Gilberto Ramirez easily outpoints Arsen Goulamirian to win 200-pound title

Gilberto Ramirez easily outpointed Arsen Goulamirian to take the Frenchman’s 200-pound title on Saturday in Inglewood, California.

Gilberto Ramirez is a two-division champion. And he accomplished the feat fairly easily.

The former 168-pound titleholder defeated Arsen Goulamirian by a one-sided decision to take the Frenchman’s WBA belt Saturday night at YouTube Theater in Inglewood, California.

All three judges had the same score, 118-110, 10 rounds to two.

Ramirez (46-1, 30 KOs) is only two fights removed from his lopsided loss to pound-for-pounder Dmitry Bivol in a 175-pound title-unification bout in 2022.

Goulamirian is no Bivol. On top of that, the now-former beltholder had fought only once in four-plus years, which didn’t help his cause.

Indeed, Ramirez had his way with his naturally bigger opponent, outboxing him throughout but also getting the better of him when they exchanged punches inside. The winner was never hurt.

Thus, the scoring was not surprising.

With the victory, Ramirez, a 32-year-old from Mazatlan, became the first Mexican to win a major 200-pound title. And he said he’s not finished writing his unusual story. He intends to move up to heavyweight at some point.

No Mexican national has ever won a major heavyweight title.

Goulamirian (27-1, 19 KOs) was upgraded to full WBA champion in September 2019. He had three successful defenses spread over two years before losing his belt.

Gilberto Ramirez on brink of making history again, this time at 200 pounds

Gilberto Ramirez is on the brink of making history again, this time at 200 pounds. He’ll face titleholder Arsen Goulamirian on Friday.

Gilberto Ramirez has fought as light as 158½ pounds. Now he’s talking about moving up to heavyweight soon.

Yes, “Zurdo” is trying to follow in the footsteps of such legends as Bob Fitzsimmons, Floyd Patterson and Roy Jones Jr., relatively small, but talented and determined men who accomplished great things in the highest weight classes.

His next challenge comes Saturday at YouTube Theater in Inglewood, California, where he’ll challenge 200-pound beltholder Arsen Goulamirian in a bid to become the first Mexican cruiserweight champion (DAZN).

“It is an honor to be able to be the main event at YouTube Theater and make a statement and potentially become a legend. This is my motivation,” Ramirez said.

Ramirez (45-1, 30 KOs) had known nothing but success against solid opposition until a year and a half ago. The now-32-year-old southpaw shut out Arthur Abraham to become the first Mexican to win a 168-pound title in 2016 and also twice beat Jesse Hart at that weight.

He moved up to 175 in 2019 and took down a series of capable opponents, including Sullivan Barrera and Yunieski Gonzalez.

Then came disaster. He challenged 175-pound beltholder and pound-for-pounder Dmitry Bivol and was outclassed in November 2022, losing a one-sided sided decision and much of the luster on his resume.

Following that he missed weight by a whopping 7.6 pounds for a 175-pound bout with Gabriel Rosado that was canceled in March of last year, further damaging his reputation.

His next move was obvious: Move up to cruiserweight. And his choice of opponent was clever: Joe Smith Jr., a well-known former 175-pound beltholder who also was moving up in weight. They agreed on a 193-pound catch weight.

The result got Ramirez moving in the right direction once again. An excellent technician, he outboxed the powerful, but limited Smith to win nine out of the 10 rounds on all three cards.

The victory earned him a shot at Goulamirian (27-0, 19 KOs), a Frenchman who has fought once in four-plus years but has ability and has fought at 200 pounds his entire career.

Ramirez told RingTV.com that he’s now a natural 200-pounder.

“I feel great at this new weight class,” he told the outlet. “It’s my natural weight and there is not too much cutting. I walk around at 210, 215 all year round, so making 200 is a breeze compared to 175 or 168.

“After moving up in the weight class, I’ve been working on my strength and boxing. I feel the work that I put will allow me to be strong in pocket and trade any shots with him. My overall strength and skill set will be the difference.”

