Ortiz vs McKinson Now a WBA Title Eliminator

The stakes just got higher for Vergil Ortiz of Grand Prairie and Mikey "The Problem" McKinson of Portsmouth, England. Saturday's main event at the Dickies Arena in Fort Worth between unbeaten welterweight prospects is now a WBA title eliminator. Meaning the winner will be the mandatory challenger for the WBA world title. Ortiz is ranked highly for the WBA and WBO world titles. A win for Ortiz will mean he will be ranked number one in the WBO, a belt held by Terence Crawford, and the mandatory challenger for the WBA held by Errol Spence of Dallas. McKinson said he "found out 5 or 10 minutes before they announced it." Mckinson added he "was not surprised" and that he'd be happy to return to Texas to fight Spence, should he beat Ortiz on Saturday night.

Ortiz is considered by many to be the best young prospect in the sport, and an all-Texas shootout with Spence has long been dreamed of by Texas fight fans, with AT&T stadium being the absolutely ideal home for the fight. Spence, who also holds the WBC and IBF titles, is rumored to be in heavy discussion for a unification bout with Crawford. Unifications typically take precedence over mandatories. However, that fight is far from being made. If that fight does not come off, Ortiz will be in a position to possibly pick which of the belts he wants to fight for. He'd be ranked in the top spot by both organizations. Ortiz and trainer Manny Robles both expressed no preference and were more than open to fighting either of the two welterweight champions.

Josh Franco Becomes Promotional Free Agent

WBA Super Flyweight champion Joshua "El Profesor " Franco is now a free agent. He parted ways with long-time promoter Golden Boy Promotions. Franco has been inactive for roughly a year since defeating Andrew Moloney via unanimous decision in August 2021, a performance he and trainer Robert Garcia said was the best performance of his young and blossoming career. Franco was later mandated by the WBA to fight the sanctioning bodies Super champion Juan Francisco Estrada. The Estrada-Franco fight went to purse bids and was won by Golden Boy. Estrada has opted to not take the fight and vacate his "Super Champion" title. That news broke roughly two weeks ago and left Franco without a fight. Franco held the WBA world title since 2020 when he won the strap from Moloney in their first of three fights. The fight was held during the height of COVID in the Top Rank Bubble in June of 2020. He has defended his belt once against Moloney, a fight that was declared a NC after a head butt in the opening round broke Franco's orbital bone. The injury caused the fight to be stopped and called to a halt after the second round. He then set the record straight in June of 2021 and dominated Moloney in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in August of 2021.

He was in line for a mega fight with one of the legends of the 115-pound division, a title held by the Legendary "Choclatito" Roman Gonzalez. The belt then went to Estrada, who picked up a controversial decision over Chocolatito in March of last year at the American Airlines Center in Dallas. Franco was supposed to fight the winner of the rematch, but the rematch kept running into delays, which included each fighter testing positive for COVID. Gonzalez tested positive back in September of 2021, which set the fight back. Estrada then tested positive earlier this year, and that fight was off. Estrada was replaced by Julio Cesar Martinez. That set up the purse bids for Estrada-Franco and delivered Franco the mega fight that had eluded him. However, Estrada has opted to vacate his version of the WBA belt. Leaving Franco without an opponent.

The news that Franco had separated from his long-time promoter had circulated on the internet. It was confirmed on Facebook by Franco's dad Jesse Rodriguez, who posted "Finally a Free Agent" the thought amongst pundits and fans is that Franco will go ahead and sign with Eddie Hearn's Matchroom Boxing. The promotional outfit which represents Franco's little brother and WBC super flyweight champ Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez. The hope there is that Hearn could put on mega fights headlining the two brothers that could pack out the Alamodome.

Former World Champ Maurice Hooker Set to Return

Former WBO Jr welterweight Champion "Mighty Mo" Maurice Hooker of Dallas will get an early 33rd birthday present. The day before turning 33. he will step back into the ring for the first time in nearly a year and a half. Hooker will battle with loud-mouth, attention-seeking welterweight Blair the flair Cobbs of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the August 6th undercard of Vergil Ortiz- Michael Mckinson at the Dickies Arena in Fort Worth.

 The Dallas native has not fought since being stopped by Grand Prairie native Vergil Ortiz in seven rounds in what was an exciting all-DFW showdown. It was also held at Dickies Arena. Hooker held the WBO world title at 140-pounds when he outpointed "Turbo" Terry Flanagan in June of 2018. Hooker traveled to the UK to defeat the countrymen and former lightweight world champ for the vacant belt. He then defended it successfully twice. Once against Oklahoma native Alex Saucedo, in a boxing rendition of the "Red River Shootout," the Texan got up off the mat and reigned victorious via seventh-round TKO. He then defended his belt in early 2019 against  "Slick Mick" Mikkel LesPierre, via unanimous decision at the Turning Stone Casino in upstate NY. He suffered his first career loss when he was stopped by Juan Carlos Ramirez in a unification bout at the College Park Center on the Grounds of UT Arlington. He picked up a tune-up win in a scrap with Uriel Perz. Hooker then suffered his second career loss. This one to Vergil Ortiz in 2021. "Mighty Mo" sports a career record of 27-2-3 (18)

Cobbs will also look to bounce back from his first career loss. After winning his first 15 of 16 professional bouts, with one draw, Cobbs ran into fellow Golden Boy welterweight prospect Alexis Rocha. In what was a barn burner on the grounds of the USC campus in Los Angeles, California, Rocha prevailed via 9th round KO. The Hooker-Cobbs fight is a must-win for both combatants. Hooker needs to get back in the win column and re-establish himself as a world title contender. Cobbs is coming off the loss and needs a win over a big name and former world champ to establish himself as a legitimate contender and not just a loud-mouthed prospect. Hooker would meet both criteria, and Cobbs sports a record of 15-1-1 (10). 

