Good, bad, worse: Welcome back Keith Thurman, welcome Jesse Rodriguez

A critical look at the past week in boxing GOOD Keith Thurman (right) made a strong statement against Mario Barrios on Saturday. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions No one knows in the wake of Keith Thurman’s unanimous-decision victory over Mario …

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Keith Thurman (right) made a strong statement against Mario Barrios on Saturday. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions

No one knows in the wake of Keith Thurman’s unanimous-decision victory over Mario Barrios on Saturday how he might fare against welterweight titleholders Terence Crawford, Errol Spence Jr. and Yordenis Ugas.

For one night, though, the former unified champion – now 33 – looked like a fighter who could hold his own against anyone.

Thurman had taken a 2½-year break from the sport in part because he needed time to recover from nagging injuries. He looked as fit as ever against Barrios, although he said afterward that he bruised a knuckle.

Any questions about whether he had lost a step were quashed. He largely has retained the quickness and athleticism for which he had been known.

If there was any ring rust after the long hiatus, it wasn’t obvious. He evidently sharpened his timing during intense sparring sessions during his training camp, just as he had told us beforehand.

And what about his inability to take out an opponent who was taking part in his first fight as a full-fledged welterweight, one that had been stopped by the smaller Gervonta Davis last time out?

Maybe Thurman didn’t have the gear required to finish the job after hurting Barrios several times. Maybe the fact they wore 10-ounce, instead of 8-ounce gloves – which was Barrios’ prerogative – was all the former 140-pound contender needed to survive the power of a naturally stronger man.

Afterward, Thurman gave himself a “C+ or a B-” on his performance. I’ll give him a solid B. He wasn’t spectacular by any means but he demonstrated against a solid opponent that he’s a legitimate contender in one of boxing’s glamour divisions.

That was essentially his goal, to show the world that “One Time” is back.

 

BAD

Barrios lost a wide decision but didn’t get blown out. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions

The bad news for Barrios is that he has lost consecutive fights against elite opponents, one by a late knockout and the other by a wide decision. Back-to-back losses are never a positive. The good news is that he acquitted himself reasonably well in each setback.

On Saturday, he couldn’t catch up to his quicker, more-athletic opponent or match his work rate enough to give him a serious test, which is why he lost 10 rounds on two cards and nine on the third.

At the same time, he was competitive.

Barrios landed clean shots here and there throughout the fight, whether they were jabs or a power shots. He got to Thurman’s body, which is perceived to be his weakness. He landed one shot to the stomach in Round 8 that was so punishing Thurman took out his mouthpiece so he could breathe more easily.

And he demonstrated both fitness and toughness by surviving 12 rounds against a hard puncher in his first fight as a full-fledged 147-pounder.

Barrios is a good all-around fighter who simply ran into opponents who are among the best of their generation. In other words, he took two big swings and missed both times. He should be applauded for stepping to the plate.

Now he’ll go back to the gym, work with respected trainer Virgil Hunter on areas in which he can improve and come back a better, wiser boxer.

Don’t be shocked if Barrios emerges victorious the next time he faces a significant challenge.

 

WORSE

Jesse Rodriguez changed his life by beating Carlos Cuadras.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom

Carlos Cuadras a few weeks ago was in position to underscore his place as one of the stars in a deep 115-pound division. Now, after a series of events, he’s on the outside looking in.

Cuadras (39-5-1, 27 KOs) had been scheduled to take on rival Srisaket Sor Rungvisai on Saturday in Phoenix, with the winner set to face the winner of a third fight between Juan Francisco Estrada and Roman Gonzalez for junior bantamweight supremacy.

Then everything fell apart. Estrada pulled out with COVID-19 and was replaced by Julio Cesar Martinez. They fight on March 5. Then Sor Rungvisai had to withdraw as a result of illness, leaving organizers to scramble for a replacement.

In stepped relative unknown Jesse Rodriguez, a junior flyweight contender from San Antonio who was scheduled to fight on the undercard and had never faced anyone near Cuadras’ status.

