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Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live blog for all the round-by-round updates from the world title fight in Florida.

That’s how you announce yourself on the big stage

On paper, Tellez might’ve taken a big leap up a bit too soon by taking on Gonzalez. But once the bell went, he was never in any serious trouble and displayed great mental discipline to break his man down methodically before really unleashing shots from what looks to be a very, very big arsenal.

Great speed, cool, calm and collected, switch hitter, can fight inside and outside, dynamite in both hands. There’s nothing not to like here.

Round 7: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez – Tellez by TKO

No wonder there’s hype around Tellez. Not only was that a diamond of a right cross, he didn’t wade in like a fool afterwards as he searched for the KO. Very, very measured response for a young fighter.

Smoking left hook knocks Gonzalexz down again, and he’s hurt – can only get back up at the count of eight.

Tellez bides his time again, beautiful punch selection in a long combination – and the ref rightfully steps in to stop it. Tellez by TKO and the rest of the division will have to sit up and take notice.

Round 6: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez

Gonzalez comes out hard and backs up Tellez. A sneaky right upppercut gets home for the Venezuelan but he cops a barrage in return, finished with a left rip to the body.

Double left jab, right for Tellez, who then does a brilliant job of setting up the left rip by slipping two shots.

Great short right hook lands for Tellez and then another clean right to the chin that takes Gonzalez’s legs out from under him. Brilliant punch there!

Gonzalez is nailed with a right uppercut on the inside and Tellez isn’t rushing this. Outstanding work, 10-8.

Round 5: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez

Gonzalez is trained by Ismael Salas, who trained Danny Green for his first bout with Anthony Mundine, and Salas has plenty to say in that break – as he should after Tellez’s success with the left to the short rib.

Bit of pop coming off Gonzalez’s punches here but his jab is still working. Tellez slips and absorbs a three-punch combo.

Nice right from Gonzalez. They trade jabs and Tellez gets the better of it. He’s working more variety into his punches, throwing a lead left uppercut.

The left to the body gets through for Tellez but not as well as it did in the fourth.

A Gonzalez right lands but doesn’t hurt Tellez, who is backing up to give himself room. The looping overhand right is starting to work for him and he’s the busier man in the fifth. Tellez 10-9.

Round 4: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez

Tellez is orthodox again, misses with a big uppercut.

Gonzalez gets him on the ropes and opens up with a couple of combinations. Tellez keeps digging to the body with his left rip, then finds the mark with an overhand right. Another rip to the body. And another. His corner have seen something here, either early in the fight or in Gonzalez’s previous bouts.

A great right hand gets Gonzalez’s attention, but doesn’t appear to hurt him.

Tellez is now the man in centre ring. That left rip to the body is ripping in and Gonzalez has slowed down and become less aggressive.

The Cuban presses him back to the ropes to end the fourth – great round from him, 10-9.

Round 3: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez

Tellez is orthodox again to start the third and throws a looping left hook that doesn’t break the Venezuelan’s guard.

Good body shot from Tellez, then he goes back to the guts with a straight right, then aother left rip. Gonzalez smiles at him and this fight is really opening up.

Tellez is back to southpaw. His right jab doesn’t have the snap of his left, but he lands with a looping right hook.

Gonzalez again owns the centre of the ring, pushing Tellez back onto the ropes easily. A straight right glances off the Cuban’s temple.

Tellez’s best round so far and he gets it 10-9.

Round 2: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez

Tellez’s corner wants him to let go with more punches, and he starts working the jab to start the second – doubling up on it as he switches to an orthodox stance.

Gonzalez drops both hands and makes Tellez miss with head movement. He’s stalking his opponent and owning the centre of the ring.

The older fighter is getting through with that jab – but Tellez triples the jab and puts a right behind it – but only finds glove.

Hard combination from Gonzalez, but Tellez wears it all on his arms and gloves.

Gonzalez squeaks this one out 10-9 courtesy of his jab and work rate.

Round 1: Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez

Tellez isn’t alone in landing with force – Gonzalez has 33 knockouts from his 35 wins.

‘This fight is not going to go very long,’ Porter predicts.

