Weekend Review: Brandon Figueroa winning over any lingering doubters

A critical look at the past week in boxing BIGGEST WINNER Brandon Figueroa – How good is Figueroa? Really good. He told me going into his fight with Mark Magsayo on Saturday that he feels he’s still seen as an easy mark. Well, if that was once the …

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER

Brandon Figueroa – How good is Figueroa? Really good. He told me going into his fight with Mark Magsayo on Saturday that he feels he’s still seen as an easy mark. Well, if that was once the case, it certainly isn’t now. The former 122-pound titleholder overcame a slow start against a quicker, more athletic opponent to grind him down with relentless pressure and win a wide decision, thus positioning himself for a shot at Rey Vargas’ 126-pound belt. The fact is Figueroa’s a physical freak, an unusually strong, ridiculously fit warrior who seems to be at his best when things are their most harry. Said pound-for-pounder Stephen Fulton Jr., who narrowly outpointed Figueroa: “It was a tough fight, he’s a tough person.” Ya think? I compare Figueroa to Leo Santa Cruz, another aggressive volume puncher adept at breaking down opponents. I think Figueroa (24-1-1, 18 KOs) might be more durable than Santa Cruz, though. That’s going to make him difficult to beat regardless of the opponent. Vargas could be in trouble.

 

BIGGEST LOSER

Mark Magsayo couldn’t withstand Brandon Figueroa’s pressure. Esther Lin / Showtime

Mark Magsayo – Where do I start? I guess with the fact he initially came in .8 pounds over the 126-pound limit on Friday, which was the result of either difficulty cutting weight or a miscalculation. Either way, it wasn’t a good omen. His fighting tactics were fairly effective, particularly in the first third of the fight. However, the holding became ridiculously excessive. He justifiably lost two points for it, although the deductions didn’t impact the outcome. And while he gave a decent account of himself he clearly faded in the second half of the fight. His inability to make weight might’ve played a role in that but you can be sure that the main reason was Figueroa’s incessant pressure and physical strength, which can be overwhelming. The positive? The protégé of Manny Pacquiao was quicker and more athletic than Figueroa, which allowed him to get in, do damage and get out in the early rounds. And his explosive multi-punch combinations got everyone’s attention. He’s a good fighter. He was just in with the wrong guy.

 

MOST QUESTIONABLE SCORING?

Figueroa-Magsayo – Sean Gibbons, Magsayo’s promoter, was livid over the scoring of the fight with Figueroa. The official scores were 118-108, 117-109 and 117-109, meaning one judge gave Figueroa 10 rounds and two gave him nine. Judge Zachary Young gave Figueroa the last nine rounds. “You cannot, no matter how you add it up, score rounds four [through] 12 for Brandon Figueroa. You just can’t do it,” Gibbons told reporters. “… This man fought his ass off. And everybody saw the fight. Even with the point deductions, [it] could’ve been 15-13, 14-14. But 17-9? No.” Said Magsayo, who left the ring without being interviewed immediately after the fight: “If I didn’t [get] the two deductions, I [thought] I’m gonna win the fight. I hit him clearly, solid punches. He feel it. He was hurt.” I agree that the scoring was too wide, although not outrageously so. I scored it 115-111 for Figueroa, seven rounds to five. And I understand that Gibbons wanted to stand up for his fighter. However, the right man won. He dominated the final nine rounds even if you give one or two to Magsayo.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II

Armando Resendiz understood the significance of his accomplishment. Esther Lin / Showtime

Armando Resendiz – The 24-year-old Mexican chose the right time to deliver his best performance as a professional. The light heavyweight-turned-super middleweight-turned middleweight had a shaky 2021, eking out a split decision over journeyman Quilisto Madera and losing a unanimous decision to Marcos Hernandez. He bounced back to stop another journeyman, Heber Rondon, in two rounds last October, which led to a shot at former unified 154-pound champion Jarrett Hurd on the Figueroa-Magsayo card. He arrived prepared. Naturally bigger and stronger than Hurd – as well as fit – he took the fight to his more heralded opponent, outworked him and was never hurt. That’s why he was well ahead on the cards when the scheduled 10-round fight was stopped after nine because of a gruesome cut on Hurd’s upper lip. Resendiz (14-1, 10 KOs) celebrated wildly afterward. Why not? He had just taken a significant step toward becoming a legitimate middleweight contender.