Ramirez’s goal is to do what he couldn’t do at 175, win a major title, and then go on to even bigger and better things.

“The only thing I know is that he has what I want (the WBA cruiserweight title) and I’m going to take it,” he said. “I’m here to stay and conquer the division before moving up to the heavyweight division.

“I know there isn’t too many fighters my size from my country, so I have to represent well. Viva Mexico!”

[lawrence-related id=41179,39291,39287]

Gilberto Ramirez on brink of making history again, this time at 200 pounds

Gilberto Ramirez is on the brink of making history again, this time at 200 pounds. He’ll face titleholder Arsen Goulamirian on Friday.

Gilberto Ramirez has fought as light as 158½ pounds. Now he’s talking about moving up to heavyweight soon.

Yes, “Zurdo” is trying to follow in the footsteps of such legends as Bob Fitzsimmons, Floyd Patterson and Roy Jones Jr., relatively small, but talented and determined men who accomplished great things in the highest weight classes.

His next challenge comes Saturday at YouTube Theater in Inglewood, California, where he’ll challenge 200-pound beltholder Arsen Goulamirian in a bid to become the first Mexican cruiserweight champion (DAZN).

“It is an honor to be able to be the main event at YouTube Theater and make a statement and potentially become a legend. This is my motivation,” Ramirez said.

Ramirez (45-1, 30 KOs) had known nothing but success against solid opposition until a year and a half ago. The now-32-year-old southpaw shut out Arthur Abraham to become the first Mexican to win a 168-pound title in 2016 and also twice beat Jesse Hart at that weight.

He moved up to 175 in 2019 and took down a series of capable opponents, including Sullivan Barrera and Yunieski Gonzalez.

Then came disaster. He challenged 175-pound beltholder and pound-for-pounder Dmitry Bivol and was outclassed in November 2022, losing a one-sided sided decision and much of the luster on his resume.

Following that he missed weight by a whopping 7.6 pounds for a 175-pound bout with Gabriel Rosado that was canceled in March of last year, further damaging his reputation.

His next move was obvious: Move up to cruiserweight. And his choice of opponent was clever: Joe Smith Jr., a well-known former 175-pound beltholder who also was moving up in weight. They agreed on a 193-pound catch weight.

The result got Ramirez moving in the right direction once again. An excellent technician, he outboxed the powerful, but limited Smith to win nine out of the 10 rounds on all three cards.

The victory earned him a shot at Goulamirian (27-0, 19 KOs), a Frenchman who has fought once in four-plus years but has ability and has fought at 200 pounds his entire career.

Ramirez told RingTV.com that he’s now a natural 200-pounder.

“I feel great at this new weight class,” he told the outlet. “It’s my natural weight and there is not too much cutting. I walk around at 210, 215 all year round, so making 200 is a breeze compared to 175 or 168.

“After moving up in the weight class, I’ve been working on my strength and boxing. I feel the work that I put will allow me to be strong in pocket and trade any shots with him. My overall strength and skill set will be the difference.”

Ramirez’s goal is to do what he couldn’t do at 175, win a major title, and then go on to even bigger and better things.

“The only thing I know is that he has what I want (the WBA cruiserweight title) and I’m going to take it,” he said. “I’m here to stay and conquer the division before moving up to the heavyweight division.

“I know there isn’t too many fighters my size from my country, so I have to represent well. Viva Mexico!”

[lawrence-related id=41179,39291,39287]

Arsen Goulamirian vs. Gilberto Ramirez: Date, time, how to watch, background

Arsen Goulamirian vs. Gilberto Ramirez: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Cruiserweight titleholder Arsen Goulamirian is scheduled to defend his belt against Gilberto Ramirez on Friday in Inglewood, California.

