Ortiz Parting Ways With Famed Trainer

Many of Texas's top boxing talent has journeyed out west to train at the Robert Garcia Boxing Academy. Joshua Franco, Bam Rodriguez, Biggie Rodriguez, Hector Tanjara, and many others have called the RGBA home away from home. No double the biggest and brightest name of the bunch was Grand Prairie's own Vergil Ortiz. Ortiz has been training with Garcia for over three years and has gone from a teenage prospect to keep your eye on to perhaps the best young talent in the sport. However, nothing lasts forever and Ortiz and Garcia have amicably split.  ESPN had reported this on the ESPN+  card this past Friday and originally reported that Ortiz had moved on to the "Canelo Camp" and was training with famed trained Eddie Reynseso,  a San Diego-based camp. Ortiz denies the latter part but former Trainer of The Year Robert Garcia that Ortiz Jr and his father, Vergil Ortiz Sr had told him that they would be parting ways. Garcia stated that he thought the two of them were going to work together and was unaware of any connections to Reynoso's camp.

The famed trainer went on to say that the main reason that Ortiz expressed to him that there were moving on was that Garcia opted to train Joshua Franco in his world title fight against Andrew Moloney instead of Ortiz who had a homecoming date with former world title challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas. Both men won and won in spectacular fashion. Garcia noted that he worked Franco's corner because he felt the young World Champion needed him there more than Ortiz did. Franco was fighting Moloney for the third time after the rematch was the subject of much controversy. Ortiz, easily disposed of Kavaliauskas after some early struggles. Garcia went on to say that the purse for Ortiz was 3-4 times more than Franco was paid so it wasn't a money-based decision. 

Ortiz turned pro in 2016 at Indio California and disposed of Julio Rodas in the first round. He was trained by Joel Diaz, trainer of both Omar and Brandon Figueroa of Weslaco, Ortiz trained with him for a few years before switching camps and going to work in Riverside with Garcia. Moving on from camps is not uncommon and it wasn't the first time Ortiz did so. Making all the outrage and controversy a bit strange. Fighters such as Tyson Fury, Oscar Valdez as well as Maurice Hooker had all changed camps recently and two-time heavyweight champ, and perhaps the biggest financial draw in the sport Anthony Joshua is in the midst of switching camps. It's a fairly common practice in the sport of boxing.

Roscoe Hill takes Silver at AIBA World Championship

Roscoe Hill, will return to Spring, Texas with the silver medalist. Bringing back the silver medal in the 2021 AIBA World Championships in the Flyweight (51kg) division, to the Lone Star State. The Houston-area native has much to feel good about. He rose from relative obscurity, at least on the international scale, to stardom putting on a boxing clinic and catching the attention of the international boxing community. Showing off a boxing IQ allows him to control the distance and pace of the fight in addition to allusive defensive skills that made him nearly impossible to hit and the ability to fight at all three distances.

Hill, comes up just short in his bid for the Gold at The 2021 championships losing a decision to Kazakh fighter Saken Bibossinov. After a largely uneventful first round in which two natural counter-punchers felt each other out and exchanged jabs in what appeared to everyone as a fairly even round ended in a 5-0 round for the Kazakh fighter and inexplicably the German judge scored the even and largely uneventful round 10-8 for Bibossinov, an absolutely mind-boggling score. The second appeared to go much better for the Texan who knowing he had dropped the first round picked up the pace and started attacking landing with just not the jab but scoring with the straight right hand as well. As the bell rang it appeared that Hill had evened up the bout. However, the judges saw it very differently than the spectators. Again scoring 5-0 for the Kazakh fighter. That put Hill, who seemingly should have been no worse than all square after two, behind two points on four of the cards and somehow three points down on the fifth.  The writing was on the wall and Hill was at the point of no return. Having to change the game plan and fight out of his preferred style he dropped the third as well. Settling for a well-earned Silver medal.

Despite settling for the Silver Hill was one of the surprising stars of the tournament that took place in Belgrade. Serbia. Winning his first four fights with his dazzling boxing skills. He outpointed Mario Lavegar of the Dominican Republic in the opening round. Next, he outclassed Artur Hovhannisyan of Armenia. Then he started upsetting some of the favorites in the tournament in the round of eight he showed the Italians not to mess with Texas when he gave a one-sided beat down to Italian favorite Federico Serra and then pulled another major upset but ending the run of Russian stand out Akhtem Zakirov who was putting together a spectacular run himself, before running into Hill.

Edward Vazquez Caps off a Breakout night for FHG & Fort Worth Boxing

It was an incredible night for the young up-and-coming fighters of Fort Worth, Texas. Four promising fighters, of all who train out of Ray Barrera's FHG gym handed in spectacular performances. The foursome went 4-0 with all but one coming by way of stoppage and one of which was an unimaginable come back. 

The night dominated by the Fort Worthians, that was dubbed "Homecoming" and took place in nearby Irving, Texas at the Southern Junction nightclub was capped off by a 93-second knockout victory by Edward "Kid Vazquez. The undefeated and highly touted featherweight who owns the WBC (USNBC) belt moved his record to 11-0 (3) and scored his second consecutive stoppage victory and the third in his last five fights. 

Vazquez came out strong working behind the jab with slick head movement. Just moments into the fight he saw his opening and scored with a left hook to the body of his opponent Ezequiel Alberto Tevez that dropped him to the count of about 8.5. Tevez bravely made it to his feet but the writing was on the wall as an aggressive Vazquez stayed poised and kept coming forward. Moments later he landed a right hand right on the button that again dropped Tevez and this time brought in the referee to wave off the bout just 93 seconds after the opening bell.

The co-main event saw "The Wolf" Return home. "The Fort Worth Wolf " Tony Lopez has had boxing take him around the world. Having fought in Las Vegas,  in the Staples Center in Los Angeles The Punch Bowl in Carson California, the Alamodome as well as many other venues, finally returned him. He made his homecoming a triumphant one. Staying patient the veteran Lopez threw a barrage of body shots that hurt his opponent, Diuhl Olguin, in the early stages. Lopez, a southpaw, worked behind his jab and with a major hand speed advantage flurried throughout the fight. He was able to work his opponent into the ropes and unleash four and five punch combinations against his rugged but overmatched opponent. With a loud cheering section behind him, Lopez taunted his opponent waving him in to come and exchange. In control throughout the scheduled six-rounds, Lopez stepped on the gas in the final round in an attempt to unload everything under the kitchen sink. Staggering Olguin several times but his tougher-than-nails opponent stood the test and heard the final bell. The verdict was academic as the "Fort Worth Wolf" picked up the win taking a UD by scores of 59-55, 60-55, and a much too close 58-56.

