Watch it: Brian Mendoza’s brutal seventh-round knockout of Sebastian Fundora on Saturday night in Carson, California.
Brian Mendoza delivered a Knockout of the Year candidate on Saturday in Carson, California, relieving previously unbeaten Sebastian Fundora from his senses with three perfect punches in the seventh round.
Have a look at the breathtaking moment the 154-pounder from Albuquerque delivered the biggest victory of his career.
Watch it: Brian Mendoza’s brutal seventh-round knockout of Sebastian Fundora on Saturday night in Carson, California.
Brian Mendoza delivered a Knockout of the Year candidate on Saturday in Carson, California, relieving previously unbeaten Sebastian Fundora from his senses with three perfect punches in the seventh round.
Have a look at the breathtaking moment the 154-pounder from Albuquerque delivered the biggest victory of his career.
Brian Mendoza stunned Sebastian Fundora and the boxing world by knocking out “The Towering Inferno” in the seventh round Saturday.
Brian Mendoza never gave up in his boxing career. And he never gave up against Sebastian Fundora on Saturday night.
And now the Albuquerque fighter is reaping the rewards.
Mendoza was struggling against “The Towering Inferno” when he buckled his knees with a perfect left hook and then took him out with a follow-up right-left combination in the seventh round of a scheduled 12-round 154-pound fight at Dignity Health Sports Park.
The stunning victory followed a fifth-round knockout of former unified titleholder Jeison Rosario in November, which resurrected his career after two losses.
“I started losing a couple rounds but I didn’t care,” Mendoza said of his performance on Saturday. “You’ll never see me give up. I would’ve given up years ago when I took some losses. I kept on sparring and look at me now. A year ago I was a swing bout after the main event. Nobody cared who I was or what I was doing.
“This is proof. You keep working you’re going to make it baby!”
Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs) was written off by many observers when he lost two of three fights between 2019 and 2021, the second one a wide decision against talented Jesus Ramos.
Then, after stopping a journeyman in March of last year, he received a phone call that would change his life.
He was asked whether he was interested in fighting Rosario on short notice. Interested? Heck yeah. And he took full advantage of the opportunity by stopping the Dominican, which set up the fight against one of the most intimidating 154-pounders in the world on Saturday night.
And Fundora (20-1-1, 13 KOs) looked the part for six-plus rounds, dominating the fight both at distance and inside in spite of his 6-foot-6 frame. He lost only one round on one card through six rounds.
Then everything changed in an instant. Mendoza countered a missed uppercut with as vicious a left hook as you’ll ever see, which hurt Fundora badly and left him wide open for the follow-up right and left that put him flat on his back.
And that’s where he stayed. He got up on his elbows but didn’t have the wherewithal to get to his feet and was counted out.
“I never quit,” Mendoza said. “I keep going. You can beat me all you want, but if you don’t kill me, I’m coming back. They didn’t kill me in my career and it’s too late now, I’m getting better each time.
“I want to thank Fundora for taking this fight he didn’t need to take it. It was really risky for where he was at. Thank you for the opportunity and we did it!
Just like that, Mendoza went from after thought two fights ago to an “interim” titleholder who is now in position to challenge undisputed champion Jermell Charlo or at least get another big fight next.
He has arrived at 29 years old.
“Now that I have this belt I want to put this around my mom hopefully,” he said. “I earned this. … I want to celebrate with my family. But they can’t deny me now. The next one up is Charlo. He’s obviously undisputed, but I just always want the best.
“When they called me for this I signed it no hesitation. So I’m waiting for a call. We’re ready for the world, man.”
Meanwhile, Fundora, who was on the brink of getting his first title shot, had no regrets.
“It was a good punch,” he said afterward. “I don’t recognize that moment, but I’m fine. I’m healthy now, and I’ll be back. I’ll be back to take the division and this is a step up and a step down. It happens but I’ll be back.
“I’m not sorry I took this fight. This is boxing. We gotta fight and we have to make these fights. Congratulations to Brian Mendoza he did his thing, but like I said, I’ll be back.”