 

BIGGEST WINNER III

Teenager Elijah Garcia (left) fought like a veteran against Amilcar Vidal. Esther Lin / Showtime

Elijah Garcia – Nineteen years old? Someone check Garcia’s birth certificate. The teenager from Phoenix fought with the maturity of a veteran against the more-experienced and previously unbeaten Amilcar Vidal (16-1, 12 KOs) on the Figueroa-Magsayo card, withstanding a fierce attack from Vidal and firing back in kind in an entertaining scrap. And then Garcia delivered the most dramatic moment on the televised portion of the card. He hurt Vidal with a right hook and followed with a barrage of hard shots, which put Vidal on the canvas. Referee Jack Reiss took a quick look at Vidal and decided he could not continue, which was the right decision. The fourth-round knockout was like a coming out party for Garcia (14-0, 12 KOs), who seems to have the physical tools and frame of mind to succeed in boxing. He said he wants to win a major world title by the age of 21. His performance on Saturday is an indication that anything is possible.

 

BIGGEST LOSER II

Jarrett Hurd (right) had his moments against Armando Resendiz. Esther Lin / Showtime

Jarrett Hurd – It’s probably too early to write off Hurd (24-3, 16 KOs) but he’s not in a strong position. He appeared to be a budding star going into his title defense against the talented Julian Williams in 2019. He’s 1-3 since, losing to Williams, Luis Arias and now Resendiz after returning from a 21-month layoff. He performed well enough against Resendiz to make me think he should keep trying. Maybe the long break left him rusty, which is now gone. At the same time, it seems that he doesn’t have at 160 pounds the physical advantages he had at 154. I suspect Hurd’s future in boxing will come down to his determination more than anything else. How badly does he want to regain his status as an elite fighter? Is he willing to put in the all-consuming, grueling work it will take for him to succeed? We’ll see how this plays out.

[lawrence-related id=36021,36017,36011,36007,36000]

Weekend Review: Brandon Figueroa winning over any lingering doubters

A critical look at the past week in boxing BIGGEST WINNER Brandon Figueroa – How good is Figueroa? Really good. He told me going into his fight with Mark Magsayo on Saturday that he feels he’s still seen as an easy mark. Well, if that was once the …

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER

Brandon Figueroa – How good is Figueroa? Really good. He told me going into his fight with Mark Magsayo on Saturday that he feels he’s still seen as an easy mark. Well, if that was once the case, it certainly isn’t now. The former 122-pound titleholder overcame a slow start against a quicker, more athletic opponent to grind him down with relentless pressure and win a wide decision, thus positioning himself for a shot at Rey Vargas’ 126-pound belt. The fact is Figueroa’s a physical freak, an unusually strong, ridiculously fit warrior who seems to be at his best when things are their most harry. Said pound-for-pounder Stephen Fulton Jr., who narrowly outpointed Figueroa: “It was a tough fight, he’s a tough person.” Ya think? I compare Figueroa to Leo Santa Cruz, another aggressive volume puncher adept at breaking down opponents. I think Figueroa (24-1-1, 18 KOs) might be more durable than Santa Cruz, though. That’s going to make him difficult to beat regardless of the opponent. Vargas could be in trouble.

 

BIGGEST LOSER

Mark Magsayo couldn’t withstand Brandon Figueroa’s pressure. Esther Lin / Showtime

Mark Magsayo – Where do I start? I guess with the fact he initially came in .8 pounds over the 126-pound limit on Friday, which was the result of either difficulty cutting weight or a miscalculation. Either way, it wasn’t a good omen. His fighting tactics were fairly effective, particularly in the first third of the fight. However, the holding became ridiculously excessive. He justifiably lost two points for it, although the deductions didn’t impact the outcome. And while he gave a decent account of himself he clearly faded in the second half of the fight. His inability to make weight might’ve played a role in that but you can be sure that the main reason was Figueroa’s incessant pressure and physical strength, which can be overwhelming. The positive? The protégé of Manny Pacquiao was quicker and more athletic than Figueroa, which allowed him to get in, do damage and get out in the early rounds. And his explosive multi-punch combinations got everyone’s attention. He’s a good fighter. He was just in with the wrong guy.

