Two Texans Score International Gold in Ecuador

Two Texans take home international championship gold at The American Boxing Confederation (AMBC) elite Championships in Guayaquil, Ecuador. The tournament ran from March 22 to April 2. Jennifer Lozano from Laredo captured a finals victory and dominated the tournament from start to finish. The Gateway City native took a 5-0 decision over Argentine fighter Tatiana Flores Milagros of Argentina to capture the 50 KG (110-pound) championship. On the men's side, in the 51 KG division (112 pounds), championship Roscoe Hill, from Spring, Texas, takes home the Gold after also taking a 5-0 decision over Argentine Ramon Quiroga dominated Romero Reyes Erislan of Cuba in the Gold Medal round.

19-year-old Hill, came out of some level of obscurity to capture the silver medal in the 2021 World Championships in Belgrade, Serbia, back in November. In his first international tournament, Hill scored staggering upsets over seasoned vets like Federico Serra of Italy on his way to coming up just short to Kazakhstan fighter Saken Bibossinov and capturing Silver. If 2021 was his coming out party he certainly made a bold statement to start 2022 in Ecuador to show 2021 was no fluke. He received a bye in the first round due to his high seeding and then beat Martin Perez of Panama by 5-0 decision, also shout our Quiroga to advance to the finals and then handed in the Gold Medal performance by outclassing Reyes Erislan of Cuba.

Lozano captured the national championship title at Shreveport back in December when she outpointed Kayla Gomez of El Paso in the finals. She came out and put together an absolutely dominated week of boxing. She blanked Liliana Murillo Deicy of Columbia (5-0) in the first round. Stopped Ecuador's Genesis Gomez in front of her home crowd in the second round and then dominated Flores Milagros to capture the Gold medal. 

Texas was well represented in addition to Hill and Lozano. There were many other Texans  representing the US in the Contential Championships including Emilio Garcia,  of Laredo, Kayla Gomez of El Paso, and Josh Edwards of Houston who won his first-round contest over Mexican boxer Luis Gomez Meneses, by a score of 5-0.

Errol Spence Media Day Workout

Desoto native and undefeated WBC/IBF Welterweight champ  Errol “The Truth” Spence Jr worked out in his home gym for the boxing media, World Class Boxing Gym which is owned by Spencer trainer Derrick James of Dallas. The media workout was to promote his April 16th fight at AT&T Stadium against WBA welterweight champ Yordenis Ugas . The fight is just over two weeks out and Spence said “I’m feeling good. I’m ready to go. This layoff was easier for me after the injury than after the accident because it was a lot less stress on my body. The fight will be shown live on Showtime PPV and will unify three-quarters of the welterweight brass. The one belt outstanding is the WBO belt that's owned by Terence Crawford. A fight between the long-reigning champ has long been demanded by the boxing world and is long overdue. With Crawford now a promotional free agent a fight seems very makeable.  A fight that Spence said "I am trying to get that fight done, but that only way could be done is if I beat Ugas, and that's why I am 100%  focused. 

This is the first fight back for the Desoto native since he had surgery to repair a retinal detachment/break. He was scheduled to fight Pacquiao at the time of the injury and was forced to pull out of the fight. Ugas was plugged in as the replacement and he upset the legendary former eight-division world champion. So eight months later Spence gets to fight for the same belt but against a different champ. Spence's trainer, Derrick James suggested Ugas may bring an even bigger challenge than Pacquiao citing his intelligence. "His athleticism,  but he's really intellectual  he's a very smart fighter: and saying "he's a mixture of old school boxing, which is counter punching and slickness and also has skills and athleticism" 

This will be the second consecutive time that Spence will be fighting in AT&T Stadium and the third time in four fights. He fought Danny Garcia at the Stadium back in December of 2020 and fought Mikey Garcia there in March of 2019. He has fought in Texas a total of seven times and this will be his sixth time-fighting in the DFW. For Ugas it will be the second time fighting in the Lone Star State. His only other time fighting in Texas was back in 2018 when he fought at The Star in Frisco. He scored a second-round TKO over an overmatched Jonathan Batista in what amounted to a tune-up fight on the undercard of Spence-Ocampo.

Xavier Bocanegra Makes Pro Debut April 9th in Las Vegas

If you have not heard of Donna, Texas, you're about to. Just like a pair of fighting brothers out of Weslaco, Omar, and Brandon Figueroa, put their hometown on the boxing map over the past decade. There's a pair of brothers from nearby Donna who are poised to do the same for their south Texas city. Xavier and Ranulfo have both been outstanding amateurs, winning countless tournaments. It's now time for the elder Bocanegra brother, Xavier, to turn pro and he will do so on April 9th at the Virgin Hotels in Las Vegas on a nationally televised Showtime card that will be headlined by Erickson Lubin vs Sebastian Fundora. 

Its been quite a journey for the young man from Donna. From training in his parent's garage to training in Ronnie Shields's famed Plex Gym. A gym that is home to the likes of world champs like Jermall Charlo, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Erislandy Lara, and touted prospects like David Morrell. One of the most prestigious boxing gyms in the country is now home to another touted prospect Xavier Bocanegra. On a visit to Plex Gym to spar, Bocanegra performed well and caught the attention of the famed trainer. Bocanegra recalls the sparring session "we came for sparring and he [Ronnie Shields] saw me spar and stop a guy, he was impressed and from there he started calling us." 

Bocanegra, an 8X national champion, had over 130+ amateur fights and got into boxing because he was a trouble maker in school as a youngster "I started when I was 8, I was a trouble maker always in school, I had ADHD. that [Boxing] is what I had to do to calm down I had to get into boxing. I tried every sport football, basketball, everything but I wanted boxing." Bocanegra said. Despite his incredible accolades, it didn't get off to a smooth start for the Rio Grande Valley native "I started off kinda rough. As I got older I started putting in that work and it really paid off" It didn't come easy but he credits his hard work. That incredible and relentless work ethic is a common trend amongst the fighters in the Rio Grande Valley. Fighters like Brandon Figueroa and Omar, and Sebastian Juarez are always credited for their tireless work ethic. 

The work ethic among fighters from the 956 has certainly been well documented as the Valley has become one of the premier hotbeds for boxing. Bocanegra stated where that passion comes from  "you gotta have that drive you gotta want it you gotta want to be the best. Everyone putting in that work Everyones trying to get our everyone's trying to find their own path." 

