A roundup of the past weeks notable boxing results from around the world:Saturday at Las VegasTerence Crawford W12 Viktor Postol - Fight RecapUnifies two junior welterweight titles Scores: 118-107 (twice), 117-108 Records: Crawford (29-0, 20 KOs); Postol (28-1, 12 KOs)Rafaels remarks: For a fight that many viewed as one that would be quite competitive, Crawford, 28, of Omaha, Nebraska, shut down that notion pretty quickly in a dominant win against Postol, 32, of Ukraine, to unify 140-pound titles, stamp himself as the worlds best in the division without a doubt and drive home his worthiness as a top pound-for-pound talent. He also set himself up for a possible Nov. 5 showdown against unretiring Manny Pacquiao in what would be a very intriguing potential changing-of-the-guard fight.The 5-foot-11 Postol, who owned a three-inch height advantage, appeared to tower over Crawford and early on it looked like Crawford, who is typically a slow starter, might have a long night. After a shaky first three rounds, however, Crawford figured Postol out and romped to the win. Perhaps it was not the most scintillating performance, but Crawford did as he pleased, landed left hands almost at will and left Postol with no answers on how to deal with his speed, movement or punches from assorted angles. The CompuBox statistics illustrated that well as Crawford landed 141 of 388 punches (36 percent) to Postols 83 of 244 (34 percent). More notably, Postol averaged landing seven of 20 punches per round to Crawfords 12 of 32. Postol averaged landing 20 of 71 punches per round in his previous five fights. That tells you how good Crawfords defense is.Oscar Valdez KO2 Matias Adrian Rueda - Fight RecapWins a vacant featherweight title Records: Valdez (20-0, 18 KOs); Rueda (26-1, 23 KOs)Rafaels remarks: From the moment Valdez, 25, Mexicos only two-time Olympic boxer (2008 and 2012) turned pro he was viewed as a blue-chip prospect expected to win a world title. He did just that and in devastating fashion in this pure destruction of Rueda, 28, whose beautiful record had been build against a series of nobodies in his native Argentina. Valdez, who dreamed of winning a world title since he began boxing at age 8, won the belt vacated last month when Vasyl Lomachenko moved up to junior lightweight and won a world title. And Valdez did it impressively in a breakout performance as he displayed power with both hands. His left hook, especially to the body, was particularly devastating.With the 126-pound belt in hand, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum has big plans for Valdez, beginning with a likely first title defense on Nov. 26 in Tucson, Arizona, where he grew up after his family came to the United States.Jose Benavidez Jr. W10 Francisco Chia SantanaWelterweight Scores: 100-90, 98-92, 96-94 Records: Benavidez (25-0, 16 KOs); Santana (24-5-1, 12 KOs)Rafaels remarks: The shutout score from judge Adalaide Byrd was absolutely outrageous and the 98-92 card from Glenn Feldman wasnt the best either. Although Benavidez, 24, of Phoenix, won the fight this was very close all the way as Santana, 30, of Santa Barbara, California, was super aggressive and came at Benavidez nonstop, forcing him to the ropes for long stretches. But Benavidez, a former interim junior welterweight titlist forced up in weight because of ongoing problems making 140 pounds, fought well off the ropes as he countered Santana effectively. Santana, who is usually in good fights, did not hurt his standing with the loss because of the tremendous effort and entertainment value he put out.Oleksandr Gvozdyk KO6 Tommy KarpencyLight heavyweight Records: Gvozdyk (11-0, 11 KOs); Karpency (26-6-1, 15 KOs).Rafaels remarks: Every prospect needs to overcome a moment of adversity at some point to make him a better fighter. Gvozdyk, a 2012 Olympic bronze medalist from Ukraine with the look of a future world champion, got his in the first round when Karpency, a former two-time world title challenger (who also owns an upset decision win against former light heavyweight world champion Chad Dawson), shockingly dropped him with a right hand he never saw.Gvozdyk, 29, trained by star trainer Robert Garcia, was hurt but got himself together and then took over the fight as he busted up Karpency, a 30-year-old southpaw from Adah, Pennsylvania, and battered him to the end. By the time the fight was over Karpency was bleeding from gash on the bridge of his nose, had a messed up left eye and was being overwhelmed by Gvozdyks superb power. In the sixth round, Gvozdyk ended the fight when he landed a right hand to the body and Karpency went down to a knee, where he took the count from referee Kenny Bayless at 2 minutes, 21 seconds.Saturday at San AntonioFabian Maidana TKO6 Jorge MaysonetWelterweight Records: Maidana (10-0, 7 KOs); Maysonet (13-2, 11 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Maidana, 24, of Argentina, is the younger brother of former junior welterweight and welterweight titleholder Marcos Maidana, who was