Juan Francisco Estrada ekes out victory over Roman Gonzalez in classic brawl

Juan Francisco Estrada eked past Roman Gonzalez in a classic brawl Saturday in Dallas.

For Juan Francisco Estrada, it was worth the wait. The same goes for the fans.

Estrada and Roman Gonzalez served up a classic brawl Saturday night at American Airlines Center in Dallas, eight-plus years after Gonzalez defeated a relatively unknown Estrada by a unanimous decision in a 108-pound fight.

This time, Estrada had his hand raised by a split decision, which allowed him to unify two 115-pound titles and take firm control of the division.

The Mexican had to go through hell to do it, though. Gonzalez, who rebuilt his career after consecutive losses in 2017, was near his best at 33 years old in a grueling fight that could’ve gone either way.

That fact wasn’t lost on Estrada, who said a third fight between them is in order.

“I think I did enough to win [but] Chocolatito is a great fighter. I think he deserves the trilogy,” he said.

Roman Gonzalez (right) gave a vintage performance but came up just short.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

Estrada (42-3, 28 KOs) got off to a strong start, outboxing and outworking Gonzalez (50-3, 41 KOs) in first few rounds.

Then Gonzalez picked up his punch rate and the battle began in earnest. Estrada did a good job of fighting off his jab, beating Gonzalez to the punch, throwing quick combinations and moving much of the fight.

However, the Nicaraguan’s relentless pressure forced his Mexican rival into regular fire fights, which served Gonzalez well. He often landed the cleaner, more-eye-catching punches when he was in range.

Remarkably, given the ability and power of both fighters, neither of them was seriously hurt over the 12 taxing rounds.

The fight seemed to be close going into the final few rounds, which was reflected in the scoring of two official judges and the Boxing Junkie scorecard. That perception probably accounted for insane punch rates for both fighters in Rounds 11 and 12.

In the end, two judges scored it for Estrada (117-111 and 115-113) and one had Gonzalez winning (115-113). Boxing Junkie scored it a 114-114 draw.

Estrada was pleased — and fortunate — to remain a titleholder.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

Estrada was told by his trainer before the start of Round 10 that he needed a knockout to win the fight, which might have been his way of trying to motivate his fighter. The fighter was asked afterward where he thought he stood at that point.

“I knew it was a close fight,” he said through a translator. “I didn’t know if I was up or down. I knew I had to close out the fight the last two rounds.”

Gonzalez accepted the defeat in a typically gracious manner.

“Whatever happened had to happen,” he said. “I gave it a good fight. I would’ve been happy either way with the result. I did my work.”

The more he spoke the more emotional he became.

“It was a better fight than the first one,” he said. “I felt strong and I felt I won. In the last round I gave it all. It was a great round. That’s what God wanted, the result was what God wanted.

“And I’m happy because I’m going back home to see my family.”

Next up for Estrada is mandatory challenger Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, who stopped Kwanthai Sithmorseng after three rounds on Friday in Thailand.

Estrada, who took Sor Rungvisai’s title in 2019, confirmed in so many words that he would follow through on that obligation but reiterated that fans can expect to see one more fight between him and Gonzalez before all is said and done.

“Rungvisai is the mandatory so I’ll look at that,” he said. “But I’ll approach a third fight any day with Chocolatito.”

[lawrence-related id=18577]

Juan Francisco Estrada ekes out victory over Roman Gonzalez in classic brawl

Juan Francisco Estrada eked past Roman Gonzalez in a classic brawl Saturday in Dallas.

For Juan Francisco Estrada, it was worth the wait. The same goes for the fans.

Estrada and Roman Gonzalez served up a classic brawl Saturday night at American Airlines Center in Dallas, eight-plus years after Gonzalez defeated a relatively unknown Estrada by a unanimous decision in a 108-pound fight.

This time, Estrada had his hand raised by a split decision, which allowed him to unify two 115-pound titles and take firm control of the division.

The Mexican had to go through hell to do it, though. Gonzalez, who rebuilt his career after consecutive losses in 2017, was near his best at 33 years old in a grueling fight that could’ve gone either way.

That fact wasn’t lost on Estrada, who said a third fight between them is in order.

