the 1970s when big-time bouts often were on broadcast networks.

This could be more the norm going forward now that UFC President and CEO Dana White is involved in boxing, this being his first card in collaboration with fellow promoter Riyadh Season. The UFC reached a seven-year deal with Paramount last month, choosing to puts its product on the streaming service rather than the PPV model that combat sports have used for their most important events.

There was not much action through the first eight rounds, at least not enough to keep a casual boxing fan tuned into the broadcast, though Crawford was the quicker, more athletic and better boxer to that point.

The action picked up significantly in the ninth. Crawford went after Alvarez early with several combinations. His momentum got stopped when Alvarez headbutted Crawford, causing a brief timeout 41 seconds into the round. Crawford, nevertheless, was the superior fighter the rest of the way.

That did not change the rest of the fight.

In the co-main event, Ireland's Callum Walsh (15-0, 11 KOs) easily defeated Fernando Vargas Jr. (17-1, 15 KOs) of Las Vegas by scores of 99-91, 99-91, 100-90. Hall of Famer Vargas Senior was a IBF, IBA and WBC super welterweight champion.

Also, WBC interim super middleweight Christian Mbilli (29-0-1, 24 KOs) of France retained his title after a draw with Lester Martinez (19-0-1, 16 KOs) of Guatemala. Judges Patricia Morse Jarman scored the fight 97-93 for Martinez, Chris Migliore 96-94 for Mbilli and Glenn Feldman 95-95.

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