Ennis stops Stanionis to unify two welterweweight titles |
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Boots Ennis TKO6 Eimantis Stanionis... Boots Ennis performed spectacularly in Atlantic City, New Jersey on Saturday, adding Eimantis Stanionis' WBA welterweight title to the IBF version Ennis already owned. Ennis bloodied and punished Stanionis, knocking him down in the sixth round. At the end of the round, Stanionis' corner stopped the fight, making Ennis a unified champion with a 34-0 record. Stanionis is now listed at 15-1, but 19-4 is the more accurate record taking into account paid fights in the World Series of Boxing. Stanioinis landed a few solid punches when he threw with Ennis, but Ennis landed the harder punches consistently and in general, Ennis' movement was too much for Stanionis to deal with. Further unification is a goal of Ennis', and he certainly would be favored against both of the other welterweight champions, Mario Barrios (WBC) and Brian Norman (WBO).
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Ennis stops Stanionis to unify two welterweweight titles
Boots Ennis TKO6 Eimantis Stanionis... Boots Ennis performed spectacularly in Atlantic City, New Jersey on Saturday, adding Eimantis Stanionis' WBA welterweight title to the IBF version Ennis already owned. Ennis bloodied and punished Stanionis, knocking him down in the sixth round. At the end of the round, Stanionis' corner stopped the fight, making Ennis a unified champion with a 34-0 record. Stanionis is now listed at 15-1, but 19-4 is the more accurate record taking into account paid fights in the World Series of Boxing. Stanioinis landed a few solid punches when he threw with Ennis, but Ennis landed the harder punches consistently and in general, Ennis' movement was too much for Stanionis to deal with. Further unification is a goal of Ennis', and he certainly would be favored against both of the other welterweight champions, Mario Barrios (WBC) and Brian Norman (WBO).
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Serrano and Shields show respect for each other |
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A social media conversation between two multi-division boxing legends, world featherweight champion Amanda Serrano (pictured) and world heavyweight champion Claressa Shields. '
Serrano: "[I'm] not sure why people keep comparing or asking who is better, myself or Claressa Shields. She is an amazing fighter with the highest accolades. I have my own set of accomplishments and accolades. She’s a big woman and I a smaller one. Not sure it makes sense for either one of us to be compared. I will never go over 140 pounds which is already three [weight] divisions past my best weight of 126 where I’m champion. I believe she can’t make 140. I have accomplished everything I’ve wanted in this sport and now I’m making more money than I know what to do with. Please just enjoy the multiple solid female fighters. If you did that. you’d find out theres more than just one female fighter worth watching. Thank you."
Shields: "100% right, I can not make 140. 154 pounds is my lowest, but the past four years, the top three women in boxing have been myself, Katie Taylor and you! Keep it up!"
Serrano: "Honestly for me it’s an honor to be mentioned beside you and Katie. Both of you guys have raised the game. I’ve never had a problem with whatever placing I’m put in. We are all doing the best we can to elevate the game. Right now I’m more excited about helping all my girls reach their highest potential. I’m more happy about this new venture than [about] getting personal credit. I will pour my heart, soul & energy to assure they have it easier than I did. As a woman I know our struggles and if I didn’t think I deserved it I’m positive they don’t. What we are today champ they will be in the future and they will have us to thank. Let’s Keep opening doors for them. If anyone has the power we do. Let’s pass on some of our blessings. We have plenty."
Shields: "Beautiful speech Amanda. We are both doing our part as fighters and pioneers to raise the bar for the women’s boxing so it’s a blue print to the millions and recognition! Women's boxing has come a long way! Proud of us! The girls coming up after us have beautiful things to look forward too!"
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Serrano and Shields show respect for each other
A social media conversation between two multi-division boxing legends, world featherweight champion Amanda Serrano (pictured) and world heavyweight champion Claressa Shields. '
Serrano: "[I'm] not sure why people keep comparing or asking who is better, myself or Claressa Shields. She is an amazing fighter with the highest accolades. I have my own set of accomplishments and accolades. She’s a big woman and I a smaller one. Not sure it makes sense for either one of us to be compared. I will never go over 140 pounds which is already three [weight] divisions past my best weight of 126 where I’m champion. I believe she can’t make 140. I have accomplished everything I’ve wanted in this sport and now I’m making more money than I know what to do with. Please just enjoy the multiple solid female fighters. If you did that. you’d find out theres more than just one female fighter worth watching. Thank you."
Shields: "100% right, I can not make 140. 154 pounds is my lowest, but the past four years, the top three women in boxing have been myself, Katie Taylor and you! Keep it up!"
Serrano: "Honestly for me it’s an honor to be mentioned beside you and Katie. Both of you guys have raised the game. I’ve never had a problem with whatever placing I’m put in. We are all doing the best we can to elevate the game. Right now I’m more excited about helping all my girls reach their highest potential. I’m more happy about this new venture than [about] getting personal credit. I will pour my heart, soul & energy to assure they have it easier than I did. As a woman I know our struggles and if I didn’t think I deserved it I’m positive they don’t. What we are today champ they will be in the future and they will have us to thank. Let’s Keep opening doors for them. If anyone has the power we do. Let’s pass on some of our blessings. We have plenty."
Shields: "Beautiful speech Amanda. We are both doing our part as fighters and pioneers to raise the bar for the women’s boxing so it’s a blue print to the millions and recognition! Women's boxing has come a long way! Proud of us! The girls coming up after us have beautiful things to look forward too!"
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Mary Spencer retains her title in Montreal |
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Mary Spencer W10 Ogleidis Suárez... In Montreal, Canada's Mary Spencer delivered a dominant performance against Venezuela’s Ogleidis Suárez, successfully defending her WBA junior middleweight crown. The judges left no doubt, scoring the ten-round bout 99-91 and 100-90 (twice), a unanimous decision in favor of the hometown fighter. From the opening bell, Spencer imposed her will, using her reach and sharp accuracy to keep Suárez on the back foot. The Venezuelan showed plenty of heart and grit, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Spencer’s relentless pace and tactical execution. With this win, Spencer not only retains her world title but sends a message to the rest of the 154-pound division: she’s here to stay. The victory improves Spencer’s record to 10 wins (6 by knockout) with 2 losses, and marks her third straight win. As for Suárez (31-6-1), the veteran warrior will need some time to regroup.
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Mary Spencer retains her title in Montreal
Mary Spencer W10 Ogleidis Suárez... In Montreal, Canada's Mary Spencer delivered a dominant performance against Venezuela’s Ogleidis Suárez, successfully defending her WBA junior middleweight crown. The judges left no doubt, scoring the ten-round bout 99-91 and 100-90 (twice), a unanimous decision in favor of the hometown fighter. From the opening bell, Spencer imposed her will, using her reach and sharp accuracy to keep Suárez on the back foot. The Venezuelan showed plenty of heart and grit, but it wasn’t enough to overcome Spencer’s relentless pace and tactical execution. With this win, Spencer not only retains her world title but sends a message to the rest of the 154-pound division: she’s here to stay. The victory improves Spencer’s record to 10 wins (6 by knockout) with 2 losses, and marks her third straight win. As for Suárez (31-6-1), the veteran warrior will need some time to regroup.
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Today: Jordan White headlines in Maryland |
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On Saturday April 12th at Live! Casino Hotel in Hanover, Maryland, junior lightweight Jordan “Shortdog” White (18-1 with 12 KOs), who fights out of Washington D.C., will meet Argentina's Jose Matias Romero (29-3 with 10 KOs). White had two outings in 2024, stopping Jonathan Oquendo-Arnaldi in a round and then outscoring Jason Sanchez over ten rounds. Romero has won three in a row since a 2022 loss to ex-champ Robeisy Ramirez. “I’m here to tell you,” said junior lightweight champion Lamont Roach, “NoXcuse Promotions, brought to you by my dad, and ProBox TV, are back with another great night of action-packed fights, headlined by Jordan White, with a supporting cast of DMV’s hottest stars, not to mention my little brother. Y’all better beat me there, because I’m gonna be there. If you can’t make it, watch it on ProBox TV. We’re gonna have a blast.” Roach, of course, is coming off a disputed draw with lightweight star Gervonta Davis last month and is hoping to secure a rematch soon, but in the meantime he will be supporting his family and gymmates at the Casino Hotel.
Heavyweight Stephan Shaw is 20-2 and has stopped 15 of his victims. The 32-year-old, from St Louis was narrowly outscored by Efe Ajagba in 2023, and now Ajagba has an eliminator for the IBF heavyweight title against Martin Bakole next month. Shaw, coming off two first-round knockout wins, is in against Florida-based Nigerian Raphael Alpejiori, who is 18-1 with 17 knockouts. He returned from his lone loss in 2023 to win three times in 2024 and now meets the heavy-hitting Shaw in a potentially explosive clash.
A third scheduled ten-rounder on the show pits William Foster III, of New Haven, Connecticut, against fellow junior lightweight Brandon Leon Benitez. Nicknamed “The Silent Assassin," Foster is 18-2 with 11 KOs after winning two of his three fights in 2024. A former featherweight from Mexico, Benitez (21-3 with 9 KOs) is coming off a defeat to Robeisy Ramirez last June.
There is a host of local talent on the show, too, with welterweight David Whitmire (9-0, 6 KOs), junior bantamweight Jordan Roach (3-0, 1 KO), welterweight Ben Johnson (3-0, 3 KOs), and junior lightweight Francois Scarboro Jr. (9-0, 7 KOs).
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Today: Jordan White headlines in Maryland
On Saturday April 12th at Live! Casino Hotel in Hanover, Maryland, junior lightweight Jordan “Shortdog” White (18-1 with 12 KOs), who fights out of Washington D.C., will meet Argentina's Jose Matias Romero (29-3 with 10 KOs). White had two outings in 2024, stopping Jonathan Oquendo-Arnaldi in a round and then outscoring Jason Sanchez over ten rounds. Romero has won three in a row since a 2022 loss to ex-champ Robeisy Ramirez. “I’m here to tell you,” said junior lightweight champion Lamont Roach, “NoXcuse Promotions, brought to you by my dad, and ProBox TV, are back with another great night of action-packed fights, headlined by Jordan White, with a supporting cast of DMV’s hottest stars, not to mention my little brother. Y’all better beat me there, because I’m gonna be there. If you can’t make it, watch it on ProBox TV. We’re gonna have a blast.” Roach, of course, is coming off a disputed draw with lightweight star Gervonta Davis last month and is hoping to secure a rematch soon, but in the meantime he will be supporting his family and gymmates at the Casino Hotel.
Heavyweight Stephan Shaw is 20-2 and has stopped 15 of his victims. The 32-year-old, from St Louis was narrowly outscored by Efe Ajagba in 2023, and now Ajagba has an eliminator for the IBF heavyweight title against Martin Bakole next month. Shaw, coming off two first-round knockout wins, is in against Florida-based Nigerian Raphael Alpejiori, who is 18-1 with 17 knockouts. He returned from his lone loss in 2023 to win three times in 2024 and now meets the heavy-hitting Shaw in a potentially explosive clash.
A third scheduled ten-rounder on the show pits William Foster III, of New Haven, Connecticut, against fellow junior lightweight Brandon Leon Benitez. Nicknamed “The Silent Assassin," Foster is 18-2 with 11 KOs after winning two of his three fights in 2024. A former featherweight from Mexico, Benitez (21-3 with 9 KOs) is coming off a defeat to Robeisy Ramirez last June.
There is a host of local talent on the show, too, with welterweight David Whitmire (9-0, 6 KOs), junior bantamweight Jordan Roach (3-0, 1 KO), welterweight Ben Johnson (3-0, 3 KOs), and junior lightweight Francois Scarboro Jr. (9-0, 7 KOs).
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Franchón Crews-Dezurn coming back with Salita Promotions |
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Promoter Dmitriy Salita announced the signing of Franchón Crews-Dezurn to a promotional contract. Crews-Dezurn won the world super middleweight championship in 2022 vs. Ellen Cederoos but lost to Savannah Marshall in her next fight. She regained the vacant WBC title by defeating Shadasia Green. Crews-Dezurn has a 9-2 record but has not fought since her win over Green in December of 2023. Salita wrote on social media: "Excited to welcome current unified world champion Franchón Crews-Dezurn to Salita Promotions. Franchón is a trailblazer—an elite athlete, powerful voice, and true original in the sport. As she sets out to reclaim her undisputed crown, we’re excited to be in her corner for the next chapter of her incredible journey. Stay tuned—big fights ahead!"
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Franchón Crews-Dezurn coming back with Salita Promotions
Promoter Dmitriy Salita announced the signing of Franchón Crews-Dezurn to a promotional contract. Crews-Dezurn won the world super middleweight championship in 2022 vs. Ellen Cederoos but lost to Savannah Marshall in her next fight. She regained the vacant WBC title by defeating Shadasia Green. Crews-Dezurn has a 9-2 record but has not fought since her win over Green in December of 2023. Salita wrote on social media: "Excited to welcome current unified world champion Franchón Crews-Dezurn to Salita Promotions. Franchón is a trailblazer—an elite athlete, powerful voice, and true original in the sport. As she sets out to reclaim her undisputed crown, we’re excited to be in her corner for the next chapter of her incredible journey. Stay tuned—big fights ahead!"
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Fundora negotiating to face Zayas next |
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UPDATE: WBO president Gustavo Olivieri wrote, "Fundora/Zayas negotiations - Be advised that Top Rank / PBC have jointly requested an extension of the negotiation period. [The WBO Championship] Committee grants extension until Friday, April 25th, no later than 4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time)."
MARCH 25, 2025: The WBO has designated Puerto Rico's undefeated Xander Zayas as its mandatory challenger in the junior middleweight division, stating "Champion Sebastian Fundora [pictured] must fulfill his WBO mandatory title defense obligation in his next bout against Zayas. Failure to do so will result in [the WBO Cjhampionship] Committee proceeding in accordance with WBO rules and regulations. Fundora will not be permitted any intervening bout, the two teams shall commence negotiation immediately to fulfill the title defense pursuing to the WBO rules. They have 20 days to reach an agreement after which a per proceeding will be ordered. If no agreement is reached. The minimum bid under WBO rules is $200,000." Fundora also holds the WBC title, so he has leverage to decline to fight Zayas and still remain WBC champion.
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Fundora negotiating to face Zayas next
UPDATE: WBO president Gustavo Olivieri wrote, "Fundora/Zayas negotiations - Be advised that Top Rank / PBC have jointly requested an extension of the negotiation period. [The WBO Championship] Committee grants extension until Friday, April 25th, no later than 4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time)."
MARCH 25, 2025: The WBO has designated Puerto Rico's undefeated Xander Zayas as its mandatory challenger in the junior middleweight division, stating "Champion Sebastian Fundora [pictured] must fulfill his WBO mandatory title defense obligation in his next bout against Zayas. Failure to do so will result in [the WBO Cjhampionship] Committee proceeding in accordance with WBO rules and regulations. Fundora will not be permitted any intervening bout, the two teams shall commence negotiation immediately to fulfill the title defense pursuing to the WBO rules. They have 20 days to reach an agreement after which a per proceeding will be ordered. If no agreement is reached. The minimum bid under WBO rules is $200,000." Fundora also holds the WBC title, so he has leverage to decline to fight Zayas and still remain WBC champion.
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IOC adopts new weight classes for 2028 Games |
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The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has confirmed the weight classes and quota places for the boxing competition at the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 2028. There will be full parity between men and women, meaning seven weight classes and 124 spots in the competition for each sex. Parity in the weight classes means an additional weight category has been added to the female competition from Paris 2024, where there were seven classes for men (125 quota places) and six for women (124 quota places).
The news follows the decision by the 144th Session of the IOC (on March 20th) to restore boxing to the Olympic program for 2028. For the first time, the competition and qualification pathway will be managed by World Boxing after it was granted provisional recognition by the IOC in February 2025 as the International Federation (IF) for boxing within the Olympic Movement.
The weight classes for boxing at 2028 games will be:
MEN: bantamweight (121.2 pounds); lightweight (132.2); welterweight (143.3); junior middleweight (154.3); light heavyweight (176.3); heavyweight (198.4) and super heavyweight (198.4+)
WOMEN: flyweight (112.4 pounds); bantamweight (119); featherweight (125.6); lightweight (132.2); welterweight (143.3); junior middleweight (154.3); heavyweight (the Olympic announcement listed 75 KG or 165.3 pounds as the heavyweight limit for women).
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IOC adopts new weight classes for 2028 Games
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has confirmed the weight classes and quota places for the boxing competition at the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 2028. There will be full parity between men and women, meaning seven weight classes and 124 spots in the competition for each sex. Parity in the weight classes means an additional weight category has been added to the female competition from Paris 2024, where there were seven classes for men (125 quota places) and six for women (124 quota places).
The news follows the decision by the 144th Session of the IOC (on March 20th) to restore boxing to the Olympic program for 2028. For the first time, the competition and qualification pathway will be managed by World Boxing after it was granted provisional recognition by the IOC in February 2025 as the International Federation (IF) for boxing within the Olympic Movement.
The weight classes for boxing at 2028 games will be:
MEN: bantamweight (121.2 pounds); lightweight (132.2); welterweight (143.3); junior middleweight (154.3); light heavyweight (176.3); heavyweight (198.4) and super heavyweight (198.4+)
WOMEN: flyweight (112.4 pounds); bantamweight (119); featherweight (125.6); lightweight (132.2); welterweight (143.3); junior middleweight (154.3); heavyweight (the Olympic announcement listed 75 KG or 165.3 pounds as the heavyweight limit for women).
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Cardenas: from driver to challenging for the world championship |
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Ramon “Dinamita” Cardenas has gone from side hustles to the main stage. The San Antonio-born junior featherweight is preparing to fight undisputed champion and pound-for-pound king Naoya Inoue on Sunday, May 4th at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Cardenas (26-1, 14 KOs), winner of 14 straight fights, is riding a string of standout victories, including February’s decision over Bryan Acosta. It wasn’t too long ago, however, that he moonlighted as a rideshare and meal delivery driver. Those gigs helped pay some bills while he built his name as an emerging prospect. Now a consensus top-10 contender, Cardenas and his head trainer, Joel Diaz, were always confident a title shot would come. “The Monster” needed an opponent for his first stateside appearance in nearly four years, and Team Cardenas jumped at the chance to author an epic upset. To prepare for Inoue, Cardenas is stationed in Indio, California, at the Diaz Brothers Training Camp. Cardenas and Diaz understand the mammoth task and embrace the underdog mindset. This is what they had to say following a day of training:
Ramon Cardenas
“I got a call a week after my last fight, and my manager {Michael Miller} asked me, ‘Hey, do you want to fight Inoue?’ Opportunities like this don’t come around often, so I had to jump at it.”