ARSEN GOULAMIRIAN (27-0, 19 KOs)
VS. GILBERTO RAMIREZ (45-1, 30 KOs)

Arsen Goulamirian (right) will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time against Gilberto Ramirez.  Gerard Julien / AFP via Getty Images
  • Date: Friday, March 29
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: YouTube Theater, Inglewood, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: Goulamirian’s WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Alexis Rocha vs. Fredrick Lawson, welterweights; Ricardo Sandoval vs. Luis Hernandez, flyweights; Santiago Dominguez vs. Jose Sanchez, welterweights; Kareem Hackett vs. Rowdy Montgomenry, light heavyweights
  • Background: Goulamirian will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time but has been unusually inactive over the past four-plus years, a period in which the California-based Frenchman has fought only once. He was out of the ring for three years between 2019 and 2022 because of illness (COVID 19) and other issues. He finally returned in November 2022, when he easily outpointed Aleksei Ergorov in France. The 36-year-old trains with Abel Sanchez in Big Bear, California. The well-connected Ramirez is getting his second title shot in three fights, having lost a one-sided decision to 175-pound champ Dmitry Bivol in 2022. He bounced back to outclass former beltholder Joe Smith Jr. in his 200-pound debut last October, winning a near-shutout decision. Ramirez is a former 168-pound titleholder.

[lawrence-related id=39287,39279]

Arsen Goulamirian vs. Gilberto Ramirez: Date, time, how to watch, background

Arsen Goulamirian vs. Gilberto Ramirez: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Cruiserweight titleholder Arsen Goulamirian is scheduled to defend his belt against Gilberto Ramirez on Friday in Inglewood, California.

ARSEN GOULAMIRIAN (27-0, 19 KOs)
VS. GILBERTO RAMIREZ (45-1, 30 KOs)

Arsen Goulamirian (right) will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time against Gilberto Ramirez.  Gerard Julien / AFP via Getty Images
  • Date: Friday, March 29
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: YouTube Theater, Inglewood, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: Goulamirian’s WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Alexis Rocha vs. Fredrick Lawson, welterweights; Ricardo Sandoval vs. Luis Hernandez, flyweights; Santiago Dominguez vs. Jose Sanchez, welterweights; Kareem Hackett vs. Rowdy Montgomenry, light heavyweights
  • Background: Goulamirian will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time but has been unusually inactive over the past four-plus years, a period in which the California-based Frenchman has fought only once. He was out of the ring for three years between 2019 and 2022 because of illness (COVID 19) and other issues. He finally returned in November 2022, when he easily outpointed Aleksei Ergorov in France. The 36-year-old trains with Abel Sanchez in Big Bear, California. The well-connected Ramirez is getting his second title shot in three fights, having lost a one-sided decision to 175-pound champ Dmitry Bivol in 2022. He bounced back to outclass former beltholder Joe Smith Jr. in his 200-pound debut last October, winning a near-shutout decision. Ramirez is a former 168-pound titleholder.

[lawrence-related id=39287,39279]

Fight Week: Tim Tszyu vs. Sebastian Fundora highlights stacked weekend

Fight Week: Tim Tszyu’s title defense against Sebastian Fundora highlights a stacked weekend of boxing.

FIGHT WEEK

Rising star Tim Tszyu is scheduled to defend his 154-pound title against replacement opponent Sebastian Fundora on a busy weekend in boxing.

OSCAR VALDEZ (31-2, 23 KOs)
VS. LIAM WILSON (13-2, 7 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, March 29
  • Time: 6:05 p.m. ET / 3:05 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Desert Diamond Arena, Glendale, Arizona
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Valdez 3½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ***
  • Also on the card: Yokasta Valle vs. Seniesa Estrada, strawweights (for  Valle’s IBF, WBO and Estrada’s WBA, WBC titles); Raymond Muratalla vs. Xolisani Ndongeni, lightweights; Richard Torrez Jr. vs. Don Haynesworth, heavyweights
  • Background: Valdez is on the comeback trail once again. The former two-division titleholder from Mexico was outclassed by Shakur Stevenson in a 130-pound title-unification bout in 2022, losing a one-sided decision. He bounced back to outpoint Adam Lopez a year later. However, he suffered another wide-decision setback in an entertaining scrap against beltholder Emanuel Navarrete last August, which further damaged his reputation. Wilson, a former title challenger, is a clear underdog but no pushover. He put Navarrete down and hurt him before he was stopped himself in Round 9 of a competitive battle for a vacant 130-pound belt in February of last year. The resident of Queensland outpointed two second-tier opponents since the loss, including a unanimous, but close decision over countryman Jackson Jon England. Also on the March 29 card, Yokasta Valle (30-2, 9 KOs) and Seniesa Estrada (25-0, 9 KOs) will fight for the undisputed strawweight championship. They hold two belts apiece.

