Barrios to Meet Up with Ugas on Canelo-Charlo Card in Las Vegas

San Antonio's fourth-ever world champion, former WBA 140-Pound title holder Mario "El Azteca" Barrios, will officially meet up with former WBA 147-pound world title holder Yordenis Ugas. The fight will be a part of the Jermell Charlo, Houston, 35-1-1(19) VS Canelo Alvarez 59-2-2 (39) on September 30th at the T-Mobile in Las Vegas.

It's a crossroads fight for each man for the WBC interim title. It's an absolute win for each of the two combatants. Barrios suffered his first two losses consecutively to two future Hall of Famers in 2021 and 2022 to, Tank Davis and then Keith Thurman. Barrios bounced backed earlier this year with an eight-round demolition of Jovanie Santiago at the Alamodome. Barrios will look to pull the Texas two-step on Ugas, who lost his WBA world title to Errol Spence of DeSoto, Texas, at AT&T Stadium in April of 2022 via 10th-round TKO.

Ugas rejuvenated his career at 147 after suffering consecutive losses in 2014 at 140 pounds. Ugas went on a tear that started in 2016 and culminated with a world title-winning performance with a win over Abel Ramos in 2020 and then beating the legendary Manny Pacquiao into retirement in 2021. At 37 years old and coming off a 16-month layoff from the brutal loss to Spence, Ugas needs a win over a young warrior like Barrios to show he still belongs in the world title picture. "El Azteca" is 1-1 (1) as a welterweight and needs a win over an elite world-class fighter like Ugas, which will propel him into a world title fight with Terence Crawford.

In April, Bam Rodriguez became the first ever Alamo City native to become a two-division world champion when he outclassed Christian Gonzalez to capture the WBO Flyweight title. Barrios will put himself in a position to challenge for the WBC welterweight title and join his friend Bam as San Antonio's only two-division world champions.

Castaneda and Juarez Score KO's on Night of Mixed Results for Laredo Fighters

Photo Credit: Cristian Rios Photography

It's been four years since Jorge Castaneda last fought in his home city of Laredo, and the now 26-year-old was eager to put a show on for his hometown fans, and he did exactly that. After somewhat of a slow start, Castaneda got cooking and sealed the deal with a thudding one-punch knockout that put Rio Grande Valley native Nestor Medellin out cold. In what was a highly competitive fight early, it ended abruptly. The early rounds saw Castaneda jabbing and boxing beautifully but may have given some rounds away by letting Medellin back him against the ropes and unleash power shots and outwork him on the inside. Castaneda got going in the third Castaneda began circling and firing off his jab. The pin-point jab set up a left hook that scored on Medellin's body and took some steam out. Medellin answered back immediately with a hook to the Gateway City native's head that slowed Castaneda down. When the Laredo native jabbed and circled, he had success the RGV native found his success on the inside, where he could score his hooks and uppercuts. However, the body attack from Castaneda was persistent. The scrap was very competitive but saw Castaneda start to pull ahead in the second half of the scheduled eight-rounder. In the eighth perhaps Medellin saw the fight slipping away on the cards, and he valiantly slammed on the gas, bringing the fight to Castaneda. He scored with a left hook early sending the hometown fighter reeling into the ropes. However, Castaneda slid off the ropes and got back behind his jab. Medellin worked his way back on the inside, and the two exchanged power shots in the close range. However, his punches no longer had the same steam, and with just under a minute to go in the fight, Castaneda unleashed the right hand from hell! A perfectly placed uppercut that about took his opponets to head off and put him on the canvas and out as the referee immediately waved the bout off without a count. Castaneda moved his record to 15-2 (11).

It was the first fight for Castaneda with his new trainer Marcos Caballero who is the trainer of legendary four-division future hall of famer Roman "Chocolatito" Gonzalez. Caballero was highly impressed with Castaneda, who he has worked with for just over a month "We made a lot of improvements, and he listens well." Caballero said.

"El Mago" Josh Juarez started his career and had the bulk of his success in the light heavyweight division. He tried his hand last year as a smaller heavyweight and scored a first-round knockout. Juarez Saturday night as a 241-pound heavyweight and gave forth a dominating performance. He possessed the same hand speed and skills that he sported as a light heavy. He rocked Leopoldo Reyna with a right hand around the midway point of the first round showing his power carried up through the division. He got back behind his jab and was landing it with accuracy. He was able to consistently make Reyna miss and tag him with a counter shot when he did. Another left hook came in and rocked Reyna again just moments later. He scoffed with another right hand just before the bell to end the opening round. The second picked up exactly where the first left off, with Juarez in complete control. The Laredo native walked his man down with his jab and landed clean right hands. A barrage of right hands put the overwhelmed opponent down a minute into the second. Juarez stayed patient, and another right hand rocked Reyna as the two exchanged some words. Clearly, on wobbled legs, Reyna was eating one big shot after another, and his corner came in and called a halt to the bout. The stoppage gave Juarez his 11th win and 6th stoppage in 11 pro bouts. The goal for Juarez is to stay busy and be back in the ring before the end of 2023. The 26-year-old showed the speed, power, and skill set that can take him far in the heavyweight division.

Other Laredo fan favorites had their comebacks stalled out. Hector "Baby Hurricane" Ferreyro Jr suffered the first loss of his young and promising career. The son of the former heavyweight belt holder was caught with a right hand early from Jesus Gomez, and he never fully recovered from it. He found himself on the canvas and was able to beat the count, but Gomez slammed on the gas and landed a barrage of power shots that put the Laredo native out cold. Ferreyro dropped to 6-1 (3), and Ferreryo was 2-0 with two first-round knockouts after a three-year layoff from March 2020 to March 2023.