 

MOST QUESTIONABLE SCORING?

Figueroa-Magsayo – Sean Gibbons, Magsayo’s promoter, was livid over the scoring of the fight with Figueroa. The official scores were 118-108, 117-109 and 117-109, meaning one judge gave Figueroa 10 rounds and two gave him nine. Judge Zachary Young gave Figueroa the last nine rounds. “You cannot, no matter how you add it up, score rounds four [through] 12 for Brandon Figueroa. You just can’t do it,” Gibbons told reporters. “… This man fought his ass off. And everybody saw the fight. Even with the point deductions, [it] could’ve been 15-13, 14-14. But 17-9? No.” Said Magsayo, who left the ring without being interviewed immediately after the fight: “If I didn’t [get] the two deductions, I [thought] I’m gonna win the fight. I hit him clearly, solid punches. He feel it. He was hurt.” I agree that the scoring was too wide, although not outrageously so. I scored it 115-111 for Figueroa, seven rounds to five. And I understand that Gibbons wanted to stand up for his fighter. However, the right man won. He dominated the final nine rounds even if you give one or two to Magsayo.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II

Armando Resendiz understood the significance of his accomplishment. Esther Lin / Showtime

Armando Resendiz – The 24-year-old Mexican chose the right time to deliver his best performance as a professional. The light heavyweight-turned-super middleweight-turned middleweight had a shaky 2021, eking out a split decision over journeyman Quilisto Madera and losing a unanimous decision to Marcos Hernandez. He bounced back to stop another journeyman, Heber Rondon, in two rounds last October, which led to a shot at former unified 154-pound champion Jarrett Hurd on the Figueroa-Magsayo card. He arrived prepared. Naturally bigger and stronger than Hurd – as well as fit – he took the fight to his more heralded opponent, outworked him and was never hurt. That’s why he was well ahead on the cards when the scheduled 10-round fight was stopped after nine because of a gruesome cut on Hurd’s upper lip. Resendiz (14-1, 10 KOs) celebrated wildly afterward. Why not? He had just taken a significant step toward becoming a legitimate middleweight contender.

 

BIGGEST WINNER III

Teenager Elijah Garcia (left) fought like a veteran against Amilcar Vidal. Esther Lin / Showtime

Elijah Garcia – Nineteen years old? Someone check Garcia’s birth certificate. The teenager from Phoenix fought with the maturity of a veteran against the more-experienced and previously unbeaten Amilcar Vidal (16-1, 12 KOs) on the Figueroa-Magsayo card, withstanding a fierce attack from Vidal and firing back in kind in an entertaining scrap. And then Garcia delivered the most dramatic moment on the televised portion of the card. He hurt Vidal with a right hook and followed with a barrage of hard shots, which put Vidal on the canvas. Referee Jack Reiss took a quick look at Vidal and decided he could not continue, which was the right decision. The fourth-round knockout was like a coming out party for Garcia (14-0, 12 KOs), who seems to have the physical tools and frame of mind to succeed in boxing. He said he wants to win a major world title by the age of 21. His performance on Saturday is an indication that anything is possible.

 

BIGGEST LOSER II

Jarrett Hurd (right) had his moments against Armando Resendiz. Esther Lin / Showtime

Jarrett Hurd – It’s probably too early to write off Hurd (24-3, 16 KOs) but he’s not in a strong position. He appeared to be a budding star going into his title defense against the talented Julian Williams in 2019. He’s 1-3 since, losing to Williams, Luis Arias and now Resendiz after returning from a 21-month layoff. He performed well enough against Resendiz to make me think he should keep trying. Maybe the long break left him rusty, which is now gone. At the same time, it seems that he doesn’t have at 160 pounds the physical advantages he had at 154. I suspect Hurd’s future in boxing will come down to his determination more than anything else. How badly does he want to regain his status as an elite fighter? Is he willing to put in the all-consuming, grueling work it will take for him to succeed? We’ll see how this plays out.

