Joseph Diaz Jr. on Friday lost his junior lightweight title on the scale but will still fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday.
Joseph Diaz Jr. lost his IBF junior lightweight title on the scale Friday.
Diaz, who will fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., weighed 133.6 pounds, 3.6 over the division limit of 130. Rakhimov weighed 129.75, which means the belt is at stake only for the Russian.
Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) won the title in his most-recent fight, a unanimous decision over Tevin Farmer in January of last year. He talked about unifying the 130-pound titles.
This is the second time Diaz has come in over weight in a major fight. He outpointed then-featherweight titleholder Jesus Rojas but lost a chance to win the belt when he came in a half pound over the limit in 2018.
Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) will be fighting for a major title for the first time.
Also on the card, Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) will defend his WBO 154-pound title against Brian Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs). Teixeira weighed 153.4, Castano 153.8.
Ronny Rios (32-3, 16 KOs) will face Oscar Negrete (19-2-2, 7 KOs) in a 10-round junior featherweight fight. Rios weighed 121.4, 1.6 pounds below the limit. Negrete weighed 121.6.
Shane Mosley Jr. (16-3, 9 KOs) and Cristian Olivas (19-7, 16 KOs) both weighed 161.6 for their 10-round super middleweight bout.
And, in the DAZN opener, hot light heavyweight prospect Bektemir Melikuziev (6-0, 5 KOs) and Morgan Fitch (19-4-1, 8 KOs) weighed 170.6 and 170.8, respectively, for a scheduled eight-rounder.
Joseph Diaz Jr. on Friday lost his junior lightweight title on the scale but will still fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday.
Joseph Diaz Jr. lost his IBF junior lightweight title on the scale Friday.
Diaz, who will fight Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., weighed 133.6 pounds, 3.6 over the division limit of 130. Rakhimov weighed 129.75, which means the belt is at stake only for the Russian.
Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) won the title in his most-recent fight, a unanimous decision over Tevin Farmer in January of last year. He talked about unifying the 130-pound titles.
This is the second time Diaz has come in over weight in a major fight. He outpointed then-featherweight titleholder Jesus Rojas but lost a chance to win the belt when he came in a half pound over the limit in 2018.
Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) will be fighting for a major title for the first time.
Also on the card, Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) will defend his WBO 154-pound title against Brian Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs). Teixeira weighed 153.4, Castano 153.8.
Ronny Rios (32-3, 16 KOs) will face Oscar Negrete (19-2-2, 7 KOs) in a 10-round junior featherweight fight. Rios weighed 121.4, 1.6 pounds below the limit. Negrete weighed 121.6.
Shane Mosley Jr. (16-3, 9 KOs) and Cristian Olivas (19-7, 16 KOs) both weighed 161.6 for their 10-round super middleweight bout.
And, in the DAZN opener, hot light heavyweight prospect Bektemir Melikuziev (6-0, 5 KOs) and Morgan Fitch (19-4-1, 8 KOs) weighed 170.6 and 170.8, respectively, for a scheduled eight-rounder.
Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans. The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN). If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That …
Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans.
The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN).
If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That means he hopes to face the likes of Gervonta Davis, Miguel Berchelt and Jamel Herring in the near future.
In this episode of Boxing with Chris Mannix, courtesy of DAZN, the host interviews Diaz about his immediate future.
Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans. The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN). If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That …
Joseph Diaz Jr. has big plans.
The junior lightweight titleholder defends his title against No. 1-ranked Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Saturday at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., (DAZN).
If he wins, he plans to set his sights on title unification. That means he hopes to face the likes of Gervonta Davis, Miguel Berchelt and Jamel Herring in the near future.
In this episode of Boxing with Chris Mannix, courtesy of DAZN, the host interviews Diaz about his immediate future.
Joseph Diaz Jr. said plans to build on his title-winning victory last year.
For some fighters, winning a world title is the culmination of everything for which they’ve worked. For Joseph Diaz Jr., it’s merely a start.
Oh, to be sure, JoJo’s unanimous-decision victory over the respected Tevin Farmer to win a portion of the 130-pound title in January of last year was gratifying for the Los Angeles fighter. All of the years of sacrifice had paid off.
