Jeison Rosario: Humbling setbacks turned him into a beast

Jeison Rosario blossomed as a fighter after some humbling experiences and adopting an improved training regimen.

Jeison Rosario shared a dream with most children in his poor neighborhood in Santa Domingo, Dominican Republic. He wanted to play baseball, which is akin to a religion in the Caribbean nation.

One problem: “I was scared of the ball coming at me,” he said through a translator on The PBC Podcast.

Scared of the ball? That’s ironic given that he is now one of the most-feared sluggers in boxing, a world champion who could climb onto pound-for-pound lists if he beats Jermell Charlo in a 154-pound title-unification bout on Saturday.

And for the sake of clarification: He was afraid of the ball, not the other kids. Rosario was a brash street fighter who thought he was indestructible until one day when he walked past a boxing gym.

It would be the first of several humbling experiences that would shape him as a fighter and a person.

“I liked to fight in the street,” he said. “I thought I was the best, the toughest in the street. One time I walked by the gym. Some kids with a little more experience were sparring. … I got permission to put the gloves on and I got my ass whooped really bad.

“My pride brought me back. And a couple of weeks after I started training, I went in with the same kid and whooped him.”

Jeison Rosario (right) overwhelmed Julian Williams in January. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) has been whooping people ever since. He won his first 12 professional bouts – 10 by knockout – to set up a fight with hard-punching middleweight Nathaniel Gallimore in April 2017 in Las Vegas, Rosario’s first fight outside the D.R.

The arrogant kid fought Gallimore that day, the kid who thought he was the biggest, strongest and baddest but turned out to be less than he thought. Gallimore put him down three times in Round 6, prompting the referee to stop the fight.

That was his second humbling experience.

“I had a big ego,” he said. “I thought I was stronger than anybody, bigger than anybody, a harder puncher than anybody. So my ego was up. God doesn’t see ego as a good thing. So God punished me for my ego.

“… You saw what happened. Actually it was perfect timing for me to get humble, to train the right way. It was a blessing for me.”

Rosario had to endure one more humbling experience for his career to take flight. He went 6-0-1 in his next seven fights – and avenged a draw with Mark Hernandez in the rematch – which set up a fight with tough Mexican Jorge Cota in April of last year.

Rosario eked out a split-decision victory that indicated to him and his team that changes were necessary. Manager Sampson Lewkowicz, well aware of his fighter’s potential, suggested he work with world-class trainer Luis “Chiro” Perez in Miami.

Rosario took two of the four major junior middleweight belts from Williams. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

It was a marriage made in boxing heaven. Turns out that Rosario, even though he was 18-1-1 and a contender, trained more like a journeyman than a contender. That changed with Perez.

“It was very hard,” he said. “My manager always told me that to cross over to the next level I need to come here to the United States, with my trainer Luis Perez. [Before] I was going from my house to the gym with my wife and kids. There was no proper [discipline], no proper anything.

“… Thank God I came here. You saw the result of my fight with Julian Williams.”

Indeed, Rosario went from relatively anonymous contender to an absolute sensation from one fight to the next. Williams, coming off a huge victory over Jarrett Hurd to win two major titles, didn’t last five full rounds with Rosario this past January.

The victory was both a stunning upset and the arrival of a potential star. If he beats Charlo on pay-per-view – particularly if he does it convincingly – he will be a prime candidate to be named 2020 Fighter of the Year.

That street kid has come a long way.

“We put our life in danger to improve economically for our families,” he said. “Other than that, what has changed for me is that people in my country didn’t believe I could compete at this level. Now they’re starting to believe.”

We all believe.

[lawrence-related id=5362,5288,13794,13706]

Jeison Rosario: Humbling setbacks turned him into a beast

Jeison Rosario blossomed as a fighter after some humbling experiences and adopting an improved training regimen.

Jeison Rosario shared a dream with most children in his poor neighborhood in Santa Domingo, Dominican Republic. He wanted to play baseball, which is akin to a religion in the Caribbean nation.

One problem: “I was scared of the ball coming at me,” he said through a translator on The PBC Podcast.

Scared of the ball? That’s ironic given that he is now one of the most-feared sluggers in boxing, a world champion who could climb onto pound-for-pound lists if he beats Jermell Charlo in a 154-pound title-unification bout on Saturday.

And for the sake of clarification: He was afraid of the ball, not the other kids. Rosario was a brash street fighter who thought he was indestructible until one day when he walked past a boxing gym.

It would be the first of several humbling experiences that would shape him as a fighter and a person.

“I liked to fight in the street,” he said. “I thought I was the best, the toughest in the street. One time I walked by the gym. Some kids with a little more experience were sparring. … I got permission to put the gloves on and I got my ass whooped really bad.