Jermell Charlo Set to Return Against Tim Tszyu

Undisputed Jr Middleweight champion and Houston Native Jermell Charlo, 35-1-1 (19), will stay at 154 pounds and defend all the belts against WBO mandatory challenger Tim Tszyu, 21-0 (15), of New South Wales, Australia. The bout is scheduled for January 28th, 2023. More than six months out. The location of the bout is not yet determined. Tszyu underwent hand surgery back in May, several weeks after his points victory over former US olympian Terrell Gausha. The injury is perhaps the reason for the delay in the fight, but that is far more than the timetable for typical recovery suggests. Tszyu is the son of legendary former Jr welterweight champ and Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu.

It has been reported that the Houstonian wanted the bout in October. This means Charlo would have fought multiple times in the same calendar year for the first time since 2019. He fought just once in 2020-2022. Having last fought in May, when he stopped then WBO champ Brian Brian Castano of Argentina. It was their second bout in 10 months. Their first bout was in the summer of 2021 and ended in a disputed draw. A fight most thought the Argentinian deserved the nod in. Charlo set the record straight by knocking out the WBO champ in the 10th round of the rematch to become the first man to unify all four belts in the 154-pound division in the four-belt era. It is unclear if the younger Charlo twin will start at 154 pounds beyond this next fight. If he wants to, he will have to start fighting more often. His other mandatories are thought to be called very shortly meaning he will be given timetables to fight the likes of  Sebastian Fundora and Bakhram Murtazaliev. If Charlo does not meet those mandatories, he risks being stripped of those titles. Murtazaliev is coming up on three years as IBF mandatory.

Bam Rodrigeuz Named ESPN Best Men's Fighter

Having covered nearly his entire career, nothing Jesse "Bam' Rodriguez accomplishes comes as much of a surprise. At just 22 years old he is in the pound-for-pound discussion and has captured and defended the WBC super flyweight belt. A belt he jumped up not one but two weight classes on 6-days-notice to capture by defeating a legendary little man. He defeated another surefire first ballot hall of fame in stopping Srisaket Sor Rungvisai. The man who took Chocolatitos "O" and then knocked him out cold in the rematch. That man, the Thai legend, got annihilated and dominated by Rodriguez.

Rodriguez has been awarded with ESPN's mid-year Fighter of the Year award. In a year that Canelo got absolutely dominated by a long-reigning champ in a year that the lineal heavyweight champ dominated Canelo and in a year that multiple fighters have captured "all the belts,' the 22-year-old Alamo city native tat has captured the award for the best fighter on the planet for the first half of 2022.

Rodriguez was the hardcore's darling he had fought on the undercard of Wilder-Fury 1, Spence- Mikey Garcia. He had some sensational knockouts in the Top Rank Bubble and some impressive performances on Mikey Garcia undercards. The hardcore knew Bam was something special. For a little man (under 126 pounds) to really, garner headlines and international attention, he has to do something truly special to make people take notice. The Texan has done exactly that! Exceeding every expectation, the kid that both Robert Garcia and former stablemate and the Prospect of the Year Vergil Ortiz, said was the best fighter in the stable is no longer boxing's best-kept secret. Bam's time has arrived.

Bam set to Return on Canelo-GGG undercard in Las Vegas

Undefeated super flyweight phenome Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez of San Antonio continues his rise to superstardom. He will not take much of a break. He will return on the undercard of what is perhaps the biggest fight of the year, Canelo-GGG. Rodriguez last fought at the Tech Port Arena in The Alamo City and delivered for his home fans a career-best performance in stopping future Hall of Famer Srisaket Sor Rungvisai via 8th round TKO to defend his WBC super flyweight title. It will be less than three months between fights for Bam and his third fight in seven months. Pretty impressive for fighting in an era where most guys at his level fight only 1-2 per year. 

Rodriguez will put his perfect 16-0 (11) record and his WBC super-fly strap on the line against another rugged opponent in Israel Gonzalez sports a 28-4-1 (11) record and is just 25 years old. He is unbeaten in his since his 2020 loss to the legendary "Chocolatito" Roman Gonzalez. Rodriguez, who hails from Baja California, Mexico, accounted quite well for himself.IN losing a clear but competitive decision to the legend. It will be the fourth world title shot for the 25-year-old from Mexico who, in addition to the Gonzalez loss, was stopped by Jerwin Ancajas and lost to Khalid Yafai in 2018. He last fought in April at the La Paz Arena in La Paz, Mexico, and scored an 8-round unanimous decision over Misael Gracia Acevedo.

