Terence Crawford smashes Kell Brook in fourth round, retains WBO belt

Terence “Bud” Crawford once again left no doubt in the ring tonight in defense of his WBO welterweight title, extending his career unbeaten streak to 37 fights and his current stoppage streak to eight by scoring a TKO over Kell Brook in round four in Las Vegas.

Crawford (37-0, 28 KO) started tentatively, as he often does, feeling Brook out in the first couple of rounds, though he had his moments. The 33-year-old Crawford had a better round in the third, and it became clear he was able to not only do more damage from a southpaw stance, but also negate what had been a solid jab from Brook (39-3, 27 KO) in the early going.

Then, it just suddenly happened. Crawford nailed Brook with a right hook, sending the 34-year-old Brit stumbling into the ropes. Brook was clearly hurt and a knockdown was ruled, but Brook tried to continue. Crawford lived up to his billing as one of boxing’s best and most vicious finishers, following up with a series of power shots that forced referee Tony Weeks to step in for the stoppage at 1:14.

I was trying to gauge the distance. He had good distance. I was trying to find my rhythm and get my distance together,” Crawford said of a fight that looked competitive until it didn’t.

“That’s why it was competitive at first, I couldn’t get my shots off. I just had to step forward, throw more but not too much. I caught up with him a couple times.”

Asked if he felt this was a bigger statement for his side than Errol Spence Jr’s 11th round stoppage of Brook in 2017, Crawford sort of shrugged it off, but also kinda-sorta stated that he felt it was a better win.

“They were different fights, different years and whatnot,” he said. “Kell’s a tremendous talent. He came and he tried to take my title, he was in shape, he made the weight. There was no excuses. He came off of three wins, not coming off of a loss. He had his confidence up, but he lost to the better man tonight.”

“(Errol) Spence and (Danny) Garcia are fighting Dec. 5. If they really want to make a big pay-per-view, I’ll put Terence Crawford in with both of them, one at a time, and he’ll beat both of them in the same night,” Arum said. “He’s far and away the best welterweight in the world.”

Arum added that he feels Crawford would have been able to compete with the great welterweights of the 1980s, while the others today would not.

“The welterweights around now are not competitive with Terence Crawford,” the Hall of Fame promoter added.

Crawford, for his part, seems most keyed on a possible fight with soon-to-be 42-year-old WBA titlist Manny Pacquiao, and Arum says the money was there to make that fight, and that it could happen in the spring of 2021 in the Middle East. Pacquiao, for what it’s worth, seems likely to fight Conor McGregor instead, but that’s not official.

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