The two other FHG-based Fort Worthians on the card were Ben "Hill" Gurment, who scored the most unthinkable of knockouts. After getting knocked down in the opening stages of the first round from a stiff right hand from his then-unbeaten opponent Alan Rosas of Mexico. Gurment was stunned and rolled his ankle on the knockdown. He rose to his feet just before the ref reached the count of eight and fought on without his feet behind him an off-balanced Gurment was sent down yet again. Twice down in the first round, the Texan would likely need a knockout to win the fight. Behind the instructions of his trainer, Coach Barrera, "to stay locked in" Gurment stayed composed and fired his jab from the southpaw stance and began out boxing his opponent. Seemingly winning the second round and being the superior boxer Gurment seized control of the fight in the third, but winning rounds was not going to be enough. Gurment had to go for the stoppage, and after an apparent knockdown was rolled a slip, Gurment landed a thudding left hand to the body of his hurt opponent that severely slowed him down. Seizing the moment Gurment unloaded a barrage of power shots a left hand landed cleanly that buckled Rosas and a relentless Gurment did not let off the gas and unloaded on his wounded opponent bringing in the referee to wave off the bout at the end of the third round giving Gurment the TKO victory and moving his record to 5-0-2 (3).

Also on the card was Joel Martinez, a 6-foot tall hard-hitting southpaw Featherweight, who has a successful amateur career of over 150 fights. Saw him secure a second-round knockout in a fight that was allowed to go on way too long. Martinez, who is expected to be moved along quite quickly, was matched with a 2-0 (2) fighter for his pro-debut by the name of Bryan Macias. Macias was completely overmatched and hit the canvas a total of five times in less than two full rounds, A straight southpaw left from Martinez down the pipe dropped his man 1:20 into the fight. Macias was dropped again a second time right at the end of the first round from a right hook, left-hand combination that should have ended the fight right then and there. However, Macias was allowed to continue and was dropped twice more with the left hands in the first minute of the second stanza and then moments later with a sweeping left collapsed him like a building imploding on itself is 1:50 into round two secured the victory for Martinez in his pro debut to move his record to 1-0 (1).

Spring Native Advances to Semi Finals of AIBA World Championship

The great state of Texas will be represented in the medal rounds of the 2021 AIBA World Championship as Spring native has secured a medal and a pot in the "final four" of the tournament, after defeating veteran Federico Sera of Sardegna, Italy. He will battle Akhtem Zakirov of other Russian Boxing Federation (RBF). Hill strung together two highly impressive performances in as many days after outpointing Artur Hovhannisyan of Armenia in the round of 16 he was equally as impressive against the Italian in the Quarter Finals advancing himself to the medal rounds. The performance against the Armenian displayed the complete range of skills from the talented Texan. In the opening round Hill out jabbed Hovhannisyan from long range. In the second round, a confident Hill stood in the pocket and used the Philly shell defense to profection, making his opponent miss from the mid-range and scored him with laser-like counter shots, landing perfectly placed right hands and left hooks. Having the fight won on the cards Hill got on the back foot and put on a clinic against Hovhannisyan moving smoothly making his Armenian rival miss and potshotting him when he did.


In the quarter-finals, Hill put on a masterclass performance and was more slippery than a bar of soap. Serra, the 27-year-old Italian veteran could not track down his taller and quicker outpoint. At a sizeable height disadvantage, the 5 foot three and a half-inch Serra could not get in range and track down the Texan. Hill controlled the distance liked a seasoned pro used every square inch of the ring and controlled all three rounds with his jab and movement and straight right hands securing the points victory and a date with the Russian, Zakirov, in the semi-finals of the 2021 world championships. He has guaranteed himself no worse than a Bronze. Should the Spring, native, secure the victory he will move onto the good medal match.

Jorge Castaneda Scores Another Upset Victory, Closes In On World Title Fight

It was a long two-year layoff for Jorge Castaneda who suffered through medical injuries that canceled one fight and then a global pandemic that kept him out of the ring for another year. He finally returned to the ring back in April and scored an upset decision victory over Otha Jones III in Miami, Florida on the undercard of Andrade-Williams. That set up what happened on Saturday night in London, England. A fight that Castaneda announced to his hometown fans in Laredo at Fight Fest 9/11.

Castaneda was matched with unbeaten British prospect Youseff Khamari in a 10 round affair at the 02 Arena for the WBC Super featherweight silver title. A win would propel the Laredo native to the world-class level and put his name in world title discussions, and a win is what the Texan delivered. After a fairly even first half of the fight, Castaneda jammed on the gas and went full steam ahead. Moving only forward he started to break his British foe down. Scoring with right hands and left hooks Khamari clearly started to slow down. The eighth round swung the momentum in the favor of the Gateway City native for good as a left hook staggered Khamari and sent him reeling backwards. Castaneda followed up and unleashed a barrage of power shots and nearly got his man out. A game Khamari survived the round and fought valiantly over the last six minutes. However, it wasn't enough as Castaneda had worn him down and continued the onslaught to capture the decision by scores of 96-94, 97-94 with the third judge somehow scoring it even at 95-95

Castaneda came back to Laredo as a hometown hero, he's come 180 degrees. From being stopped in his home city to a hero's welcome at Laredo, Laredo International Airport. The stakes are about to get higher for the Laredo, Native. The home of former world champion Gabriel and Orlando Canizales is now on the brink of being the home of yet another world champion. Jorge Castaneda is now the leader in the clubhouse to be the next Gateway City native to capture a world title, a young stable of talented Laredo based fighters is capturing the attention of the boxing world, in addition to Castaneda, Josh Juarez, Jaime Jasso, Nick Molina and a litany of other young upstarts are putting Laredo on the boxing map and have bright careers ahead of them. However, it's Castaneda who is on the face track to a world title. A fight between him and another one of Eddie Hearn’s young British prospects, Joe Cordina, is already being called for on both sides of the Atlantic. If that fight can't get made and Castaneda has lots of young 130-pound prospects in the US he would match up interestingly with including Gabe Flores Jr, Xavier Martinez, Albert Bell, and Lamont Roach are all out similar positions of their career and would make high level, fascinating scraps that could propel the inner into a world title fight.