[lawrence-related id=36021,36017,36011,36007,36000]

Armando Resendiz outworks, stops Jarrett Hurd after nine rounds because of cut

Armando Resendiz outworked and ultimately stopped Jarrett Hurd after nine rounds because of a cut on Hurd’s lip Saturday.

A new important Mexican fighter has arrived on the scene.

Armando Resendiz outworked and then stopped Jarrett Hurd after the ninth round of a scheduled 10-round 162-pound fight on the Brandon Figueroa-Mark Magsayo card Saturday in Ontario, California.

The wild, back-and-forth fight was stopped on the advice of the ring doctor because of a deep cut on Hurd’s upper lip.

“It was all about heart, but I know I can be even better and you’ll see what I mean in my next fight,” Resendiz said. “I told everyone I was willing to go to war, I’m Mexican, after all.

“It was a strong, physical fight just like we expected. The results speak for themselves.”

The relentless Resendiz (14-1, 10 KOs) was well ahead on the cards for an uncomplicated reason: He outworked Hurd (24-3, 16 KOs).

The official judges had Resendiz leading 89-82, 87-84 and 87-84 after nine rounds. Boxing Junkie also had it 89-82 for Resendiz, eight rounds to one.

Hurd had many good moments in the give-and-take war, including a number of eye-catching uppercuts. His 24-year-old opponent simply threw — and landed — more punches than the former unified 154-pound titleholder and was never hurt.

Hurd said afterward that he wished he could’ve finished the fight. He had never been stopped.

“I knew this was going to be a tough, toe-to-to fight based on our styles,” he said. “But I only had to make it one more round. I wish I could have finished it, but my lip was cut too bad. So, congratulations to Resendiz. …

“At no point was I hurt at all in that fight, but I have to respect what the doctors say, and there’s nothing I can do about it.”

Hurd, who hadn’t fought for 21 months, has now lost three of his last four fights.

Armando Resendiz outworks, stops Jarrett Hurd after nine rounds because of cut

Armando Resendiz outworked and ultimately stopped Jarrett Hurd after nine rounds because of a cut on Hurd’s lip Saturday.

A new important Mexican fighter has arrived on the scene.

Armando Resendiz outworked and then stopped Jarrett Hurd after the ninth round of a scheduled 10-round 162-pound fight on the Brandon Figueroa-Mark Magsayo card Saturday in Ontario, California.

The wild, back-and-forth fight was stopped on the advice of the ring doctor because of a deep cut on Hurd’s upper lip.

“It was all about heart, but I know I can be even better and you’ll see what I mean in my next fight,” Resendiz said. “I told everyone I was willing to go to war, I’m Mexican, after all.

“It was a strong, physical fight just like we expected. The results speak for themselves.”

The relentless Resendiz (14-1, 10 KOs) was well ahead on the cards for an uncomplicated reason: He outworked Hurd (24-3, 16 KOs).

The official judges had Resendiz leading 89-82, 87-84 and 87-84 after nine rounds. Boxing Junkie also had it 89-82 for Resendiz, eight rounds to one.

Hurd had many good moments in the give-and-take war, including a number of eye-catching uppercuts. His 24-year-old opponent simply threw — and landed — more punches than the former unified 154-pound titleholder and was never hurt.

Hurd said afterward that he wished he could’ve finished the fight. He had never been stopped.

“I knew this was going to be a tough, toe-to-to fight based on our styles,” he said. “But I only had to make it one more round. I wish I could have finished it, but my lip was cut too bad. So, congratulations to Resendiz. …

“At no point was I hurt at all in that fight, but I have to respect what the doctors say, and there’s nothing I can do about it.”

Hurd, who hadn’t fought for 21 months, has now lost three of his last four fights.

Brandon Figueroa vs. Mark Magsayo: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Brandon Figueroa vs. Mark Magsayo: LIVE updates, results and full coverage.