 

TIM TSZYU (24-0, 17 KOs) VS.
SEBASTIAN FUNDORA (20-1-1, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, March 30
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view ($69.99 in U.S.)
  • Division: Junior middleweight (154 pounds)
  • At stake: Tszyu’s WBO and vacant WBC titles
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Tszyu 4½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): *****
  • Also on the card: Rolando Romero vs. Isaac Cruz, junior welterweights (for Romero’s title); Erislandy Lara vs. Michael Zerafa, middleweights (for Lara’s WBA title); Elijah Garcia vs. Kyrone Davis, middleweights; Julio Cesar Martinez vs. Angel Cordova, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title); Serhii Bohachuk vs. Brian Mendoza, junior middleweights
  • Background: Tszyu was scheduled to face veteran Keith Thurman but Thurman pulled out of the fight after injuring his biceps less than two weeks before the opening bell. Fundora, scheduled to fight Bohachuk on the card, agreed to step in and challenge Tszyu. The champion has established himself as an elite fighter with a series of impressive performances, including convincing victories over Terrell Gausha, Tony Harrison, Carlos Ocampo and Brian Mendoza in his last four fights. He was expected to fight then-undisputed champion Jermell Charlo last year but Charlo ended up challenging 168-pound champ Canelo Alvarez and was stripped of his WBO belt at the opening bell. That allowed Tszyu to be elevated from “interim” beltholder to full champion before the Mendoza fight. Fundora was fortunate to get a shot at Tszyu in light of the fact he’s coming off the first loss of his career, a seventh-round knockout against Mendoza in April of last year. The 6-foot-5½ slugger was winning the fight when he was stopped by a brutal three-punch combination. Fundora had given a series of strong performances before his setback, including a ninth-round stoppage of Erickson Lubin in 2022. Also on the card, veteran Erislandy Lara (29-3-3, 17 KOs) will defend his 160-pound title against Michael Zerafa (31-4, 19 KOs). Lara is 40 years old. And Julio Cesar Martinez (20-3, 15 KOs) will defend his 112-pound belt against Angel Cordova (18-0-1, 12 KOs).

 

ARSEN GOULAMIRIAN (27-0, 19 KOs)
VS. GILBERTO RAMIREZ (45-1, 30 KOs)

Arsen Goulamirian (right) will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time against Gilberto Ramirez.  Gerard Julien / AFP via Getty Images
  • Date: Friday, March 29
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: YouTube Theater, Inglewood, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: Goulamirian’s WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Alexis Rocha vs. Fredrick Lawson, welterweights; Ricardo Sandoval vs. Luis Hernandez, flyweights; Santiago Dominguez vs. Jose Sanchez, welterweights; Kareem Hackett vs. Rowdy Montgomenry, light heavyweights
  • Background: Goulamirian will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time but has been unusually inactive over the past four-plus years, a period in which the California-based Frenchman has fought only once. He was out of the ring for three years between 2019 and 2022 because of illness (COVID 19) and other issues. He finally returned in November 2022, when he easily outpointed Aleksei Ergorov in France. The 36-year-old trains with Abel Sanchez in Big Bear, California. The well-connected Ramirez is getting his second title shot in three fights, having lost a one-sided decision to 175-pound champ Dmitry Bivol in 2022. He bounced back to outclass former beltholder Joe Smith Jr. in his 200-pound debut last October, winning a near-shutout decision. Ramirez is a former 168-pound titleholder.