The work ethic  Bocanegra learned in the amateurs will certainly bode well for the youngster as he moves to the professional ranks "you gotta work twice as hard" he said.  The hard work has brought great confidence for the south Texan who said of moving to the professional ranks from the amateurs "It's going to be better because I am a puncher" losing the headgear and lacing up smaller gloves certainly does benefit a puncher like Bocanegra who says the power is "God-given"

Bocanegra is well prepared and has gotten world-class training ahead of his pro debut at Plex Gym, he has sparred mainly with Brandon Figueroa, a former 122-pound world champ and one of the premier young fighters in the world period. "it's one of the best experiences you can get a former world champion, it helps your mentality cause no one can throw like him he keeps coming and he doesn't stop. I am sparring with the best so I gotta push it" 

The pro debut takes place on April 9th at the Virgin Hotels in Las Vegas on the undercard of Lubin -Fundora that airs on Showtime. An incredible showcase for the 18-year old that he describes as "a dream come true"

Alex Rincon Scores Second Round KO

Mandatory Credit: Tom Hogan/Golden Boy

Despite Grand Prairie’s favorite son, Vergil Ortiz having to pull out of Saturday’s main event after being diagnosed with Rhabdomyolysis, a rare condition in which muscle cells break down and release a substance into the blood that can lead to kidney failure. North Texas was still well represented on Golden Boy’s card in California. Highly touted 154-pound prospect Alex Rincon moved his record to 10-0 (7). The hard-hitting 26-year old from Carrollton looked sharp as always in taking apart Luis Sanchez of San Juan, Puerto Rico. Rincon, A southpaw, worked behind a quick and laser-sharp right jab in the first round and landed his first shots of consequence with about 30 ticks left in the opening stanza. a left hand upstairs caught the attention of Sanchez he followed that up with a thudding body shot that backed Sanchez up. Things got better from there for the north Texan. Rincon scored with an absolutely picture-perfect left hand, that dropped his opponent just over a minute into the second stanza. Sanchez courageously made it to his feet but his legs were very unstable. Rincon, like a dog on fear, attacked. Scoring with another massive left hand that put the Puerto Rican back on the canvas for a second time. This time his legs would not cooperate with him. Trying to get back to his feet Sanchez was flailing around the ring unable to make it to his feet, causing the referee to wave off the bout at the 1:44 mark of the second round. It was the first stoppage victory for Rincon since 2019 when he scored a second-round knockout of Joel Guevara on the undercard of Vergil Ortiz vs Antonio Orozco in Grand Prairie.  His last two victories came via unanimous decision including his most recent eight-round points victory over the very durable Sanny Duversonne back in August. Alex's big brother, undefeated junior welterweight prospect, George Rincon (11-0), returns to the ring on April 9th on the undercard of Ryan Garcia vs Emmanuel Tagoe at the Alamodome. Which was the site of George's memorable first-round knockout of Diego Vicente Perez back in January of 2020. He will battle with Alejandro Frias who last fought Brock Jarvis on the undercard of Mikey Garcia-Sandor Martin in Fresno California, back in October

Alex Rincon talks about his upcoming fight at Weigh in

Vergil Ortiz Withdraws from McKinson Fight; Recovering in Hospital

Golden Boy publicists released shattering news today. All-world welterweight contender Vergil Ortiz of Grand Prairie is hospitalized with rhabdomyolysis and had to withdraw from Saturday's fight with Michael McKinson at the Galen Center at the grounds of USC  in Los Angeles. The 12-round bout was due to headline Golden Boy’s card on DAZN. It is unclear at the moment if the card will be canceled, rescheduled or will proceed with a different main event. 

Golden Boy said in an announcement that after Ortiz was diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis he was “recovering well in hospital and is expected to make a full recovery.”  It was later reported that Ortiz was sent home and is going well Rhabdomyolysis, is sometimes shortened to rhabdo and can be a serious condition that occurs when damaged muscle tissue releases its proteins and electrolytes into the blood. causing serious heart and kidney damage that can lead all the way to death in its most severe cases.

 Golden Boy Promotions CEO Oscar De La Hoya wished the undefeated Texan well saying “We wish Vergil a very quick and speedy recovery,” “As fighters, our first instinct is to fight whatever we have and tough it out. It takes a lot of courage to admit that something is wrong and get the care that you need. We are confident that we will be seeing Vergil in the ring again very soon.”

Ortiz has not fought since August when he stopped Egidijus Kavaliauskas in eight rounds at The Star in Frisco. This was the same night that Joshua Franco, of San Antonio, successfully defended his WBA Super Flyweight belt against Andrew Moloney in Oklahoma, which in part led to Ortiz splitting with hall of fame trainer Robert Garcia. Ortiz was training with Manny Robles for this camp. 

Golden Boy is looking to find a last-minute replacement for McKinson (21-0, 2 KOs), 27, who has been in Los Angeles for over a week and is already nearly on weight.

Big Charlo Returns to Houston

WBC Middleweight champion and Houston Native Jermall Charlo is set to return to the ring. Stephen Espinoza, of Showtime Sports, made a major announcement concerning the elder Charlo twin. He will defend his WBC title against long-time Polish contender Maciej Sulecki on June 18th in Houston. A venue has not been selected yet. However, the Toyota center seems most likely as the Houston Rockets will be long over. It will be one day short of a full year since Jermall Charlo steppedinto the ring. He last fought on June 19th, 2021, and dominated Juan Macias Montiel, also in Houston, at the Toyota Center. Charlo scored a wide unanimous decision over a game and rugged Montiel. 

Charlo won the WBC  middleweight interim belt in 2018 and was awaiting a showdown with Canelo Alvarez. That fight never came to fruition. Canelo was tagged "Franchise Champion" and Charlo was promoted to WBC world champion. He defended the initial defense of his strap against Brandon Adams in Houston and has defended three more times since. Once in Brooklyn, once in Connecticut, and then in Houston. He will return to H-Town to battle Sulecki who sports a 30-2 (11) record and has been a top 10 middleweight for several years. He has had one other major world title shot, back in June of 2019 he dropped a lopsided decision to Demetrius Andrade for the WBO strap in Andrade's hometown of Providence, Rhode Island. It was the second loss of the Polish contender's career. He has scored two tune-up victories in his two-fight since the Andrade loss. Most recently he outpointed in an eight-round affair in Poland back in December.