“I think I did enough to win [but] Chocolatito is a great fighter. I think he deserves the trilogy,” he said.

Roman Gonzalez (right) gave a vintage performance but came up just short.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

Estrada (42-3, 28 KOs) got off to a strong start, outboxing and outworking Gonzalez (50-3, 41 KOs) in first few rounds.

Then Gonzalez picked up his punch rate and the battle began in earnest. Estrada did a good job of fighting off his jab, beating Gonzalez to the punch, throwing quick combinations and moving much of the fight.

However, the Nicaraguan’s relentless pressure forced his Mexican rival into regular fire fights, which served Gonzalez well. He often landed the cleaner, more-eye-catching punches when he was in range.

Remarkably, given the ability and power of both fighters, neither of them was seriously hurt over the 12 taxing rounds.

The fight seemed to be close going into the final few rounds, which was reflected in the scoring of two official judges and the Boxing Junkie scorecard. That perception probably accounted for insane punch rates for both fighters in Rounds 11 and 12.

In the end, two judges scored it for Estrada (117-111 and 115-113) and one had Gonzalez winning (115-113). Boxing Junkie scored it a 114-114 draw.

Estrada was pleased — and fortunate — to remain a titleholder.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

Estrada was told by his trainer before the start of Round 10 that he needed a knockout to win the fight, which might have been his way of trying to motivate his fighter. The fighter was asked afterward where he thought he stood at that point.

“I knew it was a close fight,” he said through a translator. “I didn’t know if I was up or down. I knew I had to close out the fight the last two rounds.”

Gonzalez accepted the defeat in a typically gracious manner.

“Whatever happened had to happen,” he said. “I gave it a good fight. I would’ve been happy either way with the result. I did my work.”

The more he spoke the more emotional he became.

“It was a better fight than the first one,” he said. “I felt strong and I felt I won. In the last round I gave it all. It was a great round. That’s what God wanted, the result was what God wanted.

“And I’m happy because I’m going back home to see my family.”

Next up for Estrada is mandatory challenger Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, who stopped Kwanthai Sithmorseng after three rounds on Friday in Thailand.

Estrada, who took Sor Rungvisai’s title in 2019, confirmed in so many words that he would follow through on that obligation but reiterated that fans can expect to see one more fight between him and Gonzalez before all is said and done.

“Rungvisai is the mandatory so I’ll look at that,” he said. “But I’ll approach a third fight any day with Chocolatito.”

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Jessica McCaskill outpoints Cecilia Braekhus more convincingly in rematch

Jessica McCaskill outpointed Cecilia Braekhus more convincingly in their rematch Saturday.

Jessica McCaskill solidified her position as a major player in women’s boxing. Cecilia Braekhus’ future is in doubt.

McCaskill, who defeated Braekhus by a majority decision to take Braekhus’ welterweight titles in August, won more handily on the Juan Francisco Estrada-Roman Gonzalez card Saturday at American Airlines Center in Dallas.

The champion won the 10-round bout by scores of 100-89, 99-90 and 98-91 this time to retain her titles. Boxing Junkie scored it 96-93 for McCaskill.

McCaskill (10-2, 3 KOs) pushed the action the entire fight, moving forward and winging punches. Her overhand right was particularly effective, particularly in the first half of the fight.

Braekhus (36-2, 9 KOs) came on strong in the second half of the fight, as she picked up her pace. However, like the first fight, it was too little, too late for the “First Lady.”

She also lost a point for holding in the seventh round.

The victory puts McCaskill in a strong position. The obvious opponent for her is undefeated junior welterweight titleholder Katie Taylor, who presumably would welcome McCaskill to the U.K. for a women’s superfight.

McCaskill said she’s open to that and other possibilities.

“If Katie Taylor is the next one, let’s go,” she said. “If Claressa [Shields] wants to come down to 147, if she can make the weight … we have a lot of options.”

Braekhus, 39, said immediately after the first setback that she would consider retirement. She was asked again about that possibility after the fight Saturday.

The once-dominating fighter doesn’t plan to go anywhere.

“I say, Jessica, meet me at 147, which is the welterweight division,” said Braekhus, referring to the 145-pound catch weight for the fight. “I definitely want a rematch at 147.”

