We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.

No ad available

Canelo Alvarez vs. Jermell Charlo fight results, highlights: Mexican star retains undisputed title by decision

LAS VEGAS – At 33, and fully healthy for the first time in two years, Canelo Alvarez reminded boxing fans on Saturday why he still belongs among the pound-for-pound best in the world.

Alvarez (60-2-2, 39 KOs) systematically dominated a timid and overwhelmed Jermell Charlo en route to a wide unanimous decision in the main event of a Premier Boxing Champions pay-per-view card from T-Mobile Arena. The Mexican icon took home judges' scores of 119-108 and 118-109 (twice) to defend his undisputed super middleweight championship.

In the first meeting between defending undisputed four-belt champions in men's boxing history, Alvarez battered the arms and shoulders of the smaller Charlo (35-2-1, 19 KOs), whose four-pack of 154-pound titles were not at stake in this 168-pound match. Alvarez also cut off the ring at will to consistently overwhelm the output of his opponent.

"Nobody can beat this Canelo," Alvarez said.

Charlo, who is two months older than Alvarez at 33, was never able to get out of first gear. His jab was non-existent for most of the bout and he was never able to bother or slow Alvarez down with his power shots in the second half.

Alvarez outlanded Charlo by a margin of 134 to 71, according to CompuBox. He landed 35% of his punches overall and 40% of his power connects, including a 42 to 11 advantage in body shots.

"I don't make excuses for myself so it is what it is," Charlo said. "I took my punches but this is boxing. You win some and you lose some.

"You could feel the difference in weight because I came up 12 pounds. I was daring to be great today. I took the shots and just kept pushing."

Alvarez put his stamp on the fight with a delayed knockdown in Round 7 as he backed Charlo up to the ropes and landed a looping right through his high guard. After taking a second to absorb the shot, Charlo took a voluntary knee.

"We worked on the body because he's a great fighter and knows how to move around the ring," Alvarez said. "We trained for three months in the mountains without my family or anything because I just love boxing so f---ing much. Boxing is my life and boxing has made me the best in the game today.

"I needed 12 rounds to show that I am the best and to show who is better."

Despite the cries from Charlo's corner in the final rounds to go for the knockout, he was never able to create enough of a threat to break through.

"I hit him with some hard shots," Charlo said. "I got him off of me."

Can't get enough boxing and MMA? Get the latest in the world of combat sports from two of the best in the business. Subscribe to Morning Kombat with Luke Thomas and Brian Campbell for the best analysis and in-depth news, including instant analysis of Canelo Alvarez vs. Jermell Charlo at the conclusion of the PPV event below.

Alvarez shook off any notion that age and mileage had kept up with him after a three-fight stretch in which he looked human. Alvarez blamed the performances, in which he faded late despite winning two of three, on a nagging left wrist injury which prevented him from training at full strength.

After the fight, Alvarez declared his intentions of returning to the ring next May but decided against declaring a targeted opponent despite the ringside presence of undisputed welterweight champion Terence Crawford, who had been campaigning to face the winner.

"Cinco de Mayo [weekend]," Alvarez said. "Whoever, I don't care. I don't f---ing care."

Despite the loss, Charlo said he would move back down to 154 pounds, where he remains the undisputed champion, and wasn't shy to invite Crawford to a future fight.

"[F---] that, I could fight Terence Crawford," Charlo said. "Let him fight Errol Spence and get that out of the way. I'm waiting."

Alvarez became the first four-belt undisputed champion to defend his titles three times.

CBS Sports was with you throughout the entire way on Saturday with the live results and highlights below. 

Fight card, results

  • Canelo Alvarez (c) def. Jermell Charlo via unanimous decision (119-108, 118-109, 118-109)
  • Erickson Lubin def. Jesus Ramos via unanimous decision (117-111, 116-112, 115-112)
  • Mario Barrios def. Yordenis Ugas via unanimous decision (117-108, 118-107, 118-107)
  • Elijah Garcia def. Armando Resendiz via eighth-round TKO

Alvarez vs. Charlo scorecard, live coverage

Round123456789101112Total
Alvarez101010101010 10 101010109119
Charlo999999 8 999910108
No ad available
Live updates
 
Pinned

Official result: Saul "Canelo" Alvarez def. Jermell Charlo via unanimous decision (118-109, 118-109, 119-108)

 

R2: Charlo lands a pair of left hands as Canelo continues to cut off the ring. 

 

ROUND 2: Canelo splits the guard with a jab. Charlo not throwing much of anything at all. Canelo walks him to the corner and lands a partial right hand. 

 

R1: Late hooks from Canelo land again on the arms and guard of Charlo. Slow round but edge goes to Alvarez, 10-9 (Overall: Canelo Alvarez 10-9)

 

R1: Charlo blocks a left hook. Canelo starts to corner him and lands a hard right to the arm of Charlo. We have seen Canelo do that before in actually injuring the left arm of Callum Smith.

 

R1: Alvarez misses with a left hook. Charlo moving well on his toes from the outside. The crowd is already booing the lack of action.

 

R1: They circle with lots of posturing but very little punches besides Charlo jabs from distance. Alvarez typically takes his time to read his foes.

 

ROUND 1: Charlo takes the center. His body has filled out well in his first fight at 168 pounds.

 

They touch gloves and here we go ...

 

As expected, huge boos fill the arena for Charlo. This is a pro-Canelo crowd, by far. 

 

Hall of Famer Jimmy Lennon Jr. continues with the fighter introductions. 

 

Charlo is four inches taller and has a reach advantage of 2.5 inches. But he has also never fought above 154 pounds and makes his 168-pound debut tonight against one of the greatest fighters in boxing history.

 

Referee Harvey Dock is the third man in the ring for this 12-round title bout. 

 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 

Referee Harvey Dock is the third man in the ring for this 12-round title bout. 

 

A four-division champion, Alvarez is actually two months younger than his 33-year-old opponent yet enters with much more mileage after turning pro some 18 years ago at the age of 15. Alvarez has promised he will be sharper tonight now that his aching left wrist is healed, allowing him a full training camp.

 

A four-division champion, Alvarez is actually two months younger than his 33-year-old opponent yet enters with much more mileage after turning pro some 18 years ago at the age of 15. Alvarez has promised he will be sharper tonight now that his aching left wrist is healed, allowing him a full training camp.

 

And now it's time for Canelo Alvarez. The four-belt super middleweight champion begins his walk wearing a yellow cover with his name on the front. 

 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 

Charlo has no expression on his face, which is partially hidden by his hood as head trainer Derrick James gives encouragement in the corner. 

 

And here comes Jermell Charlo, the undisputed junior middleweight champion. He is dressed in all black and nods his head to the music as he makes the walk.

 

The national anthems for Mexico and the United States have been sung. It's time for the ring entrances. 

 

And the time is now for the main event here inside T-Mobile Arena.

 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
 

Official result: Erickson Lubin def. Jesus Ramos (115-113, 116-112, 117-111)

A surprising result. Shocking, quite frankly. Lubin did not deserve that victory but he got it. Wild stuff there.

 

Jesus Ramos vs. Erickson Lubin -- Round 12: Ramos' pressure was effective early in the round, putting Lubin's back to the ropes where Ramos was able to do effective attacking. Lubin forced his way back to the center of the ring and he landed a few jabs and a good left hand. The crowd began to boo as the fight fell into something of a slow pace. This was not a thriller but Ramos should have it on the cards.

 
@ShowtimeBoxing via Twitter
2 of 5
No ad available