“I’ve been mentally preparing to fight Inoue for a long time. I knew I'd eventually get a big fight if I kept winning. And here we are, a shot at the undisputed champion of the world.”
“This is Inoue’s first fight in America in four years, so I know he’s motivated to show out. I’m prepared for the very best version of Naoya Inoue.”
“I know this is the type of fight and moment that can eat people up, but the ring doesn’t change. You can put it in the middle of the ocean. You can put it in the middle of the desert. The ring is the ring. It has four corners. I see it like that and understand the magnitude of this fight. I asked for his moment, and now I have to take advantage of it.”
“I started doing Lyft, DoorDash, and Uber to make ends meet. To fight for a world title is one thing, but to fight for the undisputed championship is the ultimate prize. For me to be in this position shows my work ethic and self-belief because I knew I was going to get here."
Joel Diaz
“This kid has devastating power in both hands. He is one of the fighters in boxing who can hurt you in the first or last round because he hits so hard. He moves really well, has good defense, and will rise to the moment.”
“If Ramon catches Inoue with either the right or the left, he will hurt him. We know that Inoue can be hurt.”
“Early in his career, he fought for free. All he wanted was a soda and some tacos after the fight. He started from nothing. He’s here, he loves the sport, and we’re going to shock the world.”
Inoue-Cardenas and the Rafael Espinoza-Edward Vazquez featherweight world title fight will be broadcast live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes, and ESPN+ at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT.
Promoted by Top Rank, in association with Ohashi Promotion, Teiken Promotions, and Sampson Boxing, tickets are on sale now via AXS.com.
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Cardenas: from driver to challenging for the world championship
Ramon “Dinamita” Cardenas has gone from side hustles to the main stage. The San Antonio-born junior featherweight is preparing to fight undisputed champion and pound-for-pound king Naoya Inoue on Sunday, May 4th at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Cardenas (26-1, 14 KOs), winner of 14 straight fights, is riding a string of standout victories, including February’s decision over Bryan Acosta. It wasn’t too long ago, however, that he moonlighted as a rideshare and meal delivery driver. Those gigs helped pay some bills while he built his name as an emerging prospect. Now a consensus top-10 contender, Cardenas and his head trainer, Joel Diaz, were always confident a title shot would come. “The Monster” needed an opponent for his first stateside appearance in nearly four years, and Team Cardenas jumped at the chance to author an epic upset. To prepare for Inoue, Cardenas is stationed in Indio, California, at the Diaz Brothers Training Camp. Cardenas and Diaz understand the mammoth task and embrace the underdog mindset. This is what they had to say following a day of training:
Ramon Cardenas
“I got a call a week after my last fight, and my manager {Michael Miller} asked me, ‘Hey, do you want to fight Inoue?’ Opportunities like this don’t come around often, so I had to jump at it.”
“I’ve been mentally preparing to fight Inoue for a long time. I knew I'd eventually get a big fight if I kept winning. And here we are, a shot at the undisputed champion of the world.”
“This is Inoue’s first fight in America in four years, so I know he’s motivated to show out. I’m prepared for the very best version of Naoya Inoue.”
“I know this is the type of fight and moment that can eat people up, but the ring doesn’t change. You can put it in the middle of the ocean. You can put it in the middle of the desert. The ring is the ring. It has four corners. I see it like that and understand the magnitude of this fight. I asked for his moment, and now I have to take advantage of it.”
“I started doing Lyft, DoorDash, and Uber to make ends meet. To fight for a world title is one thing, but to fight for the undisputed championship is the ultimate prize. For me to be in this position shows my work ethic and self-belief because I knew I was going to get here."
Joel Diaz
“This kid has devastating power in both hands. He is one of the fighters in boxing who can hurt you in the first or last round because he hits so hard. He moves really well, has good defense, and will rise to the moment.”
“If Ramon catches Inoue with either the right or the left, he will hurt him. We know that Inoue can be hurt.”
“Early in his career, he fought for free. All he wanted was a soda and some tacos after the fight. He started from nothing. He’s here, he loves the sport, and we’re going to shock the world.”
Inoue-Cardenas and the Rafael Espinoza-Edward Vazquez featherweight world title fight will be broadcast live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes, and ESPN+ at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT.
Promoted by Top Rank, in association with Ohashi Promotion, Teiken Promotions, and Sampson Boxing, tickets are on sale now via AXS.com.
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Cherneka Johnson extends pact with DiBella Entertainment |
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Two-division champion Cherneka “Sugar Neekz” Johnson (17-2, 7 KOs) has signed a new multi-fight promotional agreement with DiBella Entertainment, extending the partnership. The signing comes on the heels of Johnson’s knockout victory in a rematch against Nina Hughes on March 22nd in Sydney, in her first defense of her WBA bantamweight championship. The 30 year-old Melbourne-based fighter, originally from Tauranga, New Zealand, has become a rising force in women’s boxing. A decorated amateur, Johnson represented Australia in international competition, capturing three National titles, three Golden Gloves championships, and international gold before turning professional. |
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Cherneka Johnson extends pact with DiBella Entertainment
Two-division champion Cherneka “Sugar Neekz” Johnson (17-2, 7 KOs) has signed a new multi-fight promotional agreement with DiBella Entertainment, extending the partnership. The signing comes on the heels of Johnson’s knockout victory in a rematch against Nina Hughes on March 22nd in Sydney, in her first defense of her WBA bantamweight championship. The 30 year-old Melbourne-based fighter, originally from Tauranga, New Zealand, has become a rising force in women’s boxing. A decorated amateur, Johnson represented Australia in international competition, capturing three National titles, three Golden Gloves championships, and international gold before turning professional. |
Weigh-in report from Florida |
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Here are the boxers' weights for Friday's show at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida:
Armando Martinez Rabi 133.8 vs. Alberto Guevara 133.8 (ten rounds);
Andrey Bonilla 117.8 pounds vs. Ryan Shaw 117.6;
Ari Bonilla 114.4 vs. Josue Morales 115.6;
John David Martinez 161 vs. Ramon De La Cruz Sena TBA;
Montaser Aboughaly 145.8 vs. Sirarminius Williams 150.6;
Alexander Hernandez 159.8 vs. Lester Medrano 157.8;
Miguel Rosario Paredes 133.2 vs. Alexander Taylor 133.2;
Victor Abreu 128.4 vs. Jose Saant 124.6;
Luis Hernandez 126.8 vs. Jose Rodriguez-Crespo 125.2; and
Alex Ochoa 130.6 vs. Darwin Mendoza 133.8.
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Weigh-in report from Florida
Here are the boxers' weights for Friday's show at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida:
Armando Martinez Rabi 133.8 vs. Alberto Guevara 133.8 (ten rounds);
Andrey Bonilla 117.8 pounds vs. Ryan Shaw 117.6;
Ari Bonilla 114.4 vs. Josue Morales 115.6;
John David Martinez 161 vs. Ramon De La Cruz Sena TBA;
Montaser Aboughaly 145.8 vs. Sirarminius Williams 150.6;
Alexander Hernandez 159.8 vs. Lester Medrano 157.8;
Miguel Rosario Paredes 133.2 vs. Alexander Taylor 133.2;
Victor Abreu 128.4 vs. Jose Saant 124.6;
Luis Hernandez 126.8 vs. Jose Rodriguez-Crespo 125.2; and
Alex Ochoa 130.6 vs. Darwin Mendoza 133.8.
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IBF orders Ferreira vs. Ferreyra mandatory |
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On March 7th, the IBF ordered its female lightweight champion Beatriz Ferreira of Brazil to begin negotiations for her mandatory defense against Maria Ines Ferreyra of Argentina. On Thursday, the IBF scheduled a purse bid for Tuesday, April 22nd, but then quickly recalled the notice and advised Boxingtalk that the women had reached an agreement to fight. The champion is 6-0, having won the vacant title against Yanina del Carmen Lescano in April and then defended it against Licia Boudersa in December. The contender is 11-0-1 with three quality victories on her resume and several fights against women wqith losing records. Details about the date or location of Ferreira vs. Ferreyra were not immediately avaialble. |
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IBF orders Ferreira vs. Ferreyra mandatory
On March 7th, the IBF ordered its female lightweight champion Beatriz Ferreira of Brazil to begin negotiations for her mandatory defense against Maria Ines Ferreyra of Argentina. On Thursday, the IBF scheduled a purse bid for Tuesday, April 22nd, but then quickly recalled the notice and advised Boxingtalk that the women had reached an agreement to fight. The champion is 6-0, having won the vacant title against Yanina del Carmen Lescano in April and then defended it against Licia Boudersa in December. The contender is 11-0-1 with three quality victories on her resume and several fights against women wqith losing records. Details about the date or location of Ferreira vs. Ferreyra were not immediately avaialble. |
Pro boxing returns to Cuba on Friday after 64-year absence |
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After more than six decades in the shadows, professional boxing is set to make its long-awaited return to Cuba. On Friday, April 11th, the iconic Meliá Internacional Hotel in Varadero will host a boxing event destined to reshape the island’s sporting landscape. For the first time in 64 years, Cuban fighters will lace up the gloves under the bright lights of a professional show, reigniting a flame that once made Cuba a powerhouse in the global boxing scene. Headlining the historic card is Julio César La Cruz—nicknamed “La Sombra”—a decorated amateur legend now carving his path in the pro ranks. La Cruz will square off against Montenegro’s Dilan Prasovic in a WBA-sanctioned bridgerweight world title eliminator. With multiple Olympic and world titles already in his trophy case, La Cruz is now within striking distance of becoming Cuba’s next world champion. More than just a fight, this bout represents the rebirth of Cuban prizefighting on the world stage.
The night won’t begin and end with La Cruz. The undercard is loaded with top-tier Cuban talent looking to stake their claims on the international scene:
Arlen López vs. Martín Ezequiel Bulacio (light heavyweights);
Lázaro Álvarez vs. Miguel Queliz Santos (lightweights);
Erislandy Álvarez vs. Brainer Vásquez (junior welterweights);
Moussa Gholam vs. Misael Vásquez (junior lightweights);
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Pro boxing returns to Cuba on Friday after 64-year absence
After more than six decades in the shadows, professional boxing is set to make its long-awaited return to Cuba. On Friday, April 11th, the iconic Meliá Internacional Hotel in Varadero will host a boxing event destined to reshape the island’s sporting landscape. For the first time in 64 years, Cuban fighters will lace up the gloves under the bright lights of a professional show, reigniting a flame that once made Cuba a powerhouse in the global boxing scene. Headlining the historic card is Julio César La Cruz—nicknamed “La Sombra”—a decorated amateur legend now carving his path in the pro ranks. La Cruz will square off against Montenegro’s Dilan Prasovic in a WBA-sanctioned bridgerweight world title eliminator. With multiple Olympic and world titles already in his trophy case, La Cruz is now within striking distance of becoming Cuba’s next world champion. More than just a fight, this bout represents the rebirth of Cuban prizefighting on the world stage.
The night won’t begin and end with La Cruz. The undercard is loaded with top-tier Cuban talent looking to stake their claims on the international scene:
Arlen López vs. Martín Ezequiel Bulacio (light heavyweights);
Lázaro Álvarez vs. Miguel Queliz Santos (lightweights);
Erislandy Álvarez vs. Brainer Vásquez (junior welterweights);
Moussa Gholam vs. Misael Vásquez (junior lightweights);
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Espinoza: "I haven't shown what I'm capable of" |
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WBO featherweight champion Rafael Espinoza (pictured) and Mexican-American junior welterweight Emiliano Fernando Vargas joined together for a special press conference Tuesday afternoon in Mexico City. Espinoza (26-0, 22 KOs) will defend his crown against Edward Vazquez as the co-feature to the Naoya Inoue-Ramon Cardenas world junior featherweight title showdown on Sunday, May 4th at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Vargas (13-0, 11 KOs), the son of former champion Fernando Vargas, will see action on the bill in an eight-rounder against an opponent to be named. A capable singer, Espinoza regaled the crowd with his rendition of "El Rey" while backed by a mariachi band. He then visited the famed Romanza Gym, where Hall of Fame trainer Nacho Beristáin has nurtured champions such as Juan Manuel Marquez and Jhonny Gonzalez for over three decades. Espinoza aims to make the third defense of his title on Cince De Mayo weekend, five months removed from a sixth-round TKO over Robeisy Ramirez in their rematch.
Vargas made his 2025 debut on March 29th with a second-round stoppage over Giovannie Gonzalez. Fully recovered from a hand injury that sidelined him for several months, Vargas makes a rapid return on a Las Vegas super card. This is what Espinoza and Vargas had to say at Tuesday's press conference.
Rafael Espinoza
"We know that Vazquez is an opponent who is very prepared. We know that it's going to make for a great fight. He's a warrior who's not going to give up because he wants everything that I have. So, you are going to see the best version of 'El Divino.'"
"The Vazquez fight is my priority, but I want the {Inoue} fight because it's going to make me a pound-for-pound fighter, and that's my goal. It's a very strong goal."
"I haven't shown what I'm capable of. I'm a world champion, but I want to show that I'm the best."
Emiliano Fernando Vargas
"This is something really special to me, being here in Mexico City, which is where my blood is from. I'm proud to be Mexican and American and happy to be here."
"I want to keep winning. I want to keep growing. The only thing I'm focused on is my May 4 bout, and we have about four fights planned for this year. But I gotta get through May 4 first and keep winning. I'm going to shine like the star that God made me. He made me in his image and a little in the image of my dad. I'm happy to be back May 4."
Inoue-Cardenas and Espinoza-Vazquez will be broadcast live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes, and ESPN+ at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT. Vargas' bout and the rest of the undercard will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+.
Promoted by Top Rank, in association with Ohashi Promotion, Teiken Promotions, and Sampson Boxing, tickets are on sale now via AXS.com.
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Espinoza: "I haven't shown what I'm capable of"
WBO featherweight champion Rafael Espinoza (pictured) and Mexican-American junior welterweight Emiliano Fernando Vargas joined together for a special press conference Tuesday afternoon in Mexico City. Espinoza (26-0, 22 KOs) will defend his crown against Edward Vazquez as the co-feature to the Naoya Inoue-Ramon Cardenas world junior featherweight title showdown on Sunday, May 4th at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Vargas (13-0, 11 KOs), the son of former champion Fernando Vargas, will see action on the bill in an eight-rounder against an opponent to be named. A capable singer, Espinoza regaled the crowd with his rendition of "El Rey" while backed by a mariachi band. He then visited the famed Romanza Gym, where Hall of Fame trainer Nacho Beristáin has nurtured champions such as Juan Manuel Marquez and Jhonny Gonzalez for over three decades. Espinoza aims to make the third defense of his title on Cince De Mayo weekend, five months removed from a sixth-round TKO over Robeisy Ramirez in their rematch.
Vargas made his 2025 debut on March 29th with a second-round stoppage over Giovannie Gonzalez. Fully recovered from a hand injury that sidelined him for several months, Vargas makes a rapid return on a Las Vegas super card. This is what Espinoza and Vargas had to say at Tuesday's press conference.
Rafael Espinoza
"We know that Vazquez is an opponent who is very prepared. We know that it's going to make for a great fight. He's a warrior who's not going to give up because he wants everything that I have. So, you are going to see the best version of 'El Divino.'"
"The Vazquez fight is my priority, but I want the {Inoue} fight because it's going to make me a pound-for-pound fighter, and that's my goal. It's a very strong goal."
"I haven't shown what I'm capable of. I'm a world champion, but I want to show that I'm the best."
Emiliano Fernando Vargas
"This is something really special to me, being here in Mexico City, which is where my blood is from. I'm proud to be Mexican and American and happy to be here."
"I want to keep winning. I want to keep growing. The only thing I'm focused on is my May 4 bout, and we have about four fights planned for this year. But I gotta get through May 4 first and keep winning. I'm going to shine like the star that God made me. He made me in his image and a little in the image of my dad. I'm happy to be back May 4."
Inoue-Cardenas and Espinoza-Vazquez will be broadcast live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes, and ESPN+ at 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT. Vargas' bout and the rest of the undercard will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+.
Promoted by Top Rank, in association with Ohashi Promotion, Teiken Promotions, and Sampson Boxing, tickets are on sale now via AXS.com.
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Ex-champ Ford back in action on Saturday |
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Raymond Ford continues his pursuit to becoming a two-time, two-weight World champion as he faces Thomas Mattice fin a super featherweight contest on Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey. DAZN will televise the fight, which serves as the chief support for the Boots Ennis vs. Eimantis Stanionis welterweight unification contest. Ford (16-1-1 8 KOs) fights at 130 pounds for the second time after moving up from featherweight. In November, Ford routed Orlando Gonzalez over ten rounds in Philadelphia. Ford won the WBA featherweight title with a stunning last-gasp KO win over Otabek Kholmatov in March in Verona, NY. He was edged out in his first defense by a razor-thin split decision reversal against Nick Ball in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in June.
Also on the show, Arturo Cardenas will be in a super bantamweight tussle with Christian Carto...
Team USA’s Olympic bronze medal man Omari Jones fights for the second time in the paid ranks against William Jackson over six rounds at welterweight...
Welterweight contender Shakhram Giyasov will open the show live on DAZN over ten rounds against Franco Ocampo as the Uzbek man waits for his shot at a world title...
DAZN's Before The Bell action sees three young tri-state talents compete as Atlantic City’s Francisco Rodriguez takes on Camden, New Jersey’s Naheem Parker over eight rounds at lightweight...
Philadelphia’s Tahmir Small’s takes on Washington DC’s Bermudan Earl Bascome over eight rounds at welterweight and...
Newark, New Jersey’s Zaquin Moses takes on Alex Palette over four rounds at super featherweight.
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Ex-champ Ford back in action on Saturday
Raymond Ford continues his pursuit to becoming a two-time, two-weight World champion as he faces Thomas Mattice fin a super featherweight contest on Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey. DAZN will televise the fight, which serves as the chief support for the Boots Ennis vs. Eimantis Stanionis welterweight unification contest. Ford (16-1-1 8 KOs) fights at 130 pounds for the second time after moving up from featherweight. In November, Ford routed Orlando Gonzalez over ten rounds in Philadelphia. Ford won the WBA featherweight title with a stunning last-gasp KO win over Otabek Kholmatov in March in Verona, NY. He was edged out in his first defense by a razor-thin split decision reversal against Nick Ball in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in June.