At the same time, he has much bigger plans. He wants to unify the junior lightweight titles in a deep division and ultimately move up and do the same at 135. You think that’s ambitious? He also has his sights set on the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
And adding to his hunger is the fact that some don’t see the 28-year-old former Olympian as a fighter to be feared in and around his division, as rivals Gervonta Davis and Miguel Berchelt are, in spite of his accomplishments.
Thus, Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) has more work to do. And that starts this Saturday night at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., where he makes his first title defense against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) on DAZN.
“There will always be critics,” Diaz told Boxing Junkie. “I’ve fought top tier guys, I have five world champions on my resume. And I still don’t’ get respect. It is what it is. It’s a tough sport.
“As long as I’m champion, as long as I do what I gotta do, that’s all that matters.”
The lack of respect – if that’s what it is – might have something to do with Diaz’s one and only loss, a one-sided decision against gifted featherweight champion Gary Russell Jr. in his first title shot, in 2018.
Diaz has won five consecutive fights and his title since then, which he says stems partly from the lessons learned against Russell.
“That loss was a blessing in disguise,” he said. “… I didn’t open up like I should’ve, I didn’t take as many risks as I should have. That fight made me realize that you can’t leave anything in the ring. You have to give your all every time you step into the ring.
“You never know when an opportunity like that will come again.”
Diaz won’t have to go looking for Rakhimov, a rugged Russian fighter who stalks his opponents and has significant punching power. The native of Tajikistan is ranked No. 1 by the IBF, whose belt Diaz owns.
Indeed, Rakhimov might be a bigger threat than his relative anonymity might suggest.
Diaz says he’s ready. He will have been out of the ring for more than a year but has no concerns about rust. In fact, he said the time off has allowed aches and pains to heal and his mind to clear.
He believes he’ll be at his best on Saturday.
“I’ll win because of my experience, what I’ve been through as a pro,” he said. “I feel like that will be one of the key factors on fight night. I feel like this is his toughest fight but not my toughest fight. I’ve been here before, I’ve fought a lot of tough fights already.
“This is his first step up, his first really tough fight. That right there is one of my keys to victory.”
[lawrence-related id=17648,5709]
If he wins, things could get interesting.
The junior lightweight division is in flux at the moment. WBC titleholder Miguel Berchelt has a significant test against Oscar Valdez on Feb. 20. WBO beltholder Jamel Herring will defend against former champ Carl Frampton on Feb. 27. And the WBA titleholder, Gervonta Davis, is looking for an opponent.
Diaz plans to beat Rakhimov and then pursue his fellow titleholders, however that plays out.
“Winning the title was just the start of my legacy,” he said. “I want to be unified champion at 130 pounds, move up in weight and be a champion in two weight classes. I want to be a Hall of Famer.
“There is still a lot more I want to accomplish. There are still many years to go, many hard, long training camps. And I’m looking forward to it. I love what I do.”
Joseph Diaz Jr. said plans to build on his title-winning victory last year.
For some fighters, winning a world title is the culmination of everything for which they’ve worked. For Joseph Diaz Jr., it’s merely a start.
Oh, to be sure, JoJo’s unanimous-decision victory over the respected Tevin Farmer to win a portion of the 130-pound title in January of last year was gratifying for the Los Angeles fighter. All of the years of sacrifice had paid off.
At the same time, he has much bigger plans. He wants to unify the junior lightweight titles in a deep division and ultimately move up and do the same at 135. You think that’s ambitious? He also has his sights set on the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
And adding to his hunger is the fact that some don’t see the 28-year-old former Olympian as a fighter to be feared in and around his division, as rivals Gervonta Davis and Miguel Berchelt are, in spite of his accomplishments.
Thus, Diaz (31-1, 15 KOs) has more work to do. And that starts this Saturday night at Fantasy Springs in Indio, Calif., where he makes his first title defense against Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov (15-0, 12 KOs) on DAZN.
“There will always be critics,” Diaz told Boxing Junkie. “I’ve fought top tier guys, I have five world champions on my resume. And I still don’t’ get respect. It is what it is. It’s a tough sport.
“As long as I’m champion, as long as I do what I gotta do, that’s all that matters.”