“My pride brought me back. And a couple of weeks after I started training, I went in with the same kid and whooped him.”

Jeison Rosario (right) overwhelmed Julian Williams in January. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Rosario (20-1-1, 14 KOs) has been whooping people ever since. He won his first 12 professional bouts – 10 by knockout – to set up a fight with hard-punching middleweight Nathaniel Gallimore in April 2017 in Las Vegas, Rosario’s first fight outside the D.R.

The arrogant kid fought Gallimore that day, the kid who thought he was the biggest, strongest and baddest but turned out to be less than he thought. Gallimore put him down three times in Round 6, prompting the referee to stop the fight.

That was his second humbling experience.

“I had a big ego,” he said. “I thought I was stronger than anybody, bigger than anybody, a harder puncher than anybody. So my ego was up. God doesn’t see ego as a good thing. So God punished me for my ego.

“… You saw what happened. Actually it was perfect timing for me to get humble, to train the right way. It was a blessing for me.”

Rosario had to endure one more humbling experience for his career to take flight. He went 6-0-1 in his next seven fights – and avenged a draw with Mark Hernandez in the rematch – which set up a fight with tough Mexican Jorge Cota in April of last year.

Rosario eked out a split-decision victory that indicated to him and his team that changes were necessary. Manager Sampson Lewkowicz, well aware of his fighter’s potential, suggested he work with world-class trainer Luis “Chiro” Perez in Miami.

Rosario took two of the four major junior middleweight belts from Williams. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

It was a marriage made in boxing heaven. Turns out that Rosario, even though he was 18-1-1 and a contender, trained more like a journeyman than a contender. That changed with Perez.

“It was very hard,” he said. “My manager always told me that to cross over to the next level I need to come here to the United States, with my trainer Luis Perez. [Before] I was going from my house to the gym with my wife and kids. There was no proper [discipline], no proper anything.

“… Thank God I came here. You saw the result of my fight with Julian Williams.”

Indeed, Rosario went from relatively anonymous contender to an absolute sensation from one fight to the next. Williams, coming off a huge victory over Jarrett Hurd to win two major titles, didn’t last five full rounds with Rosario this past January.

The victory was both a stunning upset and the arrival of a potential star. If he beats Charlo on pay-per-view – particularly if he does it convincingly – he will be a prime candidate to be named 2020 Fighter of the Year.

That street kid has come a long way.

“We put our life in danger to improve economically for our families,” he said. “Other than that, what has changed for me is that people in my country didn’t believe I could compete at this level. Now they’re starting to believe.”

We all believe.

[lawrence-related id=5362,5288,13794,13706]

Boxing Junkie Mid-year Awards: Tyson Fury is the man

Boxing Junkie presents its mid-year awards in six categories.

A most unusual year is half over. The coronavirus pandemic brought the boxing world to a halt in March and it has only begun to return in the past few weeks.

Still, some fighters have had enough time – particularly in the first few months of the year – to turn in performances worthy of recognition.

With that in mind, Boxing Junkie presents its mid-year awards in six categories. Here they are.

FIGHTER

Tyson Fury’s stoppage of Deontay Wilder was a career-defining victory. Al Bello / Getty Images

Tyson Fury

Slam dunk. Fury and Deontay Wilder fought to a controversial draw in December 2018. The rematch, on Feb. 22 in Las Vegas, wasn’t even competitive. A bulked up Fury, employing a more-aggressive strategy, dominated the then-titleholder from beginning to end. He put Wilder down in Rounds 3 and 5 and finally stopped him in Round 7. Fury just never gave Wilder and chance to unload his big right hand. It was a virtuoso performance in a super fight, which made the accomplishment all the more spectacular.

Runner up: Jeison Rosario

 

FIGHT

Robert Helenius (right) took a giant step forward with his KO of Adam Kownacki. AP Photo / Frank Franklin II

Robert Helenius TKO 4 Adam Kownacki, March 7

Helenius vs. Kownacki was nuts from the opening bell, as most Kownacki fights are. The Polish-American came out firing away, as usual. The thought at that moment: “OK, here we go. How long is Helenius going to be able to survive?” Then, as the fight progressed: “Wait a second, Helenius doesn’t seem to be going anywhere and he’s fighting back.” In Round 4, the Finn put Kownacki down with a right-left combination and then followed with a flurry of hard shots and the fight was stopped. Whew. Crazy.  Really fun to watch.