Also on the show, Arturo Cardenas will be in a super bantamweight tussle with Christian Carto...
Team USA’s Olympic bronze medal man Omari Jones fights for the second time in the paid ranks against William Jackson over six rounds at welterweight...
Welterweight contender Shakhram Giyasov will open the show live on DAZN over ten rounds against Franco Ocampo as the Uzbek man waits for his shot at a world title...
DAZN's Before The Bell action sees three young tri-state talents compete as Atlantic City’s Francisco Rodriguez takes on Camden, New Jersey’s Naheem Parker over eight rounds at lightweight...
Philadelphia’s Tahmir Small’s takes on Washington DC’s Bermudan Earl Bascome over eight rounds at welterweight and...
Newark, New Jersey’s Zaquin Moses takes on Alex Palette over four rounds at super featherweight.
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Introducing middleweight Sebastian Juarez |
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Boxlab Promotions’ has signed middleweight Sebastian Juarez (7-0, 5 KOs) of Brownsville, Texas, to a long-term promotional agreement. Juarez, age 20, is the younger brother of junior welterweight Omar Juarez (17-2, 5 KOs). He has already shown a fan-friendly style, explosive power and the poise of a veteran. He is trained by Bob Santos, one of the most respected minds in boxing today. “Signing with Boxlab Promotions is a big moment for me,” said Juarez. “They’ve built a great reputation for developing young fighters and giving them the right opportunities. I’m excited to take my career to the next level with their guidance.”
Carving his own path in the sport, Juarez is determined to step out of his older brother’s shadow while also building on the legacy they’re creating together. “I’ve always looked up to Omar and watched how hard he’s worked to get where he is,” Sebastian added. “Now it’s my turn. I want to make a name for myself, and I’m going to show the boxing world what I’m capable of every time I step in the ring.
Under the watchful eye of Coach Santos, Juarez, a Mexican-American, has made major strides since turning pro. With seven fights under his belt, he plans to stay active and continue building momentum throughout 2025. “My goal for the rest of the year is to stay fighting consistently, keep learning, and work my way up the rankings. I’m improving every day in the gym with Bob Santos. He’s helped me tighten up my technique and sharpen my mindset. I’m confident in the direction we’re going.”
“Sebastian Juarez is a hardworking, determined young fighter with all the tools to become a star,” stated Boxlab Promotions President, Amaury Piedra. He’s got power, composure, and a great team around him. We’re excited to add another promising young fighter to our stable. Our plan is to guide his career and give him the platform he needs to rise through the ranks. He’s going to have a great opportunity.”
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Introducing middleweight Sebastian Juarez
Boxlab Promotions’ has signed middleweight Sebastian Juarez (7-0, 5 KOs) of Brownsville, Texas, to a long-term promotional agreement. Juarez, age 20, is the younger brother of junior welterweight Omar Juarez (17-2, 5 KOs). He has already shown a fan-friendly style, explosive power and the poise of a veteran. He is trained by Bob Santos, one of the most respected minds in boxing today. “Signing with Boxlab Promotions is a big moment for me,” said Juarez. “They’ve built a great reputation for developing young fighters and giving them the right opportunities. I’m excited to take my career to the next level with their guidance.”
Carving his own path in the sport, Juarez is determined to step out of his older brother’s shadow while also building on the legacy they’re creating together. “I’ve always looked up to Omar and watched how hard he’s worked to get where he is,” Sebastian added. “Now it’s my turn. I want to make a name for myself, and I’m going to show the boxing world what I’m capable of every time I step in the ring.
Under the watchful eye of Coach Santos, Juarez, a Mexican-American, has made major strides since turning pro. With seven fights under his belt, he plans to stay active and continue building momentum throughout 2025. “My goal for the rest of the year is to stay fighting consistently, keep learning, and work my way up the rankings. I’m improving every day in the gym with Bob Santos. He’s helped me tighten up my technique and sharpen my mindset. I’m confident in the direction we’re going.”
“Sebastian Juarez is a hardworking, determined young fighter with all the tools to become a star,” stated Boxlab Promotions President, Amaury Piedra. He’s got power, composure, and a great team around him. We’re excited to add another promising young fighter to our stable. Our plan is to guide his career and give him the platform he needs to rise through the ranks. He’s going to have a great opportunity.”
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Late result: Hrgovic defeats faded Joyce |
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Filip Hrgovic W10 Joe Joyce... Filip Hrgovic managed to calm the Joe Joyce storm and beat the 'Juggernaut' by unanimous decision in what was a rollercoaster of a bout in Manchester, England. There was no secret that it was last chance saloon for both heavyweights when it came to either man keeping their boxing careers alive, and Hrgovic and Joyce left it all in the ring. With scores of 97-93, 96-95 and 98-92, Hrgovic was declared the winner and even called for a rematch with IBF heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois who was sitting ringside. For Joyce, this defeat may spell the end of his career despite the man himself claiming that he will fight on. Regardless of what decision the 'Juggernaut' makes next, he will leave behind a legacy of entertaining and thrilling heavyweight battles, with this one against Hrgovic included.
Hrgovic tested Joyce’s chin early in the first round, and right hand landed clean from the Croatian within the first minute of the opening round. Joyce looked within himself, offering little in response and the Hrgovic right hands kept on coming with the ‘Juggernaut’ struggling to defend himself. When Joyce did throw a one-two combination towards the end of the session, there was little to no power which troubled Hrgovic.
Joyce had his guard up in the second, but Hrgovic was enjoying his target practice. Everything about Joyce’s slow and lazy, while his opponent had venom behind his shots. After absorbing another barrage, Joyce shook his head as he attempted to forget the punishment he was being subjected to. A brief period of Joyce success followed, he was backing Hrgovic up and beginning to let his hands go.
Joyce’s resurgence continued in round three. He managed to keep Hrgovic quiet and those hard-hitting punches which made him a feared name were on show. Hrgovic did not allow himself to be completely silenced however with a right-hand stunning Joyce briefly towards the end of the round.
With both men growing in confidence, the fourth saw Joyce and Hrgovic go toe-to-toe. Trading blows aplenty, Joyce ended the session the stronger with Hrgovic confined to the corner, the ‘Juggernaut’ and his right hand caught the attention of the Croatian.
Joyce recognised the best way to keep his opponent at bay was to pin him to the corners and he opted for this strategy in the fifth. A Joyce straight right landed with Hrgovic replying with a jab. Hrgovic eventually escaped the clutches of the corner post, but to his dismay, Joyce’s rise in confidence saw him on the front foot and walk Hrgovic down for the rest of the stanza.
Confusion came across Hrgovic’s face, he had lost control of the fight in the sixth. Joyce was now the man landing punches with Hrgovic’s right hand, which caused plenty of problems early on, failing to inflict any significant punishment.
A flying Joyce right hand kicked off round seven, albeit missing by inches. Joyce then found Hrgovic on the ropes, connecting with a left before Hrgovic replied with a combination of his own. Two dangerous Hrgovic right hands bounced off Joyce’s head before the two clinched, with this heavyweight clash past the halfway stage, what was being served at the last chance saloon was taking its toll on both men.
Jab-right hand, jab-right hand, Joyce found a rhythm in round eight. Hrgovic was open every time to the Joyce right hand, and he even found time to land a left. Joyce was the aggressor, pushing Hrgovic out of a clinch, maybe this was the ‘Juggernaut 2.0’ Joyce had teased at Friday’s weigh-in. Out of nowhere as the seconds ticked down, Hrgovic put a brief halt to Joyce, a shot on the back of the Brit’s head was then followed by two combinations to close the session.
Just like Joyce did in previous rounds, Hrgovic attempted to use his own upward trajectory to his advantage in the ninth session. A swinging Hrgovic right hand connected, and the 32-year-old had revived his best weapon. Joyce staggered with a successful left hand, but Hrgovic returned fire, his right hands were being felt by everyone in arena to the extent where it became routine for any Hrgovic punch to be followed by an “Ooooooo”.
When this heavyweight battle reached the tenth and final round, it was endless swinging from Joyce and Hrgovic. As the clock ticked past 30 seconds remaining, Hrgovic stunned Joyce once more with a one-two combination, but the ‘Juggernaut’ managed to withstand the final assault and see out the fight with both men embracing after the final bell.
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Late result: Hrgovic defeats faded Joyce
Filip Hrgovic W10 Joe Joyce... Filip Hrgovic managed to calm the Joe Joyce storm and beat the 'Juggernaut' by unanimous decision in what was a rollercoaster of a bout in Manchester, England. There was no secret that it was last chance saloon for both heavyweights when it came to either man keeping their boxing careers alive, and Hrgovic and Joyce left it all in the ring. With scores of 97-93, 96-95 and 98-92, Hrgovic was declared the winner and even called for a rematch with IBF heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois who was sitting ringside. For Joyce, this defeat may spell the end of his career despite the man himself claiming that he will fight on. Regardless of what decision the 'Juggernaut' makes next, he will leave behind a legacy of entertaining and thrilling heavyweight battles, with this one against Hrgovic included.
Hrgovic tested Joyce’s chin early in the first round, and right hand landed clean from the Croatian within the first minute of the opening round. Joyce looked within himself, offering little in response and the Hrgovic right hands kept on coming with the ‘Juggernaut’ struggling to defend himself. When Joyce did throw a one-two combination towards the end of the session, there was little to no power which troubled Hrgovic.
Joyce had his guard up in the second, but Hrgovic was enjoying his target practice. Everything about Joyce’s slow and lazy, while his opponent had venom behind his shots. After absorbing another barrage, Joyce shook his head as he attempted to forget the punishment he was being subjected to. A brief period of Joyce success followed, he was backing Hrgovic up and beginning to let his hands go.
Joyce’s resurgence continued in round three. He managed to keep Hrgovic quiet and those hard-hitting punches which made him a feared name were on show. Hrgovic did not allow himself to be completely silenced however with a right-hand stunning Joyce briefly towards the end of the round.
With both men growing in confidence, the fourth saw Joyce and Hrgovic go toe-to-toe. Trading blows aplenty, Joyce ended the session the stronger with Hrgovic confined to the corner, the ‘Juggernaut’ and his right hand caught the attention of the Croatian.
Joyce recognised the best way to keep his opponent at bay was to pin him to the corners and he opted for this strategy in the fifth. A Joyce straight right landed with Hrgovic replying with a jab. Hrgovic eventually escaped the clutches of the corner post, but to his dismay, Joyce’s rise in confidence saw him on the front foot and walk Hrgovic down for the rest of the stanza.
Confusion came across Hrgovic’s face, he had lost control of the fight in the sixth. Joyce was now the man landing punches with Hrgovic’s right hand, which caused plenty of problems early on, failing to inflict any significant punishment.
A flying Joyce right hand kicked off round seven, albeit missing by inches. Joyce then found Hrgovic on the ropes, connecting with a left before Hrgovic replied with a combination of his own. Two dangerous Hrgovic right hands bounced off Joyce’s head before the two clinched, with this heavyweight clash past the halfway stage, what was being served at the last chance saloon was taking its toll on both men.
Jab-right hand, jab-right hand, Joyce found a rhythm in round eight. Hrgovic was open every time to the Joyce right hand, and he even found time to land a left. Joyce was the aggressor, pushing Hrgovic out of a clinch, maybe this was the ‘Juggernaut 2.0’ Joyce had teased at Friday’s weigh-in. Out of nowhere as the seconds ticked down, Hrgovic put a brief halt to Joyce, a shot on the back of the Brit’s head was then followed by two combinations to close the session.
Just like Joyce did in previous rounds, Hrgovic attempted to use his own upward trajectory to his advantage in the ninth session. A swinging Hrgovic right hand connected, and the 32-year-old had revived his best weapon. Joyce staggered with a successful left hand, but Hrgovic returned fire, his right hands were being felt by everyone in arena to the extent where it became routine for any Hrgovic punch to be followed by an “Ooooooo”.
When this heavyweight battle reached the tenth and final round, it was endless swinging from Joyce and Hrgovic. As the clock ticked past 30 seconds remaining, Hrgovic stunned Joyce once more with a one-two combination, but the ‘Juggernaut’ managed to withstand the final assault and see out the fight with both men embracing after the final bell.
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Stevenson ordered to defend vs. Zepeda |
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The WBC has ordered a thirty-day negotiation period for a fight between WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson (pictured) and BBC interim lightweight title holder William Zepeda, in the hopes that an agreement is reached for a long-awaited meeting between the two undefeated 135 pounders. If the parties do not reach an agreement by May 6th, a purse bid will be held for this fight. Last February, New Jersey's Stevenson, a three-division champion, retained his belt by knocking out last-minute replacement opponent Josh Padley, England in the ninth round in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. On March 29th, Mexico's Zepeda retained his interim title by defeating Philadelphia'sTevin Farmer by majority decision at the Benito Juárez Poliforum in Cancún, Quintana Roo.
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Stevenson ordered to defend vs. Zepeda
The WBC has ordered a thirty-day negotiation period for a fight between WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson (pictured) and BBC interim lightweight title holder William Zepeda, in the hopes that an agreement is reached for a long-awaited meeting between the two undefeated 135 pounders. If the parties do not reach an agreement by May 6th, a purse bid will be held for this fight. Last February, New Jersey's Stevenson, a three-division champion, retained his belt by knocking out last-minute replacement opponent Josh Padley, England in the ninth round in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. On March 29th, Mexico's Zepeda retained his interim title by defeating Philadelphia'sTevin Farmer by majority decision at the Benito Juárez Poliforum in Cancún, Quintana Roo.
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Report: Rozicki out of title fight due to injury |
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Don King Productions wrote: "Just after promoter Don King had arranged a championship fight for [WBC cruiserweight champion in recess] Noel Mikaelian, the WBC confirmed that Ryan Rozicki suffered an injury and won’t be able to fight WBC cruiserweight champion Badou Jack for the title on May 3rd. We just heard the news and our champion in recess, Noel Mikaelian is ready, willing and able to step in for Rozicki and fight Jack for the title. We are in the process of negotiating a deal.”
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Report: Rozicki out of title fight due to injury
Don King Productions wrote: "Just after promoter Don King had arranged a championship fight for [WBC cruiserweight champion in recess] Noel Mikaelian, the WBC confirmed that Ryan Rozicki suffered an injury and won’t be able to fight WBC cruiserweight champion Badou Jack for the title on May 3rd. We just heard the news and our champion in recess, Noel Mikaelian is ready, willing and able to step in for Rozicki and fight Jack for the title. We are in the process of negotiating a deal.”
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Rest In Peace Kenny Adams |
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The WBC and its president Mauricio Sulaimán announced the passing of Kenneth “Kenny” Adams, a legendary trainer who worked with champions Evander Holyfield, Roy Jones Jr., and Riddick Bowe. Adams was known for revolutionizing boxing training in the United States by introducing strength and conditioning techniques, practices that were previously considered unconventional. According to the WBC, 26 world champions, 34 Olympians, and 56 boxers who won world titles were trained under his watchful eye and tutoridge. Boxingtalk joins the WBC in sending our deepest condolences to Kenny’s family and friends.
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Rest In Peace Kenny Adams
The WBC and its president Mauricio Sulaimán announced the passing of Kenneth “Kenny” Adams, a legendary trainer who worked with champions Evander Holyfield, Roy Jones Jr., and Riddick Bowe. Adams was known for revolutionizing boxing training in the United States by introducing strength and conditioning techniques, practices that were previously considered unconventional. According to the WBC, 26 world champions, 34 Olympians, and 56 boxers who won world titles were trained under his watchful eye and tutoridge. Boxingtalk joins the WBC in sending our deepest condolences to Kenny’s family and friends.
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Welcome to Stanionis vs. Ennis fight week |
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Eimantas Stanionis (pictured) has promised to take Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis into the deepest waters he’s ever been to – and the WBA welterweight ruler believes he’ll ‘break and beat’ the IBF champion to unify two of the four titles in the welterweight division on Saturday night at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, live worldwide on DAZN. Stanionis (listed as 15-0, but 19-3 is the more accurate record taking into account paid fights in the World Series of Boxing) made a welcome return to the ring with a victory over Gabriel Maestre in Las Vegas in May, outpointing the Venezuelan in Las Vegas to retain the WBA regular title that he won back in April 2022 in Texas against Radzhab Butaev. The 30 year old, who represented Lithuania in the 2016 Olympic Games, was elevated to full champion in August when Terence Crawford vacated the WBA belt.
Both Ennis and Stanionis have been searching for unification bouts since landing their titles, and with the Ring Magazine title also on the line at a venue that has hosted the very best fighters on the planet, Stanionis has been working tirelessly at the famous Wild Card gym to make sure he is at his very best on the biggest night of his career.
“Camp at Wild Card has been a warzone—exactly how I like it. With Coach Marvin Somodio, we’ve been grinding non-stop. The sparring partners we worked with are monsters, they pushed me to the edge. Speed, defense, pressure—we’ve dialed in every weapon in I posses. Every day I walk into that gym, I treat it like a fight. I’m locked in, and hungry. This is the best version of me the world’s ever seen.
“Ennis is slick, explosive, and they say he’s the future of the division. That’s why I signed the contract. I don’t duck anyone—I run toward the fire. This isn’t gonna be a chess match. This is going to be a war. I’m stepping into that ring to test him, break him, and beat him. Let’s see how he handles real pressure.
“Beating Boots changes everything for me. It puts me on the throne of the Welterweight division and kicks the door open to pound-for-pound greatness. But this isn’t just about belts—this is about legacy. I fight to carve my name into the history books.”
“Every time I fight, I fight with Lithuania on my back. My people know struggle, they know toughness—and I carry that spirit into the ring. When I win, they win. This moment isn’t just for me—it’s for every single person back home who believes in the warrior I’ve become.”
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Welcome to Stanionis vs. Ennis fight week
Eimantas Stanionis (pictured) has promised to take Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis into the deepest waters he’s ever been to – and the WBA welterweight ruler believes he’ll ‘break and beat’ the IBF champion to unify two of the four titles in the welterweight division on Saturday night at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, live worldwide on DAZN. Stanionis (listed as 15-0, but 19-3 is the more accurate record taking into account paid fights in the World Series of Boxing) made a welcome return to the ring with a victory over Gabriel Maestre in Las Vegas in May, outpointing the Venezuelan in Las Vegas to retain the WBA regular title that he won back in April 2022 in Texas against Radzhab Butaev. The 30 year old, who represented Lithuania in the 2016 Olympic Games, was elevated to full champion in August when Terence Crawford vacated the WBA belt.
