Games

Janis Amolins sweeps Craig Tullier 3-0 at East vs West 24

Amolins' 3-0 sweep of Craig Tullier at East vs West 24 was clean enough to read like control, not luck, and the full match shows why.

Chris Morales··2 min read
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Janis Amolins sweeps Craig Tullier 3-0 at East vs West 24
AI-generated illustration

Janis Amolins did not just beat Craig Tullier at East vs West 24. He swept him 3-0, a result that stands out in a card full of scorelines but says more about control than raw force. In Little Rock, Arkansas, the Right Arm Lightweight bout gave Amolins, “The Jedi,” a clean line in the record and left Tullier, “The Fury,” with a loss that will be measured by where he got neutralized, not just by the final number.

The division label around the matchup shifted slightly across EVW pages, with the event listing also framing it as a welterweight right-arm bout, but the outcome was consistent everywhere it mattered: Amolins won every pull. That is the kind of sweep that usually reflects discipline at the table, because a puller does not reach 3-0 by accident in a sport built around tiny leverage margins. The full-match upload gives fans the chance to watch that progression round by round, and in a match this decisive, the key question is whether Amolins kept Tullier from ever finding a usable lane or simply erased it with superior starting position and finish.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The result also fits the larger East vs West 24 picture. Michael Todd posted a 4-0 win over Oleg Petrenko, and Artyom Morozov beat Ermes Gasparini 4-1, so Amolins’ sweep landed in a night where several top names separated themselves clearly. East vs West set aside June 4, 2026 for athlete merch signing, June 5 for the press conference and VIP dinner and meet-and-greet, then staged the main event on June 6. That kind of event-week buildup only sharpens the value of a score like 3-0, because the line becomes part of how the pull is remembered after the live card fades.

For Amolins, that matters. A sweep at East vs West is more than a clean win; it is a statement that his style can travel under pressure, on a major card, against a named opponent with his own identity in the bracket. If EVW keeps moving him into a stiffer next test, the ceiling question gets more interesting fast. Against a puller who can survive the first surge and stretch the match into messier territory, this same efficiency will have to hold up under far less forgiving conditions. For now, though, Amolins left Little Rock with the sharpest kind of endorsement: three rounds, zero answers from the other side.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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