Charlo was long rumored to be in advanced talks with Golden Boy's middleweight and fan-favorite Jaime Munguia. In what was a highly anticipated fight, talks fell apart at the last minute. Munguia has a large following throughout the Lone Star State, having fought not only in Houston but having sold well in San Antonio and El Paso as well. Fans almost unanimously wanted the Munguia fight and the initial reaction to the Sulecki fight was not positive at all.

War Machine Christian Romero Shines in San Antonio

San Antonio has long been one of if not the best boxing hot beads in the country. It is now putting out not just elite-level little men but extraordinary, special, talent. Bam Rodriguez jumped up two weight classes to capture the WBC Super Flyweight title on a week's notice, Dacisd Cardenas didn't just win the USA Boxing nationals in the 106-pound division but he dominated and cleaned out the weight class barely breaking a sweat in the amateur ranks. Now, this Christian "War Machine" Romero. He may be the brightest of all. The 17-year-old phenom packed the house at The Azafar Shrine Auditorium and delivered in sensational fashion.

Romero came out of the opening bell working patiently behind a jab. Firing it off and keeping his opponent Frank Boston on the back foot. He unleashed his first violent combinations late in the first round and battered Boston against the ropes. Boston seemed not to like the thudding power and choose not to engage with the hard-hitting teenage. Romero stayed calm stayed patient and unleashed a vicious right hand to the body that again backed his opponent up in the second round. Just moments later he scored with a picture-perfect left hook the against shook the bigger another left hook sent him into the corner and unleashed a barrage of power shots. The action continued into the third as Romero scored with a right  hand with about 20 seconds left that pinned Boston in the corner yet again and the " War Machine" Let bombs go for the final few seconds of the round 

In the final round, the youngster mixed head and body shots to perfection and closed out the scheduled five-rounder, yes you read that correct five-rounder, throwing a shut out on all three cards 50-45. It was a sensational performance against a worthy opponent. A sensational display of hand speed, angels, and thudding punching power. That led trainer Rick Nunez to say "I have the next Manny Pacquiao... he can go from 108 up to 118 or 122" 

In the co-main event Javi Fernandez, who trains alongside Romero at South Park Boxing Academy, showed no ring rust or side effects from should surgery that has kept him out of the ring since last October. He scored a knockdown of Michael Haynes, a very rough and rugged opponent, Haynes fought through the excruciating pain and actually put together a couple of good moments in the second. However, any limited success Haynes had in the second came to an end as Fernandez stayed downstairs and unleashed a barrage of body shots that ended the night in the third. Fernandez moved his record to 9-0 (6).

The undercard also featured two fairly touted contenders, in the opening bout Eridson Garcia scored a one-punch body shot knockout of a usually game and skilled opponent in Rafael Reyes to move his unbeaten record to 16-0 (10). In the second bout Eddie "The Hunter" Ortiz duplicated the feat scoring a first-round knockout of his own also via body shot bouncing back from his first career defeat in outstanding fashion moving his record to 12-1-2 (5). 

In the lone woman bout hard luck, but fan-favorite, Brittany Ordonez suffered yet another hard-luck draw, in which it appeared she did more than enough to win. Seemingly dominating the fight with a sharp right hand that found its mark throughout. Ordonez seemed to do enough to win every round in the eyes of the fans however the judges disagreed and scored it a majority draw by scores of 38-38x2 and an egregious 39-37 in favor of Leanne Calderon.

Hector Tanajara Looks To Bounce Back in Fresno

San Antonio has quickly become the hottest city in the US for up-and-coming boxing stars. No star was shining brighter than the immensely skilled lightweight Hector "El Finito" Tanajara. He had compiled 19 straight wins had barely lost a single round and was on a fast track to becoming a world champion in the sports hottest division. He had captured, the WBC USNBC lightweight strap had scored a career-best win in the Alamodome against Juan Carlos Burgos and looked as sharp as any prospect in the sport. Covid hit, Tanjara was out of the ring, then a fight with Ryan Garcia, when King Ry seemingly ducked the fight. He instead opted to not fight at all. Leaving The San Antonio Native was left without a fight. A year and a half layoff for El Finito when it was all said and done. However, when he did get back into the ring he got a huge opportunity. The young, unbeaten upstart was scheduled to fight for the WBA Continental Americas title. That's when things went sideways for the Alamo City prospect. Tanajara squared off with an unbeaten but somewhat unknown prospect named William Zepeda of  San Mateo Atenco, México. After an impressive opening stanza, Tanjara was unable to stay off the ropes and keep the fight in the center of the ring. Despite his finely tuned skills on the inside, Zepeda was just too much for the Texan. Zepeda broke his opponent down and trainer Robert Garcia informed the ref Tanajara could no longer continue handing El Finito his first career loss. 

 It's been nearly was eight months since that defeat and Tanjara looks to bounce back this Friday night on a Top Rank card in Fresno, California, that will air on ESPN. He will do battle with Miguel Contreras 11-1 (6), of Bakersfield, California. Contreras took his first career defeat on the same card. He was stopped in two rounds by hard-hitting Dominican Prospect Starling Castillo.  

It's a big challenge for the Texan as both fighters absolutely need a win to stay relevant in the talent-loaded 135-pound division. Whoever captures the win likely goes back into title contention, while the loser takes a major step backward and becomes somewhat irrelevant in the lightweight division at least for the time being. Knowing exactly what on the line and how big the fight is Tanajara, didn't need or want a tune-up and is willing to travel to Contreas's backyard to prove that would happen in July to Zepeda was a fluke and that the skills and speed that shot him up the rankings are still all there. He wants to prove it was not hype it was an off night and he is as good as advertised. Prior to the Zepeda loss, there were conversations about fights with both Ryan Garcia and Devin Haney, who now holds the WBC lightweight title. A win puts him right back into those conversations

He’s Back!! Ray Ximenez shines in Comeback

Michael Montoya, as well as Kingdom Boxing, put on a sensational card in Dallas at Gilley's. A spectacular event from a gathering of DFW ring legends included Errol Spence, Derrick James, Maurice Hooker, Donald Curry, and others to the spectacular return from Ray "Valentino"  Ximenez. 