Rodriguez is perhaps the front runner for this year's Fighter of the Year and a third win in seven months over another premier 115-pounder would perhaps be exactly what the Texan needs to capture this year's award.  Rodriguez has expressed interest in moving down to his more natural weights of 108 and 112 and said in a post-fight press conference following the Sor Rungvisai destruction that he plans on moving down to 112. He will, however, stay at 125 at least for the time being.

Figueroa Impresses at New Weight Class, Cardenas Closes in on Title Shot

Former 122-pound world champion and all-action fan favorite Brandon "The Heartbreaker" Figueroa of Weslaco looked impressive in his featherweight debut. Following his very controversial loss to Stephen Fulton last November. He showed no ring rust in taking apart and handing Carlos Castro his second consecutive loss. After a feeling-out process in the first round, Figueroa got to work in the second and dropped Castro in the third with a left hook. The Rio Grande Valley native hit the gas and kept pouring on the punches and nearly getting the stoppage. Castro survived the round and tried to avoid the hard-hitting south Texan. However, by the sixth round southpaw's relentlessness paid off and he was able to turn his opponent around force him into the ropes, and unleashed a barrage of thudding and pin point accurate body shots that left Castro defenseless in the corner and forced the referee to stop the fight at the 2:11 mark of the sixth round. Figueroa moved his record to 23-1-1 (18). The bout was a WBC eliminator, placing the 25-year-old Figueroa, in a position to challenge newly minted champ Rey Vargas for the WBC featherweight strap and become a two-division world champion.

Also on the card was surging bantamweight prospect Ramon Cardenas of San Antonio fought in his hometown for the first time since taking a unanimous decision over Ramsey Luna in 2018. He boxed beautifully in a 10-round affair earning a unanimous decision over Michell Baanquez of Venezuela. The Alamo City native was able to fight off the pressure and nail. After a fairly even opening three rounds, Cardenas caught Baanquez with a left hook that wobbled him. He was able to counter his man brilliantly throughout the middle rounds. Stabbing him with the jab, avoiding the Venezuelan heavy artillery, and countering him with hooks and straight rights. Cardenas, like the consummate professional he is, closed the show out in impressive fashion, scoring with a left hook with just over 40 seconds in the bout that again buzzed his opponent to close the show. On his way to earning a unanimous decision victory by scores of 97-93x2 and 96-94. It was Cardenas's first fight with San Antonio-based trainer Chato Martinez. The two seemed to work well together and have a bright future.

Also on the card was highly touted prospect "X-man" Xavier Bocanegra hails from Donna in the Rio Grande Valley. The Blue chip prospect battered and outclassed an over-matched opponent by the name of Travis Crawford.  The RGV native badly wobbled Crawford with a pair of left hooks and then jumped on his stunned opponent and unleashed a barrage of power shots that forced the referee to call a  halt to the action at the 2;27 mark of round three. Giving Bocanegra his first stoppage victory and moving his record to 2-0 (1)

  Fellow Rio Grande Valley native Fabian Diaz of Edinburg made his pro debut a successful one. Earning a unanimous decision and winning a clear-cut but hard-earned decision over Julio Gomez of Mexico, a very game and durable opponent. Making the young Diaz dig a bit in his pro debut.

Hometown slugger Raymond "Tito" Guajardo was also on the card and ended an over 2-year-layoff. He had to settle for a disputed draw in his comeback fight. Most thought Guajardo had done enough, but the judges disagreed and declared the bout a draw. Guajardo's record moved to 5-1-1 (4). 

H-Town Comes Up Clutch: Named New Home of WBA 

According to the World Boxing Association (WBA)  President Gilberto Jesus Mendoza, the Organization will be moving its headquarters to Houston. The more than a century-old sanctioning body was originally founded in Rhode Island in 1921 and was headquartered in Panama. It additionally called Venezuela home for a brief stint. It is currently located in Panama City, Panama. They will now, officially, be moving to the Lone Star State. Organization President Mendoza called Houston "a great sports town" and cited the great, recent, world champions including Juan “Baby Bull” Diaz and Jermell Charlo as motivation to choose Houston as the WBA’s new home.

Geographically the new home makes sense as well. It will be located closer to the other major organizations. The WBC is located in Mexico and the IBF is located in the US.  There has been no official date given for the official move. The other major boxing organization, the WBO, is located in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The WBA's announcement comes as another huge win for Texas boxing and for the city of Houston, It was announced last month that the Texas Boxing Hall of Fame which is expected to open up in October of this year will also be located in Houston.

Four Texans Take the Ring at Alamodome

Four different Texans representing both the 210 and the 956 will have homecoming fights this weekend in the world-famous Alamodome in San Antonio. All four fighters must win fights and are in four very different stages of their careers. Most notably is Brandon "The Heartbreaker"  Figueroa. Figueroa looks to get back to a world championship and pound-for-pound status when he steps in the ring for the first time since losing a very controversial and disputed majority decision to Stephen Fulton. A fight no one thinks the Texan loss, outside of judges Dave Moretti and Tim Cheatham. Figueroa, the Rio Grande Valley native who made his hometown of Weslaco a household name the world over, will battle Cesar Castro in a WBC title eliminator. The fight will be contested in the featherweight division. Figueroa's first fight in the weight class and is just four pounds in the super bantamweight division where he held world titles. Castro's last two opponents, Luis Nery, whom he dropped a very contested decision, and Oscar Escandon, whom he stopped in the 10th round,  are common opponents with "The Heartbreaker", Figueroa,  stopped both men. A win for the RGV native will make him the mandatory challenger for the WBC featherweight champion, which will be determined in the night's main event between current WBC champ Mark Magsayo and Rey Vargas. 

