Frank Martin vs. Michel Rivera: date, time, how to watch, background

Frank Martin vs. Michel Rivera: date, time, how to watch, background.

Lightweight contenders Michel Rivera and Frank Martin will square off in a title eliminator Saturday at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas.

MICHEL RIVERA (24-0, 14 KOs) vs. FRANK MARTIN (16-0, 12 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Dec. 17
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • Weights: Martin 134.8, Rivera 134.4
  • Officials: Referee, Kenny Bayless; Judges: Steve Weisfeld (New Jersey), David Moretti (Nevada), Tim Cheatham (Nevada)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Jose Uzcategui vs. Vladimir Shishkin, super middleweights; Nikolai Potapov vs. Vincent Astrolabio, bantamweights; Omar Jaurez vs. Austin Dulay, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Rivera SD
  • Background: This is an unusual matchup of two gifted, undefeated young contenders. Rivera, 24, has been untouchable in his young professional career, which started in 2016. The Miami-based Dominican has demonstrating that he can outclass you with his skills or take you out with his power even as opposition has improved, although his last three opponents have taken him the distance. Rivera is coming off a one-sided eight-round decision over Jerry Perez in October. Martin is surrounded by good role models: He trains alongside Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo under mentor Derrick James. He, too, appears to be a complete fighter. He’s quick, skillful and powerful. The 27-year-old Indianapolis resident also hasn’t been seriously pushed since turning pro in 2017. He’s coming off a last-round knockout of capable Jackson Marinez this past July. The fight on Saturday is being billed as a WBA title eliminator. Rivera is ranked No. 2 by the sanctioning body, Martin No. 10. Rivera has expressed a desire to fight secondary beltholder Gervonta Davis. Devin Haney is the undisputed 135-pound champion.

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Frank Martin vs. Michel Rivera: date, time, how to watch, background

Frank Martin vs. Michel Rivera: date, time, how to watch, background.

Lightweight contenders Michel Rivera and Frank Martin will square off in a title eliminator Saturday at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas.

MICHEL RIVERA (24-0, 14 KOs) vs. FRANK MARTIN (16-0, 12 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Dec. 17
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • Weights: Martin 134.8, Rivera 134.4
  • Officials: Referee, Kenny Bayless; Judges: Steve Weisfeld (New Jersey), David Moretti (Nevada), Tim Cheatham (Nevada)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Jose Uzcategui vs. Vladimir Shishkin, super middleweights; Nikolai Potapov vs. Vincent Astrolabio, bantamweights; Omar Jaurez vs. Austin Dulay, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Rivera SD
  • Background: This is an unusual matchup of two gifted, undefeated young contenders. Rivera, 24, has been untouchable in his young professional career, which started in 2016. The Miami-based Dominican has demonstrating that he can outclass you with his skills or take you out with his power even as opposition has improved, although his last three opponents have taken him the distance. Rivera is coming off a one-sided eight-round decision over Jerry Perez in October. Martin is surrounded by good role models: He trains alongside Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo under mentor Derrick James. He, too, appears to be a complete fighter. He’s quick, skillful and powerful. The 27-year-old Indianapolis resident also hasn’t been seriously pushed since turning pro in 2017. He’s coming off a last-round knockout of capable Jackson Marinez this past July. The fight on Saturday is being billed as a WBA title eliminator. Rivera is ranked No. 2 by the sanctioning body, Martin No. 10. Rivera has expressed a desire to fight secondary beltholder Gervonta Davis. Devin Haney is the undisputed 135-pound champion.

[lawrence-related id=34834,34831,34822]

Video: Frank Martin, Michel Rivera make weight for 135-pound showdown

Lightweight contenders Frank Martin and Michel Rivera on Friday made weight for their title eliminator Saturday night in Las Vegas

Lightweight contenders Frank Martin and Michel Rivera on Friday made weight for their title eliminator Saturday night at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Showtime).

Martin weighed 134.8 pounds, .2 under the division limit. Rivera came in at 134.4.

Rivera (24-0, 14 KOs) is coming off a one-sided eight-round decision over Jerry Perez in October. Martin last fought in July, when he stopped Jackson Marinez in the 10th and final round.

The fight is being billed as a WBA title eliminator. Rivera is ranked No. 2 by the sanctioning body, Martin No. 10.

Devin Haney is the undisputed 135-pound champion.

[lawrence-related id=34831,34822,34801]

Video: Frank Martin, Michel Rivera make weight for 135-pound showdown

Lightweight contenders Frank Martin and Michel Rivera on Friday made weight for their title eliminator Saturday night in Las Vegas

Lightweight contenders Frank Martin and Michel Rivera on Friday made weight for their title eliminator Saturday night at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Showtime).

