Mielnicki to fight in Atlantic City in April |
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On Saturday, April 11th, middleweight Vito “White Magic” Mielnicki Jr. (22-1, 13 KOs) of Roseland, New Jersey will enter the ring with Mexican-born Omar Ulises “La Bala” Huerta (15-0-1, 13 KOs) in the opposite corner. Scheduled for ten rounds, Mielnicki - Huerta will be the main event of the Sampson Boxing show at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The show will be broadcast live on ProBoxTV (7:00 pm ET). In the ten-round co-feature, Cuban junior middleweight Yan Marcos (14-0, 10 KOs) will take on fellow undefeated Dwyke Flemmings Jr. (11-0, 10 KOs) of nearby Paterson, New Jersey. Also featured will be a ten-round junior middleweight battle between all-action Raul Garcia (15-2-1, 12 KOs) of the Dominican Republic and rugged Quinton Randall (15-3-1, 3 KOs) of Katy, Texas.
Tickets are available through Ticketmaster or at the Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall Box Office: (609) 348-7512, starting at 12:00 pm (Noon) on Wednesday, February 4th.
Before turning professional in July 2019, Mielnicki was a four-time Junior National Golden Gloves Champion, a USA Junior National Champion and was also on the USA National High-Performance Team. Mielnicki will be returning to fight in his home state after s big win last November in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, a ninth-round TKO of previously undefeated Samuel Nmomah of Nigeria.
Several more bouts featuring local and international talent will be announced shortly. On fight night, doors open at 5:30 pm and the action starts at 6:00 pm. Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall is located at 2301 Boardwalk in Atlantic City. Phone: (609) 348-7000.
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Mielnicki to fight in Atlantic City in April
On Saturday, April 11th, middleweight Vito “White Magic” Mielnicki Jr. (22-1, 13 KOs) of Roseland, New Jersey will enter the ring with Mexican-born Omar Ulises “La Bala” Huerta (15-0-1, 13 KOs) in the opposite corner. Scheduled for ten rounds, Mielnicki - Huerta will be the main event of the Sampson Boxing show at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The show will be broadcast live on ProBoxTV (7:00 pm ET). In the ten-round co-feature, Cuban junior middleweight Yan Marcos (14-0, 10 KOs) will take on fellow undefeated Dwyke Flemmings Jr. (11-0, 10 KOs) of nearby Paterson, New Jersey. Also featured will be a ten-round junior middleweight battle between all-action Raul Garcia (15-2-1, 12 KOs) of the Dominican Republic and rugged Quinton Randall (15-3-1, 3 KOs) of Katy, Texas.
Tickets are available through Ticketmaster or at the Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall Box Office: (609) 348-7512, starting at 12:00 pm (Noon) on Wednesday, February 4th.
Before turning professional in July 2019, Mielnicki was a four-time Junior National Golden Gloves Champion, a USA Junior National Champion and was also on the USA National High-Performance Team. Mielnicki will be returning to fight in his home state after s big win last November in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, a ninth-round TKO of previously undefeated Samuel Nmomah of Nigeria.
Several more bouts featuring local and international talent will be announced shortly. On fight night, doors open at 5:30 pm and the action starts at 6:00 pm. Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall is located at 2301 Boardwalk in Atlantic City. Phone: (609) 348-7000.
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Welcome to Ball vs. Figueroa fight week |
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Nick Ball (pictured) defends his WBA featherweight title this weekend as he faces former two-weight world champion Brandon Figueroa live on DAZN. Ball is chasing a fourth straight title defense against 'The Heartbreaker' who has designs on a third title reign of his own as he heads to Liverpool. Figueroa will enjoy a seven-inch height advantage over Ball, who stands 5'2". But Ball will enjoy the home field advantage. He has turned the city's M&S Bank Arena into a fortress over the past few years - but he will face one of his sternest tests yet against this foe. The main undercard broadcast begins at 2pm Eastern Standard Time, while the headline bout is expected to take place at 5.15pm Eastern Standard Time.
Here is the full line-up for the show:
Nick Ball vs. Brandon Figueroa; for Ball's WBA 126-pound title;
Jack Turner vs. Juan Carlos Martinez Urbina; super flyweights;
Andrew Cain vs. Alejandro Gonzalez; bantamweights;
Hassan Ishaq vs. Leonardo Baez; featherweights and
Brad Strand vs. Ruben Lezama Gonzalez; bantamweights.
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Welcome to Ball vs. Figueroa fight week
Nick Ball (pictured) defends his WBA featherweight title this weekend as he faces former two-weight world champion Brandon Figueroa live on DAZN. Ball is chasing a fourth straight title defense against 'The Heartbreaker' who has designs on a third title reign of his own as he heads to Liverpool. Figueroa will enjoy a seven-inch height advantage over Ball, who stands 5'2". But Ball will enjoy the home field advantage. He has turned the city's M&S Bank Arena into a fortress over the past few years - but he will face one of his sternest tests yet against this foe. The main undercard broadcast begins at 2pm Eastern Standard Time, while the headline bout is expected to take place at 5.15pm Eastern Standard Time.
Here is the full line-up for the show:
Nick Ball vs. Brandon Figueroa; for Ball's WBA 126-pound title;
Jack Turner vs. Juan Carlos Martinez Urbina; super flyweights;
Andrew Cain vs. Alejandro Gonzalez; bantamweights;
Hassan Ishaq vs. Leonardo Baez; featherweights and
Brad Strand vs. Ruben Lezama Gonzalez; bantamweights.
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Chisora on Wilder fight: “This is what I live for” |
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Former WBC heavyweight champion Deontay “The Bronze Bomber” Wilder (44-4-1, 43 KOs) and perennial contender Derek “War” Chisora (pictured, 36-13, 23 KOs) came face-to-face in New York City, where they officially announced their high-stakes bout scheduled for April 4th at The O2 Arena in London. The face-off, staged in front of hundreds of fans and a global media presence in Times Square, marked the kickoff by event promoter MF Pro, who is under the leadership of Amer Abdallah and Kalle Sauerland.
Wilder, the hard-hitting American known for his thunderous knockouts and unrelenting fight spirit, didn’t mince words at the event. Wilder, who last fought in June, sees the UK stage as an opportunity to reignite his march toward heavyweight supremacy. “This is more than just a comeback — this is a warning shot to the entire heavyweight division,” said Wilder. “I respect Chisora. He’s tough, he’s gritty, but on April 4th, I remind the world why I’m still the most dangerous man in boxing.”
Never one to back down, Chisora, the UK’s beloved warrior, stood defiant across from Wilder in Times Square. Known for his relentless style and iron chin, Chisora vowed to bring the heat in front of a hometown crowd at The O2. “This is what I live for,” Chisora growled. “The bright lights, the big fights, the doubters — bring them all. April 4th, it’s war in my backyard, and I’m coming to shock the world.”
Abdallah, President of MF Pro and former world kickboxing champion turned boxing executive, framed the moment as a landmark for heavyweight boxing. “You have two of the most exciting fighters in the sport — Wilder with that one-punch equalizer power and Chisora with unmatched heart and pressure. It’s a can’t-miss fight,” said Abdallah, who believes this is a true global heavyweight event. “We wanted to announce this in the world’s biggest media center — Times Square — because this fight is a global blockbuster.”
Sauerland emphasized the significance of bringing this bout to London. “Two massive names, and two legends of the sport meet on one memorable, historic night in the heavyweight division." Sauerland said. “Chisora vs. Wilder will be a true heavyweight shoot-out with one legend departing from the sport and one going on to further glory. We at MF Pro, as well as our partners at DAZN and Queensberry are proud to deliver this to boxing fans exclusively live on DAZN and for those lucky enough to witness the spectacle live from the iconic O2 in London. The world will witness a piece of boxing history being made in a fight which will be watched on repeat for decades to come. The stakes are sky-high; this is all about legacy, it’s history and it’s going to be spine-tingling.
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Chisora on Wilder fight: “This is what I live for”
Former WBC heavyweight champion Deontay “The Bronze Bomber” Wilder (44-4-1, 43 KOs) and perennial contender Derek “War” Chisora (pictured, 36-13, 23 KOs) came face-to-face in New York City, where they officially announced their high-stakes bout scheduled for April 4th at The O2 Arena in London. The face-off, staged in front of hundreds of fans and a global media presence in Times Square, marked the kickoff by event promoter MF Pro, who is under the leadership of Amer Abdallah and Kalle Sauerland.
Wilder, the hard-hitting American known for his thunderous knockouts and unrelenting fight spirit, didn’t mince words at the event. Wilder, who last fought in June, sees the UK stage as an opportunity to reignite his march toward heavyweight supremacy. “This is more than just a comeback — this is a warning shot to the entire heavyweight division,” said Wilder. “I respect Chisora. He’s tough, he’s gritty, but on April 4th, I remind the world why I’m still the most dangerous man in boxing.”
Never one to back down, Chisora, the UK’s beloved warrior, stood defiant across from Wilder in Times Square. Known for his relentless style and iron chin, Chisora vowed to bring the heat in front of a hometown crowd at The O2. “This is what I live for,” Chisora growled. “The bright lights, the big fights, the doubters — bring them all. April 4th, it’s war in my backyard, and I’m coming to shock the world.”
Abdallah, President of MF Pro and former world kickboxing champion turned boxing executive, framed the moment as a landmark for heavyweight boxing. “You have two of the most exciting fighters in the sport — Wilder with that one-punch equalizer power and Chisora with unmatched heart and pressure. It’s a can’t-miss fight,” said Abdallah, who believes this is a true global heavyweight event. “We wanted to announce this in the world’s biggest media center — Times Square — because this fight is a global blockbuster.”
Sauerland emphasized the significance of bringing this bout to London. “Two massive names, and two legends of the sport meet on one memorable, historic night in the heavyweight division." Sauerland said. “Chisora vs. Wilder will be a true heavyweight shoot-out with one legend departing from the sport and one going on to further glory. We at MF Pro, as well as our partners at DAZN and Queensberry are proud to deliver this to boxing fans exclusively live on DAZN and for those lucky enough to witness the spectacle live from the iconic O2 in London. The world will witness a piece of boxing history being made in a fight which will be watched on repeat for decades to come. The stakes are sky-high; this is all about legacy, it’s history and it’s going to be spine-tingling.
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Dana White: Zuffa boxing ratings coming soon |
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With two Zuffa Boxing events now in the books, co-founder Dana White said the management team will start to work on establishing an official rankings system for Luffa Boxing, and said that, having dome similar work before for other brands under the TKO banner, he doesn’t anticipate any problems getting them up and running. “That’s something we have to start working on this week,” he revealed. “If you look at other things we’ve done, like the UFC, Power Slap, we created rankings for that. This shouldn’t be too tough.”
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Dana White: Zuffa boxing ratings coming soon
With two Zuffa Boxing events now in the books, co-founder Dana White said the management team will start to work on establishing an official rankings system for Luffa Boxing, and said that, having dome similar work before for other brands under the TKO banner, he doesn’t anticipate any problems getting them up and running. “That’s something we have to start working on this week,” he revealed. “If you look at other things we’ve done, like the UFC, Power Slap, we created rankings for that. This shouldn’t be too tough.”
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Fundora vs. Thurman on for March 28th |
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WBC junior middleweight champion Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora (pictured) and former unified welterweight champion Keith “One Time” Thurman will go face-to-face at a press conference on Wednesday in Los Angeles before they headline a PBC pay-per-view on Prime Video taking place Saturday, March 28th at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. On October 10th, Fundora suffered a hand contusion in sparring, forcing a postponement of the event, which was originally scheduled for October 25th. Pre-sale tickets are available starting Wednesday from 10 a.m. PT until 10 p.m. PT through AXS.com with code: PBC. Public on-sale begins Thursday, February 5th at 10 a.m. PT, also through AXS.com.
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Fundora vs. Thurman on for March 28th
WBC junior middleweight champion Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora (pictured) and former unified welterweight champion Keith “One Time” Thurman will go face-to-face at a press conference on Wednesday in Los Angeles before they headline a PBC pay-per-view on Prime Video taking place Saturday, March 28th at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. On October 10th, Fundora suffered a hand contusion in sparring, forcing a postponement of the event, which was originally scheduled for October 25th. Pre-sale tickets are available starting Wednesday from 10 a.m. PT until 10 p.m. PT through AXS.com with code: PBC. Public on-sale begins Thursday, February 5th at 10 a.m. PT, also through AXS.com.
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Oliveira vs. Reynoso preview |
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For ‘Prince’ Ray Oliveira Jr. (10-4, 2 KOs), the opportunity arrives on February 7th, when the 35-year-old New Bedford, Massachusetts native headlines ‘Winter Brawl 2026’ against Rhode Island's Victor Reynoso (11-0, 7 KOs) in a New England welterweight showdown. The main event tops a seven-bout card at the Historic Park Theater in Cranston, Rhode Island. Limited tickets remain for fight night – purchase yours now at CES Fights. On paper, Reynoso brings momentum, power, and the sheen of an unblemished record. Oliveira Jr.’s record defines a man who has gained perspective from years of preparation, sacrifice, and hard luck in fights that didn’t always materialize. "I’m just here to handle business," said an introspective Oliveira about the bout. "I miss getting in the ring and doing my thing, and I’m ready to go out there and perform."
Raised in New Bedford and immersed in boxing from birth, Oliveira Jr. carries a name that resonates through New England gyms. His father, former IBU welterweight champion Ray ‘Sucra’ Oliveira, was a mainstay on USA’s popular ‘Tuesday Night Fights’ series. ‘Sucra’ instilled in Ray Jr. an early respect for both the highs and lows of the sport. That upbringing didn’t just teach him how to fight – it taught him how to wait.
"A couple years ago, I actually decided I was gonna retire," admitted Oliveira Jr., who stepped away from the ring in 2021 before returning last February. "I had another child, my wife and I bought a house, and I started a career in construction. I was enjoying my life as a father and a husband."
Ray’s decision wasn’t based on falling out of love with boxing. It was about accepting reality and responsibility. "The biggest thing was my inability to find competitors that wouldn’t back out," reflected Oliveira of the key reason why he stepped away. "I’d go through three or four opponents and still not end up with a fight. You train, sign contracts, do press, live the lifestyle, and then there’s no fight."
That grind, Oliveira explained, is what fans rarely see. "They assume you're getting paid for one day's work, but that’s not the case. There’s so much preparation – mental, physical, spiritual, that happens in a six-to-eight-week camp. You sacrifice time with your loved ones, and when there’s no result, it’s disheartening."
Family ultimately tipped the scales in favor of a civilian life. "I love my children. I love being a family man," he said. "For me, the family is more important than boxing. It didn’t make sense to take all that time away from my family and bring nothing back."
Still, the fight never left him. "It’s in me. It’s always in me," Oliveira confessed. "I’m a fighter. That’s why I came back last year and why I’m challenging myself on February 7th."
Across the ring from Oliveira on February 7th will be Reynoso, a tall, rangy fighter who often enjoys engaging in slugfests. "I’ve got a lot of respect for my opponent for taking this fight," Oliveira said of Reynoso. "He’s undefeated and he likes to go to war. I’m well known for my power, so he’s taking a big risk. I appreciate him agreeing to combat with me."
Fighting close to home, Reynoso carries the confidence, swagger, and momentum of an undefeated prospect. Oliveira represents something different: experience, patience, and an understanding that moments like this are earned, not given.
There’s another layer to fight night as well. Ray 'Sucra' Oliveira will not just be ringside watching the action, but he will be in his son’s corner serving as head trainer. "It makes my heart beat a little fast having my dad there," said Oliveira Jr. "It definitely makes me want to fight harder and come out with the victory."
On February 7th, under the bright lights of the Park Theater, this fight represents more than a regional turf war, it will be a meeting of timelines. A main event where youth meets experience and where Ray Oliveira Jr. looks to claim a moment that he’s waited long enough to enjoy.
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Oliveira vs. Reynoso preview
For ‘Prince’ Ray Oliveira Jr. (10-4, 2 KOs), the opportunity arrives on February 7th, when the 35-year-old New Bedford, Massachusetts native headlines ‘Winter Brawl 2026’ against Rhode Island's Victor Reynoso (11-0, 7 KOs) in a New England welterweight showdown. The main event tops a seven-bout card at the Historic Park Theater in Cranston, Rhode Island. Limited tickets remain for fight night – purchase yours now at CES Fights. On paper, Reynoso brings momentum, power, and the sheen of an unblemished record. Oliveira Jr.’s record defines a man who has gained perspective from years of preparation, sacrifice, and hard luck in fights that didn’t always materialize. "I’m just here to handle business," said an introspective Oliveira about the bout. "I miss getting in the ring and doing my thing, and I’m ready to go out there and perform."
Raised in New Bedford and immersed in boxing from birth, Oliveira Jr. carries a name that resonates through New England gyms. His father, former IBU welterweight champion Ray ‘Sucra’ Oliveira, was a mainstay on USA’s popular ‘Tuesday Night Fights’ series. ‘Sucra’ instilled in Ray Jr. an early respect for both the highs and lows of the sport. That upbringing didn’t just teach him how to fight – it taught him how to wait.
"A couple years ago, I actually decided I was gonna retire," admitted Oliveira Jr., who stepped away from the ring in 2021 before returning last February. "I had another child, my wife and I bought a house, and I started a career in construction. I was enjoying my life as a father and a husband."
Ray’s decision wasn’t based on falling out of love with boxing. It was about accepting reality and responsibility. "The biggest thing was my inability to find competitors that wouldn’t back out," reflected Oliveira of the key reason why he stepped away. "I’d go through three or four opponents and still not end up with a fight. You train, sign contracts, do press, live the lifestyle, and then there’s no fight."
That grind, Oliveira explained, is what fans rarely see. "They assume you're getting paid for one day's work, but that’s not the case. There’s so much preparation – mental, physical, spiritual, that happens in a six-to-eight-week camp. You sacrifice time with your loved ones, and when there’s no result, it’s disheartening."
Family ultimately tipped the scales in favor of a civilian life. "I love my children. I love being a family man," he said. "For me, the family is more important than boxing. It didn’t make sense to take all that time away from my family and bring nothing back."
Still, the fight never left him. "It’s in me. It’s always in me," Oliveira confessed. "I’m a fighter. That’s why I came back last year and why I’m challenging myself on February 7th."
Across the ring from Oliveira on February 7th will be Reynoso, a tall, rangy fighter who often enjoys engaging in slugfests. "I’ve got a lot of respect for my opponent for taking this fight," Oliveira said of Reynoso. "He’s undefeated and he likes to go to war. I’m well known for my power, so he’s taking a big risk. I appreciate him agreeing to combat with me."
Fighting close to home, Reynoso carries the confidence, swagger, and momentum of an undefeated prospect. Oliveira represents something different: experience, patience, and an understanding that moments like this are earned, not given.
There’s another layer to fight night as well. Ray 'Sucra' Oliveira will not just be ringside watching the action, but he will be in his son’s corner serving as head trainer. "It makes my heart beat a little fast having my dad there," said Oliveira Jr. "It definitely makes me want to fight harder and come out with the victory."
On February 7th, under the bright lights of the Park Theater, this fight represents more than a regional turf war, it will be a meeting of timelines. A main event where youth meets experience and where Ray Oliveira Jr. looks to claim a moment that he’s waited long enough to enjoy.
