Saul Alvarez, right, connects with a right-hook during his points victory against Matthew Hatton for vacant WBC light-middleweight belt.
Saul Alvarez, right, connects with a right-hook during his points victory against Matthew Hatton for vacant WBC light-middleweight belt.
Saul Alvarez, right, connects with a right-hook during his points victory against Matthew Hatton for vacant WBC light-middleweight belt.
Saul Alvarez, right, connects with a right-hook during his points victory against Matthew Hatton for vacant WBC light-middleweight belt.

Saul Alvarez wins WBC light-middleweight title


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Matthew Hatton failed in his bid to emulate brother Ricky by becoming a world champion after losing a unanimous points decision to Saul Alvarez in last night's WBC light-middleweight title bout in California.

Alvarez was never troubled during the fight at the Honda Center in Anaheim and deservedly claimed a 119-108 decision to emphatically underline the 20-year-old's reputation as an emerging force.

Hatton was the heavy underdog going into the contest against the prodigiously-talented Mexican, who is now unbeaten in 37 contests since turning professional as a 15-year-old, knocking out 26 opponents.

The result sees Alvarez become the youngest man to win a belt previously held by such luminaries as Tommy Hearns, Oscar de la Hoya, Shane Mosley and Floyd Mayweather Jr — and vacated by pound-for-pound superstar Manny Pacquiao last month.

Hatton, the European welterweight champion, had hoped his greater experience in a 47-bout career spanning the past decade would prove decisive, but as it turned out Alvarez had the edge from the opening bell, landing a flurry of head shots as the 29-year-old Englishman failed to win a single round.

The fight took place at a catchweight of 150lbs (68kg) — 4lbs inside the light-middleweight division's 11-stone limit. Alvarez missed the weight by 1.4 pounds at Friday's weigh-in, meaning he stands to lose 30 per cent of his fight purse.

It also opened the door for the smaller Hatton to stand behind a legitimate reason to pull out of the fight, but he had no regrets about going ahead with the bout — although he confirmed that he would now be returning to more familiar territory.

"He's a fantastic fighter, but he was just too big," Hatton said.

"He never really hurt me. It was just a size difference. I want to go back down to my natural weight at welterweight, and hopefully I'll get another shot there.

"When you get an opportunity to fight for a title, you can't turn it down."

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting 

2. Prayer 

3. Hajj 

4. Shahada 

5. Zakat 

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting

2. Prayer

3. Hajj

4. Shahada

5. Zakat 

Brief scoreline:

Manchester United 2

Rashford 28', Martial 72'

Watford 1

Doucoure 90'

The five pillars of Islam