Fight Week: Mike Garcia returns after 20 months to face obscure foe

FIGHT WEEK MIKEY GARCIA RETURNS AFTER A 20-MONTH LAYOFF TO FACE SANDOR MARTIN OF SPAIN ON SATURDAY. ALSO, ON FRIDAY, EMANUEL NAVARRETE WILL DEFEND HIS TITLE AGAINST JOET GONZALEZ. *** EMANUEL NAVARRETE (34-1, 29 KOs) VS. JOET GONZALEZ (24-1, 14 KOs) …

FIGHT WEEK

MIKEY GARCIA RETURNS AFTER A 20-MONTH LAYOFF TO FACE SANDOR MARTIN OF SPAIN ON SATURDAY. ALSO, ON FRIDAY, EMANUEL NAVARRETE WILL DEFEND HIS TITLE AGAINST JOET GONZALEZ.

***

EMANUEL NAVARRETE (34-1, 29 KOs) VS. JOET GONZALEZ (24-1, 14 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Oct. 15
  • Where: Pechanga Arena, San Diego
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweights
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Giovani Santillan vs. Angel Ruiz, welterweights
  • Prediction: Navarrete UD
  • Background: Navarrete is a two-division titleholder who will be making the second defense of his 126-pound belt, which he won by outpointing Ruben Villa when the title was vacant. The swarming volume puncher from Mexico City, who gradually wears his opponents down, established himself as an elite fighter by defeating Isaac Dogboe in consecutive fights in 2018 (UD) and 2019 (TKO 12). The first one was for the WBO 122-pound title. He successfully defended that belt five times before moving up to featherweight. The 26-year-old is coming off a 12th-round TKO of Christopher Diaz in April, a fight he was winning by a large margin at the time of the stoppage. Navarrete’s only loss came in his sixth pro fight, more than nine years ago. Gonzalez, a 27-year-old product of Los Angeles, might be best known for losing a wide decision to talented Shakur Stevenson in a fight for the vacant WBO 126-pound title, which Stevenson immediately vacated. However, Gonzalez is a good all-around fighter. He rebounded from the loss to Stevenson by easily outpoint veteran Miguel Marriaga and has other victories over solid opponents.

***

MIKEY GARCIA (40-1, 30 KOs) VS. SANDOR MARTIN (38-2, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Oct. 16
  • Where: Chukchansi Park, Fresno
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Welterweights
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Garcia No. 11
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Elwin Soto vs. Jonathan Gonzalez, junior flyweights (for Soto’s WBO title); Esteban Bermudez vs. Jesse Rodriguez, junior flyweights
  • Prediction: Garcia KO 7
  • Background: Garcia was a prime candidate to face Manny Pacquiao but the Filipino star ended up fighting Yordenis Ugas. Then the former four-division titleholder was in talks to face Regis Prograis in what would’ve been a major fight but it didn’t happen. So now, just to keep busy, he’ll face a relatively unknown Spaniard and seek bigger and better challenges afterward. Garcia, 33, bounced back from his one-sided loss to Errol Spence Jr. in March 2019 to defeat veteran Jessie Vargas by a convincing decision in February of last year. That was his most-recent fight, meaning he will have been out of the ring for almost 20 months. He is ranked No. 3 by the WBO and No. 4 by the WBC. Martin, a 28-year-old from Barcelona, has a lot working against him. He has never faced anyone near Garcia’s ability, he’ll be fighting outside of Europe for the first time and he’s moving up in weight for the fight. He has won nine consecutive fights since losing a decision to Anthony Yigit in 2017 – including a decision over Kay Prospere in April, his last fight – but the streak figures to end in Fresno. On the undercard, Elwin Soto (19-1, 13 KOs) of Mexico will make the fourth defense of his WBO junior flyweight title against Puerto Rican resident Jonathan Gonzalez (24-3-1, 14 KOs).