Martin weighed 134.8 pounds, .2 under the division limit. Rivera came in at 134.4.

Rivera (24-0, 14 KOs) is coming off a one-sided eight-round decision over Jerry Perez in October. Martin last fought in July, when he stopped Jackson Marinez in the 10th and final round.

The fight is being billed as a WBA title eliminator. Rivera is ranked No. 2 by the sanctioning body, Martin No. 10.

Devin Haney is the undisputed 135-pound champion.

[lawrence-related id=34831,34822,34801]

Michel Rivera’s plan: Continue to win, big opportunity will come

Michel Rivera’s plan: Continue to win and a big opportunity will come.

Lightweight contender Michel Rivera knows there are no guarantees.

The Miami-based Dominican’s meeting with Frank Martin on Saturday at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas is being billed as a WBA title eliminator, meaning, if he wins, he’ll be in position to challenge undisputed champion Devin Haney or secondary titleholder Gervonta Davis.

Rivera doesn’t know with certainty that he’ll get his big opportunity next but a victory over the respected Martin would bolster the argument that he’s worthy.

“Maybe after this fight, maybe I’ll fight for a world title,” Rivera, 24, told Boxing Junkie. “And it’s an opportunity to show what I have [on a large stage]. Frank Martin is a good prospect, a good fighter, but I’m pretty sure I’m going to win.”

A prospect? Martin (16-0, 12 KOs) is ranked No. 10 by the WBA. Still, Rivera believes his opponent remains a level below him.

Rivera (24-0, 14 KOs) is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, No. 2 by the WBA.

“I’m a contender for one and a half years, waiting for a title [shot],” he said. “He has 16 fights, he’s never fought in an eliminator. So he’s a prospect, not a contender. … [But] it’s a fight have to take right now. If I have to fight everyone to become mandatory, I’ll do it.

“That’s boxing. One day it’s going to come. I have to stay like this.”

An extra source of motivation for Rivera is the fact that he’ll be fighting in the main event on Showtime in the U.S.

He remembers watching his heroes fight on the premium network when he was a teen. The fact he’ll be a featured on the broadcast Saturday night adds to the significance of the fight for him.

“When I was 14 years old I watched Showtime with my father,” he said. “I dreamed of fighting on Showtime. Life is crazy. I’ve put in a lot of work for this opportunity. Dreams happen. Right now it’s time to show what I have.”

If he continues to win, he believes, everything else will fall into place.

“I don’t really know what comes next,” he said. “I put it in God’s hands. … I just want to win this fight, prove that I can win the title. And maybe I’ll get my chance.

“I just stay disciplined, listen to my coaches, run, work hard in the gym. I want to be a world champion at 135 pounds.”

[lawrence-related id=34801,29010,34822]

Michel Rivera’s plan: Continue to win, big opportunity will come

Michel Rivera’s plan: Continue to win and a big opportunity will come.

Lightweight contender Michel Rivera knows there are no guarantees.

The Miami-based Dominican’s meeting with Frank Martin on Saturday at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas is being billed as a WBA title eliminator, meaning, if he wins, he’ll be in position to challenge undisputed champion Devin Haney or secondary titleholder Gervonta Davis.

Rivera doesn’t know with certainty that he’ll get his big opportunity next but a victory over the respected Martin would bolster the argument that he’s worthy.

“Maybe after this fight, maybe I’ll fight for a world title,” Rivera, 24, told Boxing Junkie. “And it’s an opportunity to show what I have [on a large stage]. Frank Martin is a good prospect, a good fighter, but I’m pretty sure I’m going to win.”

A prospect? Martin (16-0, 12 KOs) is ranked No. 10 by the WBA. Still, Rivera believes his opponent remains a level below him.

Rivera (24-0, 14 KOs) is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, No. 2 by the WBA.

“I’m a contender for one and a half years, waiting for a title [shot],” he said. “He has 16 fights, he’s never fought in an eliminator. So he’s a prospect, not a contender. … [But] it’s a fight have to take right now. If I have to fight everyone to become mandatory, I’ll do it.

“That’s boxing. One day it’s going to come. I have to stay like this.”

An extra source of motivation for Rivera is the fact that he’ll be fighting in the main event on Showtime in the U.S.

He remembers watching his heroes fight on the premium network when he was a teen. The fact he’ll be a featured on the broadcast Saturday night adds to the significance of the fight for him.