Brandon Figueroa defeated Mark Magsayo by a unanimous decision in a 12-round fight for the WBC’s “interim” 126-pound title Saturday at Toyota Arena in Ontario, California.

The official scores were 118-108, 117-109 and 117-109. Boxing Junkie had it closer, 115-111 for Figueroa, seven rounds to five.

Figueroa (24-1-1, 18 KOs) is now the mandatory challenger for Rey Vargas’ WBC championship.

The Texan got off to a slow start against the more athletic Filipino, who got inside, did damage and then moved out of harm’s way or held Figueroa when he tried to respond.

The holding would come back to bite Magsayo as Figuero picked up his punch output, as the former 126-pound champ was docked two points for holding.

That didn’t have a direct impact on the scoring but it removed a tactic that worked for Magsayo (24-2, 16 KOs).

Figueroa seemed to outwork Magsayo down the stretch to pull away on the cards, giving him two consecutive victories at 126 after losing his 122-pound belt to Stephen Fulton Jr. by a majority decision in 2021.

You can read a full report here.

***

 

Jose Armando Resendiz stopped Jarrett Hurd after the ninth round of a scheduled 10-round 162-pound fight.

The wild, back-and-forth fight was stopped on the advice of the ring doctor because of a cut on Hurd’s upper lip.

The relentless Resendiz (14-1, 10 KOs) was ahead on the cards because he outworked Hurd (24-3, 16 KOs). Boxing Junkie had him leading 89-82 after nine rounds, eight rounds to one.

However, Hurd had many good moments in the back-and-forth war. The 24-year-old Mexican simply threw — and landed — more punches than the former unified 154-pound titleholder and was never hurt.

Hurd, who hadn’t fought for 21 months, has now lost three of his last four fights.

***

Nineteen-year-old middleweight prospect Elijah Garcia of Phoenix stopped Uruguayan contender Amilcar Vidal at 2:17 of the fourth round of a scheduled 10-rounder.

Garcia (14-0, 12 KOs) and Vidal (16-1, 12 KOs) were engaged in a spirited back-and-forth fight when the former hurt the latter with a right hook and then followed with a flurry of hard, accurate punches that put Vidal down.

Referee Jack Reiss quickly assessed Vidal’s condition and stopped the fight.

“This is what everybody dreams of right here,” Garcia said. “This ain’t like a surprise. This is what we’ve worked for since I turned pro. We’re going to keep going one step at a time.”

Garcia turned pro at 16 years old in 2020.

***

Brandon Figueroa and Mark Magsayo will face off in a scheduled 12-round 126-pound fight tonight (Saturday) in Ontario, California (Showtime).

Figueroa (23-1-1, 18 KOs) is a former 122-pound beltholder who will be fighting at 126 for the second time. Magsayo (24-1, 16 KOs) lost his 126-pound title to Rey Vargas in his most-recent fight, in July.

Also on the card, former 154-pound titleholder Jarret Hurd (24-2, 16 KOs) will take on Jose Armando Resendiz (13-1, 9 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round 160-pound bout.

And 160-pound contender Amilcar Vidal (16-0, 12 KOs) will face Elijah García (13-0, 11 KOs) in a scheduled 10-rounder.

The featured bouts on the card begin at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in show.

Boxing Junkie will post the result of the main event and featured bouts immediately after they end. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the day of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=35993,35985,35972]

Brandon Figueroa vs. Mark Magsayo: LIVE updates, results, full coverage

Brandon Figueroa vs. Mark Magsayo: LIVE updates, results and full coverage.

Brandon Figueroa defeated Mark Magsayo by a unanimous decision in a 12-round fight for the WBC’s “interim” 126-pound title Saturday at Toyota Arena in Ontario, California.

The official scores were 118-108, 117-109 and 117-109. Boxing Junkie had it closer, 115-111 for Figueroa, seven rounds to five.

Figueroa (24-1-1, 18 KOs) is now the mandatory challenger for Rey Vargas’ WBC championship.

The Texan got off to a slow start against the more athletic Filipino, who got inside, did damage and then moved out of harm’s way or held Figueroa when he tried to respond.