Cuadras wasn’t expected to have much trouble with the 22-year-old southpaw. And then he did – a heap of trouble. The veteran couldn’t cope with Rodriguez’s quickness and ability to use it, leaving the favorite on the wrong end of a stunning one-sided decision.

The loser is out of the title picture, at least for the time being. The winner? Rodriguez now holds a secondary WBC title, below “franchise” champion Estrada. More important, his victory over a proven commodity makes him a major player in the division.

There’s no reason he shouldn’t fight the winner of the Gonzalez-Martinez fight or face one of the two other beltholders, Jerwin Ancajas (IBF) or Kazuto Ioka (WBO).

Rodriguez is already a great story after his accomplishment on Saturday. Imagine if he beats one of the above.

 

RABBIT PUNCHES

Middleweight contender Chris Eubank Jr. (32-2, 23 KOs) deserves credit for putting Liam Williams (23-4-1, 18 KOs) down four times (one knockdown was a push) and winning a wide decision Saturday in Cardiff, Wales, Williams’ home country. He took another step toward a shot at a world title. At the same time, aside for the rounds in which Williams went down, the fight was fought on roughly even terms. And Eubank’s assertion that he carried Williams so he could punish him didn’t ring true and undoubtedly rubbed a lot of people the wrong way. He has more work to do. … Claressa Shields (12-0, 2 KOs) gave a strong performance against Ema Kozin (21-1-1, 11 KOs) in her return to boxing, winning a shutout decision on the Eubank-Williams card. She was disappointed that she was unable to stop Kozin but that means next to nothing. Domination is domination. Next up should be a showdown with the only fighter to beat her in a boxing ring, Savannah Marshall (11-0, 9 KOs). The Briton topped Shields in an amateur fight in 2012, which Shields was 17. Their back and forth at ringside after the Shields-Kozin fight was brilliant theater that will help sell the fight. However, I’m not sure Marshall can compete inside the ropes with the current version of Shields, who has evolved into arguably the best female fighter on the planet. … Twenty-year-old Jesus Ramos (18-0, 15 KOs) gave the strongest performance of his career against rugged Vladimir Hernandez (13-5, 6 KOs) on the Thurman-Barrios card, withstanding Hernandez’s incessant pressure like a more-experienced fighter and stopping him in six rounds. Ramos, already ranked by one sanctioning body, is almost ready for a title shot. … Leo Santa Cruz (38-2-1, 19 KOs) made a successful return after his knockout loss to Gervonta Davis, shutting out Keenan Carbajal (23-3-1, 15 KOs) in a 10-round 130-pound bout on the Thurman-Barrios card. Santa Cruz, 30, looks as if he hasn’t lost anything. He maintained a high work rate and was particularly effective to the body, which is his specialty. … Luis Nery (32-1, 24 KOs) also bounced back from a knockout loss, defeating Carlos Castro (27-1, 12 KOs) in a 10-round 122-pound bout on the Thurman-Barrios card. Nery fought with an effective combination of controlled aggression and elusiveness. The Mexican won a split decision but I thought he won seven rounds. Nery was stopped by Brandon Figueroa in his previous fight.

Good, bad, worse: Welcome back Keith Thurman, welcome Jesse Rodriguez

A critical look at the past week in boxing GOOD Keith Thurman (right) made a strong statement against Mario Barrios on Saturday. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions No one knows in the wake of Keith Thurman’s unanimous-decision victory over Mario …

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Keith Thurman (right) made a strong statement against Mario Barrios on Saturday. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions

No one knows in the wake of Keith Thurman’s unanimous-decision victory over Mario Barrios on Saturday how he might fare against welterweight titleholders Terence Crawford, Errol Spence Jr. and Yordenis Ugas.

For one night, though, the former unified champion – now 33 – looked like a fighter who could hold his own against anyone.

Thurman had taken a 2½-year break from the sport in part because he needed time to recover from nagging injuries. He looked as fit as ever against Barrios, although he said afterward that he bruised a knuckle.