Ximenez of Dallas returned in the evening's main event and returned in spectacular fashion after a three-year layoff from the ring. The quickness, speed, reflexes, and style that made Ximenez a blue-chip prospect were all still on display after the extended layoff. Ximenez who switches out of the southpaw and conventional stance caught his opponent, Darryl Hayes, of Houston, with a perfectly placed left hand, out of the southpaw stance, that dazed Hayes towards the end of the opening round. Ximenez got going in the second. Backing his man into the ropes and unleashing a series of violent, accurate hooks. The Houstonian fought back valiantly, scoring with a few sharp right hands of his own and making a fight of it, particularly in the early going. However, it was Ximenez scoring with the sharper and harder shots. Valentino again battered his man against the ropes in the fourth mixing up head and body shots to perfection. He seemed to have Hayes in a bit of real trouble for the first time, beating him up on the inside. The fifth round saw Ximenez switching to the conventional stance and scoring with a sharp right and again stunning Hayes. Ximenez, able to keep his opponents trapped against the ropes closed out the show in professional fashion. Dominating the 6th and final round. ripping body shots and dominating with hand speed and combination punching and taking the hard-earned by clear-cut unanimous decision by scores of 59-55 on all three cards.

In the co-main event, Adrian Taylor, of Dallas,  bounced back nicely from the only a controversial draw to Rafayel Simonyan back in September. After a feeling-out process in the first round that saw the shorter Taylor try to time and get on the inside of his opponent, Dennis Williams, The Dallas native was able to close the distance in the second round. Scoring with a massive right hand stunned Williams for the first time.  Taylor followed up with a right hand upstairs and clearly had Williams in a bit of trouble. He was again able to close the distance in the fourth, as Taylor set things up beautifully with the jab and was hitting on all cylinders. Working his way onto the inside with jab and scoring thudding right hands while in close range and had Williams on the ropes. Taylor was in complete control to close out the fourth. The fifth picked up where the fourth left off, the writing was on the wall and another straight right caught the attention of Williams and worsened the cut above his eye causing referee Robert Chappa to waive a halt to the bout giving Taylor a fifth-round TKO. Taylor moved his record to  12-1-1 (5)

Also on the card was the return of fan-favorite "Chiccn" Shurretta Metcalf of Dallas. After a two-year layoff, she displayed incredible footwork, a lightning-quick jab, and slick defensive skills in dominating her opponent, Karen Dulin. Metcalf worked behind the stick, using her reach to her advantage and controlling the action throughout. She capitalized on outstanding head movement making her opponent miss over and over again. She mixed in right hands as well as a barrage of well-timed combinations that seemed to hurt her opponent in the fourth. She fought off a brief rally from Dulin in the fifth and quickly regained control. Well ahead on the scorecards Metcalf didn't let off the gas in the sixth and final stanza. She dominated the final round and staggered her outmatched opponent with just seconds remaining to cruise to a unanimous decision victory 60-54 on all three cards.

The card also featured what was perhaps the performance of the night from St Louis born Samuel Arnold, who now fights out of DeSoto. Arnold, a 6'3, 18-year-old middleweight put on an incredible display of power and speed, scoring multiple knockdowns of  Travaslo Talley on his way to scoring a second-round stoppage victory to move his record to 4-0 (2). In what was perhaps the fight of the night. Edwin Pena, of Dallas, making his pro debut fought Orlando Collins, of Euless, tooth and nail in a four slugfest. Collins seemed to control the first two rounds and Pena rallied to apparently win the last two rounds to earn a unanimous draw.

Ray Ximenez Returns to the Ring

After a sensational amateur career that started at the age of 10 and included a 120-9 total record. Was highlighted by National P.A.L. Championships, Ringside World Championships. 2009 Silver Gloves National Championships and Junior Olympic National Championships, representing and being Team USA Captain at the 2009 Youth World Junior Olympics. Plus loads of local success including six-Dallas Golden Gloves championships. Ray "Valentino" Ximenez turned pro making his debut on September 25th on the undercard of Charles Hatley vs Emmanuel Augustus in his hometown of Dallas Texas. Valentino took on  Cristoval Larrazolo, dominated him, beat him up, dropped him twice, and scored a unanimous decision victory. It was a highlight performance that made everyone in the Quick Trip Ball Park think, "wow there's a kid with world champion talent." That was the beginning of a sensational start to Ximenez's career who scored 13 consecutive victories including four by way of knockout.  He fought on ESPN and had garnered national attention. 

That set up the biggest moment of his career. The Texan traveled to Puerto Rico in 2016 to take on highly touted prospect and future world title challenger Christopher "Pitufo" Diaz in Diaz's backyard in a battle of highly touted undefeated Featherweight prospects. Ximenez accounted well for himself and appeared to outbox the Puerto Rican. When the judges did the unthinkable and stole the fight from Ximenez and scored it for the hometown fighter.  It was the first blemish on Ximenez's record. However, it was not about to hold him down.

The Dallas native bounced back nicely from the controversial decision lost and just six months later scored an impressive UD victory over John Herrera, in Midland, Texas. He scored two more victories in Dallas looked highly impressive. Which set up his  February 2019 showdown with Eugene Lagos on the main event of a big card that aired on national TV on beIN Sports. Ximenez brought the has down with a career-best performance dominating his Filipino foe over eight violent one-sided rounds.  

Ximenez picked up another UD victory and was rewarded with a promotional contract with Roy Jones Jr Promotions and looked to be on a path to a world title! Ximenez displayed his confidence by saying  “I plan on showing everyone that I will be the next world champion from Dallas." Everyone who had seen the Lagos fight seemed to believe him as well. In January of 2019, he took on an unknown and awkward Mexican prospect named Luis Alberto Lopez in what was supposed to be a test for the Texas prospect but one he was expected to pass. Ximenez ended up losing the first few rounds, being cut from an unintentional headbutt before rallying in the seventh and eighth rounds getting him back in striking distance. When the bout was waved off because of the head-butt and Ximenez dropped a technical decision after just eight rounds. A loss that looks not that bad in retrospect as Lopez has gone on to defeat several prospects since and has fought his way into a position to fight for a world title and a Top Rank promotional contract.