Brian Mendoza stunned Sebastian Fundora and the boxing world by knocking out “The Towering Inferno” in the seventh round Saturday.
Brian Mendoza never gave up in his boxing career. And he never gave up against Sebastian Fundora on Saturday night.
And now the Albuquerque fighter is reaping the rewards.
Mendoza was struggling against “The Towering Inferno” when he buckled his knees with a perfect left hook and then took him out with a follow-up right-left combination in the seventh round of a scheduled 12-round 154-pound fight at Dignity Health Sports Park.
The stunning victory followed a fifth-round knockout of former unified titleholder Jeison Rosario in November, which resurrected his career after two losses.
“I started losing a couple rounds but I didn’t care,” Mendoza said of his performance on Saturday. “You’ll never see me give up. I would’ve given up years ago when I took some losses. I kept on sparring and look at me now. A year ago I was a swing bout after the main event. Nobody cared who I was or what I was doing.
“This is proof. You keep working you’re going to make it baby!”
Mendoza (22-2, 16 KOs) was written off by many observers when he lost two of three fights between 2019 and 2021, the second one a wide decision against talented Jesus Ramos.
Then, after stopping a journeyman in March of last year, he received a phone call that would change his life.
He was asked whether he was interested in fighting Rosario on short notice. Interested? Heck yeah. And he took full advantage of the opportunity by stopping the Dominican, which set up the fight against one of the most intimidating 154-pounders in the world on Saturday night.
And Fundora (20-1-1, 13 KOs) looked the part for six-plus rounds, dominating the fight both at distance and inside in spite of his 6-foot-6 frame. He lost only one round on one card through six rounds.
Then everything changed in an instant. Mendoza countered a missed uppercut with as vicious a left hook as you’ll ever see, which hurt Fundora badly and left him wide open for the follow-up right and left that put him flat on his back.
And that’s where he stayed. He got up on his elbows but didn’t have the wherewithal to get to his feet and was counted out.
“I never quit,” Mendoza said. “I keep going. You can beat me all you want, but if you don’t kill me, I’m coming back. They didn’t kill me in my career and it’s too late now, I’m getting better each time.
“I want to thank Fundora for taking this fight he didn’t need to take it. It was really risky for where he was at. Thank you for the opportunity and we did it!
Just like that, Mendoza went from after thought two fights ago to an “interim” titleholder who is now in position to challenge undisputed champion Jermell Charlo or at least get another big fight next.
He has arrived at 29 years old.
“Now that I have this belt I want to put this around my mom hopefully,” he said. “I earned this. … I want to celebrate with my family. But they can’t deny me now. The next one up is Charlo. He’s obviously undisputed, but I just always want the best.
“When they called me for this I signed it no hesitation. So I’m waiting for a call. We’re ready for the world, man.”
Meanwhile, Fundora, who was on the brink of getting his first title shot, had no regrets.
“It was a good punch,” he said afterward. “I don’t recognize that moment, but I’m fine. I’m healthy now, and I’ll be back. I’ll be back to take the division and this is a step up and a step down. It happens but I’ll be back.
“I’m not sorry I took this fight. This is boxing. We gotta fight and we have to make these fights. Congratulations to Brian Mendoza he did his thing, but like I said, I’ll be back.”
Video: Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza on Friday made weight for their 154-pound fight Saturday in Carson, California.
Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza on Friday came in below the junior middleweight limit for their fight Saturday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California (Showtime).
Fundora weighed 153.3, .7 below the division limit. Mendoza was 153.5.
The weights for other featured bouts: Brandun Lee (141.3) vs. Pedro Campa (141.2), 142-pound catchweight; Luis Reynaldo Nunez (125.9) vs. Cristian Olivo (125.5), featherweights.
Video: Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza on Friday made weight for their 154-pound fight Saturday in Carson, California.
Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza on Friday came in below the junior middleweight limit for their fight Saturday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California (Showtime).