Both Ennis and Stanionis have been searching for unification bouts since landing their titles, and with the Ring Magazine title also on the line at a venue that has hosted the very best fighters on the planet, Stanionis has been working tirelessly at the famous Wild Card gym to make sure he is at his very best on the biggest night of his career.
“Camp at Wild Card has been a warzone—exactly how I like it. With Coach Marvin Somodio, we’ve been grinding non-stop. The sparring partners we worked with are monsters, they pushed me to the edge. Speed, defense, pressure—we’ve dialed in every weapon in I posses. Every day I walk into that gym, I treat it like a fight. I’m locked in, and hungry. This is the best version of me the world’s ever seen.
“Ennis is slick, explosive, and they say he’s the future of the division. That’s why I signed the contract. I don’t duck anyone—I run toward the fire. This isn’t gonna be a chess match. This is going to be a war. I’m stepping into that ring to test him, break him, and beat him. Let’s see how he handles real pressure.
“Beating Boots changes everything for me. It puts me on the throne of the Welterweight division and kicks the door open to pound-for-pound greatness. But this isn’t just about belts—this is about legacy. I fight to carve my name into the history books.”
“Every time I fight, I fight with Lithuania on my back. My people know struggle, they know toughness—and I carry that spirit into the ring. When I win, they win. This moment isn’t just for me—it’s for every single person back home who believes in the warrior I’ve become.”
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Introducing Chicago junior middleweight Devin Parrish |
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![]() Christy Martin Promotions has announced the signing of undefeated junior middleweight Devin Parrish to a promotional contract. A native of Chicago, Parrish (5-0, 5 KOs) started boxing at age 15 and had over 60 amateur fights, competing nationally and internationally and winning several regional championships, including the Chicago Golden Gloves. Parrish will make his next ring appearance at Christy Martin’s “The Boxing Match to Raise Awareness for Domestic Violence” on May 17th at The Reserve in Nashville. His opponent will be announced soon. On fight night, doors open at 6:30 pm. Tickets can be bought online only at ChristyMartin-Promotions.com. A pressure fighter who fires strong left hooks to the head and liver, the 25 year-old Parrish was ranked as high as fifth in the nation before turning professional in June 2023 under the tutelage of prominent Windy City trainer George Hernandez at the Garfield Park Boxing Gym.
“The goal was always to turn pro,” explained Parrish. “I go to the body a lot and gain momentum as the fight goes on. That’s why I had so many good third rounds in the amateurs. I wear my opponents down with power, mixed with volume and pressure.” |
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Introducing Chicago junior middleweight Devin Parrish
Christy Martin Promotions has announced the signing of undefeated junior middleweight Devin Parrish to a promotional contract. A native of Chicago, Parrish (5-0, 5 KOs) started boxing at age 15 and had over 60 amateur fights, competing nationally and internationally and winning several regional championships, including the Chicago Golden Gloves. Parrish will make his next ring appearance at Christy Martin’s “The Boxing Match to Raise Awareness for Domestic Violence” on May 17th at The Reserve in Nashville. His opponent will be announced soon. On fight night, doors open at 6:30 pm. Tickets can be bought online only at ChristyMartin-Promotions.com. A pressure fighter who fires strong left hooks to the head and liver, the 25 year-old Parrish was ranked as high as fifth in the nation before turning professional in June 2023 under the tutelage of prominent Windy City trainer George Hernandez at the Garfield Park Boxing Gym.
“The goal was always to turn pro,” explained Parrish. “I go to the body a lot and gain momentum as the fight goes on. That’s why I had so many good third rounds in the amateurs. I wear my opponents down with power, mixed with volume and pressure.” |
Jessica Borga KOs ex-champ Hannah Rankin in BKFC |
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On Saturday, Jessica “The Black Widow” Borga needed just 32 seconds to score a one-punch knockout over ex-champion Hannah Rankin in a BKFC bare knuckles fight. Borga captured the vacant BKFC 145-pound championship with the KO, which was part of the second BKFC show in two days held at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium. Borga, from St. Petersburg, Floirda, is now 3-0 under the BKFC banner after defeating Rankin, a former 154-pound champion recognized by the WBA and IBO in 2021. Rankin is now 1-1 in her BKFC career.
“I’m the one and only Jessica Borga, and I’m only getting more dangerous. I don’t care who you are; send me anybody,” a fired-up Borga told the sold-out Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium. “I’m here to stay, baby.”
Undefeated “King” Kai Stewart defended his BKFC 145-pound championship for the fourth time and smashed his way to 8-0 with a dominant decision over previously unbeaten South African challenger Tommy “The Farmer” Strydom in the BKFC 72 main event. All three ringside judges agreed on the 50-43 verdict after the Great Falls, MT product Stewart dropped Strydom twice.
“I’m going to do whatever I want to do,” the fan-favorite Stewart told the rocking Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium after his win, hinting at a possible title run in a different BKFC weight class. “I cleaned out the 145-pound division. I break everybody!”
Strydom is now 4-1 in his BKFC career.
Spain’s Nico “The Iron” Gaffie scored an upset over Brandon “Superman” Allen. Now 2-0 after Saturday’s win, Gaffie sent Allen, the #2 contender in the BKFC 145-pound division, to the canvas four times en route to the fourth-round TKO victory. The bout was called to a stop with one second left in the fourth frame. The St. Petersburg, FL-based Allen is now 5-2 under the BKFC banner after bringing a five-fight winning streak into Saturday’s action.
Russia's Vladislav Tuinov turned heads in his BKFC debut, needing just 26 seconds to knockout Sabri Ben Henia of Belgium in welterweight action. Henia was also making his BKFC debut.
Wales’ John Phillips was victorious in his BKFC debut, defeating fellow UFC veteran Fabio Maldonado in their cruiserweight matchup. Phillips sent Maldonado to the canvas twice before the bout was called to a stop 29 seconds into the second round. The Brazilian Maldonado was also making his BKFC debut.
Aaron Chalmers (1-0 in traditional boxing) stopped Chasa Symonds in the third round of their battle of English welterweights. Chalmers sent Symonds to the canvas twice, paving the way for the TKO victory 16 seconds into the third frame. Chalmers was making his BKFC debut; Symonds is now 0-2 under the BKFC banner.
Iran’s Hassan Yousefi kicked off the main card with a hard-fought decision victory over Brazilian Guto Inocente in their heavyweight showdown. Two judges scored the contest 50-45 and one had it 49-46, all in favor of the debuting Yousefi. Inocente was also making his BKFC debut.
In the prelims, Kazakh featherweight Dilshat Nurym and Filipino lightweight Mark Angel Sadang registered first-round stoppages over Russian Shamil Dzhakhbarov and Iranian Matin Safari, respectively. Nurym logged a pair of knockdowns before winning by TKO at the 1:23 mark. Sadang also recorded two knockdowns en route to the 87-second victory. All four fighters were making their BKFC debut.
BKFC 72 Results
Kai Stewart def. Tommy Strydom via Unanimous Decision (50-43x3 (retains BKFC featherweight title);
Jessica Borga def. Hannah Rankin via KO in Round 1 (0:32) (wins inaugural BKFC featherweight title);
Nico Gaffie def. Brandon Allen via TKO in Round 4 (1:59);
Vladislav Tuinov def. Sabri Ben Henia via KO in Round 1 (0:26);
John Phillips def. Fabio Maldonado via KO in Round 2 (0:29);
Aaron Chalmers def. Chasa Symonds via TKO in Round 3 (0:16);
Hassan Yousefi def. Guto Inocente via Unanimous Decision (50-45x2, 49-46);
Mark Angel Sadang def. Matin Safari via KO in Round 1 (1:27); and
Dilshat Nurym def. Shamil Dzhakhbarov via TKO in Round 1 (1:23).
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Jessica Borga KOs ex-champ Hannah Rankin in BKFC
On Saturday, Jessica “The Black Widow” Borga needed just 32 seconds to score a one-punch knockout over ex-champion Hannah Rankin in a BKFC bare knuckles fight. Borga captured the vacant BKFC 145-pound championship with the KO, which was part of the second BKFC show in two days held at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium. Borga, from St. Petersburg, Floirda, is now 3-0 under the BKFC banner after defeating Rankin, a former 154-pound champion recognized by the WBA and IBO in 2021. Rankin is now 1-1 in her BKFC career.
“I’m the one and only Jessica Borga, and I’m only getting more dangerous. I don’t care who you are; send me anybody,” a fired-up Borga told the sold-out Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium. “I’m here to stay, baby.”
Undefeated “King” Kai Stewart defended his BKFC 145-pound championship for the fourth time and smashed his way to 8-0 with a dominant decision over previously unbeaten South African challenger Tommy “The Farmer” Strydom in the BKFC 72 main event. All three ringside judges agreed on the 50-43 verdict after the Great Falls, MT product Stewart dropped Strydom twice.
“I’m going to do whatever I want to do,” the fan-favorite Stewart told the rocking Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium after his win, hinting at a possible title run in a different BKFC weight class. “I cleaned out the 145-pound division. I break everybody!”
Strydom is now 4-1 in his BKFC career.
Spain’s Nico “The Iron” Gaffie scored an upset over Brandon “Superman” Allen. Now 2-0 after Saturday’s win, Gaffie sent Allen, the #2 contender in the BKFC 145-pound division, to the canvas four times en route to the fourth-round TKO victory. The bout was called to a stop with one second left in the fourth frame. The St. Petersburg, FL-based Allen is now 5-2 under the BKFC banner after bringing a five-fight winning streak into Saturday’s action.
Russia's Vladislav Tuinov turned heads in his BKFC debut, needing just 26 seconds to knockout Sabri Ben Henia of Belgium in welterweight action. Henia was also making his BKFC debut.
Wales’ John Phillips was victorious in his BKFC debut, defeating fellow UFC veteran Fabio Maldonado in their cruiserweight matchup. Phillips sent Maldonado to the canvas twice before the bout was called to a stop 29 seconds into the second round. The Brazilian Maldonado was also making his BKFC debut.
Aaron Chalmers (1-0 in traditional boxing) stopped Chasa Symonds in the third round of their battle of English welterweights. Chalmers sent Symonds to the canvas twice, paving the way for the TKO victory 16 seconds into the third frame. Chalmers was making his BKFC debut; Symonds is now 0-2 under the BKFC banner.
Iran’s Hassan Yousefi kicked off the main card with a hard-fought decision victory over Brazilian Guto Inocente in their heavyweight showdown. Two judges scored the contest 50-45 and one had it 49-46, all in favor of the debuting Yousefi. Inocente was also making his BKFC debut.
In the prelims, Kazakh featherweight Dilshat Nurym and Filipino lightweight Mark Angel Sadang registered first-round stoppages over Russian Shamil Dzhakhbarov and Iranian Matin Safari, respectively. Nurym logged a pair of knockdowns before winning by TKO at the 1:23 mark. Sadang also recorded two knockdowns en route to the 87-second victory. All four fighters were making their BKFC debut.
BKFC 72 Results
Kai Stewart def. Tommy Strydom via Unanimous Decision (50-43x3 (retains BKFC featherweight title);
Jessica Borga def. Hannah Rankin via KO in Round 1 (0:32) (wins inaugural BKFC featherweight title);
Nico Gaffie def. Brandon Allen via TKO in Round 4 (1:59);
Vladislav Tuinov def. Sabri Ben Henia via KO in Round 1 (0:26);
John Phillips def. Fabio Maldonado via KO in Round 2 (0:29);
Aaron Chalmers def. Chasa Symonds via TKO in Round 3 (0:16);
Hassan Yousefi def. Guto Inocente via Unanimous Decision (50-45x2, 49-46);
Mark Angel Sadang def. Matin Safari via KO in Round 1 (1:27); and
Dilshat Nurym def. Shamil Dzhakhbarov via TKO in Round 1 (1:23).
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Bivol drops WBC belt, Benavidez elevated to titleholder status |
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World light heavyweight champion Dmitry Bivol (pictured) notified the WBC through his attorney Patrick English, that he is vacating the WBC title. Bivol became the WBC light heavyweight champion by defeating Artur Beterbiev via majority decision in a great fight, held at the Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in February. Bivol also won a rematch against Beterbiev and is said to be headed towards a third fight with Beterbiev. The true world champion, Bivol continues to hold the WBO, IBF and WBA titles. In the light of Bivo's decision, the WBC has elevated its interim champion, David Benavides to the full WBC title. Benavidez defended his interim WBC light heavyweight title also in February, defeating Cuban David Morrell in a tough, exacting fight at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. In its announcement, the WBC wished Bivol success in his future and confirmed Benavidez as the WBC light heavyweight champion.
WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman seemed unhappy with Bivol's decision, tweeting, "I have just received a cold and impersonal notification from Dmitry Bivol's lawyer, Patrick English, with arguments that are so ridiculous that I rather not discuss informing the WBC that Dmitry Bivol has decided to relinquish his WBC light heavyweight championship. We wish Bivol success and hereby confirm David Benavidez as WBC world light heavyweight champion."
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Bivol drops WBC belt, Benavidez elevated to titleholder status
World light heavyweight champion Dmitry Bivol (pictured) notified the WBC through his attorney Patrick English, that he is vacating the WBC title. Bivol became the WBC light heavyweight champion by defeating Artur Beterbiev via majority decision in a great fight, held at the Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in February. Bivol also won a rematch against Beterbiev and is said to be headed towards a third fight with Beterbiev. The true world champion, Bivol continues to hold the WBO, IBF and WBA titles. In the light of Bivo's decision, the WBC has elevated its interim champion, David Benavides to the full WBC title. Benavidez defended his interim WBC light heavyweight title also in February, defeating Cuban David Morrell in a tough, exacting fight at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. In its announcement, the WBC wished Bivol success in his future and confirmed Benavidez as the WBC light heavyweight champion.
WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman seemed unhappy with Bivol's decision, tweeting, "I have just received a cold and impersonal notification from Dmitry Bivol's lawyer, Patrick English, with arguments that are so ridiculous that I rather not discuss informing the WBC that Dmitry Bivol has decided to relinquish his WBC light heavyweight championship. We wish Bivol success and hereby confirm David Benavidez as WBC world light heavyweight champion."
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Washington show features four boxers trained by Roy Jones |
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Roy Jones Jr. Promotions puts on "Revenge" this Friday night, April 11th, at the Legends Casino Hotel in Toppenish, Washington. The main event will be a ten rounder between Devontae McDonald (8-4, 2 KOs) of nearby Wenatchee against Shady Gamhour (13-2, 9 KOs) of Broby, Sweden. It will be a rematch of their previous bout in which McDonald was victorious by majority decision. Gamhour is relishing the rematch, saying, “on April 11th, I will return for my revenge. It was a mistake leaving it in the judges’ hands and that won’t happen again.” In the co-feature, Dominique “Lil Jalapeño” Roundtree (10-0-1, 6 KOs) will battle Sean Brewer (4-2, 3 KOs), in an eight-round featherweight bout. Roundtree is from Augusta, Georgia, while Brewer hails from Henderson, Nevada. Roundtree fought to a draw in December. Brewer is trained by former world champion “Bones” Adams. Also in action will be Andrew Murphy (9-0, 6 KOs) from nearby Yakima, just a short drive from Legends Casino Hotel. Murphy, will be fighting for the second time since shoulder surgery, in a six-round super middleweight bout against Virginia's Justin Gunter (7-4, 5 KOs). Heavyweight Darnell Thompson of Raleigh, NC is set to make his pro debut against Jalen Davis (1-3, 1 KO). Gamhour, Roundtree, Murphy, and Thompson are all trained by Jones. Tickets are available at Ticketmaster.com. The event will be streamed live beginning at 10 pm ET / 7 pm PT, on the following apps: FITE by Triller 24/7, Zonefy, BOLT+, Swerve Combat, Free Live Sports and Unbeaten Sports Chanel. Roy Jones Jr. (pictured) and Boxingtalk.com writer Christian Schmidt will be doing the play by play commentary.
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Washington show features four boxers trained by Roy Jones
Roy Jones Jr. Promotions puts on "Revenge" this Friday night, April 11th, at the Legends Casino Hotel in Toppenish, Washington. The main event will be a ten rounder between Devontae McDonald (8-4, 2 KOs) of nearby Wenatchee against Shady Gamhour (13-2, 9 KOs) of Broby, Sweden. It will be a rematch of their previous bout in which McDonald was victorious by majority decision. Gamhour is relishing the rematch, saying, “on April 11th, I will return for my revenge. It was a mistake leaving it in the judges’ hands and that won’t happen again.” In the co-feature, Dominique “Lil Jalapeño” Roundtree (10-0-1, 6 KOs) will battle Sean Brewer (4-2, 3 KOs), in an eight-round featherweight bout. Roundtree is from Augusta, Georgia, while Brewer hails from Henderson, Nevada. Roundtree fought to a draw in December. Brewer is trained by former world champion “Bones” Adams. Also in action will be Andrew Murphy (9-0, 6 KOs) from nearby Yakima, just a short drive from Legends Casino Hotel. Murphy, will be fighting for the second time since shoulder surgery, in a six-round super middleweight bout against Virginia's Justin Gunter (7-4, 5 KOs). Heavyweight Darnell Thompson of Raleigh, NC is set to make his pro debut against Jalen Davis (1-3, 1 KO). Gamhour, Roundtree, Murphy, and Thompson are all trained by Jones. Tickets are available at Ticketmaster.com. The event will be streamed live beginning at 10 pm ET / 7 pm PT, on the following apps: FITE by Triller 24/7, Zonefy, BOLT+, Swerve Combat, Free Live Sports and Unbeaten Sports Chanel. Roy Jones Jr. (pictured) and Boxingtalk.com writer Christian Schmidt will be doing the play by play commentary.
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Trout needs overtime but retains BKFC title |
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On Friday at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium in Dubai, former junior middleweight champion Austin “No Doubt” Trout retained the BKFC bareknucke title in the 165-pound weight class. Trout edged out the previously undefeated Carlos Trinidad-Snake with a split-decision victory, defending his belt for the second time and improving to 4-0 in the process. Trout picked himself up off the canvas in the opening round and went to a rare overtime round to decide the title after the action-packed bout ended as a draw after five rounds. Two judges scored the six-round bout in favor of Trout (57-56, 58-55), while one had it 58-55 for Trinidad-Snake.