Any questions about whether he had lost a step were quashed. He largely has retained the quickness and athleticism for which he had been known.

If there was any ring rust after the long hiatus, it wasn’t obvious. He evidently sharpened his timing during intense sparring sessions during his training camp, just as he had told us beforehand.

And what about his inability to take out an opponent who was taking part in his first fight as a full-fledged welterweight, one that had been stopped by the smaller Gervonta Davis last time out?

Maybe Thurman didn’t have the gear required to finish the job after hurting Barrios several times. Maybe the fact they wore 10-ounce, instead of 8-ounce gloves – which was Barrios’ prerogative – was all the former 140-pound contender needed to survive the power of a naturally stronger man.

Afterward, Thurman gave himself a “C+ or a B-” on his performance. I’ll give him a solid B. He wasn’t spectacular by any means but he demonstrated against a solid opponent that he’s a legitimate contender in one of boxing’s glamour divisions.

That was essentially his goal, to show the world that “One Time” is back.

 

BAD

Barrios lost a wide decision but didn’t get blown out. Ryan Hafey / Premier Boxing Champions

The bad news for Barrios is that he has lost consecutive fights against elite opponents, one by a late knockout and the other by a wide decision. Back-to-back losses are never a positive. The good news is that he acquitted himself reasonably well in each setback.

On Saturday, he couldn’t catch up to his quicker, more-athletic opponent or match his work rate enough to give him a serious test, which is why he lost 10 rounds on two cards and nine on the third.

At the same time, he was competitive.

Barrios landed clean shots here and there throughout the fight, whether they were jabs or a power shots. He got to Thurman’s body, which is perceived to be his weakness. He landed one shot to the stomach in Round 8 that was so punishing Thurman took out his mouthpiece so he could breathe more easily.

And he demonstrated both fitness and toughness by surviving 12 rounds against a hard puncher in his first fight as a full-fledged 147-pounder.

Barrios is a good all-around fighter who simply ran into opponents who are among the best of their generation. In other words, he took two big swings and missed both times. He should be applauded for stepping to the plate.

Now he’ll go back to the gym, work with respected trainer Virgil Hunter on areas in which he can improve and come back a better, wiser boxer.

Don’t be shocked if Barrios emerges victorious the next time he faces a significant challenge.

 

WORSE

Jesse Rodriguez changed his life by beating Carlos Cuadras.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom

Carlos Cuadras a few weeks ago was in position to underscore his place as one of the stars in a deep 115-pound division. Now, after a series of events, he’s on the outside looking in.

Cuadras (39-5-1, 27 KOs) had been scheduled to take on rival Srisaket Sor Rungvisai on Saturday in Phoenix, with the winner set to face the winner of a third fight between Juan Francisco Estrada and Roman Gonzalez for junior bantamweight supremacy.

Then everything fell apart. Estrada pulled out with COVID-19 and was replaced by Julio Cesar Martinez. They fight on March 5. Then Sor Rungvisai had to withdraw as a result of illness, leaving organizers to scramble for a replacement.

In stepped relative unknown Jesse Rodriguez, a junior flyweight contender from San Antonio who was scheduled to fight on the undercard and had never faced anyone near Cuadras’ status.

Cuadras wasn’t expected to have much trouble with the 22-year-old southpaw. And then he did – a heap of trouble. The veteran couldn’t cope with Rodriguez’s quickness and ability to use it, leaving the favorite on the wrong end of a stunning one-sided decision.

The loser is out of the title picture, at least for the time being. The winner? Rodriguez now holds a secondary WBC title, below “franchise” champion Estrada. More important, his victory over a proven commodity makes him a major player in the division.

There’s no reason he shouldn’t fight the winner of the Gonzalez-Martinez fight or face one of the two other beltholders, Jerwin Ancajas (IBF) or Kazuto Ioka (WBO).

Rodriguez is already a great story after his accomplishment on Saturday. Imagine if he beats one of the above.