Also fighting this weekend:

THURSDAY

  • Manuel Gallegos (18-1, 15 KOs) of Mexico will face countryman Gabriel Lopez (10-5-1, 7 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round super middleweight fight in Los Mochis, Mexico (UFC Fight Pass).

FRIDAY

  • Santiago Dominguez (24-0, 18 KOs) of Mexico will take on Jesus Antonio Rubio (13-4-1, 7 KOs), also of Mexico, in a scheduled 10-round welterweight bout in Los Mochis (UFC Fight Pass).

SATURDAY

  • IBF cruiserweight titleholder Mairis Briedis (27-1, 19 KOs) will defend his belt against Artur Mann (17-1, 9 KOs) of Kazakhstan in Riga, Latvia, Briedis’ home country.
  • Hughie Fury (25-3, 14 KOs) of England will face Christian Hammer (26-7, 16 KOs) of Romania in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout in Newcastle, England (Sky Sports in the U.K.). Also on that card, WBO middleweight titleholder Savannah Marshall (10-0, 8 KOs) of England will defend her belt against Lolita Muzeya (16-0, 8 KOs) of Zambia. And Chris Eubank Jr. (30-2, 22 KOs) of England will face Wanik Awdijan (28-1, 11 KOs) of Armenia in a scheduled 10-round middleweight bout.
  • New Yorker Cletus Seldin (25-1, 21 KOs) will fight William Silva (28-3, 16 KOs) of Brazil in a scheduled 10-round junior welterweight bout at Barclays Center in Brooklyn (FITE).

Fight Week: Mike Garcia returns after 20 months to face obscure foe

FIGHT WEEK MIKEY GARCIA RETURNS AFTER A 20-MONTH LAYOFF TO FACE SANDOR MARTIN OF SPAIN ON SATURDAY. ALSO, ON FRIDAY, EMANUEL NAVARRETE WILL DEFEND HIS TITLE AGAINST JOET GONZALEZ. *** EMANUEL NAVARRETE (34-1, 29 KOs) VS. JOET GONZALEZ (24-1, 14 KOs) …

FIGHT WEEK

MIKEY GARCIA RETURNS AFTER A 20-MONTH LAYOFF TO FACE SANDOR MARTIN OF SPAIN ON SATURDAY. ALSO, ON FRIDAY, EMANUEL NAVARRETE WILL DEFEND HIS TITLE AGAINST JOET GONZALEZ.

***

EMANUEL NAVARRETE (34-1, 29 KOs) VS. JOET GONZALEZ (24-1, 14 KOs)

  • When: Friday, Oct. 15
  • Where: Pechanga Arena, San Diego
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweights
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Giovani Santillan vs. Angel Ruiz, welterweights
  • Prediction: Navarrete UD
  • Background: Navarrete is a two-division titleholder who will be making the second defense of his 126-pound belt, which he won by outpointing Ruben Villa when the title was vacant. The swarming volume puncher from Mexico City, who gradually wears his opponents down, established himself as an elite fighter by defeating Isaac Dogboe in consecutive fights in 2018 (UD) and 2019 (TKO 12). The first one was for the WBO 122-pound title. He successfully defended that belt five times before moving up to featherweight. The 26-year-old is coming off a 12th-round TKO of Christopher Diaz in April, a fight he was winning by a large margin at the time of the stoppage. Navarrete’s only loss came in his sixth pro fight, more than nine years ago. Gonzalez, a 27-year-old product of Los Angeles, might be best known for losing a wide decision to talented Shakur Stevenson in a fight for the vacant WBO 126-pound title, which Stevenson immediately vacated. However, Gonzalez is a good all-around fighter. He rebounded from the loss to Stevenson by easily outpoint veteran Miguel Marriaga and has other victories over solid opponents.