That was three years ago and due to promotional issues a global pandemic and a litany of other issues Ximenez has been out of the ring since. The now 29-year old is set to return for the first time and make one last run at that featherweight title he seemed destined to win. He will battle a rugged veteran from Houston called Darryl Hayes at Gilley’s in Dallas. Hayes has been durable and has been in with highly touted prospects such as Javi Fernandez and Joseph "Mongoose" Rodriguez of San Antonio, Floyd Schofield of Austin, and Angel Alejandro of Dallas. He has battled each man tough and valiantly but came up short in each fight. It's a scheduled six-rounder and Ximenez should get past Hayes in a bout that will serve as a metric to see how much ring rust he has gathered and how much he has left in the tank.

The Tremendous One returns plus Gibson in action in Florida

The ever-entertaining Kendo "Tremendo" Castaneda has hit a bit of a snag after a sensational start to his career, that included 17 straight victories eight by knockout, capturing the WBA-NABA 140-pound belt, was highly ranked by the WBA, and appeared to be on his way to a world title shot. That's when things hit a bit of a snag. Tremendo traveled to Florida and took on fellow unbeaten 140-pound prospect, Yomar Alamo. Castaneda seemed to dominate the fight, applied constant pressure hurt his opponent several times, and landed much cleaner and more effective shots on the elusive Alamo. When the scorecards were read two of the scores were wide 98-92 and 97-93, it seemed about right, had they scored the fight for Castaneda. Except they didn't, two of the judges did the unthinkable and scored seven and eight rounds for Alamo, who seemed to be beaten fairly convincingly. Castaneda went on to bigger and better things despite his first career loss. He fought Jose Zepeda who is among the best 140-pounders in the world and lost a very competitive and close decision, then lost to upstart prospect Josue Vargas in Las Vegas. Moved up to 147, got robbed again, this time in Mexico dropping a decision to Mauricio Pintor. After that Tremendo returned home fought in San Antonio on a big Golden Boy Card against Raul Curiel in another competitive scrap that Castaneda rallied in the sixth and seventh before being stopped in the seventh. 

Castaneda now returns to Florida was his skid all started to battle another touted welterweight prospect who looks to bounce back from a loss. The San Antonian travels to the Whitesands Event Center, in Plant City, Florida, to battle the hard-hitting Mark Reyes Jr who hails from nearby Tampa. Reyes Jr 14-1(12) last fought a year ago and dropped a very disputed decision to Janelson Figueroa Bocachica, on a card that aired on Showtime's SHOBOX series. Reyes takes a big challenge against the best fighter he has faced in his pro career looking for big gains. Whoever wins the bout will be propelled into contender status once again and the loser takes a giant step back. 

The card also features fellow San Antonian Trenton Gibson, 1-0 (0) in a lightweight bout. Gibson will look to play spoiler against Julio Solis, a highly-touted prospect from Puerto Rico. Gibson made his pro debut back in December on a TMB card in his hometown and looked impressive in scoring a cleat cut unanimous decision victory over Vincente Loredo also of San Antonio.

Joshua Franco to battle Estrada

Bam Rodriguez defeated a super flyweight legend and now big brother, Joshua Franco, will get his chance to do the same. In what will be a mega-fight for the 115-pound division the two WBA champs will collide as Franco puts his WBA belt on the line against Estrada who will put his "Super" world title on the line. The two sides have until March 11th to come to terms. 

Estrada is coming off of a sensational career-best win over "Chocolatito" Roman Gonzalez, as controversial as it was, many thought Chocolatito was the rightful winner, Estrada unified WBC, and WBA belts in what was a fight of the year candidate and he exacted revenge on a previous loss. Prior to the Estada scored a sensational come from behind victory of Carlos Cuadras in 2020. Cuadras was thoroughly outclassed by Franco's younger brother last week in Phoenix. Estrada was scheduled to have an epic trilogy with Gonzalez. However back in September Chocolatito caught covid postponing the scheduled fight. The trilogy match was rescheduled for March 5th however back in late January Estrada tested positive for COVID. He was replaced by Julio Cesar Martinez and the card is scheduled to take place in San Diego. That left Estrada out in the cold.

Promoter Eddie Hearn was asked if he could snap his fingers and make any fighter for Rodriguez, he said without hesitation Estrada in San Antonio. Going on to say the fight will be "huge!" Instead, it's Rodriguez's older and more experienced brother Josh Franco who secured the bout. Franco was originally scheduled to fight the winner of the Estrada-Gonzalez trilogy but when Estrada had to pull out with covid that fell through. That, however, cleared the way for the WBA to call the unification bout of sorts between Franco, 18-1-2 (8) and Estrada 42-3 (28). 

Franco last fought in August in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and defeated Andrew Maloney in a trilogy match via unanimous decision. A performance both he and famed trainer Robert Garcia described as the best performance of his career. He had previously won the world title from Maloney to capture the WBA belt in June of 2020, in Top Rank's bubble in Las Vegas. The two rematched five months later but the bout was declared a no-decision as a result of a hellacious head butt that broke Franco's orbital bone. Franco set the record straight in the third bout with a dominant UD victory.

Spence to return home; takes on Ugas

The long-running rumor is indeed true. WBC & IBF welterweight champion Errol Spence Jr. and WBA kingpin Yordenis Ugas will unify three-quarters of the 147-pound gold in Spence's backyard, AT&T Stadium in Arlington, on April 16th. Spence hails from DeSoto in Dallas County. The unbeaten Spence,27-0 (21) confirmed the fight and location through his various social media accounts. Spence's last fought at AT&T Stadium was three-years-ago and unanimously outpointed Mikey Garcia in front of nearly 50,000 fans.

In the last three years, Spence has battled major outside the ring issues including a horrific car crash and a detached retina. He has fought just twice since that Garcia fight. He outpointed two former world champions in Shawn Porter and most recently Danny Garcia back in December of 2020.

Yordenis Ugas put the welterweight division and the boxing world on notice when he retired the legendary eight-division world champion, Manny Pacquiao, back in August. He was scheduled to fight on the undercard of Pacquiao-Spence, but when the Texan had to pull out of the fight due to the retina issue, Ugas stepped in and scored a career-changing 12 round unanimous decision. Ugas sports a 27-4 (12) record and has won four in a row since losing a controversial split decision to Shawn Porter back in 2019 including a win over Brownsville native Omar Figueroa a former world champion.