Tellez – a southpaw – is giving up reach and a huge gulf in experience here. He’s feeling his man out with the jab. Gonzalez throws the first combination of the fight but doesn’t land. He’s the busier of the two men.

Big, looping shot from Tellez doesn’t land. Straight left to the body follows. Gonzalez backs his man up with a left-right-left. He’s more active with the jab.

Hard to call that – Gonzalez 10-9 for being busier.

Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez is moments away

Like our main event, this is a super welterweight bout. Tellez is a Cuban with a dynamite punch on him – and he’s been touted as a future big name by some experts.

Tapia’s best moment of the fight

The final knockdown of the fight

Shawn Porter said he could see the draw because Tapia won a number of rounds apart from the knockdown. He branded it ‘not a complete robbery’ – so just a bit of a robbery, then.

That is robbery, pure and simple

Tapia just admitted Saavedra ‘got the better of me’. He’s right about that.

Now Saavedra is being interviewed in the ring – said he didn’t think Tapia would get up, and called the Aussie a Mexican warrior.

He says he doesn’t understand what happened with the verdict, how he could lose after dropping his man three times.

Saavedra’s not alone there. Even if you can somehow give a pass to the two judges who scored it even, the judge who scored it for Tapia did a disgraceful job.

And the winner is… nobody, especially not boxing

The scores come in and it’s 94-92 Tapia from one judge, 93-93 even from the other two – for a majority draw.

Saavedra has been robbed here. He clearly did enough to take that, three knockdowns to one, and was the busier man in crucial rounds.

Shawn Porter pointed to Saavedra’s strength as the key to this one, and he was able to bully and wrestle Tapia around the ring.

But at the same time, the Aussie could’ve made distance and kept turning his man – but chose not to, despite his corner constantly telling him to do so.

Round 10: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra – the Aussie needs a knockout to win

Big right lands for Tapia to kick off the final round. He can’t keep Saavedra off him though, and we’re back to the infighting.

Massive right uppercut by Tapia, but it doesn’t wobble the Venezuelan. Another right uppercut lands but doesn’t get the desired result.

Tapia slips punches in close well but doesn’t counter off that. Lots of body work from him but he is tied up again with a minute left.

A big right misses, then another looping right glances off his opponent. Twenty seconds left.

More body work from Tapia but he’s in too close. Scoring from rips to the gut won’t get his hand raised here.

Tapia misses with a wild right hook to close this one – great fight, but he doesn’t deserve to win.

Round 9: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

That punch to the back of the head kicked Saavedra up a gear in round eight. The Aussie needs to take this one.

Instead, he’s loading up with big single shots and getting dragged into inside fighting again.

Finally, a jab/right combination from Tapia and it gets through, but then we return to the fight in a phone booth, and the Venezuelan laps it up.

He volume-punches Tapia to the mat. Tapia’s up at the count of seven but he needs to jab and move.

A minute left and Saavedra is going to the body in close. Tapia tries a big left hook to change the momentum but only hits glove.

The Aussie looks tired and worn down in there. He’s playing Saavedra’s game in close again, trading to the body.

10-8 Saavedra. One round left and Tapia needs a stoppage.

Round 8: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Good vision of the clash of heads between rounds there – that was a shocker, almost looked like a headbutt by the Venezuelan. Tapia’s corner have done a good job on the injury.

Tapia turns Saavedra and punches him in the back of the head, and the Venezuelan is milking it for all it’s worth, gets a little break to recover.

Saavedra is slowing down visibly – hands, feet and head movement have all gone down a couple of notches.

His desire to pressure the Aussie is still there, though. He bullies him into the ropes and wrestles him around the ring.

More clinching, more of Saavedra using his head on that eye of Tapia’s.

Tapia lands a left hook and a right uppercut, but is getting hit in return.

Saavedra is slower but he’s also busier. Tapia’s corner will be disappointed with this round, he’s not listening to their repeated instructions to make distance.

Round 7: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Four more rounds to go and you’d be brave to suggest it will go the distance at this rate.

Tapia loading up on that laser-like right hand, catches his man on the temple – but Saavedra soaks it up. Then another right hand. He has problems with the Aussie’s hand speed, but Tapia isn’t taking advantage of it enough.