ringside to watch him take apart Maysonet, 26, of Puerto Rico, in the main event of a Premier Boxing Champions card on NBC Sports Net. Maysonet bloodied Maidanas nose in the first round but Maidana shook it off and pressured him throughout the fight. He landed nearly triple the amount of punches (60-22, according to CompuBox) and steadily broke him down until Maysonets corner threw in the towel following the sixth round.Maidana was fighting in the same city where his older brother scored his biggest win in 2013, when he battered Adrien Broner to win a unanimous decision and a welterweight world title.Alan Castano W8 Aaron GarciaMiddleweight Scores: 78-74 (three times) Records: Castano (11-0, 7 KOs); Garcia (15-6-1, 10 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Powered by his right hand, Castano got off to a quick start and raised swelling over Garcias left eye almost immediately and then nailed him with repeated combinations in the second round. In the third round, an accidental head butt resulted in a bloody gash over Garcias right eye. There was good action in the bout, including in the fourth round. It was a competitive bout but Castano, fighting past the sixth round for the first time, got the better of the exchanges and landed the crisper punches.Also on the card, southpaw junior featherweight Brandon Figueroa (9-0, 7 KOs), 19, of Weslaco, Texas and the younger brother of former lightweight world titleholder Omar Figueroa, dropped Adalberto Zorrilla (7-2, 7 KOs), 24, of Puerto Rico, twice in the third round en route to a stoppage with 16 seconds left in the round.Friday at Mashantucket, Conn.Adam Lopez D10 Roman Ruben ReynosoJunior featherweight Scores: 96-94 Lopez, 97-93 Reynoso, 95-95 Records: Lopez (15-0-1, 7 KOs); Reynoso (18-1-2, 7 KOs)Rafaels remarks: In the main event of a 15th anniversary card of Showtimes popular prospect series, ShoBox: The New Generation, Lopez, 25, of San Antonio and Reynoso, 25, of Argentina battled to a draw in an entertaining action fight that defined what the series is about: competitive fights between prospects.Although Lopez was the favorite, Reynoso gave him a pitched battle. Lopez, however, had a big 10th round when he hurt Reynoso with a flurry of shots in the final seconds of the fight, forcing him spit out his mouthpiece, a move that bought him almost 30 seconds of rest and allowed him to recover enough to stay upright for the rest of the fight in what could have been a decisive round had he not spit the bit. All three judges gave Lopez the 10th round 10-9. Had Lopez knocked him down he would have taken the round 10-8 and won the fight.There was a lot on the line besides just being on national TV in a main event. Jonathan Guzman (22-0, 22 KOs), who won a junior featherweight world title a few days earlier, was at ringside having said he was hoping to make his first defense against the winner. Those plans have changed since it was a draw.Jerry Odom KO3 Julius JacksonSuper middleweight Records: Odom (14-2-1, 13 KOs); Jackson (19-2, 15 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Odom, 23, of Washington, D.C., took the fight on 10 days notice when Ronald Ellis dropped out with a hand injury and scored a tremendous one-punch knockout of Jackson, 28, of St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Odom obliterated Jackson, one of the fighting sons of former junior middleweight and middleweight titleholder Julian Jackson, with a huge right hand at 1 minute, 57 seconds of the third round. Referee Arthur Mercante Jr. immediately called off the fight.Jackson, like his father and brother John Jackson, has a poor chin and paid the price again, getting starched for the second consecutive fight inside three rounds.There were also two other fights on the telecast. Lightweight Rolando Chinea (13-1-1, 6 KOs), 25, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, won a split decision against OShaquie Foster (10-2, 7 KOs), 22, of Orange, Texas, in a tough fight to score -- 79-73 and 78-74 for Chinea and 77-75 for Foster.Also, junior middleweight Ian Green (10-1, 8 KOs), 22, of Paterson, New Jersey (and with former junior welterweight titleholder Kendall Holt, also of Paterson, working in his corner), knocked out Khiary Gray-Pitts (13-1, 10 KOs), 23, of Worcester, Massachusetts, at 2 minutes, 50 seconds of the second round. After being staggered in the first round, Green, a late substitute, dropped Gray-Pitts twice in the second round.Thursday at Mashantucket, Conn.Sergiy Derevyanchenko KO2 Sam SolimanMiddleweight - Title eliminator Records: Derevyanchenko (9-0, 7 KOs); Soliman (44-14, 18 KOs)Rafaels remarks: The Premier Boxing Champions main event on ESPN was poor on paper and in the ring. Although Derevyanchenko, 30, of Ukraine and living in Brooklyn, New York, is one of the top up-and-comers in boxing, he is not your average 9-0 fighter. He was a 2008 Olympian, went 390-20 as an amateur and was also 23-1 in World Series of Boxing competition. Former world titleholder Soliman, 42, of