Spence has since recovered from the retina injury and was cleared to return to the boxing activity in late in 2021. He has had a full recovery. The 12-round, 147-pound unification bout will headline a four-fight pay-per-view event that either FOX or Showtime will air. Fight night is officially less than 10 weeks away.

Jorge Castaneda heads back to UK; Battles former World Champ

Jorge Castaneda, of Laredo, looks to pull off the trifecta. He has beaten two of Eddie Hearn's top 130-pound prospects and now he looks to beat former world champion Kid Galahad. Castaneda, 15-1 (11) will defend his WBC International Silver Super Featherweight Title that he won back on October 30th.

2021 was a breakthrough year for the Gateway City native, after being out of the ring for all of 2020, Castaneda came back with a vengeance. He was used as an opponent for one of Matchroom Boxing's elite prospects, Otha Jones III, and was supposed to lose. Castaneda had far, far, different plans and outclassed the unbeaten OJ3 on the undercard of Andrade-Williams back in April of last year. Six months later Hearn took the Laredo native over to the UK to challenge a more experienced fighter in Youssef Khoumari but the result was the same. Castaneda rallied and pulled out a decision victory over Khoumari to capture the WBC international silver title in October on the undercard of Chantelle Cameron vs Mary McGee at the 02 Arena in London


This time Hearn brings the tough Texan back to the UK but at the Motorpoint Arena, in Nottingham as part of the Leigh Wood VS Mick Conlocard. Castaneda will look to move to 3-0 against Matchroom Fighters in just a 12-month span. Galahad certainly represents the biggest challenge of the three. Galahad, who is moving up from featherweight to super featherweight, briefly held the IBF 126-pound world title. He stopped Jazza Dickens in August of last year before losing the belt to Kiko Martinez in what was a shocking upset in his inaugural defense this past November.


Laredo is best known in the boxing world for producing the Canizalez brothers Orlando and Gaby both held world titles. Orlando held the IBF bantamweight title from 1988 to 1995 and was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Gaby won the WBA bantamweight title by knocking out Richard Sandoval in the seventh round of the scheduled 15 rounder in 1986. He also captured the WBO version of the title in 1991 when he stopped Miguel Lora. Should Castaneda defeat Galahad, he will find himself in an excellent position to challenge for a world title later in 2022. The current champion in the 130-pound division is Oscar Valdez, Shakur Stevenson, Roger Gutierrez, and Kenichi Ogawa.

Bam Rodriguez Becomes Boxing's Youngest World Champ

Seven days ago Bam Rodriguez was supposed to take what amounted to a stay busy fight against Fernando Diaz.  A kind of a welcome to the Matchroom family fight. Instead, he jumped up two weight classes and took on a legend of the ring and future Hall of Famer in Carlos Cuadras on less than one week's notice for the WBC Super Flyweight title. Rodriguez did the unthinkable and dominated the former champ, dropped him in round number three, controlled the rest of the fight, rolled to the unanimous decision victory, and captured the Super Flyweight title.  He became boxing's youngest world champion at just 22-years-old. He also joins older brother Joshua Franco as a world champion.

At the prefight presser Rodriguez said  “When I got the call, I had no hesitation,”. He added “This is my moment. San Antonio will have a new champion and a star will be born” High expectations, but Bam certainly did not disappoint. Landing on 258 of 688 total punches (38%). After a fairly close first-round Bam seized control of the fight in the second and dropped the former champion in the third round. He remained in control of the fight from that point on. Using his incredible angles and combination punching he was clearly wearing Cuardas down. Rodriguez pumped his fist several times while working to his corner, knowing his lifelong dream of being a world champion was becoming a reality. He hurt Cuadras with a body shot in the fourth. He staggered his man in the fifth with an uppercut followed by a left hand.  The San Antonian remained in control the remainder of the bout. Cuadras did put some good moments together and Rodriguez said "I am sore" and his face showed some swelling from the non-stop work from a rugged former champ, but his moments were far too few and short-lived. The 22-year-old San Antonian closed the show like a veteran. Firing off a four-punch combination that again Rocked Cuadras and after the two traded heavy artillery Rodriguez finished the final round with two-picture perfect land hands. The scorecards were academic as all three judges scored for Rodriguez, by scores of 117-110x2 and a much too close 115-112.

The undercard featured Edward Vazquez of Fort Worth, Texas, who was absolutely robbed out of a win. Vazquez out-landed and outworked fellow unbeaten featherweight Raymond Ford, over 10 competitive but mostly one-sided rounds. After the scorecards were read off 96-94 for Vazquez and 98-92 and 97-93 in favor of Ford, the crowd erupted in boo's and DAZN commentator responded to the decision by saying "Embarrassing" no other words were needed. Ford's promoter Eddie Hearn also acknowledged that Vazquez was impressive and deserved the decsion. 

Four additional Texans took the ring just a few hours away in Las Vegas, Nevada. Brownsville native Omar Juarez scored a split decision victory over Milano native "Cowboy" Ryan Karl in a highly entertaining, fan-friendly brawl. Juarez moved his record to 13-1 (5) putting most of the early rounds in the bank using his speed and precise counter-punching to build up a lead on the scorecards. Karl battled back in the second half of the fight and appeared to slow and a cut above Karl's eye caused him to fight with a sense of urgency and he was able to draw the prospect from Brownsville into a slugfest. The 10th and final round was an all-time keeper. The round started with Juarez landing back-to-back right hands that Karl took and answered back with a thudding three-piece combination. The fast-paced round ended with the two warriors exchanging toe to toe for the final 15 seconds.

The card also featured Corpus Christ native John Rincon coming back from a nearly two-year layoff. He scored an impressive unanimous decision victory over  Ramon Duarte Marquez in a four-round affair. Rincon moves to 6-0 (2) in his promising young career.

The main event didn't go so well for The Lone Star State as former 140-pound world titleholder Mario Barrios of San Antonio, lost a spirited battle to former unified welterweight champion Keith Thurman. Barrios fell behind on the cards early but rallied a little bit in the second half of the fight, but it was too little too late as he dropped the decision unanimously to Thurman by scores of 118-110x2 and 117-111.

