Isaac Cruz sizzles in eighth-round knockout of overmatched Rolando Romero

Isaac Cruz made a loud statement by battering and then stopping Rolando Romero in eight rounds to win his first major title Saturday.

Isaac Cruz has officially arrived.

The relentless “Pitbull” battered WBA140-pound titleholder Rolando Romero before finally stopping him in the eighth round to win his first major world championship on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas.

The fight was stopped 56 seconds into Round 8.

“I’m very happy and humbled to win this title for my family and for Mexico,” said Cruz, who was the target of trash talk from Romero leading up to the fight. “I was prepared for this. I wasn’t here to just fight. I was here to terminate him. …

“I did my talking right here in the ring. And I did this not just for me but for everybody that is here at T-Mobile Arena. There’s going to be a Mexican champ at 140 pounds for a long time.”

Cruz (26-2-1, 18 KOs) did his thing from the opening bell, which is to plow forward and wing hard punches to the head and body. Romero (15-2, 13 KOs) tried to counter, tried to get out of the way but simply had no answer for the onslaught.

Cruz almost took Romero out in the opening round when he rocked him with a left hook to the temple. Romero survived but that only prolonged the inevitable.

The new champion continued to walk Romero down, pounding him to every legal target on the body as the old champ jabbed, moved, held and sometimes fired back in an attempt to survive. Romero caught Cruz with solid shots coming in on occasion but he never fazed the Mexican once, which seemed to seal his fate.

Cruz again almost took out Romero in the final minute of Round 7, when he battered Romeo around the ring and took nothing in return. Again, Romero survived.

The end came the following round when Cruz unloaded a vicious flurry of hard, accurate shots that seemed to paralyze Romero, which prompted referee Thomas Taylor to jump between them to stop the action.

Cruz has now won four consecutive fights since he was outpointed by WBA 135-pound champ Gervonta Davis in 2021.

Romero is now 1-2 in his last three fights. He was stopped by Davis in six rounds in 2022.

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Isaac Cruz sizzles in eighth-round knockout of overmatched Rolando Romero

Isaac Cruz made a loud statement by battering and then stopping Rolando Romero in eight rounds to win his first major title Saturday.

Isaac Cruz has officially arrived.

The relentless “Pitbull” battered WBA140-pound titleholder Rolando Romero before finally stopping him in the eighth round to win his first major world championship on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas.

The fight was stopped 56 seconds into Round 8.

“I’m very happy and humbled to win this title for my family and for Mexico,” said Cruz, who was the target of trash talk from Romero leading up to the fight. “I was prepared for this. I wasn’t here to just fight. I was here to terminate him. …

“I did my talking right here in the ring. And I did this not just for me but for everybody that is here at T-Mobile Arena. There’s going to be a Mexican champ at 140 pounds for a long time.”

Cruz (26-2-1, 18 KOs) did his thing from the opening bell, which is to plow forward and wing hard punches to the head and body. Romero (15-2, 13 KOs) tried to counter, tried to get out of the way but simply had no answer for the onslaught.

Cruz almost took Romero out in the opening round when he rocked him with a left hook to the temple. Romero survived but that only prolonged the inevitable.

The new champion continued to walk Romero down, pounding him to every legal target on the body as the old champ jabbed, moved, held and sometimes fired back in an attempt to survive. Romero caught Cruz with solid shots coming in on occasion but he never fazed the Mexican once, which seemed to seal his fate.

Cruz again almost took out Romero in the final minute of Round 7, when he battered Romeo around the ring and took nothing in return. Again, Romero survived.

The end came the following round when Cruz unloaded a vicious flurry of hard, accurate shots that seemed to paralyze Romero, which prompted referee Thomas Taylor to jump between them to stop the action.

Cruz has now won four consecutive fights since he was outpointed by WBA 135-pound champ Gervonta Davis in 2021.

Romero is now 1-2 in his last three fights. He was stopped by Davis in six rounds in 2022.

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Erislandy Lara stops Michael Zerafa with massive left hand in second round

Erislandy Lara evidently is far from finished at 40. The WBA middleweight titleholder from Cuba stopped Michael Zerafa in the second round to retain his belt on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas. Nothing much happened until …

Erislandy Lara evidently is far from finished at 40.