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Thorslund returns from maternity leave with a win |
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Dina Thorslund W10 Almudena Álvarez... Dina Thorslund reaffirmed her status as a top female boxer by capturing the WBC interim featherweight title with a commanding victory over Spanish softie Almudena Álvarez. Fighting before her home crowd at the Sydbank Arena, Thorslund (24-0) showcased her skills from the opening bell. Thorslund commanded the center of the ring, dictating both distance and intensity, forcing her opponent into a defensive retreat for most of the night. Alvarez has a pro record of just 7-4. Despite her attempts to reset with lateral movement and isolated flurries, Thorslund’s relentless pressure and pinpoint accuracy neutralized any counter-offensive, turning the bout into a masterclass of control and power. The technical and physical superiority of the local champion was mirrored in the judges’ scorecards, which delivered an undisputed unanimous decision: 99-91 and 100-90 (twice). Thorslund was previously the undisputed bantamweight champion. She vacated her titles earlier this year due to pregnancy. Following the heartbreaking loss of her baby, the Danish warrior decided to channel her strength back into the sport.
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Thorslund returns from maternity leave with a win
Dina Thorslund W10 Almudena Álvarez... Dina Thorslund reaffirmed her status as a top female boxer by capturing the WBC interim featherweight title with a commanding victory over Spanish softie Almudena Álvarez. Fighting before her home crowd at the Sydbank Arena, Thorslund (24-0) showcased her skills from the opening bell. Thorslund commanded the center of the ring, dictating both distance and intensity, forcing her opponent into a defensive retreat for most of the night. Alvarez has a pro record of just 7-4. Despite her attempts to reset with lateral movement and isolated flurries, Thorslund’s relentless pressure and pinpoint accuracy neutralized any counter-offensive, turning the bout into a masterclass of control and power. The technical and physical superiority of the local champion was mirrored in the judges’ scorecards, which delivered an undisputed unanimous decision: 99-91 and 100-90 (twice). Thorslund was previously the undisputed bantamweight champion. She vacated her titles earlier this year due to pregnancy. Following the heartbreaking loss of her baby, the Danish warrior decided to channel her strength back into the sport.
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BKFC has big show in Philly this weekend |
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BKFC returns to its hometown of Philadelphia on Saturday under the bright lights of the Xfinity Mobile Arena. “Big” Ben Rothwell defends his BKFC heavyweight championship for the first time against Andrei “The Pitbull” Arlovski. Both men are former mixed martial arts stars, and Arlovski is the proud owner of a pair of MMA victories over Rothwell. The former UFC champ Arlovski made a smashing first impression in his BKFC premiere, but Rothwell has been exceptional in his first four trips to the squared circle.
Saturday’s chief supporting bout pits BKFC middleweight champion David “Redneck” Mundell against BKFC light heavyweight champion Lorenzo “The Juggernaut” Hunt in a non-title matchup. Mundell and Hunt boast a combined bare knuckle fighting record of 22-3. Mundell is riding high on an eight-fight winning streak, and he knows a statement victory over the former two-division BKFC champion Hunt would elevate him to BKFC superstar status.
One of the most anticipated rematches in BKFC history takes place on Saturday. Tony “Loco” Soto is dialed in for a shot at redemption against former BKFC lightweight champion Ben “The Bomber” Bonner. The two clashed on BKFC 76 in June in one of the most electric fights in BKFC history.
The undefeated John “Johnny Canoli” Garbarino is chomping at the bit for the opportunity to smash his way to 4-0 at the expense of Kaine “Kaine 9” Tomlinson Jr. Tomlinson Jr., who makes his fifth trip to the squared circle, knocked out Garbarino’s close friend and training partner last year, and their respective teams had to be separated physically at the KnuckleMania VI Launch Press Conference.
Major rankings implications in the fully loaded BKFC heavyweight division are on the line Saturday when Patrick “The Brick” Brady and Bear “The Last Barbarian” Hill collide. Brady and Hill both boast 2-0 records, with all four of their victories coming by stoppage. BKFC fans around the world are also eager to see Jade “Evil Smile” Masson-Wong and Crystal “The Rugged Beauty” Pittman do battle in women’s bantamweight action. Among other must-see matchups Saturday is a cruiserweight clash between fan-favorite Zach “Shark Attack” Calmus and the unbeaten Lex “The Grizzly Bear” Ludlow.
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BKFC has big show in Philly this weekend
BKFC returns to its hometown of Philadelphia on Saturday under the bright lights of the Xfinity Mobile Arena. “Big” Ben Rothwell defends his BKFC heavyweight championship for the first time against Andrei “The Pitbull” Arlovski. Both men are former mixed martial arts stars, and Arlovski is the proud owner of a pair of MMA victories over Rothwell. The former UFC champ Arlovski made a smashing first impression in his BKFC premiere, but Rothwell has been exceptional in his first four trips to the squared circle.
Saturday’s chief supporting bout pits BKFC middleweight champion David “Redneck” Mundell against BKFC light heavyweight champion Lorenzo “The Juggernaut” Hunt in a non-title matchup. Mundell and Hunt boast a combined bare knuckle fighting record of 22-3. Mundell is riding high on an eight-fight winning streak, and he knows a statement victory over the former two-division BKFC champion Hunt would elevate him to BKFC superstar status.
One of the most anticipated rematches in BKFC history takes place on Saturday. Tony “Loco” Soto is dialed in for a shot at redemption against former BKFC lightweight champion Ben “The Bomber” Bonner. The two clashed on BKFC 76 in June in one of the most electric fights in BKFC history.
The undefeated John “Johnny Canoli” Garbarino is chomping at the bit for the opportunity to smash his way to 4-0 at the expense of Kaine “Kaine 9” Tomlinson Jr. Tomlinson Jr., who makes his fifth trip to the squared circle, knocked out Garbarino’s close friend and training partner last year, and their respective teams had to be separated physically at the KnuckleMania VI Launch Press Conference.
Major rankings implications in the fully loaded BKFC heavyweight division are on the line Saturday when Patrick “The Brick” Brady and Bear “The Last Barbarian” Hill collide. Brady and Hill both boast 2-0 records, with all four of their victories coming by stoppage. BKFC fans around the world are also eager to see Jade “Evil Smile” Masson-Wong and Crystal “The Rugged Beauty” Pittman do battle in women’s bantamweight action. Among other must-see matchups Saturday is a cruiserweight clash between fan-favorite Zach “Shark Attack” Calmus and the unbeaten Lex “The Grizzly Bear” Ludlow.
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Francesca Hennessy remains undefeated... barely |
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Francesca Hennessy W10 Ellie Bouttell,... At the Copper Box Arena in London, Britain’s Francesca Hennessy was pushed to the limit in a far-from-comfortable night. Her opponent, Ellie Bouttell, stubbornly refused to be a mere stepping stone. It was a classic clash of styles: constant pressure and short inside hooks against mobility, the jab, and outside work.The fight turned gritty and rocky early on. In the second round, an accidental clash of heads left both fighters with bleeding cuts, heightening the tension of an already heated contest. The action remained intense and peppery, with high-octane exchanges, which brought the crowd to edge of their seats. The judges’ scorecards read 95-95, 97-93, and 96-94, reflecting the competitive nature of the bout, awarding Hennessy a majority decision victory. While Bouttell landed the heavier shots in several stretches, Hennessy responded with superior volume, footwork, and resilience through the final rounds.
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Francesca Hennessy remains undefeated... barely
Francesca Hennessy W10 Ellie Bouttell,... At the Copper Box Arena in London, Britain’s Francesca Hennessy was pushed to the limit in a far-from-comfortable night. Her opponent, Ellie Bouttell, stubbornly refused to be a mere stepping stone. It was a classic clash of styles: constant pressure and short inside hooks against mobility, the jab, and outside work.The fight turned gritty and rocky early on. In the second round, an accidental clash of heads left both fighters with bleeding cuts, heightening the tension of an already heated contest. The action remained intense and peppery, with high-octane exchanges, which brought the crowd to edge of their seats. The judges’ scorecards read 95-95, 97-93, and 96-94, reflecting the competitive nature of the bout, awarding Hennessy a majority decision victory. While Bouttell landed the heavier shots in several stretches, Hennessy responded with superior volume, footwork, and resilience through the final rounds.
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Ex-champ Valenzuela gets win at lightweight |
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Rayo Valenzuela W10 Diego Torres... In the headline bout at Zuffa Boxing 02 in Las Vegas, former WBA junior welterweight champion Jose “Rayo” Valenzuela kicked off a new chapter in his career as he dropped to lightweight outpoint hard-hitting Diego “Azabache” Torres over ten rounds. There was no feeling-out process as both men traded big shots early, with Torres making good on his promise to walk down the former world champion and throw non-stop punches. As the early rounds played out, Valenzuela took charge of the exchanges when he kept the fight at range. But when Torres got up close, he appeared to have the better of the action as he ripped Valenzuela hard with short, chopping shots. With the action, and the momentum, swinging back and forth, a left hook from Torres opened up a nasty cut over the corner of Valenzuela’s right eye. But, after some sterling work from the cutman between rounds, the flow of blood was stemmed and Valenzuela came out for the fifth round and continued to sting Torres from range while making “El Azabache” miss.
As the action moved into the second half of the contest, Torres started to slow, and Valenzuela began to separate himself from his opponent, scoring-wise, with sharper footwork and more consistent boxing.
And as the pair battled it out in the closing rounds, it was Valenzuela still landing the cleaner, more impactful shots as he pulled away down the stretch to secure a clear unanimous decision victory, with scores of 99-91 across the board.
After his victory, Valenzuela admitted that he allowed himself to get dragged into a dogfight early on, before eventually reverting to his gameplan and leaning on his boxing to outpoint Torres on the scorecards.
“He came out hot, so I got caught in the fire, and I smelled blood, and I got a little excited,” he said. “I had to just relax and remember the gameplan. Just find my shots (and) be smart … (and) catch him with big shots coming in.”
And when Zuffa Boxing analyst Max Kellerman asked him why he opted to keep boxing in the final round rather than looking to spoil, hold and stay out of trouble, his answer was exactly what fight fans wanted to hear. “Because I’m a fighter,” he stated. "These people pay their hard working money, and that’s what we do here at Zuffa Boxing.”
He also paid tribute to Torres for pushing him so hard over the 10 rounds, saying, “I want to give him thanks. I appreciate him for taking this fight. He’s a dog. He only had one loss, and he showed why he’s so tough today.”
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Ex-champ Valenzuela gets win at lightweight
Rayo Valenzuela W10 Diego Torres... In the headline bout at Zuffa Boxing 02 in Las Vegas, former WBA junior welterweight champion Jose “Rayo” Valenzuela kicked off a new chapter in his career as he dropped to lightweight outpoint hard-hitting Diego “Azabache” Torres over ten rounds. There was no feeling-out process as both men traded big shots early, with Torres making good on his promise to walk down the former world champion and throw non-stop punches. As the early rounds played out, Valenzuela took charge of the exchanges when he kept the fight at range. But when Torres got up close, he appeared to have the better of the action as he ripped Valenzuela hard with short, chopping shots. With the action, and the momentum, swinging back and forth, a left hook from Torres opened up a nasty cut over the corner of Valenzuela’s right eye. But, after some sterling work from the cutman between rounds, the flow of blood was stemmed and Valenzuela came out for the fifth round and continued to sting Torres from range while making “El Azabache” miss.
As the action moved into the second half of the contest, Torres started to slow, and Valenzuela began to separate himself from his opponent, scoring-wise, with sharper footwork and more consistent boxing.
And as the pair battled it out in the closing rounds, it was Valenzuela still landing the cleaner, more impactful shots as he pulled away down the stretch to secure a clear unanimous decision victory, with scores of 99-91 across the board.
After his victory, Valenzuela admitted that he allowed himself to get dragged into a dogfight early on, before eventually reverting to his gameplan and leaning on his boxing to outpoint Torres on the scorecards.
“He came out hot, so I got caught in the fire, and I smelled blood, and I got a little excited,” he said. “I had to just relax and remember the gameplan. Just find my shots (and) be smart … (and) catch him with big shots coming in.”
And when Zuffa Boxing analyst Max Kellerman asked him why he opted to keep boxing in the final round rather than looking to spoil, hold and stay out of trouble, his answer was exactly what fight fans wanted to hear. “Because I’m a fighter,” he stated. "These people pay their hard working money, and that’s what we do here at Zuffa Boxing.”
He also paid tribute to Torres for pushing him so hard over the 10 rounds, saying, “I want to give him thanks. I appreciate him for taking this fight. He’s a dog. He only had one loss, and he showed why he’s so tough today.”
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Bohachuk defeats Butaev by split decision |
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Serhii Bohachuk W10 Radzhab Butaev... In Zuffa Boxing's chief support on its second show, Ukrainian warrior Serhii Bohachuk battled past Russian rival Radzhab Butaev in a back-and-forth middleweight battle. A former interim champion at junior middleweight, Bohachuk moved up to 160 pounds for a middleweight clash with Butaev and battled all the way to the scorecards to earn a split-decision verdict after ten punishing rounds Butaev seemed determined to command the center of the ring as he planeted his feet and unloaded heavy body shots on Bohachuk early. The Ukrainian took them well and kept firing back, but in the early exchanges it looked like it was the Russian’s shots that carried the greater impact.
Butaev continued his aggressive body-heavy attack, but Bohachuk covered up well and started to work behind his jab as he scored well through the round. A stinging right-hand lead snapped Butaev’s head back as he the Ukrainian started to find his range and timing in the second half of the round.
Round three saw Butaev switch to southpaw, and he had plenty of success from the left-handed stance as he outstruck Bohachuk through the third frame, then continued in the same vein in the fourth as he landed the heavier shots once again.
Bohachuk continued to push forward in a bid to smother Butaev at close range, and, after the Russian reverted back to the orthodox stance, the Ukrainian started to find a home for his punches as he scored with some nasty uppercuts and clubbing hooks from close range. The pace of the fight seemed to wear on Butaev through the middle rounds, and his pace and output gradually started to slow. It opened the door for Bohachuk to push the pace, and the Ukrainian did exactly that as he punched his way back into the fight.
By the time the pair reached the penultimate round, Bohachuk looked to be the man with the momentum, while Butaev looked drained, and even needed a little extra encouragement to get off his stool. It was all the encouragement Bohachuk needed as he finished strongly to take the victory via split decision with scores of 96-94 (twice) and 94-96 and send the vocal Ukrainian contingent in the Meta Apex bleachers into wild celebrations.
The win sees Bohachuk improve his record to 27-3, while Butaev’s defeat sees his career record adjusted to 24-3 including the World Series of Boxing.
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Bohachuk defeats Butaev by split decision
Serhii Bohachuk W10 Radzhab Butaev... In Zuffa Boxing's chief support on its second show, Ukrainian warrior Serhii Bohachuk battled past Russian rival Radzhab Butaev in a back-and-forth middleweight battle. A former interim champion at junior middleweight, Bohachuk moved up to 160 pounds for a middleweight clash with Butaev and battled all the way to the scorecards to earn a split-decision verdict after ten punishing rounds Butaev seemed determined to command the center of the ring as he planeted his feet and unloaded heavy body shots on Bohachuk early. The Ukrainian took them well and kept firing back, but in the early exchanges it looked like it was the Russian’s shots that carried the greater impact.
Butaev continued his aggressive body-heavy attack, but Bohachuk covered up well and started to work behind his jab as he scored well through the round. A stinging right-hand lead snapped Butaev’s head back as he the Ukrainian started to find his range and timing in the second half of the round.
Round three saw Butaev switch to southpaw, and he had plenty of success from the left-handed stance as he outstruck Bohachuk through the third frame, then continued in the same vein in the fourth as he landed the heavier shots once again.
Bohachuk continued to push forward in a bid to smother Butaev at close range, and, after the Russian reverted back to the orthodox stance, the Ukrainian started to find a home for his punches as he scored with some nasty uppercuts and clubbing hooks from close range. The pace of the fight seemed to wear on Butaev through the middle rounds, and his pace and output gradually started to slow. It opened the door for Bohachuk to push the pace, and the Ukrainian did exactly that as he punched his way back into the fight.
By the time the pair reached the penultimate round, Bohachuk looked to be the man with the momentum, while Butaev looked drained, and even needed a little extra encouragement to get off his stool. It was all the encouragement Bohachuk needed as he finished strongly to take the victory via split decision with scores of 96-94 (twice) and 94-96 and send the vocal Ukrainian contingent in the Meta Apex bleachers into wild celebrations.
The win sees Bohachuk improve his record to 27-3, while Butaev’s defeat sees his career record adjusted to 24-3 including the World Series of Boxing.
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More Zuffa results: Kalajdzic gets career-best win |
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Radivoje Kalajdzic KO7 Oleksandr Gvozdyk ... On Zuffa Boxing 02 undercard action, Radivoje Kalajdzic knocked out ex-champ Oleksandr Gvozdyk in their light heavyweight contest. It was a stunning come-from-behind victory for Kalajdzic, who recovered from two knockdowns to knock out Gvosdyk in a dramatic turnaround. Gvozdyk didn’t take long to find a home for his power shots, and a peach of a one-two combination sent Kalajdzic to the canvas mid-way through the opening round. Despite the early breakthrough, Gvozdyk didn’t rush his work and continued to work at his own pace as he picked holes in Kalajdzic’s defenses while “Hot Rod” looked to box from range.
“The Nail” continued to apply controlled pressure through Rounds 2 and 3, before scoring his second knockdown of the fight in Round 4. This time, it was a sustained barrage of punches that forced Kalajdzic to sit down on the ropes for a technical knockdown as the referee applied the required eight count. Then, in the fifth, Kalajdzic almost took another standing eight-count after he crouched down and sat on the bottom rope after more heavy shots from Gvozdyk.
After some inspirational words from his corner team, Kalajdzic came out in the seventh round and promptly stunned Gvozdyk with a straight right hand. The success seemed to transform “Hot Rod”, who started to land his right hand almost at will, and dropped Gvozdyk with 40 seconds to go in the round.
After the eight count, Kalajdzic immediately stepped back into range and unleashed a monster of a right hand to send “The Nail” crashing to the canvas once again. Gvozdyk battled back to his feet, but immediately staggered backward and fell to the canvas again as the referee waved off the fight. It was an incredible turnaround from “Hod Rod”, who claimed the 30th win of his 14-year career by handing Gvozdyk only his third career loss.
ADDITIONAL BOUTS
In a 157-pounds bout, Jalil Hackett defeats Roberto Cruz Jr. via majority decision (95-95, 96-94, 97-93) The featured preliminary card bout saw rival 11-1 middleweights go toe to toe as Hackett narrowly edged out Cruz Jr. after ten action-packed rounds. Hackett looked to lead the dance early, but had to content himself with trading shots as Cruz broke his rhythm with his more compact stance and smart counters. The Puerto Rican started to cause more problems for Hackett in the third round, with his consistent jabs to the body and snappy shots, but Hackett adjusted well and, in the fourth round, he found his range and landed big. A two-punch combination stunned Cruz, and Hackett moved in, landing big shots in an attempt to force the stoppage. Remarkably, Cruz took the best of Hackett’s shots, and even came firing back with heavy punches of his own as the round came to a close. WIth Cruz stubbornly refusing to buckle under the pressure, Hackett was instructed by his father and coach Bernard Hackett to switch up his style from full-power head-hunting to a more technical boxing-based approach. And, while it took a couple of rounds for Hackett to adjust, by the final two rounds, the Washington D.C. native was back to working behind his jab, and landing cleaner, more eye-catching shots as a result. The change in style helped ensure that Hackett stayed out of danger through the final two rounds as the bout went the distance. And, when the judges’ scorecards were collated, Hackett claimed the majority decision victory and moved to 12-1 as a pro.