“I expected (a tough fight), but I didn’t think he was going to do it. Shoutout to Carlos, man. He came and fought his (expletive) off. He had a good game plan and made me change my game plan. All respect to him, but I’m still here. I’m still the champion,” Trout, a former WBA 154-pound champion, said afterwards. Trinidad-Snake, who represents Omaha NE, is now 6-1 in his BKFC career.
Britain Hart added to her resume by defending her BKFC women’s 115-pound title for a fourth time with a hard-fought decision victory over Tai Emery. Hart is now 10-3 on the strength of six straight wins in the BKFC squared circle. She is now tied with BKFC women’s flyweight champion Christine “Misfit” Ferea for most all-time victories amongst female BKFC combatants. “I’m the best. I did it. I’ve proven it, and I’ve earned it,” Hart told the sold-out Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium. “I haven’t asked for anything; I’ve earned what I’ve got. I want to earn your respect and love; that’s why I’m here. I’m here for a reason!” Two judges scored the contest 48-47 and one scored the bout 50-45, all in favor of the Danville, VA product Hart.
Emery, an Australian based in Dubai, is now 2-2 in her BKFC career.
The debuting Jonny “El Toro” Tello and the unbeaten Sabah “The Sleek Sheik” Homasi delivered a frontrunner for “Fight of the Year” with their middleweight barnburner. After losing the opening two rounds, the Thailand-based Canadian Tello rallied with a pair of knockdowns that paved the way for a highly entertaining, come-from-behind win over Homasi. Two judges scored the fight 48-45 and one had it 47-46, all in favor of Tello.
“They call me ‘El Toro’ for a reason. I’m a bull, man,” Tello told the Dubai faithful. “I knew coming out here would change my life. I knew that I was going to leave this fight as a winner. Even if I lost, I knew it was going to be the Fight of the Night.”
Homasi, an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) vet out of Coconut Creek, FL, is now 1-1 under the BKFC banner.
Brazi’s Geronimo “Mondragon” Dos Santos introduced himself in style to the BKFC heavyweight division with a jaw-dropping, first-round KO over UFC vet Alexey “The Boa Constrictor” Oleinik. Time of the stoppage was 1:49 in the first round. The Russian Oleinik is now 0-1 under the BKFC banner.
Adel “Kyokushin” Altamimi turned heads in his BKFC debut as the Los Angeles-based Iraqi fighter sent the previously unbeaten David Mora to the canvas three times in their welterweight battle. The KO stoppage came at the 1:28 mark in the third round. Mora, who represents Spain, is now 1-1 under the BKFC banner.
Egypt’s Ahmed Khairy recorded three knockdowns en route to the TKO over Brazilian Leandro Martins in their lightweight showdown. The ringside physician called a stop to the bout at the 1:01 mark of the third round. Both fighters were stepping into the BKFC squared circle for the first time.
Bulgarian middleweight Mladen Iliev smashed his way to 2-0 under the BKFC banner by knocking out debuting Algerian fighter Aboubkeur Houari. The stoppage came 23 seconds into the second round.
Egypt’s Mohamed “Flex” Aly dropped Jaskaran Singh twice en route to the first-round TKO victory in their heavyweight matchup. Time of the stoppage was 59 seconds into the first round. Both fighters were making their BKFC debut.
Egyptian bantamweight Mahmoud Ahmed improved to 2-0 with a split-decision victory over debuting Russian fighter Fuad “The Flash” Tarverdi. Each fighter scored a knockdown in the action-packed matchup. Two judges scored the fight 47-46 for Ahmed, while one scored it 47-46 for Tarverdi.
Azerbaijan’s Elnur “The Conqueror” Suleymanov was victorious in his BKFC debut, stopping Germany’s Lucas “The Dentist” Sontgen via KO in their middleweight showdown. The bout was called to a stop 14 seconds into the second round. Sontgen was also making his BKFC debut.
In the first BKFC bout in UAE history, Chechnya’s Islam Sizbulatov needed just 40 seconds and a single knockdown to stop Leang Cheng of Cambodia in lightweight action. Both combatants were making their BKFC debut.
BKFC 71 Results
Austin Trout def. Carlos Trinidad-Snake via Split Decision (58-55, 55-58, 57-56)
(defends BKFC welterweight title);
Britain Hart def. Tai Emery via Unanimous Decision (48-47x2, 50-45) (defends BKFC strawweight title);
Jonny Tello def. Sabah Homasi via Unanimous Decision (48-45x2, 47-46);
Geronimo Dos Santos def. Alexey Oleinik via KO in Round 1 (1:49);
Adel Altamimi def. David Mora via KO in Round 3 (1:28);
Ahmed Khairy def. Leandro Martins via TKO in Round 3 (1:01);
Mladen Iliev def. Aboubkeur Houari via KO in Round 2 (0:23);
Mohamed Aly def. Jaskaran Singh via TKO in Round 1 (0:59);
Mahmoud Ahmed def. Fuad Tarverdi via Split Decision (47-46x2, 46-47);
Elnur Suleymanov def. Lucas Sontgen via KO in Round 2 (0:14); and
Islam Sizbulatov def. Leang Cheng via KO in Round 1 (0:40).
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Trout needs overtime but retains BKFC title
On Friday at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium in Dubai, former junior middleweight champion Austin “No Doubt” Trout retained the BKFC bareknucke title in the 165-pound weight class. Trout edged out the previously undefeated Carlos Trinidad-Snake with a split-decision victory, defending his belt for the second time and improving to 4-0 in the process. Trout picked himself up off the canvas in the opening round and went to a rare overtime round to decide the title after the action-packed bout ended as a draw after five rounds. Two judges scored the six-round bout in favor of Trout (57-56, 58-55), while one had it 58-55 for Trinidad-Snake.
“I expected (a tough fight), but I didn’t think he was going to do it. Shoutout to Carlos, man. He came and fought his (expletive) off. He had a good game plan and made me change my game plan. All respect to him, but I’m still here. I’m still the champion,” Trout, a former WBA 154-pound champion, said afterwards. Trinidad-Snake, who represents Omaha NE, is now 6-1 in his BKFC career.
Britain Hart added to her resume by defending her BKFC women’s 115-pound title for a fourth time with a hard-fought decision victory over Tai Emery. Hart is now 10-3 on the strength of six straight wins in the BKFC squared circle. She is now tied with BKFC women’s flyweight champion Christine “Misfit” Ferea for most all-time victories amongst female BKFC combatants. “I’m the best. I did it. I’ve proven it, and I’ve earned it,” Hart told the sold-out Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium. “I haven’t asked for anything; I’ve earned what I’ve got. I want to earn your respect and love; that’s why I’m here. I’m here for a reason!” Two judges scored the contest 48-47 and one scored the bout 50-45, all in favor of the Danville, VA product Hart.
Emery, an Australian based in Dubai, is now 2-2 in her BKFC career.
The debuting Jonny “El Toro” Tello and the unbeaten Sabah “The Sleek Sheik” Homasi delivered a frontrunner for “Fight of the Year” with their middleweight barnburner. After losing the opening two rounds, the Thailand-based Canadian Tello rallied with a pair of knockdowns that paved the way for a highly entertaining, come-from-behind win over Homasi. Two judges scored the fight 48-45 and one had it 47-46, all in favor of Tello.
“They call me ‘El Toro’ for a reason. I’m a bull, man,” Tello told the Dubai faithful. “I knew coming out here would change my life. I knew that I was going to leave this fight as a winner. Even if I lost, I knew it was going to be the Fight of the Night.”
Homasi, an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) vet out of Coconut Creek, FL, is now 1-1 under the BKFC banner.
Brazi’s Geronimo “Mondragon” Dos Santos introduced himself in style to the BKFC heavyweight division with a jaw-dropping, first-round KO over UFC vet Alexey “The Boa Constrictor” Oleinik. Time of the stoppage was 1:49 in the first round. The Russian Oleinik is now 0-1 under the BKFC banner.
Adel “Kyokushin” Altamimi turned heads in his BKFC debut as the Los Angeles-based Iraqi fighter sent the previously unbeaten David Mora to the canvas three times in their welterweight battle. The KO stoppage came at the 1:28 mark in the third round. Mora, who represents Spain, is now 1-1 under the BKFC banner.
Egypt’s Ahmed Khairy recorded three knockdowns en route to the TKO over Brazilian Leandro Martins in their lightweight showdown. The ringside physician called a stop to the bout at the 1:01 mark of the third round. Both fighters were stepping into the BKFC squared circle for the first time.
Bulgarian middleweight Mladen Iliev smashed his way to 2-0 under the BKFC banner by knocking out debuting Algerian fighter Aboubkeur Houari. The stoppage came 23 seconds into the second round.
Egypt’s Mohamed “Flex” Aly dropped Jaskaran Singh twice en route to the first-round TKO victory in their heavyweight matchup. Time of the stoppage was 59 seconds into the first round. Both fighters were making their BKFC debut.
Egyptian bantamweight Mahmoud Ahmed improved to 2-0 with a split-decision victory over debuting Russian fighter Fuad “The Flash” Tarverdi. Each fighter scored a knockdown in the action-packed matchup. Two judges scored the fight 47-46 for Ahmed, while one scored it 47-46 for Tarverdi.
Azerbaijan’s Elnur “The Conqueror” Suleymanov was victorious in his BKFC debut, stopping Germany’s Lucas “The Dentist” Sontgen via KO in their middleweight showdown. The bout was called to a stop 14 seconds into the second round. Sontgen was also making his BKFC debut.
In the first BKFC bout in UAE history, Chechnya’s Islam Sizbulatov needed just 40 seconds and a single knockdown to stop Leang Cheng of Cambodia in lightweight action. Both combatants were making their BKFC debut.
BKFC 71 Results
Austin Trout def. Carlos Trinidad-Snake via Split Decision (58-55, 55-58, 57-56)
(defends BKFC welterweight title);
Britain Hart def. Tai Emery via Unanimous Decision (48-47x2, 50-45) (defends BKFC strawweight title);
Jonny Tello def. Sabah Homasi via Unanimous Decision (48-45x2, 47-46);
Geronimo Dos Santos def. Alexey Oleinik via KO in Round 1 (1:49);
Adel Altamimi def. David Mora via KO in Round 3 (1:28);
Ahmed Khairy def. Leandro Martins via TKO in Round 3 (1:01);
Mladen Iliev def. Aboubkeur Houari via KO in Round 2 (0:23);
Mohamed Aly def. Jaskaran Singh via TKO in Round 1 (0:59);
Mahmoud Ahmed def. Fuad Tarverdi via Split Decision (47-46x2, 46-47);
Elnur Suleymanov def. Lucas Sontgen via KO in Round 2 (0:14); and
Islam Sizbulatov def. Leang Cheng via KO in Round 1 (0:40).
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Baumgardner added to Taylor-Serrano III card |
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Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) and Netflix announced that reigning world super featherweight champion Alycia “The Bomb” Baumgardner (15-1, 7 KOs) will face WBA interim title holder Jennifer Miranda (12-0, 1 KO) of Spain as part of the highly anticipated Katie Taylor vs. Amanda Serrano III bout. Baumgardner vs. Miranda, a ten-round undisputed super featherweight championship fight will be the chief supporting bout on an all women’s professional boxing card at the iconic Madison Square Garden in New York City. The event will be shown live on Netflix at no additional cost to its 300+ million subscribers on Friday, July 11th.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Baumgarnder then spent more than a year away from the ring dealing with repercussions of a positive test for banned performance-enhancing substances. |
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Baumgardner added to Taylor-Serrano III card
Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) and Netflix announced that reigning world super featherweight champion Alycia “The Bomb” Baumgardner (15-1, 7 KOs) will face WBA interim title holder Jennifer Miranda (12-0, 1 KO) of Spain as part of the highly anticipated Katie Taylor vs. Amanda Serrano III bout. Baumgardner vs. Miranda, a ten-round undisputed super featherweight championship fight will be the chief supporting bout on an all women’s professional boxing card at the iconic Madison Square Garden in New York City. The event will be shown live on Netflix at no additional cost to its 300+ million subscribers on Friday, July 11th.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Baumgarnder then spent more than a year away from the ring dealing with repercussions of a positive test for banned performance-enhancing substances. |
ESPN+ to stream Dzmitry Asanau vs. Francesco Patera on Thursday |
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2016 Olympian Dzmitry Asanau will defend his spotless pro record in a ten-round lightweight contest against former two-time European champion Francesco Patera this Thursday, April 10th at Casino de Montréal. The co-feature will see unbeaten puncher Christopher Guerrero against Mexico’s Oliver “El Monaguillo” Quintana in a ten-round welterweight tilt. Promoted by Eye of the Tiger, Asanau-Patera, Guerrero-Quintana, and undercard bouts will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+ at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT.
Asanau, a 2016 Olympian from Belarus, is a three-year pro who has taken the fast track to contention after defeating the likes of Andy Cruz and Hector Luis Garcia as an amateur. He signed with Eye of the Tiger last year and made his Canadian debut that August with an eight-round decision over Alexis Gabriel Camejo. Less than three months later, he stopped former featherweight title challenger Matias Rueda in five rounds. Patera (30-5, 11 KOs) last held the European title from 2018-2019 and is 2-1 since a 2023 decision defeat to Keyshawn Davis.
Guerrero (13-0, 8 KOs) has been on a knockout run of late, stopping eight of his last nine opponents. In February, he became the first man to knock out 33-fight veteran Dennis Dauti, stopping him in round four. Quintana (22-3, 16 KOs) has never fought outside of Mexico and is coming off a split decision victory over Chester Parada Torales.
In other streaming action:
Mary Spencer (9-2, 6 KOs) makes the first defense of her WBA junior middleweight world title against Venezuela's n Ogleidis Suarez (31-5-1, 15 KOs). Suarez held the WBA featherweight title in 2013...
Colombian knockout specialist Jhon Orobio (12-0, 11 KOs) makes his 2025 debut in an eight-round junior welterweight fight against Argentina’s Sebastian Ezequiel Aguirre (19-6, 12 KOs). Orobio has three straight knockouts in two rounds or less, while Aguirre’s only KO defeat came in nine rounds to former world title challenger Steve Claggett...
Middleweight Alexandre Gaumont (12-0, 8 KOs) steps up against France’s battle-tested Mathis Lourenco (13-5-3, 6 KOs).
Super middleweight Moreno Fendero (9-0, 7 KOs) goes for win number ten in an eight-round test against Mykola Vovk (15-6, 9 KOs)...
Wyatt Sanford, who captured a bronze medal for Team Canada at the 2024 Paris Olympics, makes his pro debut versus Shawn Archer (2-5, 2 KOs) in a four-rounder at junior welterweight and...
Armenia’s Erik Israyelyan, an accomplished amateur, turns pro against Richard Bernath (0-1) in a four-rounder at lightweight.
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ESPN+ to stream Dzmitry Asanau vs. Francesco Patera on Thursday
2016 Olympian Dzmitry Asanau will defend his spotless pro record in a ten-round lightweight contest against former two-time European champion Francesco Patera this Thursday, April 10th at Casino de Montréal. The co-feature will see unbeaten puncher Christopher Guerrero against Mexico’s Oliver “El Monaguillo” Quintana in a ten-round welterweight tilt. Promoted by Eye of the Tiger, Asanau-Patera, Guerrero-Quintana, and undercard bouts will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+ at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT.
Asanau, a 2016 Olympian from Belarus, is a three-year pro who has taken the fast track to contention after defeating the likes of Andy Cruz and Hector Luis Garcia as an amateur. He signed with Eye of the Tiger last year and made his Canadian debut that August with an eight-round decision over Alexis Gabriel Camejo. Less than three months later, he stopped former featherweight title challenger Matias Rueda in five rounds. Patera (30-5, 11 KOs) last held the European title from 2018-2019 and is 2-1 since a 2023 decision defeat to Keyshawn Davis.
Guerrero (13-0, 8 KOs) has been on a knockout run of late, stopping eight of his last nine opponents. In February, he became the first man to knock out 33-fight veteran Dennis Dauti, stopping him in round four. Quintana (22-3, 16 KOs) has never fought outside of Mexico and is coming off a split decision victory over Chester Parada Torales.
In other streaming action:
Mary Spencer (9-2, 6 KOs) makes the first defense of her WBA junior middleweight world title against Venezuela's n Ogleidis Suarez (31-5-1, 15 KOs). Suarez held the WBA featherweight title in 2013...
Colombian knockout specialist Jhon Orobio (12-0, 11 KOs) makes his 2025 debut in an eight-round junior welterweight fight against Argentina’s Sebastian Ezequiel Aguirre (19-6, 12 KOs). Orobio has three straight knockouts in two rounds or less, while Aguirre’s only KO defeat came in nine rounds to former world title challenger Steve Claggett...
Middleweight Alexandre Gaumont (12-0, 8 KOs) steps up against France’s battle-tested Mathis Lourenco (13-5-3, 6 KOs).
Super middleweight Moreno Fendero (9-0, 7 KOs) goes for win number ten in an eight-round test against Mykola Vovk (15-6, 9 KOs)...
Wyatt Sanford, who captured a bronze medal for Team Canada at the 2024 Paris Olympics, makes his pro debut versus Shawn Archer (2-5, 2 KOs) in a four-rounder at junior welterweight and...
Armenia’s Erik Israyelyan, an accomplished amateur, turns pro against Richard Bernath (0-1) in a four-rounder at lightweight.
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Zauerbek and Jukembayev win in Kazakhstan |
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Sultan Zaurbek W10 Azinga Fuzile... At the Barys Arena in Astana, Kazakhstan, Sultan Zaurbek (20-0, 14 KOs) kept his perfect record intact with a dominant unanimous decision win over South Africa’s Azinga Fuzile. Over ten tactical rounds, the super featherweight standout controlled the pace, picked his shots with accuracy, and systematically shut down Fuzile’s offense. Judges saw it clearly in Zaurbek’s favor. Fuzile (18-3 with 12 KOs), known for his experience and grit, came in looking to spoil the party, but was consistently outgunned by Zaurbek’s clean combinations and footwork. The Kazakh fighter stayed a step ahead all night, proving he’s ready for bigger names on the world stage.
Batyrzhan Jukembayev W10 Kane Gardner... On the same show, Batyrzhan Jukembayev (22-1, 17 KOs) put on a near-flawless performance, cruising to a wide unanimous decision over Britain’s Kane Gardner in a ten-round junior welterweight bout. The judges had it 100-89 (twice) and 100-90—all in favor of Jukembayev (his one pro loss came at the hands of ex-champ Subriel Matias). Jukembayev was surgical in his approach, using movement, sharp angles, and a stiff jab to frustrate Gardner from the opening bell. Despite Gardner’s toughness and willingness to exchange, he couldn’t find a way to penetrate the Kazakh’s tight defense or match his output.