Australia, has always made terrible television fights and now is significantly past his prime as well. He came into the fight having boxed 516 rounds, most of any notable active fighter, was coming off a 13-month layoff, multiple knee injuries and now has lost three fights in a row.No way should he have been in a televised main event, not to mention a title eliminator, which this fight was. It was an eliminator for No. 2 in a sanctioning body with the winner to move a step closer to a mandatory fight with unified titleholder Gennady Golovkin.Derevyanchenko, known as The Technician, crushed Soliman with ease. In the opening round, he bounced him off ropes with a sweeping right hand and then tagged him with a right hand on the chin to drop him to a knee. In the second round he put him away. First he knocked him down with a left hand to the head and then he was all over him when the fight resumed, eventually blasting him with a left hand to the chin to drop him in a heap. Soliman attempted to rise but fell over and referee Johnny Callas waved off the brutal mismatch at 2 minutes, 41 seconds.Ievgen Khytrov TKO9 Paul MendezMiddleweight Records: Khytrov (14-0, 12 KOs); Mendez (19-3-2, 9 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Blue-chip prospect Khytrov, 27, a native of Ukraine fighting out of Brooklyn, New York, and a 2011 world amateur champion, looked very good in an exiting performance in which he dismantled Mendez, 27, of Delano, California, with an avalanche of power shots. Mendez took an enormous amount of punishment but showed a big heart to stay on his feet until the end. They battled toe to toe for stretches but Khytrov got the better of virtually every exchange.Khytrov pounded him throughout the fight and seemed to land almost at will in the later rounds. When Khytrov cornered Mendez, who had not lost since 2011, and belted him with a series of unanswered blows in the ninth round, referee Joe Lupino called a halt to the fight upon the recommendation of the ringside doctor at 1 minute, 20 seconds.How brutal of a beating did Khytrov dish out? According to CompuBox punch statistics, he landed 53.6 punches per round, more than three times the middleweight average. He landed 40.4 power shots per round, also more than three times the division average. His 71 punches landed in the second round are second all time for middleweights. His 482 total punches landed (in only nine rounds!) is also No. 2 all time for middleweights. The record is held by Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., who landed a middleweight record 506 punches in a 12-round win against John Duddy.Thursday at Christchurch, New ZealandJoseph Parker KO4 Solomon HaumonoHeavyweight Records: Parker (20-0, 17 KOs); Haumono (24-3-2, 21 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Parker, 24, of New Zealand, is already the mandatory challenger for world titleholder Anthony Joshua, but he stayed busy by scoring yet another knockout, this one against Haumono, 40, a New Zealand native fighting out of Australia.Parker, fighting in the hometown of his trainer, Kevin Barry, had no issues with Haumono, whose four-fight winning streak came to a crashing halt. Parker controlled the first three rounds and was doing so again in the fourth round when he landed a clean right uppercut that sent Haumono sprawling to the canvas. He beat the count but referee Bruce McTavish elected to call off the fight at 1 minute, 35 seconds.With Joshua (17-0, 17 KOs), 26, of England, free to make an optional defense until Nov. 8 and the mandatory fight not due until Jan. 9, Parker will fight again in September in New Zealand, likely against Alexander Dimitrenko (38-2, 24 KOs), 34, of Russia. Felix Heredia Jersey .2 billion agreement with Rogers Communications for the leagues broadcast and multimedia rights. Miami Marlins Pro Shop . Luis Suarezs double powered Liverpool to a 4-0 victory over Fulham, and Southampton easily overcame Hull 4-1 to continue the south coast clubs impressive start to the season. Liverpool and Southampton sent Chelsea down to fourth place as the west London club was held to 2-2 at home. https://www.cheapmarlinsjerseys.us/ . Q: Team Canada announces their Olympic roster three weeks from today. Who is general manager Steve Yzerman watching? LeBrun: Over the last 48 hours, hes taken in the home-and-home between the Dallas Stars and Colorado Avalanche with Jamie Benn and Matt Duchene being the obvious targets. Ryne Stanek Jersey . -- Team after team passed on Andre Ellington in the draft. Austin Dean Jersey . After Gasquet beat fifth-seeded Ivan Dodig of Croatia 7-5, 6-3, Tsonga followed up with a 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-2 win against sixth-seeded Edouard Roger-Vasselin in an all-French match.As stunned as we may be by the Blue Jays 23-31 record and last place standing in the A.L. East, there are actually two teams that have blown me away by their monumental collapses in May. Lets start in the National League. Youve got to concede, Milwaukee