Bryan Rodriguez

Juarez Bros Shine at Payne Arena

In what was a family affair in the Rio Grande Valley, the Juarez family put on a spectacular night of boxing at the Payne Arena in Hidalgo. Father Rudy Juarez is the promoter, of Juares Rolo's Promotions,  and his sons Omar, 17-2 (5), and Sebastian, 7-0 (5), put on 5-star performances. 

In the evening's co-main event, Sebastian "Trueno" Juarez entered the ring to an unforgettable ring walk behind a standout performance from a dance squad from his hometown of Brownsville. After the memorable ring walk, the younger Juarez brother started quickly behind a snappy jab and trueno quick right hands. The 20-year-old from Brownsville has filled out his frame, looks like a full-grown middleweight, and has established himself as a much more front-foot aggressive come-forward fighter. He walked down a tough and rugged Juan Loera, originally of Mexico but now makes his home out of Pharr, Texas.  Juarez had his man hurt late in the second via a straight right hand/ Loera was clearly in survival mode, and he continued to hold and use roughhouse tactics in an effort to survive. An undeterred Juarez continued to walk him down with the jab and unload power shots at the outgunned opponent. The Final stanza saw the Brownsville native unleash a barrage of body shots that got Loera to drop his guard and protect his body, and "Trueno" started teeing off upstairs. The rugged Loera survived the final bell. However, the decision was academic, as all the judges scored for Juarez 40-36. 

In the evening's main event, world-class former title holder Omar "Relampago" Juarez, also from Brownsville,  returned to the ring in spectacular fashion. The world-ranked 140-pounder opened up and buckled an outmatched Frank Brown of San Antonio multiple times in the first round. One right uppercut, in particular, sent the Alamo City native into the ropes. Relampago opened up the assault and had Brown staggered in the opening round. The elder Juarez son unleashed on a defenseless Brown throughout the six-round affair. One right hand drove Brown into the corner with his man backed up, and Juarez unleashed and knocked Brown's mouthpiece out in the second. The fight looked to be about over when a single shot dropped Brown in the third. Juarez, like a true professional, stayed patient and picked his man apart to end the third. The Brownsville native operated like a surgeon, picking his shots precisely, mixing up head and body perfectly, but a determined Brown stood up to the test. A body shot late in the final round from Juarez put the rugged opponent down for a second time, however, Brown courageously got up and survived the final bell before dropping the lopsided unanimous decision.

The loaded South Texas card also included a wild opening bout between Michael Ramos and Keith Forman. A memorable scrap in which both fighters were deducted a point, and each fighter touched the canvas. Ramos was knocked down in the third, while Foreman touched the canvas  In the 4th. Foreman strangely was allowed to fight without a mouthpiece for a prolonged amount of time despite multiple clinches and lulls in the action.   Ramos, who served as a sparring partner for the Juarez brothers, took a split decision by scores of  37-35 x2 and the same tally but in favor of Foreman by the third judge. Ramos improved to 2-0 (1).

21-year-old Brownsville native Juis Luis Infante, put on a very impressive performance. Infante was pinpoint accurate, buckling his opponent Gerardo Fuentes. Infante was scoring at will from the long-range with a thudding jab and laser-like right hand that was thrown right down the pipe. The Brownsville native dropped his man with a single right hand down to the body at the end of the third on his way to a wide and lopsided UD and moved his record to 7-0 (3). 

Fan Favorite "Papi Chulo" Jared Mercado, of Brownsville put on a show for his large cheering section After a memorable ring entrance. He scored the first stoppage of the evening. After a well-composed and dominant first three rounds. Mercado scored the stoppage in the fourth round via a left hook that drove his man, Juan Dufresn, making his pro debut backward and into the ropes. Mercado unleashed a series of power shots, that left his man defenseless and unable to answer. Giving him the stoppage victory and moving his record to 3-0 (3). 

Additionally, Estaban "Ali" Garza from San Juan,  who was dominant in his UD  victory winning a wide decision by scores of 40-36x2 and 39-37 and moving his record to 6-0 (2). Also on the card was Mission native  Edgar Rosales, who took just 56 seconds to stop Ulises Gomez and improve his record to 4-0 (2), the future is extremely bright for the 17-year-old. 

In a shocking turn of events, undefeated "Pretty Boy" Bryan Rodriguez took the first L of his career.  After what looked like a mismatch early. Tagging Oziel Rangel with terrific body punches early and controlled range. Rangel changed the momentum of the fight in the fourth 4th with Pretty Boy fading, he snapped his head with a hook and had Rodriguez backing up. Rangel, who moved his record to 5-3 (4), seemed to be the better-conditioned athlete and tagged the fading Rodriguez through the final two rounds and eeked out the close decision victory.