Also on the card is the 20-1 (10) El Dinamita Ramon Cardenas of San Antonio is on the verge of a world title fight in the 118-pound division after his third-round TKO of Marvin Solano in Orlando, Florida, last August. He captured the vacant WBA continental America bantamweight title and was scheduled to fight in a title eliminator of his own. The 5th-ranked Cardenas was scheduled to fight Melvin Lopez, of Nicaragua. Cardenas had to pull out of the fight due to an injury. The 26-year-old  San Antonian is knocking on the door of a world title shot, one way or another, and a win on Saturday in front of his hometown fans might be exactly, what he needs to get a fight with the current WBA champ Naoya Inoue a fight with the pound for pound elite is something the rugged Cardenas welcomes 

Further down on the card are two youngsters, one looking to reinvigorate what was a sensational start to his career and the other looking to make a name for himself. Back in early 2020, San Antonio's Raymond "Tito" Guajardo was thought to be one of, if not, the brightest 154-pound prospects in the world. At merely 19 years old he sported simply ridiculous one-punch power and freakish man strength for a teenager. He scored one posterizing knockout after another. Running his record to 5-0 (4) Before he ran into party-crasher, Clay Collard, who dropped Guajardo early and then got up off the canvas after Guajardo scored rallied back and scored a knockdown of his own, and finished off the Alamo City native. It has been a tumultuous, two years for Tito, but all that is behind him now and the hard-hitting southpaw looks to pick back up on what was a once incredibly-promising career. 

Amateur stand-out and Donna native"X Man" Xavier Bocanegra looks to continue his success and just as the fellow Rio Grand valley natives Omar and Brandon Figueroa put their town of Weslaco on the map, Xavier and his little brother amateur stand-out, Ranulfo, look to make Donna, Texas, world-famous for producing world champion brothers. Xavier caught the eye of famed trainer Ronnie Shields, owner of the Plex Gym in Houston. After a sparring session that Bocanegra was highly impressive. Shields started working with the elder Bocanegra son and turned him pro. The Donna native made his pro debut a successful one scoring a unanimous decision victory, winning all four rounds on all three cards back in April on the undercard of Lubin-Fundora in Las Vegas. 

A Special Night of Specia Talent in San Antonio

Saturday night at the brand new state-of-the-art, Tech Port Arena in San Antonio was a special night, to say the least. WBC Bam Rodriguez acknowledged this the next day on social media, saying it was a special night. The crowd was electric, and they knew they weren't just watching good fighters. They were watching generational talent, the future of Texas boxing, and the future of the sport.  It wasn't just Rodriguez, who was absolutely flawless and electric in stopping Sor Rungvisai over eight, absolutely one-sided rounds, even though he was. In the opening bout of the night 17-year-old, 14x-time, US national champ and international champion "Panterita" Jesus Martinez of Del Rio. The highly touted blue-chip prospect put on another strong performance. 

The teenager has a beyond his years, type of ring IQ and patience in the ring, and that is matched by his humble, low-key personality outside the ring. After scoring a knockdown in the first round of his pro-debut Panterita stayed calm and patient, and didn't sell-put or bum rush his wounded opponent. He stayed calm and outboxed his out-matched opponent, and took the UD victory. In his second pro fight, he was well in control. When a glancing blow brushed off his shoulder in the third round an off-balanced and slipping Martinez ended up on the canvas. On what appeared to be a slip but was ruled a knockdown. The 17-year-old got to his feet and brushed it off. he went to his corner and was told to stay calm, shake it off, and reminded him he was very much in control of the fight. He did just that and finished the fourth round like he started the first two working behind a jab and a stiff right hand and wobbling his opponent with a crisp left hook to pick up his second decision victory in two weeks.

Martinez's talent is noticed by some of the biggest and best in the boxing world. Given his immense talent and beyond-his-years- maturity, it's not really a question of if he gets to a world title. It's when and how many. The 118-pounder is already really big for his weight class and carries quite a bit of power. He scored posterizing knockouts in the amateurs. What weight does he grow into? 126, 130, maybe 135? It stands to reason he can win titles all the way up through those weight classes. He has the right team behind him. He is managed by two former world champions in Darren Barker, who held the IBF middleweight title, and Hall of Famer Joe Calzaghe who held titles at 168 pounds for a decade and was the lineal Ring Magazine champ at 175. He is trained by the best stable at the RBGA he is working and growing under the tutelage of Robert Garcia. Where he trains alongside a pair of world champions in Bam and Josh Franco, each of the two speaks very highly of Panterita. Mentioning just how good he looks in the gym. After his pro debut, President of Matchroom Boxing Eddie Hearn took to social media to see where the 17-year-old would be allowed to fight. Hearn got him immediately back in the ring in Texas, just two weeks after his successful pro debut. The Del Rio phenome will likely be back in the ring in August in Mexico on his next stop to potentially like his stable mate, becoming the youngest world champion in the sport. 

