ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Boxing is ready for a reboot — “Boots” is more like it — in the welterweight division.
Not only did Atlantic City get new life for its long storied, yet stagnant, big-fight history, Jaron Ennis cashed in as the undisputed best in the 147-pound division.
Ennis crowned himself the best fighter at 147 pounds when he stopped Eimantas Stanionis after six rounds and claimed three shares of the welterweight division crown with a decisive win Saturday night in boxing's return to Atlantic City.
Ennis ran his record to 34-0 after the fight was waved off once Stanionis was unable to continue after the sixth. Ennis sent Stanionis to the ropes and down to one knee with a series of left-handed uppercuts and body shots. Ennis stumbled Stanionis with a big blow to the body right before the bell — and the Philly fighter stared him down as he strutted to the corner.
The seventh round never came after Stanionis' corner decided the Lithuanian could not continue.
“When I fight top-of-the-line guys, good guys, that's what you're going to see,” Ennis said. “You're going to see a whole different me. When I'm in my ring, I'm in my heavy place. When I've got a top guy and I'm fighting for something, it's a whole different story. Can't nobody mess with me.”
Ennis soon covered his body in three three championship belts.
“Is this what y'all looking for,” Ennis asked.
Ennis, out of northwest Philadelphia and a rising star in the sport, was already the IBF welterweight champion and he took the WBA and Ring Magazine away from Stanionis (15-1). Ennis said in the ring following the signature victory he sorely needed to throw himself into the pound-for-pound conversation that it was too early to decide if he would move up in weight class.
There was a decided Philly flavor in Boardwalk Hall for Ennis' unification victory. “Boots” was accompanied to the ring by Philadelphia 76ers All-Star guard Tyrese Maxey — who draped the IBF belt over his right shoulder for the ring walk — and Philly rapper Meek Mill's music played between rounds.
“Me and Maxey are kind of cool,” Ennis said. “This summer, we're going to try and help him out and get ready for the next season.”
The 27-year-old Ennis has won eight straight fights overall and made four straight successful title defenses since he defeated Ukrainian fighter Karen Chukhadzhian for the championship in January 2023.
The 30-year-old Stanionis, who represented Lithuania in the 2016 Olympic Games, was elevated to full WBA champion in August when Terence Crawford vacated the WBA belt.
Boardwalk Hall hadn't held a major title fight since Sergey Kovalev beat Bernard Hopkins on Nov. 8, 2014, in a light heavyweight championship bout. Eleider Alvarez beat Kovalev and won the 175-pound championship by knockout at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in 2018 in what can be generously described as the last big-time bout in Atlantic City.
As Atlantic City casinos withered over the last dozen or so years, so did interest in hosting boxing cards.
T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas and Madison Square Garden and Barclays Center in New York host some of the biggest domestic cards while the true headline bouts — topped by Tyson Fury’s win over Francis Ngannou in October ...