RGV Trio of Juarez Promotions, Rolo production, and Sebastian Juarez Make History.

Box Azteca has been a staple of boxing for decades. It has highlighted and showcased countless Mexican fights and fighters. It has now moved into the Lone Star State, thanks to the father and son combination of Rudy Juarez, the founder of Juarez Promotions and the father of 140-pound world title contender Omar "El Relampago" Juarez, and Juarez's youngest son, undefeated 154-pound prospect and US National Amateur champ 18-year-old, Sebastian "El Trueno" Juarez who moved to 2-0 (1). On Saturday, the 28th of October, "El Trueno" dominated Francisco Javier Castillo in the main event of the first-ever Juarez Promotions card. The event was held at the Harlingen Event Center. The venue was packed with energetic RGV fight fans, and the night was filled with the best young talent in the RGV, a region that has become one of boxing's top hot spots in recent years.

Juarez Promotions and Box Azteca have agreed to a unique contract that brings fight fans at least four of these cards per year. The first time the world-renowned Box Azteca has aired a Texas-based card. It now will do so regularly, thanks to the Juarez men. The first card of 2024 will be on February 24, followed by one in July. The first professional show put on by Juarez Promotions was a ringing success. Juarez commented, "As soon as we finished the show on October 28th, by Monday, we started working on the next one...We already have our sponsors and fighters lined up on our card... We're getting calls from all over, people from California who want to be on our card." The promoter went on and explained his big plans. "We're changing boxing in the RGV and South Texas! All these kids are going to be televised, with Spanish commentators! Having Spanish commentators gives it the classic Mexican feel and makes it more exciting. It has the Mexican boxing feel. The boxing scene is changing." Team Juarez is taking massive steps in doing so, and that TV deal with Box Azteca is a huge step. It will give the fighters exposure and a massive audience. It will also allow Box Azteca, the famous Mexican program, to plant its claws in the RGV and have the ability to showcase these elite prospects. It's a win-win proposal for the promoter and network. A chance Juarez said he had to take. "They did an interview with Sebastian, and after that finished up, I had to ask them if they were interested in televising my card. I figured, what did I have to lose? The worst they could say is no." It turns out they did not say no! They were thrilled with the idea. The details and finances were hammered out, and a deal was reached. The young RGV upstarts had massive exposure, and the RGV was on the boxing map!

Juarez is revolutionizing the boxing scene in the boxing-crazed RGV, and by the end of 2024, for his final show of that year, he wants to bring a card to one of the large arenas in the Valley, either the Payne Arena or the Bert Ogden Arena in Edinburg. Things are moving fast for Juarez Promotions, as Juarez explained, "10-years ago, I was just a boxing dad and a boxing coach, now I have my ranch gym, a ton of fighters, and I am a promoter. I did it because I love boxing. I want to grow in boxing."

It started with humble beginnings, just two friends and two coaches who loved boxing and happened to "click". "Rolo" Michael Garza of "Rolo Productions" and Juarez met through the amateur program in South Texas, and they immediately clicked. The pair worked together putting on hugely successful amateur shows in the Valley, drawing over 1,000 fans for these shows. Juarez told Garza they should do professional shows and that he was going to get his promoter license. Juarez did just that, and a few months later, the pair had a stable of young fighters to put on the professional card, a TV contract for multiple fights with a world-renowned network, and a massively successful show that the sponsors are lining up for. The Team of Juarez and Garza has amassed a very deep stable of talented, undefeated prospects. In addition to Sebastian Juarez, they work with prospects such as Moses Garcia, Jose Infante, Bryan Rodriguez, and Manny Hernandez. It's been a quick rise to the top for the elder Juarez and Garza.

As for the youngest Juarez son, things are going equally as well! He moved his record to 2-0 (1) and picked up an impressive unanimous decision victory in the main event of the October 28 card. He's building up a huge following of his own and has been around the spotlight since his early teens with his brother, Omar. Sebastian is not at all overwhelmed by the moment or the spotlight. He remains laser-focused on his rise to the top. The 18-year-old has handled himself like a veteran, answering questions, doing interviews, and taking care of business inside the ring like he has been doing it for years, not like he turned pro a few months ago. "He was made for this." the proud father exclaimed. "Now it's just get him the right fights and the right opposition, get him a rugged guy or a lefty, matching him tough. With the right management, we can get him to where we want to go."