Joseph Diaz Jr. salvages a draw against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov

Joseph Diaz Jr. and Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov fought to a draw on Saturday in Indio, Calif.

Well, at least he didn’t lose the fight.

Joseph Diaz Jr. committed a cardinal sin on Friday, coming in 3.6 pounds over the junior lightweight limit to lose his IBF title on the scale. On Saturday, the now-former champ did just enough against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov to earn a majority draw and prevent a complete disaster.

Rakhimov would’ve won the title had he had his hand raised.

Diaz (31-1-1, 15 KOs) has experienced a number of changes since he outpointed Tevin Farmer to win his belt in January of last year, his most-recent fight.

The Los Angeles-area fighter has a newborn son. He changed management companies. He didn’t work with longtime co-trainer Joel Diaz for the Rakhimov fight. And, according to BoxingScene.com, he was arrested for drunken driving in July.

Perhaps the distractions played a role in his inability to make weight, perhaps they didn’t. Bottom line: He lost something for which he has worked hard his entire adult life before he entered the ring.

All that was left for him was to win the fight against his relatively unknown Russian opponent. And he almost did.

Diaz, who made the agreed-upon 140-pound limit Saturday morning, looked sharp the first few rounds. Rakhimov (15-0-1, 12 KOs) was the busier fighter from the start but the former titleholder landed the cleaner, eye-catching punches.

Then, in the middle rounds, Diaz allowed Rakhimov to outwork him without returning fire enough to win rounds. Many of Rakhimov’s shots hit Diaz’s gloves – he landed only 22% of his punches, according to CompuBox — but he was pushing the action.

The momentum shifted again around Round 8, when Diaz picked up his pace, timed his punches well and Rakhimov’s output fell off to some degree. That pattern continued until the end of the fight, which evidently salvaged a draw for Diaz.

One judge had it 115-113 (seven rounds to five) for Diaz. The other two scored it 114-114. Boxing Junkie had Diaz winning 115-113.

Diaz didn’t seem to be overly upset when the result was announced but he said afterward that he believes he deserved the decision.

“I’m a little upset. I thought I did enough to win the fight,” he said and then added later in the interview: “It was a close fight. The guy was throwing a lot of combinations, throwing a lot of shots, but it was just gloves. I thought I was dictating the pace, landing the body shots, hurting him and walking him down and breaking him down.

“… I thought I should’ve won the fight. It is what it is. I have to learn from this, take some time off and get right back to it.”

Diaz also apologized for the events of Friday.

“I didn’t make weight,” he said. “You know, like, I vacated my title. But it was a long layoff, man. I want to apologize to DAZN, I want to apologize to all my fans that have been rooting for me since day one and have been rocking with me and have been wanting to watch this fight.

“It was a mistake on my behalf. It was a year layoff. No excuses. I’ll get back into it.”

[lawrence-related id=17760]

Joseph Diaz Jr. salvages a draw against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov

Joseph Diaz Jr. and Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov fought to a draw on Saturday in Indio, Calif.

Well, at least he didn’t lose the fight.

Joseph Diaz Jr. committed a cardinal sin on Friday, coming in 3.6 pounds over the junior lightweight limit to lose his IBF title on the scale. On Saturday, the now-former champ did just enough against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov to earn a majority draw and prevent a complete disaster.

Rakhimov would’ve won the title had he had his hand raised.

Diaz (31-1-1, 15 KOs) has experienced a number of changes since he outpointed Tevin Farmer to win his belt in January of last year, his most-recent fight.

The Los Angeles-area fighter has a newborn son. He changed management companies. He didn’t work with longtime co-trainer Joel Diaz for the Rakhimov fight. And, according to BoxingScene.com, he was arrested for drunken driving in July.

Perhaps the distractions played a role in his inability to make weight, perhaps they didn’t. Bottom line: He lost something for which he has worked hard his entire adult life before he entered the ring.

All that was left for him was to win the fight against his relatively unknown Russian opponent. And he almost did.

Diaz, who made the agreed-upon 140-pound limit Saturday morning, looked sharp the first few rounds. Rakhimov (15-0-1, 12 KOs) was the busier fighter from the start but the former titleholder landed the cleaner, eye-catching punches.

Then, in the middle rounds, Diaz allowed Rakhimov to outwork him without returning fire enough to win rounds. Many of Rakhimov’s shots hit Diaz’s gloves – he landed only 22% of his punches, according to CompuBox — but he was pushing the action.