Leopoldo Martinez returned to the ring for the first time since back-to-back losses to Kingsville native Oscar Cantu and fellow Gateway City native Jaime Jasso in 2020. The three-and-a-half-year layoff proved to be too much for Martinez as he was knocked out in the first round by Jose Casiano of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico

Also on the card was Laredo native Mario Ramirez, who made his pro debut a successful one scoring a dominant one-sided point victory over Alex Ramirez, also of Laredo, who was also making his pro debut. Mario dominated the fight with a pin-point accurate jab and a thudding left hook and won the four-round jr middleweight affair by scores of 40-36 x2 and 39-37 to move his record to 1-0 (0).

Dominique Griffin Looks to Continue Hot Streak in New Jersey

Photo Credit: David Algranati / The Fight Photos

Photo Credit: David Algranati / The Fight Photos

Irving Texas native "Dynamite" Dominique Griffin, 5-3-2 (2), is back in the ring on Saturday, August 19th, on perhaps the biggest stage of his career. He will battle New Jersey native and fan favorite John Leonardo at the Sportika in Manalapan, New Jersey. The 35-year-old Griffin is coming off the two biggest performances of his career. The Texan scored a majority decision victory over Carlos Vanegas Nunez of Port Chester NY at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Connecticut, on a card that featured former world title challengers Tremaine Williams and Chordale Booker. Prior to that, he scored a disputed draw with "Biggie '' Robert Rodriguez of San Antonio on the undercard of Hector Tanajara's return fight. A fight in Rodriguez's native San Antonio at the Tech Port Arena in a fight nearly all observers thought the Irving native deserved the decision. Rodriguez was featured on ESPN several times and scored sensational first and second-round KO's of Adrias Servin and Abel Soriano.

Another win over a respected fighter in his own backyard put Griffin in a great position to get a big-money fight and makes him a contender in the 122-pound division. Dynamite would likely have to go in as a B-side but the disputed draw with Rodriguez followed up by two wins over two respected prospects in their backyards make Griffin a legitimate road dog who can be used to fight any of the top young 122-pounders on the way up.

Griffin was born and raised in West Texas in San Angelo and turned professional back in 2018. He was unbeaten in his first five professional bouts, compiling a record of 4-0-1 (1), before losing three fights in a row to three undefeated prospects losing all three on points before the current two-fight hot streak.

Michael Angeletti Shines on Showtime Card.

photo credit: David Algranati/The Fight Photos

The 118-pound division is wide open. With Naoya Inoue having moved up to 122 and vacating all the belts, there is no longer a dominant force in the division. That was until now 27-year-old Spring, Texas Bantamweight Michael Angeletti, 9-0 (7), has settled in at 118 and has put the entire division on notice with his performance Saturday night at the MGM National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland. In a battle of unbeaten up-and-comers. The Texan absolutely took apart and punished Jonathan Lopez to move his record to 9-0 (7),

After a somewhat quiet and tit-for-tat first round. Angeletti got cooking in the second and never slowed down. Angeletti found the range in the second and scored with laser-like right hands that did not miss. Keeping the fight at his preferred range, the Texan started letting his hands go and landing consistently. Lopez was hurt for the first time in the fourth round via a left hook and again in the sixth with a pair of right hands that had Lopez wobbled. The Texans scored with a ferocious uppercut in the seventh, and with just over 30 seconds left, he rocked Lopez with yet another left uppercut. Angeletti, having scored an 8th-round KO in his last outing, went for it again. He nailed Lopez with a right hand to the body that forced him backward with just over a minute remaining in the fight but the determined Lopez held up and ran out the clock. The decision was clear as Angeletti rolled to the lopsided UD by a score of 80-72, 79-73 X2.

Angeletti closed out 2022 with a win over the unbeaten Jeremy Adorno, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn and then picked up an impressive win over Michell Banquez on the undercard of Rolly Romero-Ismael Barroso. The win on Saturday night showcased the complete skill set plus the power of Angeletti, and a high-level ring IQ. The win established the Spring, Texas, resident as a legitimate world title challenger and should put him in a position where he can be fighting for a world title in the wide-open division in the next 12 months.

Omar Juarez Likely to Return on September 30th Canelo-Charlo Undercard.

Omar "El Relampago" Juarez, 14-2 (5), of Brownsville, will likely return on the September 30th, Canelo-Charlo card at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Juarez is coming off a tough-luck decision loss to former two-division world champion Rances Barthelemy. A hotly contested and debated majority decision loss that nearly all observers felt Juarez had won. Unfortunately, for the Brownsville native, the official judges did not concur. 

According to Juarez's team, they have been contacted and are expecting to fight on the card. Juarez's father Rudy said, "He's leaving for camp on Monday." Currently, no opponent has been announced. A motivational speaker, Juarez was not down for long from the controversial defeat and will look to get back in the win column just four months after the loss, and on arguably the biggest card of the year. The 24-year-old South Texan has two blemishes on his resume, each one is highly contentious. Juarez suffered a highly controversial loss to All Rivera in the Summer of 2021 in a fight again, nearly all observers thought “El Relampago” deserved the nod.

Juarez will begin his camp in San Antonio and then move to Las Vegas to close out camp. In the early stages of his career, Juarez did his camps in the San Antonio Gym South Park Boxing Academy, his home away from home. The Brownsville native has since done his full camps in Las Vegas. Since he will be in the Alamo City, Juarez will be available to help out with his younger brother, and a USA Boxing National Champion, Sebastian "Treuno'' Juarez, 1-0 (1), who will be fighting in San Antonio at the Shrine Auditorium. The younger Juarez made his successful professional debut on August 4th and scored a second-round knockout in Matamoros, Mexico.

