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Stephen Fulton Jr. Unifies 122-Pound Titles In Dominant
Unanimous Decision Over Danny Roman
Photos: Esther Lin - SHOWTIME
WBC and WBO 122-pound world
champion Stephen Fulton Jr. displayed his full complement of
skills and made his case as a top pound-for-pound fighter in
a dominant unanimous decision win over former unified
champion Danny Roman Saturday night in the main event of
action live on SHOWTIME in front of a sold-out crowd at The
Armory in Minneapolis in an event presented by Premier
Boxing Champions.
“I made a hell of a statement tonight,” said Fulton, who
improved to 21-0 with eight knockouts. “I prepared for this
and I told y’all I was going to make it easy and fight
depending on how I wake up, and I woke up feeling good.”
The Philadelphia-native closed out the bout in impressive
fashion, moving to the inside for the final three rounds as
he continued to batter and frustrate Roman. Overall, he held
a 218 to 113 lead in punches landed according to CompuBox,
including 112 to 68 in power shots. In addition, his nine
jabs landed per round was more than double the average for
the weight class. After 12 rounds, all three judges were in
agreement on Fulton’s dominance, with final scores of
120-108 twice and 119-109.
“There’s no excuse,” said Roman, who dropped to 29-4-1 with
10 knockouts. “I think this fight proves who the best
122-pound fighter in the division is. Fulton did that
tonight. He proved it. I wish him the best and I hope he
goes and achieves what I couldn’t achieve. Go become
undisputed. Like I said, this fight proved who is the best
in the division. Fulton was the better man tonight.”
Known as “Cool Boy Steph”, Fulton was in control throughout
the action, showing off expert movement against an
aggressive opponent, while consistently finding openings for
his offense. Roman pushed the pace early and often,
initiating offense with power and body shots, but Fulton
effectively countered him repeatedly and removed himself
from danger.
“It was very important to control the distance tonight,”
said Fulton. “Like I said before, in the last outing with
Brandon Figueroa, I didn’t have the energy because I didn’t
make the weight the right way. So shout out to my dietician.
Any moment he had, I took it right away from him. I
neutralized the threat.”
“Fulton knew how to use his distance,” said Roman. “It was
hard for me to adjust to his distance because he was boxing.
He came in and came out. He changed his style so it was hard
for me to adjust.”
After unifying titles last November in an all-action
showdown against Figueroa, Fulton used more movement on his
way to a wider decision in his first defense as unified
champion. Fulton’s accuracy was a key throughout, as he held
a 36% to 17% edge in connect percentage.
“I started walking him down because I saw that he had been
slowing down,” said Fulton of the final rounds. “I feel like
the more I kept boxing, the more I just got a little tired
of boxing. Me trying to walk forward to him wasn’t going to
happen all the time, but I definitely saw him slowing down.
I wanted to stop him but I didn’t get that.”
In his post-fight interview with SHOWTIME’s Brian Campbell,
Fulton set his sights on an undisputed 122-pound title fight
against fellow unified champion Murodjon Akhmadaliev.
“You already know what’s next,” said Fulton. “I want M.J. I
got to finish this up. But much respect for Danny Roman.
Much respect.”
In the co-main event, WBA Super Middleweight Champion David
Morrell Jr. (7-0, 6 KOs) delivered a bruising fourth-round
TKO over Kalvin Henderson (15-2-1, 11 KOs), thrilling the
fans in his adopted hometown.
“I’m excited,” said Morrell. “Thank you everyone for coming
out to The Armory. I’m just happy, man. I’m happy. I’m so
excited every time I fight in my new home in Minnesota. I
made this place my home.”
Competing in his third-straight bout at The Armory, Morrell
gave his fans what they came out to see, stepping to
Henderson early and often and putting his opponent on the
defensive. Morrell showed a dedicated intention on attacking
his opponent’s body, racking up a 26-3 edge in body punches
landed, before mixing it up with hooks and uppercuts.
Henderson was game for the challenge, hanging on the ropes
and slinging counters to try to deter the charging Morrell,
but was overwhelmed by the punching accuracy of Morrell (37%
to 11%). Late in round three, Morrell broke through for the
first time, connecting on a right hook that left Henderson
visibly hurt on the ropes.
“We knew that he wanted to come out strong like he did, but
we wanted to show that his punches weren’t doing anything,”
said Henderson. “We were picking off most of those shots. We
were trying to wear him out, and the game plan was working
but he landed some shots and the referee called it.”
Morrell continued to swing aggressively throughout the final
moments of the round, although Henderson was able to
withstand the punishment and stay on his feet until the bell
rang. While Henderson made it out for round four, Morrell
remained patient until he found an opening and landed his
right hook, hurting Henderson again and eventually forcing
referee Luis Pabon to waive off the contest 2:35 into the
frame.
“I want to thank my trainer Ronnie Shields, who did an
excellent job today,” said Morrell. “That’s what our game
plan was, to be concentrated and if I didn’t get him by the
end of the first round, I was looking to get him in the
later rounds.”
“I’m a fighter at heart and I compete so when he stopped the
fight, I was upset,” said Henderson. “But I understand, the
referee is just doing his job.”
After the fight, Morrell declared his intention to face the
best at 168-pounds.
“It’s David Benavidez, it’s Caleb Plant, it’s Anthony
Dirrell, it’s whoever wants to get in the ring with me,”
said Morrell. “I’m ready for any of them.”
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