If that doesn’t happen?

“I love boxing,” he said. “If there is a good fight out there for me, I’ll take it.”

Jessica McCaskill outpoints Cecilia Braekhus more convincingly in rematch

Jessica McCaskill outpointed Cecilia Braekhus more convincingly in their rematch Saturday.

Jessica McCaskill solidified her position as a major player in women’s boxing. Cecilia Braekhus’ future is in doubt.

McCaskill, who defeated Braekhus by a majority decision to take Braekhus’ welterweight titles in August, won more handily on the Juan Francisco Estrada-Roman Gonzalez card Saturday at American Airlines Center in Dallas.

The champion won the 10-round bout by scores of 100-89, 99-90 and 98-91 this time to retain her titles. Boxing Junkie scored it 96-93 for McCaskill.

McCaskill (10-2, 3 KOs) pushed the action the entire fight, moving forward and winging punches. Her overhand right was particularly effective, particularly in the first half of the fight.

Braekhus (36-2, 9 KOs) came on strong in the second half of the fight, as she picked up her pace. However, like the first fight, it was too little, too late for the “First Lady.”

She also lost a point for holding in the seventh round.

The victory puts McCaskill in a strong position. The obvious opponent for her is undefeated junior welterweight titleholder Katie Taylor, who presumably would welcome McCaskill to the U.K. for a women’s superfight.

McCaskill said she’s open to that and other possibilities.

“If Katie Taylor is the next one, let’s go,” she said. “If Claressa [Shields] wants to come down to 147, if she can make the weight … we have a lot of options.”

Braekhus, 39, said immediately after the first setback that she would consider retirement. She was asked again about that possibility after the fight Saturday.

The once-dominating fighter doesn’t plan to go anywhere.

“I say, Jessica, meet me at 147, which is the welterweight division,” said Braekhus, referring to the 145-pound catch weight for the fight. “I definitely want a rematch at 147.”

If that doesn’t happen?

“I love boxing,” he said. “If there is a good fight out there for me, I’ll take it.”

Hiroto Kyoguchi stops injured Axel Aragon Vega in Round 5

Hiroto Kyoguchi stopped Axel Aragon Vega in Round 5 after Vega broke his hand Saturday in Dallas.

Hiroto Kyoguchi retained his junior flyweight title under unfortunate circumstances  on the Juan Francisco Estrada-Roman Gonzalez card Saturday in Dallas.

Kyoguchi and 4-foot-9½ Axel Aragon Vega were engaged in a compelling, give-and-take fight when Vega evidently broke his right hand when he landed a punch to the top of Kyoguchi’s head in Round 5.

Vega, in great pain, immediately turned his back on the champion, who landed an incidental body shot before referee Raul Caiz Jr. jumped in to stop the fight. The ring doctor seemed to confirm the injury, saying he believed Vega’s four metacarpal bone – in his ring finger – had been broken.

The official time was 1:32 of Round 5.

Kyoguchi (15-0, 10 KOs) was making the third defense of his WBA 108-pound title and his U.S. debut. Vega (14-4-1, 8 KOs) was fighting for a title for the second time. He lost a seventh-round technical decision to 105-pound champ Wilfredo Mendez in 2019.

Vega gave the 5-foot-4 Japanese fighter all he could handle for four-plus rounds, forcing himself into close quarters with Kyoguchi and doing damage. Kyoguchi tried to maintain range but Vega kept working his way inside.

Boxing Junkie had the fight even after four rounds, 38-38.

Hiroto Kyoguchi stops injured Axel Aragon Vega in Round 5

Hiroto Kyoguchi stopped Axel Aragon Vega in Round 5 after Vega broke his hand Saturday in Dallas.

Hiroto Kyoguchi retained his junior flyweight title under unfortunate circumstances  on the Juan Francisco Estrada-Roman Gonzalez card Saturday in Dallas.

Kyoguchi and 4-foot-9½ Axel Aragon Vega were engaged in a compelling, give-and-take fight when Vega evidently broke his right hand when he landed a punch to the top of Kyoguchi’s head in Round 5.