Bam Rodriguez and Sunny Edwards Get Official Date and Location

Finally, WBO Flyweight Champ and San Antonio's favorite son Bam Rodriguez and IBF champ Sunny Edwards of Surrey, UK, have an official date and location. Eddie Hearn, as well as Rodriguez, have both confirmed that the fight was going to happen in the fourth quarter and on the West Coast. However, no date or location was official. Until now! The two will officially unify their Flyweight straps on December 16th at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona. In the same state, Rodriguez had his star-making performance when he dominated future hall of famer the legendary Carlos Cuadras to capture his first world title, the WBC Super flyweight crown, in February 2022.

Promoter Eddie Hearn noted that "fighting in San Antonio wouldn't be unfair to Edwards" and added, "We've done well in Arizona before."

Rodriguez, 18-0 (11), is a two-division world champion, the first ever from Alamo City, to accomplish the feat. He captured his 112-pound world title when he outpointed Cristian Gonzalez back in April at the Tech Port Arena in San Antonio. He suffered a broken jaw in his otherwise one-sided victory and was expected to be out before the end of the year. However, according to Rodriguez, his recovery went well, and he was "feeling good."

Edwards, 20-0 (4), won his version of the flyweight title back in April of 2021 with perhaps the best performance in his career, a one-sided beatdown of Moruti Mthalane. He has defended his belt four times since then, including a win over Felix Alvarado, and most recently, he defeated Andres Campos in June in a tougher-than-expected contest.

Ramon Cardenas Returns to San Antonio For Showtime Main Event

27-year-Old "Dinamita" Ramon Cardenas returns to the ring in his hometown of San Antonio, Texas. The 22-1 (11) Super Bantamweight will battle undefeated Panamanian prospect Rafael Pedroza, 15-0 (11), in the 10-round main event at the Boeing Center at Tech Port and will air live on Showtime on Friday, September 15th. It will air as part of Showtime's legendary SHOBOX series. The series has produced over 75 world champions, and the winner of this bout will definitely be in short order for that.

Cardenas has fought in his hometown in his last two fights, he went 2-0 with 1KO. That KO came in his most recent fight when he stopped veteran Rodrigo Guerrero in the second round at the Smoke Bar on May 26th. Before that, he outpointed Michell Banquez over 10-rounds at the Alamodome last July on the undercard of Rey Vargas's win over Mark Magsayo. This was the first time he fought in San Antonio since late 2018 when he outpointed fellow Alamo City native Ramsey Luna in late 2018. Cardenas captured the vacant NABA super bantamweight belt in 2021, by outpointing Angel Antonio Contreras before dropping down to the 118-pound division in 2022.

His opponent, the 26-year-old Pedroza, is coming off the best win of his blossoming career. He outpointed Venezuelan KO Artist Yerny Betancourt over 10-rounds for the WBC FECARBOX Super Bantamweight strap in May. His other win of note is an 8-round points decision victory over Hugo Berrio in January.

Several high-profile South Texans win professional debuts in Matamoros, Mexico on Friday night.

Opening the show was 17-year-old phenom Ricky Nunez of San Antonio, the son of world Class trainer Rick Nunez who has worked the corner of Omar Juarez and Mario Barrios. Nunez made his debut at 138 and will likely settle in at the lightweight limit of 135, showing off his tremendous power. Just seconds into the fight, Nunez scored with a straight right hand followed by a body shot that hurt his outmatched opponent. Another right hand put Pedro A La Torre on the canvas for the first time just 25 seconds into the fight. La Torre got to his feet, and Nunez got back to work, ripping another violent left hook that put his opponent back on the mat, and this time for good! The youngster from San Antonio made his pro debut, a successful one, just seconds into the opening round, making him 1-0 (1). Nunez is expected back in the ring on August 26th in his hometown.

Next up was Rio Grande Valley native and hard-hitting welterweight Moses Garcia, who patiently stalked Alejandro Espinoza with a stiff jab and backed him up. Garcia did a good job of maintaining the distance he wanted to. He scored with a straight right, followed by a left hook 30 seconds into the contest. The RGV native stayed heavy on the front foot and scored with laser-like right hands. He continued to score with right hands and snuck in some body shots, and it was clear that Espinoza was in way over his head. Just before the end of the first round, Garcia scored with another body shot that backed his man up into the ropes and left him clearly wounded as Garcia began to unleash clean, thudding power shots that were landing at will. Espinoza was unable to answer the bell for the second round, and the bout was waved off. Garcia picked up his first win and first stoppage in his pro debut.

We also got the Pro debut of US National Champion David Crdenas of San Antonio. The highly skilled little man looked a bit like fellow Alamo City little man Bam Rodriguez. Cardenas dazzled his opponent, Jonathan Zamora, with sensational footwork. He started off smart, using his footwork and jab to score at will in the first round. In the second, he had figured things out, slammed on the gas, and started unleashing power shots. Driving Zamora back with right hands and left hooks. It was obvious Cardenas had seized control of the fight. Peppering him with his right hand, Cardenas had his man in a world of trouble and backed into the ropes. Zamora went to a high guard, and the US National champ delivered a perfectly placed left hook to the body that put his man down and out, making Cardenas 1-0 (1).