 

YUDAI SHIGEOKA (9-2, 6 KOs)
VS. MELVIN JERUSALEM (21-3, 12 KOs)

  • Date: Sunday, March 31
  • Time: 5 a.m. ET / 2 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: International Conference Hall, Nagoya, Japan
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Strawweight (105 pounds)
  • At stake: Shigeoka’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Shigeoka 6-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Ginjiro Shigeoka vs. ArAr Andales, strawweights (for Shigeoka’s IBF title); Lerato Dlamani vs. Tomoki Kameda, featherweights; Riku Kunimoto vs. Eiki Kani, middleweights; Mark Dickinson vs. Anauel Ngamissengue, middleweights; Aaron McKenna vs. Jeovanny Estela, middleweights; Kieron Conway vs. Ainiwaer Yilixiati, middleweights
  • Background: The Shigeoka brothers – 26-year-old Yudai and 24-year-old Ginjiro – will both be defending their 105-pound titles in their home country. Yudai, an offense-minded fighter with power, got off to a slow start in his career – losing two of his first three fights – but he’s unbeaten in his next eight. That includes his convincing decision over then-titleholder Panya Pradabsri last October, giving Shigeoka his first major belt. His opponent on Sunday, Jerusalem, lost his own strawweight title to young star Oscar Collazo last May, getting stopped in seven rounds. The Filipino rebounded by outpointing journeyman Francis Jay Diaz last October in the Philippines. Ginjiro Shigeoka (10-0, 8 KOs) also is aggressive and has heavy hands. The younger Shigeoka’s first title shot ended in disappointment, when then-champ Daniel Valladares was cut by an accidental head butt and the fight was declared a no-contest in January of last year. However, two fights later, Shigeoka stopped the Mexican in five rounds to become a world champion. That fight took place in October. Shigeoka’s opponent on Sunday is ArAr Andales, a light-punching Filipino who is coming off back-to-back draws against Tsubasa Koura and Wilfredo Mendez in 2022 and in October, respectively. Andales (14-2-3, 6 KOs) has three draws in his last four fights.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

WEDNESDAY

  • Joseph Adorno vs. Nicholas Walters, lightweights, Plant City, Florida (ProBox TV)

THURSDAY

  • Juan Carrillo vs. Quinton Rankin, light heavyweights, Detroit (DAZN)

FRIDAY

  • Elijah Pierce vs. Arthur Villanueva, bantamweights, Atlanta (DAZN)

SATURDAY

  • Luis Lopez vs. Jesus Resendiz, welterweights, Long Beach, California (Fubo Sports)

SUNDAY

  • Fabio Wardley vs. Frazer Clarke, heavyweights, London (Peacock)

[lawrence-related id=41119,40545,39539,39372,39356,36648,36644,38543]

Fight Week: Tim Tszyu vs. Sebastian Fundora highlights stacked weekend

Fight Week: Tim Tszyu’s title defense against Sebastian Fundora highlights a stacked weekend of boxing.

FIGHT WEEK

Rising star Tim Tszyu is scheduled to defend his 154-pound title against replacement opponent Sebastian Fundora on a busy weekend in boxing.

OSCAR VALDEZ (31-2, 23 KOs)
VS. LIAM WILSON (13-2, 7 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, March 29
  • Time: 6:05 p.m. ET / 3:05 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Desert Diamond Arena, Glendale, Arizona
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Valdez 3½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ***
  • Also on the card: Yokasta Valle vs. Seniesa Estrada, strawweights (for  Valle’s IBF, WBO and Estrada’s WBA, WBC titles); Raymond Muratalla vs. Xolisani Ndongeni, lightweights; Richard Torrez Jr. vs. Don Haynesworth, heavyweights
  • Background: Valdez is on the comeback trail once again. The former two-division titleholder from Mexico was outclassed by Shakur Stevenson in a 130-pound title-unification bout in 2022, losing a one-sided decision. He bounced back to outpoint Adam Lopez a year later. However, he suffered another wide-decision setback in an entertaining scrap against beltholder Emanuel Navarrete last August, which further damaged his reputation. Wilson, a former title challenger, is a clear underdog but no pushover. He put Navarrete down and hurt him before he was stopped himself in Round 9 of a competitive battle for a vacant 130-pound belt in February of last year. The resident of Queensland outpointed two second-tier opponents since the loss, including a unanimous, but close decision over countryman Jackson Jon England. Also on the March 29 card, Yokasta Valle (30-2, 9 KOs) and Seniesa Estrada (25-0, 9 KOs) will fight for the undisputed strawweight championship. They hold two belts apiece.