In a lightweight contest, undefeated southpaws Oscar Perez and Justin Viloria went toe to toe at 135 pounds and served up a breathless back-and-forth scrap that went all the way back to the scorecards, with Viloria taking the victory by unanimous decision. The pair put the pedal to the metal from the very first exchange and didn’t let up for a second as they traded shots in a series of rapid-fire exchanges that saw each fighter seemingly always have an answer for the other. It made for a spectacular contest, with Perez opening up looking to rip the body, then move up to the head, while Viloria started off targeted the head, then sprinkled in some solid body work of his own. Eventually, it turned into a fast-paced, high-intensity phone-booth fight that delivered some of the best action we’ve seen in the Zuffa Boxing ring so far. Remarkably, after four rounds of non-stop action, the pace still hadn’t dropped, and neither man had taken a backward step. But, in trying to find a differentiating factor, it seemed the Viloria’s shots were starting to look the heavier and cleaner, though Perez’s relentless salvos ensured that every round was a virtual coin flip. Both men maintained the pace through the full eight-round duration, but when there was a difference to be seen between the pair, it was Vilorian whose work narrowly edged the comparative eye test. In the end, after eight rounds of non-stop action, the judges were called upon to separate the pair, and it was Viloria’s cleaner, crisper work that got the nod, with scores of 79-73, 78-74, 77-75. It meant that Viloria moved on to 12-0, while Perez dropped to 14-1-2.
Damoni Cato-Cain showcased outstanding conditioning and a non-stop work-rate as he returned from a 415-day layoff to comprehensively outpoint undefeated short-notice opponent Christian Morales over eight rounds in an entertaining 150-pound catchweight contest Cato-Cain started fast, switch-hitting and presenting constantly-changing looks for Morales, who struggled to get his shots off in the opening round. The Oakland native’s high output and weighty shots forced Morales to play defense throughout the first three minutes. In Round 2, Morales attempted to work off the back foot and catch Cato-Cain on the way in, but more often than not found himself on the wrong end of multiple shots. But, despite taking more punches than he dished out, the Las Vegas native managed to gain a foothold in the bout, with his straight right finding its mark on more than one occasion during the second stanza.
Morales almost made the breakthrough at the start of the third round as he caught Cato-Cain with a perfectly-timed shot that sent the Oakland man staggering backwards. Roared on by his corner, Morales continued to push forward and land big shots. As the round wore on, Cato-Cain, now settled into his orthodox stance, managed to box his way back into the round, but the confidence in Morales’ work was there for all to see as he happily went punch for punch with his more experienced opponent all the way to the end of the round. That round set the tone for the next four rounds as the pair went back and forth, with Cato-Cain’s volume and activity contrasting with Morales’ more flashy single shots. It took us all the way to the final round, and both men connected with big shots as they looked to finish the fight strong. But, despite their best efforts, the fight went all the way to the final bell. Despite each of the eight rounds being competitively contested, Cato-Cain held the advantage in almost all of them, and the scorecards reflected that fact, as he was declared the victor with scores of 80-72, 79-73, 77-75 to take his professional record to 9-1-2. Morales, meanwhile, falls to the first defeat of his career as he drops to 7-1.
Da'Mazion Vanhouter conceded around 60 pounds in weight to opponent Julian Gomez, but the 21-year-old heavyweight prospect more than made up for it with his boxing as he showcased intelligent shot selection and solid punch power to score a third-round TKO victory. Gomez got to work straight away, throwing big looping overhand rights, with a couple of them finding a home on the top of Vanhouter’s head. It didn’t take long for Vanhouter to find his range, though, and a vicious combination sent Gomez down to the canvas at the mid-way point of the opening round. Gomez took the eight count, got up and came back swinging, but once again Vanhouter avoided the big shots, then set his feet and started clubbing his Mexican opponent, with the American’s uppercuts snapping Gomez’s head backward on a couple of notable occasions. The round ended with Vanhouter teeing off on Gomez, who looked outmatched and outgunned. In round two, Vanhouter invested in his body work as he kept a slowing Gomez at range and hammered him to the midsection with thumping body shots. By the middle of the round Gomez’s punches had noticeably slowed, and Vanhouter continued to stalk his man, landing more heavy shots to the body. After two one-sided rounds, Vanhouter saw the chance to get himself a third-round finish, and after trapping Gomez in the corner, he did exactly that as a powerful salvo of unanswered punches forced the referee to step in and wave off the contest at the 1:27 mark. Vanhouter’s victory extends his perfect professional record to 11-0, with eight knockouts, while Gomez drops to 7-4.
The event kicked off with a second-round finish from cruiserweight Jamar “No Mercy” Talley, who showed off some flashy hands before loading up to claim a stoppage victory over 16-fight veteran Devonte Williams with one perfectly-placed shot. Talley quickly settled into his work and mixed up his shots nicely, moving from head to body and having equal success with both. Williams shook his head at some of the early shots, but those dismissive gestures had stopped by the end of the round, with Talley connecting seemingly at will. The second round saw Talley turn up the power and the frequency as he doubled up on his jab and extended his combinations to dominate the round. Then, as the round approached its final seconds, Talley slipped to the side and connected with a perfectly-timed short right hook that sent Williams to the canvas. Williams couldn’t beat the count, and Talley claimed the fifth knockout of his young career with just one second left on the clock. The 25-year-old’s victory took the protegé of renowned trainer Brian “BoMac” McIntyre to 6-0, and served as an early warning to the other cruiserweight prospects looking to make a name for themselves in Zuffa Boxing.
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More Zuffa results: Kalajdzic gets career-best win
Radivoje Kalajdzic KO7 Oleksandr Gvozdyk ... On Zuffa Boxing 02 undercard action, Radivoje Kalajdzic knocked out ex-champ Oleksandr Gvozdyk in their light heavyweight contest. It was a stunning come-from-behind victory for Kalajdzic, who recovered from two knockdowns to knock out Gvosdyk in a dramatic turnaround. Gvozdyk didn’t take long to find a home for his power shots, and a peach of a one-two combination sent Kalajdzic to the canvas mid-way through the opening round. Despite the early breakthrough, Gvozdyk didn’t rush his work and continued to work at his own pace as he picked holes in Kalajdzic’s defenses while “Hot Rod” looked to box from range.
“The Nail” continued to apply controlled pressure through Rounds 2 and 3, before scoring his second knockdown of the fight in Round 4. This time, it was a sustained barrage of punches that forced Kalajdzic to sit down on the ropes for a technical knockdown as the referee applied the required eight count. Then, in the fifth, Kalajdzic almost took another standing eight-count after he crouched down and sat on the bottom rope after more heavy shots from Gvozdyk.
After some inspirational words from his corner team, Kalajdzic came out in the seventh round and promptly stunned Gvozdyk with a straight right hand. The success seemed to transform “Hot Rod”, who started to land his right hand almost at will, and dropped Gvozdyk with 40 seconds to go in the round.
After the eight count, Kalajdzic immediately stepped back into range and unleashed a monster of a right hand to send “The Nail” crashing to the canvas once again. Gvozdyk battled back to his feet, but immediately staggered backward and fell to the canvas again as the referee waved off the fight. It was an incredible turnaround from “Hod Rod”, who claimed the 30th win of his 14-year career by handing Gvozdyk only his third career loss.
ADDITIONAL BOUTS
In a 157-pounds bout, Jalil Hackett defeats Roberto Cruz Jr. via majority decision (95-95, 96-94, 97-93) The featured preliminary card bout saw rival 11-1 middleweights go toe to toe as Hackett narrowly edged out Cruz Jr. after ten action-packed rounds. Hackett looked to lead the dance early, but had to content himself with trading shots as Cruz broke his rhythm with his more compact stance and smart counters. The Puerto Rican started to cause more problems for Hackett in the third round, with his consistent jabs to the body and snappy shots, but Hackett adjusted well and, in the fourth round, he found his range and landed big. A two-punch combination stunned Cruz, and Hackett moved in, landing big shots in an attempt to force the stoppage. Remarkably, Cruz took the best of Hackett’s shots, and even came firing back with heavy punches of his own as the round came to a close. WIth Cruz stubbornly refusing to buckle under the pressure, Hackett was instructed by his father and coach Bernard Hackett to switch up his style from full-power head-hunting to a more technical boxing-based approach. And, while it took a couple of rounds for Hackett to adjust, by the final two rounds, the Washington D.C. native was back to working behind his jab, and landing cleaner, more eye-catching shots as a result. The change in style helped ensure that Hackett stayed out of danger through the final two rounds as the bout went the distance. And, when the judges’ scorecards were collated, Hackett claimed the majority decision victory and moved to 12-1 as a pro.
In a lightweight contest, undefeated southpaws Oscar Perez and Justin Viloria went toe to toe at 135 pounds and served up a breathless back-and-forth scrap that went all the way back to the scorecards, with Viloria taking the victory by unanimous decision. The pair put the pedal to the metal from the very first exchange and didn’t let up for a second as they traded shots in a series of rapid-fire exchanges that saw each fighter seemingly always have an answer for the other. It made for a spectacular contest, with Perez opening up looking to rip the body, then move up to the head, while Viloria started off targeted the head, then sprinkled in some solid body work of his own. Eventually, it turned into a fast-paced, high-intensity phone-booth fight that delivered some of the best action we’ve seen in the Zuffa Boxing ring so far. Remarkably, after four rounds of non-stop action, the pace still hadn’t dropped, and neither man had taken a backward step. But, in trying to find a differentiating factor, it seemed the Viloria’s shots were starting to look the heavier and cleaner, though Perez’s relentless salvos ensured that every round was a virtual coin flip. Both men maintained the pace through the full eight-round duration, but when there was a difference to be seen between the pair, it was Vilorian whose work narrowly edged the comparative eye test. In the end, after eight rounds of non-stop action, the judges were called upon to separate the pair, and it was Viloria’s cleaner, crisper work that got the nod, with scores of 79-73, 78-74, 77-75. It meant that Viloria moved on to 12-0, while Perez dropped to 14-1-2.
Damoni Cato-Cain showcased outstanding conditioning and a non-stop work-rate as he returned from a 415-day layoff to comprehensively outpoint undefeated short-notice opponent Christian Morales over eight rounds in an entertaining 150-pound catchweight contest Cato-Cain started fast, switch-hitting and presenting constantly-changing looks for Morales, who struggled to get his shots off in the opening round. The Oakland native’s high output and weighty shots forced Morales to play defense throughout the first three minutes. In Round 2, Morales attempted to work off the back foot and catch Cato-Cain on the way in, but more often than not found himself on the wrong end of multiple shots. But, despite taking more punches than he dished out, the Las Vegas native managed to gain a foothold in the bout, with his straight right finding its mark on more than one occasion during the second stanza.
Morales almost made the breakthrough at the start of the third round as he caught Cato-Cain with a perfectly-timed shot that sent the Oakland man staggering backwards. Roared on by his corner, Morales continued to push forward and land big shots. As the round wore on, Cato-Cain, now settled into his orthodox stance, managed to box his way back into the round, but the confidence in Morales’ work was there for all to see as he happily went punch for punch with his more experienced opponent all the way to the end of the round. That round set the tone for the next four rounds as the pair went back and forth, with Cato-Cain’s volume and activity contrasting with Morales’ more flashy single shots. It took us all the way to the final round, and both men connected with big shots as they looked to finish the fight strong. But, despite their best efforts, the fight went all the way to the final bell. Despite each of the eight rounds being competitively contested, Cato-Cain held the advantage in almost all of them, and the scorecards reflected that fact, as he was declared the victor with scores of 80-72, 79-73, 77-75 to take his professional record to 9-1-2. Morales, meanwhile, falls to the first defeat of his career as he drops to 7-1.
Da'Mazion Vanhouter conceded around 60 pounds in weight to opponent Julian Gomez, but the 21-year-old heavyweight prospect more than made up for it with his boxing as he showcased intelligent shot selection and solid punch power to score a third-round TKO victory. Gomez got to work straight away, throwing big looping overhand rights, with a couple of them finding a home on the top of Vanhouter’s head. It didn’t take long for Vanhouter to find his range, though, and a vicious combination sent Gomez down to the canvas at the mid-way point of the opening round. Gomez took the eight count, got up and came back swinging, but once again Vanhouter avoided the big shots, then set his feet and started clubbing his Mexican opponent, with the American’s uppercuts snapping Gomez’s head backward on a couple of notable occasions. The round ended with Vanhouter teeing off on Gomez, who looked outmatched and outgunned. In round two, Vanhouter invested in his body work as he kept a slowing Gomez at range and hammered him to the midsection with thumping body shots. By the middle of the round Gomez’s punches had noticeably slowed, and Vanhouter continued to stalk his man, landing more heavy shots to the body. After two one-sided rounds, Vanhouter saw the chance to get himself a third-round finish, and after trapping Gomez in the corner, he did exactly that as a powerful salvo of unanswered punches forced the referee to step in and wave off the contest at the 1:27 mark. Vanhouter’s victory extends his perfect professional record to 11-0, with eight knockouts, while Gomez drops to 7-4.
The event kicked off with a second-round finish from cruiserweight Jamar “No Mercy” Talley, who showed off some flashy hands before loading up to claim a stoppage victory over 16-fight veteran Devonte Williams with one perfectly-placed shot. Talley quickly settled into his work and mixed up his shots nicely, moving from head to body and having equal success with both. Williams shook his head at some of the early shots, but those dismissive gestures had stopped by the end of the round, with Talley connecting seemingly at will. The second round saw Talley turn up the power and the frequency as he doubled up on his jab and extended his combinations to dominate the round. Then, as the round approached its final seconds, Talley slipped to the side and connected with a perfectly-timed short right hook that sent Williams to the canvas. Williams couldn’t beat the count, and Talley claimed the fifth knockout of his young career with just one second left on the clock. The 25-year-old’s victory took the protegé of renowned trainer Brian “BoMac” McIntyre to 6-0, and served as an early warning to the other cruiserweight prospects looking to make a name for themselves in Zuffa Boxing.
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Matchroom announces Feb. 21st undercard |
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Nottingham, England's Motorpoint Arena is set to be completely sold out on Saturday, February 21st, when two former champions – and bitter enemies – Leigh Wood and Josh Warrington collide in an eagerly awaited rematch. Super bantamweight Molly McCann, who last year switched to boxing following a successful MMA career, wants to make a big impression earlier in the evening when she steps inside the ropes for the third time – looking to extend her perfect start in the professional ranks following her recent win last November against Ebonie Cotton. “I cannot wait to fight on the Wood-Warrington II undercard,” said Merseyside’s McCann, speaking to Matchroom Boxing. “I know how amazing both sets of fans are. Trust me, the atmosphere at the Motorpoint Arena in Nottingham is going to be absolutely electric. I’m looking forward to sharing the rest of the card with some incredible fighters. But, mainly, I’m very excited to show how much I have levelled up since my last fight and get this massive year off to a good start. It’s huge for me.”
Ishamel Davis (15-3, 6 KOs) makes the first defense of his British 154-pound crown when he faces Matchroom Boxing’s recent recruit, Bilal Fawaz (10-1-1, 3 KOs). The Londoner overcame Junaid Bostan (10-1-1, 8 KOs) – who also returns to action on February 21st – in a thrilling, tough-fought contest last October in Sheffield and will be determined to upset the odds again. But Davis, who conquered Sam Gilley in an enthralling bout back in November 2025 on the Benn-Eubank II card at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, will be in no mood to surrender his newly acquired title at the first time of asking.
Popular heavyweight hero Dave Allen (24-8-2, 19 KOs) is back in action too as he looks to set up some huge fight nights ahead and bounce back to winning ways following his October spirited defeat by Arslanbek Makhmudov.
One of Britain’s very best and Derby’s own Sandy Ryan (8-3-1, 3 KOs) bids to become a two-weight champion when she takes on Mexico’s Karla Ramos Zamora (12-10-2, 4 KOs) for the vacant WBC junior welterweight title.
And former WBO welterweight queen Ryan is joined on the card by Tiah-Mai Ayton (4-0, 4 KOs) as the teenage bantamweight – dubbed by the great, Katie Taylor as a future undisputed ruler of the world – goes up against Brazil’s Catherine Tacone Ramos (9-3-1, 2 KOs), looking to stretch her flawless record.
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Matchroom announces Feb. 21st undercard
Nottingham, England's Motorpoint Arena is set to be completely sold out on Saturday, February 21st, when two former champions – and bitter enemies – Leigh Wood and Josh Warrington collide in an eagerly awaited rematch. Super bantamweight Molly McCann, who last year switched to boxing following a successful MMA career, wants to make a big impression earlier in the evening when she steps inside the ropes for the third time – looking to extend her perfect start in the professional ranks following her recent win last November against Ebonie Cotton. “I cannot wait to fight on the Wood-Warrington II undercard,” said Merseyside’s McCann, speaking to Matchroom Boxing. “I know how amazing both sets of fans are. Trust me, the atmosphere at the Motorpoint Arena in Nottingham is going to be absolutely electric. I’m looking forward to sharing the rest of the card with some incredible fighters. But, mainly, I’m very excited to show how much I have levelled up since my last fight and get this massive year off to a good start. It’s huge for me.”
Ishamel Davis (15-3, 6 KOs) makes the first defense of his British 154-pound crown when he faces Matchroom Boxing’s recent recruit, Bilal Fawaz (10-1-1, 3 KOs). The Londoner overcame Junaid Bostan (10-1-1, 8 KOs) – who also returns to action on February 21st – in a thrilling, tough-fought contest last October in Sheffield and will be determined to upset the odds again. But Davis, who conquered Sam Gilley in an enthralling bout back in November 2025 on the Benn-Eubank II card at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, will be in no mood to surrender his newly acquired title at the first time of asking.
Popular heavyweight hero Dave Allen (24-8-2, 19 KOs) is back in action too as he looks to set up some huge fight nights ahead and bounce back to winning ways following his October spirited defeat by Arslanbek Makhmudov.
One of Britain’s very best and Derby’s own Sandy Ryan (8-3-1, 3 KOs) bids to become a two-weight champion when she takes on Mexico’s Karla Ramos Zamora (12-10-2, 4 KOs) for the vacant WBC junior welterweight title.
And former WBO welterweight queen Ryan is joined on the card by Tiah-Mai Ayton (4-0, 4 KOs) as the teenage bantamweight – dubbed by the great, Katie Taylor as a future undisputed ruler of the world – goes up against Brazil’s Catherine Tacone Ramos (9-3-1, 2 KOs), looking to stretch her flawless record.
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Josh Padley wins European championship |
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Josh Padley TKO2 Jaouad Belmehdi... Josh Padley moved to claim the vacant European 130-pound championship in emphatic style as he dispatched Jaouad Belmehdi inside two rounds in Newcastle, England on Saturday. Fighting on the Bakhram Murtazaliev-Josh Kelly undercard, the Doncaster native made short work of his latest opponent to underline his growing status as a key operator. Since losing a WBC lightweight title bid as a late replacement to face Shakur Stevenson nearly a year ago, Padley (18-1) has won three straight against good opposition. Belmehdi returns to France with a record of 23-3-3.
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Josh Padley wins European championship
Josh Padley TKO2 Jaouad Belmehdi... Josh Padley moved to claim the vacant European 130-pound championship in emphatic style as he dispatched Jaouad Belmehdi inside two rounds in Newcastle, England on Saturday. Fighting on the Bakhram Murtazaliev-Josh Kelly undercard, the Doncaster native made short work of his latest opponent to underline his growing status as a key operator. Since losing a WBC lightweight title bid as a late replacement to face Shakur Stevenson nearly a year ago, Padley (18-1) has won three straight against good opposition. Belmehdi returns to France with a record of 23-3-3.