Runner up: Jeison Rosario vs. Julian Williams, Jan. 18

 

KNOCKOUT

Ryan Garcia (left) is on a knockout roll. Tom Hogan-Hoganphotos / Golden Boy

Ryan Garcia KO 1 Francisco Fonseca, Feb. 4

Tyson Fury’s stoppage of Deontay Wilder was the most important knockout so far. Garcia gave us the most spectacular KO. Garcia, the charismatic 21-year-old lightweight contender, had already generated a great deal of intrigue with two early knockouts in 2019. He simply added to the excitement against the veteran Fonseca. A single left hook relieved the Nicaraguan from his senses and took our breath away only 80 seconds into the fight.

Runner up: Fury KO 7 Wilder

 

UPSET

Jeison Rosario was overwhelmed when his new championship belts were placed over his shoulders. Stephanie Trapp / TGB Promotions

Jeison Rosario TKO 5 Julian Williams

Williams’ stature going into the Jan. 18 fight was what made Rosario’s thorough victory special. Remember, Williams, the then-junior middleweight titleholder, was coming off a career-defining victory over Jarrett Hurd eight months earlier. He had climbed onto some pound-for-pound lists. And Rosario beat the you-know-what out of him. Rosario hurt Williams about two minutes into Round 5 and followed with a brutal barrage of hard shots that forced the referee to end the fight and give Rosario the title.

Runner up: Robert Helenius TKO 4 Adam Kownacki

 

COMEBACK

Roman Gonzalez (right) resurrected his career as an elite fighter with his knockout of Kal Yafai. Amanda Westcott / DAZN

Roman Gonzalez

The former No. 1 fighter pound-for-pound had already won back-to-back fights since he lost consecutive bouts to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai in 2017, the second loss being a brutal knockout. Still, many had doubts about whether the 32-year-old Nicaraguan remained an elite fighter. He proved against then-unbeaten junior bantamweight titleholder Kal Yafai on Feb. 29 that he has plenty more to give. He gave Yafai a boxing lesson for eight-plus rounds and then stopped him in Round 9. Vintage Gonzalez.

Runner up: Mikey Garcia UD 12 Jessie Vargas, Feb. 29

 

BREAKOUT

Joseph Diaz Jr. celebrates after outpointing Tevin Farmer to win his first major world title. Michael Reaves / Getty Images

Joseph Diaz Jr.

Diaz, the former U.S. Olympian, had failed in attempts to win a major title and a secondary one, losing a decision to Gary Russell Jr. and then failing to make weight before outpointing Jesus Rojas, which precluded him from winning the belt. Some wondered whether Diaz would ever get over the hump. And then he did. Then-junior lightweight titleholder Tevin Farmer was one of the hottest fighters around yet an inspired Diaz took him to school, winning a decision that wasn’t as close as the cards indicate to finally claim a belt.

Runner up: Jeison Rosario TKO 5 Julian Williams

Fox Sports, PBC personalities thank coronavirus warriors

Fox Sports and Premier Boxing Champions put together a video featuring their biggest personalities to thank the coronavirus warriors.

Our health care workers and first responders have emerged as heroes in the ongoing fight against the coronavirus.

And that fact isn’t lost on those in the boxing world.

Fox Sports and Premier Boxing Champions took the time to put together a video (see below) featuring many of their biggest stars and personalities to thank those risking their lives.

Here are those who took part:

PBC Fighters

Manny Pacquiao, Errol Spence, Deontay Wilder, Leo Santa Cruz, Andy Ruiz Jr, Shawn Porter, Mikey Garcia, Danny Garcia, Keith Thurman, David Benavidez, Caleb Plant, Abner Mares, Erislandy Lara, Julian Williams, Tony Harrison, Anthony Dirrell, Andre Dirrell, Chris Eubank Jr, Andre Berto and Adam Kownacki.

PBC on FOX Personalities

Brian Kenny, Chris Myers, Joe Goossen, Kate Abdo, Jimmy Lennon Jr, Marcos Villegas, Heidi Androl, Jordan Plant, Steve Cunningham and Ray Flores.

The 2020 year-end award leaders as of today

These are the fighters to beat in selected year-end categories so far in 2020.

The year in boxing has been limited to two-plus months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

As a result, not many elite boxers have had the opportunity to fight in 2020. Some did, though. And a few of those made massive statements in the ring before the sport was shut down completely last month.

Of course, it’s too early to determine who will win year-end awards. After all, the sport almost certainly will resume sometime in the next several months.

That said, these are the fighters to beat in selected categories so far.

FIGHTER OF THE YEAR

Tyson Fury

Slam dunk. Fury and Deontay Wilder fought to a controversial draw in December 2018. The rematch, on Feb. 22 in Las Vegas, wasn’t even competitive. Fury, employing a more-aggressive strategy, dominated the then-titleholder from beginning to end. He put Wilder down in Rounds 3 and 5 and finally stopped him in Round 7. Fury just never gave Wilder and chance to unload his big right hand. It was a virtuoso performance in a super fight, which made the accomplishment all the more spectacular.