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Zauerbek and Jukembayev win in Kazakhstan
Sultan Zaurbek W10 Azinga Fuzile... At the Barys Arena in Astana, Kazakhstan, Sultan Zaurbek (20-0, 14 KOs) kept his perfect record intact with a dominant unanimous decision win over South Africa’s Azinga Fuzile. Over ten tactical rounds, the super featherweight standout controlled the pace, picked his shots with accuracy, and systematically shut down Fuzile’s offense. Judges saw it clearly in Zaurbek’s favor. Fuzile (18-3 with 12 KOs), known for his experience and grit, came in looking to spoil the party, but was consistently outgunned by Zaurbek’s clean combinations and footwork. The Kazakh fighter stayed a step ahead all night, proving he’s ready for bigger names on the world stage.
Batyrzhan Jukembayev W10 Kane Gardner... On the same show, Batyrzhan Jukembayev (22-1, 17 KOs) put on a near-flawless performance, cruising to a wide unanimous decision over Britain’s Kane Gardner in a ten-round junior welterweight bout. The judges had it 100-89 (twice) and 100-90—all in favor of Jukembayev (his one pro loss came at the hands of ex-champ Subriel Matias). Jukembayev was surgical in his approach, using movement, sharp angles, and a stiff jab to frustrate Gardner from the opening bell. Despite Gardner’s toughness and willingness to exchange, he couldn’t find a way to penetrate the Kazakh’s tight defense or match his output.
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Fabio Wardley to face Jarrell Miller in UK on June 7th |
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Fabio Wardley will live the dream of his longed-for homecoming fight when he faces Jarrell Miller at Portman Road, the home of Ipswich Town FC, with the WBA interim heavyweight championship on the line. Wardley (18-0-1, 17 KOs) heads into the fight with the American Miller fresh off a win against British rival Frazer Clarke in October. Wardley blased out the Olympian Clarke inside a round. The quickfire triumph was a sequel to a thrilling draw between Wardely and Clarke in March of last year, which was voted ‘Fight of the Year’ at the recent BBBoC awards ceremony. The Ipswich native became British champion in November 2022 by defeating Nathan Gorman and made a successful defense against David Adeleye in October 2023, a fight in which he also won the vacant Commonwealth championship.
Miller (26-1-2, 22 KOs), known as Big Baby, propelled himself back onto the heavyweight frontline in 2023 with a victory over Lucas Browne, which resulted in a Riyadh Season call to take on Daniel Dubois at the end of the year. The 36-year-old started strongly and applied huge pressure on Dubois, now the IBF world champion, before his stamina faded in the later rounds and Dubois took advantage and secured a tenth round stoppage.
His display against Dubois earned him a Riyadh Season recall for the Los Angeles edition where he went up against former unified world champion Andy Ruiz at the BMO Stadium in August. Despite dominating the fight in the eyes of most observers. Miller was forced to accept a majority draw when the scorecards were revealed.
“On a personal note, it is a huge pleasure for me to deliver Fabio his dream of fighting at Portman Road,” said promoter Frank Warren. “It is what he has spoken about from day one of our alliance and I know how much Ipswich Town means to him.“ I believe this is the perfect fight for Fabio to take his next step because Miller is no easy pickings for anyone, especially given his size and front foot style. Fabio really is ‘Running Towards Adversity.’"
Wardley said: “As a proud Tractor Boy born and bred in Ipswich, this is a dream come true for me. Fighting for a world title at Portman Road means everything to me. I’ve got a tough opponent in front of me, but that’s what I live for. I’m ready to dig deep, go to battle, and leave it all in the ring. Even more so than usual! It’s going to be a war, and I can’t wait to give my hometown crowd a spectacle they’ll never forget.”
Fabio’s manager, Michael Ofo said; “Wardley bleeds Ipswich. He’s dreamt of nights like this his whole life, and now it’s his moment. The man across the ring is no pushover, but that’s exactly what we want—real challenges. Real fights. He’s ready for war, and when that bell rings, you’ll see why he’s the pride of the east of England.”Miller’s advisor, Spencer Brown commented; “I am delighted to bring this fabulous opportunity to Jarrell on such a big stage. I think he’s the best heavyweight in America and if I didn’t think he was going to win this we wouldn’t have taken the fight. Fabio is a great fighter, one of the best in the UK and good guy but he’s bitten off more than he can chew. It’s great to team up with Queensberry once again! It’s going to be some night at Portman Road on June 7 and I’m 100% behind my man to get the job done.”
"Fabio and I have been discussing a Portman Road fight for the best part of nearly four years,” said Chairman and CEO of Ipswich Town FC Mark Ashton.“So, I'm delighted that we've managed to get this fight over the line and give Fabio the opportunity for a homecoming world title fight at Portman Road. I'd like to thank Frank Warren and his team, who have all been tremendous throughout the planning process, and we're all now looking forward to fight night."Let's get this town and county behind one of our own in what is sure to be a thrilling event on our doorstep."
“Another great fight for our subscribers this summer”, said Michael Ridout, EVP Combat Sports & New Business at DAZN. “Fabio Wardley is the coming man in the heavyweight division with two excellent headline making performances against Frazer Clarke in the last 12 months. He deserves this homecoming!
Jerrell Miller always brings it both in and out the ring and we can’t wait to broadcast this sensational night of heavyweight boxing, live and exclusive June 7, only on DAZN.”
Tickets for ‘Running Towards Adversity’ go on presale to Ipswich Town FC season ticket holders at 1pm on Monday, the 7th of April and general sale at 1pm on Wednesday, 9 April available from itfc.co.uk.
There will be a launch press conference including both fighters on Monday April 7 at Portman Road, streamed live on DAZN and Queensberry’s social channels.
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Fabio Wardley to face Jarrell Miller in UK on June 7th
Fabio Wardley will live the dream of his longed-for homecoming fight when he faces Jarrell Miller at Portman Road, the home of Ipswich Town FC, with the WBA interim heavyweight championship on the line. Wardley (18-0-1, 17 KOs) heads into the fight with the American Miller fresh off a win against British rival Frazer Clarke in October. Wardley blased out the Olympian Clarke inside a round. The quickfire triumph was a sequel to a thrilling draw between Wardely and Clarke in March of last year, which was voted ‘Fight of the Year’ at the recent BBBoC awards ceremony. The Ipswich native became British champion in November 2022 by defeating Nathan Gorman and made a successful defense against David Adeleye in October 2023, a fight in which he also won the vacant Commonwealth championship.
Miller (26-1-2, 22 KOs), known as Big Baby, propelled himself back onto the heavyweight frontline in 2023 with a victory over Lucas Browne, which resulted in a Riyadh Season call to take on Daniel Dubois at the end of the year. The 36-year-old started strongly and applied huge pressure on Dubois, now the IBF world champion, before his stamina faded in the later rounds and Dubois took advantage and secured a tenth round stoppage.
His display against Dubois earned him a Riyadh Season recall for the Los Angeles edition where he went up against former unified world champion Andy Ruiz at the BMO Stadium in August. Despite dominating the fight in the eyes of most observers. Miller was forced to accept a majority draw when the scorecards were revealed.
“On a personal note, it is a huge pleasure for me to deliver Fabio his dream of fighting at Portman Road,” said promoter Frank Warren. “It is what he has spoken about from day one of our alliance and I know how much Ipswich Town means to him.“ I believe this is the perfect fight for Fabio to take his next step because Miller is no easy pickings for anyone, especially given his size and front foot style. Fabio really is ‘Running Towards Adversity.’"
Wardley said: “As a proud Tractor Boy born and bred in Ipswich, this is a dream come true for me. Fighting for a world title at Portman Road means everything to me. I’ve got a tough opponent in front of me, but that’s what I live for. I’m ready to dig deep, go to battle, and leave it all in the ring. Even more so than usual! It’s going to be a war, and I can’t wait to give my hometown crowd a spectacle they’ll never forget.”
Fabio’s manager, Michael Ofo said; “Wardley bleeds Ipswich. He’s dreamt of nights like this his whole life, and now it’s his moment. The man across the ring is no pushover, but that’s exactly what we want—real challenges. Real fights. He’s ready for war, and when that bell rings, you’ll see why he’s the pride of the east of England.”Miller’s advisor, Spencer Brown commented; “I am delighted to bring this fabulous opportunity to Jarrell on such a big stage. I think he’s the best heavyweight in America and if I didn’t think he was going to win this we wouldn’t have taken the fight. Fabio is a great fighter, one of the best in the UK and good guy but he’s bitten off more than he can chew. It’s great to team up with Queensberry once again! It’s going to be some night at Portman Road on June 7 and I’m 100% behind my man to get the job done.”
"Fabio and I have been discussing a Portman Road fight for the best part of nearly four years,” said Chairman and CEO of Ipswich Town FC Mark Ashton.“So, I'm delighted that we've managed to get this fight over the line and give Fabio the opportunity for a homecoming world title fight at Portman Road. I'd like to thank Frank Warren and his team, who have all been tremendous throughout the planning process, and we're all now looking forward to fight night."Let's get this town and county behind one of our own in what is sure to be a thrilling event on our doorstep."
“Another great fight for our subscribers this summer”, said Michael Ridout, EVP Combat Sports & New Business at DAZN. “Fabio Wardley is the coming man in the heavyweight division with two excellent headline making performances against Frazer Clarke in the last 12 months. He deserves this homecoming!
Jerrell Miller always brings it both in and out the ring and we can’t wait to broadcast this sensational night of heavyweight boxing, live and exclusive June 7, only on DAZN.”
Tickets for ‘Running Towards Adversity’ go on presale to Ipswich Town FC season ticket holders at 1pm on Monday, the 7th of April and general sale at 1pm on Wednesday, 9 April available from itfc.co.uk.
There will be a launch press conference including both fighters on Monday April 7 at Portman Road, streamed live on DAZN and Queensberry’s social channels.
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Adeleye wins British crown by hitting on the break |
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David Adeleye TKO6 Jeamie Tshikeva... Frank Warren expects newly minted British heavyweight champion David Adeleye (14-1) to chase bigger names such as Dillian Whyte after a successful show in Manchester on Saturday. DAZN broadcast Adeleye's fight, a controversial knockout of Jeamie "TKV" Tshikeva (8-2). Adeleye's victory, which saw Adeleye hit his foe after referee Ron Kearney called for a break of a clinch was a major talking point afterwards. Tshikeva got up from the questionable bloe, but was clearly impaired and the fight stopped soon afterwards. Warren admitted he wanted to have a second view of the event, adding: "I want to watch it back. A lot of fighters were saying that's the case but I want to watch it back."
Briths trainer Ben Davison was far more opinionated that TKV was done wrong: "Jeamie TKV was well on his way to victory last night... TKV was picking up rounds by larger margins as the fight was unfolding! A fighter can not be rewarded for directly disobeying the referees orders/an illegal blow (no matter how much you try to justify it!) I fully expect the result to be overturned!"
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Adeleye wins British crown by hitting on the break
David Adeleye TKO6 Jeamie Tshikeva... Frank Warren expects newly minted British heavyweight champion David Adeleye (14-1) to chase bigger names such as Dillian Whyte after a successful show in Manchester on Saturday. DAZN broadcast Adeleye's fight, a controversial knockout of Jeamie "TKV" Tshikeva (8-2). Adeleye's victory, which saw Adeleye hit his foe after referee Ron Kearney called for a break of a clinch was a major talking point afterwards. Tshikeva got up from the questionable bloe, but was clearly impaired and the fight stopped soon afterwards. Warren admitted he wanted to have a second view of the event, adding: "I want to watch it back. A lot of fighters were saying that's the case but I want to watch it back."
Briths trainer Ben Davison was far more opinionated that TKV was done wrong: "Jeamie TKV was well on his way to victory last night... TKV was picking up rounds by larger margins as the fight was unfolding! A fighter can not be rewarded for directly disobeying the referees orders/an illegal blow (no matter how much you try to justify it!) I fully expect the result to be overturned!"
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Tszyu stops Spencer, calls out Thurman |
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Tim Tszyu TKO4 Joey Spencer ... Former 154-pound champion Tim Tszyu (pictured) returned to the ring in style with a fourth-round TKO over Joey Spencer of the United States on Saturday's PBC Championship Boxing on Prime Video show at the Newcastle Entertainment Centre in Newcastle, Australia. After losing a pair of title fights in 2024, Tszyu (25-2, 18 KOs) gave his home fans in Australia what they were looking for and scored a big victory to put himself back into contention for a second world title run in the star-studded 154-pound division. “We took over the town and put on a show,” said Tszyu. “To have this type of stage, it’s one hell of a ride. There was no pressure…well there was a bit of pressure. I couldn’t take another loss. I hope I taught people that if you go on the floor, you can always get back up and rise to the top.”
Tszyu came into the fight measured and largely held back his punches in the first two rounds, choosing instead to stalk Spencer (19-2, 11 KOs) around the ring and measure his distance. In round three, Tszyu turned up the heat and began to score with lead left hooks as Spencer was too often caught stuck in the line of fire. “I learned from my mistakes,” said Tszyu. “You don’t go in like a hothead in the first round and abandon everything. I had a hell of an opponent in there and I was blessed to share the ring with him.”
In round four, Tszyu quickly began to do damage, badly bruising Spencer’s right eye, which immediately began to swell. From there, the onslaught was on, Tszyu unloaded with huge combos, while Spencer was only able to return fire with one or two shots at a time.
Tszyu landed a brutal 41 power punches in the decisive fourth round according to CompuBox, eventually forcing Spencer’s corner to throw in the towel, ending the fight 2:18 into the round. “The critics are always going to be there, but I had to prove it to myself,” said Tszyu. “I proved it to everyone in the world. I’m back baby, I’m back.”
After the fight, Tszyu welcomed a potential Australian blockbuster against former unified world champion Keith “One Time” Thurman, who recently returned to the ring in the land down under, knocking out Aussie Brock Jarvis in March. “Sign the contract big boy,” said Tszyu. “If the fans want it, we can bring a mega-show to Australia. He knows who to contact.”
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Tszyu stops Spencer, calls out Thurman
Tim Tszyu TKO4 Joey Spencer ... Former 154-pound champion Tim Tszyu (pictured) returned to the ring in style with a fourth-round TKO over Joey Spencer of the United States on Saturday's PBC Championship Boxing on Prime Video show at the Newcastle Entertainment Centre in Newcastle, Australia. After losing a pair of title fights in 2024, Tszyu (25-2, 18 KOs) gave his home fans in Australia what they were looking for and scored a big victory to put himself back into contention for a second world title run in the star-studded 154-pound division. “We took over the town and put on a show,” said Tszyu. “To have this type of stage, it’s one hell of a ride. There was no pressure…well there was a bit of pressure. I couldn’t take another loss. I hope I taught people that if you go on the floor, you can always get back up and rise to the top.”
Tszyu came into the fight measured and largely held back his punches in the first two rounds, choosing instead to stalk Spencer (19-2, 11 KOs) around the ring and measure his distance. In round three, Tszyu turned up the heat and began to score with lead left hooks as Spencer was too often caught stuck in the line of fire. “I learned from my mistakes,” said Tszyu. “You don’t go in like a hothead in the first round and abandon everything. I had a hell of an opponent in there and I was blessed to share the ring with him.”
In round four, Tszyu quickly began to do damage, badly bruising Spencer’s right eye, which immediately began to swell. From there, the onslaught was on, Tszyu unloaded with huge combos, while Spencer was only able to return fire with one or two shots at a time.
Tszyu landed a brutal 41 power punches in the decisive fourth round according to CompuBox, eventually forcing Spencer’s corner to throw in the towel, ending the fight 2:18 into the round. “The critics are always going to be there, but I had to prove it to myself,” said Tszyu. “I proved it to everyone in the world. I’m back baby, I’m back.”
After the fight, Tszyu welcomed a potential Australian blockbuster against former unified world champion Keith “One Time” Thurman, who recently returned to the ring in the land down under, knocking out Aussie Brock Jarvis in March. “Sign the contract big boy,” said Tszyu. “If the fans want it, we can bring a mega-show to Australia. He knows who to contact.”
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Torrez outpoints Vianello |
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Richard Torrez W10 Guido Vianello... Heavyweight Richard Torrez Jr., an Olympic silver medal winner in 2021, defeated Italian Olympian Guido Vianello via ten-round unanimous decision on Saturday at Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas. The judges' scores were 98-91 (twice) and 97-92. From the start, Torrez (13-0, 11 KOs) bull-rushed Vianello, swinging wildly with overhand lefts and right hooks. Vianello (13-3-1, 11 KOs) clinched him to avoid damage, so much so that he was deducted a point in the second.
Vianello attempted to counter as Torrez continued forward, landing shots as he could, though taking an occasional punch on the way in. Vianello connected with a chopping shot in the fifth round, but Torrez returned fire and stunted his momentum. The two went toe-to-toe in the eighth, and Torrez stunned him in the ninth before controlling the final round.
Torrez said, “I was trying to set up my feints and my body shots. Then, my body shots started landing more and more. From there, other shots started landing like my hooks. That was the plan that we had. He’s an Olympian. I give him all the credit. He’s a great fighter. I have nothing but respect for him, but Tulare, California, came out today. I don’t say no to fights. I want that to be clear. I want that to be known. Whoever you guys give me, I’m going to say yes to.”
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Torrez outpoints Vianello
Richard Torrez W10 Guido Vianello... Heavyweight Richard Torrez Jr., an Olympic silver medal winner in 2021, defeated Italian Olympian Guido Vianello via ten-round unanimous decision on Saturday at Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas. The judges' scores were 98-91 (twice) and 97-92. From the start, Torrez (13-0, 11 KOs) bull-rushed Vianello, swinging wildly with overhand lefts and right hooks. Vianello (13-3-1, 11 KOs) clinched him to avoid damage, so much so that he was deducted a point in the second.
Vianello attempted to counter as Torrez continued forward, landing shots as he could, though taking an occasional punch on the way in. Vianello connected with a chopping shot in the fifth round, but Torrez returned fire and stunted his momentum. The two went toe-to-toe in the eighth, and Torrez stunned him in the ninth before controlling the final round.