The WBA middleweight titleholder from Cuba stopped Michael Zerafa in the second round to retain his belt on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas.

Nothing much happened until the violent ending, as each fighter used the first one-plus rounds to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the other.

Lara (30-3-3, 18 KOs) evidently figured it out quickly. In the final seconds of Round 2, Zerafa missed a left jab, and Lara, a southpaw, countered with a right and then a straight left to the chin that put Zerafa onto his back and hurt him badly.

Zerafa (31-5, 19 KOs) was able to get to feet but stumbled into a corner, which convinced referee Allen Huggins that the challenger was in no condition to continue. And no one objected to the stoppage.

The official time of the knockout was 2:59, meaning one second remained in the round.

Lara was making the second defense of his title. He also had a long reign as a 154-pound champion.

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Erislandy Lara stops Michael Zerafa with massive left hand in second round

Erislandy Lara evidently is far from finished at 40. The WBA middleweight titleholder from Cuba stopped Michael Zerafa in the second round to retain his belt on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas. Nothing much happened until …

Erislandy Lara evidently is far from finished at 40.

The WBA middleweight titleholder from Cuba stopped Michael Zerafa in the second round to retain his belt on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas.

Nothing much happened until the violent ending, as each fighter used the first one-plus rounds to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the other.

Lara (30-3-3, 18 KOs) evidently figured it out quickly. In the final seconds of Round 2, Zerafa missed a left jab, and Lara, a southpaw, countered with a right and then a straight left to the chin that put Zerafa onto his back and hurt him badly.

Zerafa (31-5, 19 KOs) was able to get to feet but stumbled into a corner, which convinced referee Allen Huggins that the challenger was in no condition to continue. And no one objected to the stoppage.

The official time of the knockout was 2:59, meaning one second remained in the round.

Lara was making the second defense of his title. He also had a long reign as a 154-pound champion.

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Julio Cesar Martinez drops Angelino Cordova twice, wins majority decision

Julio Cesar Martinez dropped Angelino Cordova twice and defeated him by a majority decision Saturday in Las Vegas.

Julio Cesar Martinez did just enough to hold onto his 112-pound belt.

Martinez never really figured out challenger Angelino Cordova but dropped the Venezuelan twice and defeated him by a majority decision in the seventh defense of his title on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas.

One judge had it 113-113 but he was overruled by the other two, both of whom had it 114-112 for Martinez. Boxing Junkie also scored it 114-112 for Martinez, six rounds apiece.

Cordova (18-1-1, 12 KOs) got off to a strong start, taking the fight to a surprised Martinez (21-3, 15 KOs) and landing more consistently in the first few rounds.

Then came the most dramatic moments of the fight. Cordova walked into two stiff left jabs in Round 3 and ended up on his behind both times, giving Martinez a 10-7 round and all the momentum.

The rest of the fight followed a pattern. The fleet Cordova was the busier boxer and rarely stood still, which made it difficult for Martinez to get into a rhythm and find his target.

However, Martinez clearly landed the cleaner, harder shots when he did connect, seeming to hurt Cordova several times.

Martinez suffered a gruesome cut on his left eye brow in Round 10, the result of an accidental clash of heads, but he was allowed to continue and he continued to take the fight to Cordova.

Martinez has now won three consecutive fights since he lost a one-sided decision when he moved up in weight to challenge then-115 pound champion Roman Gonzalez in 2022.

Julio Cesar Martinez drops Angelino Cordova twice, wins majority decision

Julio Cesar Martinez dropped Angelino Cordova twice and defeated him by a majority decision Saturday in Las Vegas.

Julio Cesar Martinez did just enough to hold onto his 112-pound belt.

Martinez never really figured out challenger Angelino Cordova but dropped the Venezuelan twice and defeated him by a majority decision in the seventh defense of his title on the Tim Tszyu-Sebastian Fundora card Saturday in Las Vegas.

One judge had it 113-113 but he was overruled by the other two, both of whom had it 114-112 for Martinez. Boxing Junkie also scored it 114-112 for Martinez, six rounds apiece.