Brownsville native and multi-time US national champ Sebastian "El Trueno" Juarez, younger brother of jr welterweight contender Omar Juarez, also shines in his pro debut. Working behind a snappy jab, the Brownsville native was able to damage his opponent, Carlos Hernandez, early and often. Just under a minute into the opening round, Juarez scored with a thudding left hook to the body. Juarez stayed behind his pin-point accurate jab in the second until he could deliver the "trueno" and it came in the form of a short left hook to the body that left Hernandez rolling around on the canvas in pain. Hernandez was unable to beat the count. He was also unable to stand up straight for several moments after the count. An absolutely debilitating body shot moved Juarez to 1-0 (1). Juarez will look to make it 2-0 on August 26th in San Antonio.

Sebastian Juarez, Younger Brother of Omar Juarez, To Turn Pro In Mexico on August 4

Boxing in the Rio Grande Valley is alive and well. It has become one of the premier boxing hotbeds anywhere in the world. It's about to get even better as a pair of amateur standouts from Brownsville are set to make their professional debut on Saturday at the Auditorio Matamoros in Matamoros, Mexico, just a stone's throw away from their hometown and their home gym, RGV Elite Boxing in Brownsville. The gym was made famous by Omar "El Relampago" Juarez and his father, the owner of the gym, Rudy Juarez. Now it's time for my little brother to make his professional debut. The 18-Year-Old Sebastian "El Tureno'' Juarez, who had a tremendous amount of amateur success, including being number one in the nation according to USA Boxing at 156lbs, 145lbs, and 119lbs at various points of his outstanding amateur career, will leave the amateur ranks for the paid ranks. His last amateur bout was in April. The teenager will now turn pro at 160 lbs. Juarez has been bred for this at an early age, being from a high-level fighting family. He has been around world-class training camps with his brother for years and has worked with "Trainer of the Year" Bob Santos. Juarez is also scheduled to fight in San Antonio on August 26th.

Also, on the card and in Matamoros, Mexico, and also making his pro debut is Moses Garcia, an RGV Elite stablemate of "El Trueno" Garcia also had a successful amateur career that included making it to the semi-finals of the USA National Championships in 2021. He will look to make his pro debut a successful one at the welterweight limit of 147 pounds.

Edward Vazquez Shines at Riders Stadium

On a 105-degree day at Riders Field in Frisco, Texas, the heat seemed not to bother any of the combatants as all five fights went the scheduled distance, and hometown favorite Edward "Kid" Vazquez of Fort Worth delivered for his adoring hometown fans and delivered for his new promoter, the Hall of Famer Lou Dibella. Vazquez took a non-stop, all-action 10-round decision over Bryan De Gracia of Panama in the main event.

After a very competitive and bak and forth first six rounds of the fight, Vazquez started chopping his man down in the seventh. His relentless bodywork was paying dividends, and De Gracia was beginning to slow. A perfectly placed right hand set up by a stiff jab set the tone early in the seventh. Another precise uppercut snapped De Gracia's head back later in the round as Vazquez could not miss on the inside and showed a new level of elusiveness, slipping and dodging the heavy artillery of his opponent. "The Kid" ended the seventh in style ducking and dodging shots with his hands dropped, reminiscent of Pernell Whitaker, and the hometown crowd erupted with cheers for their man. The momentum of the fight had clearly shifted, while perhaps even on the cards, the momentum was now fully on the side of the Fort Worthian. A short chopping right hand stopped De Gracia in his tracks early in the eighth, and then a giant left hook moments later staggered Vazquez's opponent. The right uppercut and left hook o the inside were automatic and on point for Vazquez. With the fight clearly titled in his favor the last two rounds were perhaps "The Kid's" best. Vazquez said his opponent was in his ear talking to him, telling him, "He was going to outwork him" However, that was not the case as nobody outworks the Texan, and Vazques dug deep and landed with a beautiful straight right hand that took some more steam out of the Panamanian. Chants of "Eddie, Eddie, Eddie" began to pour in as Vazquez refused to take a step back and continued chopping down De Gracia's right hook left hand against staggered the fatiguing De Gracia with just over a minute left in the 9th. Vazquez closed the show beautifully in the 10th. Clearly emptying his tank in the final round, Vazquez started the final stanza off with a beautifully placed left hook followed by a right hand. Another three-piece combination landed nicely for the Texan as the Panamanian was fatiguing and began holding after the combination landed. Vazquez closed the show in style. Clearly the fresher man he was beating De Gracia to the punch, and when the fatigued fighter did fire off, Vazquez would counter with precision. The Fort Worth native delivered in his first fight with his new promoter, the Hall of Famer Lou Dibella, and took the clear-cut but hard-earned decision by scores of 96-94x2 and 98-92. The win moves Vazquez’s record to 15-1 (3).

Vazquez's FHG stablemate Joel "The Owl" Martinez, of Fort Worth, was also in action when he battled Austin native "Gusto" Sean Brewer. After a bit of a feeling out process in the opening round, where both fighters who are tall and rangy for the weight class tried to find the range, and was mainly a battle of the jabs. Brewer landed the best shot of the round, a quick straight right that landed clean on the chin of Martinez. Martinez got going in the second with an early straight left from the Martinez, a southpaw set the tone, a short flurry put Brewer back in the ropes, and Martinez had found his rhythm. "The owl" ripped a right hook to the body. The Fort Worthian scored with another crisp straight left hand. The Austinite looked like he was unable to close the distance as Martinez scored with the straight left hand and would rip with power shots on the inside, closing out a very good second stanza. The third was more of the same, setting up the straight left off the jab and then landing on the inside a double right hook to the head and body scored for Martinez midway through the third.

