Naoya Inoue gets up from knockdown, moves to 27-0 with sick KO of Luis Nery

We saw that Naoya Inoue isn’t perfect. And then we witnessed his greatness with another brilliant knockout in Japan to move to 27-0 in boxing.

(This story originally published on MMA Junkie sister-site BoxingJunkie.com)

We saw that [autotag]Naoya Inoue[/autotag] isn’t perfect. And then we witnessed his greatness.

[autotag]Luis Nery[/autotag] stunned Inoue and everyone watching by putting Inoue down with a perfect left hook in the opening round of their fight at the Tokyo Dome, the site of Buster Douglas’ historic upset of Mike Tyson.

Would we see another shocking result there? Uh, no.

Inoue, his otherworldly talents on full display, got up from the knockdown to put his Mexican opponent down three times before referee Michael Griffin stopped the fight at 1:22 of Round 6 (via X):

Thus, Inoue (27-0, 24 KOs) retained his undisputed 122-pound championship.

“That happening gave me motivation,” Inoue said about the knockdown through a translator afterward.

Nery’s hook about a minute and a half into the fight — landed when Inoue’s right hand was down — genuinely rocked the champion, who had never been on the canvas in his decade long career.

He got up quickly but went into a defensive mode, perhaps a sign that he felt the weight of the blow. However, by the end of the round he seemed to be at 100%.

Then came the fireworks. Inoue, careful to avoid Nery’s left thereafter, proceeded to pick the slower, less skillful Nery apart from both the outside and inside until the Mexican challenger could fight no more.

Inoue put the challenger down with a short left hook as he was rushing in recklessly in the second round, although Nery wasn’t hurt.

The champion scored the second knockdown with the same punch in Round 3. This time Nery seemed to truly feel Inoue’s power.

And, after taking a fearful beating that broke him down over the next two-plus rounds, Nery went down once more from a right hand as his back was against the ropes.

Griffin had no reason to count as Nery sat on the canvas. He was done. Inoue had the 16th knockout in his last 17 fights.

It appears that unbeaten contender Sam Goodman might be Inoue’s next opponent. The Australian, Inoue’s mandatory challenger, was in the ring after the fight and called out the champion.

“Look, I’ve been mandatory for over a year. Either give up the belts or fight me. Let’s get it on,” Goodman said.

Inoue said he would open negotiations with Goodman for a fight in September.

Naoya Inoue gets up from knockdown to stop overmatched Luis Nery in Round 6

Naoya Inoue got up from a first-round knockdown to stop overmatched Luis Nery in the sixth round Saturday in Tokyo.

We saw that Naoya Inoue isn’t perfect. And then we witnessed his greatness.

Luis Nery stunned Inoue and everyone watching by putting Inoue down with a perfect left hook in the opening round of their fight at the Tokyo Dome, the site of Buster Douglas’ historic upset of Mike Tyson.

Would we see another shocking result there? Uh, no.

Inoue, his otherworldly talents on full display, got up from the knockdown to put his Mexican opponent down three times before referee Michael Griffin stopped the fight at 1:22 of Round 6.

Thus, Inoue (27-0, 24 KOs) retained his undisputed 122-pound championship.

“That happening gave me motivation,” Inoue said about the knockdown through a translator afterward.

Nery’s hook about a minute and a half into the fight — landed when Inoue’s right hand was down — genuinely rocked the champion, who had never been on the canvas in his decade long career.

He got up quickly but went into a defensive mode, perhaps a sign that he felt the weight of the blow. However, by the end of the round he seemed to be at 100%.

Then came the fireworks. Inoue, careful to avoid Nery’s left thereafter, proceeded to pick the slower, less skillful Nery apart from both the outside and inside until the Mexican challenger could fight no more.

Inoue put the challenger down with a short left hook as he was rushing in recklessly in the second round, although Nery wasn’t hurt.

The champion scored the second knockdown with the same punch in Round 3. This time Nery seemed to truly feel Inoue’s power.