Roscoe Hill Advances in AIBA Elite Men’s World Championships

About 25 miles north of Houston, is a town of about 50,000 people called Spring, Texas. If you have not heard of it, you are about to. Amature stand-out Roscoe Hill calls the town of Spring home. Hill is emerging as an absolute powerhouse in the international amateur scene. Not just as one of the best US amateurs but one of the best in the world. The flyweight was the lone member of Team USA to fight during the second day of boxing at the 2021 AIBA Elite Men’s World Championships in Belgrade, Serbia. The Texan put on an absolute show against Mario Lavegar of the Dominican Republic. Hill seized control of the fight from the opening moments on. Dominating both the first two rounds of the affair. Taking them both 5-0 and scoring a standing 8 count in the second secured him a 10-8 round on one of the cards in the second stanza. Ahead on points, Hill didn't rest sit on his points lead. Hill jammed on the gas and continued to punish his Dominican foe unleashing a barrage of power shots again bringing in the referee to give Lavegar yet another standing 8 count. This time the referee waved off the bout at roughly the midway point of the stanza, giving the Texan the third-round TKO victory. The victory now moves him into the second round. Hill will have a few days to rest and prepare for his next opponent. He will battle with  Artur Hovhannisyan of Armenia, on Monday, November 1st. Hovhannisyan was a 2016 Olympian and lost to Spaniard Samuel Carmona in the opening round.

19-year-old Phenom, Floyd Schofield, Fights For First Title

19-year-old Floyd "Kid Austin" Schofield, of Austin, Texas, sports a perfect 7-0 (6) knockout record. He's the crown jewel of Davies Entertainment Promotions and returns to the ring in San Antonio on Friday at the Davies Boxing and Fitness gym. He will fight for his first title, the NABF Junior Super-Featherweight strap. When he takes on Pedro Vicente-Scharbaai. The bout is a major step up for the Austinite. Vicente-Scharbaai sports a 7-3-1 record and went 8-rounds with Edison Garcia and fought the rugged veteran, Alexis Del Bosque to a draw. Certainly no slouch, however, given Schofield's immense talent it should go relatively smoothly. 

At first sight, Schofield's hand speed captures your attention and the speed is lightning quick. However, it's not just speed, he is strong as a Brahma bull and has tremendous power. his speed and precision allow him to unload power shots, lead left hooks, right hands, and uppercuts from any angle, at any time. Offensively he's the complete package he throws in volume and with heavy hands. He is strong enough to maul his opponents and skilled and quick enough to light them up from the outside. He can seamlessly switch from his natural conventional stance to the southpaw stance and work the head and body. He is masterful at all three distances. On top of that his speed and head, movement makes him equally hard to hit. He can stand in the pocket or come forward and make you miss while he lands and lands with pinpoint accuracy. He is so quick and powerful it causes opponents to "shell up" and not fire back as they know that Schofield will fire back three shots in return.

In addition to immense skills and power Kid Austin already has a world champion pedigree and elite-level knowledge. He has been mentored by former three-division world champion Adrien Broner. He has sparred three rounds with world champion Devin Haney in a heated sparring session that saw Haney get buckled. He is clearly on a fast track to a world title. 

The teenager from Austin, Texas last fought back on August 20th. He scored a knockdown a minute into the fight against  Roberto Almazan, of Matamoros Mexico. The quick knockdown was foreshadowing for what was about to come. Just a minute later he scored another knockdown courtesy of a thudding three-piece combination. A minute into the second stanza a right hand to the body followed by a right hand to the head, just for good measure, put  Almazan out for the count. Running Schofield's record to 7-0 (6). Schofield starts a new knockout streak, that he looks to continue Friday night in San Antonio. He won his first five fights all by way of stoppage before stepping in with rugged journeyman Darryl Hayes who stands up and goes the distance with everyone. He had been the distance with San Antonio Native and unbeaten prospect Javy Fernandez and Dallas-based Angel Alejandro in recent fights. So it's no knock that Schofield didn't get rid of Hayes. Schofield floored him and battered getting in good rounds and getting valuable experience on his way to a wide one-sided unanimous decision victory.

Austin, Texas, has produced some pretty good fighters in recent history. James Kirkland is the first name that comes to mind, he battled for a world title, headlines countless cards, including fighting Canelo at Minute Maid Park in Houston. He became a fan favorite with a massive following but never captured a world title. "Black Magic" Travell Mazion seemed well on his way to a world title until we tragically lost the 24-year-old last year. Kurtiss Colvin was highly touted but never got to the mountain top. However, Schofield the 19-year-old phenome seems destined for a world title. The skills and ability are all there at 19-year-olds and it appears Texas's capital city will sooner rather than later have a world champ.

Bam Rodriguez Shines on DAZN Card

21-year-old Bam Rodriguez had gotten the highest of praise. Both legendary trainer Robert Garcia and blue-chip prospect Vergil Ortiz both called Bam the best fighter in the camp. That camp, Robert Garcia Boxing Academy, is home to not only Vergil Ortiz and Mikey Garcia, but also Jose Carlos Ramirez, Super Flyweight champ Josh Franco and countless other elite-level fighters.

Rodriguez, the 21-year-old San Antonio native, is considered by those in that camp as the best fighter in that camp. That's a lot to live up to. The 21-year-old phenome was supposed to battle Estaben Bermudez for the WBA 108-pound title on the Garcia-Martin undercard. An opportunity to prove himself to the world on a major card.  Bermudez, then abruptly backed out of the fight for just about a week. He was then given a fight with Jose Alejandro Burgos. A rugged opponent who had gone 9 rounds with Bam's older brother Josh Franco back in 2020 in their hometown of San Antonio. The distraction and disappointment would have shaken many fighters. Not Bam though it was Rodriguez's time to shine and he wasn't going to let it slip Rodriguez showed the boxing world exactly why Garcia and stablemates like Ortiz speak so highly of him.

Like a seasoned pro, the 21-year-old Texan methodically dissected and beat down his rugged but overmatched opponent. The southpaw landed a barrage of power shots from a litany of angels, never coming straight in, Rodriguez used the side doors to perfection scoring a sensational knockdown early in the fourth round. Laser-focused upon Burgos beating the count and convincing  Caiz he was able to continue. The San Antonian seamlessly closed the show, unloading a straight left the sent Burgos helplessly stumbling into the ropes and bringing Caiz in to wave off the bout. The Compubox statistics tell the intriguing story of just how dominant and impressive Bam scoring on 103-of-218 (47%) shots including 74-of-127 power punches (58%) while holding Burgos to 37-of-307 total punches (12%).