Bam Scores Spectacular TKO in Tech Port Arena

Choclatito couldn't do it, Estrada couldn't do it, Cuadras couldn't do it, but Bam certainly could. The 22-year-old, Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez, of San Antonio became the first man to stop future first ballot hall of famer Sisaket Sor Rungvisai, and he did so not only in spectacular fashion but in front of a sold-out crowd in his hometown. Bam started the offense with a beautifully well-placed jab and sliding out of the way seamlessly making Rungvisai miss wildly. Showing off dazdazzling to close out the opening stanza. The hand and foot the speed was vastly different as Rodriguez was able to land with picture perfect hooks and avoid the heavy artilary in return from his That counterpart.

By the fourth round it appeared to already be decided with the only question being can Runvisai survive Bam for 12 rounds? Rodriduez continued putting the laer-like left behind the south paw jab and Rungvisai was a sitting duck. Adding in an amazing display of foot work consistently put the San Antonian in position to score over and over again with the straight left hand, right hook two-piece late in the fifth that badly hurt the Thai opponent. Another perfectly placed left hand in the seventh put Rungvisai down less than a minute into the round. A vicious rally and combination in the 8th round sealed the deal and gave Rodriguez the sensational knockout! Moving his record to 16-0 (11) and making him the front runner for Fighter of the Year.

Also on the card was rising prospect "Panterita" Jesus Martinez of Del Rio got to work right away. After sizing up his opponent, Keven Monroy, with the jab Panterita landed his first thunderous shot at about the midway point of the opening round. Scoring with a sweeping right hand that rocked Monroy. Just moments later a patient Martinez snapped his mans head back with a shotgun jab. A lead right hand and then a follow-up counter left hook put Monroy on very shaky leagues late in the second round. After surviving a scare in the third round, which saw Martinez on the canvas after a punch grazed off his shoulder and Panterita alipped to the canvas, it was ruled a knockdown, however. Panterita again stepped on the gas and regained control of the fight. The teenager closed the show in the final stanza like a rugged veteran. He rocked his man with solid right hands. However, Monroy embodied the true warrior spirit and fought valiantly surviving to the last round. Panterita moved his record to 2-0 picking up his second decision. Manager and former world champion Darren Barker gave Panterita a "7 out of 10. I am happy but there are things he could have done better" he said. The plan is to continue to keep the young fighter active and Barker suggested they could be back at it as soon as August.

Rick Medina Jr came up short in a points loss in a competitive fight with Raymond Ford.

The Future of Texas Boxing On Stage at Tech Port Arena

The Lone Star State has emerged as one of the premier hotspots for boxing anywhere in the world. It is producing world champions and blue-chip prospects at breakneck speeds. Much of that talent will be on display Saturday the 25th in San Antonio at the Tech Port Arena. In the main event, WBC Super Flyweight champ Jesse "Bam" Rodriguez will step in the ring and make his inaugural title defense against legendary former champ and future first ballot hall of Famer Srisaket Sor Rungvisai. Rodriguez could have chosen any number of opponents, much less deserving and accomplished than Sor Rungvisai. However Rodriguez wanted the challenge and wanted to fight the legendary Thai fighter. Rodriguez, who is the youngest champ in the sport, and the first-ever world champion born in the 2000s, is no stranger to a challenge. He won his world title by beating another future hall of Famer on six days' notice and moving up two weight classes in what was perhaps the performance of the year. Rodriguez has emerged from being the hardcore fight fans darling, the fighter that every hardcore fan thought might be special, to the talk of the boxing world and the future of the smaller weight classes in a very short period of time. The 22-year-old now begins his title reign and pound-for-pound run.

Also on the card is 21-year-old San Antonian "El Castigo" Rick Medina, who will put his perfect 13-0 record on the line against fellow unbeaten featherweight prospect Raymond Ford. In what is a massive step-up fight for the unbeaten San Antonian. Recently a picture of Bam Rodriguez, Josh Franco, Mario Barrios, and Rick Medina posed together when they were children went viral. The other three in the now-famous picture have all captured world titles. It is now Medina's turn, and he can take a massive step toward that goal by defeating Ford in the battle of unbeaten featherweights. Ford is Ranked #6 by the WBA at 126-pounds and in the top 15 by the IBF. If "El Castigo" picks up the "W" he will likely replace Ford in those rankings and propel himself into the world title picture at just 21 years old.

Del Rio Native, 14x national champ, and unbeaten Bantamweight prospect "Panterita '' Jesus Martinez returns to the ring just two weeks after making his pro debut in Mexico. Panterita made his debut a successful one. Taking a brilliant four-round unanimous decision against Daniel Nunez Gomes of Mexico. The hard-hitting south Texan wowed the boxing world with his sensational professional debut and was added to the San Antonio card by popular demand. The boxing world wanted to see Panterita again, given his sensational performance in Mexico, and they will get that chance just a few hours from the fighter's hometown. He will battle with Keven Monroy 1-2 (1), and hails from California. Given Martinez continues to look impressive, it is believed he will be moved along quickly to a world title opportunity. 

Spence and Crawford in Advanced Talks for Undisputed Showdown

The welterweight division is the most star-studded division and the two biggest stars in the division who happened to hold all four major world titles are in advanced talks and it does appear the fight may finally happen.  AFight between WBA/WBC/IBF Welterweight Champ Errol Spence Jr of DeSoto and WBO champ Terence Crawford has been on the top of fight fans' wish list since Crawford moved up to welterweight in 2018 and captured the WBO belt by stopping Jeff Horn.