Brewer needed something big in the last round after Martinez rallied in the middle two rounds of the scheduled four-rounder. After a solid left hand to his body that scored nicely and perhaps served as a wake-up call, Brewer got cooking. Brewer backed his man up and on the inside, ripped off two right hands that landed cleanly. He finally found his range and was landing cleanly with his straight right as Brewer appeared to be the fresher man in the final round, Shouts of "Joel Joel, Joel" rained in for the hometown fighter, but the visiting Brewer was undeterred as the visiting fighter closed out the round landing precise right hands in the pocket. In a fight that Hall of Fame promoter Lou DiBella called "the most obvious draw, I've ever seen." all three judges agreed and handed in identical scorecards of 38-38, making it a unanimous draw. Martinez's record moves to 3-0-1 (2), and Brewer is now 4-0-1 (3). Post-fight, both fighters thought they would have won if the bout was a scheduled six rounds and they had two more rounds to operate, and both combatants expressed interest in a rematch. Hopefully, if the rematch does happen later this year, it will be scheduled for six rounds. Both fighters are, high-level, blue-chip prospects, and four rounds was not enough for either man to make a definitive statement.

The card also featured fan favorite and Dallas native Shurretta "Chiccn" Metcalf who moved to 12-4-1(2), by outpointing the undefeated Melissa Odessa Parker of Houston, who fell to 6-1 (2), a very close and competitive majority decision that went to Mertcalf by scores of 78-74 and 77-75 with the third card an even draw 76-76, was hotly debated, by DiBellas who said he would write a letter to the commission objecting to the decision.

In another highly competitive decision, Dallasite Josh Shipman moved to 5-4 (2) over Orlando Rashad Coulter in a battle of all Dallas-based heavyweights. Coulter dropped to 5-2 (3), and came up on the wrong end of his second straight competitive decision.

Errol Spence Looks to Become Undisputed Welterweight Champion Tomorrow in Vegas

Desoto native and undefeated unified welterweight world champion Errol "The Truth" Spence, 28-0 (22), looks to join his stablemate Jermell Charlo as an undisputed champion in his weight class. The feat has been accomplished nine times in the four-belt era. It was last accomplished by Japanese KO artist Naoya Inoue, in the Bantamweight division in late 2022. Charlo, a Houston native, captured all four belts in the 154-pound division in May, 2022 by stopping Brian Castano in the 10th round of their rematch.

Spence, who currently holds three of the four welterweight belts (WBA, WBC, IBF), will step into the ring with WBO title holder Terence "Bud" Crawford, 38-0 (30), of Omaha, Nebraska, in what is being-touted as the biggest fight of the year. Crawford is also one of the nine men who held all the straps in the four-belt era. He accomplished the task when he stopped Julius Indongo in the third round of their 2017 showdown. Crawford will look to be the first-ever man to hold the undisputed crown in multiple weight classes. Evander Holyfield accomplished the feat in the three-belt era.

If Spence, who is a slight betting underdog, +120 according to DraftKings, can pull the minor upset, that will mean all eight world title belts from 147 to 154, will not only be held in the great state of Texas, they will be held in the same gym. Both fighters train with Derick James at his World Class Boxing Gym in Dallas. Additionaly, Charlo will have a unique opportunity to hold all four belts in two separate weight classes when he steps into the ring with legendary Mexican champion Canelo Alvarez who holds all the belts at 168 on September 30th in Las Vegas. If both Texans are successful, all of the world titles in the 147, 154 & 168-pound divisions will all be held by Texans.

Eddie Vazquez Returns to DFW, Headlines Riders Field!

Hall of Fame Promoter and boxing icon Lou DiBella brings home Fort Worth, native, and Featherweight world title contender Edward "Kid" Vazques home. Vazquez, 14-1 (3), will battle Panamanian KO artist Bryan De Gracia, 29-2-1 (25), in Saturday's main event at Riders Field, in Frisco, in what is a most-win fight for each man. The Fort Worthian inked a promotional deal with DiBella Entertainment last month. This will be the first fight of that deal, and another win will likely get the highly-ranked Texan closer to a world title fight. Vazquez had not fought in his home state since November 2021, when he dismantled Ezequiel Alberto Tevez in less than one round. Over the last two years, Vazques has fought on significant cards all over the US, including in the famous 2300 Arena in Philadelphia and the "Punch Bowl" in Carson, California. Vazques is currently riding a three-fight win streak with wins over touted contenders such as Misael Lopez and Viktor Slavinskyi. His lone defeat is a hotly debated loss in Arizona to Raymond Ford, a fight Ford's promoter, Eddie Hearn, acknowledged his fighter lost. Outside of that controversy, Vazquez has a flawless record. His opponent from Panama is also riding a hot streak. De Gracia has won five consecutive contest bouts, all by stoppage since his last defeat. In 2019, The Panamanian lost a thrilling slugfest to Eduardo Ramirez via 9th-round stoppage in Brooklyn's Barclays Center on the undercard of Lara-Castano.

In addition to Vazquez's return, the undercard is loaded with Texas talent. The Co-main event features fan favorite and bantamweight contender "Chiccn" Shurretta Metcalf, 11-4-1 (2), of Dallas. She battles undefeated Spring, Texas, native Melissa Odessa Parker, who captured the IBO Bantamweight title in her last outing by outpointing Mikenna Tansley in the Bayou Event Center in Houston.

Also on this card is a highly intriguing battle of unbeaten blue-chip prospects. Joel "The Owl" Martinez, of Fort Worth and an FHG Gym stablemate of Eddie Vazquez, will put his 3-0 (2) record on the line against the highly touted and upset-minded Sean "Gusto" Brewer, 4-0 (3) of Austin. Brewer now trains with former world champion Clarence "Bones" Adams in Las Vegas. That bout is scheduled for four rounds in the super featherweight division. 

