Rising star William Zepeda overwhelming opponents, winning over fans

Rising 135-pound star William Zepeda of Mexico is overwhelming opponents and winning over fans.

A number of talented young fighters are in position to become the face of Mexican boxing when Canelo Alvarez fades from the scene. Emanuel Navarrete, Isaac Cruz and Jaime Munguia are just a few of them.

The best candidate might be 135-pound William Zepeda, who is scheduled to face clever Maxi Hughes on Saturday at The Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas (DAZN).

Fans are falling in love with Zepeda’s seek-and-destroy, volume-punching style and he’s getting results, which is why he’s ranked No. 1 by two sanctioning bodies and breathing down the necks of the top lightweights.

The 27-year-old’s style isn’t complicated: He outworks opponents in training camp – he seems to have inexhaustible stamina — and then does the same in the ring, where he has set eye-popping punch statistic records.

In other words, he throws punches relentlessly until his opponents can no longer defend themselves and are stopped or he wins a one-sided decision.

His machine-like effort in a unanimous-decision victory over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. in October 2022 stands out: He threw a division-record 1,536 punches – 128 per round – according to CompuBox.

He has averaged 99.2 punches thrown per round over his last 10 fights, 42.1 more than the division average.

And he doesn’t simply wing power shot after power shot like some volume punchers: 787 of the punches he threw against Diaz were jabs, meaning his approach to boxing is more methodical than reckless.

“There were a lot of comments on social media that thought [Diaz] was my test,” Zepeda said through a translator immediately after his victory. “I think I passed the rest with excellence. I’m ready for the best at 135 pounds.”

That seemed even more obvious in his next two fights, in which his brutal tactics and punching power were on full display

The 27-year-old from the Toluca area used mostly vicious body shots to drop contender Jaime Arboleda three times and stop him in two rounds in April of last year and delivered a terrible beating in his sixth-round stoppage of former title challenger Mercito Gesta in September.

He has been as dominating as any fighter over the past few years.

“I wanted to fight a guy with experience,” said Zepeda, referring to Gesta. “He gave that to me. I’m going to keep going on my way to becoming a world champion.”

The next step for Zepeda is proving he can continue to succeed against next-level opposition.

Hughes (26-6-2, 5 KOs) doesn’t fall into that category but he made a strong statement in his most recent fight, a disputed majority decision loss to former champion George Kambosos Jr. last July.

If Zepeda has his hand raised, next up could be one of the big boys: the Gervonta Davis-Frank Martin winner, the Vasiliy Lomachenko-Kambosos winner or Shakur Stevenson, among a few other 135-pounders who are deemed elite.

Only then will we know whether Zepeda can join the exclusive club of Mexican superstars. He and his handlers believe he’s prepared to take the next step.

“We want to fight all the champions who are out there,” said Jay Najar, Zepeda’s trainer. “We’re ready for each and every one of them.”

[lawrence-related id=38937,38931]

Rising star William Zepeda overwhelming opponents, winning over fans

Rising 135-pound star William Zepeda of Mexico is overwhelming opponents and winning over fans.

A number of talented young fighters are in position to become the face of Mexican boxing when Canelo Alvarez fades from the scene. Emanuel Navarrete, Isaac Cruz and Jaime Munguia are just a few of them.

The best candidate might be 135-pound William Zepeda, who is scheduled to face clever Maxi Hughes on Saturday at The Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas (DAZN).

Fans are falling in love with Zepeda’s seek-and-destroy, volume-punching style and he’s getting results, which is why he’s ranked No. 1 by two sanctioning bodies and breathing down the necks of the top lightweights.

The 27-year-old’s style isn’t complicated: He outworks opponents in training camp – he seems to have inexhaustible stamina — and then does the same in the ring, where he has set eye-popping punch statistic records.

In other words, he throws punches relentlessly until his opponents can no longer defend themselves and are stopped or he wins a one-sided decision.

His machine-like effort in a unanimous-decision victory over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. in October 2022 stands out: He threw a division-record 1,536 punches – 128 per round – according to CompuBox.

