Huge upset denied as underdog Aussie boxer launches protest following controversial loss to champion

By News / Wire

Liam Wilson’s corner will launch a protest after he was denied an incredible underdog boxing world title, beaten by favourite Emanuel Navarrete despite flooring the Mexican in the fourth round.

Opening an $18 long shot for the vacant WBO super featherweight title, Australian Wilson silenced the partisan crowd in Phoenix’s Desert Diamond Arena when he landed a sweet left hook and eventually sent the two-division champion to the canvas.

Navarrete survived what Wilson’s corner thought was a prolonged count and was hit again by Wilson’s final punch of a dominant round. Wilson landed another sweet left hook in the sixth round but was then monstered before the fight was stopped with one minute left in the ninth round.

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“I knocked him down in the fourth and thought the count was a bit longer than I thought (it should have been),” he said in the ring after the loss.

“I think it was about a 20-second count. Review it and see what happens there.

“I’ll be back, make no mistake about it. I love these hard fights.”

It was Navarrete’s 32nd consecutive win, dating back to 2012 and his 11th title fight, the victory making him the 10th Mexican to win titles in three divisions.

(Photo by Mikey Williams/Top Rank Inc via Getty Images)

“Liam is a great warrior; he came to win, led with that big shot on me and it stung me,” Navarrete said.

“I was able to get myself up off the canvas and settle down.”

It was Brisbane product Wilson’s second defeat in only 13 professional fights, the world title promise made to his dying father 11 years ago on ice for now.

Wilson’s path to a world title shot was a winding one, knocked out in 2021 by Joe Noynay, winning their rematch and then prevailing against Matias Rueda to book a world title eliminator berth. But he was promoted from that straight into the main event when Mexican star Oscar Valdez was injured, the Australian plucked to fight Navarrete for the title vacated when champion Shakur Stevenson missed weight and moved up in class.

Initially a major outsider, he firmed during fight week despite a dramatic weigh-in that finished with the Australian’s camp crying foul.

Wilson’s team claimed the scales had been tampered with to allow Navarrete to make weight. Accusing officials of cheating, they demanded a meeting with authorities on Friday and eventually got it just hours before the fight.

But with no proof of their accusation, their worries – and demand for Navarrete to be weighed again – were waved away and the show went on.

Wilson put that behind him to quieten a hostile 5100-strong crowd and eventually earn their respect, the low-profile father of two set to return to Queensland with his reputation hugely enhanced.

The Crowd Says:

2023-02-04T22:58:46+00:00

Gray-Hand

Roar Rookie


When a fighter gets knocked down, he is normally given 8 seconds before the fight resumes - this is normally called a ‘mandatory 8 count’. The referee gave him 27 seconds before the fight restarted. It is significant because a fighter is normally vulnerable after having been knocked down even with 8 seconds to recover, and that is often the best time for their opponent to press ahead and knock them out or do more damage that will wear them down for later in the fight.

2023-02-04T21:49:24+00:00

Sergeant Salt n Pepper

Guest


Yes , you are ignorant. He may have got up , but he was protected for quite some time .

2023-02-04T21:10:50+00:00

Bloke7

Roar Rookie


Call me ignorant but the guy got up straight away. Don't know where they got the 27 seconds from.

2023-02-04T09:59:40+00:00

Lukas

Roar Pro


Interesting one. The count was fine. He got up quick and have to say looked wobbly while he enjoyed his “extra time with the mouthpiece”… Wonder what the rule is? Could he just have got lucky that his mouth guard was knocked out? Not easy to get that back in wearing gloves.

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