Rodriguez has said he is overdue for a title shot, and he isn't wrong. The phenome is now 14-0 (10) has won six in a row by stoppage and has gotten better and better as the stage has gotten bigger and opposition has gotten stiffer. A look into the landscape of the 108-pound division looks favorable for Rodriguez. On the same card,  Jonathan Gonzalez captured the WBO belt by shocking Elwin Soto. Estaban Bermudez holds the WBA "regular", Hiroto Kyoguchi holds the Super title, Felix Alvardo holds the IBF belt and Masamichi Yabuki just captured the WBC strap. Gonzalez and Bermudez have both been knocked out previously and all four fighters seemingly fight into the hands of the hard-hitting southpaw from San Antonio.

The Mysterious UNAPPROVAL of Juan Tapia

Juan "Johnny Blaze" Tapia of Brownsville,  had to pull out of a massive fight. A fight was scheduled for May 22 with former two-time Olympic gold medalist Robisery Ramirez of Cuba due to a rotator cuff injury and Bicep tear. It was perhaps the biggest fight of Tapia's young and promising career but it was a fight that needed to be taken at 100%. It's not a situation unique to Tapia, unified welterweight world champion Errol Spence just had to back out of the biggest money fight of his career, a legacy fight, with Manny Pacquiao due to an injury. Injuries are a part of the sport, and a fighter can't be knocked for not fighting any fight while injured, especially a fight of that magnitude. Tapia knew other opportunities would present themselves. That opportunity was November 5th in Las Vegas against  Adam Lopez on the Mikaela Mayer vs. Maiva Hamadouche card. It was a great opportunity against a big name, on a major card, and most importantly a very, very winnable fight for the highly skilled and quick-fisted Texan. 

Tapia eagerly signed the contract, started camp, and got to work.  Sparring with fellow Rio Grande Valley native and super bantamweight world champion Brandon Figueroa as well as fellow world title challenger Miguel Flores of Houston. Two fighters, head and shoulders better than Adam Lopez. Tapia was getting excellent sparring and holding his own preparing for the fight and the victory that would change the trajectory of his career. A win on an ESPN aired Top Rank card is the win the Brownsvillian, needed to get his name mentioned among the world-class elite fighters in the world and get himself in the world title discussion. Tapia, a father of two, because of his hard work, willingness to pay his dues and remain patient, had a clear path to changing his life and taking himself to the next level. 

That's where things get strange. Top Rank sent out a press release saying Adam Lopez was scheduled to fight fringe contender Adan Ochoa, who is best known for losing every moment of his fight to Edward Vazquez of Fort Worth, before scoring a thudding knockdown, that Vazquez recovered from got up and dominated every moment of the fight on his way to a UD victory. It was an intriguing fight, that aired on ESPN as part of the Top Rank summer series in "The Bubble" in which Ochoa was clearly outmanned and outgunned. That's his best performance, a clear loss to a young prospect. Several media publications picked up the press release, including Fight Mag https://www.fightmag.com.au/2021/10/02/mikaela-mayer-vs-maiva-hamadouche-date-set-for-nov-5-in-vegas-tickets/ and published the news of Lopez-Ochoa. That's strange as Tapia had a signed contract and was in the midst of training camp. Two days later and out of nowhere the Nevada State Athletic Commission unapproved Tapia for the fight. According to Team Tapia the reason given by Jeff Mullen, of the NSAC, was that Tapia “wasn't at that level yet” and “wasn't seasoned enough.”

The comments by Mullen are beyond bizarre and defy logic as the same commission approved Tapia to fight Shakur Stevenson in 2018, much earlier in Tapia's career. Stevenson is one of the most skilled and dominant fighters in the sport who went on to easily win a world title the next year. By any metric Stevenson is a far, far superior fighter to Adam Lopez. That's not to disrespect Lopez who is a fan-friendly warrior who loves to scrap. However, Stevenson is a special, unique, talent who is among a handful of fighters who are earmarked as the future of the sport. So the commission thought a much younger Tapia was ready to fight Stevenson who was closing in on a world title fight as well as Cuban sensation Ramirez, who is also a far, far more skilled and a whole another level from Lopez. Both of those fights the NSAC had no issue with approving. However, after approving The Lopez-Tapia fight, the NSAC decided to go back, for no reason, and reconsider its approval of Juan Tapia. They then assured Tapia's team that this time, unlike when they approved him, this time their decision was final. 

The NSAC stated that they have not as of yet approved the Lopez-Ochoa fight at this time. Ochoa's best win came back in late 2018 when he outpointed Edgar Cantu of Laredo, Texas. Tapia's best win came on a major card- Spence-Garcia perhaps the biggest card of 2020 when he outpointed the house fighter, Fernando Garcia at Cowboy Stadium, it was that win that propelled him into bigger fights. Fights like the Stevenson fight or the Ramirez fight. Fights Tapia has earned the old-fashioned way. Going into enemy territory and upsetting the house fighter, what he did against Garcia, what he was planning on and preparing on doing in the Lopez fight until he was mysteriously unapproved for the fight he was already approved for, just days after Top Rank mysteriously named Ochoa as the opponent for Lopez and not Tapia who was already contractually obligated to the Lopez fight.

Vazquez Continues to Impress in Comeback

Leading up to his fight in Mesquite, Texas, Middleweight prospect  Marco Vazquez was asked if, 50+ fight veteran Ulisses Jimenez was the toughest opponent of his comeback following a more than three-year layoff?  Vazquez, of Grand Prairie, responded: "it's the biggest test of my whole career." Well if that was the biggest test  Vazquez certainly earned an A+. Scoring with a vicious uppercut that dropped and finished off Jimenez in just 34 seconds. A vicious and perfectly placed shot that would have stopped nearly anyone moving his record to 6-1 (3). Vazquez was a highly touted prospect when he made his pro debut back in March of 2015, on the undercard of a Maurice Hooker card at the Kay Bailey Hutchinson Convention Center in Dallas. A career that looked derailed just a year later, after an impressive 3-0 start, the Grand Prairie native took a shocking L to Jon Bullock. The loss led to a three-year layoff.  Vazquez is now just 25-years-old, and currently campaigning at middleweight but says he can still get down to 154 and plans on fighting there in the future, he has come a long way in rejuvenating his image. He has in just his fourth comeback fight molded himself into a main event fighter and his future is once again as bright as it was the night he stopped Warren Stewart on that Maurice Hooker undercard. 

The Boxing Showcase cards also featured Vazquez highly touted stablemate  Jake "The Snake" Ysasi outclassed fellow unbeaten fighter Jerrion Campbell of Jacksonville, Texas.  In a fight where someone's "O" had to go, Ysasi was certainly going to preserve displaying a picture-perfect jab and controlling the distance with the stick. "The Snake" struck like a Cobra with quick right hands. Ysasi looked sharp and composed beyond his years, in just his second pro bout, controlling distance and picking his shots like a veteran delivering an uppercut midway through the second round that stunned Campbell. Ysasi against stunned Campbell just moments before the bell with a picture-perfect left hook ending the scheduled four-rounder with an exclamation point and cruised to the points victory moving his record to 2-0 and handing Jerrion Campbell now 2-1 his first lost. 