He has averaged 99.2 punches thrown per round over his last 10 fights, 42.1 more than the division average.

And he doesn’t simply wing power shot after power shot like some volume punchers: 787 of the punches he threw against Diaz were jabs, meaning his approach to boxing is more methodical than reckless.

“There were a lot of comments on social media that thought [Diaz] was my test,” Zepeda said through a translator immediately after his victory. “I think I passed the rest with excellence. I’m ready for the best at 135 pounds.”

That seemed even more obvious in his next two fights, in which his brutal tactics and punching power were on full display

The 27-year-old from the Toluca area used mostly vicious body shots to drop contender Jaime Arboleda three times and stop him in two rounds in April of last year and delivered a terrible beating in his sixth-round stoppage of former title challenger Mercito Gesta in September.

He has been as dominating as any fighter over the past few years.

“I wanted to fight a guy with experience,” said Zepeda, referring to Gesta. “He gave that to me. I’m going to keep going on my way to becoming a world champion.”

The next step for Zepeda is proving he can continue to succeed against next-level opposition.

Hughes (26-6-2, 5 KOs) doesn’t fall into that category but he made a strong statement in his most recent fight, a disputed majority decision loss to former champion George Kambosos Jr. last July.

If Zepeda has his hand raised, next up could be one of the big boys: the Gervonta Davis-Frank Martin winner, the Vasiliy Lomachenko-Kambosos winner or Shakur Stevenson, among a few other 135-pounders who are deemed elite.

Only then will we know whether Zepeda can join the exclusive club of Mexican superstars. He and his handlers believe he’s prepared to take the next step.

“We want to fight all the champions who are out there,” said Jay Najar, Zepeda’s trainer. “We’re ready for each and every one of them.”

[lawrence-related id=38937,38931]

Weekend Review: William Zepeda, Luis Alberto Lopez overwhelm opponents

Weekend Review: William Zepeda and Luis Alberto Lopez overwhelmed their opponents in separate locations over the weekend.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
William Zepeda

It’s easy to understand why fans – particularly those from Zepeda’s native Mexico – are falling in love with him. Everyone adores a take-no-prisoners warrior who throws a crazy amount of punches, all of which are meant to inflict serious harm. That’s what we witnessed in it’s most brutal form on Saturday in California, where the 135-pound contender pummeled a good opponent in veteran Mercito Gesta until the carnage was stopped in the sixth round. The winner connected on 286 of a remarkable 618 punches in the five-plus rounds, according to CompuBox. More striking, 242 of the punches he landed were power shots, which is how he was able to break down a tough foe like Gesta. The formula could take Zepeda (29-0, 25 KOs) a long way. Can he beat the likes of 135-pound luminaries Devin Haney, Gervonta Davis, Shakur Stevenson and Vasiliy Lomachenko? I have my doubts because of their special skill level. At the same time, history tells us that Zepeda’s pressure-fighting approach to the sport might be the style that could give slick technicians problems. Think Floyd Mayweather vs. Jose Luis Castillo. Let’s hope Zepeda gets the opportunity to face that type of opponent soon. He has earned it.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
Luis Alberto Lopez

Lopez (29-2, 16 KOs) is similar to his countryman Zepeda, a fit, durable bruiser who outworks his opponents. The 126-pound titleholder did that again on Friday in Corpus Christi, Texas, delivering a unanimous-decision victory over determined, but overmatched veteran Joet Gonzalez. Lopez threw 881 punches (landing 195) over the 12 rounds, which is a busy night for almost anyone in the sport. The victory was his third in a row over quality opponents, following a decision over Josh Warrington to win his belt in December and a fifth-round knockout of Michael Conlan in his first defense in May. That’s the kind of run that gets the attention of pundits, fans and prospective opponents. One difference between Lopez and Zepeda? The 126-pound division isn’t nearly as top heavy as 135, meaning the IBF beltholder would have a good chance of beating any of his fellow titleholders – Rey Vargas (WBC), Leigh Wood (WBA) and Robeisy Ramirez (WBO) – and becoming a unified champion. Lopez has come a long way since he was outpointed by Ruben Villa in 2019.