Vega, in great pain, immediately turned his back on the champion, who landed an incidental body shot before referee Raul Caiz Jr. jumped in to stop the fight. The ring doctor seemed to confirm the injury, saying he believed Vega’s four metacarpal bone – in his ring finger – had been broken.

The official time was 1:32 of Round 5.

Kyoguchi (15-0, 10 KOs) was making the third defense of his WBA 108-pound title and his U.S. debut. Vega (14-4-1, 8 KOs) was fighting for a title for the second time. He lost a seventh-round technical decision to 105-pound champ Wilfredo Mendez in 2019.

Vega gave the 5-foot-4 Japanese fighter all he could handle for four-plus rounds, forcing himself into close quarters with Kyoguchi and doing damage. Kyoguchi tried to maintain range but Vega kept working his way inside.

Boxing Junkie had the fight even after four rounds, 38-38.

Juan Francisco Estrada wants to avenge loss to Roman Gonzalez

Juan Francisco Estrada wants to avenge his 2012 loss to Roman Gonzalez.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Juan Francisco Estrada is confident of revenge when he meets Roman Gonzalez for the second time on Saturday night at American Airlines Center in Dallas.

The pair first fought in 2012 for the WBA junior flyweight title, with Gonzalez winning by unanimous decision. The 33-year-old has since claimed titles in four different weight divisions, the first Nicaraguan to do so.

Speaking to The Ak & Barak Show on DAZN, WBC junior bantamweight champion said this fight will be a different proposition.

“The truth is I’m really looking forward to this fight,” Estrada said through a translator. “It’s almost nine years after the first time we fought. I’m really excited, we had excellent preparations, and back then it was two weight classes different than the fight now, so I feel stronger now and I’m ready to go. I always say you win the fight outside the ring and especially with physical conditioning.

“I’m a complete fighter and depending on how my opponent fights, that’s how I’m going to fight. But, really, I was focusing on my physical conditioning and sparring. We already focused a lot on strength in my previous fight with Carlos Cuadras, and I was able to show it, winning by knockout.”

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While pleased with his preparations and confident of victory, the 30-year-old Mexican is not underestimating Gonzalez. At the same time, he believes he will win emphatically.

“I consider Roman Gonzalez to be a future Hall of Famer, and beating him would be beating somebody with such a great legacy,” he said. “He has finished most of his rivals. He’s held important titles. And I think a victory against him would allow me to enter the conversation as one of the best in the lower weight classes.

“Because I already fought him, I know his strengths and his weaknesses. I believe I have the possibility of knocking him out. He’s already been knocked out, so I think that’s something I can do as well.”

 

Juan Francisco Estrada wants to avenge loss to Roman Gonzalez

Juan Francisco Estrada wants to avenge his 2012 loss to Roman Gonzalez.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Juan Francisco Estrada is confident of revenge when he meets Roman Gonzalez for the second time on Saturday night at American Airlines Center in Dallas.

The pair first fought in 2012 for the WBA junior flyweight title, with Gonzalez winning by unanimous decision. The 33-year-old has since claimed titles in four different weight divisions, the first Nicaraguan to do so.

Speaking to The Ak & Barak Show on DAZN, WBC junior bantamweight champion said this fight will be a different proposition.

“The truth is I’m really looking forward to this fight,” Estrada said through a translator. “It’s almost nine years after the first time we fought. I’m really excited, we had excellent preparations, and back then it was two weight classes different than the fight now, so I feel stronger now and I’m ready to go. I always say you win the fight outside the ring and especially with physical conditioning.

“I’m a complete fighter and depending on how my opponent fights, that’s how I’m going to fight. But, really, I was focusing on my physical conditioning and sparring. We already focused a lot on strength in my previous fight with Carlos Cuadras, and I was able to show it, winning by knockout.”

[lawrence-related id=18562,18500,18449,18465]

While pleased with his preparations and confident of victory, the 30-year-old Mexican is not underestimating Gonzalez. At the same time, he believes he will win emphatically.

“I consider Roman Gonzalez to be a future Hall of Famer, and beating him would be beating somebody with such a great legacy,” he said. “He has finished most of his rivals. He’s held important titles. And I think a victory against him would allow me to enter the conversation as one of the best in the lower weight classes.