hasnt been quite as imposing since Prince Fielder left for Detroit as a free agent. But they still looked like a solid team that could at least be close to one of the Wild Cards. Ron Roenickes crew got out of the gate with a fairly solid 14-11 record in April. They have a star left fielder in Ryan Braun (juiced or not) and a budding superstar at short in Jean Segura. However they havent had the starting pitching and their bullpen has been in turmoil through injuries and inconsistency. The Brewers are heading for the worst month of May in franchise history. They have dropped six in a row and are just 5-22 for the month. The "Brew Crew" has tumbled into last place in the N.L. Central, and they are already 16 games back of first place St. Louis and 13 behind division rival Cincinnati for the second Wild Card spot. Barring a miracle, their season is already over on the final day of May. General manager Doug Melvin and assistant GM Gord Ash would appear safe, based on an excellent track record and the Brewers solid attendance. Roenicke, though, could be in trouble if the nose dive continues. Royal Pains The team though that really puzzles me is the Kansas City Royals. G.M. Drayton Moore went out in the off-season and appeared to fill the void in the starting rotation by acquiring James Shields and Wade Davis from Tampa Bay and Ervin Santana from the Angels. Though none of the three have been spectacular, they have added some stability to the starting staff and some veteran leadership. The Royals actually went 17-10 in April, and looked like a team that might press Detroit for the division lead over the course of the season. Then in May, the bats died. The Royals are only 5-19 this month. Not only that but they tied a franchise record by dropping 10 in a row at home and had dropped eight in a row overall before Thursdays bizarre win at St. Louis. More on that in a second. But for now K.C. is last in the A.L. Central and seven and a half back of the Yankees for the second Wild Card spot, same as the Blue Jays. A year ago, the Royals tied for last in the American League in home runs. Again this season, they were struggling to hit the long ball. Early this week, batting coach Jack Maloof stuck his foot in his mouth by saying the Royals would likely finish last in homers again. A couple of days later Maloof and his assistant batting coach Andre David were re-assigned withhin the organization.dddddddddddd The man taking over as interim batting coach for Thursdays game was 60-year-old George Brett, the greatest Royals player of them all. Yes, the Royals did win the game at St. Louis and break off that eight-game losing skid, but it was one of the strangest games you would ever want to see. The Royals could only muster four hits on the night, but managed to rally for three runs in the top of the ninth to beat the "Red Birds" 4-2. Thats not even half the story. The game played in front of over 43,000 fans was delayed for an hour at the start by rain. Heading to the top of the ninth, St. Louis was up 2-1. Then Jeff Francoeur slugged a homer - the Royals first in 59 innings - and Eric Hosmer later in the inning hit what proved to be a game winning two-run bases loaded double off Victor Marte. That wasnt the final chapter though. Right after that, the skies opened up again, and the game went into a marathon rain delay of four hours and 32 minutes. The game finally ended at 3:14am. This was the Royals one and only visit to St. Louis this season, so veteran ump Joe West was determined to get it in. He actually could have ruled the game was official after eight and given St. Louis the 2-1 victory. Over the course of the delay the Cardinals brass and manager Mike Matheny actually lobbied for West to do just that. Matheny said he was worried that one of his players might have been injured on the slippery field. He couldnt be too critical though because it was his home grounds crew at Busch Stadium. In fact, he said later they did a great job just to make the field playable. When play resumed, it took just 12 more minutes to get the final six outs. Will this be a turning point in the Royals season? Who knows? I thought the Blue Jays might get some huge momentum by having four relievers combine to shut out Atlanta 3-0 on Wednesday night. So what happens Thursday? R.A. Dickey struggles again and the Blue Jays get blasted 11-3 in the series finale. Bruised Yankees This is circle the wagons weekend for the Yankees. Theyve lost five in a row including a four-game sweep in Queens at the hand of their crosstown rivals, the Mets. This weekend they are home to the division-leading Red Sox whom they trail by two games. C.C Sabathia will be facing Jon Lester in a duel of lefties in game 1. The Yanks are due to get Kevin Youkilis and Mark Teixeira back in the line-up. At this point it would probably be better for the Blue Jays if one team or the other get swept in their respective series. Of course, they would have to co-operate by taking three themselves at San Diego. Game on! ' ' '