On to Cairo: Lindenmuth schedules next title quest

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Bosque Farms boxer Katherine Lindenmuth’s Nov. 14 fight against Kazakhstan’s Angelina Lukas in Giza, Egypt, originally announced as a victory by split decision for the New Mexican, has been declared no contest amid allegations that Lindenmuth failed a post-fight doping test.
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Trainer Anthony Rosales holds a poster advertising Bosque Farms’ Katherine Lindenmuth’s Nov. 14 bout in Egypt against Kazakhstan’s Angelina Lukas for the vacant WBA Gold flyweight title. When Rosales and Lindenmuth arrived in Cairo, they were told she’d be fighting for the super flyweight title instead.
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Boxer Katherine Lindenmuth of Bosque Farms, with her trainer Anthony Rosales looking on signs a contract for her Nov. 14 bout against Kazakhstan’s Angelina Lukas in Egypt. The outcome of the bout, originally ruled a victory for Lindemuth, has been changed to no contest after it was alleged that Lindenmuth failed a doping test.
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Katherine Lindenmuth, as adventuresome as ever, announced her next scheduled fight on Thursday.

Will she come home from Cairo, Egypt with another professional boxing title, as well as another stamp in her passport?

That’s the plan. The Bosque Farms battler has signed a contract for a bout against Kazakhstan’s Angelina Lukas in Cairo on Nov. 14, with the vacant WBA Gold flyweight title at stake.

The bout would be Lindenmuth’s second trip overseas. She defeated Thailand’s Pornpimon Pongpaew by second-round TKO in Bangkok on May 31, bringing home the WIBA minimumweight (105-pound) title.

“We’re excited to accept another title opportunity and to bring home another win on foreign soil,” Lindenmuth said on Thursday at a news conference held at Rosales Karate & Kickboxing on Edith NE.

On paper, Lukas (15-1, eight knockouts) would appear to be a solid favorite against Lindenmuth (7-5, three KOs). The 28-year-old Kazakhstani fighter has won titles sponsored by five different sanctioning bodies. And note the eight KOs, as opposed to Lindenmuth’s three.

Anthony Rosales is not impressed.

“I can say that (Lukas) is not a great boxer,” said Rosales, who’s been Lindenmuth’s primary coach for the entirety of her combat-sports career. “She wrestles more than she fights.”

Lindenmuth’s record, meanwhile, belies its strength of schedule. Her five losses have come against boxers with a cumulative record of 52–5. Kim Clavel, who defeated Lindenmuth by unanimous decision in the latter’s hometown of Montreal in May 2024, was a once-and-again world champion, having defeated Sol Cudos for the IBF minimumweight title on Sept. 27.

As a counterpoint, Lindenmuth’s most recent bout was her first defeat by stoppage — a seventh-round loss by TKO against Brook Sibrian on Aug. 2 in San Jacinto, California.

Lindenmuth, 36 and a widowed mother of three, said on Thursday she never contemplated retirement after the Sibrian fight.

“Not at all,” she said. “A loss is never a loss. It’s always a lesson.

“… Sometimes it takes a loss to show you something that you need to work on. And I feel like we came back stronger, and we’re ready to step it up.”

Rosales, for his part, said he did have concerns after the Sibrian fight that it might be time for Lindenmuth to retire.

He doesn’t think so now, believing the Sibrian fight came too soon after the title fight in Bangkok. Though the WIBA title fight was an easy one, Rosales said the two fight camps — for Pongpaew and for Sibrian, bouts separated by 62 days — didn’t give Lindenmuth adequate recovery time.

When Lindenmuth steps into the ring against Lukas on Nov. 14, she’ll have had 104 days between fights.

Another concern: the bout in Cairo is for a 112-pound title. Lindenmuth has weighed in that heavy for a fight only once. She weighed 105 pounds for the Sibrian fight.

Lukas, meanwhile, weighed 114 1/4 for her most recent fight, a victory by sixth-round TKO over Chile’s Daniela Asenjo in a successful defense of Lukas’ IBO super flyweight title.

Lindenmuth is undaunted.

“I do think that when you come up in weight you’re gonna gain a little bit of strength,” she said.

NO DOUBT, HE’S BACK: Las Cruces’ Austin “No Doubt” Trout, the world boxing champion turned bare-knuckle fighter who suffered a broken hand while defeating Carlos Trinidad by split decision on April 4 in Dubai, is scheduled to return on Dec. 5 against Luis Palomino on a BKFC card in Hollywood, Fla.

Trout-Palomino is a rematch of a Feb. 2, 2024 fight won by Trout via unanimous decision. Trout that night won the BKFC welterweight title, which he never lost in the ring. But Julian Lane is now listed as the organization’s welterweight champion, with Trout listed as the No. 1 challenger.

But forget welterweight. The December Trout-Palomino rematch is one-half of a BKFC lightweight tournament, the winner to face the winner of fight between Franco Tenaglia and Ben Bonner.

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