“When I was 14 years old I watched Showtime with my father,” he said. “I dreamed of fighting on Showtime. Life is crazy. I’ve put in a lot of work for this opportunity. Dreams happen. Right now it’s time to show what I have.”

If he continues to win, he believes, everything else will fall into place.

“I don’t really know what comes next,” he said. “I put it in God’s hands. … I just want to win this fight, prove that I can win the title. And maybe I’ll get my chance.

“I just stay disciplined, listen to my coaches, run, work hard in the gym. I want to be a world champion at 135 pounds.”

[lawrence-related id=34801,29010,34822]

Frank Martin willing to take great risks to achieve his goals

Lightweight contender Frank Martin is willing to take great risks to achieve his goals.

No risk, no reward?

Lightweight contender Frank Martin knows it’s a gamble fighting fellow rising star Michel Rivera in a title eliminator Saturday at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Showtime). The winner could get a title shot within a fight or two. The loser will have to rebuild.

Martin is willing to roll the dice because he believes in himself.

“This is the fight that’s going to get me to the next level,” he told Boxing Junkie. “… Once they told me it was a title eliminator, I was all in. I know this is a fight that’s [early] to take right now in both of our careers. A lot of guys close to the No. 1 spot wouldn’t have taken it.

“If that’s what it takes to get to the next level, I had to take it. It’s just one of those fights you have to bite down and accept and go from there.”

Martin (16-0, 12 KOs) spends a lot of time around two fighters who have made it to the top, Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo. All three are trained by Derrick James. And Spence is his promoter.

Spence, a unified welterweight titleholder, has been at Martin’s side every step of his current journey, which has been invaluable for a young boxer whose most important fights are around the corner. They train together in Dallas.

“[Spence] keeps me motivated,” Martin said. “He has been helping me out a lot, especially for this fight. He’s been really locked in with me. We go to strength and conditioning together, stay together at the Airbnb, eat the same things, work out at the same time.

“He’s worked with me a lot, helping me, pushing me.”

Martin. 27, is confident he’ll end up where Spence is now, on pound-for-pound lists. The next step is a victory over Rivera, who Martin respects but believes is inferior to him in every aspect of the game.

The fight is being billed as a WBA title eliminator, meaning the winner will be in line to face the feared Gervonta Davis, who owns the sanctioning body’s secondary 135-pound title (which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize).

That’s who Martin wants. And it could happen if Davis defeated Ryan Garcia in a projected showdown next year. Yes, Martin is thinking big.

“Yeah, that’s life changing,” he said. “It’s what I feel I have to do. I have to go in there and fight the superstars to become a superstar. Some superstars don’t have to fight a lot of top guys. I’m not one of them. I’m going to fight superstars to become one.”

Life changing, indeed. Martin is on the threshold of doing special things that could make him a star and earn him a fortune. However, he doesn’t want to get ahead of himself.

It’s one step at a time. And Rivera is the next step. That’s his what he’s focused on at the moment.

“I don’t let these opportunities throw me off track,” he said. “They just keep me more locked in.”

Frank Martin willing to take great risks to achieve his goals

Lightweight contender Frank Martin is willing to take great risks to achieve his goals.

No risk, no reward?

Lightweight contender Frank Martin knows it’s a gamble fighting fellow rising star Michel Rivera in a title eliminator Saturday at Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Showtime). The winner could get a title shot within a fight or two. The loser will have to rebuild.

Martin is willing to roll the dice because he believes in himself.

“This is the fight that’s going to get me to the next level,” he told Boxing Junkie. “… Once they told me it was a title eliminator, I was all in. I know this is a fight that’s [early] to take right now in both of our careers. A lot of guys close to the No. 1 spot wouldn’t have taken it.

“If that’s what it takes to get to the next level, I had to take it. It’s just one of those fights you have to bite down and accept and go from there.”

Martin (16-0, 12 KOs) spends a lot of time around two fighters who have made it to the top, Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo. All three are trained by Derrick James. And Spence is his promoter.

Spence, a unified welterweight titleholder, has been at Martin’s side every step of his current journey, which has been invaluable for a young boxer whose most important fights are around the corner. They train together in Dallas.

“[Spence] keeps me motivated,” Martin said. “He has been helping me out a lot, especially for this fight. He’s been really locked in with me. We go to strength and conditioning together, stay together at the Airbnb, eat the same things, work out at the same time.

“He’s worked with me a lot, helping me, pushing me.”

Martin. 27, is confident he’ll end up where Spence is now, on pound-for-pound lists. The next step is a victory over Rivera, who Martin respects but believes is inferior to him in every aspect of the game.