A left hook hits Tapia on that problematic eye, he tries to land a right uppercut from the outside and fails.

Tapia can turn his man with ease but again, doesn’t do it enough. Why he wants to clinch so often is a mystery.

Big right hook lands in close from the Aussie, but Saavedra gets through it. His hand speed has gone out the window, though.

Round 6: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

That shot slowed Saavedra down a bit. It was a peach of a straight right; the Aussie rocked back out of range then launched in with a shot right on the jaw.

More clinching with Tapia going to the body. He looks far more dangerous fighting on the outside.

Porter wants the Aussie to stick and move, use the jab to break the Venezuelan down before throwing the big leather.

A looping right from Tapia just misses.A right doesn’t – it forced Saavedra back then, even though it didn’t land flush.

More clinching, Saavedra working the body, taking a left hook in the exchange. Good body work by the Aussie, finished by a right hook.

Round 5: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Tapia tries to make distance and gets caught with a straight right. The snap has come off his punches a bit and Saavedra is pouring it on early in the fifth.

Good jab, but Saavedra’s head isn’t doing the cut and swelling any favours in the clinches.

A big left hand shot lands and Tapia is backed up and looking a little wobbly again. Porter wants the Aussie to either clinch right up or fight from the outside instead of being in no-man’s land, where he’s getting hit.

Tapia’s corner yelling at him to find range – and he unleashes with a diamond of a right hand that puts Saavedra down!

The bell goes before he can capitalise, but what a shot!

Round four: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Shawn Porter says Tapia isn’t picking up on the looping shots from Saavedra, which did the damage in round 3 – in addition to that head clash.

Tapia scores with the jab and needs to create distance here. He’s still throwing with aggression but is also getting caught and can’t keep Saavedra off him for long.

Blood is coming from Tapia’s cut again – that didn’t take long.

Tapia initiates a clinch there and both men land heavy hooks, the Aussie getting backed up to the ropes.

Probing jabs from Tapia at the close of this one, then another clinch, and his right eye is swelling to the point where vision will become a worry.

Round 3: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Tapia has the edge in hand and foot speed but looks to be having a little trouble picking up the Venezuelan’s jab.

A lot of inside fighting to start this round before the Aussie makes distance and goes to the body and head, but catches a left hook in the exchange.

Saavedra keeps scoring but Tapia’s punches are crisper with a fair bit more snap on them.

Head clash in the clinch here and Tapia is marked up under the right eye.

The Aussie is in trouble off a left hook, cops a barrage and goes down!

Tapia bleeding under the right eye now. That head clash really took a toll on him and he’s down again!

He’s up at six and the bell goes before Saavedra can get another shot off.

Round two: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Saavedra a little busier to start the second; Tapia loads up with a big right but only hits glove.

Good exchange in centre ring, started by Tapia, finished by Saavedra. The Aussie didn’t show enough head movement at the end of his combination there.

Good straight right by Tapia but Saavedra is completely unfazed. Fair bit of clinching and inside work here.

Saavedra likes the hard business on the inside and is keen to keep the fight that way. But he’s edged by the Aussie again, 10-9 Tapia.

Round one: Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra

Tapia gets the scoring started with a right hand and uppercut, then there’s an extended clinch, which is pretty disappointing for the first round of a middleweight bout.

Saavedra lands with a jab but Tapia goes to the body well in return.

Shawn Porter is praising the Aussie, saying he looks good on the outside and inside – then Tapia gets caught with a jab and a left hook.

Good round for the Aussie overall, he gets that 10-9. His corner is warning him about trading on the inside too much and being impatient as he looks to hit a ‘home run’ shot.

Cesar Mateo Tapia vs Endry Saavedra is moments away

Aussie middleweight prospect Tapia comes into this bout with a 17-0 record – with 10 of those wins coming inside the distance.

Saavedra’s record sits at 16-1, with 13 of his victories coming by KO.

Kostya’s involvement goes up a notch

The former undisputed world champion will walk to the ring with Tim. This is a bit of a surprise, as the Tszyu camp had said Kostya would be sitting ringside, but wouldn’t have any further role in his son’s preparations.