 

BIGGEST LOSERS
Joet Gonzalez and Mercito Gesta

Mercito Gesta got caught in a storm Saturday night. Golden Boy Promotions

Gonzalez (26-4, 15 KOs) and Gesta (34-4-3, 17 KOs) probably will never win their biggest fights – if they get more of them – but you have to respect them. They both gave absolutely everything they had against overwhelming opposition over the weekend, which is all anyone can expect of a fighter. That’s little consolation for Gonzalez, who has now failed in three attempts to win major world titles. The 29-year-old Angeleno has become one of those fighters who is considered capable but not good enough to reach the pinnacle of the sport, a legacy that can haunt a boxer for the remainder of his days. Gesta won his first two fights after a 2½-year layoff, including an encouraging decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. in March. However, a brutal knockout loss in his third fight on Saturday put an agonizing end to his momentum. And, at 35, one wonders how many more meaningful opportunities he’ll receive. We might’ve seen the last of the Filipino warrior as an elite fighter.

 

BIGGEST NO-BRAINER
Referee seminars

I spent a day at Jack Reiss’ recent three-day “Sole Arbiter” refereeing seminar in Ventura, California. My main take away? The conference or something like it should be mandatory for anyone who ends up as the third person in the ring, a sentiment expressed by every participant with whom I spoke that day. Reiss, fellow refs Russell Mora and Thomas Taylor, and guest speakers pack an impressive amount of material – power-point slides, video review and more – into 26 hours of instruction, providing both experienced and developing officials with the input they need to become better referees. To be clear: Many referees are good at what they do, particularly in jurisdictions that provide quality training and maintain high standards. However, even those officials can improve. And God knows that some refs are clueless because of a lack of universal standards and questionable selection processes, which is a frightening thought because the lives of the fighters are in their hands. If you want to realize your potential as a referee, find a way to get to “Sole Arbiter.” You’ll be inspired by the instruction and passion of everyone involved. And you’ll leave with more valuable tools than you came with. You owe it to yourself, you owe it to the boxers.

[lawrence-related id=38931,38920,38911]

Weekend Review: William Zepeda, Luis Alberto Lopez overwhelm opponents

Weekend Review: William Zepeda and Luis Alberto Lopez overwhelmed their opponents in separate locations over the weekend.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
William Zepeda

It’s easy to understand why fans – particularly those from Zepeda’s native Mexico – are falling in love with him. Everyone adores a take-no-prisoners warrior who throws a crazy amount of punches, all of which are meant to inflict serious harm. That’s what we witnessed in it’s most brutal form on Saturday in California, where the 135-pound contender pummeled a good opponent in veteran Mercito Gesta until the carnage was stopped in the sixth round. The winner connected on 286 of a remarkable 618 punches in the five-plus rounds, according to CompuBox. More striking, 242 of the punches he landed were power shots, which is how he was able to break down a tough foe like Gesta. The formula could take Zepeda (29-0, 25 KOs) a long way. Can he beat the likes of 135-pound luminaries Devin Haney, Gervonta Davis, Shakur Stevenson and Vasiliy Lomachenko? I have my doubts because of their special skill level. At the same time, history tells us that Zepeda’s pressure-fighting approach to the sport might be the style that could give slick technicians problems. Think Floyd Mayweather vs. Jose Luis Castillo. Let’s hope Zepeda gets the opportunity to face that type of opponent soon. He has earned it.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
Luis Alberto Lopez

Lopez (29-2, 16 KOs) is similar to his countryman Zepeda, a fit, durable bruiser who outworks his opponents. The 126-pound titleholder did that again on Friday in Corpus Christi, Texas, delivering a unanimous-decision victory over determined, but overmatched veteran Joet Gonzalez. Lopez threw 881 punches (landing 195) over the 12 rounds, which is a busy night for almost anyone in the sport. The victory was his third in a row over quality opponents, following a decision over Josh Warrington to win his belt in December and a fifth-round knockout of Michael Conlan in his first defense in May. That’s the kind of run that gets the attention of pundits, fans and prospective opponents. One difference between Lopez and Zepeda? The 126-pound division isn’t nearly as top heavy as 135, meaning the IBF beltholder would have a good chance of beating any of his fellow titleholders – Rey Vargas (WBC), Leigh Wood (WBA) and Robeisy Ramirez (WBO) – and becoming a unified champion. Lopez has come a long way since he was outpointed by Ruben Villa in 2019.