The momentum shifted again around Round 8, when Diaz picked up his pace, timed his punches well and Rakhimov’s output fell off to some degree. That pattern continued until the end of the fight, which evidently salvaged a draw for Diaz.

One judge had it 115-113 (seven rounds to five) for Diaz. The other two scored it 114-114. Boxing Junkie had Diaz winning 115-113.

Diaz didn’t seem to be overly upset when the result was announced but he said afterward that he believes he deserved the decision.

“I’m a little upset. I thought I did enough to win the fight,” he said and then added later in the interview: “It was a close fight. The guy was throwing a lot of combinations, throwing a lot of shots, but it was just gloves. I thought I was dictating the pace, landing the body shots, hurting him and walking him down and breaking him down.

“… I thought I should’ve won the fight. It is what it is. I have to learn from this, take some time off and get right back to it.”

Diaz also apologized for the events of Friday.

“I didn’t make weight,” he said. “You know, like, I vacated my title. But it was a long layoff, man. I want to apologize to DAZN, I want to apologize to all my fans that have been rooting for me since day one and have been rocking with me and have been wanting to watch this fight.

“It was a mistake on my behalf. It was a year layoff. No excuses. I’ll get back into it.”

[lawrence-related id=17760]

Brian Castano batters, outpoints Patrick Teixeira to win title

Brian Castano defeated Patrick Teixeira by a wide decision to take Teixeira’s junior middleweight title on Saturday.

Brian Castano didn’t just win a 154-pound title on Saturday night. He seized it.

Castano used nonstop pressure to overwhelm Patrick Teixeira, giving Castano a one-sided decision and the WBO belt at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif.

The Argentine is now in position to fight three-belt champ Jermell Charlo for all the major titles if that fight can be made.

Teixeira (31-2, 22 KOs) tried to use his height and reach advantage by jabbing and moving in the first half of the fight. However, that didn’t work. Castano, a relentless puncher, was able to cut off the ring and do damage in side.

The Brazilian then tried his hand at inside fighting. That didn’t work, either, as that’s Casatno’s wheelhouse. Teixeira got in some licks but Castano (17-0-1, 12 KOs) got the better of almost all exchanges.

Thus, in the end, Teixeira took a beating and lost a wide decision. The scores were 120-108, 119-109 and 117-111. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110 for Castano.

The punch statistics helped tell the story. Castano through 1,136 punches (landing 373), almost 100 per round. More remarkable, he threw 927 power shots (landing 344). Teixeira (197 of 972 overall) simply couldn’t match his opponent’s effectiveness.

In other preliminary fights, former titleholder challenger Ronny Rios (33-3, 16 KOs) of Santa Ana, Calif., outworked veteran Oscar Negrete (19-3-2, 7 KOs) to win a near-shutout decision in a 10-round 122-pound fight.

Rios turned in an impressive performance, outworking an opponent know for his work rate. His body attack was particularly effective. The scores were 100-90, 100-90 and 99-91.

Negrete moved up from 118 pounds for the fight.

Shane Mosley Jr. (17-3, 10 KOs) of the Los Angeles area knocked out Mexican Cristian Olivas (20-8, 17 KOs) after five rounds of a scheduled 10-round super middleweight bout.

Olivas, who has never been stopped, couldn’t continue because he right eye was swollen shut as a result of an effective attack from the son the Hall of Famer of the same name.

Mosley, 30, has won four consecutive fights.

And light heavyweight prospect Bektemir Melikuziev (7-0, 6 KOs) of Uzbekistan stopped last-replacement opponent Morgan Fitch (19-5-1, 8 KOs) of Pittsburgh at 2:08 of Round 3 of a scheduled eigh-round bout.

Brian Castano batters, outpoints Patrick Teixeira to win title

Brian Castano defeated Patrick Teixeira by a wide decision to take Teixeira’s junior middleweight title on Saturday.

Brian Castano didn’t just win a 154-pound title on Saturday night. He seized it.

Castano used nonstop pressure to overwhelm Patrick Teixeira, giving Castano a one-sided decision and the WBO belt at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif.

The Argentine is now in position to fight three-belt champ Jermell Charlo for all the major titles if that fight can be made.