The lack of respect – if that’s what it is – might have something to do with Diaz’s one and only loss, a one-sided decision against gifted featherweight champion Gary Russell Jr. in his first title shot, in 2018.
Diaz has won five consecutive fights and his title since then, which he says stems partly from the lessons learned against Russell.
“That loss was a blessing in disguise,” he said. “… I didn’t open up like I should’ve, I didn’t take as many risks as I should have. That fight made me realize that you can’t leave anything in the ring. You have to give your all every time you step into the ring.
“You never know when an opportunity like that will come again.”
Diaz won’t have to go looking for Rakhimov, a rugged Russian fighter who stalks his opponents and has significant punching power. The native of Tajikistan is ranked No. 1 by the IBF, whose belt Diaz owns.
Indeed, Rakhimov might be a bigger threat than his relative anonymity might suggest.
Diaz says he’s ready. He will have been out of the ring for more than a year but has no concerns about rust. In fact, he said the time off has allowed aches and pains to heal and his mind to clear.
He believes he’ll be at his best on Saturday.
“I’ll win because of my experience, what I’ve been through as a pro,” he said. “I feel like that will be one of the key factors on fight night. I feel like this is his toughest fight but not my toughest fight. I’ve been here before, I’ve fought a lot of tough fights already.
“This is his first step up, his first really tough fight. That right there is one of my keys to victory.”
[lawrence-related id=17648,5709]
If he wins, things could get interesting.
The junior lightweight division is in flux at the moment. WBC titleholder Miguel Berchelt has a significant test against Oscar Valdez on Feb. 20. WBO beltholder Jamel Herring will defend against former champ Carl Frampton on Feb. 27. And the WBA titleholder, Gervonta Davis, is looking for an opponent.
Diaz plans to beat Rakhimov and then pursue his fellow titleholders, however that plays out.
“Winning the title was just the start of my legacy,” he said. “I want to be unified champion at 130 pounds, move up in weight and be a champion in two weight classes. I want to be a Hall of Famer.
“There is still a lot more I want to accomplish. There are still many years to go, many hard, long training camps. And I’m looking forward to it. I love what I do.”
Fight Week: Title fights featuring Joe Smith Jr., Joseph Diaz Jr. and Patrick Teixeira highlight a busy weekend of boxing.
FIGHT WEEK
Title fights featuring Joseph Diaz Jr., Joe Smith Jr. and Patrick Teixeira highlight busy weekend of boxing
***
JOE SMITH JR. (26-3, 21 KOs) VS.
MAXIM VLASOV (45-3, 26 KOS)
When: Saturday, Feb. 13
Where: MGM Grand, Las Vegas
TV/Stream: ESPN
Division: Light heavyweight (175 pounds)
At stake: Vacant WBO title
Pound-for-poundranking: None
Odds: Smith 3-1 favorite
Also on the card: Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez, 10 rounds, lightweights; Adam Lopez vs. Jason Sanchez, 10 rounds, featherweights
Prediction: Smith KO 9
Background: Smith will be fighting for a major title for the second time, after losing a wide decision to Dmitry Bivol in March 2019. The hard puncher from Long Island, N.Y., bounced back from that disappointment to record two impressive victories, a split decision over Jesse Hart in January of last year and a ninth-round knockout of Eleider Alvarez the following August that earned him a shot at the belt. Smith, 31, burst onto the scene by stopping Andrzej Fonfara and Bernard Hopkins in consecutive fights in 2016. Vlasov, a 34-year-old Russian, will be fighting for a world title for the first time. He has seen action 13 times in the U.S. but has lost his biggest fights here, decisions against Issac Chilemba, Gilberto Ramirez and Krzysztof Glowacki. Vlasov has won three consecutive fights since the Glowacki setback, including a wide decision over Chilemba in their rematch. He last fought in November 2019, a shutout decision over Emmanuel Martey. Vlasov has never been stopped.
***
JOSEPH DIAZ JR. (31-1, 15 KOs) VS.
SHAVKATDZHON RAKHIMOV (15-0, 12 KOS)
When: Saturday, Feb. 13
Where: Fantasy Springs, Indio, Calif.