Two San Antonionians Headline; Six Texans in Action

The first major weekend of boxing of the new year is absolutely loaded and stacked with fighters from the Lone Star State. The two major cards this weekend are headed up by two fighters from San Antonio. Former WBA 140-Pound World champ, Mario Barrios, returns to the ring for the first time since his fight of the year type fight with Tank Davis in June of last year. Barrios suffered his first career loss to Davis, a three-division world champion, via 11th round TKO. Barrios moves up to welterweight for the first time and instead of fighting a soft touch, he opted for the biggest challenge of his professional career. He battles former unified welterweight champ, Keith Thurman in the main event of a card at The Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, Nevada. About 300 miles away at the Footprint center in Phoenix, Arizona. Barrios's long-time friend and fellow Alamo City native Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez literally and figuratively take the biggest fight of his career. The 22-year-old phenom jumps up not one, but two weight classes to battle future hall of famer Carlos Cuadras for the WBC Super Flyweight strap and looks to capture the first world title of his promising career. A career that is expected to produce multiple world titles in multiple weight classes.

While Barrios and Bam headline the cards, the undercards are stacked with Texans. On the undercard of Thurman-Barrios, Brownsville native and highly touted jr welterweight prospect "El Relampago" Omar Juarez will battle long time contender "Cowboy" Ryan Karl, who hails from a town called Milano, a small town about 60-70 miles northeast of Austin, in an all Texas throwdown. Karl, 19-3 (12)  had previously fought for a world title when he lost to Barrios in San Antonio on the undercard of Davis-Santa Cruz. Juarez, the blue-chip prospect, is on the fast track to fighting for a world title at 140 pounds and sports a 12-1 (5) record, he suffered his first career defeat back in June when he dropped a split decision to All Rivera in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He bounced back nicely and scored a dominant one-sided decision over 40-fight veteran Jairo Lopez. The fight will air on Fox in the build-up to the Thurman-Barrios PPV. Also on the card is Corpus Christi native John Rincon. He puts his 5-0 (2) record on the line against 4-0 (4) Ramon Duarte Marquez in a battle of unbeaten prospects. After a quick start to his career that saw Rincon fight on several major cards, he has been out of the ring for nearly two years for a litany of reasons.

On the Arizona card headlined by Cuadras and Bam Rodriguez, Fort Worth native, undefeated Edward "Kid" Vazquez will battle highly touted and undefeated New Jersey-based prospect Raymond "Savage" Ford in what promises to be a TV-friendly fight between two unbeaten featherweight prospects. Vazquez has delivered action-packed fights in the past when he got up off the canvas to dominate Adan Ochoa in a bout that was televised on ESPN and then he delivered a non-stop fight of the year type slugfest and outlasted Irvin Gonzalez on the undercard of the Mike Tyson-Roy Jones Jr PPV in November of 2020. Vazquez sports a perfect 12-0 (3) record and could be looking at a world title fight by the end of the calendar year should he beat Ford Saturday night at the Footprint Center

Two Texans take a Huge Step Up on DAZN Card

Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez of San Antonio got the phone call that could change his life. On Sunday Rodriguez was the newest member of the Matchroom Boxing and was preparing to fight a solid opponent in Fernando Diaz for a regional belt. No small task. That's when the San Antonian got the phone call that could change his life. He was informed that Srisaket Sor Rungivisai who twice beat the legendary Roman "Chocolatito" Gonzalez, was out of a world title fight with Carlos Cuadras, due to an illness and he was in. He would get his world title shot, one that even at just 22-years-old is long overdue for. It's just not a title shot it's a shot at a legend of the ring. One of the best and most exciting little men to have ever done it. It's also against a fighter two weight classes bigger than him. That's how confident Bam is and how confident his famed trainer Robert Garcia is and the rest of his team is in him. There was no hesitation to throw Bam in on short notice against a former world champ and legend of the ring that's two weight classes bigger than him on six-days notice. There is a mystique around the name Bam Rodriguez people don't just expect him to be a world champion they expect him to win multiple world titles in multiple divisions. He's one of a handful of fighters that represent the future of the sport. In simple terms "Bam is special". He gets to show the world just how special he is this Saturday at the Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Should he win, should he jump up not one but two weight classes and beat a potential future hall of fame,  at just  22-years-old, Rodriguez would find himself in pound-for-pound discussions.

Also, on the card is Fort Worth's own Edward "Kid" Vazquez who, just like Bam, undefeated, but has taken a far different path. Vazquez found himself in a contract dispute that kept him out of the ring for prolonged periods. He finally got himself out of the contract. Signed with a new management company and got ready to fight. Then Vazquez ran into another issue, he had about half a dozen flights canceled due to the pandemic. One fight after another was postponed or canceled. "Kid" kept doing the only thing he knows to do. He kept fighting and he finally got his shot to shine. He got a fight on ESPN in the Top Rank bubble in Las Vegas. After a clean and impressive first round, the Fort Worthian found himself on the canvas and despite having just eight pro bouts got himself up, dusted himself off then controlled the final four rounds to take a decision over Adan Ochoa. He came back just two months later came back and on the undercard of Mike Tyson vs Roy Jones Jr, Vazquez scored a thrilling decision victory in a fight of the year, non-stop, action-packed, eight-round war with Irvin Gonzalez to capture the WBC USNBC featherweight title. He has scored a few more victories in stay busy fights and again gets to play the role of underdog and spoiler. Raymond Ford had a spectacular amateur career and was one of Matchroom's most touted US prospects and after a brilliant start, he suffered a draw with Aaron Perez. He bounced back nicely and scored some quality wins but is now matched incredibly tough with Vazquez. The two unbeaten prospects have more than an "0”' in their L columns the winner will jump to the head of the line and could be in a position to fight for a world title later in 2022.

Rodriguez Gets Major Opportunity; Will Fight Cudras for WBC Super Fly Title

Back in August at the Hard Rock,Tulsa Undefeated light flyweight, Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez. 14-0 (10) said in an interview with 3DBoxing that he was "Long overdue for a title fight" At that time he was there to support older his older brother, Josh Franco in his title defense against Andrew Maloney. Franco won by unanimous decision. Bam said he was willing to fight any of the champions. Rodriguez, of San Antonio, has got his wish in the most unconventional fashion. He will jump up not one, but two weight classes and fill in for future hall of famer, Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, who had to pull out of the fight due to an illness, and will battle former world champion Carlos Cuadras for the vacant WBC Super Flyweight title. Cuadras won the WBC 115-pound world title from Sor Rungvisai back in 2014 in their first epic bout. He went on to defend the title six times before losing the strap to Roman "Chocolatito" Gonzalez in 2016.