Additionally, rising heavyweight slugger Rashad Coulter, 5-1 (3), of Dallas, looks to bounce back from his first career defeat. In February, Coulter came up on the wrong end of a close decision dropping an entertaining fight with Edgar Ramirez.

In addition to the loaded card, fans who purchase a ticket, are invited to stay and watch the live closed-circuit viewing party as DeSoto native Errol Spence battles Terence Crawford for the undisputed welterweight crown. 

Tickets can be purchased at the link below: 

Live Boxing at Riders Field w/ Spence/Crawford PPV Fight - MyProVenue™ (tickets.com)

World Championship Boxing Return to Corpus Chrisit

Corpus Christi has a rich boxing history. It has hosted Hall of Famer Evander Holyfield and multi-divisional world champions Paul Williams and Gilberto Ramirez. It is home to former world champion Jesse Benavidez and former world title challenger Jerry Belmontes. Not bad for the coastal bend beach town, which has a population of just over 300,000. Boxing disappeared from Sparkle City after the pandemic until earlier this year when Ernest Reyna and Reyna Promotions brought a card back to the beach town in February, featuring hometown contender Mark Beuke and produced solid attendance. Another show followed last month, and now legendary Hall of Fame Promoter Bob Arum will bring big-time boxing back to Corpus. The city will host the Featherweight world title fight between Luis Alberto Lopez, 28-2 (16) of Mexicali, Mexico, who will defend his IBF title on September 15th against former world title challenger Joet Gonzalez 26-3 (15).

Lopez won his world title in December of 2022 in Leeds, England, by upsetting and outpointing Josh Warrington. The Mexican title holder successfully defended his back in May in Belfast against Irish Olympian Michael Conlan. Gonzalez has had two shots at world titles. Gonzalez was badly outboxed by Shakur Stevenson in late 2019, and then lost a thrilling fight to Emanuel Navarrete in 2021. In his last outing in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in April, he won a wide 10-round decision over Enrique Vivas.

"Goyo" Gregory Morales Picks Up Dramatic 5th Round KO in Mexico City.

22-year-old San Antonio-based Super bantamweight Gregory "Goyo" Morales continues to bounce back from his first professional defeat. The 22-year-old, picked up his second consecutive win against a very tough and rugged opponent. This time it was against hometown fighter Ernesto Salcedo in Mexico City, which aired live on DAZN. Morales said he wanted to start fast. That's exactly what the Texan did. Coming out with a sharp jab, Morales set the tone early. A right hand at about the midway point of the opening round staggered Salcedo. A perfectly placed uppercut dropped Salcedo that landed right on the button dropped the hometown fighter Crediting Morales with a first-round knockdown. In the second round, things changed as Salcedo scored with a stiff jab that caught the Texan causing his hand to touch the canvas, and was correctly ruled a knockdown. Unphased, Goyo fought back and landed clean shots, however, Salcedo rallied late in the round, busted open Morales's nose, and battered him against the ropes in a thrilling second stanza. Rounds three and four were much of the same. Morales boxed well from the outside, firing off a jab, and landed with a right hand that would catch the attention of the Mexico City native. However, Salcedo was undeterred, and he kept pushing forward and backing Morales into the ropes and would land on the inside. The fight clearly became Morlaes sharp, clean, work on the outside VS Salcedo pushing the fight onto the inside and backing Morales into the ropes. To start the fifth, Morales was likely down on the cards, his team told him he had already lost the fight on the cards. Whether or not that was true was unknown, but Goyo obliged and picked up the pace. A bloody Alamo City native scored with looping right early in the fifth that dropped Salcedo. The Mexican got to his feet but was on wobbly legs. Goyo jumped on him, landing with another looping right hand that buckled his opponent yet again. Morales poured on a few more monster right hands and finished Salcedo! A bloody and tested Morales dug deep and got the fifth-round stoppage his team told him he needed less than a minute ago. The official stoppage was :52 into round five. Morales moves his record to 15-0 (9).

Battle of Unbeaten Texans: Joel Martinez VS Sean Brewer in Talks

Not too often in our sport do we get two undefeated, highly touted prospects just entering their primes to face off. Even more rarely are both fighters from Texas. However, that's exactly, what is in discussion for July 29th at Riders Field in Frisco. Joel "The Owl" Martinez, 3-0 (2), and Sean "Gusto" Brewer, 4-0 (3), are in heavy talks to square off on the undercard of the IBF intercontinental title fight between Edward Vazquez VS Brayan De Gracia. A win would propel the winner to the top of the 126-pound prospect discussion although the fight will be held at the Super Featherweight limit of 130-pound limit. Each fighter has acknowledged that 126 in their preferred weight class.

Martinez, a Fort Worth native, is a 6'1, tall, long-range, hard-hitting southpaw that has destroyed everything in his path thus far. "The Owl ''currently trains with coach Ray Barrera at FHG Gym in their home city of Fort Worth. According to Team Martinez, they have accepted the fight, and the contract is being sent to Brewer's team. Martinez was eager for the fight saying, "I'm willing to accept whoever they offer. I want to move up the rankings."