For years the excuse of the two being on upside sides of the street was used, Spence is with PBC, and Crawford was with Top Rank, and fighting the fighters in their own stable, is typically easier to make and more profitable for the promoters. Crawford is now a promotional free agent. The fight appears to be on the verge of finally getting done. The winner will be the first undisputed welterweight champion in the four-belt era.

Crawford spoke during a DAZN interview saying "Hopefully (the Spence fight gets made), that’s the plan, for us to get the job done on the business side and to be able to share the ring and put on a great performance for each and every one of you guys who want to see us share the ring together...I think the time right now is the best time because it’s for all the marbles. You got Errol Spence got three of the titles, I got one, it would be for undisputed. There wouldn’t be no other champion in the division and I feel like this is the biggest moment for us to fight."

Edward Vazquez Retuns to Ring on July 9 in Philadelphia

Edward "Kid" Vazquez of Fort Worth, fresh off of what should be a career-defining victory, will return to the ring in about four weeks in the great fighting city of Philadelphia. On July 9th, the weekend following Independence Day, Vazquez will headline a card at the world-famous 2300 Arena in the city of brotherly love. Vazquez last fought in February against fellow unbeaten featherweight prospect Raymond Ford at the Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Vazquez dominated the action and was able to slip on the inside and out work, out hustle, and outland his overmatched opponent and dominated most of the 10-round affair. Two of the three judges did the unthinkable and scored the fight for Ford. Ford's promoter Eddie Hearn didn't think he won either and said in the post-fight press conference, " I have to be honest with his fighter"  At press row, there wasn't a single member of the press that scored the fight for Ford. The decision is the leader in the clubhouse for "Robbery of the Year" 

However, Vazquez will shake off the egregious decision and look to get back in the official win column in Philadelphia. While the Fort Worthian did press hard for a rematch with Ford. Ford and his team opted to take on another unbeaten Texas Prospect instead in "El Castigo" Rick Medina of San Antonio. Vazquez will go in another direction and continue his journey to a world title. Given his performance against Ford, which everyone thinks he didn't only win but dominated from start to finish, in addition, to his other notable wins over Irving Gonzalez, and Adan Ochoa, another solid performance should have Vazquez who has an 11-1 (3) record in the world title conversation at126-pounds. No opponent has been confirmed for Vazquez at the time of publication. 

Edward Vazquez Return on July 9th in Philadelphia

Edward "Kid" Vazquez of Fort Worth, fresh off of what should be a career-defining victory, will return to the ring in about four weeks in the great fighting city of Philadelphia. On July 9th, the weekend following Independence Day, Vazquez will headline a card at the world-famous 2300 Arena in the city of brotherly love. Vazquez last fought in February against fellow unbeaten featherweight prospect Raymond Ford at the Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Vazquez dominated the action and was able to slip on the inside and out work, out hustle, and outland his overmatched opponent and dominated most of the 10-round affair. Two of the three judges did the unthinkable and scored the fight for Ford. Ford's promoter Eddie Hearn didn't think he won either and said in the post-fight press conference, " I have to be honest with his fighter"  At press row, there wasn't a single member of the press that scored the fight for Ford. The decision is the leader in the clubhouse for "Robbery of the Year" 

However, Vazquez will shake off the egregious decision and look to get back in the official win column in Philadelphia. While the Fort Worthian did press hard for a rematch with Ford. Ford and his team opted to take on another unbeaten Texas Prospect instead in "El Castigo" Rick Medina of San Antonio. Vazquez will go in another direction and continue his journey to a world title. Given his performance against Ford, which everyone thinks he didn't only win but dominated from start to finish, in addition, to his other notable wins over Irving Gonzalez, and Adan Ochoa, another solid performance should have Vazquez who has an 11-1 (3) record in the world title conversation at126-pounds. No opponent has been confirmed for Vazquez at the time of publication. 

Avanesyan out as Vergil Ortiz's opponent. McKinson might be back in!

Vergil Ortiz vs Michael McKinson was on then it was off and now maybe it could be back on.  Ortiz was supposed to fight David Avanesyan on August 6th, but now that fight looks to be off and McKinson may be back in.  Ortiz’s manager, Rick Mirigian, explained that David Avanesyan never sent the contract back after agreeing to terms. Saying “Golden Boy did everything they wanted, accommodated their every crazy need they asked for, and Vergil even kicked in some money to help make the fight. They agreed to the deal and then never would send the actual contract back.” and that Michael McKinson 22-0 (2 KO) will likely step in. The 28-year-old British southpaw was meant to fight Ortiz (18-0, 18 KO) on Mar. 19 in Los Angeles, but the fight was scrapped when Ortiz was diagnosed with rhymbosis. McKinson remained on the card and defeated Alex Martin via a lackluster decision.

 Ortiz has not fought since August of last year when he destroyed former world title challenger Egidijus Kavaliauskas in eight rounds and dropped him a grand title of five times. Avanesyan was viewed as a decent opponent but a step back from  Kavaliauskas, who stopped Avanesyan in six rounds back in 2018. However, he was still viewed as far more of a threat to the 18-0 Texan than McKinson, who despite being undefeated and sporting a 22-0 record is thought to be tailor made and does not nearly have the resume to make people think he can stand up to Ortiz. However, McKinson's promoter, Eddie Heard, was quite confident that his fighter could do quite well, due to his unorthodox style.