And, after taking a fearful beating that broke him down over the next two-plus rounds, Nery went down once more from a right hand as his back was against the ropes.

Griffin had no reason to count as Nery sat on the canvas. He was done. Inoue had the 16th knockout in his last 17 fights.

It appears that unbeaten contender Sam Goodman might be Inoue’s next opponent. The Australian, Inoue’s mandatory challenger, was in the ring after the fight and called out the champion.

“Look, I’ve been mandatory for over a year. Either give up the belts or fight me. Let’s get it on,” Goodman said.

Inoue said he would open negotiations with Goodman for a fight in September.

Fight Week: Naoya Inoue vs. Luis Nery, Vasiliy Lomachenko vs. George Kambosos Jr. on tap

Fight Week: Naoya Inoue will take on Luis Nery in the early morning hours Monday. Vasiliy Lomachenko vs. George Kambosos Jr. is Saturday.

FIGHT WEEK

Naoya Inoue will face Luis Nery in the early morning hours Monday, U.S. time. Four days later, in Australia, Vasiliy Lomachenko is set to take on George Kambosos Jr.

NAOYA INOUE (26-0, 23 KOs)
VS. LUIS NERY (35-1, 27 KOs)

Editor’s note: Naoya Inoue got up from a knockdown to stop Luis Nery in Round 6 in the early morning hours U.S. time Monday.

  • Date: Monday, May 6
  • Time: 4 a.m. ET / 1 a.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Tokyo Dome, Tokyo
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior featherweight (122 pounds)
  • At stake: Inoue’s IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO titles
  • Boxing Junkie Pound-for-pound: Inoue No. 2
  • Odds: Inoue 11-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): *****
  • Also on the card: Jason Moloney vs. Yoshiki Takei, bantamweights (for Moloney’s WBO title); Takuma Inoue vs. Sho Ishida, bantamweights (for Inoue’s WBA title); Seigo Yuri Akui vs. Taku Kuwahara, flyweights (for Akui’s WBA title)
  • Background: Four-division titleholder Naoya Inoue, arguably the best fighter in the world pound-for-pound (he’s No. 2 on Boxing Junkie’s list), is riding a streak of seven consecutive knockouts against top-level opposition. That’s why the near-flawless 31-year-old Japanese star is around an 11-1 favorite over Luis Nery on Tuesday in Tokyo, meaning oddsmakers believe Nery has next to no chance to win the fight. “The Monster” is coming off a 10th-round knockout of Marlon Tapales to collect all four major 122-pound titles in December. Nery has won four consecutive fights since he was knocked out by Brandon Figueroa in the seventh round to lose the WBC belt in 2021. The 29-year-old Mexican southpaw last fought in July, when he stopped journeyman Froilan Saludar in two rounds. He outpointed Carlos Castro and then stopped David Carmona and Azat Hovhannisyan before the fight with Saludar. Figueroa lost his title to Stephen Fulton, who then lost them to Inoue.
  • Prediction: Inoue KO 8

