Jose Ramirez’s title defense vs. Viktor Postol rescheduled for May 9

Jose Ramirez’s junior welterweight title defense against Viktor Postol has been rescheduled for May 9 in Fresno, ESPN reported Monday.

Jose Ramirez’s junior welterweight title defense against Viktor Postol has been rescheduled for May 9 in Fresno, California, ESPN reported Monday.

The fight had been scheduled for Feb. 1 in Haikou, China. But Top Rank was forced to move the bout out of China because of coronavirus, a respiratory infection that has led to 1,018 deaths, according to latest news reports.

Ramirez (25-0, 17 KOs) was scheduled to leave for China on Jan. 23, the day it was decided that the bout against Postol (31-2, 12 KOs), a challenger from the Ukraine, would have to be re-scheduled.

The mandatory bout for two of Ramirez’s 140-pound belts is now scheduled for the Save Mart Center in Fresno, Ramirez’s hometown, according to ESPN, which will televise the fight.

Jose Ramirez: First Viktor Postol, then the real prize – Josh Taylor

Jose Ramirez said that he wants a title-unification showdown with Josh Taylor to be his last fight at 140 pounds.

There’s no doubt about what awaits Jose Ramírez. First, however, he has to travel to China and measure where he is. How prepared he is. It’s long way to go to get what everybody around him thinks is so close.

A Ramírez bout with Josh Taylor was the story when Taylor signed with Top Rank on Jan 9. It was never a question. Just when.

But a date was already on the Ramírez itinerary. There’s a bout with Viktor Postol on ESPN for an opening bell that will sound at about the time alarm clocks go off on the resort island of Haikou in the early morning hours of Feb. 2. For an American audience, it’ll be prime time Feb. 1.

On Ramírez’s career clock, it’s serious business in any time zone.

It will put him within a fight or two of who — what — he has always wanted.

“Taylor is the fight I want, hopefully next,’’ Ramírez said Wednesday on a conference call.

Ramírez, who was scheduled to leave for China on Thursday, foresees the Taylor bout as his last fight at 140 pounds. Then, he says he plans to move up the scale to 147 against Terence Crawford, a welterweight champion and leading pound-for-pound contender.

Exactly when the Ramírez-Taylor fight might happen, however, hinges on some mandatory defenses attached to the belts held by both. Each hold two. Taylor is expected to make a mandatory defense against Apinun Khongsong of Thailand before he moves on to Ramírez. The timing of that one is still unclear.

Top Rank’s Bob Arum said there’s a chance Ramírez could also fight a mandatory. Arum also said an exception from further mandatory defenses could be granted, which would immediately set up Ramírez-Taylor for all of the meaningful belts

“We’ll see,’’ Arum said.

Meanwhile, Ramírez (25-0, 17 KOs) has a chance to test himself against Postol (31-2, 12 KOs), a former champion whose 33 fights include losses to Crawford and then Taylor, both by unanimous decision.

“This will give people an idea of where I am as a fighter,’’ said Ramirez, who added that he won’t use the Postol fight as a way to measure his chances against Taylor and/or Crawford. “I won’t focus on how I would do against Crawford or Taylor. I’ll focus on what I do.’’

Jose Ramirez’s manager explains why next defense is in China

Jose Ramirez will be fighting in Hainan, China for his next junior welterweight title defense against Viktor Postol. The question is why?

Jose Ramirez, a proven ticket seller in California’s Central Valley, will be defending his two junior welterweight titles against Viktor Postol on a Chinese resort island called Hainan on Feb. 1.

All good. The question is why?

Increased exposure, says Ramirez’s longtime manager Rick Mirigian.

“There was a possibility that the fight did end up in Central Califronia and we made a case for it,” Mirigian told Boxing Junkie. “Looking at the bigger scope of things, we know that if we want to make him a bigger superstar, we have to get him worldwide exposure. We’ve got to get him to places like China. As a team, we talked and it was OK with us.”

It’s not just about introducing the Mexican-American slugger to a country with about 1.4 billion people. In a somewhat roundabout way, it’s also about exposing Ramirez to a greater swath of the American public. The fight is scheduled to air on ESPN the day before the Super Bowl, the most watched sporting event in America, giving it incomparable exposure. The fight could have taken place in Tasmania and it wouldn’t have mattered.

“(The Super Bowl date) was the prime factor for the doing the deal,” Mirigian said. “It was a huge negotiating point. I know how valuable that date is. To me it is more important than any date in the year just because of the eyeballs (in the U.S.). That ESPN channel is on around the spectrum. That’s a heaven-sent date.”

Should Ramirez defeat Postol, Mirigian will work to showcase Ramirez later in the year in front of his hometown fans, hopefully against Scotland’s Josh Taylor for a full unification bout of the junior welterweight titles. Mirigian expects Ramirez to fight twice in 2020.

“I’m looking at a football stadium,” Mirigian said. “Fresno State University holds 40,000 people. The next time he comes back home I’ll probably target that arena. I think a Josh Taylor fight could produce that.”

Jose Ramirez vs. Viktor Postol set for Feb. 1 in China

Junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez will take on Viktor Postol in the main event of a boxing card to take place in Hainan, China.

The pride of California’s Central Valley is taking his high-octane act to China.

Junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez will defend his belts against mandatory challenger Viktor Postol on Feb. 1 at the Mission Hills Haikou in the port city of Haikou, Hainan, Top Rank announced earlier this week. The fight will be broadcast live on ESPN.

Ramirez (25-0, 17 knockouts) is coming off a career-best win over Maurice Hooker to unify two of the four major belts in the division. He had surgery on his left hand following the fight. Ramirez, of Avenal, won his first title against Amir Imam at the Theatre at Madison Square Garden in 2018.

“I am excited to defend my belts against Viktor Postol to kick off my 2020 schedule,” Ramirez said. “I am a world champion, so it is my honor to defend my titles in front of the great fans in China. It is going to be a great experience, and I am glad that my fans back home will be able to watch me live on ESPN. As a unified champion, I am hungrier than ever.”

A former titleholder, Postol (31-2, 12 KOs) emerged on the world scene in 2015 when he knocked out Lucas Matthysse in the 10th round to win a vacant title. He lost it to Terence Crawford the following year and later came up short against Josh Taylor, the division’s other partially unified champion, in the World Boxing Super Series. Postol became the mandatory challenger for Ramirez’s WBC belt after his points win over Mohamed Mimoune in April.

“It’s a big opportunity for me and a big honor to share the ring with one of the best fighters in my division,” Postol said. “I know Ramirez, as we sparred together in the past. I’m looking forward to a great fight in China.”

Top Rank has staged fights in China in the past, most notably with Zou Shiming and Manny Pacquiao in the Chinese outpost of Macau.