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Spence vs Garcia Live Stream On SlingTV

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Published on Mar 16, 2019

Spence vs Garcia live streaming results, full fight coverage

LIVE=> Spence vs Garcia live streaming

LIVE=> Spence vs Garcia live streaming
Two of boxing’s pound-for-pound strongest talents are set to duke it out TONIGHT (Sat., March 16, 2019) inside AT&T Stadium in Dallas, Texas, as Mikey Garcia jumps up two weight classes to meet fellow undefeated champion Errol Spence Jr.MMAmania.com will deliver LIVE coverage of the FOX pay-per-view (PPV) main event below, including real-time round-by-round, blow-by-blow updates (the four-fight FOX PPV begins at 9 p.m. ET, with Spence Jr. vs. Garcia starting around midnight).Heavyweight: Chris Arreola vs. Jean Pierre AugustinWelterweight Championship: Errol Spence Jr. vs. Mikey GarciaRingside Seat: Pound-for-pound supremacy on the line as Spence and Garcia face offThere is little question that Spence, who will be making his third title defense, and Garcia, who has won world titles at featherweight, junior lightweight, lightweight and junior welterweight, rank among the elite fighters in the world.According to the ESPN poll, Garcia ranks No. 5 and Spence ranks No. 6. That alone makes their fight extremely significant. Both fighters believe that a win over the other, given their stature, should vault them to No. 1.It remains to be seen whether that would be the case, especially if Spence wins because, well, he's supposed to. But Spence, 29, from the Dallas suburb of DeSoto, Texas, is convinced he should be elevated with a victory in front of his hometown fans."This win makes me pound-for-pound No. 1," Spence declared. "Mikey has a great record and a big fan base, and I feel like winning this fight turns me into a star. Everyone wants to take Floyd Mayweather's place as the face of boxing, and I feel like this puts me on the right track to become the face of boxing and become the No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter in the world.""This is a legendary fight. This is where we see what fighters are made of. There have been a lot of great fights when little guys came up and beat a bigger fighter. You can't ever write off the little guy. This is going to be a hard fight."Errol Spence Jr.If Garcia, 31, of Moreno Valley, California, wins, he would have a better case to leapfrog those in front of him: Vasiliy Lomachenko, Terence Crawford, Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin. A victory would be historic for Garcia, who would join Hall of Famer Henry Armstrong and obvious future Hall of Famer Pacquiao as the only former featherweight world titleholders to also win a belt at welterweight."Getting this victory will forever leave my name in the history books. I'm here to create history. No other fighter is daring to do what I'm doing," Garcia said. "I'm here to make history, and this fight does that. I'm about big challenges and obstacles."Saturday night I will become a five-division champion. I will dethrone Spence. I will become the new welterweight champion, and that's history."Garcia is facing his third undefeated titleholder in a row in a third weight class. Last March, he moved up to junior welterweight and outpointed Sergey Lipinets to take his belt. In July, he returned to lightweight and cruised past Easter to unify two titles. Now he's going up two divisions to fight Spence."When I took on this fight and I wanted to get this fight, I was not doing it for any reason other than to prove to everybody that I'm the best and that I can fight anybody and I'm not scared to fight anybody even in the welterweight division," Garcia said. "There is no other fighter doing what I'm doing. When you talk about pound-for-pound, well, I'm actually proving it. I'm doing it in different divisions. So I mean that's kind of why people will remember me for, that I was willing to fight anybody in any division."Weight classes were created for a reason. Garcia is clearly a much smaller man than the taller, bulkier Spence.But both men believe it won't be size that makes the difference in the fight but their skills and smarts, and both have plenty of each. They are both experienced, with Spence having been a star amateur and 2012 U.S. Olympian and Garcia coming from a boxing family that includes father Eduardo, a noted trainer, and brother Robert, a former junior lightweight world titleholder as well as one of boxing's top trainers and Garcia's chief cornerman."Size always matters, but when you get in there, at the end of the day, it's about skills and intelligence. I'm not going to rely on size," Spence said. "I'm going to focus on my talent. If I can roll through him, then I'll show my killer instinct and try to get him out of there. I'm going to use my ability to break him down."Said Derrick James, Spence's trainer: "This fight is all about the skill set, not the size. Size will come into play a little bit, but we're going to show the skill set that we have to beat this guy. That's what Errol is going to show."Garcia shrugged off the size issue. He said he would likely come into the ring at only about 150 pounds, just three over the 147-pound limit he expects to weigh in at."Saturday night, Errol is going to find out why I picked this fight. All of my opponents say they don't see anything flashy, they don't see anything special when they watch me, until they get into the ring."Mikey Garcia"I'll probably be where I normally walk around. I'll probably come around 150," he said "I don't think it's an advantage for me to try to gain weight or hydrate too much. I don't plan on being big and huge and bulk up like that. I want to be sharp, I want to be quick."If people say Errol is bigger, that's just obvious. But who's faster? Who has better timing? There's a lot more that goes into this sport and who's going to win this particular fight."Spence owns the IBF title, and that organization requires a weight check on the morning of a world title bout that is not a unification fight. Neither fighter can put on more than 10 pounds from the weigh-in. So, Spence won't blow up too much overnight. He can gain more after the weight check but said it won't be much."The 10-pound limit won't be an issue at all," he said. "I won't get too big. I don't want to be sluggish. I'll probably weigh 160 [on fight night]."Garcia spent five weeks working with Victor Conte, the reformed convict of BALCO scandal infamy, in the Bay Area to put on muscle mass."I wanted to make sure that I gained the weight -- the right weight -- but we also didn't want to lose the speed, we did not want to lose the reaction time, the explosiveness," Garcia said. "And that's what we worked on with Victor Conte. We made a program that could help me to gain a little bit of mass but at the same time, improve my speed, my reaction, my reflexes and all the things that I will use on fight night."