NEW YORK — After Katie Taylor had defeated her for the third time to remain the undisputed 140-pound champion, Amanda Serrano was in tears.
Not because of the sadness over her loss, but because of the appreciation for where women's boxing has gone since the two champions started their trilogy three years ago.
Taylor won by scores of 97-93 Friday night on two judges' cards, while the third had it even at 95-95, for a majority decision. It was the third straight narrow finish between the two, after Taylor won a split decision in their first bout and a narrow unanimous decision in the rematch.
It was another festive atmosphere in front of another sold-out crowd of more than 19,000 at Madison Square Garden that was split between Irish and Puerto Rican fans, just the way it was when they first fought here on April 30, 2022, in what was the first women's boxing match to headline the arena.
This time, the arena hosted its first all-women's card that streamed on Netflix, with many of the fighters saying during the leadup they owed their opportunity to the interest created by the Taylor-Serrano trilogy.
''It was truly an amazing night for all of us women and I'm crying because it's all because of you guys,'' Serrano told the crowd in the ring afterward. ''You guys support us women and thanks to all of you we're able to show our skills.''
Back in Madison Square Garden, site of their first bout, Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn't as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call.
''We made history again three times,'' said Taylor, the 2012 Olympic gold medalist. ''It's such a privilege to share the ring with her and we're history makers forever, and my name is embedded with Amanda's forever and I'm so happy about that.''