 

RABBIT PUNCHES

Middleweight contender Chris Eubank Jr. (32-2, 23 KOs) deserves credit for putting Liam Williams (23-4-1, 18 KOs) down four times (one knockdown was a push) and winning a wide decision Saturday in Cardiff, Wales, Williams’ home country. He took another step toward a shot at a world title. At the same time, aside for the rounds in which Williams went down, the fight was fought on roughly even terms. And Eubank’s assertion that he carried Williams so he could punish him didn’t ring true and undoubtedly rubbed a lot of people the wrong way. He has more work to do. … Claressa Shields (12-0, 2 KOs) gave a strong performance against Ema Kozin (21-1-1, 11 KOs) in her return to boxing, winning a shutout decision on the Eubank-Williams card. She was disappointed that she was unable to stop Kozin but that means next to nothing. Domination is domination. Next up should be a showdown with the only fighter to beat her in a boxing ring, Savannah Marshall (11-0, 9 KOs). The Briton topped Shields in an amateur fight in 2012, which Shields was 17. Their back and forth at ringside after the Shields-Kozin fight was brilliant theater that will help sell the fight. However, I’m not sure Marshall can compete inside the ropes with the current version of Shields, who has evolved into arguably the best female fighter on the planet. … Twenty-year-old Jesus Ramos (18-0, 15 KOs) gave the strongest performance of his career against rugged Vladimir Hernandez (13-5, 6 KOs) on the Thurman-Barrios card, withstanding Hernandez’s incessant pressure like a more-experienced fighter and stopping him in six rounds. Ramos, already ranked by one sanctioning body, is almost ready for a title shot. … Leo Santa Cruz (38-2-1, 19 KOs) made a successful return after his knockout loss to Gervonta Davis, shutting out Keenan Carbajal (23-3-1, 15 KOs) in a 10-round 130-pound bout on the Thurman-Barrios card. Santa Cruz, 30, looks as if he hasn’t lost anything. He maintained a high work rate and was particularly effective to the body, which is his specialty. … Luis Nery (32-1, 24 KOs) also bounced back from a knockout loss, defeating Carlos Castro (27-1, 12 KOs) in a 10-round 122-pound bout on the Thurman-Barrios card. Nery fought with an effective combination of controlled aggression and elusiveness. The Mexican won a split decision but I thought he won seven rounds. Nery was stopped by Brandon Figueroa in his previous fight.

Keith Thurman looks a lot like champion of old in victory over Mario Barrios

Keith Thurman looked a lot like the welterweight champion of old in a one-sided victory over Mario Barrios on Saturday in Las Vegas.

The long break evidently served Keith Thurman well.

The former welterweight champion, returning after a 2½-year hiatus from boxing, outboxed and outworked Mario Barrios to win a one-sided decision Saturday night at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.

The victory was Thurman’s first since he outpointed Josesito Lopez in January 2019, more than three years ago.

“I’m just so grateful to everyone who got me into this position I’m in now,” he said. “And I look forward to having a better year later this year, 2022. ‘One Time’ is back!”

It appears so.

Thurman (30-1, 22 KOs) hadn’t looked particularly good for at least half a decade, in part because of injuries to his elbow and hand that required surgery.

Keith Thurman (right) looked a lot like the world champ of old in his victory over Mario Barrios. Joe Buglewicz / Getty Images

He was able to get past Lopez but wasn’t the sharp, athletic boxer-puncher the fans had come to know. And while he rallied to make his fight with Manny Pacquiao in July 2019 close, he lost his title to a 40-year-old.

So when it was announced that he would make his return at 33 years old on Saturday, people had questions. Would he continue to struggle? Would we see ring rust? Would he look like the Thurman of old? Or would we see some of all of the above?

In the end, he was probably was closest to looking like the Thurman of old, although he was unable to stop an opponent who was moving up in weight.

Thurman, as fit as he has been in years, moved around the ring like he used to, planting his feet long enough to land hard, accurate punches and then using them to dance out of harm’s way round after round.

Barrios (26-2, 17 KOs) boxed well and landed meaningful punches at times. For example, a shot to Thurman’s gut in Round 8 seemed to knock him for a loop, as he took out his mouthpiece to get more air.