***

MIKEY GARCIA (40-1, 30 KOs) VS. SANDOR MARTIN (38-2, 13 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Oct. 16
  • Where: Chukchansi Park, Fresno
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Welterweights
  • At stake: No titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Garcia No. 11
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Elwin Soto vs. Jonathan Gonzalez, junior flyweights (for Soto’s WBO title); Esteban Bermudez vs. Jesse Rodriguez, junior flyweights
  • Prediction: Garcia KO 7
  • Background: Garcia was a prime candidate to face Manny Pacquiao but the Filipino star ended up fighting Yordenis Ugas. Then the former four-division titleholder was in talks to face Regis Prograis in what would’ve been a major fight but it didn’t happen. So now, just to keep busy, he’ll face a relatively unknown Spaniard and seek bigger and better challenges afterward. Garcia, 33, bounced back from his one-sided loss to Errol Spence Jr. in March 2019 to defeat veteran Jessie Vargas by a convincing decision in February of last year. That was his most-recent fight, meaning he will have been out of the ring for almost 20 months. He is ranked No. 3 by the WBO and No. 4 by the WBC. Martin, a 28-year-old from Barcelona, has a lot working against him. He has never faced anyone near Garcia’s ability, he’ll be fighting outside of Europe for the first time and he’s moving up in weight for the fight. He has won nine consecutive fights since losing a decision to Anthony Yigit in 2017 – including a decision over Kay Prospere in April, his last fight – but the streak figures to end in Fresno. On the undercard, Elwin Soto (19-1, 13 KOs) of Mexico will make the fourth defense of his WBO junior flyweight title against Puerto Rican resident Jonathan Gonzalez (24-3-1, 14 KOs).

Also fighting this weekend:

THURSDAY

  • Manuel Gallegos (18-1, 15 KOs) of Mexico will face countryman Gabriel Lopez (10-5-1, 7 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round super middleweight fight in Los Mochis, Mexico (UFC Fight Pass).

FRIDAY

  • Santiago Dominguez (24-0, 18 KOs) of Mexico will take on Jesus Antonio Rubio (13-4-1, 7 KOs), also of Mexico, in a scheduled 10-round welterweight bout in Los Mochis (UFC Fight Pass).

SATURDAY

  • IBF cruiserweight titleholder Mairis Briedis (27-1, 19 KOs) will defend his belt against Artur Mann (17-1, 9 KOs) of Kazakhstan in Riga, Latvia, Briedis’ home country.
  • Hughie Fury (25-3, 14 KOs) of England will face Christian Hammer (26-7, 16 KOs) of Romania in a scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout in Newcastle, England (Sky Sports in the U.K.). Also on that card, WBO middleweight titleholder Savannah Marshall (10-0, 8 KOs) of England will defend her belt against Lolita Muzeya (16-0, 8 KOs) of Zambia. And Chris Eubank Jr. (30-2, 22 KOs) of England will face Wanik Awdijan (28-1, 11 KOs) of Armenia in a scheduled 10-round middleweight bout.
  • New Yorker Cletus Seldin (25-1, 21 KOs) will fight William Silva (28-3, 16 KOs) of Brazil in a scheduled 10-round junior welterweight bout at Barclays Center in Brooklyn (FITE).

Egidijus Kavaliauskas makes a strong statement in the end

It took Egidijus Kavaliauskas a while to make a statement on Saturday. Once he did, though, it was loud.

It took Egidijus Kavaliauskas a while to make a statement on Saturday. Once he did, though, it was loud.

“Mean Machine” trailed Mikael Zewski on two of the three cards when he ended the fight in a span of about 10 seconds, winning by knockout seven seconds into the eighth round of a scheduled 10-round welterweight bout inside the “bubble” at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Zewski (34-2, 23 KOs) outworked Kavaliauskas (22-1-1, 18 KOs) early in the fight, generally beating his Lithuanian opponent to the punch and landing more eye-catching power shots than him.