Teixeira (31-2, 22 KOs) tried to use his height and reach advantage by jabbing and moving in the first half of the fight. However, that didn’t work. Castano, a relentless puncher, was able to cut off the ring and do damage in side.

The Brazilian then tried his hand at inside fighting. That didn’t work, either, as that’s Casatno’s wheelhouse. Teixeira got in some licks but Castano (17-0-1, 12 KOs) got the better of almost all exchanges.

Thus, in the end, Teixeira took a beating and lost a wide decision. The scores were 120-108, 119-109 and 117-111. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110 for Castano.

The punch statistics helped tell the story. Castano through 1,136 punches (landing 373), almost 100 per round. More remarkable, he threw 927 power shots (landing 344). Teixeira (197 of 972 overall) simply couldn’t match his opponent’s effectiveness.

In other preliminary fights, former titleholder challenger Ronny Rios (33-3, 16 KOs) of Santa Ana, Calif., outworked veteran Oscar Negrete (19-3-2, 7 KOs) to win a near-shutout decision in a 10-round 122-pound fight.

Rios turned in an impressive performance, outworking an opponent know for his work rate. His body attack was particularly effective. The scores were 100-90, 100-90 and 99-91.

Negrete moved up from 118 pounds for the fight.

Shane Mosley Jr. (17-3, 10 KOs) of the Los Angeles area knocked out Mexican Cristian Olivas (20-8, 17 KOs) after five rounds of a scheduled 10-round super middleweight bout.

Olivas, who has never been stopped, couldn’t continue because he right eye was swollen shut as a result of an effective attack from the son the Hall of Famer of the same name.

Mosley, 30, has won four consecutive fights.

And light heavyweight prospect Bektemir Melikuziev (7-0, 6 KOs) of Uzbekistan stopped last-replacement opponent Morgan Fitch (19-5-1, 8 KOs) of Pittsburgh at 2:08 of Round 3 of a scheduled eigh-round bout.

Joseph Diaz Jr. loses junior lightweight title on the scale

Joseph Diaz Jr. on Friday lost his junior lightweight title on the scale but will still fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday.

Joseph Diaz Jr. lost his IBF junior lightweight title on the scale Friday.

Diaz, who will fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., weighed 133.6 pounds, 3.6 over the division limit of 130. Rakhimov weighed 129.75, which means the belt is at stake only for the Russian.

Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) won the title in his most-recent fight, a unanimous decision over Tevin Farmer in January of last year. He talked about unifying the 130-pound titles.

This is the second time Diaz has come in over weight in a major fight. He outpointed then-featherweight titleholder Jesus Rojas but lost a chance to win the belt when he came in a half pound over the limit in 2018.

Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) will be fighting for a major title for the first time.

Also on the card, Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) will defend his WBO 154-pound title against Brian Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs). Teixeira weighed 153.4, Castano 153.8.

Ronny Rios (32-3, 16 KOs) will face Oscar Negrete (19-2-2, 7 KOs) in a 10-round junior featherweight fight. Rios weighed 121.4, 1.6 pounds below the limit. Negrete weighed 121.6.

Shane Mosley Jr. (16-3, 9 KOs) and Cristian Olivas (19-7, 16 KOs) both weighed 161.6 for their 10-round super middleweight bout.

And, in the DAZN opener, hot light heavyweight prospect Bektemir Melikuziev (6-0, 5 KOs) and Morgan Fitch (19-4-1, 8 KOs) weighed 170.6 and 170.8, respectively, for a scheduled eight-rounder.

Joseph Diaz Jr. loses junior lightweight title on the scale

Joseph Diaz Jr. on Friday lost his junior lightweight title on the scale but will still fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday.

Joseph Diaz Jr. lost his IBF junior lightweight title on the scale Friday.

Diaz, who will fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., weighed 133.6 pounds, 3.6 over the division limit of 130. Rakhimov weighed 129.75, which means the belt is at stake only for the Russian.

Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) won the title in his most-recent fight, a unanimous decision over Tevin Farmer in January of last year. He talked about unifying the 130-pound titles.

This is the second time Diaz has come in over weight in a major fight. He outpointed then-featherweight titleholder Jesus Rojas but lost a chance to win the belt when he came in a half pound over the limit in 2018.

Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) will be fighting for a major title for the first time.

Also on the card, Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) will defend his WBO 154-pound title against Brian Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs). Teixeira weighed 153.4, Castano 153.8.