However, that was the exception. The Texan spent most of the fight eating punches and finding it difficult to reciprocate.

He didn’t have a horrible night. He was able to remain on his feet against a naturally bigger man with considerable power and he kept the fight competitive. He simply wasn’t able to do enough to put himself in position to win.

Thurman had his hand raised for the first time in three years.  Joe Buglewicz / Getty Images

The scores were 118-110, 118-110 and 117-111 for Thurman. Boxing Junkie also had it 118-110, 10 rounds to two.

Thurman was asked to grade his performance and gave himself “a C+ or B-,” which apparently stems from his inability to take Barrios out.

“I rocked him a few times,” he said. “I just have to get back to the gym, get grinding, and push that high intensity, high endurance. That’s what I’m missing right now. I got the stamina, I got the timing. I just have to go a little harder. And we’re going to prepare to do that later this year.”

The fight was billed as a WBC title eliminator, which makes him a legitimate opponent for any of the 147-pound titleholders after just one fight back from his hiatus.

It sounds as if he’d be perfectly happy to fight any of the champions, the winner of the projected Errol Spence Jr.-Yordenis Ugas title-unification bout or Terence Crawford. He doesn’t care.

“I want the belts, baby,” he said. “I want the champions. I want to be back on top. So whoever’s willing to send Keith Thurman a contract, let’s go, baby, let’s go.”

[lawrence-related id=27905,27901,27893]

Keith Thurman looks a lot like champion of old in victory over Mario Barrios

Keith Thurman looked a lot like the welterweight champion of old in a one-sided victory over Mario Barrios on Saturday in Las Vegas.

The long break evidently served Keith Thurman well.

The former welterweight champion, returning after a 2½-year hiatus from boxing, outboxed and outworked Mario Barrios to win a one-sided decision Saturday night at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.

The victory was Thurman’s first since he outpointed Josesito Lopez in January 2019, more than three years ago.

“I’m just so grateful to everyone who got me into this position I’m in now,” he said. “And I look forward to having a better year later this year, 2022. ‘One Time’ is back!”

It appears so.

Thurman (30-1, 22 KOs) hadn’t looked particularly good for at least half a decade, in part because of injuries to his elbow and hand that required surgery.

Keith Thurman (right) looked a lot like the world champ of old in his victory over Mario Barrios. Joe Buglewicz / Getty Images

He was able to get past Lopez but wasn’t the sharp, athletic boxer-puncher the fans had come to know. And while he rallied to make his fight with Manny Pacquiao in July 2019 close, he lost his title to a 40-year-old.

So when it was announced that he would make his return at 33 years old on Saturday, people had questions. Would he continue to struggle? Would we see ring rust? Would he look like the Thurman of old? Or would we see some of all of the above?

In the end, he was probably was closest to looking like the Thurman of old, although he was unable to stop an opponent who was moving up in weight.

Thurman, as fit as he has been in years, moved around the ring like he used to, planting his feet long enough to land hard, accurate punches and then using them to dance out of harm’s way round after round.

Barrios (26-2, 17 KOs) boxed well and landed meaningful punches at times. For example, a shot to Thurman’s gut in Round 8 seemed to knock him for a loop, as he took out his mouthpiece to get more air.

However, that was the exception. The Texan spent most of the fight eating punches and finding it difficult to reciprocate.

He didn’t have a horrible night. He was able to remain on his feet against a naturally bigger man with considerable power and he kept the fight competitive. He simply wasn’t able to do enough to put himself in position to win.

Thurman had his hand raised for the first time in three years.  Joe Buglewicz / Getty Images

The scores were 118-110, 118-110 and 117-111 for Thurman. Boxing Junkie also had it 118-110, 10 rounds to two.

Thurman was asked to grade his performance and gave himself “a C+ or B-,” which apparently stems from his inability to take Barrios out.

“I rocked him a few times,” he said. “I just have to get back to the gym, get grinding, and push that high intensity, high endurance. That’s what I’m missing right now. I got the stamina, I got the timing. I just have to go a little harder. And we’re going to prepare to do that later this year.”