Torrez said, “I was trying to set up my feints and my body shots. Then, my body shots started landing more and more. From there, other shots started landing like my hooks. That was the plan that we had. He’s an Olympian. I give him all the credit. He’s a great fighter. I have nothing but respect for him, but Tulare, California, came out today. I don’t say no to fights. I want that to be clear. I want that to be known. Whoever you guys give me, I’m going to say yes to.”
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Delgado barely gets by Rodriguez in Vegas |
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Lindolfo Delgado W10 Elvis Rodriguez ... In a battle of junior welterweights on the undercard of Saturday's Top Rank show in Las Vegas, Lindolfo Delgado (23-0, 16 KOs) maintained his unbeaten record with a razor-thin ten-round majority decision over Dominican puncher Elvis Rodriguez (17-2-1, 13 KOs). The official scores — 95-95 and 96-94 (twice) — were indicative of a closely contested tilt that had ringside observers split. Rodriguez had the most consequential blow of the night, a straight left hand that caused Delgado to stumble into the neutral corner. Delgado, however, shook off the shakiest moment of his career to win the tenth round on all three judges' cards and escape with the victory.
Delgado said, "I feel good. I was very prepared, and I was very concentrated. In the ninth round, he got me with a good shot. But aside from that, we knew how to handle him. I want to fight for a world title. This was a WBC title eliminator. So, I deserve a shot at the WBC champion. I'm also willing to fight any of the champions of my division."
ADDITIONAL RESULTS
Lightweight Abdullah Mason (18-0, 16 KOs) celebrated his 21st birthday with a sixth-round TKO over Carlos Ornelas (28-5, 15 KOs). Mason was too big, too fast, and too strong. He forced Ornelas to take a knee with pinpoint shots in rounds two, four, and six. Ornelas' corner let him continue, but the ringside doctor waved it off following the end of the round. Mason said, “Every fighter has something coming with him. I felt myself loading up a bit to get him out there early, but he’s a strong guy, and you still have to be smart in there. You still have to break them down and not look for the perfect shot. I was looking for the perfect shot. I didn’t find it, but I got him with many good shots. And the ref eventually waved it off."
Featherweight Albert “Chop Chop” Gonzalez (13-0, 7 KOs) earned a workmanlike unanimous decision over gritty Australian Dana Coolwell (13-4, 8 KOs). Gonzalez pressed forward behind a high guard, slipping and parrying as he walked Coolwell down. The Aussie answered with sharp shots around the guard, but Gonzalez was more accurate and consistent on the inside. Scores: 77-75, 78-74 and 80-72.
Junior bantamweight Steven Navarro (6-0, 5 KOs) stepped up in class in only his sixth fight and emerged victorious by vanquishing Mexico's Juan Garcia (14-2-2, 11 KOs) in four. Navarro peppered Garcia with shots in the opening rounds, but Garcia found his distance and returned fire. The Mexican stunned Navarro with a sharp four-punch combo to start the fourth, but the 21-year-old maintained his composure and fired back with a relentless barrage to force the stoppage at 2:56.
Junior middleweight Robert Garcia-trained prospect Art Barrera Jr. (8-0, 6 KOs) painted another devastating masterpiece, stopping Daijohn Gonzalez (12-6, 6 KOs) in the second round. Barrera notched a pair of knockouts in the same stanza, the second coming courtesy of a sweeping left hook. Gonzalez rose to his feet at the count of nine, but referee Thomas Taylor stepped in after another furious Barrera flurry.
Middleweight Jahi Tucker (14-1-1, 6 KOs) tallied a dominant ten-round unanimous decision over former British junior middleweight champion Troy Williamson (20-4-1, 14 KOs). Tucker started strong, slipping and rolling punches before countering with quick lefts and right hands. Tucker faded in rounds five and six as Williamson pressed him to the ropes, but he regained control in the eighth with a left hook that sent Williamson to the canvas. All three official scores were 99-89.
Junior lightweight: Las Vegas native DJ Zamora (16-0, 11 KOs) registered a fourth-round TKO against Mexico’s Hugo Castañeda (15-2-1, 11 KOs). After two rounds of toe-to-toe action, Zamora floored Castañeda twice in the third before forcing the stoppage in the following stanza.
In the junior welterweight division, Sammy Contreras (1-0, 1 KO) earned his first professional victory, defeating Robert Jimenez (2-3-1, 1 KO) via first-round TKO. Time of stoppage: 2:16.
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Delgado barely gets by Rodriguez in Vegas
Lindolfo Delgado W10 Elvis Rodriguez ... In a battle of junior welterweights on the undercard of Saturday's Top Rank show in Las Vegas, Lindolfo Delgado (23-0, 16 KOs) maintained his unbeaten record with a razor-thin ten-round majority decision over Dominican puncher Elvis Rodriguez (17-2-1, 13 KOs). The official scores — 95-95 and 96-94 (twice) — were indicative of a closely contested tilt that had ringside observers split. Rodriguez had the most consequential blow of the night, a straight left hand that caused Delgado to stumble into the neutral corner. Delgado, however, shook off the shakiest moment of his career to win the tenth round on all three judges' cards and escape with the victory.
Delgado said, "I feel good. I was very prepared, and I was very concentrated. In the ninth round, he got me with a good shot. But aside from that, we knew how to handle him. I want to fight for a world title. This was a WBC title eliminator. So, I deserve a shot at the WBC champion. I'm also willing to fight any of the champions of my division."
ADDITIONAL RESULTS
Lightweight Abdullah Mason (18-0, 16 KOs) celebrated his 21st birthday with a sixth-round TKO over Carlos Ornelas (28-5, 15 KOs). Mason was too big, too fast, and too strong. He forced Ornelas to take a knee with pinpoint shots in rounds two, four, and six. Ornelas' corner let him continue, but the ringside doctor waved it off following the end of the round. Mason said, “Every fighter has something coming with him. I felt myself loading up a bit to get him out there early, but he’s a strong guy, and you still have to be smart in there. You still have to break them down and not look for the perfect shot. I was looking for the perfect shot. I didn’t find it, but I got him with many good shots. And the ref eventually waved it off."
Featherweight Albert “Chop Chop” Gonzalez (13-0, 7 KOs) earned a workmanlike unanimous decision over gritty Australian Dana Coolwell (13-4, 8 KOs). Gonzalez pressed forward behind a high guard, slipping and parrying as he walked Coolwell down. The Aussie answered with sharp shots around the guard, but Gonzalez was more accurate and consistent on the inside. Scores: 77-75, 78-74 and 80-72.
Junior bantamweight Steven Navarro (6-0, 5 KOs) stepped up in class in only his sixth fight and emerged victorious by vanquishing Mexico's Juan Garcia (14-2-2, 11 KOs) in four. Navarro peppered Garcia with shots in the opening rounds, but Garcia found his distance and returned fire. The Mexican stunned Navarro with a sharp four-punch combo to start the fourth, but the 21-year-old maintained his composure and fired back with a relentless barrage to force the stoppage at 2:56.
Junior middleweight Robert Garcia-trained prospect Art Barrera Jr. (8-0, 6 KOs) painted another devastating masterpiece, stopping Daijohn Gonzalez (12-6, 6 KOs) in the second round. Barrera notched a pair of knockouts in the same stanza, the second coming courtesy of a sweeping left hook. Gonzalez rose to his feet at the count of nine, but referee Thomas Taylor stepped in after another furious Barrera flurry.
Middleweight Jahi Tucker (14-1-1, 6 KOs) tallied a dominant ten-round unanimous decision over former British junior middleweight champion Troy Williamson (20-4-1, 14 KOs). Tucker started strong, slipping and rolling punches before countering with quick lefts and right hands. Tucker faded in rounds five and six as Williamson pressed him to the ropes, but he regained control in the eighth with a left hook that sent Williamson to the canvas. All three official scores were 99-89.
Junior lightweight: Las Vegas native DJ Zamora (16-0, 11 KOs) registered a fourth-round TKO against Mexico’s Hugo Castañeda (15-2-1, 11 KOs). After two rounds of toe-to-toe action, Zamora floored Castañeda twice in the third before forcing the stoppage in the following stanza.
In the junior welterweight division, Sammy Contreras (1-0, 1 KO) earned his first professional victory, defeating Robert Jimenez (2-3-1, 1 KO) via first-round TKO. Time of stoppage: 2:16.
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PBC undercard results from Australia |
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Liam Talivaa TKO5 Brandon Grach ... On the PBC Championship Boxing on Prime Video show in Newcastle, Australia, heavyweight Liam Talivaa (7-1, 3 KOs) blasted out Brandon Grach (3-1, 2 KOs) in round five to avenge a defeat in the pair’s first contest. Grach and Talivaa first met in a 2023 firefight that saw Grach score one of the year’s best knockouts in the second round. They once again threw big punches from the outset, as Australia’s Grach and the southpaw from New Zealand Talivaa looked to pick up where they left off. Talivaa struck first in the titanic affair, landing a counter hook that knocked Grach off-balance midway through round three and scored a flash knockdown. After Grach rose to his feet, Talivaa had more success with power hooks that badly bruised Grach’s right eye, causing immediate swelling.
After Grach looked to get some of the momentum back in his direction in round four, Talivaa came out fast in round five, with a right hook and straight left combo that hurt Grach badly and eventually saw him hit the canvas again. Talivaa left no doubt in the follow up, throwing huge shots to force referee Dean Cambridge to stop the bout 1:08 into the round. “I came here to redeem myself and show the world who I am,” said Talivaa. “Big up to Grach. I thank him for a hell of a fight and for making my story even better.”
Endry Saavedra TKO8 Mikkel Nielsen ... Middleweight Endry Saavedra (17-1-1, 14 KOs) scored a victory by eighth-round TKO over Denmark’s Mikkel Nielsen (13-3, 5 KOs), dominating the contest with body shots throughout, before closing the show with two knockdowns. A 2016 Olympian representing Venezuela, Saavedra was making his ring return after a memorable October 2024 showdown on Prime Video that saw him and Cesar Mateo Tapia both hit the canvas on their way to a majority draw. Against Nielsen, Saavedra showed impressive ring IQ, taking the time to methodically break his opponent down. Saavedra began to really get his momentum going in round four, landing a crisp uppercut that stunned Nielsen and began a steady stream of blood from his nose that would hamper him throughout the fight. The onslaught came to a crescendo in the eighth, as a right hook to the body from close quarters forced Nielsen to take a knee. Nielsen was able to rise to his feet, and stayed game while looking to wing big right hands, but was eventually dropped again by a series of big shots before referee Chris Condon halted the action 1:42 seconds into the round.
Koen Mazoudier W10 Dan Hill... Coverage on Prime Video began with contender Koen Mazoudier (13-4-1, 5 KOs) earning the Australian junior middleweight title via unanimous decision over the defending champion Dan Hill (7-2, 3 KOs) after ten toe-to-toe rounds. The fight got off to a blistering start, with the pair combining to land 100 punches across the first two rounds. In round three, Mazoudier landed a thudding right hand in the final minute that put Hill down on the mat, taking control of the momentum early.
Despite the knockdown, Hill was undeterred and continued to push forward after surviving the third and had a strong fourth round in an attempt to turn the tide in his favor, but still took his fair share of damage. The fight continued its rough and tumble nature through the 10th, with Mazoudier punctuating his performance by hurting Hill again in that final frame, this time with a left hook, eventually clinching the victory by scores of 100-89, 99-90 and 98-91. “Anytime, anywhere, anyone,” said Mazoudier when asked about his next move post-match. “I’d love the rematch with Nikita Tszyu. I want anyone who they think is better than me. Anyone who wants to test themselves, I’m here to show that I’m a world-level fighter.”
The event was promoted by No Limit Boxing and The Rose Brothers, in association with TGB Promotions.
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PBC undercard results from Australia
Liam Talivaa TKO5 Brandon Grach ... On the PBC Championship Boxing on Prime Video show in Newcastle, Australia, heavyweight Liam Talivaa (7-1, 3 KOs) blasted out Brandon Grach (3-1, 2 KOs) in round five to avenge a defeat in the pair’s first contest. Grach and Talivaa first met in a 2023 firefight that saw Grach score one of the year’s best knockouts in the second round. They once again threw big punches from the outset, as Australia’s Grach and the southpaw from New Zealand Talivaa looked to pick up where they left off. Talivaa struck first in the titanic affair, landing a counter hook that knocked Grach off-balance midway through round three and scored a flash knockdown. After Grach rose to his feet, Talivaa had more success with power hooks that badly bruised Grach’s right eye, causing immediate swelling.
After Grach looked to get some of the momentum back in his direction in round four, Talivaa came out fast in round five, with a right hook and straight left combo that hurt Grach badly and eventually saw him hit the canvas again. Talivaa left no doubt in the follow up, throwing huge shots to force referee Dean Cambridge to stop the bout 1:08 into the round. “I came here to redeem myself and show the world who I am,” said Talivaa. “Big up to Grach. I thank him for a hell of a fight and for making my story even better.”
Endry Saavedra TKO8 Mikkel Nielsen ... Middleweight Endry Saavedra (17-1-1, 14 KOs) scored a victory by eighth-round TKO over Denmark’s Mikkel Nielsen (13-3, 5 KOs), dominating the contest with body shots throughout, before closing the show with two knockdowns. A 2016 Olympian representing Venezuela, Saavedra was making his ring return after a memorable October 2024 showdown on Prime Video that saw him and Cesar Mateo Tapia both hit the canvas on their way to a majority draw. Against Nielsen, Saavedra showed impressive ring IQ, taking the time to methodically break his opponent down. Saavedra began to really get his momentum going in round four, landing a crisp uppercut that stunned Nielsen and began a steady stream of blood from his nose that would hamper him throughout the fight. The onslaught came to a crescendo in the eighth, as a right hook to the body from close quarters forced Nielsen to take a knee. Nielsen was able to rise to his feet, and stayed game while looking to wing big right hands, but was eventually dropped again by a series of big shots before referee Chris Condon halted the action 1:42 seconds into the round.
Koen Mazoudier W10 Dan Hill... Coverage on Prime Video began with contender Koen Mazoudier (13-4-1, 5 KOs) earning the Australian junior middleweight title via unanimous decision over the defending champion Dan Hill (7-2, 3 KOs) after ten toe-to-toe rounds. The fight got off to a blistering start, with the pair combining to land 100 punches across the first two rounds. In round three, Mazoudier landed a thudding right hand in the final minute that put Hill down on the mat, taking control of the momentum early.
Despite the knockdown, Hill was undeterred and continued to push forward after surviving the third and had a strong fourth round in an attempt to turn the tide in his favor, but still took his fair share of damage. The fight continued its rough and tumble nature through the 10th, with Mazoudier punctuating his performance by hurting Hill again in that final frame, this time with a left hook, eventually clinching the victory by scores of 100-89, 99-90 and 98-91. “Anytime, anywhere, anyone,” said Mazoudier when asked about his next move post-match. “I’d love the rematch with Nikita Tszyu. I want anyone who they think is better than me. Anyone who wants to test themselves, I’m here to show that I’m a world-level fighter.”
The event was promoted by No Limit Boxing and The Rose Brothers, in association with TGB Promotions.
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Rupprecht reigns supreme at 102 pounds |
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Tina Rupprecht W10 Sumire Yamanaka ... Germany's Tina Rupprecht was crowned unified atomweight champion in her home country. The 32 year-old Rupprecht handed previously undefeated Sumire Yamanaka of Japan her first loss. Rupprecht's triumph came via decision after an exciting fight at the MBS Arena in Potsdam in front of 2,500 spectators. Rupprecht, who is barely five feet tall and is nicknamed “Tiny Tina,” was quick on her feet and the more active boxer overall. Her Japanese opponent launched a few counterattacks but in the end, Rupprecht prevailed thanks to her greater variability. Rupprecht entered the fight as WBO, WBA, and WBC champion, while Yamanaka came in with IBF recognition.
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Rupprecht reigns supreme at 102 pounds
Tina Rupprecht W10 Sumire Yamanaka ... Germany's Tina Rupprecht was crowned unified atomweight champion in her home country. The 32 year-old Rupprecht handed previously undefeated Sumire Yamanaka of Japan her first loss. Rupprecht's triumph came via decision after an exciting fight at the MBS Arena in Potsdam in front of 2,500 spectators. Rupprecht, who is barely five feet tall and is nicknamed “Tiny Tina,” was quick on her feet and the more active boxer overall. Her Japanese opponent launched a few counterattacks but in the end, Rupprecht prevailed thanks to her greater variability. Rupprecht entered the fight as WBO, WBA, and WBC champion, while Yamanaka came in with IBF recognition.
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Gaby Sánchez victorious in her hometown |
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Gaby Sánchez W10 Simangele Hadebe... Puebla, Mexico's Gaby “Bonita” Sánchez won via unanimous decision in a flyweight battle over South Africa’s Simangele “La Leona” Hadebe before a packed GNP Auditorium in Sanchez's hometown. Sanchez (12-6) punished Hadebe (14-4-2), but the visitor withstood the onslaught and didn’t hesitate to counter with her own right hand. A well-placed blow caused Sánchez’s nose to bleed, but her momentum never waned. The final decision was rendered by the judges, who awarded identical scores of 100-89 to Sánchez. The Governor of Puebla, Alejandro Armenta, watched the fight from the front row, accompanied by the Mayor of Puebla, José Chedraui, and former Governor Sergio Salomón. More than 10,000 people gathered to celebrate the victory of the woman who also serves as the state’s Secretary of Sports and Youth.
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Gaby Sánchez victorious in her hometown
Gaby Sánchez W10 Simangele Hadebe... Puebla, Mexico's Gaby “Bonita” Sánchez won via unanimous decision in a flyweight battle over South Africa’s Simangele “La Leona” Hadebe before a packed GNP Auditorium in Sanchez's hometown. Sanchez (12-6) punished Hadebe (14-4-2), but the visitor withstood the onslaught and didn’t hesitate to counter with her own right hand. A well-placed blow caused Sánchez’s nose to bleed, but her momentum never waned. The final decision was rendered by the judges, who awarded identical scores of 100-89 to Sánchez. The Governor of Puebla, Alejandro Armenta, watched the fight from the front row, accompanied by the Mayor of Puebla, José Chedraui, and former Governor Sergio Salomón. More than 10,000 people gathered to celebrate the victory of the woman who also serves as the state’s Secretary of Sports and Youth.