Runner up: Jeison Rosario

***

KNOCKOUT OF THE YEAR

Ryan Garcia KO 1 Francisco Fonseca

Tyson Fury’s stoppage of Deontay Wilder was the most important knockout so far. Garcia gave us the most spectacular. Some background: Garcia, the charismatic 21-year-old lightweight contender, had already generated a great deal of intrigue with two early knockouts in 2019. He simply added to the excitement against the veteran Fonseca on Feb. 4. A single left hook relieved the Nicaraguan from his senses and took out breath away only 80 seconds into the fight.

Runner up: Fury KO 7 Wilder

***

UPSET OF THE YEAR

Jeison Rosario TKO 5 Julian Williams

Williams’ stature going into the Jan. 18 fight was what made Rosario’s thorough victory special. Remember, Williams, the then-junior middleweight titleholder, was coming off a career-defining victory over Jarrett Hurd eight months earlier. He had climbed onto some pound-for-pound lists. And Rosario, a Dominican, beat the you-know-what out of him. Rosario hurt Williams about two minutes into Round 5 and followed with a brutal barrage of hard shots the forced the referee to end the fight and give Rosario the title.

Runner up: Robert Helenius TKO 4 Adam Kownacki

***

COMEBACK OF THE YEAR

Roman Gonzalez

The former No. 1 fighter pound for pound had already won back-to-back fights since he lost consecutive bouts to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai in 2017, the second loss being a brutal knockout. Still, many had doubts about whether the 32-year-old Nicaraguan was still an elite fighter. He proved against then-unbeaten junior bantamweight titleholder Kal Yafai on Feb. 29 that he has plenty more to give. He gave Yafai a boxing lesson for eight-plus rounds and then stopped him in Round 9. Vintage Gonzalez.

Runner up: Mikey Garcia UD 12 Jessie Vargas

***

BREAKTHROUGH OF THE YEAR

Joseph Diaz Jr.

Diaz, the former U.S. Olympian, had failed in attempts to win a major title and a secondary one, losing on the cards to Gary Russell Jr. and failing to make weight before outpointing Jesus Rojas, which precluded him from winning the belt. Some wondered whether Diaz would ever get over the hump. And then he did. Then-junior lightweight titleholder Tevin Farmer was one of the hottest fighters around yet an inspired Diaz took him to school, winning a decision that wasn’t as close as the cards indicate to finally claim a belt.

Runner up: Jeison Rosario TKO 5 Julian Williams

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

Marcos Hernandez plans to use James Kirkland as springboard

Marcos Hernandez believes a victory over James Kirkland on Saturday will catapult him toward a shot at a title.

Marcos Hernandez knows a good opportunity when he sees one.

“Madman” has lost two of his last three fights – a ninth-round TKO against Jeison Rosario and unanimous decision against Kevin Newman II – but he believes he has what takes to be a contender. He’ll have a chance to demonstrate that when he faces James Kirkland in a 10-round middleweight bout Saturday in Oxon Hill, Maryland on Fox Sports 1.

“I’ve had a great camp and for the first time in my career I’ve added a strength and conditioning coach,” Hernandez said. “I’m constantly in the gym with [trainer] Henry Ramirez working hard every single day. I was super focused going into this camp, since I know this is a major opportunity to get me back in line for a world title shot. I know I have to take this seriously.

“Some people may have doubted me based on past fights, but that is only fueling my motivation. I miss my family a lot, but I know to be great, I have to do what it takes to go to the next level.”

Hernandez (14-3-1, 3 KOs) has faced mostly second-tier opposition but does have two fights against Rosario, who stopped Julian Williams to win a junior middleweight title in January.

The first meeting, a six-round middleweight fight, ended in a split draw. That might provide a hint of what the product of Fresno, California is capable of.

Hernandez, also known as Mark Anthony Hernandez, respects the punching power of the 35-year-old Kirkland (34-2, 30 KOs) but he believes he’s the more complete fighter.

“James Kirkland is a notorious fighter known for his power, but his time has come and gone,” Hernandez said. “This is a great opportunity for me since Kirkland is a popular fighter. And when I beat him, people will take notice.

“I watched Kirkland growing up and I have studied his mistakes. Kirkland only has one style, but I have many. This will be a great fight for the fans because both of us have our backs against the wall and must win.”

And if Hernandez wins?

“When I win, I want to get back in there with unified champion Jeison Rosario,” said Hernandez. “I have fought Rosario twice already, and the first time was a draw. I have unfinished business with him. I need to make a big statement and have a highlight-reel performance this Saturday night.

“I believe I can fight him this year. The fight would be a trilogy, and who doesn’t like trilogies in boxing?”

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