VASILIY LOMACHENKO (17-3, 11 KOs)
VS. GEORGE KAMBOSOS JR. (21-2, 10 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, May 11 (in U.S.)
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: RAC Arena, Perth
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: Vacant IBF title
  • Boxing Junkie Pound-for-pound: Lomachenko No. 13
  • Odds: Lomachenko  5½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): *****
  • Also on the card: Nina Hughes vs. Cherneka Johnson, bantamweights (for Hughes’ WBA title); Andrew Moloney vs. Pedro Guevara, junior bantamweights; Imam Khataev vs. Ricards Bolotniks, light heavyweights; Joe Goodall vs. Djanago Opelu, heavyweights
  • Background: Lomachenko, the 36-year-old boxing wizard from Ukraine, hasn’t held a major world title since he lost his 135-pound belts to Teofimo Lopez in 2020 yet is still considered one of the best boxers in the world. He bounced back from the loss by stopping Masayoshi Nakatani in June 2021 and then defeating Richard Commey by a one-sided decision that December. He has fought sporadically since Russia invaded his country in February 2022, entering the ring only twice. He easily outpointed Jamaine Ortiz in October of that year. Then the former three-division champion got his chance to regain past glory in a meeting with then-undisputed 135-pound champ Devin Haney in May of last year. Lomachenko gave a typically strong performance against his highly rated opponent but lost a disputed decision, 116-112, 115-113 and 115-113. He will get another crack at a belt against Kambosos in Australia. Kambosos shocked the boxing world by defeating Lopez to win a split decision and three 135-pound belts in 2021. It was downhill after that, as he lost back-to-back one-sided decisions to Haney. He rebounded to beat Maxi Hughes by a majority decision but he wasn’t convincing last July.
  • Prediction: Lomachenko UD

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

SATURDAY

  • Jessica McCaskill vs. Lauren Price, welterweights (for McCaskill’s WBA title), Cardiff, Wales (Peacock)
  • Eduardo Hernandez vs. Daniel Lugo, junior lightweights, Aguascalientes, Mexico
    DAZN
  • John Leonardo vs. Frank Gonzalez, junior featherweights, Atlantic City, New Jersey
    com

Luis Nery vs. Azat Hovhannisyan: date, time, how to watch, background

Luis Nery vs. Azat Hovhannisyan: date, time, how to watch, background.

Former two-division titleholder Luis Nery is scheduled to face Azat Hovhannisyan in a 12-round junior featherweight bout Saturday on DAZN.

LUIS NERY (33-1, 25 KOs) VS. AZAT HOVHANNISYAN (21-3, 17 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fox Theater, Pomona, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Featherweights (126 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Shane Mosley Jr. vs. Mario Lozano, super middleweights
  • Prediction: Hovhannisyan KO 10
  • Background: Junior featherweight contenders Nery and Hovhannisyan bring offense-minded attitudes and impressive punching power into this main event. Nery, a former two-division titleholder from Mexico, is still rebuilding after a rough stretch in 2021 and last year, when he was stopped by a bigger, stronger Brandon Figueroa in seven rounds in a 122-pound title-unification bout and then defeated Carlos Castro by an unconvincing split decision. He’s coming off a third-round knockout of less threatening David Carmona in a 130-pound, stay-busy fight last October. Hovhannisyan, a Los Angeles-based Armenian, has won seven consecutive fights since he lost a unanimous decision to then-122-pound titleholder Rey Vargas in 2018 and has rarely failed to entertain the fans. He last fought in April of last year, when he knocked out Dagoberto Aguero in two rounds on the Ryan Garcia-Emmanuel Tagoe card.

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Luis Nery vs. Azat Hovhannisyan: date, time, how to watch, background

Luis Nery vs. Azat Hovhannisyan: date, time, how to watch, background.

Former two-division titleholder Luis Nery is scheduled to face Azat Hovhannisyan in a 12-round junior featherweight bout Saturday on DAZN.

LUIS NERY (33-1, 25 KOs) VS. AZAT HOVHANNISYAN (21-3, 17 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fox Theater, Pomona, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Featherweights (126 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Shane Mosley Jr. vs. Mario Lozano, super middleweights
  • Prediction: Hovhannisyan KO 10
  • Background: Junior featherweight contenders Nery and Hovhannisyan bring offense-minded attitudes and impressive punching power into this main event. Nery, a former two-division titleholder from Mexico, is still rebuilding after a rough stretch in 2021 and last year, when he was stopped by a bigger, stronger Brandon Figueroa in seven rounds in a 122-pound title-unification bout and then defeated Carlos Castro by an unconvincing split decision. He’s coming off a third-round knockout of less threatening David Carmona in a 130-pound, stay-busy fight last October. Hovhannisyan, a Los Angeles-based Armenian, has won seven consecutive fights since he lost a unanimous decision to then-122-pound titleholder Rey Vargas in 2018 and has rarely failed to entertain the fans. He last fought in April of last year, when he knocked out Dagoberto Aguero in two rounds on the Ryan Garcia-Emmanuel Tagoe card.