Bam was already scheduled to face off with Fernando Diaz 10-1-1 (3), for a regional WBC title in a 10 round affair on the same card, that will be streamed live on DAZN and will take place at the home of the Phoenix Suns, the Footprint Center, in Phoenix, Arizona. The 22-year-old from San Antonio agreed to take a massive step up in both talent and weight and accepted the fight on short notice against Cuadras when Sor Rungvisai had to withdraw due to a non covid-19 illness. Rodriguez was previously scheduled to fight for a WBA world title back in October of 2020 tiin Fresno, California, on the undercard Mikey Garcia vs Sandor Martin against Esteban Bermudez, however the bout was nixed by the WBA just days before the fight. Rodriguez scored a sensational fourth round stoppage over Jose Alejandro Burgos. Like Cuadras, Burgos was a naturally larger fighter who fought at 115 in the past including fighting Franco in January of 2020 at the Alamodome in San Antonio. A fight Franco won via 9th round TKO.

Cuadras, a long reigning super flyweight is looking for his second world title reign in the division and will enjoy a noticeable size advantage. However, Rodriguez is no stranger to fighting larger opponents. A natural Light flyweight, Bam has fought at both 112 and 115 in the past. The surging Rodriguez was our 2020 Prospect of the Year and has scored six consecutive victories by way of stoppage. He is considered one of the most elite up and coming young fighters in the sport regardless of weight.

Ben Gurment Scores Devastating KO Wins WBC Tournament

Fort Worth's Benjamin Gurnment an Army specialist can now add WBC champion to his impressive and growing resume. After two fairly even rounds,  Gurment turned to his opponent and had something to say to him, Yainiel Alvarez Telemaco, originally of Cuba, now fighting out of Hutto. The native Cuban turned to Gurment and allegedly mocked his power. That quickly proved to be a massive mistake as just two minutes into the third round Gurment, a southpaw,  landed a perfectly timed left hand that about took Alvarez's head off and collapsed him like a building imploding. Instantly Alvarez was out and Gurment had his second unforgettable KO in his second consecutive fight. He moved his record to 6-0-2 (4) and claimed the WBC four-round big belt championship in the 140-pound weight class. 

Also on the card Jake "The Snake" Ysasi captured the same WBC belt but in one division north. He scored a four-round dominant unanimous decision, which saw him pull all the tools out of the toolbox in what was likely his most impressive career performance. He switched southpaw at time, couldn't miss with the left hook, scored a vicious knockdown of his opponent, Sergio Augustin of Mexico, with an uppercut in the third round, and dominated the fourth to capture the WBC four-round belt and move his record to 4-0

In the main event, Marco Vazquez scored his second consecutive first-round knockout. Back in October, Vazquez stopped veteran Ulisses Jimenez in less than a minute and then completely overwhelmed Kasimu Yakubu with one second left in the opening stanza to move his record to 8-1(5) and recorded the fifth consecutive victory of his comeback, since suffering the only set back of his career to Jon Bullock back in 2016. Vazquez took over three years half. His comeback is going extremely well and Vazquez takes about moving down from 160 to 154 and making a world at an elite level at that weight class. The 6- foot- one-inch Vazques would have tremendous size at 154 to go along with the tremendous power and skills he possesses.

The card at the Southern Junction in Irving also featured two other four-round championship fights. In the first championship bout in the lightweight division, Omar Urieta of Tyler and Juan Manuel Castaneda, of Mexico City, Mexico, traded heavy artillery in the center of the ring for four incredibly exciting and event rounds. A left hook nearly dropped the Tyler native in the second, who was able to keep his footing, stay on his feet and rally back to earn a draw. Urieta has been the most exciting fighter in the series having scored two first-round knockouts in the first two rounds of the tournament.

In the featherweight division Moises Andres Sixto, scored a highly controversial majority decision victory over Haltom City's Brandon DeSpain. In a fight that DeSpain seemed to dominate the action and easily outbox Sixto, also saw DeSapin eat several low blows. The judges added insult to injury in scoring the bout in favor of Sixto in majority fashion. DeSpain suffered a controversial draw in the opening round against Luis Fernandez, in a bout the DeSapin also appeared to outbox his opponent but had to settle for a draw. Despain advanced to the next round automatically however when Fernendez missed weight.

Bam Rodirguez Signs Deal with Eddie Hearn

2020 Prospect of the Year Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez of San Antonio, has signed a multi-fight deal with Eddie Hearn's Matchroom Boxing. Rodriguez is regarded as one of the brightest young prospects in the sport and the future of the smaller weight classes he sports a 14-0 (10)  and is long overdue for a world title fight. He will certainly bring excitement to Matchroom cards and has the right style to be a fan favorite especially with the rise in popularity of the smaller weight classes. Something Hearn and Matchroom have helped drive. 

Rodriguez will be in action next Saturday, February 5th, at the Foot Print Center in Phoenix Arizona where he will do battle with  Fernando Diaz of Riverside, California. The two will battle it out for the WBC USNBC Flyweight title and the bout will be streamed live on DAZN. The bout is on the undercard of what promises to be a fan-friendly slugfest between two of the great little men of all time as former world champion Srisket Sor Rungvisai battles former world champion  Carlos Cuadras in a Super Flyweight battle who will battle for the vacant WBC Super Flyweight title. 

Rodriguez expressed his excitement about joining the Matchroom family saying "I’m very excited to be joining the Matchroom team...This is huge for me and my career. This is my coming-out party – in 2022 we secure my World title shot, and then go looking for the biggest fights there are out there.”

"Bam"  who last fought in October n the Mikey Garcia vs Sandor Martin Card in  Fresno, California, is trained by Robert Garcia and has been called by Garcia and others as the best fighter in the camp. He is also the younger brother of WBA Super Flyweight Champ Joshua "El Profesor" Franco. He is co-promoted with Japanese promotional outfit Teiken Promotions.