TV/Stream: DAZN
Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
At stake: Diaz’s IBF title
Pound-for-poundranking: None
Odds: Diaz 2-1 favorite
Also on the card: Patrick Teixeira vs. Brian Castano, junior middleweights (for Teixeira’s WBO title), Ronny Rios vs. Oscar Negrete, junior featherweights; Jason Quigley vs. Shane Mosley Jr., middleweights
Prediction: Smith KO 9
Background: Diaz is coming off his breath-through victory, a unanimous decision over Tevin Farmer to win a major 130-pound title in January of last year. The 2012 U.S. Olympian had lost to 126-pound champ Gary Russell Jr. in his only other title shot. Diaz, 28, has won five consecutive fights since that setback. Rakhimov is a 26-year-old former amateur standout from Tajikistan. He is coming off an eight-round knockout of Azinga Fuzile in September 2019 in South Africa, his only fight outside Russia. This is Rakhimov’s first world title fight. In the co-feature, Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) last fought in November 2019, when he narrowly outpointed Carlos Adames to win the WBO “interim” title. The Brazilian was later elevated to full champion. Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs) is coming off a fifth-round stoppage of Wale Omotoso in November 2019. He recently gave strong performances against Michel Soro (SD victory) Erislandy Lara (SD draw) to move into the WBO’s No. 1 position at junior middleweight.
Also on the card: Leigh Wood vs. Reece Mould, featherweights (for vacant British title); Zelfa Barrett vs. Kiko Martinez, junior lightweights
Prediction: Warrington UD
Background: Warrington gave up his IBF featherweight title after the sanctioning body rejected a unification bout with WBA secondary beltholder Xu Can. The excellent technician from Leeds, England, is on a streak of impressive victories, including decisions over Lee Selby (2018), Carl Frampton (2018) and Kid Galahad (2019). The 30-year-old stopped Sofiane Takoucht in October 2019, his most-recent fight. Warrington reportedly is still pursuing a meeting with Can. Lara, 22, is a relative unknown from Mexico City who has never fought outside Latin America and is taking a big step up in opposition. Hence the wide odds in Warrington’s favor. Lara last fought this past December, when he easily outpointed journeyman Sergio Puente in Monterrey, Mexico. Warrington vs. Lara is a scheduled 10-rounder.
Fight Week: Title fights featuring Joe Smith Jr., Joseph Diaz Jr. and Patrick Teixeira highlight a busy weekend of boxing.
FIGHT WEEK
Title fights featuring Joseph Diaz Jr., Joe Smith Jr. and Patrick Teixeira highlight busy weekend of boxing
***
JOE SMITH JR. (26-3, 21 KOs) VS.
MAXIM VLASOV (45-3, 26 KOS)
When: Saturday, Feb. 13
Where: MGM Grand, Las Vegas
TV/Stream: ESPN
Division: Light heavyweight (175 pounds)
At stake: Vacant WBO title
Pound-for-poundranking: None
Odds: Smith 3-1 favorite
Also on the card: Richard Commey vs. Jackson Marinez, 10 rounds, lightweights; Adam Lopez vs. Jason Sanchez, 10 rounds, featherweights
Prediction: Smith KO 9
Background: Smith will be fighting for a major title for the second time, after losing a wide decision to Dmitry Bivol in March 2019. The hard puncher from Long Island, N.Y., bounced back from that disappointment to record two impressive victories, a split decision over Jesse Hart in January of last year and a ninth-round knockout of Eleider Alvarez the following August that earned him a shot at the belt. Smith, 31, burst onto the scene by stopping Andrzej Fonfara and Bernard Hopkins in consecutive fights in 2016. Vlasov, a 34-year-old Russian, will be fighting for a world title for the first time. He has seen action 13 times in the U.S. but has lost his biggest fights here, decisions against Issac Chilemba, Gilberto Ramirez and Krzysztof Glowacki. Vlasov has won three consecutive fights since the Glowacki setback, including a wide decision over Chilemba in their rematch. He last fought in November 2019, a shutout decision over Emmanuel Martey. Vlasov has never been stopped.
***
JOSEPH DIAZ JR. (31-1, 15 KOs) VS.