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Weigh-in report from Las Vegas |
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Here are the boxers' weights for Saturday's ESPN show in Las Vegas:
Richard Torrez Jr. 229.2 pounds vs. Guido Vianello 242.3 (ten rounds);
Lindolfo Delgado 139.9 vs. Elvis Rodriguez 139.6 (WBC eliminator — ten rounds);
Abdullah Mason 135 vs. Carlos Ornelas 133.8 (ten Rounds);
Albert Gonzalez 124.8 vs. Dana Coolwell 125.5 (eight rounds);
Steven Navarro 114.8 vs. Juan Garcia 113.5 (eight rounds);
Art Barrera Jr. 152.7 vs. Daijohn Gonzalez 152.9 (six rounds);
Jahi Tucker 160.7 vs. Troy Williamson 160.4 (ten rounds);
DJ Zamora 130.9 vs. Hugo Castañeda 130.6 (eight rounds); and
Sammy Contreras Jr. 138.6 vs. Robert Jimenez 138.4 (four rounds).
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Weigh-in report from Las Vegas
Here are the boxers' weights for Saturday's ESPN show in Las Vegas:
Richard Torrez Jr. 229.2 pounds vs. Guido Vianello 242.3 (ten rounds);
Lindolfo Delgado 139.9 vs. Elvis Rodriguez 139.6 (WBC eliminator — ten rounds);
Abdullah Mason 135 vs. Carlos Ornelas 133.8 (ten Rounds);
Albert Gonzalez 124.8 vs. Dana Coolwell 125.5 (eight rounds);
Steven Navarro 114.8 vs. Juan Garcia 113.5 (eight rounds);
Art Barrera Jr. 152.7 vs. Daijohn Gonzalez 152.9 (six rounds);
Jahi Tucker 160.7 vs. Troy Williamson 160.4 (ten rounds);
DJ Zamora 130.9 vs. Hugo Castañeda 130.6 (eight rounds); and
Sammy Contreras Jr. 138.6 vs. Robert Jimenez 138.4 (four rounds).
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Atomweight unification day has arrived! |
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Today (Saturday) marks a true undisputed, world championship bout in the 102-pound weight class. Christina “Tiny Tina” Rupprecht prepares to defend her three atomweight championships against her IBF counterpart, Sumire Yamanaka of Japan. This high-stakes clash will take place at MBS Arena in Potsdam, Germany, promising a battle that could redefine the landscape of the division. Rupprecht (13-1-1, 3 KOs), a former 105-pound champion, built her reputation on technical mastery and strategic execution, making her one of the most formidable fighters in the lightest divisions. The German champion aims to solidify her legacy, but standing in her way is a hungry and undefeated Yamanaka (8-0). |
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Atomweight unification day has arrived!
Today (Saturday) marks a true undisputed, world championship bout in the 102-pound weight class. Christina “Tiny Tina” Rupprecht prepares to defend her three atomweight championships against her IBF counterpart, Sumire Yamanaka of Japan. This high-stakes clash will take place at MBS Arena in Potsdam, Germany, promising a battle that could redefine the landscape of the division. Rupprecht (13-1-1, 3 KOs), a former 105-pound champion, built her reputation on technical mastery and strategic execution, making her one of the most formidable fighters in the lightest divisions. The German champion aims to solidify her legacy, but standing in her way is a hungry and undefeated Yamanaka (8-0). |
Today: ProBox comes to Philadelphia |
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Welterweights Ricardo Salas and Kent Cruz take center stage in Philadelphia on Saturday night. They headline a ProBox TV bill at the 2300 Arena in The City of Brotherly Love. Cruz, a decorated amateur, boasts a record of 17 victories against just one defeat with three draws. Eleven of his opponents have not been around to hear the final bell. But Salas, 20-2-2 (15 KOs), and known as “The Magic Man,” is on the cusp of a big fight. In his last contest, he took out Roiman Villa in three rounds on the Canelo Alvarez-Edgar Berlanga undercard. An injury to welterweight contender Nicklaus Flaz means his fight with Gabriel Maestre is now off the show.
There is also a junior welterweight bout between Connecticut's Mykquan Williams, 22-0-2 (11 KOs), and 30-7-1 (21 KOs) Antonio Moran of Mexico. Williams is working his way up the ladder toward a fight with champion Teofimo Lopez. Williams had three solid wins in 2024, including a stoppage victory over then-17-0 Luis Feliciano on ProBox TV last January. Moran has been in deep in losses to Arnold Barboza, Jamaine Ortiz, and Andy Cruz.
Orlando-based southpaw junior lightweight Geo Lopez, 17-0 (10 KOs), bagged three wins in 2024, and he is up against experienced Nicaraguan Rene Alvarado, who has gone the distance with the likes of William Zepeda and Lamont Roach. Alvarado is 34-15 (22 KOs).
At light heavyweight, there is an eight-rounder between Cleveland’s 10-0-1 (8 KOs) Dante Benjamin and Texas-based Mexican Rodolfo Gomez Jnr, who is 14-8-3 (10 KOs).
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Today: ProBox comes to Philadelphia
Welterweights Ricardo Salas and Kent Cruz take center stage in Philadelphia on Saturday night. They headline a ProBox TV bill at the 2300 Arena in The City of Brotherly Love. Cruz, a decorated amateur, boasts a record of 17 victories against just one defeat with three draws. Eleven of his opponents have not been around to hear the final bell. But Salas, 20-2-2 (15 KOs), and known as “The Magic Man,” is on the cusp of a big fight. In his last contest, he took out Roiman Villa in three rounds on the Canelo Alvarez-Edgar Berlanga undercard. An injury to welterweight contender Nicklaus Flaz means his fight with Gabriel Maestre is now off the show.
There is also a junior welterweight bout between Connecticut's Mykquan Williams, 22-0-2 (11 KOs), and 30-7-1 (21 KOs) Antonio Moran of Mexico. Williams is working his way up the ladder toward a fight with champion Teofimo Lopez. Williams had three solid wins in 2024, including a stoppage victory over then-17-0 Luis Feliciano on ProBox TV last January. Moran has been in deep in losses to Arnold Barboza, Jamaine Ortiz, and Andy Cruz.
Orlando-based southpaw junior lightweight Geo Lopez, 17-0 (10 KOs), bagged three wins in 2024, and he is up against experienced Nicaraguan Rene Alvarado, who has gone the distance with the likes of William Zepeda and Lamont Roach. Alvarado is 34-15 (22 KOs).
At light heavyweight, there is an eight-rounder between Cleveland’s 10-0-1 (8 KOs) Dante Benjamin and Texas-based Mexican Rodolfo Gomez Jnr, who is 14-8-3 (10 KOs).
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Final Presser quotes for Torrez vs. Vianello |
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Heavyweights Richard Torrez Jr (12-0, 11 KOs) and Guido “The Gladiator” Vianello (13-2-1, 11 KOs) are set for a high-stakes ten-round main event this Saturday, April 5th at Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas. Torrez, a U.S. Olympic silver medalist, takes a big step up in class against the battle-tested Italian Olympian. In the ten-round junior welterweight co-feature, Mexican Olympian Lindolfo Delgado (22-0, 16 KOs) and Dominican standout Elvis Rodriguez (17-1-1, 13 KOs) will collide in a WBC and IBF title eliminator. Additionally, 20 year-old lightweight Abdullah Mason (17-0, 15 KOs), who turns 21 on fight night, will face Mexican southpaw Carlos “Chinito” Ornelas (28-4, 15 KOs) in a ten-round special attraction. Torrez-Vianello, Delgado-Rodriguez, Mason-Ornelas, and the entire undercard will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+ starting at 5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT.
Featherweight Albert “Chop Chop” Gonzalez (12-0, 7 KOs) and junior bantamweight Steven “Kid Dynamite” Navarro (5-0, 4 KOs) will be featured on the undercard in separate eight-rounders. Gonzalez will take on the durable Dana Coolwell (13-3, 8 KOs), while Navarro steps up against Mexican veteran Juan Garcia (14-1-2, 11 KOs). Promoted by Top Rank, remaining tickets are on sale now via Ticketmaster.com. This is what the fighters said at Thursday's press conference.
Richard Torrez
“It is something surreal to see your face on the side of a hotel and stuff like that. And I’m just excited to show everyone at home and the people following us who I am as a fighter. I feel like sometimes people think that I only know how to come forward. So, I’m really excited to show some different facets to my game.”
“Guido brings a lot to the table. He’s a really tall guy. He knows how to use his length. I’m really excited to show my boxing abilities and to show that I’m supposed to be here.”
“The most exciting part of this is that he is a worthy opponent. He has a name. We’re both working towards something. We’re not just trying to stay in the game. We’re trying to prove something in order to obtain something great. So, it’s amazing to me that we’re able to be in the ring together to fight for that greatness.”
“A win would solidify that I’m supposed to be here and that the trajectory that Top Rank has me on is the right one. It solidifies that I’ve been working hard and that the work has not been in vain.”
Guido Vianello
“The fight with Arslanbek Makhmudov was just a warm-up for me. It was an easy fight. Now, my pro career is getting started.”
“Richard is a very strong guy. He’s young like me. Actually, he’s younger. We are two young guys. He’s a southpaw. He has an Olympic medal, so big respect to him.”
“I sparred with two Olympians in Italy. I sparred with two professional boxers in England. I sparred with another guy in Las Vegas. This was my hardest training camp ever.
Lindolfo Delgado
“I’m ready. I’ve been waiting for an opportunity like this, to fight a great fighter like Elvis. I know this fight will give me an opportunity for a world title shot.”
“There are a lot of southpaws at Robert Garcia’s gym. I’ve been sparring with Giovani Santillan and others. It was a great camp. And in my amateur career, I fought a lot of southpaws. So, I’m prepared and very focused on this fight.”
“Winning a fight of this magnitude would be great for me. It makes me so happy to be so close to a world title opportunity. I have been working and training hard for many years. So it will be nice for me, my family, and those that support me.”
Elvis Rodriguez
“It’s a great opportunity. And we are more than ready to take advantage of it. It’s taken us a lot of hard work to get here. And on Saturday night, we will do the work necessary to walk away with the victory.”
“A win would be the most significant of my career and will put me one step away from a world title opportunity. It will put me one step away from achieving my dream of becoming a world champion.”
“My desire is to fight for a world title after. This is a final eliminator. By winning it, I will deserve it. And I’m ready for any of the world champions.”
Abdullah Mason
“I was looking forward to facing Giovanni Cabrera {who withdrew due to injury}. He was a great step up. He went the distance with Isaac Cruz. It would have put us higher in the rankings. But we were still preparing when we heard he had fallen out of the fight. We have this new opponent, and we are ready for him, too. He’s a southpaw as well. And we’re in shape.”
“This step-up fight, too. He knows how to move his head and feet. He can punch. We’ll be prepared for what he has coming.”
“The way I get the job done is to display my skills and keep doing what I’ve been doing to my other opponents.”
Carlos Ornelas
“We are always in the gym. So when this opportunity came, we were ready. We will do our very best.”
“I have a lot of amateur experience as well. And I’ve also learned as a pro to adjust on the fly. That’s why this isn’t complicated now. I’ve acquired a lot of tools, and it’s about picking the right ones.”
Albert Gonzalez
“This is definitely a step-up fight. Dana Coolwell is smarter than my previous opponents. He's longer and taller. So he's going to try to box me. He's going to try to keep it on the outside.”
“At Robert Garcia Boxing Academy, we see all different types of styles. There's a little bit of everything there. So, I'm ready for whatever he brings to the table.”
Steven Navarro
“It's been a surreal experience. I've always known what I am destined to do. But I'm nowhere near where I want to be at. We are blessed to be where we are, but not satisfied.”
“It means the world to be with the best promoter and on the best platform. It means I'm on the right path. We're ready to have my hand raised up high on Saturday.”
Saturday, April 5
LIVE on ESPN+ (5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT)
Richard Torrez Jr. vs. Guido Vianello, 10 Rounds, Heavyweights
Lindolfo Delgado vs. Elvis Rodriguez, 10 Rounds, WBC & IBF Junior Welterweight Title Eliminator
Abdullah Mason vs Carlos Ornelas, 10 Rounds,
Albert Gonzalez vs. Dana Coolwell, 8 Rounds, Featherweight
Steven Navarro vs. Juan Garcia, 8 Rounds,
Art Barrera Jr. vs. Daijohn Gonzalez, 6 Rounds, Junior Middleweight
Jahi Tucker vs. Troy Williamson, 10 Rounds, Middleweight
DJ Zamora vs. Hugo Castañeda, 8 Rounds, Junior Lightweight
Sammy Contreras Jr. vs. Robert Jimenez, 4 Rounds, Junior Welterweights
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Final Presser quotes for Torrez vs. Vianello
Heavyweights Richard Torrez Jr (12-0, 11 KOs) and Guido “The Gladiator” Vianello (13-2-1, 11 KOs) are set for a high-stakes ten-round main event this Saturday, April 5th at Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas. Torrez, a U.S. Olympic silver medalist, takes a big step up in class against the battle-tested Italian Olympian. In the ten-round junior welterweight co-feature, Mexican Olympian Lindolfo Delgado (22-0, 16 KOs) and Dominican standout Elvis Rodriguez (17-1-1, 13 KOs) will collide in a WBC and IBF title eliminator. Additionally, 20 year-old lightweight Abdullah Mason (17-0, 15 KOs), who turns 21 on fight night, will face Mexican southpaw Carlos “Chinito” Ornelas (28-4, 15 KOs) in a ten-round special attraction. Torrez-Vianello, Delgado-Rodriguez, Mason-Ornelas, and the entire undercard will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+ starting at 5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT.
Featherweight Albert “Chop Chop” Gonzalez (12-0, 7 KOs) and junior bantamweight Steven “Kid Dynamite” Navarro (5-0, 4 KOs) will be featured on the undercard in separate eight-rounders. Gonzalez will take on the durable Dana Coolwell (13-3, 8 KOs), while Navarro steps up against Mexican veteran Juan Garcia (14-1-2, 11 KOs). Promoted by Top Rank, remaining tickets are on sale now via Ticketmaster.com. This is what the fighters said at Thursday's press conference.
Richard Torrez
“It is something surreal to see your face on the side of a hotel and stuff like that. And I’m just excited to show everyone at home and the people following us who I am as a fighter. I feel like sometimes people think that I only know how to come forward. So, I’m really excited to show some different facets to my game.”
“Guido brings a lot to the table. He’s a really tall guy. He knows how to use his length. I’m really excited to show my boxing abilities and to show that I’m supposed to be here.”
“The most exciting part of this is that he is a worthy opponent. He has a name. We’re both working towards something. We’re not just trying to stay in the game. We’re trying to prove something in order to obtain something great. So, it’s amazing to me that we’re able to be in the ring together to fight for that greatness.”
“A win would solidify that I’m supposed to be here and that the trajectory that Top Rank has me on is the right one. It solidifies that I’ve been working hard and that the work has not been in vain.”
Guido Vianello
“The fight with Arslanbek Makhmudov was just a warm-up for me. It was an easy fight. Now, my pro career is getting started.”
“Richard is a very strong guy. He’s young like me. Actually, he’s younger. We are two young guys. He’s a southpaw. He has an Olympic medal, so big respect to him.”
“I sparred with two Olympians in Italy. I sparred with two professional boxers in England. I sparred with another guy in Las Vegas. This was my hardest training camp ever.
Lindolfo Delgado
“I’m ready. I’ve been waiting for an opportunity like this, to fight a great fighter like Elvis. I know this fight will give me an opportunity for a world title shot.”
“There are a lot of southpaws at Robert Garcia’s gym. I’ve been sparring with Giovani Santillan and others. It was a great camp. And in my amateur career, I fought a lot of southpaws. So, I’m prepared and very focused on this fight.”
“Winning a fight of this magnitude would be great for me. It makes me so happy to be so close to a world title opportunity. I have been working and training hard for many years. So it will be nice for me, my family, and those that support me.”
Elvis Rodriguez
“It’s a great opportunity. And we are more than ready to take advantage of it. It’s taken us a lot of hard work to get here. And on Saturday night, we will do the work necessary to walk away with the victory.”
“A win would be the most significant of my career and will put me one step away from a world title opportunity. It will put me one step away from achieving my dream of becoming a world champion.”
“My desire is to fight for a world title after. This is a final eliminator. By winning it, I will deserve it. And I’m ready for any of the world champions.”
Abdullah Mason
“I was looking forward to facing Giovanni Cabrera {who withdrew due to injury}. He was a great step up. He went the distance with Isaac Cruz. It would have put us higher in the rankings. But we were still preparing when we heard he had fallen out of the fight. We have this new opponent, and we are ready for him, too. He’s a southpaw as well. And we’re in shape.”
“This step-up fight, too. He knows how to move his head and feet. He can punch. We’ll be prepared for what he has coming.”
“The way I get the job done is to display my skills and keep doing what I’ve been doing to my other opponents.”
Carlos Ornelas
“We are always in the gym. So when this opportunity came, we were ready. We will do our very best.”
“I have a lot of amateur experience as well. And I’ve also learned as a pro to adjust on the fly. That’s why this isn’t complicated now. I’ve acquired a lot of tools, and it’s about picking the right ones.”
Albert Gonzalez
“This is definitely a step-up fight. Dana Coolwell is smarter than my previous opponents. He's longer and taller. So he's going to try to box me. He's going to try to keep it on the outside.”
“At Robert Garcia Boxing Academy, we see all different types of styles. There's a little bit of everything there. So, I'm ready for whatever he brings to the table.”
Steven Navarro
“It's been a surreal experience. I've always known what I am destined to do. But I'm nowhere near where I want to be at. We are blessed to be where we are, but not satisfied.”
“It means the world to be with the best promoter and on the best platform. It means I'm on the right path. We're ready to have my hand raised up high on Saturday.”
Saturday, April 5
LIVE on ESPN+ (5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT)
Richard Torrez Jr. vs. Guido Vianello, 10 Rounds, Heavyweights
Lindolfo Delgado vs. Elvis Rodriguez, 10 Rounds, WBC & IBF Junior Welterweight Title Eliminator
Abdullah Mason vs Carlos Ornelas, 10 Rounds,
Albert Gonzalez vs. Dana Coolwell, 8 Rounds, Featherweight
Steven Navarro vs. Juan Garcia, 8 Rounds,
Art Barrera Jr. vs. Daijohn Gonzalez, 6 Rounds, Junior Middleweight
Jahi Tucker vs. Troy Williamson, 10 Rounds, Middleweight
DJ Zamora vs. Hugo Castañeda, 8 Rounds, Junior Lightweight
Sammy Contreras Jr. vs. Robert Jimenez, 4 Rounds, Junior Welterweights
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