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Boxlab returns to Orlando on Feb. 20th |
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Boxlab Promotions announced “Night of Champions XIV,” set for Friday, February 20th at the Caribe Royale Resort in Orlando, Florida. The event will be streamed live worldwide on the Boxlab Promotions YouTube channel. The ten-round main event will feature junior middleweight Alex Bray (10-0, 8 KOs), from Melbourne, FL, as he takes on Rodrigo Damian Coria (15-7, 3 KOs) from Argentina. In another ten rounder, heavyweight Dainier Pero (12-0, 9 KOs) will continue his climb toward world-title contention against Donald Haynesworth (19-9-1,17 KOs). A high-stakes women’s showdown will also take place as Gabriela Tellez (6-0, 2 KOs) puts her undefeated record on the line in her lightweight debut, squaring off against Calista Silgado (22-20-4, 16 KOs) in a scheduled ten-round bout
Bray is eager to headline one of Boxlab’s premier events and make a statement on February 20. “This is the kind of opportunity I’ve been working for,” said Bray. “Night of Champions lives up to its name, and I’m proud to be the main event. I’m undefeated for a reason, and on February 20, I plan to show that I’m ready for the next level and ready to bring that title home.”
“Every fight is another step toward my ultimate goal,” said Pero. “Being featured in the co-main event of Night of Champions is another big moment for me. I want to make a statement, keep building, and show fans why I belong among the best heavyweights in the world.”
A rising star from San Antonio, Texas, Tellez has shown speed, precision and composure, but now faces the toughest test of her career in Silgado, a proven knockout artist known for her durability and experience against top-level opposition. Tellez welcomes both the challenge and the opportunity to compete for her first WBA title. “This is the moment I’ve been working toward for a long time,” said Tellez. “Calista is experienced and dangerous, but I respect her and I’m ready for whatever she brings. Fighting at lightweight for a WBA title means everything to me. I’m focused, motivated, and ready to make a statement.”
Boxlab Promotions President Amaury Piedra emphasized the significance of the event and the talent on display. “Night of Champions XIII represents everything Boxlab Promotions stands for, elite competition, smart matchmaking, and meaningful opportunities for fighters to advance their careers,” said Piedra. “Alex Bray, Dainier Pero, and Gabriela Tellez each bring something special to this card. This event is designed to entertain fans... while showcasing the next generation of champions, and we’re proud to present it on a our platform.”
“Night of Champions XIII” will also feature a deep undercard featuring undefeated prospects, pro debuts, and competitive matchups across multiple weight classes, highlighting Boxlab Promotions’ commitment to developing future stars while delivering entertaining fights.
UNDERCARD BOUTS:
Alex Rios Vega (10-2, 3 KOs) vs. Hebreux Francois (6-1, 2 KOs) — Super Lightweight (6-rounds)
Mandeep Jangra (12-1, 7 KOs) vs. TBA — Super Featherweight
Jobed Collazo (2-0) vs. TBA — Lightweight (4-rounds)
Jusiyah Shirley (8-1, 7 KOs) vs. Jose Valenzuela Alvarado (4-24-4, 2 KOs) — Super Lightweight (6-rounds)
Jayson Martinez (Pro Debut) vs. Terreeon Hammond (2-11, 2 KOs) — Super Bantamweight (4-rounds)
Pedro Veitia (6-0, 6 KOs) vs. TBA — Super Welterweight (6-rounds)
Giovanni Louis (3-0, 2 KOs) vs. Jose Fernandez (1-1, 1 KO) — Featherweight (4-rounds)
Alan Knight vs. Victor Flores — Heavyweight (Both making pro debuts) (4-rounds)
Diondre Hill vs. Anthony Jones — Super Lightweight (Both making pro debuts) (4-rounds)
Aleksei Dronov (9-0, 7 KOs) vs. TBA — Heavyweight (8-rounds)
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Boxlab returns to Orlando on Feb. 20th
Boxlab Promotions announced “Night of Champions XIV,” set for Friday, February 20th at the Caribe Royale Resort in Orlando, Florida. The event will be streamed live worldwide on the Boxlab Promotions YouTube channel. The ten-round main event will feature junior middleweight Alex Bray (10-0, 8 KOs), from Melbourne, FL, as he takes on Rodrigo Damian Coria (15-7, 3 KOs) from Argentina. In another ten rounder, heavyweight Dainier Pero (12-0, 9 KOs) will continue his climb toward world-title contention against Donald Haynesworth (19-9-1,17 KOs). A high-stakes women’s showdown will also take place as Gabriela Tellez (6-0, 2 KOs) puts her undefeated record on the line in her lightweight debut, squaring off against Calista Silgado (22-20-4, 16 KOs) in a scheduled ten-round bout
Bray is eager to headline one of Boxlab’s premier events and make a statement on February 20. “This is the kind of opportunity I’ve been working for,” said Bray. “Night of Champions lives up to its name, and I’m proud to be the main event. I’m undefeated for a reason, and on February 20, I plan to show that I’m ready for the next level and ready to bring that title home.”
“Every fight is another step toward my ultimate goal,” said Pero. “Being featured in the co-main event of Night of Champions is another big moment for me. I want to make a statement, keep building, and show fans why I belong among the best heavyweights in the world.”
A rising star from San Antonio, Texas, Tellez has shown speed, precision and composure, but now faces the toughest test of her career in Silgado, a proven knockout artist known for her durability and experience against top-level opposition. Tellez welcomes both the challenge and the opportunity to compete for her first WBA title. “This is the moment I’ve been working toward for a long time,” said Tellez. “Calista is experienced and dangerous, but I respect her and I’m ready for whatever she brings. Fighting at lightweight for a WBA title means everything to me. I’m focused, motivated, and ready to make a statement.”
Boxlab Promotions President Amaury Piedra emphasized the significance of the event and the talent on display. “Night of Champions XIII represents everything Boxlab Promotions stands for, elite competition, smart matchmaking, and meaningful opportunities for fighters to advance their careers,” said Piedra. “Alex Bray, Dainier Pero, and Gabriela Tellez each bring something special to this card. This event is designed to entertain fans... while showcasing the next generation of champions, and we’re proud to present it on a our platform.”
“Night of Champions XIII” will also feature a deep undercard featuring undefeated prospects, pro debuts, and competitive matchups across multiple weight classes, highlighting Boxlab Promotions’ commitment to developing future stars while delivering entertaining fights.
UNDERCARD BOUTS:
Alex Rios Vega (10-2, 3 KOs) vs. Hebreux Francois (6-1, 2 KOs) — Super Lightweight (6-rounds)
Mandeep Jangra (12-1, 7 KOs) vs. TBA — Super Featherweight
Jobed Collazo (2-0) vs. TBA — Lightweight (4-rounds)
Jusiyah Shirley (8-1, 7 KOs) vs. Jose Valenzuela Alvarado (4-24-4, 2 KOs) — Super Lightweight (6-rounds)
Jayson Martinez (Pro Debut) vs. Terreeon Hammond (2-11, 2 KOs) — Super Bantamweight (4-rounds)
Pedro Veitia (6-0, 6 KOs) vs. TBA — Super Welterweight (6-rounds)
Giovanni Louis (3-0, 2 KOs) vs. Jose Fernandez (1-1, 1 KO) — Featherweight (4-rounds)
Alan Knight vs. Victor Flores — Heavyweight (Both making pro debuts) (4-rounds)
Diondre Hill vs. Anthony Jones — Super Lightweight (Both making pro debuts) (4-rounds)
Aleksei Dronov (9-0, 7 KOs) vs. TBA — Heavyweight (8-rounds)
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Fight Club OC returns on Feb. 12th |
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Fight Club OC is back on February 12th inside The Hangar at The OC Fair & Events Center in Costa Mesa (Orange County), California. Six bouts are sscheduled, five of them boxing and one mixed martial arts alongside a Hustler Casino Knockout Promotion where fans in attendance can win up to $1,000 cash. The best-known boxer on the show will be California lightweight Johnny Canas (9-0), who faces Mexico's Jose Antonio Meza (9-11), who has never been stopped despite the eleven losses. All tickets available online at www.socafights.com.
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Fight Club OC returns on Feb. 12th
Fight Club OC is back on February 12th inside The Hangar at The OC Fair & Events Center in Costa Mesa (Orange County), California. Six bouts are sscheduled, five of them boxing and one mixed martial arts alongside a Hustler Casino Knockout Promotion where fans in attendance can win up to $1,000 cash. The best-known boxer on the show will be California lightweight Johnny Canas (9-0), who faces Mexico's Jose Antonio Meza (9-11), who has never been stopped despite the eleven losses. All tickets available online at www.socafights.com.
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Atlantic City Hall of Fame names 20 new members |
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The Atlantic City (New Jersey) Boxing Hall of Fame (ACBHOF) unveiled twenty honorees for induction into its Hall of Fame. The annual Awards & Induction Weekend is scheduled to take place from Friday, September 25th through Sunday, September 27th at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City. Here is the list of inductees: boxers: Miguel Cotto, Ray Mancini, Zab Judah, Orlando Canizales, Charles Williams, Harold Knight, Mike Tinley and Jacqui Frazier-Lyde. Contributors: Lou Dibella (promoter), Melvina Lathan (judge), Earl Brown (referee), Craig Johnson (manager) and John Scully (humanitarian/trainer/boxer). Posthumous: James Shuler (boxer), Georgie Navarro (boxer), Wesley Mouzon (trainer) and Chuck Betson (media). Pioneers: Juan Carlos Tapia (international media), John Fitzpatrick (referee) and Al Soifer (promoter).
“We proudly look ahead to the induction of these outstanding individuals selected for the 2026 Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame. It is with great excitement that we prepare to celebrate and honor this remarkable group, whose contributions have helped shape Atlantic City into one of the sport’s true boxing meccas.” – Ray McCline, President & Founder, Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame
The annual Awards & Induction Weekend will offer boxing enthusiasts a fun filled experience with exceptional programming at this year’s Hall of Fame Festivities. Delight yourselves in our VIP cocktail receptions, engage in meet & greets with legendary figures, and immerse yourself in a fight fan experience showcasing stunning artwork, exhibits, and boxing memorabilia. The pinnacle of the weekend will be the Awards & Induction red-carpet ceremony, set in an award-show atmosphere.
"It is a tremendous honor to be part of the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame. This recognition not only celebrates my career, but also the sacrifice of my family, my team, and everyone who believed in me. I carried the pride of Puerto Rico in the ring in each of my fights to all the fans” – Miguel Cotto
“I’m truly honored and excited to be inducted into the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame. I want to sincerely thank Commissioner Larry Hazzard Sr., for always being great to me and for taking care of Team Judah. He’s given us the opportunity to showcase ourselves to the world, and I’m very grateful for that. I can’t wait to see everyone—it’s going to be a fabulous night.” - Zab Judah
“I am deeply humbled and honored to be inducted into the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame—a place where I truly made my bones as a professional fighter. From my first title fight at Bally’s Park Place in October 1981 through my next two bouts there, Atlantic City always made me feel like a champion. The fans are true fight fans who showed me incredible love and support. Thank you for this great honor. I am truly grateful and deeply touched.” - Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini
A special thanks to our partners, sponsors and supporters: Mayor Marty Small Sr., City of Atlantic City, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City, Club Boardwalk Resorts-Flagship Hotel, Casino Reinvestment Development Authority, Sampson Boxing, Visit Atlantic City and Atlantic City Sports Commission, Bare Knuckle Fighting Champions, Irish Pub, D’Arcy Johnson Day Lawyers, Sparbar LTD, Fight Night Apparel, Adams Boxing, WBC, IBF, CM 3D Crystal’s, Chris Guzman Gloves and Patrick Killian Arts.
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Atlantic City Hall of Fame names 20 new members
The Atlantic City (New Jersey) Boxing Hall of Fame (ACBHOF) unveiled twenty honorees for induction into its Hall of Fame. The annual Awards & Induction Weekend is scheduled to take place from Friday, September 25th through Sunday, September 27th at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City. Here is the list of inductees: boxers: Miguel Cotto, Ray Mancini, Zab Judah, Orlando Canizales, Charles Williams, Harold Knight, Mike Tinley and Jacqui Frazier-Lyde. Contributors: Lou Dibella (promoter), Melvina Lathan (judge), Earl Brown (referee), Craig Johnson (manager) and John Scully (humanitarian/trainer/boxer). Posthumous: James Shuler (boxer), Georgie Navarro (boxer), Wesley Mouzon (trainer) and Chuck Betson (media). Pioneers: Juan Carlos Tapia (international media), John Fitzpatrick (referee) and Al Soifer (promoter).
“We proudly look ahead to the induction of these outstanding individuals selected for the 2026 Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame. It is with great excitement that we prepare to celebrate and honor this remarkable group, whose contributions have helped shape Atlantic City into one of the sport’s true boxing meccas.” – Ray McCline, President & Founder, Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame
The annual Awards & Induction Weekend will offer boxing enthusiasts a fun filled experience with exceptional programming at this year’s Hall of Fame Festivities. Delight yourselves in our VIP cocktail receptions, engage in meet & greets with legendary figures, and immerse yourself in a fight fan experience showcasing stunning artwork, exhibits, and boxing memorabilia. The pinnacle of the weekend will be the Awards & Induction red-carpet ceremony, set in an award-show atmosphere.
"It is a tremendous honor to be part of the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame. This recognition not only celebrates my career, but also the sacrifice of my family, my team, and everyone who believed in me. I carried the pride of Puerto Rico in the ring in each of my fights to all the fans” – Miguel Cotto
“I’m truly honored and excited to be inducted into the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame. I want to sincerely thank Commissioner Larry Hazzard Sr., for always being great to me and for taking care of Team Judah. He’s given us the opportunity to showcase ourselves to the world, and I’m very grateful for that. I can’t wait to see everyone—it’s going to be a fabulous night.” - Zab Judah
“I am deeply humbled and honored to be inducted into the Atlantic City Boxing Hall of Fame—a place where I truly made my bones as a professional fighter. From my first title fight at Bally’s Park Place in October 1981 through my next two bouts there, Atlantic City always made me feel like a champion. The fans are true fight fans who showed me incredible love and support. Thank you for this great honor. I am truly grateful and deeply touched.” - Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini
A special thanks to our partners, sponsors and supporters: Mayor Marty Small Sr., City of Atlantic City, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City, Club Boardwalk Resorts-Flagship Hotel, Casino Reinvestment Development Authority, Sampson Boxing, Visit Atlantic City and Atlantic City Sports Commission, Bare Knuckle Fighting Champions, Irish Pub, D’Arcy Johnson Day Lawyers, Sparbar LTD, Fight Night Apparel, Adams Boxing, WBC, IBF, CM 3D Crystal’s, Chris Guzman Gloves and Patrick Killian Arts.
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Stevenson puts on a clinic vs. Lopez |
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Shakur Stevenson W12 Teofimo Lopez... Headlining at Madison Square Garden, undefeated Shakur Stevenson put on a boxing master class, easily routing Teofimo Lopez over twelve one-sided rounds to earn Stevenson's world (and WBO) junior welterweight championship. It was a historic win because Stevenson is now a champion in a fourth weight class. No longer working with Eddy Reynoso, and his father, Teofimo Sr., remaining as head coach, Lopez brought in Stacey McKinley as an assistant trainer to help him prepare for this title defense. Yet the Brooklynite, now residing in Las Vegas, still had no answer for Stevenson’s superior ring generalship. While Lopez aggressively pressed the action in the opener trying to establish his jab, that determination quickly evaporated into a state of befuddlement.
Guided by his grandfather, Wali Moses, and head coach Kay Koroma, Stevenson, 138.5 lbs., delivered a southpaw masterclass based on a “make him miss, make him pay” philosophy. He neutralized Lopez using deft footwork and sharp counters, ranging from stiff jabs to stinging right hooks and overhand lefts. Lopez, 139.5 lbs., soon resorted to throwing wild swings, leaving himself even more susceptible to the faster challenger’s pinpoint accuracy.
Trailing on the scorecards by the midway point, and with his left eye swollen and bleeding, Lopez finally increased his punch output in the later rounds, having a modicum of success targeting his adversary’s body. No matter what Lopez tried, though, Newark, New Jersey’s Stevenson, now based out of Houston, TX, remained in control.
All three judges agreed on a tally of 119-109 for Stevenson, now 25-0 (11 KOs). Punchstat numbers also favored Stevenson by a wide margin, 165-72 in punches landed. Suffering a second loss at the Garden, Lopez, the two-division world champion, fell to 22-2 (13 KOs).
“I picked him apart, and I did what I was supposed to do,” said Stevenson. “This is the art of boxing, hit and don’t get hit. I knew my jab was going to kill him. I told everybody before the fight, ‘They’re going to say I have the best jab in boxing after this fight,’ because I saw where he was weak at and I capitalized off of it.”
During Stevenson’s post-fight interview, Britain’s Conor Benn stepped through the ropes and a verbal altercation ensued between the two regarding a potential clash. Should that fight occur, and it would be a massive sell in the UK, expect Stevenson to have just as easy a time as he had against Lopez.
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Stevenson puts on a clinic vs. Lopez
Shakur Stevenson W12 Teofimo Lopez... Headlining at Madison Square Garden, undefeated Shakur Stevenson put on a boxing master class, easily routing Teofimo Lopez over twelve one-sided rounds to earn Stevenson's world (and WBO) junior welterweight championship. It was a historic win because Stevenson is now a champion in a fourth weight class. No longer working with Eddy Reynoso, and his father, Teofimo Sr., remaining as head coach, Lopez brought in Stacey McKinley as an assistant trainer to help him prepare for this title defense. Yet the Brooklynite, now residing in Las Vegas, still had no answer for Stevenson’s superior ring generalship. While Lopez aggressively pressed the action in the opener trying to establish his jab, that determination quickly evaporated into a state of befuddlement.
Guided by his grandfather, Wali Moses, and head coach Kay Koroma, Stevenson, 138.5 lbs., delivered a southpaw masterclass based on a “make him miss, make him pay” philosophy. He neutralized Lopez using deft footwork and sharp counters, ranging from stiff jabs to stinging right hooks and overhand lefts. Lopez, 139.5 lbs., soon resorted to throwing wild swings, leaving himself even more susceptible to the faster challenger’s pinpoint accuracy.
Trailing on the scorecards by the midway point, and with his left eye swollen and bleeding, Lopez finally increased his punch output in the later rounds, having a modicum of success targeting his adversary’s body. No matter what Lopez tried, though, Newark, New Jersey’s Stevenson, now based out of Houston, TX, remained in control.
All three judges agreed on a tally of 119-109 for Stevenson, now 25-0 (11 KOs). Punchstat numbers also favored Stevenson by a wide margin, 165-72 in punches landed. Suffering a second loss at the Garden, Lopez, the two-division world champion, fell to 22-2 (13 KOs).
“I picked him apart, and I did what I was supposed to do,” said Stevenson. “This is the art of boxing, hit and don’t get hit. I knew my jab was going to kill him. I told everybody before the fight, ‘They’re going to say I have the best jab in boxing after this fight,’ because I saw where he was weak at and I capitalized off of it.”
During Stevenson’s post-fight interview, Britain’s Conor Benn stepped through the ropes and a verbal altercation ensued between the two regarding a potential clash. Should that fight occur, and it would be a massive sell in the UK, expect Stevenson to have just as easy a time as he had against Lopez.