The fight is being billed as a WBA title eliminator, meaning the winner will be in line to face the feared Gervonta Davis, who owns the sanctioning body’s secondary 135-pound title (which Boxing Junkie doesn’t recognize).

That’s who Martin wants. And it could happen if Davis defeated Ryan Garcia in a projected showdown next year. Yes, Martin is thinking big.

“Yeah, that’s life changing,” he said. “It’s what I feel I have to do. I have to go in there and fight the superstars to become a superstar. Some superstars don’t have to fight a lot of top guys. I’m not one of them. I’m going to fight superstars to become one.”

Life changing, indeed. Martin is on the threshold of doing special things that could make him a star and earn him a fortune. However, he doesn’t want to get ahead of himself.

It’s one step at a time. And Rivera is the next step. That’s his what he’s focused on at the moment.

“I don’t let these opportunities throw me off track,” he said. “They just keep me more locked in.”

Fight Week: Naoya Inoue shoots for ‘undisputed’; Michel Rivera, Frank Martin put ‘0s’ on line

Fight Week: Naoya Inoue and Paul Butler will fight for the undisputed 118-pound championship. And Michel Rivera will face Frank Martin.

FIGHT WEEK

Japanese star Naoya Inoue will face Paul Butler for the undisputed bantamweight championship Tuesday in Tokyo. Also, lightweight contenders Michel Rivera and Frank Martin will square off Saturday in Las Vegas.

NAOYA INOUE (23-0, 20 KOs) vs. PAUL BUTLER (34-2, 15 KOs)

  • When: Tuesday, Dec. 13
  • Time: 2 a.m. ET (main event later in show)
  • Where: Ariake Arena, Tokyo
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Bantamweight (118 pounds)
  • At stake: Inoue’s undisputed championship
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Inoue No. 2
  • Odds: Inoue 70-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Yoshiki Takei vs. Bruno Tarimo, junior featherweights; Andy Hiraoka vs. Min Ho Jung, junior welterweights; Takuma Inoue vs. Jade Bornea, featherweights; Satoshi Shimizu vs. Landy Cris Leon, featherweights
  • Prediction: Inoue KO 6
  • Background: The only thing Inoue hasn’t accomplished? Being an undisputed champion. The knockout artist from Japan will have the opportunity to become one in the early morning hours Tuesday (in the U.S.), when he’ll face fellow titleholder Paul Butler in Tokyo. Inoue has been as dominating as any active fighter, blowing through elite opposition to win titles in three divisions and earn pound-for-pound recognition. He’s 18-0 (16 KOs) in world title fights and 9-0 (7 KOs) against current or former world titleholders. He’s 8-0 (7 KOs) as a 118-pounder. The only bantamweight to take him the distance during that stretch was Nonito Donaire in 2019, when Inoue fought with a facial fracture. He stopped Donaire in two rounds in the rematch this past June. Butler is a two-time 118-pound beltholder. He won the IBF version when he outpointed Stuart Hall in 2014 but gave it up and moved down to 115 later that year. He regained the same title when he defeated Jonas Sultan by a unanimous decision to win the sanctioning body’s “interim” title this past April and was soon elevated to full champion. The 34-year-old has won eight consecutive fights since he failed to make weight against then-titleholder Emanuel Rodriguez and then lost a wide decision in 2018.

 

MICHEL RIVERA (24-0, 14 KOs) vs. FRANK MARTIN (16-0, 12 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Dec. 17
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Jose Uzcategui vs. Vladimir Shishkin, super middleweights; Nikolai Potapov vs. Vincent Astrolabio, bantamweights; Omar Jaurez vs. Austin Dulay, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Rivera SD
  • Background: This is an unusual matchup of two gifted, undefeated young contenders. Rivera, 24, has been untouchable in his young professional career, which started in 2016. The Miami-based Dominican has demonstrating that he can outclass you with his skills or take you out with his power even as opposition has improved, although his last three opponents have taken him the distance. Rivera is coming off a one-sided eight-round decision over Jerry Perez in October. Martin is surrounded by good role models: He trains alongside Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo under mentor Derrick James. He, too, appears to be a complete fighter. He’s quick, skillful and powerful. The 27-year-old Indianapolis resident also hasn’t been seriously pushed since turning pro in 2017. He’s coming off a last-round knockout of capable Jackson Marinez this past July. The fight on Saturday is being billed as a WBA title eliminator. Rivera is ranked No. 2 by the sanctioning body, Martin No. 10. Rivera has expressed a desire to fight secondary beltholder Gervonta Davis. Devin Haney is the undisputed 135-pound champion.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