The holding would come back to bite Magsayo as Figuero picked up his punch output, as the former 126-pound champ was docked two points for holding.

That didn’t have a direct impact on the scoring but it removed a tactic that worked for Magsayo (24-2, 16 KOs).

Figueroa seemed to outwork Magsayo down the stretch to pull away on the cards, giving him two consecutive victories at 126 after losing his 122-pound belt to Stephen Fulton Jr. by a majority decision in 2021.

You can read a full report here.

***

 

Jose Armando Resendiz stopped Jarrett Hurd after the ninth round of a scheduled 10-round 162-pound fight.

The wild, back-and-forth fight was stopped on the advice of the ring doctor because of a cut on Hurd’s upper lip.

The relentless Resendiz (14-1, 10 KOs) was ahead on the cards because he outworked Hurd (24-3, 16 KOs). Boxing Junkie had him leading 89-82 after nine rounds, eight rounds to one.

However, Hurd had many good moments in the back-and-forth war. The 24-year-old Mexican simply threw — and landed — more punches than the former unified 154-pound titleholder and was never hurt.

Hurd, who hadn’t fought for 21 months, has now lost three of his last four fights.

***

Nineteen-year-old middleweight prospect Elijah Garcia of Phoenix stopped Uruguayan contender Amilcar Vidal at 2:17 of the fourth round of a scheduled 10-rounder.

Garcia (14-0, 12 KOs) and Vidal (16-1, 12 KOs) were engaged in a spirited back-and-forth fight when the former hurt the latter with a right hook and then followed with a flurry of hard, accurate punches that put Vidal down.

Referee Jack Reiss quickly assessed Vidal’s condition and stopped the fight.

“This is what everybody dreams of right here,” Garcia said. “This ain’t like a surprise. This is what we’ve worked for since I turned pro. We’re going to keep going one step at a time.”

Garcia turned pro at 16 years old in 2020.

***

Brandon Figueroa and Mark Magsayo will face off in a scheduled 12-round 126-pound fight tonight (Saturday) in Ontario, California (Showtime).

Figueroa (23-1-1, 18 KOs) is a former 122-pound beltholder who will be fighting at 126 for the second time. Magsayo (24-1, 16 KOs) lost his 126-pound title to Rey Vargas in his most-recent fight, in July.

Also on the card, former 154-pound titleholder Jarret Hurd (24-2, 16 KOs) will take on Jose Armando Resendiz (13-1, 9 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round 160-pound bout.

And 160-pound contender Amilcar Vidal (16-0, 12 KOs) will face Elijah García (13-0, 11 KOs) in a scheduled 10-rounder.

The featured bouts on the card begin at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT. The main event will take place later in show.

Boxing Junkie will post the result of the main event and featured bouts immediately after they end. Simply return to this post and refresh when the time comes.

Full coverage – a fight story, photo gallery and analysis – will follow on separate posts the day of the fight and the following day.

Enjoy the fights!

[lawrence-related id=35993,35985,35972]

Julian Williams’ trainer: ‘He should be ready to go by August or September’

Stephen Edwards, the trainer of Julian Williams, believes his charge will be ready for a tune-up fight as soon as late summer.

It’s not if Julian Williams will fight Jeison Rosario again, it’s when.

Williams recently decided not to exercise his contractual right to an immediate rematch with Rosario, the Dominican contender who stopped him in five rounds in a significant upset on Jan. 18. However, Stephen Edwards, the trainer of Williams, says they have every intention of fighting Rosario again. Just not next. They need time to heal and regroup.

“Julian just had surgery [to repair damaged skin around] both of his eyes last week,” Edwards told BoxingScene.com. “He can’t even spar until May or June. We wouldn’t be ready for a rematch in a reasonable period of time.”

In the fight, Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) opened up a large gash over Williams’ left eye, which immediately changed the tenor of the fight.

“It’s counterproductive to rush into a rematch without getting his eye fixed and his eye was a big reason he lost in the first place,” Edward said. “But Team Rosario has expressed to me personally that they are honorable and will give us the rematch very soon. Just not next because we won’t be ready.”

