Jose Zepeda cruises to unanimous-decision victory over Kendo Castaneda

Jose Zepeda did what he was supposed to do on Tuesday in Las Vegas, dominate an inferior opponent.

Jose Zepeda did what he was supposed to do on Tuesday in Las Vegas, dominate an inferior opponent.

Was it thrilling? Not at all. Was it convincing? Absolutely. He probably won’t frighten any of the best 140-pounders with his unanimous-decision victory over Kendo Castaneda in the bubble at the MGM Grand but maybe he should.

Zepeda (32-2, 25 KOs) was machine-like, almost robotic in his attack. The Southern Californian didn’t throw an abundance of punches but made the ones he unloaded count. They were accurate and hard, although Castaneda was never hurt.

Meanwhile, for the most part, Castaneda (17-2, 8 KOs) couldn’t land consistently. The tough, but limited late replacement from San Antonio was either beaten to punch or couldn’t catch Zepeda, whose slick footwork kept him out of trouble.

Castaneda came on to some degree in the later rounds, fighting with more urgency and finding the target enough to win a few rounds, but it wasn’t enough.

Zepeda did what it took down the stretch to preserve his victory but failed to shift into another gear, which might’ve allowed him to make a statement to those in his division and the fans.

In the end, he was happy with the victory. He has now won two in a row (not counting a no-contest) since he lost a close, majority decision to unbeaten junior welterweight titleholder Jose Ramirez in February of last year.

“He was a late replacement, but he was tough in there,” Zepeda said of Castaneda. “I didn’t take Kendo lightly because I knew what he was capable of. He had only one loss by decision coming into tonight.”

Zepeda is laser focused on getting another title shot. He was asked afterward which of the 140-pounders he wants. He responded by simply listing the names of the four major sanctioning bodies.

Ramirez holds two of the belts, Josh Taylor the other two.

“Anybody with a belt at 140 pounds is who I want to fight,” he said. “A championship fight is my goal, and that is what I am working towards.”

Luis Alberto Lopez upsets Andy Vences by split decision

Luis Alberto Lopez is on a roll. The Mexican slugger spoiled Cristian Baez’s perfect record in December. And on Tuesday, he outworked favored Andy Vences to win a split decision in a 10-round junior lightweight fight on the Jose Zepeda-Kendo …

Luis Alberto Lopez is on a roll.

The Mexican slugger spoiled Cristian Baez’s perfect record in December. And on Tuesday, he outworked favored Andy Vences to win a split decision in a 10-round junior lightweight fight on the Jose Zepeda-Kendo Castaneda card Tuesday in Las Vegas.

One judge had it for Vences 96-94 but the other two scored it for Lopez by the same score.

The fight had a number of ebbs and flows. Lopez (21-2, 11 KOs) was more active and got off first in the first few rounds. Vences (23-2-1, 12 KOs) picked up his pace and found is rhythm in Round 3 and had strong rounds in the fourth and fifth.

Then came a crazy Round 5. Lopez hurt Vences with a right uppercut about a minute into the round and followed with a barrage of hard, accurate shots that had Vences on the brink of being stopped.

Somehow, the San Jose product survived and held his own in the final three rounds. However, he came up just short.

“I felt I won the fight with my pressure,” Lopez said. “It was a close fight, but I was confident I did enough after the final bell sounded. Credit to Vences. I thought he was knocked out earlier in the fight, but he came back like a warrior.”

Vences has now lost two of his past three fights. He lost a clear decision to tall, slick Albert Bell in June of last year.

“I thought I won a close fight, but I am not going to complain about the decision,” Vences said. “It was a good, close fight. No excuses. I prepared well for 10 hard rounds. …

“I listened to my corner and got back in the fight. I thought I closed strong and did enough to win. I’ll come back to fight another say. This isn’t the end for ‘El Tiburon.’”

Lopez, a former soccer player who started boxing only five years ago, has four consecutive fights since he was outpointed by unbeaten Ruben Villa in June of last year.

In other preliminaries, lightweight prospect Andres Cortes (13-0, 7 KOs) of Las Vegas survived a nasty cut and fourth-round knockdown to defeat Alejandro Salinas (10-4, 9 KOs) of Youngstown, Ohio, by a unanimous decision in an eight-round bout. The scores were: 76-75, 79-73 and 77-74.

And Gabriel Muratalla (4-0, 3 KOs) of Fontana, California, defeated Sergio Lopez (4-6-3, 0 KOs) of Las Vegas by a unanimous decision in a four-round junior featherweight bout. The scores were 40-36, 40-36 and 39-37.

Jose Zepeda faces Kendo Castaneda in MGM Grand bubble Tuesday

Jose Zepeda is scheduled to face Kendo Castaneda in a 10-round junior welterweight bout Tuesday in the MGM Grand bubble in Las Vegas.

Jose Zepeda is on a roll. And that includes a loss.

Zepeda, who faces Kendo Castaneda in a scheduled 10-round junior welterweight bout Tuesday in Las Vegas, gave 140-pound titleholder Jose Ramirez all he could handle before losing a majority decision in February of last year.

That’s the same Jose Ramirez who is considered one of the fastest-rising stars in the sport, which means anyone who can push him to the limit has something going for him.

And if that performance weren’t enough, Zepeda is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Jose Pedraza in September. That’s the same Jose Pedraza who just outclassed Mikkel LesPierre, thus demonstrating that he remains an elite fighter.

Yes, Zepeda (31-2, 25 KOs) is good. Castaneda (17-1, 8 KOs) should learn that in the bubble at the MGM Grand on ESPN.

Zepeda was originally scheduled to face fellow contender in Ivan Baranchyk but the Belarusian pulled out because of a rib injury. Castaneda, from San Antonio, took the fight on seven days’ notice.

Castaneda, a southpaw, is coming off a majority-decision loss to unbeaten Puerto Rican Yomar Alamo on Feb. 28. Zepeda is another step up for him.

Also on the card Tuesday, Andy Vences (23-1-1, 12 KOs) of San Jose, California, faces Luis Alberto Lopez (20-2, 11 KOs) of Mexico in a scheduled 10-round junior lightweight bout.

Vences bounced back from a unanimous-decision loss to tall, slick Albert Bell in June to easily outpoint Mark Bernaldez in October. Lopez has won three fights in Mexico since losing a unanimous decision to unbeaten Ruben Villa in May of last year in Corona, California.

In other preliminaries: Andres Cortes (12-0, 7 KOs) vs. Alejandro Salinas (10-3, 9 KOs), eight rounds, lightweights; Genaro Gamez (9-1, 6 KOs) vs. Reymond Yanong (11-5-1, 9 KOs), eight rounds, junior welterweights; Eric Puente (2-0, 0 KOs) vs. Diego Elizondo (2-1-2, 0 KOs), four rounds, lightweights; and Gabriel Muratalla (3-0, 3 KOs) vs. Sergio Lopez (4-5-3, 0 KOs), four rounds, bantamweights.