In the evening co-main event  Refugio “Cuco” Montellano, who trains out of Del Bosque Boxing Gym, boxed circles around Juan Castaneda. creating a moving target that Castaneda, of Mexico, just couldn’t find. Cuco scored with perfectly timed counter shots and carried the decision by scores of 40-36x2 and a way to close 38-38 Even

The other young upstarts put on sensational performances  Omar Urieta, of Tyler, Texas, secured his first win a first-round knockout victory. Powered behind a tremendous left hook that staggered his opponent, Czyz Harrison, and then followed up with a barrage of power shots to secure the stoppage at  1:38 of the first stanza to move his record to 1-1 (1). 

Additionally, Keven Soto, of Dallas, dropped Orlando Colins with a perfectly placed left hook early in the opening round. The next three rounds were simply Collins serving as very tough and durable target practice for Soto's right hand. Who dominated and strolled to a unanimous decision victory by lopsided scores of 40-35x2 and 39-36  

In other action "El Catcho De oro" Merin Zalazar scored a sensational second-round KO  and Fernando Vasquez made his pro debut a successful one. He and Moises Sixto Gomez traded power shots in a phone booth over four high-paced back and forth non-stop rounds. Vazquez a southpaw battered his man against the ropes and was relentless over four competitive but clear rounds and scored in his favor 40-36x3

Soto dropped him with a left hook early in round 1. Making Target practice with the right-hand laser-like battering him again as the bell rang to end the second 40-35x2 and 39-36

Rick Medina and other Prospects Shine in Floresville

San Antonio natives Joshua Franco currently holds the WBA 115-pound title, Mario Barrios recently held the WBA 140-pound title and Bam Rodriguez will challenge for the 108-pound world title. Cementing Alamo City's legacy as one of boxing's premier hot spots of young talent. After those names, there is a litany of upstarts who look to continue that legacy. Of all the young fighters 20-Year-Old "El Castigo" Rick Medina may be the brightest of all those stars. The first fighter exclusively signed to Team Morones Boxing Promotions improved his record to 11-0 (6)  Saturday night passing the biggest test of his young career.  The San Antonio blue-chipper took on veteran and ABF champ Rafael Reyes at the Floresville, Event Center.  Reyes was coming off a career-best win a first-round stoppage of undefeated prospect, Ignacio Chairez. Medina boxed beautifully firing the jab off his back foot. He controlled the pace of the fight as Reyes continued to press forward and tried to rough up Medina even losing a point for hitting Medina to the back of the head. El Castigo, however,  wouldn't take the bait. Fighting beautifully he was able to keep Reyes off of him and the few times Reyes was able to get in close, Medina more than held his own. He would slow Reyes down and get back to boxing and moving in securing the lopsided 8-round unanimous decision by scores of 80-71,79-72 & 78-73. 

In the evening's co-main event another one of San Antonio's young upstart prospects, Welterweight Sebastian "C-Bass" Rodriguez also took a massive step up against the naturally bigger and undefeated Jorge Hernandez. After three fairly even round Rodriguez seized control of the fight in the fourth round backing Hernandez up with vicious bodywork. Then firing off vicious combinations when he had his opponent backed up against the ropes. Hernandez fought well coming forward in the early stages but was broken down by the body attack and became a stationary target for C-Bass in the second half of the fight as Rodriguez took a majority decision by scores of  59-55 x2 and 57-57 even, to improve his record to 5-0. 

The rest of the undercard featured a brilliant performance by super flyweight prospect Guillermo Gutierrez, who moved to 2-0 (1) by brutally beating down  Gabriel Guerrero. Showing off the entire arsenal Guiterrez came out aggressive landing vicious hooks to the head and body. He then slowed down and landed with pinpoint accuracy from the outside. Switching from the conventional to southpaw stance seamlessly throughout the duration of the bout. He nearly stopped a very brave Guerrero in the third and after a long look from the ref and doctor was allowed to continue. Guiterrez stepped on the gas and landed a left hook, straight hand combination that dropped Guerrero and brought the ref in to waive the bout off 18 seconds into the fourth round. 

Also,  Oge Harwell, Destiny Jones, Ramon Acosta, and Jeremaine White all were victories in their pro debuts. Harwell, outpointed all-action, fan-favorite slugger Adam Salazar who fell to 0-3, Ramon Acosta destroyed Jose Rodriguez in under two rounds. Destiny Jones put on a boxing clinic in taking a unanimous decision over Janina Lopez. Jeremaine White dropped and dominated Sean Holcombe on his way to a unanimous decision victory.

El Relampago Shines on FS1 Card

"El Relampago"  Omar Juarez of Brownsville bounced back beautifully Sunday night at the Mechanics Bank Arena in Bakersfield, California. Rebounding off the only loss of his career, a very close and controversial loss, to rugged, Filipino, All Rivera in Minnesota back in June. A loss many including his management team thought he clearly won. The decision went one way and not the other and the highly touted prospect from the Rio Grande Valley had the first blemish on his record. 

What came next, however,  would be of the utmost importance. How would Juarez, who also serves as a motivational speaker in the Rio Grande Valley area, respond to adversity. If that was the question El Relampago answered that question emphatically. Juarez came out like gangbusters and rocked his opponent, Jairo Lopez, just over a minute into the fight with an overhand right and followed up with another straight right hand for good measure and then a third. What happened in the first minute and change of the fight would be indicative of what happened the rest of the night. The Texan would not look back remaining in control throughout. Staying cool and composed Juarez stayed on the outside in the early stages piling up the points. Well ahead on the cards by the fourth Juarez decided to sit and establish his power more. Midway through the fourth Juarez landed split the guard with a perfect uppercut snapping Lopez's head back and then fired off a barrage of hooks and right hands that kept Lopez in a world of trouble. The beatdown continued in the fifth as Juarez now fighting off the front foot landed a massive straight right hand that dropped Lopez. It looked like it may end that fight, however a brave Lopez, of Nuevo Leon, Mexico somehow beat the count and continued.  The writing was already on the wall however and Juares on the behest of his trainer Rick Nunez, remained on the aggressive, not gun shy or cautious at all coming off his first career knockdown and loss. Juarez fought the remainder of the fight on the inside unleashing thudding combinations that scored to the head and body. Stunning Lopez from long range and then beating him up on the inside and backing the aggressive Lopez up, Juarez cruised to an impressive unanimous decision victory by scores of 80-71, and 79-72x2 to move his record to 12-1 (5). 