Cordova (18-1-1, 12 KOs) got off to a strong start, taking the fight to a surprised Martinez (21-3, 15 KOs) and landing more consistently in the first few rounds.

Then came the most dramatic moments of the fight. Cordova walked into two stiff left jabs in Round 3 and ended up on his behind both times, giving Martinez a 10-7 round and all the momentum.

The rest of the fight followed a pattern. The fleet Cordova was the busier boxer and rarely stood still, which made it difficult for Martinez to get into a rhythm and find his target.

However, Martinez clearly landed the cleaner, harder shots when he did connect, seeming to hurt Cordova several times.

Martinez suffered a gruesome cut on his left eye brow in Round 10, the result of an accidental clash of heads, but he was allowed to continue and he continued to take the fight to Cordova.

Martinez has now won three consecutive fights since he lost a one-sided decision when he moved up in weight to challenge then-115 pound champion Roman Gonzalez in 2022.

Oscar Valdez knocks out Liam Wilson in seven rounds

Oscar Valdez knocked out Liam Wilson in seven rounds to become an “interim” 130-pound champion Friday night.

Oscar Valdez is back in business.

The former two-division titleholder stopped Liam Wilson in the seventh round to win the WBO “interim” 130-pound title Friday at Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.

Valdez (32-2, 24 KOs) had lost two of his previous three fights, including a decision to Emanuel Navarrete last August.

“This victory means a lot,” Valdez said. “I proved a lot of people wrong again. People said, ‘You’re 30-something, you’re done, you got your jaw broken, you got your rib broken.’ But I refused to believe that.”

Valdez ended the fight with a series of hard blows. Wilson (13-3, 7 KOs) somehow remained on his feet but took considerable punishment, which prompted referee Mark Nelson to stop the fight.

The official time of the stoppage was 2:48 of Round 7.

Wilson, 28, said he fought too much with his heart and not enough with his brain.

“That’s how boxing goes,” he said. “I tried to box in the first few rounds, but my heart got the better of me. These are the kind of fights I dreamed of since I was a kid. But I’ve got to learn from this and start using my boxing brain.

“Oscar is a true champion, and I’m very proud to have shared the ring with him. It’s still early in my career. I have plenty to go. I’m young. I’ll be back.”

Navarrete holds the WBO title but reportedly will be moving up in weight, which will open up the championship. Valdez could then be elevated to full titleholder.

Also on the card, Seniesa Estrada (26-0, 9 KOs) defeated Yokasta Valle (30-3, 9 KOs) by a unanimous decision to become undisputed 105-pouind champion.

Oscar Valdez knocks out Liam Wilson in seven rounds

Oscar Valdez knocked out Liam Wilson in seven rounds to become an “interim” 130-pound champion Friday night.

Oscar Valdez is back in business.

The former two-division titleholder stopped Liam Wilson in the seventh round to win the WBO “interim” 130-pound title Friday at Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.

Valdez (32-2, 24 KOs) had lost two of his previous three fights, including a decision to Emanuel Navarrete last August.

“This victory means a lot,” Valdez said. “I proved a lot of people wrong again. People said, ‘You’re 30-something, you’re done, you got your jaw broken, you got your rib broken.’ But I refused to believe that.”

Valdez ended the fight with a series of hard blows. Wilson (13-3, 7 KOs) somehow remained on his feet but took considerable punishment, which prompted referee Mark Nelson to stop the fight.

The official time of the stoppage was 2:48 of Round 7.

Wilson, 28, said he fought too much with his heart and not enough with his brain.

“That’s how boxing goes,” he said. “I tried to box in the first few rounds, but my heart got the better of me. These are the kind of fights I dreamed of since I was a kid. But I’ve got to learn from this and start using my boxing brain.

“Oscar is a true champion, and I’m very proud to have shared the ring with him. It’s still early in my career. I have plenty to go. I’m young. I’ll be back.”

Navarrete holds the WBO title but reportedly will be moving up in weight, which will open up the championship. Valdez could then be elevated to full titleholder.

Also on the card, Seniesa Estrada (26-0, 9 KOs) defeated Yokasta Valle (30-3, 9 KOs) by a unanimous decision to become undisputed 105-pouind champion.