The fight is still scheduled for August 9th and was thought to be held at the Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, however, that is not confirmed.  Ortiz fought at that venue back in 2021 when he stopped Maurice Hooker in for seven rounds, in an all-DFW shootout. The fight drew a fairly large and intense crowd. It would make sense to put the fight back at the Dickie's Arena. However, that has not been confirmed. Ortiz is currently ranked #1 by the WBO

Texas Boxing Hall Of Fame Announced

The Lone Star State is the hotbed for boxing and is home to many of the premier fighters in the world today, such as Errol Spence, Vergil Ortiz, Bam Rodriguez the Charlo, and Figueroa brothers, and countless others. It also has an extremely rich history and is home to Jack Johnson, George Foreman, Orlando Canizales, Donald Curry, and countless others. It will now have a home to honor these legends of the ring. It was announced earlier in the week, by longtime Texas Boxing figure, Lester Bedford, that the Texas Boxing Hall of Fame is now a reality. Bedford, who will serve as President of the organization, has been front and center. He’ll be teaming up with Houston businessman, George Foreman, Jr. to organize and guide the future of the Texas Boxing Hall of Fame.

“Finally, we will have a platform to honor and preserve Texas Boxing’s rich heritage and to chronicle the achievements of those who excelled and contributed to the sport,” Bradford said. Foreman Jr added “I am honored to be working with such an incredible team of people who take the sport of boxing so seriously. Our goal is to bring international attention to the achievements of these great boxing icons, trainers, promoters, and executives with the hope to inspire a new generation to carry on their legacy.” said George Foreman Jr.

The Hall of Fame will be the Texas Boxing Hall of Fame is targeting October 2022. The mission of the Texas Boxing Hall of Fame is to serve as the best historical showplace and repository to celebrate boxers, trainers, promoters, commentators, and those in the Boxing industry who have significantly contributed. The Texas Boxing Hall of Fame will impact communities through broad outreach, such as nationally televised events, an in-depth website, educational and youth programs, social media, and special events held in Texas and is expected to open up by October of this year.

Jesus "Panterita" Martinez Impresses in Pro Debut

The small border town of Del Rio, population 35,000, is home to one of if not the brightest prospect in boxing. Jesus "Panterita" Martinez compiled a 137-9 amateur record and captured 13 national titles and an international crown as well. He is now 1-0 as a professional after putting on a sensational performance and capturing a unanimous decision in his pro debut this past Friday in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Panterita, called it a dream come true to be able to work with his manager Joe Calzaghe, a two-division world champ who compiled a 46-0 (32) record and was one of Pantierita's all-time favorite fighters. After seeing the south Texan's incredible performance. It's fair to say Panterita is a dream come true for Calzaghe as well. The former world champ teamed up with a fellow world title holder Darren Barker to form International Sports Group, and The 17-year-old from Del Rio is the prized jewel. The Texan was known in the amateurs for his tremendous punching power. In his pro debut, he showed tremendous power. Additionally, he displayed poise and ring generalship. After hurting his opponent, Daniel Nunez Gomez, early in the first round. He stayed on top of his wounded opponent and scored with another right and then another that dropped Nunez Gomez. Pantierita was able to hurt his overmatched opponent every time he landed the right hand. However, the determined Nunez Gomez was able to make it through the first round.

Martinez, who came out aggressively in the opening stanza, didn't get overly excited and settled down and controlled the remainder of the bout. Working behind an educated jab and mixing up levels, Martinez showed a bit of everything. Landing left hooks that stunned Nunez Gomez and mixed in body shots that wore his opponent down. He set up his punches perfectly and would sneak in right hands that would snap back the head of his opponent. Nunez Gomez, an MMA fighter, showed rugged determination in making it to the final bell. However, the decision was academic as Martinez secured a unanimous decision in his first pro fight by scores of 40-35 X2 and 40-36

Weslaco's Omar Figueroa Set To Return Against Broner

The Rio Grande Valley's own "Panterita" Omar Figueroa is set to return to the ring in a big way. The now 32-year-old south Texan is the older brother of Brandon Figueroa, and held the WBC lightweight world title from 2013 to 2014 and will now face off with former four-division world champion Adrien Broner on July 23rd. Reportedly, but not officially, in Chicago. Broner is one of the sport's most polarizing figures, having his share of troubles in and outside the ring. Broner last fought in February of 2021. He scored a lackluster UD over Jovanie Santiago. In a fight, most thought he was lucky to get the decision. Broner is just 4-3-1 (2) in his last eight fights.

The two were originally scheduled to fight in 2018 in a welterweight title eliminator. However, legal issues and a Figueroa shoulder injury sidelined the bout. Broner ended up fighting Jessie Vargas at the Barclays Center and settled for a draw. While Figueroa was out of action for another year and did not return to the ring until February of 2019 when he scored a unanimous decision in an extremely entertaining fight with John Molina moving his record to 28-0-1 (19). He has since suffered two consecutive setbacks and has not looked himself in dropping a lopsided decision to Yordenis Ugas and then being stopped by Abel Ramos last May.