Sampson Lewkowicz, the promoter of Rosario, told Boxing Junkie that Rosario “100%” plans to give Williams a rematch whenever he is ready.

Edwards believes Williams (27-2-1, 16 KOs) should be ready for a tune-up fight by late summer.

“He should be ready to go by August or September,” he said.

Edwards does not know who the opponent will be yet. In the meantime, the trainers says Williams won’t be peddling any excuses.

“What I’ve learned is it’s no use talking about what went wrong publicly,” Edwards said. “It always sounds like an excuse and, at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter. The result is what matters.

“Julian just has to redeem himself. Jeison Rosario fought a great fight, and he got the win.”

 

Follow Sean Nam on Twitter @seanpasbon

Julian Williams won’t ask for immediate rematch with Jeison Rosario

Multiple outlets have reported that Julian Williams is not interested in pursuing an immediate rematch against Jeison Rosario.

The future appears to be wide open for Jeison Rosario.

Former junior middleweight titleholder Julian Williams is forgoing his contractual right to an immediate rematch against Rosario, the Dominican contender who scored a shocking stoppage of Williams on Jan. 18 in the latter’s inaugural title defense in his hometown of Philadelphia, multiple outlets have reported.

The reason? Williams (27-2-1, 16 KOs) needs to recover from surgery on the cut he suffered over his left eye in the Rosario fight. Provided Rosario is still a titleholder, Williams has every intention of pursuing a rematch later in the year, according to BoxingScene.com. The feeling apparently is mutual.

“When Williams wants the rematch, Rosario will give it to him, 100%,” Sampson Lewkowicz, Rosario’s promoter, told Boxing Junkie. “For now, Williams has a medical problem.”

That leaves Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs), who turns 25 in April, with a few options in a division teeming with intriguing possibilities. He could face his mandatory in Russian Bakhram Murtazaliev (17-0, 13 KOs). Or, more compellingly, he could head straight into a unification against fellow titleholder Jermell Charlo (33-1, 17 KOs), who revenged his disputed loss to Tony Harrison (28-3, 21 KOs) last December. Both Charlo and Rosario are aligned with Premier Boxing Champions, so that would be a relatively easy matchup to make.

Rosario’s upset of Williams was just another eye-opening outcome in the ultra competitive 154-pound division. Last year, Williams upset multiple-belt titleholder Jarrett Hurd (24-1, 16 KOs) in impressive fashion. All in all, the division has produced some of the most interesting story lines of any weight class.

As for Williams, he is staring down at yet another attempt at a comeback. He was knocked out by current middleweight titleholder Jermall Charlo (Jermell’s twin brother) in 2016 before making a statement against Hurd last year. Williams’ trainer Stephen Edwards has set the bar high for his charge the second time around. Shortly after the upset loss to Rosario, Edwards was adamant about getting revenge.

“[Williams] cannot go out on his career losing to that kid, I’m sorry,” Edwards said on the TalkBox Boxing Podcast. “[The loss to] Jermall Charlo, I can accept that a little bit. You know, that guy may go to the Hall of Fame, and we can say we fought him when Julian was a little young at the time and that he caught Julian with a great shot.

“This fight (against Rosario), I can’t stomach that. I’m serious. I just can’t.”

 

Follow Sean Nam on Twitter @seanpasbon

Pound-for-pound: King Tyson can’t be denied after that performance

Tyson Fury climbs from honorable mention to No. 8 on the Boxing Junkie pound-for-pound list after stopping Deontay Wilder on Saturday.

The pound-for-pound concept was devised as a means of comparing fighters regardless of weight.

For example, not so long ago, we could’ve asked: Who would’ve won a bout between Floyd Mayweather and Wladimir Klitschko had they been the same size? Easy. Mayweather, whose skill set was far superior to that of the big Ukrainian and everyone else.

So where does Tyson Fury fit into the equation after his tremendous performance against Deontay Wilder on Saturday in Las Vegas?