However, by the fifth round, Kavaliauskas begin to pick up his pace. He followed up his effective jab with more and more power shots as the fight progressed – many to the body – and Zewski, while always game, started to slow down.

Then, with only seconds to go in Round 7, things changed dramatically. Kavaliauskas landed perfect right uppercut that buckled Zewski’s knees and followed with a flurry that sent the Canadian into the ropes for a knockdown.

Egidijus Kavaliauskas (left) landed his jab to the head of Mikael Zewski consistently on Saturday. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

Zewski got up on shaky legs at the count of 9 and the round ended a second after the action resumed.

However, he didn’t last much longer. Kavaliauskas, clearly aware that Zewski was hurt, landed a hard right hand that put Zewski down again. And that was enough for referee Kenny Bayless, who stopped the fight immediately.

Two of the judges had Zewski ahead by the same score after seven rounds, 67-65, meaning they had Zewski leading five rounds to two. The third judge had it 67-65 for Kavaliauskas, four rounds to three.

Of course, the winner took it out of the judges’ hands.

Kavaliauskas was asked whether he had made the statement he hoped to make coming off his ninth-round knockout loss to 147-pound titleholder Terence Crawford in December.

“I wanted to do it faster,” he said. “You can’t count on knockouts. I was working, making pressure and he was slowing down. Every round I could tell he was getting weaker and weaker.”

Kavaliauskas’ immediate goal is to get another shot a title, preferably in a rematch with Crawford. However, the pound-for-pounder is in talks to defend against Kell Brook in his next fight.

Kavaliauskas holds out hope that Crawford’s limited options will lead to a second fight.

“There are no opponents for him,” Kavaliauskas said. “And I don’t see anyone who gave him a better fight than I did.”

Things got brutal for Zewski (left) in the end. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

In the co-feature, featherweight contender Joet Gonzalez (24-1, 14 KOs) gave a strong performance in a unanimous-decision victory over veteran Miguel Marriaga (29-4, 25 KOs).

Marriaga was busy throughout the fight but was easy to hit, which allowed Gonzalez to land many more power shots than the Colombian.

The scores were 99-91, 99-91 and 97-93, all in favor of the Los Angeles-area fighter.

Egidijus Kavaliauskas makes a strong statement in the end

It took Egidijus Kavaliauskas a while to make a statement on Saturday. Once he did, though, it was loud.

It took Egidijus Kavaliauskas a while to make a statement on Saturday. Once he did, though, it was loud.

“Mean Machine” trailed Mikael Zewski on two of the three cards when he ended the fight in a span of about 10 seconds, winning by knockout seven seconds into the eighth round of a scheduled 10-round welterweight bout inside the “bubble” at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Zewski (34-2, 23 KOs) outworked Kavaliauskas (22-1-1, 18 KOs) early in the fight, generally beating his Lithuanian opponent to the punch and landing more eye-catching power shots than him.

However, by the fifth round, Kavaliauskas begin to pick up his pace. He followed up his effective jab with more and more power shots as the fight progressed – many to the body – and Zewski, while always game, started to slow down.

Then, with only seconds to go in Round 7, things changed dramatically. Kavaliauskas landed perfect right uppercut that buckled Zewski’s knees and followed with a flurry that sent the Canadian into the ropes for a knockdown.

Egidijus Kavaliauskas (left) landed his jab to the head of Mikael Zewski consistently on Saturday. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

Zewski got up on shaky legs at the count of 9 and the round ended a second after the action resumed.

However, he didn’t last much longer. Kavaliauskas, clearly aware that Zewski was hurt, landed a hard right hand that put Zewski down again. And that was enough for referee Kenny Bayless, who stopped the fight immediately.

Two of the judges had Zewski ahead by the same score after seven rounds, 67-65, meaning they had Zewski leading five rounds to two. The third judge had it 67-65 for Kavaliauskas, four rounds to three.

Of course, the winner took it out of the judges’ hands.