Looks like that changed after Kostya’s emotional surprise reunion with his son yesterday…

Some fatherly advice backstage

Much has been made of Kostya Tszyu making the trip to Florida for this fight after he spent years being barred from ringside at Tim’s bouts. No hint of any problems here as the Hall of Famer hugs his son and gives him some words of encouragement as he begins his preparations in the dressing room…

Shawn Porter on why Tszyu will win

The former world champ turned commentator believes the Aussie will have the edge in terms of his game plan, mental toughness and ability to adapt.

Porter says he feels he still has to convince Aussies that Tszyu is in the very top ranks of world boxing – and that while Murtazaliev is tough and iron-hard, the Tim will be able to remain calm, figure him out and use his footwork to maintain a good distance.

Basically, Porter is backing Tszyu to adapt to the Russian’s style – while branding the IBF champ more one-dimensional than the Aussie challenger.

More on Tim’s big news with fiancee Alexandra Constantine

Tszyu is a huge fan of American muscle cars – and he’s selling off his beloved 1955 Chevrolet in anticipation of moving to Vegas with his fiancee.

‘I’ve said goodbye to Australia and started to look at houses here. I’m definitely moving … The future does belong here in America,’ he said before the biggest fight of his life.

His manager Glen Jennings is certain the switch to the States is the way forward for his fighter.

‘It’s inevitable, really,’ Jennings said.

‘America is where Tim needs to be to get ready for the highest levels. This is where all the best sparring is and Australia is so small by comparison, and it’s a long way away.

‘As much as Tim will miss home, he will still ahve the luxury of fighting, then shooting home to Sydney for a holiday and getting back to the US.’

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What are the bookies saying?

They’re saying Tszyu, Tszyu, Tszyu – and it’s not even close.

Sportsbet has the Aussie paying $1.16 for the win, with the Russian at $5.75.

Bet365 isn’t far off, with the Aussie at $1.16 and Murtazaliev at $5.

Pretty surprising odds there considering both men are proven knockout artists who like to be aggressive and mix it up. Even when there’s a bit of a gap in class between fighters of that nature, bookies often hedge their bets due to the unpredictable nature of puncher vs puncher fights.

A bit of disappointing news for fans of the ‘Soul Taker’

While a big fight down under beckons the 29-year-old if he gets past Murtazaliev, it could also mean he’ll be distancing himself from his Aussie fans – literally.

Big things in the works for Tszyu if he can overcome the Russian

Tszyu’s backers at boxing promotions company No Limit want him back in the ring, in Australia, before the end of the year if he secures the IBF strap today – with four Aussie cities shortlisted to host the event.

Tim’s Hall of Fame dad Kostya opens up about family split

Kostya and Tim seem to be back on good terms, with the ex-world champion hugging his son as he arrived in Orlando for the flight yesterday – but things haven’t always been rosy between the pair after the former undisputed lightweight king walked out on his family and returned to Russia to live when his eldest son was still a boy.

Now Kostya has revealed why he hardly sees his boys – and what he’s now prepared to do for them when they need his help.

The tale of the tape

Record: 24 wins, 17 victories by knockout, one loss

Record: 22 wins, 16 victories by knockout, 0 losses

A quick look at today’s card

Bakhram Murtazaliev vs Tim Tszyu (IBF junior middleweight/super welterweight title)

Yoenis Tellez vs Johan Gonzalez (super welterweight)

Dainier Pero vs Willie Jake Junior (heavyweight)

Justin Viloria vs Diuhl Olguin (super featherweight)

Carlos Jackson vs Ryan Lee Allen (super bantamweight)

Gary Antonio Russell Jr vs Jaden Burnias (super bantamweight)

G’day and welcome

Thanks for joining us for Daily Mail Australia’s coverage of Tim Tszyu’s battle with Bakhram Murtazaliev for the IBF Super Welterweight world title.

The Aussie might be a big favourite with the bookies but this promises to be a war between two fighters who are known for their aggression and punching power – plus there’s a quality undercard to soak up before we get to the main event.

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