Saul “Canelo” Alvarez retained his undisputed super-middleweight world title, seeing off Gennady Golovkin to complete their epic fight trilogy in Las Vegas.
Mexico’s Alvarez was in charge for most of 12 rounds at an electric T-Mobile Arena, winning a unanimous decision to spark wild scenes of celebration among the Mexican fans who made up most of the sell-out crowd.
One judge scored the bout 116-112 while the two others saw it 115-113 for Alvarez, who took control early and continued to cruise even as Golovkin stepped it up in the late rounds.
“Thank you so much, my friend,” Alvarez said to Golovkin in the ring after a bout whose build-up was marked by some bitter rhetoric.
“We gave the fans three good fights. Thank you for everything.”
It was a welcome return to form for Alvarez, who suffered the second defeat of his career earlier this year after moving up to light-heavyweight to face Dmitry Bivol.
“You have to continue to move forward,” he said.
“I have shown that defeats can show you can be great and you can regain your humility.”
“He is a good fighter, a real fighter,” he added of Golovkin.
“I am glad to share the ring with him.”
This return to 168 pounds clearly suited Alvarez, but Golovkin was left to rue a leaden start in which he only sparked into life when it was too late.
“It was a tactical mistake on my part to start slow, but we wanted to see how the fight was going to develop,” Golovkin said.
“I think we both started slowly.”
Alvarez improved to 58-2-2 with 39 knockouts, but he said he knew in the first round he wouldn’t get the knockout he said he said before the bout he craved.
“First round, I knew he’s tough,” Alvarez said.
“He’s a tough fighter. I need surgery, my left hand is not good. But I’m good, I’m a warrior, that’s why I’m here. I can’t hold a glass. It’s really bad. But I’m a warrior.”
This highly anticipated third tussle between two of the hardest hitting fighters in the world came a whole four years after their last meeting.
Back in 2018, it was Alvarez whose hand was raised at the end of 12 frenetic, quality rounds which saw Golovkin suffer defeat for the very first time as he came out on the wrong end of a narrow majority decision.
Their first fight the year before ended in a draw and the outcome of the second bout was tough on the Kazakh warrior, who has little time for Alvarez and made no bones about it during the build-up here this week.
The bad blood had boiled ever since the Mexican failed a drugs test and was banned for six months which held up this edge-of-your-seat trilogy.