Kavaliauskas was asked whether he had made the statement he hoped to make coming off his ninth-round knockout loss to 147-pound titleholder Terence Crawford in December.

“I wanted to do it faster,” he said. “You can’t count on knockouts. I was working, making pressure and he was slowing down. Every round I could tell he was getting weaker and weaker.”

Kavaliauskas’ immediate goal is to get another shot a title, preferably in a rematch with Crawford. However, the pound-for-pounder is in talks to defend against Kell Brook in his next fight.

Kavaliauskas holds out hope that Crawford’s limited options will lead to a second fight.

“There are no opponents for him,” Kavaliauskas said. “And I don’t see anyone who gave him a better fight than I did.”

Things got brutal for Zewski (left) in the end. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

In the co-feature, featherweight contender Joet Gonzalez (24-1, 14 KOs) gave a strong performance in a unanimous-decision victory over veteran Miguel Marriaga (29-4, 25 KOs).

Marriaga was busy throughout the fight but was easy to hit, which allowed Gonzalez to land many more power shots than the Colombian.

The scores were 99-91, 99-91 and 97-93, all in favor of the Los Angeles-area fighter.

Egidijus Kavaliauskas, Mikael Zewski make weight for welterweight clash

Egidijus Kavaliauskas and Mikael Zewski made weight for their welterweight main event Saturday in Las Vegas.

Egidijus Kavaliauskas and Mikael Zewski made weight for their welterweight main event Saturday inside the MGM Grand “bubble” in Las Vegas. The card will be streamed on ESPN+ beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Kavaliauskas weighed 146.5 pounds, half a pound below the limit. Zewski weighed 147.

Kavaliauskas (21-1-1, 17 KOs) is 0-1-1 in his last two fights, a majority draw against Ray Robinson in March of last year and a ninth-round knockout loss to titleholder Terence Crawford in December. The Lithuanian is ranked by two of the four major sanctioning bodies.

“I am excited to return to the ring, as I still have unfinished business,” Kavaliauskas said. “I still believe I have what it takes to become a world champion, and that journey resumes against a tough opponent in Mikael Zewski.”

Egidijus Kavaliauskas (left) and Mikael Zewski pose after the weigh-in for their welterweight fight on Saturday. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

Zewski (34-1, 23 KOs) will be stepping up in opposition for this fight. The Canadian lost a wide decision in his biggest fight, a 10-rounder against Konstantin Ponomarev in 2015. He has won eight consecutive fights since against second-tier opponents.

In the co-feature, a scheduled 10-round featherweight bout, Miguel Marriaga (29-3, 25 KOs) weighed 125.9 and Joet Gonzalez (23-1, 14 KOs) weighed 125.8. The limit is 126.

The weigh-in results for the other fights on the card are as follows:

  • Aleem Jumakhonov (8-3-2, 4 KOs) 126.5 vs. Jorge Ramos (7-2-1, 4 KOs) 127, eight rounds, featherweights.
  • Manuel Flores (8-0, 5 KOs) 117.3 vs. Jonathan Rodriguez (8-0, 3 KOs) 118, six rounds, bantamweights.
  • Anthony Chavez (8-1, 3 KOs) 129.1 vs. Adan Gonzales (5-3-2, 2 KOs) 129.1, six rounds, junior ligthweights.
  • Eric Puente (3-0, 0 KOs) 137.7 vs. Luis Norambuena (4-5-1, 0 KOs) 135.6, four rounds, lightweights.

[lawrence-related id=13641]

Egidijus Kavaliauskas, Mikael Zewski make weight for welterweight clash

Egidijus Kavaliauskas and Mikael Zewski made weight for their welterweight main event Saturday in Las Vegas.

Egidijus Kavaliauskas and Mikael Zewski made weight for their welterweight main event Saturday inside the MGM Grand “bubble” in Las Vegas. The card will be streamed on ESPN+ beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Kavaliauskas weighed 146.5 pounds, half a pound below the limit. Zewski weighed 147.