 

TIM TSZYU (24-0, 17 KOs) VS.
SEBASTIAN FUNDORA (20-1-1, 13 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, March 30
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view ($69.99 in U.S.)
  • Division: Junior middleweight (154 pounds)
  • At stake: Tszyu’s WBO and vacant WBC titles
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Tszyu 4½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): *****
  • Also on the card: Rolando Romero vs. Isaac Cruz, junior welterweights (for Romero’s title); Erislandy Lara vs. Michael Zerafa, middleweights (for Lara’s WBA title); Elijah Garcia vs. Kyrone Davis, middleweights; Julio Cesar Martinez vs. Angel Cordova, flyweights (for Martinez’s WBC title); Serhii Bohachuk vs. Brian Mendoza, junior middleweights
  • Background: Tszyu was scheduled to face veteran Keith Thurman but Thurman pulled out of the fight after injuring his biceps less than two weeks before the opening bell. Fundora, scheduled to fight Bohachuk on the card, agreed to step in and challenge Tszyu. The champion has established himself as an elite fighter with a series of impressive performances, including convincing victories over Terrell Gausha, Tony Harrison, Carlos Ocampo and Brian Mendoza in his last four fights. He was expected to fight then-undisputed champion Jermell Charlo last year but Charlo ended up challenging 168-pound champ Canelo Alvarez and was stripped of his WBO belt at the opening bell. That allowed Tszyu to be elevated from “interim” beltholder to full champion before the Mendoza fight. Fundora was fortunate to get a shot at Tszyu in light of the fact he’s coming off the first loss of his career, a seventh-round knockout against Mendoza in April of last year. The 6-foot-5½ slugger was winning the fight when he was stopped by a brutal three-punch combination. Fundora had given a series of strong performances before his setback, including a ninth-round stoppage of Erickson Lubin in 2022. Also on the card, veteran Erislandy Lara (29-3-3, 17 KOs) will defend his 160-pound title against Michael Zerafa (31-4, 19 KOs). Lara is 40 years old. And Julio Cesar Martinez (20-3, 15 KOs) will defend his 112-pound belt against Angel Cordova (18-0-1, 12 KOs).

 

ARSEN GOULAMIRIAN (27-0, 19 KOs)
VS. GILBERTO RAMIREZ (45-1, 30 KOs)

Arsen Goulamirian (right) will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time against Gilberto Ramirez.  Gerard Julien / AFP via Getty Images
  • Date: Friday, March 29
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: YouTube Theater, Inglewood, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Cruiserweight (200 pounds)
  • At stake: Goulamirian’s WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 2½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Alexis Rocha vs. Fredrick Lawson, welterweights; Ricardo Sandoval vs. Luis Hernandez, flyweights; Santiago Dominguez vs. Jose Sanchez, welterweights; Kareem Hackett vs. Rowdy Montgomenry, light heavyweights
  • Background: Goulamirian will be defending his 200-pound title for the fifth time but has been unusually inactive over the past four-plus years, a period in which the California-based Frenchman has fought only once. He was out of the ring for three years between 2019 and 2022 because of illness (COVID 19) and other issues. He finally returned in November 2022, when he easily outpointed Aleksei Ergorov in France. The 36-year-old trains with Abel Sanchez in Big Bear, California. The well-connected Ramirez is getting his second title shot in three fights, having lost a one-sided decision to 175-pound champ Dmitry Bivol in 2022. He bounced back to outclass former beltholder Joe Smith Jr. in his 200-pound debut last October, winning a near-shutout decision. Ramirez is a former 168-pound titleholder.