Ronny Rios (32-3, 16 KOs) will face Oscar Negrete (19-2-2, 7 KOs) in a 10-round junior featherweight fight. Rios weighed 121.4, 1.6 pounds below the limit. Negrete weighed 121.6.

Shane Mosley Jr. (16-3, 9 KOs) and Cristian Olivas (19-7, 16 KOs) both weighed 161.6 for their 10-round super middleweight bout.

And, in the DAZN opener, hot light heavyweight prospect Bektemir Melikuziev (6-0, 5 KOs) and Morgan Fitch (19-4-1, 8 KOs) weighed 170.6 and 170.8, respectively, for a scheduled eight-rounder.

Video: Joseph Diaz Jr. targeting Gervonta Davis, other big names next

Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans. The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN). If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That …

Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans.

The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN).

If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That means he hopes to face the likes of Gervonta Davis, Miguel Berchelt and Jamel Herring in the near future.

In this episode of Boxing with Chris Mannix, courtesy of DAZN, the host interviews Diaz about his immediate future.

Here’s what he had to say.

[jwplayer N8fOOX6v]

 

 

Video: Joseph Diaz Jr. targeting Gervonta Davis, other big names next

Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans. The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN). If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That …

Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans.

The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN).

If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That means he hopes to face the likes of Gervonta Davis, Miguel Berchelt and Jamel Herring in the near future.

In this episode of Boxing with Chris Mannix, courtesy of DAZN, the host interviews Diaz about his immediate future.

Here’s what he had to say.

[jwplayer N8fOOX6v]

 

 

Joseph Diaz Jr. plans to build on his title-winning victory

Joseph Diaz Jr. said plans to build on his title-winning victory last year.

For some fighters, winning a world title is the culmination of everything for which they’ve worked. For Joseph Diaz Jr., it’s merely a start.

Oh, to be sure, JoJo’s unanimous-decision victory over the respected Tevin Farmer to win a portion of the 130-pound title in January of last year was gratifying for the Los Angeles fighter. All of the years of sacrifice had paid off.

At the same time, he has much bigger plans. He wants to unify the junior lightweight titles in a deep division and ultimately move up and do the same at 135. You think that’s ambitious? He also has his sights set on the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

And adding to his hunger is the fact that some don’t see the 28-year-old former Olympian as a fighter to be feared in and around his division, as rivals Gervonta Davis and Miguel Berchelt are, in spite of his accomplishments.

Joseph Diaz Jr. (left) stopped Freddy Fonseca in seven rounds in 2019. AP Photo / John Locher

Thus, Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) has more work to do. And that starts this Saturday night at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., where he makes his first title defense against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) on DAZN.

“There will always be critics,” Diaz told Boxing Junkie. “I’ve fought top tier guys, I have five world champions on my resume. And I still don’t’ get respect. It is what it is. It’s a tough sport.

“As long as I’m champion, as long as I do what I gotta do, that’s all that matters.”

The lack of respect – if that’s what it is – might have something to do with Diaz’s one and only loss, a one-sided decision against gifted featherweight champion Gary Russell Jr. in his first title shot, in 2018.

Diaz has won five consecutive fights and his title since then, which he says stems partly from the lessons learned against Russell.

“That loss was a blessing in disguise,” he said. “… I didn’t open up like I should’ve, I didn’t take as many risks as I should have. That fight made me realize that you can’t leave anything in the ring. You have to give your all every time you step into the ring.

“You never know when an opportunity like that will come again.”

Diaz couldn’t have been happy after beating Tevin Farmer to become a world champion. Michael Reaves / Getty Images

Diaz won’t have to go looking for Rakhimov, a rugged Russian fighter who stalks his opponents and has significant punching power. The native of Tajikistan is ranked No. 1 by the IBF, whose belt Diaz owns.

Indeed, Rakhimov might be a bigger threat than his relative anonymity might suggest.

Diaz says he’s ready. He will have been out of the ring for more than a year but has no concerns about rust. In fact, he said the time off has allowed aches and pains to heal and his mind to clear.

He believes he’ll be at his best on Saturday.

“I’ll win because of my experience, what I’ve been through as a pro,” he said. “I feel like that will be one of the key factors on fight night. I feel like this is his toughest fight but not my toughest fight. I’ve been here before, I’ve fought a lot of tough fights already.

“This is his first step up, his first really tough fight. That right there is one of my keys to victory.”