 

BIGGEST LOSERS
Joet Gonzalez and Mercito Gesta

Mercito Gesta got caught in a storm Saturday night. Golden Boy Promotions

Gonzalez (26-4, 15 KOs) and Gesta (34-4-3, 17 KOs) probably will never win their biggest fights – if they get more of them – but you have to respect them. They both gave absolutely everything they had against overwhelming opposition over the weekend, which is all anyone can expect of a fighter. That’s little consolation for Gonzalez, who has now failed in three attempts to win major world titles. The 29-year-old Angeleno has become one of those fighters who is considered capable but not good enough to reach the pinnacle of the sport, a legacy that can haunt a boxer for the remainder of his days. Gesta won his first two fights after a 2½-year layoff, including an encouraging decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. in March. However, a brutal knockout loss in his third fight on Saturday put an agonizing end to his momentum. And, at 35, one wonders how many more meaningful opportunities he’ll receive. We might’ve seen the last of the Filipino warrior as an elite fighter.

 

BIGGEST NO-BRAINER
Referee seminars

I spent a day at Jack Reiss’ recent three-day “Sole Arbiter” refereeing seminar in Ventura, California. My main take away? The conference or something like it should be mandatory for anyone who ends up as the third person in the ring, a sentiment expressed by every participant with whom I spoke that day. Reiss, fellow refs Russell Mora and Thomas Taylor, and guest speakers pack an impressive amount of material – power-point slides, video review and more – into 26 hours of instruction, providing both experienced and developing officials with the input they need to become better referees. To be clear: Many referees are good at what they do, particularly in jurisdictions that provide quality training and maintain high standards. However, even those officials can improve. And God knows that some refs are clueless because of a lack of universal standards and questionable selection processes, which is a frightening thought because the lives of the fighters are in their hands. If you want to realize your potential as a referee, find a way to get to “Sole Arbiter.” You’ll be inspired by the instruction and passion of everyone involved. And you’ll leave with more valuable tools than you came with. You owe it to yourself, you owe it to the boxers.

[lawrence-related id=38931,38920,38911]

William Zepeda delivers vicious beating, stops Mercito Gesta in six

Lightweight contender William Zepeda delivered a vicious beating before finally stopping Mercito Gesta in six rounds on Saturday night.

What top 135-pound fighters are going to want to tangle with William Zepeda?

The volume-punching Mexican contender buried veteran Mercito Gesta in wave after wave of hard, accurate shots until he finally broke down the overwhelmed Filipino and the scheduled 12-round fight was stopped in the sixth round Saturday in Commerce, California.

Zepeda (29-0, 25 KOs) started throwing — and landing — punches to both the head and body at the opening bell and didn’t stop until Gesta’s cornermen indicated that enough was enough.

Gesta (34-4-3, 17 KOs) fought back bravely until the end, landing some effective counters and sometimes beating Zepeda to the punch. He also moved his feet and ultimately held in attempt to weather the never-ending storm.

However, in the end, he simply couldn’t keep his Mexican counterpart off of him or avoid taking punishment, As a result, by the time the fight was stopped at 1:31 of Round 6, Gesta had taken a terrible beating.

The CompuBox stats were compelling. Zepeda connected on 286 of 618 punches in the five-plus rounds, which is a good night’s work for most fighters over 10 or 12 rounds.

And a remarkable 242 of the punches the winner landed were power shots, which explains Gesta’s inability to continue.

“I wanted to fight a guy with experience,” Zepeda said through a translator afterward. “He gave that to me. I’m going to keep going on my way to becoming a world champion.”