The fight was billed as a WBC title eliminator, which makes him a legitimate opponent for any of the 147-pound titleholders after just one fight back from his hiatus.

It sounds as if he’d be perfectly happy to fight any of the champions, the winner of the projected Errol Spence Jr.-Yordenis Ugas title-unification bout or Terence Crawford. He doesn’t care.

“I want the belts, baby,” he said. “I want the champions. I want to be back on top. So whoever’s willing to send Keith Thurman a contract, let’s go, baby, let’s go.”

[lawrence-related id=27905,27901,27893]

Leo Santa Cruz outworks, shuts out Keenan Carbajal

Leo Santa Cruz outworked and shut out Keenan Carbajal on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Leo Santa Cruz was Leo Santa Cruz on Saturday night.

The former four-division titleholder, who was knocked out by Gervonta Davis in his most-recent fight, outworked Keenan Carbajal to win a shutout decision in a 10-round junior lightweight bout on the Keith Thurman-Mario Barrios card in Las Vegas.

Santa Cruz (38-2-1, 19 KOs) went to work at the opening bell and never let up, pounding Carbajal’s body incessantly and mixing in plenty of shots to the head in spite of a cut above his right eye.

Carbajal (23-3-1, 15 KOs) was resilient — he was never hurt significantly — and had some good moments. However, he couldn’t keep pace with Santa Cruz’s vaunted work rate.

Plus, Carbajal began to complain that his left arm was injured in the middle rounds, which evidently made it difficult for him to use the arm. That made a difficult mission almost impossible.

The official scoring was not surprising: All three judges had it 100-90 in Santa Cruz’s favor, as did Boxing Junkie.

Santa Cruz hadn’t fought since October 2020, when Davis ended a competitive fight with a monstrous left uppercut in the sixth round.

[lawrence-related id=27901,27893]

Leo Santa Cruz outworks, shuts out Keenan Carbajal

Leo Santa Cruz outworked and shut out Keenan Carbajal on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Leo Santa Cruz was Leo Santa Cruz on Saturday night.

The former four-division titleholder, who was knocked out by Gervonta Davis in his most-recent fight, outworked Keenan Carbajal to win a shutout decision in a 10-round junior lightweight bout on the Keith Thurman-Mario Barrios card in Las Vegas.

Santa Cruz (38-2-1, 19 KOs) went to work at the opening bell and never let up, pounding Carbajal’s body incessantly and mixing in plenty of shots to the head in spite of a cut above his right eye.

Carbajal (23-3-1, 15 KOs) was resilient — he was never hurt significantly — and had some good moments. However, he couldn’t keep pace with Santa Cruz’s vaunted work rate.

Plus, Carbajal began to complain that his left arm was injured in the middle rounds, which evidently made it difficult for him to use the arm. That made a difficult mission almost impossible.

The official scoring was not surprising: All three judges had it 100-90 in Santa Cruz’s favor, as did Boxing Junkie.

Santa Cruz hadn’t fought since October 2020, when Davis ended a competitive fight with a monstrous left uppercut in the sixth round.

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Jesus Ramos knocks out Vladimir Hernandez in Round 6

Jesus Ramos knocked out Vladimir Hernandez in Round 6 on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Jesus Ramos made a strong statement on Saturday night.

The young junior middleweight contender withstood intense pressure from Vladimir Hernandez and knocked out the rugged Mexican in the sixth round on the Keith Thurman-Mario Barrios in Las Vegas.

Hernandez (13-5, 6 KOs) was coming off back-to-back victories over Alfredo Angulo and Julian Williams, swarming his opponents to win decisions.

And that’s the tactic he used Saturday, attacking Ramos from the opening bell and not letting up. However, by Round 4, Ramos seemed to become more comfortable with the pressure, began to avoid many of Hernandez’s shots and started to land the cleaner, harder punches.

