Teofimo Lopez promised ‘a takeover.’ He screamed from the boxing mountain tops to anyone willing to listen that he was going to do something no one else thought he could do: Beat the untouchable Vasiliy Lomachenko.
Then “The Takeover” took over.
Teofimo “Takeover” Lopez placed himself on boxing’s pantheon with a resounding unanimous 12-round decision over Lomachenko, becoming at 23 the youngest four-belt title holder in boxing history Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
Judges Tim Cheatham (116-112), Julie Lederman (119-109) and Steve Weisfeld (117-111) all had it for Lopez (16-0, 12 KOs).
It was Lopez who was the tactician, not Lomachenko (14-2, 10 KOs). It was Lopez who outboxed the master boxer.
“I had to dig deep, and I thank God, and I did dig deep in there and it feels good,” Lopez said. “I knew he was coming. I could bang, too, I can take one to give one. You have to keep pressuring him. I couldn’t give him that opportunity to set up. And anytime he wanted to throw, I had something ready for him.
“That kind of stopped his momentum. On top of that, he was coming off a 14-month layoff. I knew it would take him a long time to catch up. I wanted to stay composed through the whole course. I wanted to keep him from throwing so many punches. What I did successfully was counter him.”
Lopez connected on 183/659 total punches to Lomachenko’s 141/321. Lopez also connected on 148 power punches to Lomachenko’s 78. The 148 power shots were the most a Lomachenko opponent ever landed on him. Lomachenko landed 1/4, 5/12, 2/11, 5/9, 5/9, 7/13 through the first six rounds. In comparison, Lopez landed 6/27, 11/35, 11/42, 7/45, 7/44 and 11/46 in those rounds.
“I expected more (from Lomachenko),” Lopez said. “He was pretty basic. I fought the guy who everyone said was the pound-for-pound (best). He’s going to the Hall of Fame for being a three-time (division) winner. Facing someone like him and doing what I did, you haven’t seen anything yet. I don’t fear no man. I’m in there to fight. He thought he could take me to the later rounds. He failed. I noticed with him starting to huff and puff. I was two steps ahead of him.”
In the first round, Lopez did all of the work—and Lomachenko did nothing. He dropped his right a few times to Lomachenko’s body. Lopez followed up with a right to the head in the second, and Lomachenko did land a left to Lopez’s face and a left to the body in the round, but again, Lopez seemed to have the greater work rate.
Lopez again was the aggressor in the third. Lomachenko seemed to be pacing himself. Lopez was more active, while Lomachenko may have been checking his levels and doing little of anything else.
The fourth round was fairly uneventful—but after four, it was easy to see Lopez ahead, 4-0.
Lopez seemed to have his left eye get a little reddish. Two-thirds into the fifth round, Lopez had thrown 174 to Lomachenko’s 40 in the fight.
Into the sixth, Lopez’s confidence was growing. He finished the sixth with a right uppercut to Lomachenko’s chest. After six, Lopez appeared to throwing a shutout.
“I think in the first half of the fight, he got more rounds than I did, but in the second half of the fight, I took it over and I was that much better,” Lomachenko said. “I want to go home and see what I can do better. I’m definitely not agreeing with the scorecards. I thought I won the fight, but the results are the results, and I’m not going to argue it right now.
“Right now, I’ll go home and we’ll discus (the future).”
After the seventh, Teofimo Lopez Sr. could be heard saying, “It’s a blowout; told you!”
Sensing he was behind, Lomachenko fought with more urgency in the eighth. Lomachenko attacked with the jab, then followed with two lefts to Lopez’s face, forcing the younger fighter back for the first time in the fight. The eighth marked the first time Lomachenko landed double-digit in punches, connecting on 19/38.
After eight, Lopez still appeared in command, 6-2.
In the last 10 seconds of the ninth, Lomachenko closed with a straight left to the chest. Between the ninth and the 10th, Anatoliy Lomachenko told his son to keep the combinations going over and over.
Lomachenko began stepping more toward Lopez, more willing to fight in the pocket in the 10th. With :01 left in the 10th, referee Russell Mora ruled a Lopez beltline right was a low blow, and gave Lopez a warning.
Through 10, Lopez appeared to be up, 6-4, but was leaking.
Lomachenko, feeling Lopez was slowing, went back on the attack again. Lopez came on late in the round, but Lomachenko made it a far closer affair, staying in the pocket and landing on Lopez’s face and body. Lomachenko had his most productive round, connecting on 29/62, with 19 power punches.
Lopez started the 12th very well, landing rights to the body. With :10 left in the fight, Mora stopped the action with a cut on Lopez’s left eyelid, caused by an accidental headbutt.
After the fight, Lopez walked over to Lomachenko’s corner and shook hands with the Ukrainian tactician.
“All it is the takeover, it’s time for the new generation to come up and it was up to me to lead the way for everybody,” Lopez said. “I knew I won the fight. I outboxed him, and I beat him for most of the rounds. Loma is a hell of a fighter, he knows what he’s doing, but his time is over. There was no rematch clause for a reason. They gave me a contract on the side. Now it’s time for us to take over and move forward. Out with the old, in with the new.”
–ringtv.com