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Fight Week: Leigh Wood vs. Mauricio Lara highlights busy weekend

Fight Week: Featherweight titleholder Leigh Wood vs. capable challenger Mauricio Lara highlights a busy weekend.

FIGHT WEEK

Featherweight beltholder Leigh Wood, coming off his sensational KO of Michael Conlan, will defend against Maurico Lara on Saturday in England.

ARDREAL HOLMES (12-0, 5 KOS)
VS. ISMAEL VILLARREAL (12-0, 8 KOS)

  • When: Friday, Feb. 17
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Stormont Vail Events Center, Topeka, Kansas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior middleweights (154 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Misael Lopez vs. Edward Vazquez, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Holmes UD
  • Background: Two American junior middleweight prospects will risk their perfect records against one another in a main event on “ShoBox: The New Generation”. Holmes, a 2016 Olympic Alternate, is coming off a unanimous decision over Vernon Brown in his first 10-rounder on ShoBox last March. The product of Flint, Michigan, is an unusually tall (6-foot-2) southpaw with excellent skills that were honed during his successful amateur career, which is why he appears to have a high ceiling. The aggressive Villarreal last fought in July, when he stopped LeShawn Rodriguez in six rounds. It was the Bronx native’s fifth consecutive knockout. He’s much shorter than Holmes (5-foot-8) but he also had a good amateur career, meaning he has a solid skill set to go with his punching power.

 

LEIGH WOOD (26-2, 16 KOS)
VS. MAURICIO LARA (25-2-1, 18 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (7 p.m. U.K. time) (main event later in show)
  • Where: Nottingham Arena, Nottingham, England
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Featherweights (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Wood’s WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Wood 2-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Dalton Smith vs. Billy Allington, junior welterweights; Gary Cully vs. Wilfredo Flores, lightweights; Cheavon Clarke vs. Dec Spelman, cruiserweights; Gamal Yafai vs. Diego Alberto Ruiz, junior featherweights
  • Prediction: Lara KO 9
  • Background: One of the hottest fighters from the U.K. will face a Mexican brawler who has a history of spoiling the plans of Britons. Wood is coming off the 2022 Fight of the Year, in which he got up from a first round knockdown to  knock challenger Michael Conlan through the ropes and out in the final round last March. The boxer-puncher, who will be fighting in his hometown, has won three consecutive fights since he lost a majority decision to James Dickens in 2020. That includes a 12th-round stoppage of Can Xu to win his belt in 2021. Lara, a 24-year-old from Mexico City, stunned U.K. fans when he knocked out then-unbeaten and rising star Josh Warrington in the ninth round in London in 2021. The rematch later that year ended in a two-round technical draw after Lara suffered a cut and couldn’t continue. Lara then knocked out both Emilio Sanchez and Jose Sammartin in three rounds to earn another shot at a top British fighter.

 

LUIS NERY (33-1, 25 KOs) VS. AZAT HOVHANNISYAN (21-3, 17 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fox Theater, Pomona, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Featherweights (126 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Shane Mosley Jr. vs. Mario Lozano, super middleweights
  • Prediction: Hovhannisyan KO 10
  • Background: Junior featherweight contenders Nery and Hovhannisyan bring offense-minded attitudes and impressive punching power into this main event. Nery, a former two-division titleholder from Mexico, is still rebuilding after a rough stretch in 2021 and last year, when he was stopped by a bigger, stronger Brandon Figueroa in seven rounds in a 122-pound title-unification bout and then defeated Carlos Castro by an unconvincing split decision. He’s coming off a third-round knockout of less threatening David Carmona in a 130-pound, stay-busy fight last October. Hovhannisyan, a Los Angeles-based Armenian, has won seven consecutive fights since he lost a unanimous decision to then-122-pound titleholder Rey Vargas in 2018 and has rarely failed to entertain the fans. He last fought in April of last year, when he knocked out Dagoberto Aguero in two rounds on the Ryan Garcia-Emmanuel Tagoe card.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

THURSDAY

  • Juan Avila vs. Andres Gerardo, lightweights, Costa Mesa, California (FITE).

