Some rivalries come to define an era. The trilogy between Canelo Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin, fought across five years, gave boxing fans three contrasting chapters and an argument that has never fully been settled. Together the fights told a story about styles, timing, and the razor thin margins that separate the best fighters in the world.
The First Fight: A Draw That Satisfied No One
When the two finally met in September 2017, the bout delivered on its promise. Golovkin pressed forward behind his jab while Canelo countered with sharp combinations and clever defense. The fight was scored a draw, a result made infamous by one judge’s wide card in Canelo’s favor that drew heavy criticism. Most observers felt Golovkin had done enough, and the controversy guaranteed a sequel.
The Second Fight: Canelo Adjusts
The rematch in September 2018 saw a different Canelo. Rather than boxing on the back foot, he met Golovkin in the center of the ring and traded with him, working the body and standing his ground in the exchanges. The result was a majority decision in Canelo’s favor. Again it was close, again some disagreed, but few could argue that Canelo had not shown growth and nerve in changing his approach.
The Third Fight: Time Catches Up
By the time the trilogy concluded in September 2022, the picture had changed. Canelo was the undisputed super middleweight champion and Golovkin had moved up to challenge him at the heavier weight, now in his forties. Canelo won a clear unanimous decision. The fire of the first two meetings flickered only in stretches, a reminder that even the greatest rivalries are bound by the calendar.
Three fights, a combined handful of rounds in the balance, and a debate that still divides fans.
What the Trilogy Taught Us
- Styles make fights. Golovkin’s pressure and Canelo’s counters produced compelling, close action every time.
- Adaptation wins. Canelo’s willingness to change tactics between the first and second fights was decisive.
- Timing matters. The age gap that barely showed in 2017 was significant by 2022.
- Judging remains the sport’s stubborn flaw, and the first fight’s scorecard is still cited as an example.
A Rivalry for the Ages
What made the trilogy special was the respect underneath the rivalry. Two elite fighters tested each other at the highest level, and neither was ever truly dominated. Years from now, fans will still debate the first fight’s true winner and wonder how a meeting at their shared peak might have gone. That lingering argument is the surest sign of a great rivalry, and Canelo and Golovkin gave the sport one of the best of their generation.