Kavaliauskas (21-1-1, 17 KOs) is 0-1-1 in his last two fights, a majority draw against Ray Robinson in March of last year and a ninth-round knockout loss to titleholder Terence Crawford in December. The Lithuanian is ranked by two of the four major sanctioning bodies.

“I am excited to return to the ring, as I still have unfinished business,” Kavaliauskas said. “I still believe I have what it takes to become a world champion, and that journey resumes against a tough opponent in Mikael Zewski.”

Egidijus Kavaliauskas (left) and Mikael Zewski pose after the weigh-in for their welterweight fight on Saturday. Mikey Williams / Top Rank

Zewski (34-1, 23 KOs) will be stepping up in opposition for this fight. The Canadian lost a wide decision in his biggest fight, a 10-rounder against Konstantin Ponomarev in 2015. He has won eight consecutive fights since against second-tier opponents.

In the co-feature, a scheduled 10-round featherweight bout, Miguel Marriaga (29-3, 25 KOs) weighed 125.9 and Joet Gonzalez (23-1, 14 KOs) weighed 125.8. The limit is 126.

The weigh-in results for the other fights on the card are as follows:

  • Aleem Jumakhonov (8-3-2, 4 KOs) 126.5 vs. Jorge Ramos (7-2-1, 4 KOs) 127, eight rounds, featherweights.
  • Manuel Flores (8-0, 5 KOs) 117.3 vs. Jonathan Rodriguez (8-0, 3 KOs) 118, six rounds, bantamweights.
  • Anthony Chavez (8-1, 3 KOs) 129.1 vs. Adan Gonzales (5-3-2, 2 KOs) 129.1, six rounds, junior ligthweights.
  • Eric Puente (3-0, 0 KOs) 137.7 vs. Luis Norambuena (4-5-1, 0 KOs) 135.6, four rounds, lightweights.

[lawrence-related id=13641]

Shakur Stevenson set to face Puerto Rican Felix Caraballo on June 9

Shakur Stevenson is tentatively scheduled to face Puerto Rican Felix Caraballo when boxing resumes in the U.S. on June 9.

Featherweight titleholder Shakur Stevenson reportedly has an opponent for the tentative June 9 restart of boxing.

Stevenson is scheduled to face Felix Caraballo on the Top Rank card in Las Vegas, co-manager Andre Ward revealed on ESPN Saturday. The show must still be approved by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

ESPN will televise the event. No site has been announced.

“Obviously, he’s excited,” said Ward, speaking between classic fights airing on the network. “He wants to get back in the ring, a throwback mentality type of fighter even though he’s a young fighter. He’s working out in the gym now. He’s excited to get back in the ring by early June.

“He recently just had an opponent change because his opponent is in Mexico and having issues getting over. He’s now facing, I believe it’s Felix Caraballo.”

Stevenson, a silver medalist in the 2016 Olympics, won a vacant 126-pound belt when he easily outpointed Joet Gonzalez in October. That was Stevenson’s most recent fight.

Caraballo (13-1-2, 9 KOs) has won five fights since his only loss but the Puerto Rican has never fought outside his country, has been in only one scheduled 10-round fight and has never faced anyone near Stevenson’s ability.

Ward is confident about his client’s chances.

“I don’t know much about him,” he said. “Shakur texted me and said, ‘Hey I haven’t watched the tape yet. What do you think about him?’ I told him Felix has big trouble come June 9.”

Stevenson was scheduled to face Miguel Marriaga on March 14 in New York City but the fight was canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Shakur Stevenson wants to make statement even without spectators

Shakur Stevenson will make his first featherweight title defense against Miguel Marriaga on Saturday in front of empty seats.

The building will be empty. But Shakur Stevenson’s future is not.