“Because I already fought him, I know his strengths and his weaknesses. I believe I have the possibility of knocking him out. He’s already been knocked out, so I think that’s something I can do as well.”

 

Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Roman Gonzalez: time, how to watch, background

Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Roman Gonzalez: time, how to watch, facts

Juan Francisco Estrada and Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez are scheduled to meet in a compelling title-unification rematch of their 2012 fight

***

JUAN FRANCISCO ESTRADA (41-3, 28 KOs)
VS. ROMAN GONZALEZ (50-2, 41 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, March 13
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: American Airlines Center, Dallas
  • Stream / TV: DAZN and pay-per-view via cable or satellite
  • Cost: DAZN: $19.99 per month or $99 annually. Simply download the app. Pay-per-view: $24.99. Includes unlimited access to stream DAZN through the end of April 2021 at no extra charge.
  • Division: Junior bantamweight (115 pounds)
  • At stake: Estrada’s WBC and Gonzalez’s WBA titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Estrada No. 10
  • Odds: Estrada 1½-1 (BetMGM)
  • Also on the card: Hiroto Kyoguchi vs. Axel Aragon Vega, junior flyweights (for Kyoguchi’s WBA title); Jessica McCaskill vs. Cecilia Braekhus, welterweights (for McCaskill’s IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Estrada UD
  • Background: It doesn’t get much better than this. Then-108-pound titleholder Gonzalez and Estrada fought back in 2012, when Gonzalez was blossoming into one of the best fighters in the world and Estrada was a relative unknown contender. ‘Chocolatito’ won a unanimous decision but a competitive Estrada gave notice that he was a force to be reckoned with. A lot has happened since. Gonzalez climbed to No. 1 on many pound-for-pound lists only to lose back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai in 2017. The Nicaraguan rebounded to win four consecutive fights, including a KO of Khalid Yafai to win a 115-pound title in February of last year. Estrada went on to win titles in two divisions and make his own pound-for-pound claim. The Mexican is coming off an impressive 11th-round knockout of former titleholder Carlos Cuadras this past October. The winner of Estrada-Gonzalez will hold two of the four belts in the division and become the man to beat.

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Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Roman Gonzalez: time, how to watch, background

Juan Francisco Estrada vs. Roman Gonzalez: time, how to watch, facts

Juan Francisco Estrada and Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez are scheduled to meet in a compelling title-unification rematch of their 2012 fight

***

JUAN FRANCISCO ESTRADA (41-3, 28 KOs)
VS. ROMAN GONZALEZ (50-2, 41 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, March 13
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: American Airlines Center, Dallas
  • Stream / TV: DAZN and pay-per-view via cable or satellite
  • Cost: DAZN: $19.99 per month or $99 annually. Simply download the app. Pay-per-view: $24.99. Includes unlimited access to stream DAZN through the end of April 2021 at no extra charge.
  • Division: Junior bantamweight (115 pounds)
  • At stake: Estrada’s WBC and Gonzalez’s WBA titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Estrada No. 10
  • Odds: Estrada 1½-1 (BetMGM)
  • Also on the card: Hiroto Kyoguchi vs. Axel Aragon Vega, junior flyweights (for Kyoguchi’s WBA title); Jessica McCaskill vs. Cecilia Braekhus, welterweights (for McCaskill’s IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Estrada UD
  • Background: It doesn’t get much better than this. Then-108-pound titleholder Gonzalez and Estrada fought back in 2012, when Gonzalez was blossoming into one of the best fighters in the world and Estrada was a relative unknown contender. ‘Chocolatito’ won a unanimous decision but a competitive Estrada gave notice that he was a force to be reckoned with. A lot has happened since. Gonzalez climbed to No. 1 on many pound-for-pound lists only to lose back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai in 2017. The Nicaraguan rebounded to win four consecutive fights, including a KO of Khalid Yafai to win a 115-pound title in February of last year. Estrada went on to win titles in two divisions and make his own pound-for-pound claim. The Mexican is coming off an impressive 11th-round knockout of former titleholder Carlos Cuadras this past October. The winner of Estrada-Gonzalez will hold two of the four belts in the division and become the man to beat.

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