SATURDAY

  • Felix Sturm vs. Sukru Altay, super middleweights, Stuttgart, Germany (DAZN).
  • Mike Ohan Jr. vs. Daniel Sostre, welterweights, Melrose, Massachusetts (BXNGTV).

[lawrence-related id=34885,28809,28777,27893]

Fight Week: Leigh Wood vs. Mauricio Lara highlights busy weekend

Fight Week: Featherweight titleholder Leigh Wood vs. capable challenger Mauricio Lara highlights a busy weekend.

FIGHT WEEK

Featherweight beltholder Leigh Wood, coming off his sensational KO of Michael Conlan, will defend against Maurico Lara on Saturday in England.

ARDREAL HOLMES (12-0, 5 KOS)
VS. ISMAEL VILLARREAL (12-0, 8 KOS)

  • When: Friday, Feb. 17
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Stormont Vail Events Center, Topeka, Kansas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior middleweights (154 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Misael Lopez vs. Edward Vazquez, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Holmes UD
  • Background: Two American junior middleweight prospects will risk their perfect records against one another in a main event on “ShoBox: The New Generation”. Holmes, a 2016 Olympic Alternate, is coming off a unanimous decision over Vernon Brown in his first 10-rounder on ShoBox last March. The product of Flint, Michigan, is an unusually tall (6-foot-2) southpaw with excellent skills that were honed during his successful amateur career, which is why he appears to have a high ceiling. The aggressive Villarreal last fought in July, when he stopped LeShawn Rodriguez in six rounds. It was the Bronx native’s fifth consecutive knockout. He’s much shorter than Holmes (5-foot-8) but he also had a good amateur career, meaning he has a solid skill set to go with his punching power.

 

LEIGH WOOD (26-2, 16 KOS)
VS. MAURICIO LARA (25-2-1, 18 KOS)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT (7 p.m. U.K. time) (main event later in show)
  • Where: Nottingham Arena, Nottingham, England
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Featherweights (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Wood’s WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Wood 2-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Dalton Smith vs. Billy Allington, junior welterweights; Gary Cully vs. Wilfredo Flores, lightweights; Cheavon Clarke vs. Dec Spelman, cruiserweights; Gamal Yafai vs. Diego Alberto Ruiz, junior featherweights
  • Prediction: Lara KO 9
  • Background: One of the hottest fighters from the U.K. will face a Mexican brawler who has a history of spoiling the plans of Britons. Wood is coming off the 2022 Fight of the Year, in which he got up from a first round knockdown to  knock challenger Michael Conlan through the ropes and out in the final round last March. The boxer-puncher, who will be fighting in his hometown, has won three consecutive fights since he lost a majority decision to James Dickens in 2020. That includes a 12th-round stoppage of Can Xu to win his belt in 2021. Lara, a 24-year-old from Mexico City, stunned U.K. fans when he knocked out then-unbeaten and rising star Josh Warrington in the ninth round in London in 2021. The rematch later that year ended in a two-round technical draw after Lara suffered a cut and couldn’t continue. Lara then knocked out both Emilio Sanchez and Jose Sammartin in three rounds to earn another shot at a top British fighter.