The 22-year-old Brownsville native is consistently mentioned among the best young fighters in the world. He is time and again featured on the FOX and FS1 broadcasts as one of the best PBC prospects under the age of 23. With this performance the Brownsvillian reestablishes himself as the force he was considered to be before the controversial loss this past summer and sets himself up for bigger fights in the future. Juarez will likely fight one more time in 2021 before moving up in competition in 2022 and fighting the premier names in the jr welterweight division.

Del Rio Prospect Shines in the Capital

Texas has long been a hotbed for boxing, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio, The Rio Grande Valley have all produced multiple world champions in recent years. The tiny border town of Del Rio and its population of barely 35,000 has not really made its mark on the Texas boing landscape. Until now. Hard-hitting, undefeated welterweight prospect Hector Coronado scored a sensational one-punch knockout on an absolutely thudding left hook in the second round of Saturday night's fight in Austin, Texas. Fighting a much taller and somewhat awkward opponent in Daniel Wright. Using the first round as a feeling-out process, the Del Rio native quickly exploded with the vicious left hook which came seemingly out of nowhere that dropped Wright like a building collapsing on himself to move Coronado to 6-0(5). Coronado who also serves as a firefighter in Del Rio took the fight above his natural weight class. Typically a welterweight Coronado did not shy away from fighting at 154. Saying postfight "the guy was huge and caught me a couple of times and we adapted and thank God we got the job done"  The height and size advantage seemed to have no impact on the much more skillful Coronado who does plan on moving back down to 147 in his next fight and hopes to be back in the ring in late October.

Additionally. two other up-and-comers had star-making performances. Malik "One Punch" Calhoun, who is originally from Kansas City, Missouri, and now fights out of FHG gym with coach Ray Barrera, in Fort Worth. A gym that has produced the likes of John Vera, Edward Vazquez, and Jesse Angel Hernandez in recent years. One-Punch once again lived up to his nickname and scored a spectacular one-punch knockout a body shot that knocked the air out of his opponent Alejandro Heredia and left him on all fours for the full 10-count plus several additional seconds. Calhoun moved his record to 2-0 (2) with both knockouts coming by way of one of one-punch knockout. 

In the main event of the night in the Lightheavyweight division (175 lbs) at 4 rounds, the Nigerian-based Nosa Divine who now fights out of  Austin prevailed via unanimous decision. Outworking and outhustling DeQuint Hill, Hill rallied late in the final round scoring with a scorching right hand with about 40 seconds left in the final round. However, it wasn't enough as Divine's snappy right jab and volume was enough to win what was a strategic affair by scores of 39-36 on all three cards

With any great night of boxing, it's not without its controversy as Brandin DeSapin of Fort Worth who suffered two brutal low blows had to suffer again and settle for a draw in a fight nearly everyone thought he won handily. Outboxing and throwing beautiful double-left hooks and catching his aggressive opponent, Luis Fernandez, with hard check hooks. Fernandez goes to 1-0-1 and DeSapin is 0-0-1, who, rightfully upset protested for a rematch. The Fort Worthian was an amateur standout who has an amateur victory over Olympic silver medalist Keyshawn Davis. DeSpain had already advanced to the next round when Fernandez failed to make weight.

The rest of the results of the tournament were as follows in the heavyweight division  Dionardo Minor advanced with a unanimous decision victory over Vercel Webster. In a middleweight bout, Davelle Smith stopped Ricky Evans in the first round. In the lightweight division Atanacio "Nacho"  Perez scored a hard-fought majority decision over Nathaniel Bonner.

The next stage of The Big Belt Championship will be October 1st in mesquite and will be headlined by middleweight Marco Vazquez and welterweight Jake Ysasi

Bam Rodriguez to fight For Light Flyweight World Title

San Antonio is chock-filled with high-level blue-chip fighters. Mario Barrios, Josh Franco, Hector Tanjara, Ramon Cardenas, Kendo Castaneda, Gregory Morales,  and the listguys on and on. Whenever any of the Alamo City fighters are asked who will be the next fighter from San Antonio to capture a world title the response is quick and unanimous. Without hesitation, they respond Bam Rodriguez.  Rodriguez, an undefeated 108-pound prospect 13-0 (9), was our 2020 Prospect of the Year after scoring three knockouts in his three 2020 fights. The latter two of them were in the MGM Bubble on Top Rank cards and the first came at The Star in Frisco just prior to the pandemic on the undercard of Mikey Garcia vs Jessie Vargas. 

To give context to just how special the San Antonian is both Vergil Ortiz and multi-time trainer of the year award winner have both said that Bam is the best fighter in the camp. Both the legendary future hall of famer trainer and Ortiz, who is considered among the best and most highly touted prospects in the sport, both agree that Rodriguez is the best fighter in the camp. A camp that features Mikey Garcia, Vergil Ortiz, Jose Carlos Ramirez as well as Josh Franco, and countless others. That is incredibly high praise for the 21-year-old. Rodriguez has been waiting for a world title shot for quite some time, when asked about a world title shot and who he would like to fight he said  "My title shot is long overdue whenever one of them agrees to step in the ring with me, I'll be more than glad to do that." He is actually correct, despite being just 21-years-old his name has been mentioned in world title discussions since at least March of 2019 when he disposed of rugged veteran Rauf Aghayev in just three rounds on the undercard of Spence-Mikey Garcia. It's been two and a half years of waiting patiently. However, his time is coming.

The 21-year-old phenom is on the verge of becoming a world title and has been since he was a teenager. The COVID pandemic has delayed his title shot but that delay is over. Bam will get his shot to join big brother, Joshua Franco as a WBA world champion next month when he takes on Esteban Bermudez on October 16th on the undercard of Mikey Garcia vs Sandor Martin in Fresno, California at Chukchansi Park, home of the Fresno Grizzlies. Bermudez captured his version of the WBA belt back in May when he upset Venezuelan KO artist Carlos Canizales. This will be the first defense of the title.  Also on the card, Elwin Soto, who holds the "Super" version of the WBA belt will defend against Puerto Rican veteran and former world title challenger Jonathan Gonzalez. Setting up a logical mega-fight between the winners.