Brewer, an Austinite, is a hyper-athletic boxer-puncher with lightning-quick reflexes and surprising power. He has been used as a B-side early in his career and hasn't just won but has scored quick, easy knockouts when he was brought in as the B-side, to lose. In just his second pro bout, he was used as the sacrificial lamb on a Thompson Promotions card for a Thompson promotions prospect named Ivan Zarate. Brewer would not accept his fate as a B-side saying, "...being the B-side, being in the locker room with other B-side fighters, who already accepted the fate of losing, I was like no! This is not me." It certainly was not, as Brewer annihilated Zarate in one round. He repeated the feat in his last outing against Christian Renteria, scoring another first-round KO, this time in the main event of a Thompson Promotions card back in October. Brewer is currently trained by former World Champion Clarence "Bones" Adams in Las Vegas.

Jose Gomez, Alexis Mones, Shine on Thursday Night Card in Fort Worth

El Corral West in Fort Worth hosted a Thursday night of Boxing! A King’s Promotion Card featured two amateur standouts who shined early on in their professional development and an undefeated and upstart welterweight coming off an upset of Sammy "Cobra" Brown. In the undercard portion, Jaycob Ramos stepped into the ring for the second time as a professional. The Dallas native made his pro debut back in May after a massively successful amateur career. Immediately his speed and skills were obvious. Using his lightning-quick speed and reflexes. Ramos was able to outgun his opponent, Xzavier Jackson. Jackson was unable to get on the inside and landed a thudding combination capped off with a left hook to the body that set the tone for the night. Ramos stayed on the gas in the second round, unleashing a flurry to the head that again buckled Jackson. One final clean combination that battered Jackson against the ropes sealed the deal, and that finished the job as the referee Laurence Cole waved off the bout at the 2:27 mark of round number two to move Ramos to 2-0 (1).

Also, Fernando Solís stayed undefeated and moved to 2-0 (1) with a one-sided beatdown of Waldo Zamudio, with the official stoppage coming at 2:58 of the 3rd round.

Two-time national champion Alexis Mones, of Fort Worth, boxed beautifully over a four-round affair in overwhelming Macy Breaux, of Larose, Lacrosse. Mones started cautiously firing off her jab and keeping Breaux on her back foot. A clean left hook from the Fort Worthian landed flush on the side of Breaux's head. The momentum carried into the second round as Mones picked up the volume, throwing in combination she landed with clean right hands and left hooks and rattled her opponent again just before the end of the second. By the third round, she was landing with clean heavy artillery, one left hook late in the third again staggered her opponent. Mones cruised through the fourth and picked up the first win of her promising professional career by scores of 39-37x3.

In the main event, Jose Gomez kept the momentum going after upsetting Sammy Brown back in April. He dominated an outmatched and outgunned Raul Garica JR. Gomez the much bigger, stronger, man started the fight off his back foot. After a somewhat slow start and feeling out process, Ramos ripped a body shot with just a couple of seconds left in the opening round as the first punch of consequence. Gomez started the second round where the first left off and rocked Garcia again with a left-right combination. Moments later a right hand dropped Garcia midway through the second. Ramos jumped on his wounded opponent unleashing a whirlwind of power shots, a left hook came in and staggered Garcia again. Gomez followed up, and another barrage put his overwhelmed opponent down for a second time. He again got up, and Gomez again battered his outmatched opponent against the ropes as referee Robert Chappa came in and waved the bout off at 2:24 of the second round.

Jorge Castaneda & Josh Juarez Return to Laredo August 19th

Laredo, the 10th largest city in the Lone Star State, is quickly becoming a major boxing hotbed. Two of their biggest and brightest stars will return home on August 19th at the Sames Auto Arena on a Triple A Promotions card. In the main event, Jorge Castaneda, 15-2 (11) will battle undefeated Nestor Medellin, 9-0 (4), in an eight-round featherweight affair and battle of the 956. Castaneda has been around the world and has upset victories over Otha Jones III and  Youssef Khoumari in the UK and last fought in Mexico and was stopped by Eduardo Hernandez on the undercard of Hiroto Kyoguchi vs Esteban Bermudez that aired live on DAZN. He now looks to bounce back in his hometown against Medellin who has a hotly debated split decision victory over fellow Laredo native Jorge Ramos in his last outing back in 2020. Its been three years out of the ring for Medelian who fights out of Harligen. Castaneda has acquired a number of straps including ABF belts as well as the WBC Youth intercontinental super featherweightr belt as well as the WBC International silver belt at ther same weight weight calss.

In the co-main event fan favorite undefeated boxer-puncher Josh Juarez, 10-0 (5), will also retrun to the ring. Juarez scored an impressive unamioud decision victory over Neller Obergon in a battle of unbeaten prospects then outpointed  Emmanuel Sanchez on a Golden Boy card in Grand Prairie. He then had a nearly three year lay off before returning to the ring last July and destroying Randy McCarty in less than one-round. Now he looks to continue his come back against Leopoldo Reyna 11-3-1 (4), of Brownsville in a six-round heavyweight contest. Reyna last fought in March and was stopped by Raphael Murphy in one round. Juarez has competed at both heavyweight and Light Heavyweight in the past and has talked about settling in at cruiserweight in the future. 

The undercard portion will also feature Hector "Tito"  Ferreyro Jr, 6-0 (3), who has scored two consecutive first-round KO's in his comeback including earlier this month when he destroyed Rafael Munoz. He will battle Mexican Jesus Gomez Rodriguez, 5-3 (4), who alst fought San Antoni native Eddie Ortiz in his last fight in 2019. The card also features Jose Cardenas who looks to keep the momentum going after his upset victory over "Tigre" Hugo Castaneda on July 1. 