Stevenson will make his first featherweight title defense against Miguel Marriaga on Saturday night at Hulu Theater at New York’s Madison Square Garden in front of empty seats because of the growing coronavirus threat.

Essentially, it’ll be a studio show for an ESPN audience. It’ll be different. It’ll be weird. Echoes instead of cheers, yet life and boxing careers move on. Nothing about Stevenson’s ambition changes, especially in a title defense that allows him to make a statement against Marriaga, a perennial title contender.

Before Stevenson (13-0, 7 KO) won his first 126-pound belt with a dominating decision over Joet Gonzalez last October in Reno, Nevada, he talked about 2020 as a year when he could begin to stake a claim on pound-for-pound contention.

“I want to be the king of boxing,’’ Stevenson, 22, told reporters this week on a promotional stop in his hometown of Newark.

He won’t necessarily do that against Marriaga (29-3, 25 KOs). Stevenson is heavily favored. He is expected to win. But he has his own expectations. He’ll measure himself more by how he does than what he does. He’s hoping for a sensational performance, one that won’t get a crowd rocking, yet will be YouTube worthy. Fans can’t be there, but Stevenson wants to deliver a victory memorable enough to replay and share.

Marriaga is 0-3 in title shots. He lost to Nicholas Walters in June 2015, Oscar Valdez Jr. in May 2017 and Vasiliy Lomachenko in August 2017. Lomachenko, No. 1 in Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound poll, destroyed Marriaga, knocking down the 33-year-old Colombian twice and forcing him to quit after the seventh round of a junior lightweight fight.

For Stevenson, Lomachenko’s performance is the standard, one he hopes to surpass. Do that and maybe he gets some consideration from some of those pound-for-pound polls.

More immediate is a possible title unification fight with U.K. featherweight Josh Warrington (30-0, 7 KOs). Stevenson hopes to face Warrington in May. That might be a little bit early, but nobody ever became king by waiting around.

Joet Gonzalez determined to bounce back with a bang

Joet Gonzalez is determined to demonstrate that his loss to Shakur Stevenson was just an off night.

Boxing, says featherweight contender Joet Gonzalez, is a learning process. That applies whether you win or lose.

Gonzalez is coming off the biggest fight of his career and his first loss, a unanimous decision against Shakur Stevenson for a vacant 126-pound title last October in Reno, Nevada. All three scorecards were the same: 119-109, or 11 rounds to one. It wasn’t close.

Gonzalez hasn’t made excuses, even when he has had the opportunity. Five months later, nothing has changed. It just wasn’t his night.

“I just found myself stuck in this [rut],” said Gonzalez, who faces Chris Avalos on March 19 at Avalon Hollywood in Hollywood, California. “I was doing the same thing over and over again, every round. I knew what I needed to do I just couldn’t do it. It was weird.

“… That’s boxing. You learn something in every fight.”

Joet Gonzalez (right, against Rafael Rivera) remains focused on winning a world championship. Tom Hogan-Hoganphotos / Golden Boy

Gonzalez (23-1, 14 KOs) has had a lot of learning opportunities.

For example, he has had the opportunity to spar with highly respected world champions Vasiliy Lomachenko and Oscar Valdez, which he described as “good sparring, really good work.”

He said he held his own against Lomachenko, who many regard as the No. 1 fighter pound for pound in the world, but he added that the gifted Ukrainian was no ordinary sparring partner.

“You could say Lomachenko is in his own category. The guy’s very competitive, very, very skilled and smart in the ring,” he told Boxing Junkie.

Of course, the fight against Stevenson – his first professional setback – also provided valuable lessons.

The main one: That no matter how prepared you are for fight you never know how things will unfold in the ring. All a fighter can do is train properly, do his best, accept the result and come back to do it again.

“I had a great camp [for Stevenson],” he said. “I had great sparring, everything. It just wasn’t my day. What I learned is that you can have one of your best camps, best sparring, and, come fight time, you don’t perform the way you’re supposed to.