Fury, who has been an honorable mention on the Boxing Junkie pound-for-pound list for some time, dominated a feared, previously unbeaten opponent en route to a spectacular seventh-round stoppage before a sell-out crowd at the MGM Grand.

That kind of performance — on that kind of stage — certainly works in Fury’s favor. However, it doesn’t necessarily mean that Fury would stack up favorably against the stars that make our Top 10 if they fought in same division.

In the end, we decided after some back-and-forth discussion that we had to elevate Fury into the Top 10 in light of his dominance on Saturday but we didn’t want to get carried away: He jumps to No. 8, behind Errol Spence Jr. but ahead of Juan Francisco Estrada. That pushes Kosei Tanaka (No. 15 on the most-recent list) to honorable mention.

Of course, another victory over Wilder or one over Anthony Joshua in an all-U.K. title-unification bout by Fury could push him even higher.

Check out our pound-for-pound list below. And let us know what you think.

BOXING JUNKIE

POUND-FOR-POUND

  1. Vasiliy Lomachenko
  2. Terence Crawford
  3. Canelo Alvarez
  4. Naoya Inoue
  5. Oleksandr Usyk
  6. Gennadiy Golovkin
  7. Errol Spence Jr.
  8. Tyson Fury
  9. Juan Francisco Estrada
  10. Mikey Garcia
  11. Artur Beterbiev
  12. Josh Taylor
  13. Manny Pacquiao
  14. Srisaket Sor Rungvisai
  15. Leo Santa Cruz

Honorable mention (alphabetical order): Miguel Berchelt, Mairis Briedis, Teofimo Lopez, Shawn Porter and Kosei Tanaka

Read more:

Tyson Fury vs. Deontay Wilder III: It’s seems likely

Tyson Fury prepared to face Anthony Joshua if Deontay wilder opts out

Good, bad, worse: Tyson Fury had perfect game plan, perfect execution

Tyson Fury beats the heavyweight title out of Deontay Wilder

Julian Williams’ trainer: JRock has to KO Rosario in rematch

Stephen Edwards, the trainer of Julian Williams, believes his charge not only needs to beat Jeison Rosario, but do so by knockout.

The trainer of Julian Williams wants his charge to avenge his stunning upset loss to Jeison Rosario on Jan. 18. And he wants him to do so by knockout.

Stephen Edwards, Williams’ longtime trainer, set the bar high for Williams during an appearance on the Everlast TalkBox Podcast.

“I may get overruled on this, I don’t know,” Edwards said, “but for me being able to go to sleep at night and what I believe Julian is at, he gotta get that loss the f— back.

“I don’t care who don’t like this. He gotta fight that kid again and he gotta knock that kid out.”

Talk about pressure.

Williams made strong statement last May when he upset Jarrett Hurd to win two junior middleweight titles. It was a remarkable comeback for a fighter who had been written off by some after suffering a knockout loss at the hands of Jermall Charlo in 2016.

A rematch with Hurd was expected to take place in December but Hurd, for whatever reason, declined. In stepped Rosario, a hard-hitting, but relatively unknown Dominican who was expected to be something of a tune-up for Williams. There were even tentative plans to have Williams face a fellow titleholder in a unification bout this summer.

The 24-year-old Rosario had other plans. Rosario busted up Williams’ eye early in the fight and then stopped the Philadelphian in the fifth-round in front of his hometown crowd.

Edwards, still smarting from the loss, believes a knockout in the rematch will be the only way to conclusively put this episode behind them.

“If [Williams] don’t [knock out Rosario] I’m gonna be disappointed in him,” Edwards said. “I made it as clear as I can. I don’t know if [the rematch is] going to be next or whatever, but he gotta get that kid back.”

Edwards upped the ante.

“[Williams] cannot go out on his career losing to that kid, I’m sorry,” he said. “[The loss to] Jermall Charlo, I can accept that a little bit. You know, that guy may go to the Hall of Fame, and we can say we fought him when Julian was a little young at the time and that he caught Julian with a great shot.

“This fight (against Rosario), I can’t stomach that. I’m serious. I just can’t.”

 

Jeison Rosario scores stunning 5th-round KO of Julian Williams