Photos: Tim Tszyu, Sebastian Fundora make weight for Saturday’s fight

Photos: Tim Tszyu and Sebastian Fundora on Friday made weight for their title fight Saturday night.

Tim Tszyu and Sebastian Fundora on Friday made weight for their title fight Saturday night on pay-per-view from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Both men came in at 152.8 pounds, 1.2 below the division limit.

Tszyu (24-0, 17 KOs) and Fundora (20-1-1, 13 KOs) will be fighting for Tszyu’s WBO belt and the vacant WBC title.

The weights for the other fights on pay-per-view:

  • Rolando Romero (139.6) vs. Isaac Cruz (138.8), junior welterweights (for Romero’s title)
  • Erislandy Lara (158.6) vs. Michael Zerafa (159.8), middleweights (for Lara’s WBA title)
  • Julio Cesar Martinez (111.6) vs. Angel Cordova (111.8), flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title)

Here are images from the weigh-in. All photos by Esther Lin and Ryan Hafey for Premier Boxing Champions.

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Tim Tszyu vs. Sebastian Fundora: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Tim Tszyu vs. Sebastian Fundora: LIVE updates, results, full coverage.

Sebastian Fundora upset Tim Tszyu by a split decision to become a unified 154-pound champion in a horribly bloody fight Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

One judge had Tszyu winning 116-112 but the other two scored it for Fundora, 116-112 and 115-113. Boxing Junkie also had Fundora winning 116-112, eight rounds to four.

Tszyu (24-1, 17 KOs) got off to a strong start, getting past his 6-foot-5½ opponent’s jab to land some eye-catching punches that seemed to portend a strong performance.

Then everything changed in an instant. In Round 3, Tszyu suffered a deep cut on his hairline when his head collided with Fundora’s elbow. Blood gushed into his eyes for the remainder of the fight, impairing his sight and ability to fight effectively.

And Fundora (21-1-1, 13 KOs) took full advantage. The “Towering Inferno,” a brawler at heart, used his long jab and timely power shots to keep Tszyu at a safe distance round after round.

Tszyu tried to overcome the monumental adversity and had some good rounds, when he landed the cleaner, harder shots. However, Fundora stayed the course, outworking his favored opponent to pull out the biggest victory of his career.

Fundora, coming off a knockout loss to Brian Mendoza, became Tszyu’s opponent on short notice when Keith Thurman pulled out with an injury. Now, after taking Tszyu’s WBO belt and the vacant WBC title, he’s a world champion.

You can read a full report here.

***

Isaac Cruz has officially arrived.

The relentless “Pitbull” battered WBA140-pound titleholder Rolando Romero before finally stopping him in the eighth round to win his first major world championship.

The official time of the stoppage was :56 of Round 8.

Cruz (26-2-1, 18 KOs) did his thing from the opening bell, which is to plow forward and wing hard punches to the head and body. Romero (15-2, 13 KOs) tried to counter, tried to get out of the way but simply had no answer for the onslaught.

Cruz almost took Romero out in the opening round when he rocked him with a left hook to the temple. Romero survived but that only prolonged his struggle.

The new champion continued to walk Romero down, pounding him to every legal target on the body as the old champ jabbed, moved, held or sometimes fired back in an attempt to survive. Romero had moments when he caught Cruz with solid shots coming in but he never fazed the Mexican once, which seemed to seal his fate.

Cruz again almost took out Romero in the final minute of Round 7, when he battered Romeo around the ring and took nothing in return. Again, Romero survived.

The end came the following round when Cruz unloaded a vicious flurry of hard, accurate shots that seemed to paralyze Romero, which prompted referee Thomas Taylor to jump between them to stop the action.

Cruz has now won four consecutive fights since he was outpointed by WBA 135-pound champ Gervonta Davis in 2021.

Romero is now 1-2 in his last three fights. He was stopped by Davis in six rounds in 2022.

***

WBA middleweight titleholder Erislandy Lara stopped Michael Zerafa in the second round to retain his belt.

Nothing much happened until the violent ending, as each fighter was in the process of assessing the strengths and weaknesses of the other for one-plus rounds.