“And then you have camps where you look like s—, you get your ass beat in sparring, maybe you’re not in great shape, and come fight time you knock the dude out cold. It is what it is.”

Gonzalez certainly isn’t dwelling on the past. He said taking his first loss wasn’t as devastating as one might think. He leaned on his family to help him in the immediate aftermath, took about a week off to rest and then went right back to the gym.

His record looks different now but he’s the same determined boxer with sights locked onto another title shot.

“My goal is still there, my hunger is still there,” he said.

Of course, he’ll have to get past Avalos (27-7, 20 KOs) to get back into the championship hunt.

Avalos has been a major player at both junior featherweight and featherweight but has come up short in his biggest fights, knockout losses to Carl Frampton for a 122-pound title in 2015, Oscar Valdez at 126 pounds later that year and Leo Santa Cruz for a 126-pound belt in 2017.

After the loss to Santa Cruz, he stepped away from boxing for two years only to lose a decision to Abimael Ortiz in his comeback fight this past November.

Still, Gonzalez isn’t taking anything for granted. They know one another because they both grew up in the Los Angeles area and they even sparred once, when Gonzalez was still an amateur and Avalos a young pro. Gonzalez doesn’t remember much about the session other than it was “normal sparring.”

“He’s a tough guy,” Gonzalez said. “He comes to fight. He doesn’t come as an opponent, he comes to win. I’m ready. I want to make a statement. I want to show boxing fans, boxing people that [the loss to Stevenson] was just a bad night and that I can do well against tough guys.

“I’m still going forward toward my goal of being a world champion.”

 

Follow Michael Rosenthal on Twitter @mrosenthal_box

Shakur Stevenson, Mick Conlan to headline March featherweight cards

Shakur Stevenson and Mick Conlan are scheduled to headline featherweight cards in March.

Featherweights will bring their own version of March Madness to New York.

First, Shakur Stevenson will make the first defense of his 126-pound title against veteran Colombian challenger Miguel Marriaga on March 14 at Madison Square Garden’s Hulu Theater on ESPN.

Three days later, Irish featherweight Mick Conlan will be at Hulu Theater for his annual celebration of Saint Patrick’s Day against Belmar Preciado, also of Colombia.

The featherweight two-step, announced Tuesday by Top Rank, will begin with Stevenson (13-0, 7 KOs) in his first bout since scoring a unanimous decision over Joet Gonzalez on Oct. 26.

“We’ve been trying to make this fight with Miguel Marriaga for a long time now,” Stevenson said. “I wanted a strong opponent for my first title defense. He’s been in the ring with multiple world champions, and I am ready to prove that I am the best featherweight in the world. This is my fourth fight at Madison Square Garden, but my first as a world champion, and it will be my best performance yet.”

Marriaga (29-3, 25 KOs) has challenged for world titles three times, losing all three to Nicholas Walters, Oscar Valdez Jr. and Vasiliy Lomachenko. He has won his last four fights, all by stoppage.

“I always wanted this fight, and the time is right now that he’s a world champion,” Marriaga said. “He speaks often about how people are ducking him, but here I am. Colombia will have a new world champion March 14.”

Conlan (13-0, 7 KOs), who will make a fourth straight St Paddy’s Day appearance at Hulu, looms as a potential challenger for the Stevenson-Marriaga winner.

“I know how tough Preciado (20-2-1, 13 KOs) is, but this fight is a great test as I continue on my path towards becoming a world champion,’’ Conlan said.

On the March 14 card, former junior-featherweight champion Jessie Magdaleno (27-1, 18 KOs) will face unbeaten Sakaria Lukas (23-0, 16 KOs) of Namibia in a 10-round featherweight bout.

On the March 17 card, unbeaten Mikaela Mayer (12-0, 5 KOs) will take on Melissa Hernandez (23-7-3, 7 KOs), a former featherweight champ, in a junior lightweight bout.