Nick Molina Shines As Boxing in Laredo Returns

20-year old and  Laredoan and undefeated Jr. middleweight, Nick Molina, was planning on attending Fight Fest 9/11 in his native Laredo as a spectator watching his friends and local fighters throw down in the return of boxing to the Gateway City. Until he received a phone call just over a week ago, offering him a fight on the card. The catch was he needed to fight a touted fighter from Weslaco, Peter Balderas jr, who would be making his pro debut three weight classes above where he typically fights and had the WBC Super Bantamweight Champ Brandon Figueroa by his side. The fighter that Molina is, he gladly accepted.

The fearless but very undersized Molina stepped into the ring and just seconds into the bout got clipped on the chin and dropped. He calmly got up and showed incredible composure for a 20-year-old veteran of just three previous fights. Firing off the jab and he never lost focus. Out boxing Balderas from the outside he can see his larger opponent softening up. Snapping his head back with laser-like right hands. The first round saw Molina picking himself up off the canvas and within the next three minutes absolutely seize control of the fight. He picked up the pace and really started breaking him down Balderas in the second stanza. Clearly slowing down Bladeras threw a sloppy hook that Molina countered perfectly with a right hand that sent his opponent flailing into the ropes. Molina jumped on his wounded opponent like a dog on fear unleashing a barrage of power shots that put Balderas down and brought the referee in to call a halt to the bout with just seconds left in the second round. Molina jumped up three weight classes on a week's notice got himself up off the canvas and delivered a career-best performance securing a second-round TKO victory to move his record to 4-0 (4).

The rest of the card featured Danie "The Disciple" l Villareal of Zapata, Texas scoring an impressive third-round knockout over a game opponent in Ramiro Balli.  Villareal outboxed his opponent easily firing off a shotgun-like jab and broke his overmatched opponent down with a ferocious body attack and straight right hands to the head. He scored with a perfect left hook that staggered Balli. The Disciple unleashed a whirlwind of power shots leaving his opponents helpless against the ropes and unable to continue as the ref waived the bout off giving Villareal his fifth win in five pr fights. Villareal will headline the next FIght Fest, on October 29th in his hometown of Zapata. 

Alex "The Bazooka" Ramos bounced back nicely from his first career loss to blast out an outmatched veteran by the name of Hector Gutierrez, a veteran of 18 fights who hails from Mission, Texas and scored a vicious one-sided TKO victory. There was also an upset in the building as San Antonio-based Robert Ledesma, who has been in the ring with several world-class fighters, including Max Ornelas, Ray Ximenez, Juan Tapia, and Bam Rodriguez but he finally got his win over a big named fighter. The beneficiary of two very controversial knockdowns secured the victory over Cesar Garcia of Laredo by scores of 38-36 on all three cards. Ledesma moves his record to 3-7 while Garcia whose only other loss was to the prospect of the year Bam Rodriguez, falls to 11-2.

Two other local fighters were able to secure the first win of their professional careers. Jaime Gueverra of Laredo unleashed a ferocious body attack and broke down Austin Rivas of McAllen to secure the victory in his pro debut. Additionally, Oscar Barrera also from the Gateway City picked up the first win of his pro career. In Barrera's other two professional bouts he fought Steve Garagarza both times in two very close and contentious battles. Settling for a draw in the first and suffering a decision loss in the second. He bounced back from that and outlasted Manuel Lerma. taking a majority decision by scores of 40-36, 39-37 in his favor with the third judge scoring 38-38 even.

Omar Juarez Returns

The boxing scene in the Rio Grande Valley has been absolutely on fire as of late, and there is no better or more touted prospect than 22-year-old  "El Relampago" Omar Juarez of Brownsville. The South Texas native sports an 11-1 (5) record and is set to return September 19th in Bakersfield, California. A PBC on Fox card that will feature the brightest young stars in the PBC Stable. The network had previously mentioned El Relampago as one of the best prospects under the age of 23 and every time the young upstart steps in the ring the boxing world takes note. 

Juarez will battle 30-year-old hard-hitting Mexican veteran, Jairo Lopez, 26-13 (17) in an eight-round affair. Lopez most recently fought back in August in Atlanta suffering a UD loss to Anthony Peterson. Juarez is looking to bounce back from the lone defeat of his career. A close controversial majority decision loss to Filipino veteran  All Rivera. Juarez suffered the first knockdown of his career in the ninth round but certainly seemed to win enough of the early rounds to carry a points victory. Two of the judges disagreed with the boxing public and most ringside observers and awarded the fight to Rivera.  

The judges' verdict was nothing less than shocking as nearly everyone thought the young Texan had certainly did enough to pass the first serious test of his young career.  Juarez's team reassured him that he had done enough to get the win and that the judges got it wrong. His trainer thought they had won seven rounds and "beat him [Rivera] better than Rances Barthelemy did." Barthelemy is a former two-division world champion who beat Rivera via UD in Rivera's previous fight. Juarez who also serves as a motivational speaker to the youth in the Rio Grande Valley said that he needs to "practice what I preach and come back from this...mentally and emotionally I'm 100% I'm ready to come back.

Boxing is Back In Laredo!

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Laredo, the Gateway City, is quickly becoming one of the hotbeds of Texas boxing. The city that gave the boxing world the legendary Canizales brothers is again producing potential world-level talent at an alarming rate. Jorge Castaneda pulled a major upset over Otha Jones III on a Matchroom Card, Josh Juarez put on a masterclass performance on a Golden Boy card, and Jaime Jasso, started his career with two wins over really impressive highly experienced fighters and then recently dropped a very competitive decision to Floy Diaz, who is perhaps Top Ranks most regarded young prospect. Jasso was brought in to be an outmatched, undefeated opponent that was supposed to make Diaz look good. That was anything but the case as Jasso impressed and fought Diaz tooth and nail for the scheduled four rounds. 

what all these young South Texans have in common is they built themselves up on the Triple-A Promotions Fright Fest series in Laredo. Fight Fest 20 went down in Laredo back in March of 2020. However, due to the pandemic, this series which is producing such incredible talent was put to a temporary halt. It's been a year and a half since the last rendition of the fight series but it returns today (9/11/21) in a major way. On the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 tragedy, the hard-hitting prospects of Laredo, Texas will once again fill out the Sames Auto Arena. 

Undefeated super featherweight Daniel Villarreal will make his Laredo debut and look to move to 5-0.  Nick Molina who is a highly touted Jr Middleweight prospect, will show his fighter's mentality and warrior spirit will take a catchweight fight on extremely short notice and look to move his record to 4-0.  Additionally, Alex "Bazooka" Ramos, younger brother of Jorge Ramos, looks to bounce back from his first career loss, a 6-round slugfest with San Antonio-based prospect Javier Fernandez when he takes on veteran Hector Gutierrez of Mission, Texas. Two other young Gateway city natives will make their professional debuts. 112-pound Jaime Guevara and Super Middleweight Sonny Lique, both look to get their career off to a quick start.