[lawrence-related id=17648,5709]

If he wins, things could get interesting.

The junior lightweight division is in flux at the moment. WBC titleholder Miguel Berchelt has a significant test against Oscar Valdez on Feb. 20. WBO beltholder Jamel Herring will defend against former champ Carl Frampton on Feb. 27. And the WBA titleholder, Gervonta Davis, is looking for an opponent.

Diaz plans to beat Rakhimov and then pursue his fellow titleholders, however that plays out.

“Winning the title was just the start of my legacy,” he said. “I want to be unified champion at 130 pounds, move up in weight and be a champion in two weight classes. I want to be a Hall of Famer.

“There is still a lot more I want to accomplish. There are still many years to go, many hard, long training camps. And I’m looking forward to it. I love what I do.”

Joseph Diaz Jr. plans to build on his title-winning victory

Joseph Diaz Jr. said plans to build on his title-winning victory last year.

For some fighters, winning a world title is the culmination of everything for which they’ve worked. For Joseph Diaz Jr., it’s merely a start.

Oh, to be sure, JoJo’s unanimous-decision victory over the respected Tevin Farmer to win a portion of the 130-pound title in January of last year was gratifying for the Los Angeles fighter. All of the years of sacrifice had paid off.

At the same time, he has much bigger plans. He wants to unify the junior lightweight titles in a deep division and ultimately move up and do the same at 135. You think that’s ambitious? He also has his sights set on the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

And adding to his hunger is the fact that some don’t see the 28-year-old former Olympian as a fighter to be feared in and around his division, as rivals Gervonta Davis and Miguel Berchelt are, in spite of his accomplishments.

Joseph Diaz Jr. (left) stopped Freddy Fonseca in seven rounds in 2019. AP Photo / John Locher

Thus, Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) has more work to do. And that starts this Saturday night at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., where he makes his first title defense against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) on DAZN.

“There will always be critics,” Diaz told Boxing Junkie. “I’ve fought top tier guys, I have five world champions on my resume. And I still don’t’ get respect. It is what it is. It’s a tough sport.

“As long as I’m champion, as long as I do what I gotta do, that’s all that matters.”

The lack of respect – if that’s what it is – might have something to do with Diaz’s one and only loss, a one-sided decision against gifted featherweight champion Gary Russell Jr. in his first title shot, in 2018.

Diaz has won five consecutive fights and his title since then, which he says stems partly from the lessons learned against Russell.

“That loss was a blessing in disguise,” he said. “… I didn’t open up like I should’ve, I didn’t take as many risks as I should have. That fight made me realize that you can’t leave anything in the ring. You have to give your all every time you step into the ring.

“You never know when an opportunity like that will come again.”

Diaz couldn’t have been happy after beating Tevin Farmer to become a world champion. Michael Reaves / Getty Images

Diaz won’t have to go looking for Rakhimov, a rugged Russian fighter who stalks his opponents and has significant punching power. The native of Tajikistan is ranked No. 1 by the IBF, whose belt Diaz owns.

Indeed, Rakhimov might be a bigger threat than his relative anonymity might suggest.

Diaz says he’s ready. He will have been out of the ring for more than a year but has no concerns about rust. In fact, he said the time off has allowed aches and pains to heal and his mind to clear.

He believes he’ll be at his best on Saturday.

“I’ll win because of my experience, what I’ve been through as a pro,” he said. “I feel like that will be one of the key factors on fight night. I feel like this is his toughest fight but not my toughest fight. I’ve been here before, I’ve fought a lot of tough fights already.

“This is his first step up, his first really tough fight. That right there is one of my keys to victory.”

[lawrence-related id=17648,5709]

If he wins, things could get interesting.

The junior lightweight division is in flux at the moment. WBC titleholder Miguel Berchelt has a significant test against Oscar Valdez on Feb. 20. WBO beltholder Jamel Herring will defend against former champ Carl Frampton on Feb. 27. And the WBA titleholder, Gervonta Davis, is looking for an opponent.

Diaz plans to beat Rakhimov and then pursue his fellow titleholders, however that plays out.

“Winning the title was just the start of my legacy,” he said. “I want to be unified champion at 130 pounds, move up in weight and be a champion in two weight classes. I want to be a Hall of Famer.

“There is still a lot more I want to accomplish. There are still many years to go, many hard, long training camps. And I’m looking forward to it. I love what I do.”