The typical routine for Canelo Alvarez is to train in Southern California and fight in Las Vegas, and it’s a formula that has helped him develop one of boxing’s great careers.
Alvarez hopes to again unify super middleweight division in early Sunday morning fight vs. Scull
The typical routine for Canelo Alvarez is to train in Southern California and fight in Las Vegas, and it’s a formula that has helped him develop one of boxing’s great careers.
Now at 34, Alvarez is showing he’s willing to change his habits - a reported $400 million, minimum four-fight deal with Riyadh Season probably no small factor in that decision.
The first of those bouts takes place Sunday at Riyadh, Saudi Arabia against little-known William Scull for the undisputed super middleweight championship. The main event ringwalk begins at about 6 a.m. local time to accommodate the American and Mexican pay-per-view audiences.
"A lot of people talk about the time change, fighting at 6 a.m., but I think when you work somebody as disciplined as Canelo is, has that experience, he can adjust to any time of timetable,” Alvarez’s trainer and manager, Eddy Reynoso, said through an interpreter. “He could be fighting at 3, 4, even midnight, it doesn't matter. He's a champion. He's shown that and he will go on to show that."