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Zayas now a unified champion at 154 pounds |
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Xander Zayas W12 Abass Baraou... In San Juan, Xander Zayas defeated Abass Baraou of Germany by unanimous decision to become the unified WBO / WBA junior middleweight champion. Fighting in front of his Puerto Rican fan base, Zayas moved backwards for most of the fight but threw tons of punches, a strategy that worked out brilliantly. Although Zayas had the decision locked up going into the final round, he nonetheless delighted the crowd by trading punches with Baraou for three minutes. The scorecards surprisingly showed a split decision, with one reading 116-112 for Baraou, but it was thankfully and correctly overruled by two scores of 116-112 for Zayas. In his post-fight interview, Zayas said he hurt his hand in round nine. With 23 wins at age 23, the undefeated Zayas was congratulated afterwards by Puerto Rican legend Felix Trinidad and seems to be the face of Puerto Rican boxing right now with a bright future ahead of him. |
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Zayas now a unified champion at 154 pounds
Xander Zayas W12 Abass Baraou... In San Juan, Xander Zayas defeated Abass Baraou of Germany by unanimous decision to become the unified WBO / WBA junior middleweight champion. Fighting in front of his Puerto Rican fan base, Zayas moved backwards for most of the fight but threw tons of punches, a strategy that worked out brilliantly. Although Zayas had the decision locked up going into the final round, he nonetheless delighted the crowd by trading punches with Baraou for three minutes. The scorecards surprisingly showed a split decision, with one reading 116-112 for Baraou, but it was thankfully and correctly overruled by two scores of 116-112 for Zayas. In his post-fight interview, Zayas said he hurt his hand in round nine. With 23 wins at age 23, the undefeated Zayas was congratulated afterwards by Puerto Rican legend Felix Trinidad and seems to be the face of Puerto Rican boxing right now with a bright future ahead of him. |
Back to business: Keyshawn Davis wins by TKO |
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Kewshawn Davis TKO12 Jamaine Ortiz... Ex-WBO lightweight champion Kewshawn "The Businessman" Davis made a successful debut in the junior welterweight division on Saturday in New York City. Davis, who lost that title on the scales before his prior fight, stopped the capable Jamaine Ortiz in round twelve. By way of comparison, Ortiz went the distance vs. two champs-- Vasily Lomachenko and Teofimo Lopez. At the beginning of round eleven, Davis connected on a powerful body shot to send Ortiz to the canvas. Ortiz got up and survived a barrage of power shots from Davis to make it to the twelfth round. Ortiz nearly made it to the final bell, but Davis landed another body shot that put Ortiz down again. The referee immediately waved off the fight, just eleven seconds short of the final bell. By then, one of Ortiz's eye was swollen shut. Afterward, Davis called out two-dvision champion Devin Haney.
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Back to business: Keyshawn Davis wins by TKO
Kewshawn Davis TKO12 Jamaine Ortiz... Ex-WBO lightweight champion Kewshawn "The Businessman" Davis made a successful debut in the junior welterweight division on Saturday in New York City. Davis, who lost that title on the scales before his prior fight, stopped the capable Jamaine Ortiz in round twelve. By way of comparison, Ortiz went the distance vs. two champs-- Vasily Lomachenko and Teofimo Lopez. At the beginning of round eleven, Davis connected on a powerful body shot to send Ortiz to the canvas. Ortiz got up and survived a barrage of power shots from Davis to make it to the twelfth round. Ortiz nearly made it to the final bell, but Davis landed another body shot that put Ortiz down again. The referee immediately waved off the fight, just eleven seconds short of the final bell. By then, one of Ortiz's eye was swollen shut. Afterward, Davis called out two-dvision champion Devin Haney.
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KO nets Carrington the WBC featherweight title |
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Bruce Carrington KO9 Carlos Castro ... Fighting in his hometown of New York City, Bruce Carrington defeated Carlos Castro by knockout at 1:29 of the ninth round to win the vacant WBC featherweight championship. From the Brownsville, Brooklyn section of New York, Carrington landed a flush right hand and followed it up with a four or five-punch combination. He punctuated the combination by landing one more right that sent Castro down for a ten count and the crowd inside Madison Square Garden into a frenzy. Carrington was the WBC interim champion but is now that organization's full champion of the 126-pound division.
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KO nets Carrington the WBC featherweight title
Bruce Carrington KO9 Carlos Castro ... Fighting in his hometown of New York City, Bruce Carrington defeated Carlos Castro by knockout at 1:29 of the ninth round to win the vacant WBC featherweight championship. From the Brownsville, Brooklyn section of New York, Carrington landed a flush right hand and followed it up with a four or five-punch combination. He punctuated the combination by landing one more right that sent Castro down for a ten count and the crowd inside Madison Square Garden into a frenzy. Carrington was the WBC interim champion but is now that organization's full champion of the 126-pound division.
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New champion alert: Josh Kelly edges Bakhram Murtazaliev in UK |
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Josh Kelly W12 Bakhram Murtazaliev... Josh Kelly is the new IBF junior middleweight champion following hometown slpit-decision win over Bakhram Murtazaliev in Newcastle, England. Kelly made an excellent start and even dropped his opponent, but that was almost undone when he was floored in round nine before absorbing a tough finish in the championship rounds. Despite Murtazaliev’s efforts in the closing stages, Kelly clung on to win on the scorecards via majority decision with the scores reading 115-111 and 114-113 in favor of Kelly against a card of 113-113. Kelly’s win now makes him Britain’s latest world champion, and he will be keen to land another huge fight against the likes of Jaron Ennis and Vergil Ortiz.
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New champion alert: Josh Kelly edges Bakhram Murtazaliev in UK
Josh Kelly W12 Bakhram Murtazaliev... Josh Kelly is the new IBF junior middleweight champion following hometown slpit-decision win over Bakhram Murtazaliev in Newcastle, England. Kelly made an excellent start and even dropped his opponent, but that was almost undone when he was floored in round nine before absorbing a tough finish in the championship rounds. Despite Murtazaliev’s efforts in the closing stages, Kelly clung on to win on the scorecards via majority decision with the scores reading 115-111 and 114-113 in favor of Kelly against a card of 113-113. Kelly’s win now makes him Britain’s latest world champion, and he will be keen to land another huge fight against the likes of Jaron Ennis and Vergil Ortiz.
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Undercard results from Puerto Rico |
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Juanmita Lopez De Jesus W6 Conner Goade... On the Top Rank undercard in San Juan, second-generation Puerto Rican standout Juanmita Lopez De Jesus (5-0, 2 KOs) earned a six-round unanimous decision against Conner Goade (8-5-2, 7 KOs) by three scores of 60-53. The 20 year-old southpaw boxed from the outside, landing single straight left hands or right hooks to the body. Goade pressed the action, but by round three, Juanmita found his rhythm and upped the pressure, nearly finishing him. However, Goade did not crumble under the assault, forcing Juanmita to cruise in the later rounds on the back foot.
Euri Cedeño W10 Etoundi Michel William... Dominican middleweight Euri Cedeño (14-0-1, 12 KOs) punished Etoundi Michel William (16-3, 10 KOs) across ten rounds to earn a lopsided unanimous decision. Cedeño scored two knockdowns in the opening stanza, from which William could not fully recover. The scorecards were a complete whitewash, 100-88 accorss the board for Cedeno.
MORE RESULTS
Junior lightweight Carlos De Leon Castro (7-0, 5 KOs) registered a sixth-round technical knockout against durable veteran Diuhl Olguin (17-48-7, 10 KOs). Castro build a strong lead in the opening rounds, but a nonstop flurry on a bloody Olguin forced the stoppage at 1:31.
Puerto Rican super flyweight Yadriel Caban (3-0, 3 KOs) blasted out Jeremis Hernandez-Torres (2-3) in one round. Caban, age 20, dropped Hernandez-Torres with a right hand before ending the contest with a left hook to the body. Time of stoppage: 1:46
In his first fight at 154 pounds, San Diego native Giovani Santillan (35-1, 18 KOs) earned a workman like ten-round points verdict over Courtney Pennington (17-12-3, 7 KOs). Official scores were 98-92, 97-93, and 96-94.
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Undercard results from Puerto Rico
Juanmita Lopez De Jesus W6 Conner Goade... On the Top Rank undercard in San Juan, second-generation Puerto Rican standout Juanmita Lopez De Jesus (5-0, 2 KOs) earned a six-round unanimous decision against Conner Goade (8-5-2, 7 KOs) by three scores of 60-53. The 20 year-old southpaw boxed from the outside, landing single straight left hands or right hooks to the body. Goade pressed the action, but by round three, Juanmita found his rhythm and upped the pressure, nearly finishing him. However, Goade did not crumble under the assault, forcing Juanmita to cruise in the later rounds on the back foot.
Euri Cedeño W10 Etoundi Michel William... Dominican middleweight Euri Cedeño (14-0-1, 12 KOs) punished Etoundi Michel William (16-3, 10 KOs) across ten rounds to earn a lopsided unanimous decision. Cedeño scored two knockdowns in the opening stanza, from which William could not fully recover. The scorecards were a complete whitewash, 100-88 accorss the board for Cedeno.
MORE RESULTS
Junior lightweight Carlos De Leon Castro (7-0, 5 KOs) registered a sixth-round technical knockout against durable veteran Diuhl Olguin (17-48-7, 10 KOs). Castro build a strong lead in the opening rounds, but a nonstop flurry on a bloody Olguin forced the stoppage at 1:31.
Puerto Rican super flyweight Yadriel Caban (3-0, 3 KOs) blasted out Jeremis Hernandez-Torres (2-3) in one round. Caban, age 20, dropped Hernandez-Torres with a right hand before ending the contest with a left hook to the body. Time of stoppage: 1:46
In his first fight at 154 pounds, San Diego native Giovani Santillan (35-1, 18 KOs) earned a workman like ten-round points verdict over Courtney Pennington (17-12-3, 7 KOs). Official scores were 98-92, 97-93, and 96-94.
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Miller wigs out but beats Ibeh |
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Jarrell Miller W10 Kingsley Ibeh... Perennial fringe contender Jarrell Miller left the ring at Madison Square Garden looking a lot different than when he entered it. Kingsley Ibeh landed an uppercut that knocked Miller's hairpiece loose and resulted in Miller pulling the wig off and fighting the majority of the ten rounds with a bizarre looking tonsure (monk haircut). Ibeh did very well early but couldn't finish the job. But Miller pressed on, and won an ugly fight by unanimous decision. Official scores were 97-93 Miller (twice) and 96-94 (Ibeh). Miller was far too heavy at 317 pounds, but he knows how to use his weight to lean on his opponent and tire him out. That tactic began to pay dividends in round six, as Ibeh began to run out of gas. Miller continued to press forward, leaving Ibeh looking dejected after round seven. The last five rounds were pretty much a clean sweep for Miller as a tired Ibeh could not move fast enough to keep Miller off him.
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Miller wigs out but beats Ibeh
Jarrell Miller W10 Kingsley Ibeh... Perennial fringe contender Jarrell Miller left the ring at Madison Square Garden looking a lot different than when he entered it. Kingsley Ibeh landed an uppercut that knocked Miller's hairpiece loose and resulted in Miller pulling the wig off and fighting the majority of the ten rounds with a bizarre looking tonsure (monk haircut). Ibeh did very well early but couldn't finish the job. But Miller pressed on, and won an ugly fight by unanimous decision. Official scores were 97-93 Miller (twice) and 96-94 (Ibeh). Miller was far too heavy at 317 pounds, but he knows how to use his weight to lean on his opponent and tire him out. That tactic began to pay dividends in round six, as Ibeh began to run out of gas. Miller continued to press forward, leaving Ibeh looking dejected after round seven. The last five rounds were pretty much a clean sweep for Miller as a tired Ibeh could not move fast enough to keep Miller off him.
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Ammo Williams defeats late replacement |
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Austin Williams W10 Wendy Toussaint ... Southpaw Austin “Ammo” Williams, 159.6 lbs., of Palm Beach Gardens, FL, was scheduled to challenge WBC middleweight world champion Carlos Adames tonight at Madison Square Garden, but plans changed when Adames was forced to withdraw on the morning of the weigh-in. Reportedly, he was suffering from dehydration. Local junior middleweight Wendy “Haitian Fire” Toussaint, of Huntington, Long Island, NY, stepped in on short notice to keep Williams on the undercard. Toussaint weighed in at 167.2 lbs. The southpaw Williams, trained by Kevin Cunningham, applied pressure but had trouble landing cleanly in the first few rounds. Toussaint’s best weapon was his counter straight right. By round four, Williams made adjustments and began to target the body with hooks. Near the end of that frame, a right uppercut to the chin deposited Toussaint on the canvas. From that point on, Williams was in control, landing the more effective blows, though Toussaint remained game. Following 10 rounds, scorecards read 99-90 (twice), and 98-91, all for Williams via unanimous decision. Earning his fourth straight victory, Williams improved to 20-1 (13 KOs). Toussaint is now 17-4 (7 KOs).
Kevin Castillo W8 Ziyad Almaayouf... At the weigh-in, Ecuadorian junior welterweight Kevin Castillo, 140.75 lbs., of Miami, FL, said, “How am I going [pull off the upset]? By taking him to war, a war that’s fitting for a venue like Madison Square Garden. After tomorrow, you’re going to know my name. I’ll leave my mark.” In the opening bout of the event, Castillo did just that, defeating Los Angeles-based Ziyad Almaayouf, 141.25 lbs., who is of Saudi Arabian descent, by unanimous decision following an entertaining eight-rounder. Scorecards read 78-73, and 77-74 (twice), all for Castillo, now 6-2-1. Suffering his first defeat, Almaayouf left Madison Square Garden at 7-1-1 (1 KO).
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Ammo Williams defeats late replacement
Austin Williams W10 Wendy Toussaint ... Southpaw Austin “Ammo” Williams, 159.6 lbs., of Palm Beach Gardens, FL, was scheduled to challenge WBC middleweight world champion Carlos Adames tonight at Madison Square Garden, but plans changed when Adames was forced to withdraw on the morning of the weigh-in. Reportedly, he was suffering from dehydration. Local junior middleweight Wendy “Haitian Fire” Toussaint, of Huntington, Long Island, NY, stepped in on short notice to keep Williams on the undercard. Toussaint weighed in at 167.2 lbs. The southpaw Williams, trained by Kevin Cunningham, applied pressure but had trouble landing cleanly in the first few rounds. Toussaint’s best weapon was his counter straight right. By round four, Williams made adjustments and began to target the body with hooks. Near the end of that frame, a right uppercut to the chin deposited Toussaint on the canvas. From that point on, Williams was in control, landing the more effective blows, though Toussaint remained game. Following 10 rounds, scorecards read 99-90 (twice), and 98-91, all for Williams via unanimous decision. Earning his fourth straight victory, Williams improved to 20-1 (13 KOs). Toussaint is now 17-4 (7 KOs).
Kevin Castillo W8 Ziyad Almaayouf... At the weigh-in, Ecuadorian junior welterweight Kevin Castillo, 140.75 lbs., of Miami, FL, said, “How am I going [pull off the upset]? By taking him to war, a war that’s fitting for a venue like Madison Square Garden. After tomorrow, you’re going to know my name. I’ll leave my mark.” In the opening bout of the event, Castillo did just that, defeating Los Angeles-based Ziyad Almaayouf, 141.25 lbs., who is of Saudi Arabian descent, by unanimous decision following an entertaining eight-rounder. Scorecards read 78-73, and 77-74 (twice), all for Castillo, now 6-2-1. Suffering his first defeat, Almaayouf left Madison Square Garden at 7-1-1 (1 KO).
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Diego Torres has opportunity to reach the world level today |
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Diego Torres has always had his family to cheer him on, but now he’s ready to use those that matter most to help push him to new heights as he embarks on a new chapter in his boxing career. Torres will headline Zuffa Boxing 02 against ex-140-pound champ Jose Valenzuela at Las Vegas' Meta Apex on Sunday, February 1st. He plans on showcasing his special brand of Mexican fighting to the wider world, while helping to provide for those closest to him. “I’m very excited to be here. It’s an opportunity,” he said. “It's also an opportunity for my family. So that's why I'm glad to be here.” The subject of family ran through much of his sit-down conversation with UFC.com ahead of his Zuffa Boxing debut, with Torres revealing that he comes from a family that has embraced the sport of boxing through the exploits of him and his two siblings.
“I am the eldest of five brothers – me and my next two brothers also box,” he explained. “We come from a poor family. We all have high expectations. So that's what, what we want to accomplish … good things, great things.”
Torres started boxing training as a nine-year-old and competed in an estimated 120 amateur bouts, earning gold on three occasions in the Mexican National University Games, as well as taking 141-pound gold at the 2017 Mexican Olympic Festival. “I remember my family joining me and cheering for me,” he said of his early days as an amateur. We all knew that was the beginning of my career, and that everybody would knew my name someday.”
Fast forward to the present day, and Torres heads to the Meta Apex as a seasoned professional. The 28-year old has 22 victories against just one defeat so far in his pro career, with that sole loss coming against current IBF lightweight champion Raymond Muratalla back in 2023. Since then, Torres has bounced back superbly, winning four straight to send him into Sunday night’s headliner in Las Vegas in solid form. But he revealed that he’s heading into his latest test with added motivation after becoming a father to his first son back in November. Parenthood has transformed his life, both in terms of the demands placed on him as a father, as well as the emotional responsibility he’ll carry into his fight this weekend.
“I never thought it was so exhausting, but I enjoy every moment with him,” he admitted. “Unfortunately, I haven't been able to be with him for the last two months because I’ve been training, but he's my motivation to be here. It's tough, because I'm not with him, but he’s also my motivation, because I need to support him and give him a good future. If he wants to box, he can box, or he can do any sport he wants. I will just be very clear that, whatever he does, he has to give his best effort in doing that.”
The Valenzuela match-up that Torres is super-motivated for, and one he says should produce an exciting fight for the fans. “I think everyone will expect a good fight. For me, (it’s) a great fight, and that's what I know I have to give them,” he said. Obviously, he’s a great fighter. He's a good fighter. He has experience, as well. I will have to put a lot of pressure on him and manage my time so I can put up a very aggressive fight against him.”
And the native of Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico, said that his familiar aggressive Mexican fighting style will endear him to the fans who’ll be watching him in action on Sunday night. “They will know me, and I will earn a lot of fans,” he promised.
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Diego Torres has opportunity to reach the world level today
Diego Torres has always had his family to cheer him on, but now he’s ready to use those that matter most to help push him to new heights as he embarks on a new chapter in his boxing career. Torres will headline Zuffa Boxing 02 against ex-140-pound champ Jose Valenzuela at Las Vegas' Meta Apex on Sunday, February 1st. He plans on showcasing his special brand of Mexican fighting to the wider world, while helping to provide for those closest to him. “I’m very excited to be here. It’s an opportunity,” he said. “It's also an opportunity for my family. So that's why I'm glad to be here.” The subject of family ran through much of his sit-down conversation with UFC.com ahead of his Zuffa Boxing debut, with Torres revealing that he comes from a family that has embraced the sport of boxing through the exploits of him and his two siblings.
“I am the eldest of five brothers – me and my next two brothers also box,” he explained. “We come from a poor family. We all have high expectations. So that's what, what we want to accomplish … good things, great things.”
Torres started boxing training as a nine-year-old and competed in an estimated 120 amateur bouts, earning gold on three occasions in the Mexican National University Games, as well as taking 141-pound gold at the 2017 Mexican Olympic Festival. “I remember my family joining me and cheering for me,” he said of his early days as an amateur. We all knew that was the beginning of my career, and that everybody would knew my name someday.”
Fast forward to the present day, and Torres heads to the Meta Apex as a seasoned professional. The 28-year old has 22 victories against just one defeat so far in his pro career, with that sole loss coming against current IBF lightweight champion Raymond Muratalla back in 2023. Since then, Torres has bounced back superbly, winning four straight to send him into Sunday night’s headliner in Las Vegas in solid form. But he revealed that he’s heading into his latest test with added motivation after becoming a father to his first son back in November. Parenthood has transformed his life, both in terms of the demands placed on him as a father, as well as the emotional responsibility he’ll carry into his fight this weekend.