 

YUDAI SHIGEOKA (9-2, 6 KOs)
VS. MELVIN JERUSALEM (21-3, 12 KOs)

  • Date: Sunday, March 31
  • Time: 5 a.m. ET / 2 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: International Conference Hall, Nagoya, Japan
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Strawweight (105 pounds)
  • At stake: Shigeoka’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Shigeoka 6-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ****
  • Also on the card: Ginjiro Shigeoka vs. ArAr Andales, strawweights (for Shigeoka’s IBF title); Lerato Dlamani vs. Tomoki Kameda, featherweights; Riku Kunimoto vs. Eiki Kani, middleweights; Mark Dickinson vs. Anauel Ngamissengue, middleweights; Aaron McKenna vs. Jeovanny Estela, middleweights; Kieron Conway vs. Ainiwaer Yilixiati, middleweights
  • Background: The Shigeoka brothers – 26-year-old Yudai and 24-year-old Ginjiro – will both be defending their 105-pound titles in their home country. Yudai, an offense-minded fighter with power, got off to a slow start in his career – losing two of his first three fights – but he’s unbeaten in his next eight. That includes his convincing decision over then-titleholder Panya Pradabsri last October, giving Shigeoka his first major belt. His opponent on Sunday, Jerusalem, lost his own strawweight title to young star Oscar Collazo last May, getting stopped in seven rounds. The Filipino rebounded by outpointing journeyman Francis Jay Diaz last October in the Philippines. Ginjiro Shigeoka (10-0, 8 KOs) also is aggressive and has heavy hands. The younger Shigeoka’s first title shot ended in disappointment, when then-champ Daniel Valladares was cut by an accidental head butt and the fight was declared a no-contest in January of last year. However, two fights later, Shigeoka stopped the Mexican in five rounds to become a world champion. That fight took place in October. Shigeoka’s opponent on Sunday is ArAr Andales, a light-punching Filipino who is coming off back-to-back draws against Tsubasa Koura and Wilfredo Mendez in 2022 and in October, respectively. Andales (14-2-3, 6 KOs) has three draws in his last four fights.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

WEDNESDAY

  • Joseph Adorno vs. Nicholas Walters, lightweights, Plant City, Florida (ProBox TV)

THURSDAY

  • Juan Carrillo vs. Quinton Rankin, light heavyweights, Detroit (DAZN)

FRIDAY

  • Elijah Pierce vs. Arthur Villanueva, bantamweights, Atlanta (DAZN)

SATURDAY

  • Luis Lopez vs. Jesus Resendiz, welterweights, Long Beach, California (Fubo Sports)

SUNDAY

  • Fabio Wardley vs. Frazer Clarke, heavyweights, London (Peacock)

[lawrence-related id=41119,40545,39539,39372,39356,36648,36644,38543]

Weekend Review: Gilberto Ramirez back, Leigh Wood delivers more drama

Weekend Review: Gilberto Ramirez is back and Leigh Wood delivered more drama.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Gilberto Ramirez

The former 168-pound titleholder is back, such as that is. Light heavyweight champ Dmitry Bivol exposed his limitations by easily outpointing him this past November. That fight demonstrated that Ramirez (45-1, 30 KOs) is a solid, unusually durable boxer but doesn’t’ have the speed, athleticism or punching power (at the higher weights) to take down a pound-for-pound talent. Joe Smith Jr. (28-5, 22 KOs)? That’s a different story. Ramirez will generally thrive against an opponent like that, as we saw when he defeated the even-more limited American by a one-sided decision at a 193-pound catch weight Saturday in Las Vegas. It wasn’t exciting but it was efficient. Ramirez is talented and experienced enough to do better at 200 pounds than has at 175, where Bivol and Artur Beterbiev still reside. Ramirez will never be a special fighter but he has a decent chance of winning a major belt in a second division 32 pounds heavier than the limit at super middleweight, at which he won his first title. That’s special.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
Leigh Wood

The 126-pound titleholder probably won’t be remembered as one of the best fighters England has produced. He’s one of the most exciting, though. The same man who knocked Michael Conlan out of the ring in the final round to win a fight he was losing last year delivered another unlikely victory on Saturday in Sheffield, where he was behind on the cards and was nearly stopped himself only to brutally knock out former champion Josh Warrington (31-3-1, 8 KOs) in the seventh round and retain his title. Wood (28-3, 17 KOs) was losing all three cards at the time. To say the 35-year-old from Nottingham has the flair for the dramatic is an understatement. I don’t know whether he has the ability to unify at featherweight or win a title at 130 pounds. I do know that his solid ability, toughness and never-ever-say-die mentality would give him a chance to beat anyone. Win or lose, you can bet he’s going to entertain the fans. It’s no wonder he’s so popular in his home town.

