Amanda Serrano: ‘I want to show women can fight. We can sell tickets’

The Puerto Rican's fight with Katie Taylor in New York this Saturday has been billed as the biggest in women’s boxing history.
Amanda Serrano: ‘I want to show women can fight. We can sell tickets’

Focused Amanda Serrano doesn’t date, drink, or own a cell phone.

AMANDA Serrano is on top of the world – that’s how it feels, anyway, standing on the 86th-floor observation deck of the Empire State Building on a misty Manhattan afternoon. As the seven-division champion from Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighbourhood poses for photographs, the city unspools behind her, offering an evocative glimpse of Madison Square Garden. In the storied venue’s 140 years of hosting boxing, a women’s fight has never headlined a card – until Saturday night, when Serrano will climb through the ropes to challenge Ireland’s Katie Taylor for the undisputed lightweight championship.

The fight has been billed as the biggest in women’s boxing history – perhaps in recent boxing history, period. Serrano and Taylor are the world’s top two female boxers regardless of weight. The last time the pound-for-pound No 1 and No 2 squared off was more than a decade ago when Manny Pacquiao defeated Juan Manuel Márquez by split decision in 2008.

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