In Round 6, a left hook to Hernandez’s chin that hurt him badly was the beginning of the end. Ramos followed with several more hard shots, backed him to the ropes and landed more blows.

Finally, referee Mike Ortega had seen enough and stopped the fight. The official time was 2:21 of Round 6 in the scheduled 10-rounder.

Ramos stopped his first 15 opponents but had outpointed his last two.

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Jesus Ramos knocks out Vladimir Hernandez in Round 6

Jesus Ramos knocked out Vladimir Hernandez in Round 6 on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Jesus Ramos made a strong statement on Saturday night.

The young junior middleweight contender withstood intense pressure from Vladimir Hernandez and knocked out the rugged Mexican in the sixth round on the Keith Thurman-Mario Barrios in Las Vegas.

Hernandez (13-5, 6 KOs) was coming off back-to-back victories over Alfredo Angulo and Julian Williams, swarming his opponents to win decisions.

And that’s the tactic he used Saturday, attacking Ramos from the opening bell and not letting up. However, by Round 4, Ramos seemed to become more comfortable with the pressure, began to avoid many of Hernandez’s shots and started to land the cleaner, harder punches.

In Round 6, a left hook to Hernandez’s chin that hurt him badly was the beginning of the end. Ramos followed with several more hard shots, backed him to the ropes and landed more blows.

Finally, referee Mike Ortega had seen enough and stopped the fight. The official time was 2:21 of Round 6 in the scheduled 10-rounder.

Ramos stopped his first 15 opponents but had outpointed his last two.

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Luis Nery bounces back from setback to outpoint Carlos Castro

Luis Nery bounced back from his first loss to outpoint Carlos Castro on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Luis Nery is back in the win column.

The hard-punching Mexican, who was stopped by Brandon Figueroa in his most-recent fight, put previously unbeaten Carlos Castro down in the opening round and went on to win a split decision on Keith Thurman-Mario Barrios card Saturday in Las Vegas.

Nery (32-1, 24 KOs) tried to match the naturally bigger, stronger Figueroa and paid a price in May. On Saturday, he fought aggressively at times — landing quick, hard combinations — but he also used to his feet to be an elusive target.

Castro (27-1, 12 KOs) had his moments, particularly in the middle rounds. He matched Nery punch for punch beginning in Round 4. However, he couldn’t do quite enough to erase the early deficit, at least on two cards.

The official scores were 96-93 and 95-94 for Nery, 95-94 for Castro. Boxing Junkie had it 97-92 for Nery, seven rounds to three.

Nery put Castro on his behind with a straight left less a minute into the fight. Castro got up at the count of 8 and weathered an onslaught of punches from Nery, who tried to end matters then and there.

However, Castro survived the round. After that, Nery was content to box, score in flurries and make it difficult for Castro to land cleanly. The formula worked.

 

Luis Nery bounces back from setback to outpoint Carlos Castro

Luis Nery bounced back from his first loss to outpoint Carlos Castro on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Luis Nery is back in the win column.

The hard-punching Mexican, who was stopped by Brandon Figueroa in his most-recent fight, put previously unbeaten Carlos Castro down in the opening round and went on to win a split decision on Keith Thurman-Mario Barrios card Saturday in Las Vegas.

Nery (32-1, 24 KOs) tried to match the naturally bigger, stronger Figueroa and paid a price in May. On Saturday, he fought aggressively at times — landing quick, hard combinations — but he also used to his feet to be an elusive target.

Castro (27-1, 12 KOs) had his moments, particularly in the middle rounds. He matched Nery punch for punch beginning in Round 4. However, he couldn’t do quite enough to erase the early deficit, at least on two cards.

The official scores were 96-93 and 95-94 for Nery, 95-94 for Castro. Boxing Junkie had it 97-92 for Nery, seven rounds to three.

Nery put Castro on his behind with a straight left less a minute into the fight. Castro got up at the count of 8 and weathered an onslaught of punches from Nery, who tried to end matters then and there.

However, Castro survived the round. After that, Nery was content to box, score in flurries and make it difficult for Castro to land cleanly. The formula worked.