FRIDAY

  • Arslanbek Makhmudov vs. Michael Wallisch, heavyweights, Shawinigan, Quebec (ESPN+)

SATURDAY

  • Christian Mbili vs. Vaughn Alexander, super middleweights, Nantes, France (ESPN+)
  • Quilisto Madera vs. Hector Zepeda, middleweights, Stockton, California (FightHype)
  • Raul Curiel vs. Brad Solomon, welterweights, Commerce, California (DAZN)

Fight Week: Naoya Inoue shoots for ‘undisputed’; Michel Rivera, Frank Martin put ‘0s’ on line

Fight Week: Naoya Inoue and Paul Butler will fight for the undisputed 118-pound championship. And Michel Rivera will face Frank Martin.

FIGHT WEEK

Japanese star Naoya Inoue will face Paul Butler for the undisputed bantamweight championship Tuesday in Tokyo. Also, lightweight contenders Michel Rivera and Frank Martin will square off Saturday in Las Vegas.

NAOYA INOUE (23-0, 20 KOs) vs. PAUL BUTLER (34-2, 15 KOs)

  • When: Tuesday, Dec. 13
  • Time: 2 a.m. ET (main event later in show)
  • Where: Ariake Arena, Tokyo
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Bantamweight (118 pounds)
  • At stake: Inoue’s undisputed championship
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Inoue No. 2
  • Odds: Inoue 70-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Yoshiki Takei vs. Bruno Tarimo, junior featherweights; Andy Hiraoka vs. Min Ho Jung, junior welterweights; Takuma Inoue vs. Jade Bornea, featherweights; Satoshi Shimizu vs. Landy Cris Leon, featherweights
  • Prediction: Inoue KO 6
  • Background: The only thing Inoue hasn’t accomplished? Being an undisputed champion. The knockout artist from Japan will have the opportunity to become one in the early morning hours Tuesday (in the U.S.), when he’ll face fellow titleholder Paul Butler in Tokyo. Inoue has been as dominating as any active fighter, blowing through elite opposition to win titles in three divisions and earn pound-for-pound recognition. He’s 18-0 (16 KOs) in world title fights and 9-0 (7 KOs) against current or former world titleholders. He’s 8-0 (7 KOs) as a 118-pounder. The only bantamweight to take him the distance during that stretch was Nonito Donaire in 2019, when Inoue fought with a facial fracture. He stopped Donaire in two rounds in the rematch this past June. Butler is a two-time 118-pound beltholder. He won the IBF version when he outpointed Stuart Hall in 2014 but gave it up and moved down to 115 later that year. He regained the same title when he defeated Jonas Sultan by a unanimous decision to win the sanctioning body’s “interim” title this past April and was soon elevated to full champion. The 34-year-old has won eight consecutive fights since he failed to make weight against then-titleholder Emanuel Rodriguez and then lost a wide decision in 2018.

 

MICHEL RIVERA (24-0, 14 KOs) vs. FRANK MARTIN (16-0, 12 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Dec. 17
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Even (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Jose Uzcategui vs. Vladimir Shishkin, super middleweights; Nikolai Potapov vs. Vincent Astrolabio, bantamweights; Omar Jaurez vs. Austin Dulay, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Rivera SD
  • Background: This is an unusual matchup of two gifted, undefeated young contenders. Rivera, 24, has been untouchable in his young professional career, which started in 2016. The Miami-based Dominican has demonstrating that he can outclass you with his skills or take you out with his power even as opposition has improved, although his last three opponents have taken him the distance. Rivera is coming off a one-sided eight-round decision over Jerry Perez in October. Martin is surrounded by good role models: He trains alongside Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo under mentor Derrick James. He, too, appears to be a complete fighter. He’s quick, skillful and powerful. The 27-year-old Indianapolis resident also hasn’t been seriously pushed since turning pro in 2017. He’s coming off a last-round knockout of capable Jackson Marinez this past July. The fight on Saturday is being billed as a WBA title eliminator. Rivera is ranked No. 2 by the sanctioning body, Martin No. 10. Rivera has expressed a desire to fight secondary beltholder Gervonta Davis. Devin Haney is the undisputed 135-pound champion.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

FRIDAY

  • Arslanbek Makhmudov vs. Michael Wallisch, heavyweights, Shawinigan, Quebec (ESPN+)

SATURDAY

  • Christian Mbili vs. Vaughn Alexander, super middleweights, Nantes, France (ESPN+)
  • Quilisto Madera vs. Hector Zepeda, middleweights, Stockton, California (FightHype)
  • Raul Curiel vs. Brad Solomon, welterweights, Commerce, California (DAZN)