[lawrence-related id=39287]

Weekend Review: Gilberto Ramirez back, Leigh Wood delivers more drama

Weekend Review: Gilberto Ramirez is back and Leigh Wood delivered more drama.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Gilberto Ramirez

The former 168-pound titleholder is back, such as that is. Light heavyweight champ Dmitry Bivol exposed his limitations by easily outpointing him this past November. That fight demonstrated that Ramirez (45-1, 30 KOs) is a solid, unusually durable boxer but doesn’t’ have the speed, athleticism or punching power (at the higher weights) to take down a pound-for-pound talent. Joe Smith Jr. (28-5, 22 KOs)? That’s a different story. Ramirez will generally thrive against an opponent like that, as we saw when he defeated the even-more limited American by a one-sided decision at a 193-pound catch weight Saturday in Las Vegas. It wasn’t exciting but it was efficient. Ramirez is talented and experienced enough to do better at 200 pounds than has at 175, where Bivol and Artur Beterbiev still reside. Ramirez will never be a special fighter but he has a decent chance of winning a major belt in a second division 32 pounds heavier than the limit at super middleweight, at which he won his first title. That’s special.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
Leigh Wood

The 126-pound titleholder probably won’t be remembered as one of the best fighters England has produced. He’s one of the most exciting, though. The same man who knocked Michael Conlan out of the ring in the final round to win a fight he was losing last year delivered another unlikely victory on Saturday in Sheffield, where he was behind on the cards and was nearly stopped himself only to brutally knock out former champion Josh Warrington (31-3-1, 8 KOs) in the seventh round and retain his title. Wood (28-3, 17 KOs) was losing all three cards at the time. To say the 35-year-old from Nottingham has the flair for the dramatic is an understatement. I don’t know whether he has the ability to unify at featherweight or win a title at 130 pounds. I do know that his solid ability, toughness and never-ever-say-die mentality would give him a chance to beat anyone. Win or lose, you can bet he’s going to entertain the fans. It’s no wonder he’s so popular in his home town.

[lawrence-related id=39287]

Gilberto Ramirez defeats overmatched Joe Smith Jr. by one-sided decision

Gilberto Ramirez defeated an overmatched Joe Smith Jr. by a one-sided decision Saturday in Las Vegas.

All is right with Gilberto Ramirez again.

The former 168-pound title holder, who lost a one-sided decision to 175-pound champ Dmitry Bivol in November and then missed weight by 7-plus pounds for a scheduled fight that was canceled in March, had his way with Joe Smith Jr. on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Ramirez (45-1, 30 KOs) won nine of the 10 rounds on all three scorecards in a 193-pound catch weight bout, making him a major player in the cruiserweight division.

The 32-year-old southpaw from Mexico picked apart Smith (28-5, 22 KOs) for most of the one-sided fight, doing particularly good work to the body.

Fifty-nine of Ramirez’s total punches landed were to his American counterpart’s stomach, 35%, according to CompuBox. And 51 of the 59 were power shots. He threw 415 punches overall

Smith, a big puncher, landed some clean power shots but couldn’t hurt the rugged Ramirez. The New Yorker landed 119 of his 419 punches.

“This is a new beginning for me,” Ramirez said. “I came back stronger, faster and I came forward. I was a lot smarter in the ring. I think it was a great performance for me. …

“I felt like I was ahead on the cards. I never took any chances because he has heavy hands and brings a lot of heat to the ring.”

The fight was billed as a WBA title eliminator.