“I never thought it was so exhausting, but I enjoy every moment with him,” he admitted. “Unfortunately, I haven't been able to be with him for the last two months because I’ve been training, but he's my motivation to be here. It's tough, because I'm not with him, but he’s also my motivation, because I need to support him and give him a good future. If he wants to box, he can box, or he can do any sport he wants. I will just be very clear that, whatever he does, he has to give his best effort in doing that.”
The Valenzuela match-up that Torres is super-motivated for, and one he says should produce an exciting fight for the fans. “I think everyone will expect a good fight. For me, (it’s) a great fight, and that's what I know I have to give them,” he said. Obviously, he’s a great fighter. He's a good fighter. He has experience, as well. I will have to put a lot of pressure on him and manage my time so I can put up a very aggressive fight against him.”
And the native of Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico, said that his familiar aggressive Mexican fighting style will endear him to the fans who’ll be watching him in action on Sunday night. “They will know me, and I will earn a lot of fans,” he promised.
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Toussaint to fight Williams on 24 hours' notice |
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Just 24 hours before fight night, Wendy “Haitian Fire” Toussaint has stepped up to save a marquee matchup at Madison Square Garden following the withdrawal of Carlos Adames from his WBC championship defense against Austin "Ammo" Williams. Toussaint (17-3) was originally scheduled to fight on Star Boxing's Rockin' Fights 53 at the Paramount on February 28th. Instead, tomorrow he will step up and take this huge opportunity and go toe-to-toe with world contender Austin “Ammo” Williams (19-1) under the bright lights of Madison Square Garden in New York City. "Huge thanks to my team at Star Boxing, the promotional team, and especially to Wendy Toussaint, who was literally driving a school bus when the call came today for this incredible opportunity." said Star Boxing CEO/President Joe DeGuardia. "Like a true warrior, he spent the entire day scrambling to satisfy regulatory, medical, and logistical requirements to step into the ring tomorrow night."
Toussaint enters this late-notice battle riding the momentum of a career-defining performance defeating the highly regarded Joseph Hicks in a junior middleweight bout. Fighting with relentless pressure and intensity, Wendy controlled the action over ten rounds, earning the upset win and laying the foundation for this opportunity at Madison Square Garden.Watch Wendy Toussaint take on Austin Williams, in addition to the rest of the thrilling Ring 6 card including Teofimo Lopez vs. Shakur Stevenson for the WBO Junior Welterweight Championship, tomorrow night live on DAZN PPV.
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Toussaint to fight Williams on 24 hours' notice
Just 24 hours before fight night, Wendy “Haitian Fire” Toussaint has stepped up to save a marquee matchup at Madison Square Garden following the withdrawal of Carlos Adames from his WBC championship defense against Austin "Ammo" Williams. Toussaint (17-3) was originally scheduled to fight on Star Boxing's Rockin' Fights 53 at the Paramount on February 28th. Instead, tomorrow he will step up and take this huge opportunity and go toe-to-toe with world contender Austin “Ammo” Williams (19-1) under the bright lights of Madison Square Garden in New York City. "Huge thanks to my team at Star Boxing, the promotional team, and especially to Wendy Toussaint, who was literally driving a school bus when the call came today for this incredible opportunity." said Star Boxing CEO/President Joe DeGuardia. "Like a true warrior, he spent the entire day scrambling to satisfy regulatory, medical, and logistical requirements to step into the ring tomorrow night."
Toussaint enters this late-notice battle riding the momentum of a career-defining performance defeating the highly regarded Joseph Hicks in a junior middleweight bout. Fighting with relentless pressure and intensity, Wendy controlled the action over ten rounds, earning the upset win and laying the foundation for this opportunity at Madison Square Garden.Watch Wendy Toussaint take on Austin Williams, in addition to the rest of the thrilling Ring 6 card including Teofimo Lopez vs. Shakur Stevenson for the WBO Junior Welterweight Championship, tomorrow night live on DAZN PPV.
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Wilder lands Chisora fight for April 4th |
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It was announced late Friday that heavyweights Deontay Wilder (pictured) and Derek Chisora will do battle at the O2 Arena in London on April 4th. When the bruising heavyweights clash in a little over nine weeks time, it will be the 100 combined fights between Wilder and Chisora, with each guy having 50 apiece. Wilder (44-4-1, 43 KOs), the former WBC heavyweight champion, snapped a two-fight losing streak in [a low-level comeback], stopping Tyrrell Herndon by seventh-round TKO at the end of June. Now, he looks to put together back-to-back wins against one of England's top heavyweights in the last 15 years. Chisora (36-13, 23 KOs) is [no spring chicken either but ] is on a career resurgence, having won three consecutive fights over Gerald Washington, Joe Joyce, and Otto Wallin, respectively.
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Wilder lands Chisora fight for April 4th
It was announced late Friday that heavyweights Deontay Wilder (pictured) and Derek Chisora will do battle at the O2 Arena in London on April 4th. When the bruising heavyweights clash in a little over nine weeks time, it will be the 100 combined fights between Wilder and Chisora, with each guy having 50 apiece. Wilder (44-4-1, 43 KOs), the former WBC heavyweight champion, snapped a two-fight losing streak in [a low-level comeback], stopping Tyrrell Herndon by seventh-round TKO at the end of June. Now, he looks to put together back-to-back wins against one of England's top heavyweights in the last 15 years. Chisora (36-13, 23 KOs) is [no spring chicken either but ] is on a career resurgence, having won three consecutive fights over Gerald Washington, Joe Joyce, and Otto Wallin, respectively.
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ProBox Results from Maryland |
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Bryan Flores W10 Starling Castillo... Junior welterweight Bryan “Nino Maravilla” Flores scored a ten-round majority decision over Starling “El Poli” Castillo in the main event of ProBoxTV’s “The Contender Series” from the Live! Casino Hotel Maryland in Hanover, Maryland. After a slow first two rounds, Flores (28-1-1, 16 KOs) of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, began to pressure Castillo (20-2-1, 13 KOs), working his way inside the Dominican southpaw’s longer arms to hammer the body and sap his strength. Round after round, Castillo had fewer answers to deal with Flores, who stepped it up and battered him around the ring. By the final rounds, Castillo seemed to be in survival mode from the onslaught. The scores of 95-95 draw, overruled by 98-92 and 96-94 Flores, were not a clear indication of the dominance Flores enjoyed throughout the contest. For instance, he outlanded Castillo 163-76 in power punches.
Rene Palacios W10 Sulaiman Segawa... In the ten-round co-feature, Rene “El Zurdo” Palacios (19-0-1, 10 KOs) Nuevo Casas Grandes, Mexico, scored an upset split decision over featherweight contender Sulaiman Segawa (18-6-1, 7 KOs) of Silver Spring, Maryland, via Uganda.Segawa landed more punches overall 180-177. Both southpaws could make a case for winning in the end, but the judges favored Palacios’ work by scores of 99-91 Palacios, 97-93 Palacios and an over-ruled 96-94 Segawa. Palacios was the better fighter on the inside while Segawa relied on his well-placed punches from range. Although there were no knockdowns, Segawa was cut on the right eye in round four and Palacios finished the fight with a swollen-closed right eye.
UNDERCARD RESULTS
The show was presented by Lamont Roach Sr (NoXcuse Promotions) and broadcast on ProBox TV, Local favorite Francois “The Franchise” Scarboro Jr. (12-0, 9 KOs) of nearby Cheverly, Maryland, won a ten-round slugfest by way of unanimous decision over Brandon Valdes (15-7, 7 KOs) of Rosemead, California, via Barranquilla, Colombia. In a back-and-forth, high-intensity battle throughout all ten rounds, the two super featherweights traded power shots with abandon. Both men came our firing from the onset. Scarboro appeared to rock Valdes late in the opening round with a series of strong right hands. Valdes was cut above the left eye from another right hand in round three. Both fighters landed heavily and neither gave an inch in this entertaining battle. Scarboro, who was having his second fight in 70 days, won by scores of 96-94, 96-94 and 99-91. The valiant Valdes was taking on his fourth consecutive undefeated opponent.
Lightweight Jordan “Shortdog” White (20-2, 12 KOs) registered a ten-round unanimous decision over a cautious Willie “The Thrill” Shaw Jr. (15-7, 10 KOs). While the action was sporadic throughout, White, of Washington DC, managed to drop late-notice opponent Shaw, of Vallejo, California, with a well-timed right hand in round nine and pull away by scores of 99-90, 97-92 and 98-91.
In a tightly fought welterweight battle, Thanjhae “The Tiger” Teasley (14-0, 6 KOs) of Allentown, Pennsylvania, scored a close eight-round split decision over Elijah “2 Tec” Flores (10-1, 4 KOs) of Redlands, California, via The Bronx. The fight fell into a rhythm early with Teasley dominating the front half of the rounds and Flores coming on later. Both men had their moments and neither seemed badly hurt at any point. Teasley enjoyed a 130-124 advantage in landed punches by fight’s end. The scores were 77-75 Flores, overruled by two scores of 78-74 Teasley.
Travon “The Sniper” Marshall (13-1, 10 KOs) of nearby Capitol Heights, Maryland, used a searing body attack to slowly break down and sap the will of LAPD officer Eduardo Diaz (9-5, 3 KOs), stopping him in the sixth and final round. The more offensively gifted of the two, Marshall stayed at range and controlled the action with his long right hand and thudding shots to the abdomen. With the punishment piling up and the tough Diaz looking tired, Referee David Braslow decided he’d finally seen enough at 2:41 of the round.
Welterweight Benjamin Johnson (7-0, 7 KOs) stayed perfect with an impressive three-round TKO over game, but outgunned, Mexican opponent Mario Meza (4-2, 3 KOs). Johnson dropped Meza with a left-hand body shot two minutes into round three. A minute later, Meza took a knee from a strong right hand for a second knockdown and, when he rose, turned his back on Referee Jamaal Brown who immediately waved the fight off at 2:53
Towering welterweight David “The Body Snatcher” Whitmire (11-0, 8 KOs) of Washington, DC exhibited his formidable skills by raking Los Angeles-based opponent Jarrod Tennant (9-8, 4 KOs) to the head and body before dropping him twice and stopping him late in round three. Approaching the end of the round, Whitmire finally knocked Tennant down with a strong right hand and then moved in with a two-fisted assault to drop and stop Tennant at 2:59.
DWayne Holmes (11-0, 6 KOs) TKO 4 (0:01) over Nestor Robledo (9-16-2, 7 KOs);
Ervin Fuller III (12-0, 6 KOs) UD (3x 59-50) over Eric Ruiz (17-13-1, 7 KOs) ; and
Jeffrey Yu (9-2, 6 KOs) MD (60-54, 59-55, 57-57) over Brandon Gutierrez (5-4-2, 2 KOs).
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ProBox Results from Maryland
Bryan Flores W10 Starling Castillo... Junior welterweight Bryan “Nino Maravilla” Flores scored a ten-round majority decision over Starling “El Poli” Castillo in the main event of ProBoxTV’s “The Contender Series” from the Live! Casino Hotel Maryland in Hanover, Maryland. After a slow first two rounds, Flores (28-1-1, 16 KOs) of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, began to pressure Castillo (20-2-1, 13 KOs), working his way inside the Dominican southpaw’s longer arms to hammer the body and sap his strength. Round after round, Castillo had fewer answers to deal with Flores, who stepped it up and battered him around the ring. By the final rounds, Castillo seemed to be in survival mode from the onslaught. The scores of 95-95 draw, overruled by 98-92 and 96-94 Flores, were not a clear indication of the dominance Flores enjoyed throughout the contest. For instance, he outlanded Castillo 163-76 in power punches.
Rene Palacios W10 Sulaiman Segawa... In the ten-round co-feature, Rene “El Zurdo” Palacios (19-0-1, 10 KOs) Nuevo Casas Grandes, Mexico, scored an upset split decision over featherweight contender Sulaiman Segawa (18-6-1, 7 KOs) of Silver Spring, Maryland, via Uganda.Segawa landed more punches overall 180-177. Both southpaws could make a case for winning in the end, but the judges favored Palacios’ work by scores of 99-91 Palacios, 97-93 Palacios and an over-ruled 96-94 Segawa. Palacios was the better fighter on the inside while Segawa relied on his well-placed punches from range. Although there were no knockdowns, Segawa was cut on the right eye in round four and Palacios finished the fight with a swollen-closed right eye.
UNDERCARD RESULTS
The show was presented by Lamont Roach Sr (NoXcuse Promotions) and broadcast on ProBox TV, Local favorite Francois “The Franchise” Scarboro Jr. (12-0, 9 KOs) of nearby Cheverly, Maryland, won a ten-round slugfest by way of unanimous decision over Brandon Valdes (15-7, 7 KOs) of Rosemead, California, via Barranquilla, Colombia. In a back-and-forth, high-intensity battle throughout all ten rounds, the two super featherweights traded power shots with abandon. Both men came our firing from the onset. Scarboro appeared to rock Valdes late in the opening round with a series of strong right hands. Valdes was cut above the left eye from another right hand in round three. Both fighters landed heavily and neither gave an inch in this entertaining battle. Scarboro, who was having his second fight in 70 days, won by scores of 96-94, 96-94 and 99-91. The valiant Valdes was taking on his fourth consecutive undefeated opponent.
Lightweight Jordan “Shortdog” White (20-2, 12 KOs) registered a ten-round unanimous decision over a cautious Willie “The Thrill” Shaw Jr. (15-7, 10 KOs). While the action was sporadic throughout, White, of Washington DC, managed to drop late-notice opponent Shaw, of Vallejo, California, with a well-timed right hand in round nine and pull away by scores of 99-90, 97-92 and 98-91.
In a tightly fought welterweight battle, Thanjhae “The Tiger” Teasley (14-0, 6 KOs) of Allentown, Pennsylvania, scored a close eight-round split decision over Elijah “2 Tec” Flores (10-1, 4 KOs) of Redlands, California, via The Bronx. The fight fell into a rhythm early with Teasley dominating the front half of the rounds and Flores coming on later. Both men had their moments and neither seemed badly hurt at any point. Teasley enjoyed a 130-124 advantage in landed punches by fight’s end. The scores were 77-75 Flores, overruled by two scores of 78-74 Teasley.
Travon “The Sniper” Marshall (13-1, 10 KOs) of nearby Capitol Heights, Maryland, used a searing body attack to slowly break down and sap the will of LAPD officer Eduardo Diaz (9-5, 3 KOs), stopping him in the sixth and final round. The more offensively gifted of the two, Marshall stayed at range and controlled the action with his long right hand and thudding shots to the abdomen. With the punishment piling up and the tough Diaz looking tired, Referee David Braslow decided he’d finally seen enough at 2:41 of the round.
Welterweight Benjamin Johnson (7-0, 7 KOs) stayed perfect with an impressive three-round TKO over game, but outgunned, Mexican opponent Mario Meza (4-2, 3 KOs). Johnson dropped Meza with a left-hand body shot two minutes into round three. A minute later, Meza took a knee from a strong right hand for a second knockdown and, when he rose, turned his back on Referee Jamaal Brown who immediately waved the fight off at 2:53
Towering welterweight David “The Body Snatcher” Whitmire (11-0, 8 KOs) of Washington, DC exhibited his formidable skills by raking Los Angeles-based opponent Jarrod Tennant (9-8, 4 KOs) to the head and body before dropping him twice and stopping him late in round three. Approaching the end of the round, Whitmire finally knocked Tennant down with a strong right hand and then moved in with a two-fisted assault to drop and stop Tennant at 2:59.
DWayne Holmes (11-0, 6 KOs) TKO 4 (0:01) over Nestor Robledo (9-16-2, 7 KOs);
Ervin Fuller III (12-0, 6 KOs) UD (3x 59-50) over Eric Ruiz (17-13-1, 7 KOs) ; and
Jeffrey Yu (9-2, 6 KOs) MD (60-54, 59-55, 57-57) over Brandon Gutierrez (5-4-2, 2 KOs).
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Weigh-in report from New York |
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Saturday night sees Teofimo Lopez defend his world and WBO junior weltereight championship against undefeated three-division champion Shakur Stevenson at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Stevenson, a former champion in the 126, 130 and 135-pound weight divisions, came in at a career-high 138.6 pounds, while Lopez was a pound heavier at 139.6... Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington and Carlos Castro successfully made weight and are ready to compete for the vacant WBC featherweight championship. Carrington weighed in at 125.6 pounds while Castro tipped the scales at 125.2. Carrington, fighting in his hometown, gained respect on the international level in 2024, by defeating Sulaiman Segawa by majority decision. One year later, he fought for the interim WBC featherweight title against Mateus Heita. Following the vacancy left by the overweight Stephen Fulton, Carrington was given the opportunity to compete for the world championship against Castro
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Weigh-in report from New York
Saturday night sees Teofimo Lopez defend his world and WBO junior weltereight championship against undefeated three-division champion Shakur Stevenson at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Stevenson, a former champion in the 126, 130 and 135-pound weight divisions, came in at a career-high 138.6 pounds, while Lopez was a pound heavier at 139.6... Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington and Carlos Castro successfully made weight and are ready to compete for the vacant WBC featherweight championship. Carrington weighed in at 125.6 pounds while Castro tipped the scales at 125.2. Carrington, fighting in his hometown, gained respect on the international level in 2024, by defeating Sulaiman Segawa by majority decision. One year later, he fought for the interim WBC featherweight title against Mateus Heita. Following the vacancy left by the overweight Stephen Fulton, Carrington was given the opportunity to compete for the world championship against Castro
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Weigh-in report from San Juan |
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Here are the weigh-in results for Saturday's Top Rank show at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan:
WBO / WBA junior middleweight unification — twelve rounds
Xander Zayas 153.5 pounds vs. Abass Baraou 153.5
Referee: Roberto Ramirez Jr.; judges: Oliver Brien, Patrick Morley and Jose R. Torres;
Juanmita Lopez De Jesus 114.8 vs. Conner Goade 113.9 (six rounds);
Carlos De Leon Castro 129.7 vs. Diuhl Olguin 129.5 (six rounds);
Yadriel Caban 115 vs. Jeremis Hernandez-Torres 114.7 (four rounds);
Euri Cedeno 159.7 vs. Etoundi Michel William 159.9 (ten rounds); and
Giovani Santillan 153.9 vs. Courtney Pennington 153.5 (ten rounds).
The show will be freestreamed on Top Rank Classics Fast Channel, 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT). To watch on mobile or desktop, visit trboxing.co/TopRankClassics. To watch on your smart TV, check the availability of FAST channel apps and look for Top Rank Classics on The Roku Channel, Tubi, or Vizio. The entire Zayas vs. Baraou card will re-air in the U.S. for free on the Top Rank Classics FAST channel, starting at 10 a.m. ET on Sunday, Feb. 1, airing all day until midnight. It will re-air once at 1 p.m. ET on Monday, Feb. 2.
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Weigh-in report from San Juan
Here are the weigh-in results for Saturday's Top Rank show at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan:
WBO / WBA junior middleweight unification — twelve rounds
Xander Zayas 153.5 pounds vs. Abass Baraou 153.5
Referee: Roberto Ramirez Jr.; judges: Oliver Brien, Patrick Morley and Jose R. Torres;
Juanmita Lopez De Jesus 114.8 vs. Conner Goade 113.9 (six rounds);
Carlos De Leon Castro 129.7 vs. Diuhl Olguin 129.5 (six rounds);
Yadriel Caban 115 vs. Jeremis Hernandez-Torres 114.7 (four rounds);
Euri Cedeno 159.7 vs. Etoundi Michel William 159.9 (ten rounds); and
Giovani Santillan 153.9 vs. Courtney Pennington 153.5 (ten rounds).