The Legendary Marco Antonio Barrera returns to Texas.

Former Multi division world champion Marco Antonio Barrera is set to return to the Lone Star State to take on fellow former world champion Jose Luis Castillo in an exhibition in Houston on October 29th at the Arena Theatre and will be dubbed "problems in Houston". The bout will be an exhibition between the two again all-time great fighters. It will be added as a feature to the Big Belt Tournament which is bought to you by The Boxing Showcase and the WBC\ and is a tournament that pits young fighters with less than five pro bouts against each other in a single-elimination tournament that concludes with the winner of each weight class receiving an official World Boxing Council championship belt. The Tournament begins next Friday in Austin.

Barrera is considered one of the greatest fighters of his or any era, compiled a 67-7 record, and is a three-division world champion. He has fought previously in Texas twice, once against Manny Pacquiao in San Antonio and again in San Antonio in the next to last bout of his career in 2010 where he scored a UD victory over Adailton De Jesus. He also fought in South Padre Island, where he secured a victory over Agapito Sanchez all the way back in 1995. The former world champ said through a translator "He looks forward to fighting in Houston. Coming off the pandemic people are looking to get out and have a good time and he wants to put on a show" his opponent Jose Luis Castillo is most notoriously remembered as the man that was robbed of a decision against Floyd Mayweather and being stopped by Diego Corrales in one of the greatest fights of all time. Castillo previously held a major world title at lightweight. He compiled a record of 66-13-1 and has fought previously in Texas just multiples times including in El Paso when he outpointed Rolando Reyes in El Paso back in 2006 and he also stopped Saul Duran in Brownsville in 2003.

Javier Fernandez Moves to 7-0; caps off exciting San Antonio Card

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San Antonio is quickly becoming the fight capital of the Lone Star State, Saturdays card at the Shrine auditorium is a prime example as to why. An electric five-bout card that featured live musical acts and was well attended by a cheering crowd as well as local celebrities such as 140-pound prospect Omar Juarez and Bantamweight contender Ramon Cardenas.  In the main event unbeaten 18-year-old Featherweight prospect Javier Fernandez, of San Antonio, improved his record to 7-0. Taking the first major test of his young career he put constant pressure on Darryl Hayes of Houston. Fernadez ripped body shots in the early going and kept Hayes, who was looking to move, kept getting caught in exchanges up against the ropes.

The card kicked off with a highly touted California native making his Texas debut Angel Chavez made quick work of his overmatched opponent Brushnell Robert who was making his pro-debut. Chavez moves his record to 4-0. on a seek and destroy a mission he scored with an overhand right to the side of the that ended the bout just 43 seconds after it started. By the third round, Hayes started to show signs of fatigue as the San Antonian started digging in and for the first time noticeably hurting Hays with a three-piece combination just prior to the bell sounding to end the third. The second of the half looked much the same, with Fernadez trapping and out-working his opponent and landing the heavier shots in the exchanges. Rolling to a clear points victory by scores of 59-51 and 58-52 while the third judge egregiously scored the fight 58-52 in favor of Hayes.

In the co-main event, Fan-favorite Crisanto Lucio entered to a tremendous roar from the crowd. He immediately got to work and gave the crowd what they wanted scoring a vicious second-round knockout via a thudding right hand followed by a body shot that put Corpus Christi, native Christopher Cantu down and out in his pro debut. The 21- year-old Lucio moved his record. 

in the next bout unbeaten welterweight, Luis Alberto Gallegos, of San Antonio put together a dominant opening round mixing up body shots and headshots perfectly. Which set up a vicious second-round KO over an overmatched Ruben Martinez, also of San Antonio. Moving onto a thrilling light heavyweight scrap between fan-favorite Enrique Neira, who originally hails from San Angelo, Texas, and received a massive roar from the crowd. He controlled the range rocked his opponent Michael Sanchez with a right hand and then staggered him badly moments later with a left hook double right hand getting back to boxing Enrique controlled his man with the jab in the second. With Neira likely taking the first two rounds Sanchez picked up the pace and exchanged on the inside landing his best shot early in the fourth. The two traded heavy leather for the remainder of the fairly even final round. However, the rally was too little too late for Sanchez as Neira took the majority decision by scores of  38-38 even and 39-37x2 in his favor to move his record to 8-1.

"Big Belt Tournament" Kicks off in Austin on September 15th

On September 17th something truly special event l will kick off in Austin, Texas. The first stage of the "Big Belt Championship" will begin. The Boxing Showcase with the help of the World Boxing Council (WBC) will bring together four-round fighters from all over the country to compete in a tournament and win the first major belt.  It's a tournament that will cover several different weight classes. Earlier in the month, the event was announced in San Antonio by WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman. Three of the four stages will take place in the Lone Star State with one other stage in nearby Oklahoma. The semifinals will be the last week of October and the first week of November and will take place in Austin and Laredo. The finals will be held in Mc Allen in December. The winners from each weight class will be awarded a WBC belt. 

Eligible fighters most have a winning record and have no more than five fights prior to the beginning of the tournament. Professional debuts are allowed. Each fighter is required to, have a professional boxer license, and must comply with the medical and physical examinations requested by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. 

The four women divisions are Flyweight (112 pounds), Bantamweight (118 pounds), Featherweight (126 pounds), and Lightweight (135 pounds).

For men, there are eight divisions:  While for men, there will be 8 divisions: Flyweight (112 pounds), Bantamweight (118 pounds), Featherweight (126 pounds), Lightweight (135 pounds), Welterweight (147 pounds), Middleweight (160 pounds), Lightheavyweight (175 pounds) and Heavyweight (+200 pounds).

All stages will be broadcast in full on TV nationally and internationally.

The schedule is below: 

1st stage Austin Texas | SEPTEMBER 17TH2nd Stage Mesquite Texas | OCTOBER 1ST 3rd Stage Oklahoma | OCTOBER 8TH 4th Stage Amarillo Texas | OCTOBER 15TH

Semifinal  Austin Texas | OCTOBER 29Semifinal  Laredo Texas | NOVEMBER 5

GRAND FINAL MC ALLEN TEXAS | DECEMBER 17TH WIN YOUR FIRST WBC BELT, WITH THE BOXING SHOWCASE. 

SIGN UP TODAY FOR THER PRO TOURNAMENT https://boxingshowcase.com/registration/