SHAVKATDZHON RAKHIMOV (15-0, 12 KOS)
When: Saturday, Feb. 13
Where: Fantasy Springs, Indio, Calif.
TV/Stream: DAZN
Division: Junior lightweight (130 pounds)
At stake: Diaz’s IBF title
Pound-for-poundranking: None
Odds: Diaz 2-1 favorite
Also on the card: Patrick Teixeira vs. Brian Castano, junior middleweights (for Teixeira’s WBO title), Ronny Rios vs. Oscar Negrete, junior featherweights; Jason Quigley vs. Shane Mosley Jr., middleweights
Prediction: Smith KO 9
Background: Diaz is coming off his breath-through victory, a unanimous decision over Tevin Farmer to win a major 130-pound title in January of last year. The 2012 U.S. Olympian had lost to 126-pound champ Gary Russell Jr. in his only other title shot. Diaz, 28, has won five consecutive fights since that setback. Rakhimov is a 26-year-old former amateur standout from Tajikistan. He is coming off an eight-round knockout of Azinga Fuzile in September 2019 in South Africa, his only fight outside Russia. This is Rakhimov’s first world title fight. In the co-feature, Patrick Teixeira (31-1, 22 KOs) last fought in November 2019, when he narrowly outpointed Carlos Adames to win the WBO “interim” title. The Brazilian was later elevated to full champion. Castano (16-0-1, 12 KOs) is coming off a fifth-round stoppage of Wale Omotoso in November 2019. He recently gave strong performances against Michel Soro (SD victory) Erislandy Lara (SD draw) to move into the WBO’s No. 1 position at junior middleweight.
Also on the card: Leigh Wood vs. Reece Mould, featherweights (for vacant British title); Zelfa Barrett vs. Kiko Martinez, junior lightweights
Prediction: Warrington UD
Background: Warrington gave up his IBF featherweight title after the sanctioning body rejected a unification bout with WBA secondary beltholder Xu Can. The excellent technician from Leeds, England, is on a streak of impressive victories, including decisions over Lee Selby (2018), Carl Frampton (2018) and Kid Galahad (2019). The 30-year-old stopped Sofiane Takoucht in October 2019, his most-recent fight. Warrington reportedly is still pursuing a meeting with Can. Lara, 22, is a relative unknown from Mexico City who has never fought outside Latin America and is taking a big step up in opposition. Hence the wide odds in Warrington’s favor. Lara last fought this past December, when he easily outpointed journeyman Sergio Puente in Monterrey, Mexico. Warrington vs. Lara is a scheduled 10-rounder.
Joseph “JoJo” Diaz Jr. recorded a break-through victory when he outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year. The two have gone back and forth since then about why a contracted rematch hasn’t happened or been arranged, …
Joseph “JoJo” Diaz Jr. recorded a break-through victory when he outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year.
The two have gone back and forth since then about why a contracted rematch hasn’t happened or been arranged, with each giving their own spin on the situation.
In this episode of The Ak & Barak show, hosts by DAZN commentators Akin Reyes and Barak Bess interview Diaz, who reacts to recent comments made by Farmer.
Diaz is scheduled to make the first defense of his belt against unbeaten Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Feb. 13 in Indio, Calif. (DAZN).
The Ak & Barak Show is available on DAZN and Sirius XM Fight Nation, Channel 156.
Joseph “JoJo” Diaz Jr. recorded a break-through victory when he outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year. The two have gone back and forth since then about why a contracted rematch hasn’t happened or been arranged, …
Joseph “JoJo” Diaz Jr. recorded a break-through victory when he outpointed Tevin Farmer to win a 130-pound title in January of last year.
The two have gone back and forth since then about why a contracted rematch hasn’t happened or been arranged, with each giving their own spin on the situation.
In this episode of The Ak & Barak show, hosts by DAZN commentators Akin Reyes and Barak Bess interview Diaz, who reacts to recent comments made by Farmer.
Diaz is scheduled to make the first defense of his belt against unbeaten Shavkatdzhon Rakhimov on Feb. 13 in Indio, Calif. (DAZN).
The Ak & Barak Show is available on DAZN and Sirius XM Fight Nation, Channel 156.