The show will be freestreamed on Top Rank Classics Fast Channel, 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT). To watch on mobile or desktop, visit trboxing.co/TopRankClassics. To watch on your smart TV, check the availability of FAST channel apps and look for Top Rank Classics on The Roku Channel, Tubi, or Vizio. The entire Zayas vs. Baraou card will re-air in the U.S. for free on the Top Rank Classics FAST channel, starting at 10 a.m. ET on Sunday, Feb. 1, airing all day until midnight. It will re-air once at 1 p.m. ET on Monday, Feb. 2.
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Preview of Sunday's Zuffa Boxing 02 show |
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In Las Vegas, the action continues on Sunday with Zuffa Boxing 02. In the main event, former WBA junior welterweight champion Jose "Rayo" Valenzuela (14-3) kicks off a new chapter in his career as he drops to lightweight to take on hard-hitting Diego "Azabache" Torres over ten rounds. Valenzuela last fought back in March 2025, where he lost his title on the scorecards against Gary Antuanne Russell, but now he's beginning a run towards a new goal under the Zuffa Boxing banner. The southpaw has a 13-1 record against orthodox fighters, and he'll be looking to extend that record on Sunday night when he takes on Torres. From Mexico, Torres heads into the bout on a four-fight win streak following a 2023 loss to current IBF lightweight champion Raymond Muratalla. His 22-1 record boasts 19 knockouts, and the Zapopan, Jalisco native will look to score the biggest win of his career on February 1st.
Serhii Bohachuk vs Radzhab Butaev
In the co-feature, Ukraine's former WBC interim junior middleweight champion Serhii Bohachuk moves up to 160 pounds for a middleweight clash with Russia's Radzhab Butaev. Los Angeles-based Bohachuk quickly built his reputation as a fearsome puncher as he raced to 18-0, with all 18 victories coming inside the distance. But on Sunday night he'll look to bounce back from his unanimous decision loss to Brandon Adams on the Canelo-Crawford undercard last September. Bohachuk has a formidable knockout rate of 92 percent, with 24 of his 26 victories coming inside the distance. He'll look to enhance that knockout record when he takes on Butaev, who bases himself out of Indio, California, and is moving up to 160 pounds for the first time in his career.
Radivoje Kalajdzic vs Oleksandr Gvozdyk
Serbia takes on Ukraine in Zuffa Boxing 02's main card opener scheduled for Sunday, February 1st. Radivoje Kalakdzic takes on ex-WBC champion Oleksandr Gvozdyk (pictured) in a battle between two seasoned light heavyweights with aspirations of championship gold. Serbia's Kalakdzic (29-3, 21 KOs) will end a 541-day layoff when he returns to action at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, with the Serbian contender keen to re-establish some momentum at 175 pounds. His last outing, back in August 2024, saw Kalakdzic fall to a decision defeat to David Morrell, ending a five-fight win streak. Now he's ready to return, and faces Ukraine's former 175-pound champion. Gvozdyk captured boxing bronze for Ukraine at the London 2012 Olympics before turning pro and knocking out Adonis Stevenson in the eleventh round to capture the light heavyweight world title back 2018 in his sixteenth pro fight. Now standing with a record of 30-2 including the World Series of Boxing, Gvozdyk plans on making another run at championship glory in Zuffa Boxing, starting with victory over former title challenger Kalajdzic on Sunday night.
Jalil Hackett vs Roberto Cruz
Rival 11-1 prospects go head-to-head in the featured preliminary card bout as Washington D.C.'s Jalil Hackett takes on Puerto Rico's Roberto Cruz. Both men turned pro as 18-year olds, but the pair arrive in Las Vegas after taking different routes to get here. While Hackett has stayed active, with his 12 career bouts coming in just over four and a half years, Cruz has built his experience over twice that timespan. Hackett is making a quick turnaround for his Zuffa Boxing debut, just 51 days after his first-round knockout of 29-fight veteran Jose Angulo in December. Cruz, meanwhile, hasn't fought since last May, when he suffered the first defeat of his pro career. Now "El Terror de Cayey" is ready to return, and the Texas-based prospect will look to get back to winning ways against fellow prospect Hackett in their 157-pound catchweight matchup.
Oscar Perez vs Justin Viloria
Unbeaten lightweight southpaws collide as Oscar "El Chato" Perez faces off against Justin "Chosen" Viloria. A Texas native, Perez banked some valuable rounds in 2025 with back-to-back decision wins in eight-round bouts to take his record to 14-0-2 with 7 KOs, while California's Viloria had a fraction more ring time, but in those rounds he managed to secure one decision win and three knockouts as he improved his record to 11-0 with 8 KOs.
Damoni Cato-Cain vs Christian Morales
Damoni Cato-Cain arrives in Vegas looking for a fresh start and a chance to build some new momentum after a two-year, four-fight run that saw one win and one loss bookended by a pair of draws. The most recent of those, against undefeated Jorge Maravillo, came back in December 2024. Now ready to return after a year away from the ring, the 8-1-2 (7 KOs) welterweight will take on more unbeaten opposition in the form of Las Vegas local Christian "El Mejor" Morales (7-0, 7 KOs), who is stepping in to compete on just ten days' notice. His response to getting the short-notice opportunity? "I trust in my skills and said, 'Fuck it. No risk, no reward.'"
Julian Gomez vs Damazion Vanhouter
Heavyweights will step into the Zuffa Boxing ring for the first time as 7-3 Mexican hopeful Julian "La Bomba" Gomez takes on undefeated 10-0 American Damazion Vanhouter. Gomez is looking to bounce back after a knockout defeat to unbeaten Austin Benson last October, while Vanhouter claimed the seventh first-round stoppage win of his career with a TKO of Jose Mario Tamez in December.
Jamar Talley vs Devonte Williams
Opening up Zuffa Boxing 02 is a cruiserweight bout between undefeated Jamar "No Mercy" Talley and Devonte Williams, who has a record of 13 wins, 3 losses, with five knockouts to his name. The Houston native will step through the ropes on Sunday looking to turn around his form after ending a three-and-a-half-year hiatus with back-to-back stoppage losses in 2025. Now the 32-year-old is ready for his first fight in Las Vegas, and an opportunity to transform his fortunes. Standing in his way is unbeaten Talley, a protege of the acclaimed trainer Brian "BoMac" McIntyre and former teammate of the now-retired multi-weight undisputed champion Terence Crawford. The 25-year-old New Jersey native has knocked out four of his five career victories as a pro and has only been beyond the second round once in his career.
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Preview of Sunday's Zuffa Boxing 02 show
In Las Vegas, the action continues on Sunday with Zuffa Boxing 02. In the main event, former WBA junior welterweight champion Jose "Rayo" Valenzuela (14-3) kicks off a new chapter in his career as he drops to lightweight to take on hard-hitting Diego "Azabache" Torres over ten rounds. Valenzuela last fought back in March 2025, where he lost his title on the scorecards against Gary Antuanne Russell, but now he's beginning a run towards a new goal under the Zuffa Boxing banner. The southpaw has a 13-1 record against orthodox fighters, and he'll be looking to extend that record on Sunday night when he takes on Torres. From Mexico, Torres heads into the bout on a four-fight win streak following a 2023 loss to current IBF lightweight champion Raymond Muratalla. His 22-1 record boasts 19 knockouts, and the Zapopan, Jalisco native will look to score the biggest win of his career on February 1st.
Serhii Bohachuk vs Radzhab Butaev
In the co-feature, Ukraine's former WBC interim junior middleweight champion Serhii Bohachuk moves up to 160 pounds for a middleweight clash with Russia's Radzhab Butaev. Los Angeles-based Bohachuk quickly built his reputation as a fearsome puncher as he raced to 18-0, with all 18 victories coming inside the distance. But on Sunday night he'll look to bounce back from his unanimous decision loss to Brandon Adams on the Canelo-Crawford undercard last September. Bohachuk has a formidable knockout rate of 92 percent, with 24 of his 26 victories coming inside the distance. He'll look to enhance that knockout record when he takes on Butaev, who bases himself out of Indio, California, and is moving up to 160 pounds for the first time in his career.
Radivoje Kalajdzic vs Oleksandr Gvozdyk
Serbia takes on Ukraine in Zuffa Boxing 02's main card opener scheduled for Sunday, February 1st. Radivoje Kalakdzic takes on ex-WBC champion Oleksandr Gvozdyk (pictured) in a battle between two seasoned light heavyweights with aspirations of championship gold. Serbia's Kalakdzic (29-3, 21 KOs) will end a 541-day layoff when he returns to action at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, with the Serbian contender keen to re-establish some momentum at 175 pounds. His last outing, back in August 2024, saw Kalakdzic fall to a decision defeat to David Morrell, ending a five-fight win streak. Now he's ready to return, and faces Ukraine's former 175-pound champion. Gvozdyk captured boxing bronze for Ukraine at the London 2012 Olympics before turning pro and knocking out Adonis Stevenson in the eleventh round to capture the light heavyweight world title back 2018 in his sixteenth pro fight. Now standing with a record of 30-2 including the World Series of Boxing, Gvozdyk plans on making another run at championship glory in Zuffa Boxing, starting with victory over former title challenger Kalajdzic on Sunday night.
Jalil Hackett vs Roberto Cruz
Rival 11-1 prospects go head-to-head in the featured preliminary card bout as Washington D.C.'s Jalil Hackett takes on Puerto Rico's Roberto Cruz. Both men turned pro as 18-year olds, but the pair arrive in Las Vegas after taking different routes to get here. While Hackett has stayed active, with his 12 career bouts coming in just over four and a half years, Cruz has built his experience over twice that timespan. Hackett is making a quick turnaround for his Zuffa Boxing debut, just 51 days after his first-round knockout of 29-fight veteran Jose Angulo in December. Cruz, meanwhile, hasn't fought since last May, when he suffered the first defeat of his pro career. Now "El Terror de Cayey" is ready to return, and the Texas-based prospect will look to get back to winning ways against fellow prospect Hackett in their 157-pound catchweight matchup.
Oscar Perez vs Justin Viloria
Unbeaten lightweight southpaws collide as Oscar "El Chato" Perez faces off against Justin "Chosen" Viloria. A Texas native, Perez banked some valuable rounds in 2025 with back-to-back decision wins in eight-round bouts to take his record to 14-0-2 with 7 KOs, while California's Viloria had a fraction more ring time, but in those rounds he managed to secure one decision win and three knockouts as he improved his record to 11-0 with 8 KOs.
Damoni Cato-Cain vs Christian Morales
Damoni Cato-Cain arrives in Vegas looking for a fresh start and a chance to build some new momentum after a two-year, four-fight run that saw one win and one loss bookended by a pair of draws. The most recent of those, against undefeated Jorge Maravillo, came back in December 2024. Now ready to return after a year away from the ring, the 8-1-2 (7 KOs) welterweight will take on more unbeaten opposition in the form of Las Vegas local Christian "El Mejor" Morales (7-0, 7 KOs), who is stepping in to compete on just ten days' notice. His response to getting the short-notice opportunity? "I trust in my skills and said, 'Fuck it. No risk, no reward.'"
Julian Gomez vs Damazion Vanhouter
Heavyweights will step into the Zuffa Boxing ring for the first time as 7-3 Mexican hopeful Julian "La Bomba" Gomez takes on undefeated 10-0 American Damazion Vanhouter. Gomez is looking to bounce back after a knockout defeat to unbeaten Austin Benson last October, while Vanhouter claimed the seventh first-round stoppage win of his career with a TKO of Jose Mario Tamez in December.
Jamar Talley vs Devonte Williams
Opening up Zuffa Boxing 02 is a cruiserweight bout between undefeated Jamar "No Mercy" Talley and Devonte Williams, who has a record of 13 wins, 3 losses, with five knockouts to his name. The Houston native will step through the ropes on Sunday looking to turn around his form after ending a three-and-a-half-year hiatus with back-to-back stoppage losses in 2025. Now the 32-year-old is ready for his first fight in Las Vegas, and an opportunity to transform his fortunes. Standing in his way is unbeaten Talley, a protege of the acclaimed trainer Brian "BoMac" McIntyre and former teammate of the now-retired multi-weight undisputed champion Terence Crawford. The 25-year-old New Jersey native has knocked out four of his five career victories as a pro and has only been beyond the second round once in his career.
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Rival promoter comes out in support of Zuffa Boxing |
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Promoter's editorial: As a fight promoter for the past forty years, I believe it gives me the right to comment on what has been said or posted the past month by fight promoters, fight media, and fight fans, regarding the launch of Zuffa Boxing by Dana White. Let’s look at this situation. White launched a boxing promotions company, Zuffa Boxing, just like Bob Arum did with Top Rank, Don King did with Don King Promotions, Richard Schaefer, Oscar, and myself did with Golden Boy Promotions, Eddie Hearn with Matchroom, Joe Deguardia with Star Boxing, Jimmy Burchfield with CES, Al Haymon with PBC, and on and on. White hired a staff including Tom Loeffler, (who I have know for 30 years) as vice president, and matchmaker Chuck Bosecker (whose first matchmaking job was for our Fight Club OC shows). Just like Golden Boy did with Eric Gomez; like Top Rank did with Bruce Trampler, Brad Jacobs, and Carl Moretti; like Al Hayman did with Tom Brown, and on and on. |
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Rival promoter comes out in support of Zuffa Boxing
Promoter's editorial: As a fight promoter for the past forty years, I believe it gives me the right to comment on what has been said or posted the past month by fight promoters, fight media, and fight fans, regarding the launch of Zuffa Boxing by Dana White. Let’s look at this situation. White launched a boxing promotions company, Zuffa Boxing, just like Bob Arum did with Top Rank, Don King did with Don King Promotions, Richard Schaefer, Oscar, and myself did with Golden Boy Promotions, Eddie Hearn with Matchroom, Joe Deguardia with Star Boxing, Jimmy Burchfield with CES, Al Haymon with PBC, and on and on. White hired a staff including Tom Loeffler, (who I have know for 30 years) as vice president, and matchmaker Chuck Bosecker (whose first matchmaking job was for our Fight Club OC shows). Just like Golden Boy did with Eric Gomez; like Top Rank did with Bruce Trampler, Brad Jacobs, and Carl Moretti; like Al Hayman did with Tom Brown, and on and on. |
NYC Firefighters to box for charity |
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The New York City Fire Department's FDNY Bravest Boxing Team is gearing to square off against first responders from around the globe at the International Battle of the Badges III. On Friday, March 6th, the fearless fighters will take center stage at The Theater at Madison Square Garden, battling not only for victory but for powerful causes. Every punch thrown will support the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, The Michael J. Fox Parkinson’s Foundation, The FDNY Foundation, NY Firefighters Foundation, and the Fire Family Transport Foundation. Come support New York City’s Bravest – get your tickets here. |
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NYC Firefighters to box for charity
The New York City Fire Department's FDNY Bravest Boxing Team is gearing to square off against first responders from around the globe at the International Battle of the Badges III. On Friday, March 6th, the fearless fighters will take center stage at The Theater at Madison Square Garden, battling not only for victory but for powerful causes. Every punch thrown will support the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, The Michael J. Fox Parkinson’s Foundation, The FDNY Foundation, NY Firefighters Foundation, and the Fire Family Transport Foundation. Come support New York City’s Bravest – get your tickets here. |
Adames out of tomorrow's title defense |
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The WBC announced that the WBC middleweight championship fight between Carlos Adames and Austin Williams, scheduled for this Saturday, January 31st at Madison Square Garden in New York City has been cancelled due to an illness affecting the champion, Adames. The bout was set to be Adames' second title defense. Two fights fell out today, the day of the weigh-in, leading to questions as to whether the weight cut was the source of the "illness." Earlier in the day, it was announced that Domincan welterweight Rohan Polanco fell ill late and has withdrawn from a significant bout against Christian Gomez that was the co-feature on Top Rank's Puerto Rico show. |
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Adames out of tomorrow's title defense
The WBC announced that the WBC middleweight championship fight between Carlos Adames and Austin Williams, scheduled for this Saturday, January 31st at Madison Square Garden in New York City has been cancelled due to an illness affecting the champion, Adames. The bout was set to be Adames' second title defense. Two fights fell out today, the day of the weigh-in, leading to questions as to whether the weight cut was the source of the "illness." Earlier in the day, it was announced that Domincan welterweight Rohan Polanco fell ill late and has withdrawn from a significant bout against Christian Gomez that was the co-feature on Top Rank's Puerto Rico show. |
Polanco out of tomorrow's San Juan co-feature |
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Welterweight Rohan Polanco fell ill late Thursday evening and was forced to withdraw from his bout against Christian Gomez. The rest of the card tomorrow at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico, headlined by the Xander Zayas-Abass Baraou junior middleweight title unification showdown, will proceed as scheduled. The six-round junior bantamweight fight between Juanmita Lopez De Jesus and Conner Goade will take place immediately before the main event. Zayas-Baraou and the full undercard will stream for free on the Top Rank Classics FAST channel in the U.S. with a new start time of 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT. Zayas vs. Baraou will begin at approximately 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT.
To watch on mobile or desktop, visit trboxing.co/TopRankClassics. To watch on your smart TV, check the availability of FAST channel apps and search for Top Rank Classics on The Roku Channel, Tubi, or Vizio. The full Zayas vs. Baraou card will be broadcast in Puerto Rico on WAPA Deportes, the only local channel dedicated entirely to sports programming, starting at 7:30 p.m. AST
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Polanco out of tomorrow's San Juan co-feature
Welterweight Rohan Polanco fell ill late Thursday evening and was forced to withdraw from his bout against Christian Gomez. The rest of the card tomorrow at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico, headlined by the Xander Zayas-Abass Baraou junior middleweight title unification showdown, will proceed as scheduled. The six-round junior bantamweight fight between Juanmita Lopez De Jesus and Conner Goade will take place immediately before the main event. Zayas-Baraou and the full undercard will stream for free on the Top Rank Classics FAST channel in the U.S. with a new start time of 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT. Zayas vs. Baraou will begin at approximately 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT.
To watch on mobile or desktop, visit trboxing.co/TopRankClassics. To watch on your smart TV, check the availability of FAST channel apps and search for Top Rank Classics on The Roku Channel, Tubi, or Vizio. The full Zayas vs. Baraou card will be broadcast in Puerto Rico on WAPA Deportes, the only local channel dedicated entirely to sports programming, starting at 7:30 p.m. AST
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Lopez gets a rise out of Stevenson |
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Thursday's final presser with world and WBO junior welterweight champion Teofimo Lopez (pictured) and undefeated WBC lightweight titlist Shakur Stevenson brought drama and substance ahead of Saturday's headliner from a sold-out Madison Square Garden in New York City, live on DAZN PPV. Normally, Stevenson is cool, calm, and collected. It didn't take long though for Lopez to get under Stevenson's skin. Lopez provoked Stevenson to rise from his chair and confront Lopez. Security intervened to prevent a further incident.
Lopez's father and trainer, Teofimo Lopez Sr., wasn't at the press conference due to being under the weather. Lopez declined to elaborate any further beyond saying his father was "downloading". But that didn't prevent Stevenson from trying to escalate the situation.
Stevenson alleged that Teofimo Sr. was in the fighter's hotel lobby "drugged out", which hasn't been proven to be accurate. The three-division world champion went on to tell Lopez he had a gift for Teofimo Sr. he wanted to give him. Lopez obliged, saying, "You never deny a gift". Stevenson took a bottle of tequila out of the bag.
Stevenson walked over to Teofimo Jr.'s side and handed a security guard the bottle. The lightweight champion's team kept insisting that Lopez Sr. was recovering from a hangover. Lopez didn't take the bait and insisted that Stevenson and his entourage are so worried about his dad that they bought him a gift.