Panterita was a fan favorite who rose to success and fame due to his all-action style. If he can rejuvenate his career and replicate the relentless aggression that made him famous he has the right style to beat and overwhelm Broner, who is very selective and at times reluctant to let his hands go. Figueroa expressed gratitude for the fight, taking to Twitter to say "First off, I want to thank Al Haymon for not giving up on me. I know I haven't been the best version of myself, but, that's because I was fighting against an invisible opponent! I hope Adrien has gotten his #MentalHealth in order because..."

The bout will air on Fox, so the fight will not only end a long layoff for each fighter it will also end the long layoff for PBC on Fox.

Jairo Castaneda Scores Impressive UD victory, Picks up ABO strap

On what was a star-studded crowd at the Hangar 9 in San Antonio that featured a room full of world champions, including Marco Antonio Barrera, Austin Trout, and John Michael Johnson. The "Takeover" has begun. The first boxing card by Pound For Pound promotions and Luey Villareal was a ringing success. In the main event, "El Increible" Jairo Castaneda of San Antonio, made it a Texas Two-step for the Castaneda brothers. Younger brother Kendo scored a knockout of the year type knockout last week in Florida, and big brother Jairo scored a dominant 6-round unanimous decision victory over Leonardo Esquivel Carrizales of Brownsville to capture ABO welterweight strap. Castaneda struck first with a picture-perfect left hook around the midpoint of the opening round that caught the attention of Carrizales, "El incredible'  followed up with a left hook downstairs just moments later. The older Castaneda brother stayed aggressive and was heavy on the front foot forcing his opponent backward. Then staggering him with straight right hands was taking their effect as he began to look sluggish. By round three, the Rio Grande Valley native appeared sluggish and was wearing down. Castaneda stayed on the gas, firing off am educated jab and putting thudding right hands behind it, not letting up or slowing down for the remainder of the six-rounder on his way to taking a hard-earned but clear-cut decision by scores of 60-65 and 59-55 X2. It marked the fourth consecutive win for Castaneda, who improved his record to 14-2 (5).  He took nearly three years off following a loss to Reshard Hicks in late 2018. 

In the co-main "Jersey Boy" Glen Tapia, originally from New Jersey and now trains in San Antonio, returned to the ring for the first time since August of 2021 and for just the second time since 2017. In what was an incredibly entertaining five and half minutes of action. Tapia emerged victorious, picking up his second consecutive win in his comeback and moved his record to 25-5 (17).  After an action-packed first round, which saw each fighter throw and land plenty of heavy artillery. The Jersey Boy figured out his opponent, Tyrone Sanders, knockout artist. Tapia rocked the Houstonian with a right hand to start the second, and the onslaught that continued as Tapia stayed on his durable opponent and unleashed a whirlwind of power shots that rocked Sanders and ultimately left him defenseless, causing the referee to call a halt to the bout at the 2:27 mark of the second round.

A loaded undercard also featured highly talented flyweight/super-flyweight prospect Jaime Jasso, Of Laredo, who looked spectacular in his first fight with new head trainer Luey Villarreal. Jasso showed off lightning-quick combinations and put his punches together in spectacular fashion. Jasso landed with precision-like power shots to the head and body that finally put the outmatched Austin Rivas away in the second round. The young Gateway City native ended his two-fight skid in spectacular fashion moving his record to 3-2 (1) and winning his first fight with his new trainer at his new weight of 115. Jasso said he can move down further & can easily make 112 also.

14x national champ Melissa "La Joya'' Holguin, Of San Antonio made her highly anticipated professional debut. After having multiple flights canceled due to opponents opting to pull out instead of fighting the 14x national champion. La Joya boxed beautifully, mixing up head and body shots. After someone of a sloppy start, perhaps due to the nerves of making her pro debut. Holguin got cooking in the second round, hurting her opponent, Kim Colbert of Dallas, to the body several times and ripping beautiful hooks and uppercuts on the inside. Holguinn hurt Colbert several times and appeared to have a chance to get the stoppage late in the third round when she froze her with a left hand to the body and followed up with a barrage of shots on the inside. Colbert was to endure till the final round as the San Antonian won every round on every card in the one-sided beatdown taking her pro debut via unanimous decision by scores of 40-36 x3.

If you have not heard of Carrizo Springs, you are about to. Amateur superstar Carrizo Springs native Juan Garcia also made his much anticipated professional debut and scored a sensational third-round knockout of Michael Land of Dallas to move his record to 1-0 (1). Post-fight super bantamweight prospect "Goyo" Gregory Morales said of Garcia, "He's a monster. He is going to be really good. We were on the Mexican national team together." 

In what was the fight of the night. San Antonios own Trenton Gibson and Vincente Loredo provided violent entertainment for the fans, and for the second time in five months Gibson proved too much Loredo, scoring four total knockdowns on his way to picking up a third-round TKO to move his record to 2-1(1). After seizing control of the fight in the first round with a flash knockdown of Loredo. The two traded heavy artillery in the second, and Loredo momentarily took control of the fight. Hurting Gibson with a right hand and then dropping him. Gibson cleared his head, got to his feet, and scored another knockdown of Loredo, this time with a straight right hand to regain the momentum. He scored two more knockdowns in the third as the referee waved off the bout and secured the victory for Gibson.