Zepeda’s trainer, Jay Najar, was asked who the team wants next for their imposing fighter.

“We want to fight all the champions who are out there,” Najar said. “We’re ready for each and every one of them. Devin Haney is the champion so we want to fight Devin Haney.”

That was echoed by Zepeda, who said in English, “I’m ready for Devin Haney.”

Haney is expected to move up to 140 pounds to challenge Regis Prograis in his next bout, meaning Zepeda won’t get his dream fight just yet.

If he continues to turn in sensational performances, though, you can bet truly big fights are on the horizon — whether the best 135-pounders like it or not.

William Zepeda delivers vicious beating, stops Mercito Gesta in six

Lightweight contender William Zepeda delivered a vicious beating before finally stopping Mercito Gesta in six rounds on Saturday night.

What top 135-pound fighters are going to want to tangle with William Zepeda?

The volume-punching Mexican contender buried veteran Mercito Gesta in wave after wave of hard, accurate shots until he finally broke down the overwhelmed Filipino and the scheduled 12-round fight was stopped in the sixth round Saturday in Commerce, California.

Zepeda (29-0, 25 KOs) started throwing — and landing — punches to both the head and body at the opening bell and didn’t stop until Gesta’s cornermen indicated that enough was enough.

Gesta (34-4-3, 17 KOs) fought back bravely until the end, landing some effective counters and sometimes beating Zepeda to the punch. He also moved his feet and ultimately held in attempt to weather the never-ending storm.

However, in the end, he simply couldn’t keep his Mexican counterpart off of him or avoid taking punishment, As a result, by the time the fight was stopped at 1:31 of Round 6, Gesta had taken a terrible beating.

The CompuBox stats were compelling. Zepeda connected on 286 of 618 punches in the five-plus rounds, which is a good night’s work for most fighters over 10 or 12 rounds.

And a remarkable 242 of the punches the winner landed were power shots, which explains Gesta’s inability to continue.

“I wanted to fight a guy with experience,” Zepeda said through a translator afterward. “He gave that to me. I’m going to keep going on my way to becoming a world champion.”

Zepeda’s trainer, Jay Najar, was asked who the team wants next for their imposing fighter.

“We want to fight all the champions who are out there,” Najar said. “We’re ready for each and every one of them. Devin Haney is the champion so we want to fight Devin Haney.”

That was echoed by Zepeda, who said in English, “I’m ready for Devin Haney.”

Haney is expected to move up to 140 pounds to challenge Regis Prograis in his next bout, meaning Zepeda won’t get his dream fight just yet.

If he continues to turn in sensational performances, though, you can bet truly big fights are on the horizon — whether the best 135-pounders like it or not.

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background.

lightweight contender william zepeda will return against veteran mercito gesta on saturday in commerce, California.

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

[lawrence-related id=37108,37105,37098]

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background.

lightweight contender william zepeda will return against veteran mercito gesta on saturday in commerce, California.

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

[lawrence-related id=37108,37105,37098]

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez, William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta on tap

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez and William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta highlight a busy weekend.

FIGHT WEEK

Luis alberto lopez will defend his 126-pound belt against joet gonzlaez on friday. on saturday, william zepeda will return against mercito gesta

LUIS ALBERTO LOPEZ (28-2, 16 KOs)
VS. JOET GONZALEZ (26-3, 15 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: American Bank Center, Corpus Christi, Texas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Lopez’s IBF title
  • Odds: Lopez 6-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Xander Zayas vs. Roberto Valenzuela Jr., junior middleweights; Jamaine Ortiz vs. Antonio Moran, lightweights
  • Prediction: Lopez UD
  • Background: Lopez made a splash by outpointing Josh Warrington to take the Englishman’s title last December in Leeds and then proved it was no fluke by stopping veteran Michael Conlan in five rounds on May 27, his fourth knockout in his last five fights. The 30-year-old Mexican last lost in 2019, when Ruben Villa defeated him by a unanimous decision. He’s 11-0 since the setback, with eight KOs. Gonzalez is a slick, tough technician who has failed in two attempts to win a 126-pound world title, losing a one-sided decisions to Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete in 2021. The 29-year-old from Los Angeles is 2-1 since, including a split-decision loss to Isaac Dogboe in July of last year. He bounced back to easily outpoint Enrique Vivas on April 1.