The presser concluded shortly thereafter. Lopez and Stevenson had an intense face-to-face staredown, with the latter talking trash. Stevenson stood facing the media while Lopez kept glaring at him. Stevenson nudged his shoulder and walked off. He walked around security trying to find a way to Lopez. He was unsuccessful but he made sure to get every last word in.
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Lopez gets a rise out of Stevenson
Thursday's final presser with world and WBO junior welterweight champion Teofimo Lopez (pictured) and undefeated WBC lightweight titlist Shakur Stevenson brought drama and substance ahead of Saturday's headliner from a sold-out Madison Square Garden in New York City, live on DAZN PPV. Normally, Stevenson is cool, calm, and collected. It didn't take long though for Lopez to get under Stevenson's skin. Lopez provoked Stevenson to rise from his chair and confront Lopez. Security intervened to prevent a further incident.
Lopez's father and trainer, Teofimo Lopez Sr., wasn't at the press conference due to being under the weather. Lopez declined to elaborate any further beyond saying his father was "downloading". But that didn't prevent Stevenson from trying to escalate the situation.
Stevenson alleged that Teofimo Sr. was in the fighter's hotel lobby "drugged out", which hasn't been proven to be accurate. The three-division world champion went on to tell Lopez he had a gift for Teofimo Sr. he wanted to give him. Lopez obliged, saying, "You never deny a gift". Stevenson took a bottle of tequila out of the bag.
Stevenson walked over to Teofimo Jr.'s side and handed a security guard the bottle. The lightweight champion's team kept insisting that Lopez Sr. was recovering from a hangover. Lopez didn't take the bait and insisted that Stevenson and his entourage are so worried about his dad that they bought him a gift.
The presser concluded shortly thereafter. Lopez and Stevenson had an intense face-to-face staredown, with the latter talking trash. Stevenson stood facing the media while Lopez kept glaring at him. Stevenson nudged his shoulder and walked off. He walked around security trying to find a way to Lopez. He was unsuccessful but he made sure to get every last word in.
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Murtazaliev to defend vs. Kelly in England on Saturday |
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IBF junior middleweight champion Bakhram Murtazaliev travels to Newcastle upon Tyne, England to make the second defense of his title against Josh Kelly, live on DAZN. Taking place this Saturday, Kelly will be in his first world title fight and will be a huge underdog to topple the undefeated 33-year old. The Russian-born Murtazaliev has knocked out his two previous opponents and he would love nothing more than to spoil what is the biggest moment of Kelly's boxing career so far. DAZN's coverage will begin at 7pm in the UK, which is 2pm in the United States' Eastern time zone.
The two fighters faced off on Tuesday, with Kelly surrounded by young prospects at a Newcastle gym, trying to make it an intimidating atmosphere for Murtazaliev as he encouraged those watching on to ramp up the volume. This left Kelly in a confident mood who claims he can stop the undefeated IBF light middleweight champion. "I believe there will be a shift, especially in him in his belief when he starts getting hit," Kelly told Matchroom Boxing. "He doesn't know where it's coming from, different angles he's never been hit from. And there will be a shift and you might not see it, but I'll feel it. And when I feel it, that's when I'll go on top. I believe I stop him."
The full fight card:
Bakhram Murtazaliev vs. Josh Kelly (IBF junior middleweight title);
Josh Padley vs. Jaouad Belemehdi (vacant European junior lightweight title);
Elif Nur Turhan vs. Taylah Gentzen (IBF women's lightweight title); and
Leo Atang vs. Amine Boucetta (heavyweights).
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Murtazaliev to defend vs. Kelly in England on Saturday
IBF junior middleweight champion Bakhram Murtazaliev travels to Newcastle upon Tyne, England to make the second defense of his title against Josh Kelly, live on DAZN. Taking place this Saturday, Kelly will be in his first world title fight and will be a huge underdog to topple the undefeated 33-year old. The Russian-born Murtazaliev has knocked out his two previous opponents and he would love nothing more than to spoil what is the biggest moment of Kelly's boxing career so far. DAZN's coverage will begin at 7pm in the UK, which is 2pm in the United States' Eastern time zone.
The two fighters faced off on Tuesday, with Kelly surrounded by young prospects at a Newcastle gym, trying to make it an intimidating atmosphere for Murtazaliev as he encouraged those watching on to ramp up the volume. This left Kelly in a confident mood who claims he can stop the undefeated IBF light middleweight champion. "I believe there will be a shift, especially in him in his belief when he starts getting hit," Kelly told Matchroom Boxing. "He doesn't know where it's coming from, different angles he's never been hit from. And there will be a shift and you might not see it, but I'll feel it. And when I feel it, that's when I'll go on top. I believe I stop him."
The full fight card:
Bakhram Murtazaliev vs. Josh Kelly (IBF junior middleweight title);
Josh Padley vs. Jaouad Belemehdi (vacant European junior lightweight title);
Elif Nur Turhan vs. Taylah Gentzen (IBF women's lightweight title); and
Leo Atang vs. Amine Boucetta (heavyweights).
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WBC sanctioning two eliminators in bantamweight division |
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Mexican bantamweight Alejandro “Konejo” González (19-6-3) will compete on the road in a WBC eliminator against Britain’s Andrew Cain (14-1) on Saturday, February 7th in Liverpool, England. González is coming off an important victory over Juan Hernández. González and his promoter, Mario Muñoz, were present at the WBC’s weekly press conference this week, where they shared details about this key matchup.
During the conference, WBC president Mauricio Sulaimán confirmed that there will be another bantamweight eliminator, which will be contested between Tenshin Nasukawa and [former multi-division champion] Juan Manuel Estrada. This is because, after the vacant bantamweight title was contested, the current champion, Takuma Inoue, will be required to make two mandatory defenses.
Nonetheless, González stated: “I’m very happy. This is a great opportunity, and believe me, we’re not going to let it slip away. Every fight is tough, but we prepare for each one as if we were fighting for the world championship. I’ve already gone through blood tests, eye exams, head scans—full medical checkups—and we’re at 100 percent. I hope everyone supports us. Believe me, there will be a new champion, and above all, a Mexican one.”
Muñoz added: “Having ‘Konejo’ with me—who is more than my team, he’s my family. We’re going to work to represent the WBC in the most dignified way possible. We appreciate all your support. You’re going to see a ‘Konejo’ González who will make history.”
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WBC sanctioning two eliminators in bantamweight division
Mexican bantamweight Alejandro “Konejo” González (19-6-3) will compete on the road in a WBC eliminator against Britain’s Andrew Cain (14-1) on Saturday, February 7th in Liverpool, England. González is coming off an important victory over Juan Hernández. González and his promoter, Mario Muñoz, were present at the WBC’s weekly press conference this week, where they shared details about this key matchup.
During the conference, WBC president Mauricio Sulaimán confirmed that there will be another bantamweight eliminator, which will be contested between Tenshin Nasukawa and [former multi-division champion] Juan Manuel Estrada. This is because, after the vacant bantamweight title was contested, the current champion, Takuma Inoue, will be required to make two mandatory defenses.
Nonetheless, González stated: “I’m very happy. This is a great opportunity, and believe me, we’re not going to let it slip away. Every fight is tough, but we prepare for each one as if we were fighting for the world championship. I’ve already gone through blood tests, eye exams, head scans—full medical checkups—and we’re at 100 percent. I hope everyone supports us. Believe me, there will be a new champion, and above all, a Mexican one.”
Muñoz added: “Having ‘Konejo’ with me—who is more than my team, he’s my family. We’re going to work to represent the WBC in the most dignified way possible. We appreciate all your support. You’re going to see a ‘Konejo’ González who will make history.”
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Final presser quotes from San Juan |
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Puerto Rican star Xander Zayas (22-0, 13 KOs) has waited nearly six years for a homecoming. He returns as WBO 154-pound champion and will square off against WBA king Abass Baraou (17-1, 9 KOs) this Saturday, Jan. 31st, at Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan. In just the second unification ever held on Puerto Rican soil, the 23-year-old has the chance to become the youngest active unified champion and the first Boricua to do it on home turf. Baraou, a seasoned road warrior, is unfazed by the task at hand. Zayas-Baraou and other featured bouts will stream for free on the Top Rank Classics Fast channel in the U.S. beginning at 5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT. Zayas vs. Baraou will begin at approximately 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT. To watch on mobile or desktop, visit trboxing.co/TopRankClassics. To watch on your smart TV, check the availability of FAST channel apps and search for Top Rank Classics on The Roku Channel, Tubi, or Vizio.
This is what the fighters said at Thursday's press conference.
Xander Zayas
“This is what I have been working for since I was 5 years old. {18} years as a fighter, seven as a pro. I got a world title in my last fight at 23. I’m ready to become a unified world champion and to keep making history. This is the biggest moment of my life. I deserve to be here. I worked hard to be here. This is where I belong.”
“I’m expecting the best version of Abass Baraou. I’m expecting something I haven’t seen before. We sparred almost two years ago. But he’s a champion now. And we both have grown and learned. We've also experienced different things. So, I’m expecting the best version of him because he’s going to get the best version of me. That’s for sure.”
“This is the only fight {this weekend} where you’ll have two world titles on the line. It’s the only fight where you’ll see two champions putting everything on the line to become a unified champion. Tune in because there will be fireworks, and I’m going to make history one more time.”
Abass Baraou
“I go everywhere to make my dreams come true. I’ve been doing the work for a long time. Being here is amazing. And I can’t wait for Saturday night.”
“Winning the title was amazing. It was one of my favorite moments so far. I worked so hard for this moment. It was hard to get there. As you can tell, my team was happy as well. And securing that win opened up bigger opportunities, like Saturday’s fight. So I really enjoyed that moment.”
“Everyone knows we sparred. But I don’t put too much focus on it. I spar to learn. When we sparred, it was always good work. But a fight is different. Gloves are different. No headgear. It’s just me and him in the ring with no helping hand. It’s going to be way different than any sparring. I’m focused on this fight, and I’m looking forward to it.”
“I’m an experienced fighter. I have a great amateur background. And I’ve come to Puerto Rico to put it all on the line. We know that Zayas is fast and talented. So, as a boxing fan myself, I feel this is a great fight to watch. Tune in to see how I pull this off.”
***
In the ten-round co-feature, Dominican welterweight Rohan “El Rayo” Polanco (17-0, 10 KOs) takes on Mexican veteran Christian Gomez (23-6-1, 21 KOs). Here is what those two had to say:
Rohan Polanco
“I hope that the title opportunity comes this year. I have been fighting for some time, and I’ve been ranked for a while as well. I’ve been positioning myself among the best. So, I’m just waiting for the opportunity. I feel I am ready. I have lots of experience. I just need the opportunity.”
“I would love to fight {WBO champion} Devin Haney. I’m ranked in that organization. I think that would be the easiest fight to make. I’m ready. I’m going to beat everyone.”
Christian Gomez
“We’re going to come forward, but we’re also going to try different strategies that we worked on in camp.”
“I come from a family of boxers. Even my mother was a boxer. This sport is very important to us.”
“I think experience dictates how you perform in a fight. But also, when you see the abilities of your opponent, you also tailor your camp for that.”
***
Additionally, Juanmita Lopez De Jesus (4-0, 2 KOs), the 19-year-old son of former world champion Juan Manuel “Juanma” Lopez, will face Conner Goade (8-4-2, 7 KOs) in a six-round tilt at junior bantamweight.
Juanmita Lopez De Jesus
“This first year as a pro has been great. I’ve gotten a lot of experience. I know Conner is an experienced fighter. But I’m going to show that I’m on a different level.”
“Camp has been great. I had a cut in my last fight, so I had to wait three months to return. So, I was able to prepare more. I’m going to show that I’ve grown a lot.”
Conner Goade
“I’ve had a lot of fights that could have gone either way. But that’s alright. You’ll see what happens on Saturday night.”
“I’ve got a couple more rounds fought than him. But I also know he has more amateur fights. So, it’ll even out.”
***
The undercard will also include the junior middleweight debut of Giovani Santillan (34-1, 18 KOs), as well as the return of rising Dominican middleweight Euri Cedeño (13-0-1, 12 KOs), in separate ten-rounders. Santillan will lock horns with Courtney Pennington (17-11-3, 7 KOs), while Cedeño squares off against Etoundi Michel William (16-2, 12 KOs).
Giovani Santillan
“This is my first time fighting at 154 pounds, and I’m excited to put on a show here in Puerto Rico. I want to show everyone that there is a new fighter in this weight class who is coming for the belts.”
“I feel good at this weight now. It shows in my training and preparation. We focused less on making the weight and more on the actual fight.”
“I have big goals for 2026. I want to fight for a world title in this new weight class.”
Euri Cedeño
“My power comes from my hard work. I always work with my mindset on destroying my opponent. That’s where it comes from.”
“Rohan {my Olympic teammate} and I never talked about fighting on the same card together. But I feel happy to be sharing this card with him. We’ve known each other since we were kids. We’ve always respected each other.”
“My opponent asked for this fight. So, I’m coming in here even more motivated because I want to show him that he took a huge risk in asking to fight me.”
Additionally, Juanmita Lopez De Jesus (4-0, 2 KOs), the 19-year-old son of former world champion Juan Manuel “Juanma” Lopez, will face Conner Goade (8-4-2, 7 KOs) in a six-round tilt at junior bantamweight.
The undercard will also include the junior middleweight debut of Giovani Santillan (34-1, 18 KOs), as well as the return of rising Dominican middleweight Euri Cedeño (13-0-1, 12 KOs), in separate 10-rounders. Santillan will lock horns with Courtney Pennington (17-11-3, 7 KOs), while Cedeño squares off against Etoundi Michel William (16-2, 12 KOs).
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Final presser quotes from San Juan
Puerto Rican star Xander Zayas (22-0, 13 KOs) has waited nearly six years for a homecoming. He returns as WBO 154-pound champion and will square off against WBA king Abass Baraou (17-1, 9 KOs) this Saturday, Jan. 31st, at Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan. In just the second unification ever held on Puerto Rican soil, the 23-year-old has the chance to become the youngest active unified champion and the first Boricua to do it on home turf. Baraou, a seasoned road warrior, is unfazed by the task at hand. Zayas-Baraou and other featured bouts will stream for free on the Top Rank Classics Fast channel in the U.S. beginning at 5:30 p.m. ET/2:30 p.m. PT. Zayas vs. Baraou will begin at approximately 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT. To watch on mobile or desktop, visit trboxing.co/TopRankClassics. To watch on your smart TV, check the availability of FAST channel apps and search for Top Rank Classics on The Roku Channel, Tubi, or Vizio.
This is what the fighters said at Thursday's press conference.
Xander Zayas
“This is what I have been working for since I was 5 years old. {18} years as a fighter, seven as a pro. I got a world title in my last fight at 23. I’m ready to become a unified world champion and to keep making history. This is the biggest moment of my life. I deserve to be here. I worked hard to be here. This is where I belong.”
“I’m expecting the best version of Abass Baraou. I’m expecting something I haven’t seen before. We sparred almost two years ago. But he’s a champion now. And we both have grown and learned. We've also experienced different things. So, I’m expecting the best version of him because he’s going to get the best version of me. That’s for sure.”
“This is the only fight {this weekend} where you’ll have two world titles on the line. It’s the only fight where you’ll see two champions putting everything on the line to become a unified champion. Tune in because there will be fireworks, and I’m going to make history one more time.”
Abass Baraou
“I go everywhere to make my dreams come true. I’ve been doing the work for a long time. Being here is amazing. And I can’t wait for Saturday night.”
“Winning the title was amazing. It was one of my favorite moments so far. I worked so hard for this moment. It was hard to get there. As you can tell, my team was happy as well. And securing that win opened up bigger opportunities, like Saturday’s fight. So I really enjoyed that moment.”
“Everyone knows we sparred. But I don’t put too much focus on it. I spar to learn. When we sparred, it was always good work. But a fight is different. Gloves are different. No headgear. It’s just me and him in the ring with no helping hand. It’s going to be way different than any sparring. I’m focused on this fight, and I’m looking forward to it.”
“I’m an experienced fighter. I have a great amateur background. And I’ve come to Puerto Rico to put it all on the line. We know that Zayas is fast and talented. So, as a boxing fan myself, I feel this is a great fight to watch. Tune in to see how I pull this off.”
***
In the ten-round co-feature, Dominican welterweight Rohan “El Rayo” Polanco (17-0, 10 KOs) takes on Mexican veteran Christian Gomez (23-6-1, 21 KOs). Here is what those two had to say:
Rohan Polanco
“I hope that the title opportunity comes this year. I have been fighting for some time, and I’ve been ranked for a while as well. I’ve been positioning myself among the best. So, I’m just waiting for the opportunity. I feel I am ready. I have lots of experience. I just need the opportunity.”
“I would love to fight {WBO champion} Devin Haney. I’m ranked in that organization. I think that would be the easiest fight to make. I’m ready. I’m going to beat everyone.”
Christian Gomez
“We’re going to come forward, but we’re also going to try different strategies that we worked on in camp.”
“I come from a family of boxers. Even my mother was a boxer. This sport is very important to us.”
“I think experience dictates how you perform in a fight. But also, when you see the abilities of your opponent, you also tailor your camp for that.”
***
Additionally, Juanmita Lopez De Jesus (4-0, 2 KOs), the 19-year-old son of former world champion Juan Manuel “Juanma” Lopez, will face Conner Goade (8-4-2, 7 KOs) in a six-round tilt at junior bantamweight.
Juanmita Lopez De Jesus
“This first year as a pro has been great. I’ve gotten a lot of experience. I know Conner is an experienced fighter. But I’m going to show that I’m on a different level.”
“Camp has been great. I had a cut in my last fight, so I had to wait three months to return. So, I was able to prepare more. I’m going to show that I’ve grown a lot.”
Conner Goade
“I’ve had a lot of fights that could have gone either way. But that’s alright. You’ll see what happens on Saturday night.”
“I’ve got a couple more rounds fought than him. But I also know he has more amateur fights. So, it’ll even out.”
***
The undercard will also include the junior middleweight debut of Giovani Santillan (34-1, 18 KOs), as well as the return of rising Dominican middleweight Euri Cedeño (13-0-1, 12 KOs), in separate ten-rounders. Santillan will lock horns with Courtney Pennington (17-11-3, 7 KOs), while Cedeño squares off against Etoundi Michel William (16-2, 12 KOs).
Giovani Santillan
“This is my first time fighting at 154 pounds, and I’m excited to put on a show here in Puerto Rico. I want to show everyone that there is a new fighter in this weight class who is coming for the belts.”
“I feel good at this weight now. It shows in my training and preparation. We focused less on making the weight and more on the actual fight.”
“I have big goals for 2026. I want to fight for a world title in this new weight class.”
Euri Cedeño
“My power comes from my hard work. I always work with my mindset on destroying my opponent. That’s where it comes from.”
“Rohan {my Olympic teammate} and I never talked about fighting on the same card together. But I feel happy to be sharing this card with him. We’ve known each other since we were kids. We’ve always respected each other.”
“My opponent asked for this fight. So, I’m coming in here even more motivated because I want to show him that he took a huge risk in asking to fight me.”
Additionally, Juanmita Lopez De Jesus (4-0, 2 KOs), the 19-year-old son of former world champion Juan Manuel “Juanma” Lopez, will face Conner Goade (8-4-2, 7 KOs) in a six-round tilt at junior bantamweight.
The undercard will also include the junior middleweight debut of Giovani Santillan (34-1, 18 KOs), as well as the return of rising Dominican middleweight Euri Cedeño (13-0-1, 12 KOs), in separate 10-rounders. Santillan will lock horns with Courtney Pennington (17-11-3, 7 KOs), while Cedeño squares off against Etoundi Michel William (16-2, 12 KOs).
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