Fundora weighed 153.3, .7 below the division limit. Mendoza was 153.5.
The weights for other featured bouts: Brandun Lee (141.3) vs. Pedro Campa (141.2), 142-pound catchweight; Luis Reynaldo Nunez (125.9) vs. Cristian Olivo (125.5), featherweights.
Video: Sebastian Fundora vs. Brian Mendoza final news conference before their 154-pound showdown on Saturday in Carson, California.
Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza on Thursday took part in the final news conference before their key 154-pound fight Saturday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California (Showtime).
Video: Sebastian Fundora vs. Brian Mendoza final news conference before their 154-pound showdown on Saturday in Carson, California.
Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza on Thursday took part in the final news conference before their key 154-pound fight Saturday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California (Showtime).
Sebastian Fundora vs. Brian Mendoza: date, time, how to watch, background.
Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora will face Brian Mendoza in a key 154-pound fight Saturday night in Carson, California.
SEBASTIAN FUNDORA (20-0-1, 13 KOS)
VS. BRIAN MENDOZA (21-2, 15 KOS)
Date: Saturday, April 8
Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
Where: Dignity Health Sports Park, Carson, California
TV/Stream: Showtime
Division: Junior middleweight (154 pounds)
At stake: No major titles
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: Fundora 10½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
Also on the card: Brandun Lee vs. Pedro Campa, junior welterweights; Luis Nunez vs. Christian Olivo, featherweight
Prediction: Fundora KO 10
Background: Fundora has emerged as a popular contender as a result of his unusual height (6-foot-6) and bruising style. The 25-year-old from the Southern California desert quashed the notion that he is nothing more than a physical freak when he got up from a knockdown to stop Erickson Lubin in April of last year. He followed that with a unanimous decision victory over Carlos Ocampo in October, a fight in which he boxed more than usual. A victory over Mendoza will keep Fundora near the front of the line to face undisputed 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo, although Charlo is expected to defend against Tim Tszyu next. Mendoza is a 29-year-old boxer-puncher from Albuquerque. He lost two of three fights between 2019 and 2021, a split decision against Larry Gomez and a one-sided decision against rising star Jesus Ramos. However, he rebounded by stopping journeyman Benjamin Whitaker (TKO 5) and former unified champion Jeison Rosario (KO 5). The latter victory, a major breakthrough, earned him a shot at Fundora.
Sebastian Fundora vs. Brian Mendoza: date, time, how to watch, background.
Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora will face Brian Mendoza in a key 154-pound fight Saturday night in Carson, California.
SEBASTIAN FUNDORA (20-0-1, 13 KOS)
VS. BRIAN MENDOZA (21-2, 15 KOS)
Date: Saturday, April 8
Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
Where: Dignity Health Sports Park, Carson, California
TV/Stream: Showtime
Division: Junior middleweight (154 pounds)
At stake: No major titles
Pound-for-pound ranking: None
Odds: Fundora 10½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
Also on the card: Brandun Lee vs. Pedro Campa, junior welterweights; Luis Nunez vs. Christian Olivo, featherweight
Prediction: Fundora KO 10
Background: Fundora has emerged as a popular contender as a result of his unusual height (6-foot-6) and bruising style. The 25-year-old from the Southern California desert quashed the notion that he is nothing more than a physical freak when he got up from a knockdown to stop Erickson Lubin in April of last year. He followed that with a unanimous decision victory over Carlos Ocampo in October, a fight in which he boxed more than usual. A victory over Mendoza will keep Fundora near the front of the line to face undisputed 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo, although Charlo is expected to defend against Tim Tszyu next. Mendoza is a 29-year-old boxer-puncher from Albuquerque. He lost two of three fights between 2019 and 2021, a split decision against Larry Gomez and a one-sided decision against rising star Jesus Ramos. However, he rebounded by stopping journeyman Benjamin Whitaker (TKO 5) and former unified champion Jeison Rosario (KO 5). The latter victory, a major breakthrough, earned him a shot at Fundora.