 

LUIS NERY (33-1, 25 KOs) VS. AZAT HOVHANNISYAN (21-3, 17 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fox Theater, Pomona, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Featherweights (126 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Shane Mosley Jr. vs. Mario Lozano, super middleweights
  • Prediction: Hovhannisyan KO 10
  • Background: Junior featherweight contenders Nery and Hovhannisyan bring offense-minded attitudes and impressive punching power into this main event. Nery, a former two-division titleholder from Mexico, is still rebuilding after a rough stretch in 2021 and last year, when he was stopped by a bigger, stronger Brandon Figueroa in seven rounds in a 122-pound title-unification bout and then defeated Carlos Castro by an unconvincing split decision. He’s coming off a third-round knockout of less threatening David Carmona in a 130-pound, stay-busy fight last October. Hovhannisyan, a Los Angeles-based Armenian, has won seven consecutive fights since he lost a unanimous decision to then-122-pound titleholder Rey Vargas in 2018 and has rarely failed to entertain the fans. He last fought in April of last year, when he knocked out Dagoberto Aguero in two rounds on the Ryan Garcia-Emmanuel Tagoe card.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

THURSDAY

  • Juan Avila vs. Andres Gerardo, lightweights, Costa Mesa, California (FITE).

SATURDAY

  • Felix Sturm vs. Sukru Altay, super middleweights, Stuttgart, Germany (DAZN).
  • Mike Ohan Jr. vs. Daniel Sostre, welterweights, Melrose, Massachusetts (BXNGTV).

[lawrence-related id=34885,28809,28777,27893]

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.

 

Keith Thurman to begin comeback against Mario Barrios on Feb. 5

Keith Thurman will begin his comeback against Mario Barrios on Feb. 5 on pay-per-view.

The last time we saw Keith Thurman was in July of 2019, when Manny Pacquiao turned in one last special performance to win a split decision and take Thurman’s world welterweight title.

More than a year and a half later, on Feb. 5, the 33-year-old former champ will step back into the ring in what he hopes will be the first step toward reclaiming his place atop the celebrated 147-pound division.

Thurman will face Mario Barrios on that date on pay-per-view from Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas, it has been officially announced.

“It’s been a long time coming for my return to the ring, and I can’t wait to compete again,” Thurman said. “In 2022, I will remind the world of boxing that Keith ‘One Time’ Thurman is a fighter not to forget.

“I look not to the past nor to the future, I’m back now, and I’m ready to fight. I dream big, and now is the time to make that dream a reality.”

Thurman (29-1, 22 KOs) has battled injuries more than opponents in recent years, including elbow and then hand surgery. That’s the main reason he has fought only four times since July 2015, a span of more than six years.

He has said recently that he feels as good as he has in years, which might not bode well for Barrios.

There has been talk of a possible fight with WBO champion and free agent Terence Crawford if Thurman wins on Feb. 5. That would be the kind of high-profile opportunity that is attractive to both men.

Could Barrios spoil Thurman’s plans?

The Texan is coming off the first loss of his career, a spirited effort against Gervonta Davis in June that ended in an 11th round knockout. That fight took place at 140 pounds.

Facing a fighter of Thurman’s track record in his first fight as a full-fledged 147-pounder is a bold move on Barrios’ part. Barrios certainly will be a significant underdog come fight night.

“I’m excited to be making my welterweight debut against a great fighter and former world champion like Keith Thurman,” Barrios said. “A lot of fighters wouldn’t take this fight, but that’s why I wanted it. Both of us like to throw a lot of bombs and I believe this will be an all-out war.

“The fans know I’m a warrior and that I don’t back down from any challenge. That’s why everyone should order this fight. ‘El Azteca’ is going to make a statement on February 5.”

The undercard is deep.

  • Four-division titleholder Leo Santa Cruz (37-2-1, 19 KOs) will face Keenan Carbajal (23-2-1, 15 KOs) in a scheduled 12-round featherweight bout.
  • Welterweight contender Abel Ramos (27-4-2, 21 KOs) will take on veteran Josesito Lopez (38-8, 21 KOs).
  • And former junior featherweight titleholder Luis Nery (31-1, 24 KOs) will fight Carlos Castro (27-0, 12 KOs).