Shakur, the master technician, will seek to exploit Teo’s greatest weakness, which is his lack of mobility in the ring. Lopez struggled to cut the ring off against Sandor Martin and Jamaine Ortiz, being very limited offensively. Teofimo’s offensive struggles were career lows, failing to land 100 punches in either match.

He connected on less than 25 percent of his punches against Martin and Ortiz, who defensively are skillful but not at the level of Stevenson, who’s considered the best defensive boxer in the world.

Shakur’s opponents’ total connect percentage of 16.7 percent is one of the best in the sport. In his last match against William Zepeda, a volume puncher who threw nearly 1,000 punches in the match landed only 27.8 percent of his punches (Compubox).

Stevenson will seek to control the distance by strategically utilizing his agility and speed to strike with precision while stepping out of range before Lopez can counter. If he’s able to execute this strategy, he’ll outpoint Teo in a technical match.

Lopez has looked focused during fight week activities, promising to put on a show. At Thursday’s press conference, he threw personal insults at Shakur, aiming to anger him in hopes of causing him to change his game plan for fight day.

Lopez knows he’ll fare much better in the match if he faces an aggressive Stevenson who trades with him in a firefight rather than one who boxes him in a technical chess match.

Teofimo is great on the inside, and he holds the advantage in being the stronger, bigger fighter. This is Shakur’s first fight at 140 pounds, and he’ll be tested against Teofimo
Who’ll look to land by timing him coming in.

If Lopez isn’t effective at cutting the ring off against Shakur, he’s going to struggle to find the target and land his punches.

Read the full article here

Share.
Exit mobile version