Lara (30-3-3, 18 KOs) evidently figured it out quickly. In the final seconds of Round 2, Zerafa missed a left jab, and Lara, a southpaw, countered with a right and then a straight left to the chin that put Zerafa onto his back and hurt him badly.

Zerafa (31-5, 19 KOs) was able to get to feet but stumbled into corner, which convinced referee Allen Huggins that the challenger was in no condition to continue. No one objected to the stoppage.

The official time of the knock out was 2:59, meaning one second remained in the round.

Lara, 40, was making the second defense of his title.

***

Julio Cesar Martinez dropped Angelino Cordova twice in the third round and defeated him by a majority decision to retain his 112-pound title in his seventh defense.

One judge had it 113-113 but he was overruled by the other two, both of whom had it 114-112 for Martinez. Boxing Junkie also scored it 114-112 for Martinez, six rounds apiece.

Cordova (18-1-1, 12 KOs) got off to a strong start, taking the fight to Martinez (21-3, 15 KOs) and landing more consistently in the first few rounds.

Then came the most dramatic moments of the fight. The Venezuelan walked into two stiff left jabs in Round 3 and ended up on his behind both times, giving Martinez a 10-7 round.

The rest of the fight followed a pattern. The fleet Cordova was the busier boxer and rarely stood still, which made it difficult for Martinez to get into a rhythm and find his target. However, Martinez clearly landed the cleaner, harder shots when he did connect, seeming to hurt Cordova several times.

Martinez suffered a gruesome cut on his left eye brow in Round 10, the result of an accidental clash of heads, but he was allowed to continue and he continued to fight hard.

***

Brian Mendoza couldn’t overcome Serhii Bohachuk’s relentless pressure.

Bohachuk (24-1, 23 KOs) had Mendoza (22-4, 16 KOs) fighting on his heels from the opening bell, outworking his opponent and ultimately delivering a significant beating to win a one-sided decision and the WBC “interim” 154-pound title.

The official scores were 118-110, 117-111 and 117-111. Boxing Junkie also had it 117-111, nine rounds to three.

Bohachuk was unable to put Mendoza down or seriously hurt him but he landed power shots almost at will to win round after round, which accounts for the scoring.

Mendoza, a strong puncher, had some good moments in the entertaining fight, but he couldn’t land the punch or combination of punches to derail the speeding Ukrainian train.

Bohachuk, whose previous 23 victories came by knockout, has now won six consecutive fights since he was stopped by Brandon Adams in 2021. He also bolstered his position as a genuine title contender.

Mendoza has now lost back-to-back fights after his sensational knockout of Fundora in April of last year. Tszyu outpointed him in October.

***

Floyd Mayweather protege Curmel Moton, a 17-year-old junior lightweight prospect, defeated Anthony Cuba by a shutout decision in an entertaining eight-round fight.

All three judges had the same score, 80-72.

Moton (3-0, 2 KOs) dominated Cuba (7-1-2, 3 KOs) from the opening bell, outboxing and outworking his 21-year-old opponent. Cuba, who obviously has a good chin, took everything thrown at him but he didn’t have the tools to keep pace with Moton.

Moton had stopped his previous two opponents in the first round.

***

Note: Middleweight contender Elijah Garcia was scheduled to fight Kyrone Davis on the Tsyzu-Fundora undercard but Garcia pulled out because of illness.

***

Tim Tszyu and Sebastian Fundora are scheduled to fight for Tszyu’s WBO 154-pound belt and the vacant WBC title on a deep card Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Also on the show:

  • Rolando Romero vs. Isaac Cruz, junior welterweights (for Romero’s WBA title) (PPV)
  • Erislandy Lara vs. Michael Zerafa, middleweights (for Lara’s WBA title) (PPV)
  • Julio Cesar Martinez vs. Angelino Cordova, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title) (PPV)
  • Elijah Garcia vs. Kyrone Davis, middleweights

The featured portion of the show is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT. (main event later in the show).

Boxing Junkie will post results, as well as a brief summary, immediately after the featured fights end. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage – detailed fight stories, analysis and more – will follow on separate posts the night of the card and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

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