Edward Vazquez to Headline Loaded Card at Riders Field in Frisco

Last month "Kid" Edward Vazquez of Fort Worth made headlines by announcing his signing with hall-of-fame promoter Lou DiBella. Now the 27-year-old Fort Worthian will headline a card less than an hour from his hometown at Riders Field, formerly known as Dr Pepper Stadium in Frisco, the home of the Frisco Rough Riders, the Double-A affiliates of the Texas Rangers. Vazquez, 14-1 (3), will battle Brayan De Gracia, 29-2-1 (25), of Panama, for the IBF Inter-continental featherweight belt. A strap recently held by Shakur Stevenson and Kid Galahad. De Gracia is best known for his previous performance in the US. The Panamanian was stopped by Eduardo Ramirez in nine rounds, in a fun back-and-forth affair on the undercard of the Brain Castano-Erislandy Lara scrap at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY. Vazquez last fought in February and outpointed Misael Lopez on a SHOWTIME, SHOBOX card that aired live from Topeka, Kansas. A card that was also promoted by DiBella and apparently impressed him enough to ink a deal with the North Texan. Vazquez is currently ranked in the top ten by the IBF. Luis Alberto Lopez is the sanctioning body's current world champion, and the top two spots in that division's rankings are currently vacant.

A loaded undercard also features fellow Fort Worthian and FHG Gym Stablemate Joel "The Owl '' Martinez, 3-0 (2), in a super featherweight affair. Dallas-based world title contender Shurretta Metcalf, 11-4-1 (2), will battle Melissa Oddessa Parker, 6-0 (2), of the fighting city of Spring, Texas, in an 8-round affair. Also on the card is hard-hitting Dallas middleweight prospect Miguel Angel Hernandez, 7-0 (6) will be in action in a six-round fight. Hernandez last fought on the Brandon Figueroa-Mark Magsayo card in California back in March and scored a six-round decision over Dario Guerrero-Meneses.

Releford Continues to Bring Big-Time Boxing Back to the 817

Like a Phoenix from the ashes, Fort Worth boxing is on the rise. Thanks to the efforts of former heavyweight contender and Texas State champion and Fort Worth native Kendrick Releford he is working on bringing "Funky Town" back to its heyday. Not long ago Fort Worth was one of the brightest cities in the boxing home. It's home to not only Releford but also Hall of Famer Donald Curry, former world champions like Paulie Ayala, and US olympian Sergio Reyes Jr. It again has the talent and the interest to get back to that status, and the former heavyweight contender is laser-focused on putting Fort Worth boxing back on top.

Releford's initial show, back in April in which he worked along Marshall Kaufman's King Promotions, was a smashing success. They are back at the El Corral West n to bring the next show on Thursday, July 13th. The card will feature Woman's amateur standout and national champion Alexis Mones of Fort Worth, who will make her third professional fight and take on Macy Breaux of Louisiana. The card also features a pair of 3-0 fighters looking to continue their winning ways. Emanuel Moreno of Wichita Falls and Jose Gomez of Dallas, both look to make it 4-0 on Thursday.

Two highly touted and highly decorated amateurs look to move to 2-0 as well. Jaycob Ramos of Plano scored an impressive UD victory in Irving in May, and Fort Worthian Fernando Solis wowed the crowd at the El Corral West on the First show. He will return against cagey veteran Waldo Zamudio, who has eight fights of experience and has been in with some of the top talent in Texas, including Xavier Nunez, Ben Gurment, and Favian Lopez of Houston.

Sensational one-punch KO Malik "One Punch" Calhoun, who now fights out of Fort Worth's FHG Gym, makes his much anticipated ring return. He looks to get back into the win column after being inactive for over a year and a half. Calhoun sports a 2-1 (2) record and will battle Austin Dulworth in a middleweight bout.

Marquis Taylor Looks Marvelous in Atlantic City, Pulls Upset over Gomez

Photo Credit: "David Algranati/The Fight Photos"

"Marvelous" Marquis Taylor has long been equally overlooked as he is supremely confident. The best of the 29-year-old from Houston was on display at the Ballroom Boardwalk in Atlantic City on Saturday. He was supposed to be just an opponent, a step up and quality name on the resume of Cuban Middleweight Yoelvis Gomez on his way to bigger and better things. The Cuban was also supposed to be the bigger, stronger, fighter, the naturally more gifted puncher. Taylor seemed not to care about any of those things either, as he boxed beautifully on the inside. The Texan fought around a pretty nasty cut around his right eye for almost the entire fight, dropped Gomez, and dominated throughout the 10-round affair.

After an excellent opening stanza for the Cuban, who dominated the action and opened a cut above the eye of Taylor, Gomez was never much of a threat again. The momentum shifted immediately. A looping right hand sent the A-side fighter to the canvas a minute into the round. From that point on, the awkward style of the Houstonian never allowed the Cuban to get comfortable, and the power from the alleged soft hitting proved not to be the case as another straight right hand that staggered Gomez in the fourth and late in the fifth another right hand badly rocked the Cuban once again. Gomez had a brief moment within the sixth. A short hook on the inside that phased Taylor. However, Taylor rallied back immediately with a pair of body shots. Taylo continued to make Gomez miss and run up the points, winning round after round. By the 10th round, Gomez was well aware that he needed a knockout and went for broke and had another moment with a well-paced uppercut that cut the attention of Taylor with just over a minute left in the fight. However, the GTexan survived the scare, ran out of the clock, and took a clear-cut decision by scores of 99-90 and 96-93X2 to move his record to 15-1-2 (1).

Taylor has now beaten five undefeated fighters and is 7-0 against Southpaws. Not bad for a career "B-side" who finally got the win he has long needed to elevate his status as a legitimate title contender.