 

RAFAEL PEDROZA (15-0, 11 KOs)
VS. RAMON CARDENAS (22-1, 11 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Boeing Center at Tech Port, San Antonio
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior featherweight (122 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: NA
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Mirco Cuello vs. Rudy Garcia, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pedroza UD
  • Background: Pedroza and Cardenas will fight in the main event on “ShoBox: The New Generation.” Pedroza, 26, is an unbeaten prospect from Panama who will be making his debut in the United States. He is skillful and has punching power, although he has failed to stop his last three opponents. He is coming off a unanimous decision over Yerny Betancourt on May 6. Pedrozo is ranked No. 5 by the WBA. Cardenas is a capable boxer out of San Antonio, meaning he’ll be fighting in front of his hometown fans. The 27-year-old last fought on May 26, when he stopped journeyman Rodrigo Guerrero in two rounds. Cardenas’ only loss came in 2017, when he lost a majority decision to journeyman Danny Flores. He has won 10 consecutive fights since, four by knockout.

 

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

FRIDAY

  • Angel Fierro vs. Brayan Zamarripa, lightweights, Tijuana, Mexico (DAZN)

[lawrence-related id=37555,31672,37105,37098,36209]

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez, William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta on tap

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez and William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta highlight a busy weekend.

FIGHT WEEK

Luis alberto lopez will defend his 126-pound belt against joet gonzlaez on friday. on saturday, william zepeda will return against mercito gesta

LUIS ALBERTO LOPEZ (28-2, 16 KOs)
VS. JOET GONZALEZ (26-3, 15 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: American Bank Center, Corpus Christi, Texas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Lopez’s IBF title
  • Odds: Lopez 6-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Xander Zayas vs. Roberto Valenzuela Jr., junior middleweights; Jamaine Ortiz vs. Antonio Moran, lightweights
  • Prediction: Lopez UD
  • Background: Lopez made a splash by outpointing Josh Warrington to take the Englishman’s title last December in Leeds and then proved it was no fluke by stopping veteran Michael Conlan in five rounds on May 27, his fourth knockout in his last five fights. The 30-year-old Mexican last lost in 2019, when Ruben Villa defeated him by a unanimous decision. He’s 11-0 since the setback, with eight KOs. Gonzalez is a slick, tough technician who has failed in two attempts to win a 126-pound world title, losing a one-sided decisions to Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete in 2021. The 29-year-old from Los Angeles is 2-1 since, including a split-decision loss to Isaac Dogboe in July of last year. He bounced back to easily outpoint Enrique Vivas on April 1.

 

RAFAEL PEDROZA (15-0, 11 KOs)
VS. RAMON CARDENAS (22-1, 11 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Boeing Center at Tech Port, San Antonio
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior featherweight (122 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: NA
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Mirco Cuello vs. Rudy Garcia, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pedroza UD
  • Background: Pedroza and Cardenas will fight in the main event on “ShoBox: The New Generation.” Pedroza, 26, is an unbeaten prospect from Panama who will be making his debut in the United States. He is skillful and has punching power, although he has failed to stop his last three opponents. He is coming off a unanimous decision over Yerny Betancourt on May 6. Pedrozo is ranked No. 5 by the WBA. Cardenas is a capable boxer out of San Antonio, meaning he’ll be fighting in front of his hometown fans. The 27-year-old last fought on May 26, when he stopped journeyman Rodrigo Guerrero in two rounds. Cardenas’ only loss came in 2017, when he lost a majority decision to journeyman Danny Flores. He has won 10 consecutive fights since, four by knockout.

 

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

FRIDAY

  • Angel Fierro vs. Brayan Zamarripa, lightweights, Tijuana, Mexico (DAZN)

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