Good, bad, worse: Emanuel Navarrete beastly, Edgar Berlanga human

Good, bad, worse: Emanuel Navarrete was beastly, Edgar Berlanga human on Saturday night.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qymuTb3Vo0g

Emanuel Navarrete’s performance. Christopher Diaz’s courage. Both were inspiring.

Diaz must have felt as if he was in an unfair fight Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla. Navarrete, defending his 126-pound title, appeared to be significantly bigger and stronger than Diaz. And he has those impossibly long arms, which are seemingly capable of reaching the opposition from across the ring.

Plus, as we saw, Navarrete’s chin would make countryman Julio Cesar Chavez proud. Diaz landed many flush shots but none deterred the champion.

That daunting combination of size, reach and durability – as well as Navarrete’s well-honed ability to make it all work for him – would present a serious problem for anyone between 126 and 130 pounds.

That doesn’t mean he’s unbeatable or even the best at those weights. For example, I would pick fellow featherweight titleholder Gary Russell Jr. to beat Navarrete because of his speed, skill and experience. And Leo Santa Cruz, another beltholder, is similar to Navarrete is many ways. That would be a good, competitive fight.

I like Navarrete’s attitude about future challenges. He said in so many words: “I might lose but it will never be easy for my opponent.” No doubt about that.

The same can be said of Diaz, who went down four times but never stopped trying to realize his dream of becoming a world champion. This wasn’t a fighter trying to survive. He was willing to risk it all in an effort to win and pushed Navarrete to his limits as a result.

We can’t ask more of the fighters than that.

[lawrence-related id=19742]

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xp6xQgi20zU

The streak has ended.

Of course, we knew Edgar Berlanga’s run of first-round knockouts wasn’t going to last his entire career. But as I was watching him fight Demond Nicholson in a scheduled eight-rounder on the Navarrete-Diaz card, a part of me was rooting for him to get his 17th opening-round stoppage to start his career.

Alas, it wasn’t to be. Nicholson, a clever veteran, had the ability and wherewithal to survive not only the first round but all eight of them. Suddenly, Berlanga seemed a lot more like the rest of we humans.

The good news is that Berlanga was about as dominating as one can be in a fight that goes the distance. The 23-year-old super middleweight contender put Nicholson down four times and won a wide decision to remain unbeaten in his young career.

More good news: First-round knockouts don’t allow fighters to learn much from the process. Berlanga might’ve grown as a fighter more on Saturday night than in his previous 16 outings combined, which will serve him well going forward.

Berlanga graded his performance a “C,” which might reflect his humility more than reality. His principal failure was his inability to find a way to take Nicholson out. However, in Berlanga’s defense, it’s difficult to stop an experienced opponent whose main goal is to survive.

Indeed, the streak is over but Berlanga remains a bad-ass.

[lawrence-related id=19735]

***

WORSE

https://www.instagram.com/p/CODk7OmhVN6/

Golden Boy Promotions had a rough week.

On April 17, CEO Oscar De La Hoya was a guest commentator during the Jake Paul-Ben Askren show and his behavior raised concern about his well-being. Then, six days later, Ryan Garcia, Golden Boy’s top attraction, pulled out of his fight with Javier Fortuna to tend to his mental health.

De La Hoya, whose speech pattern raised eyebrows, later said he had had a few drinks and apologized for the bizarre incident. That was good to hear. However, based on what seems to have been the Hall of Famer’s roller coaster personal life, we all wonder whether he’s still struggling.

And the fact he is planning a comeback at 48 adds to the concern. He is scheduled to return to the ring July 3 on the Triller Fight Club platform, although no opponent has been selected.

De La Hoya said that he has been in training for that fight. How does a “few drinks” fit into that equation?

Of course, Garcia’s situation is different. The lightweight contender has been open about his battles with anxiety and depression, which obviously are making it difficult for him to function.

It seems to me that he made an intelligent decision. He’s only 22. He has time to undergo treatment, learn to cope better with his challenges and then return to the ring when he’s ready.

“I hope to be back soon and am looking forward to stepping back into the ring when I am my healthiest self,” he wrote on Instagram.

Let’s hope De La Hoya and Garcia both find their healthiest selves.

[lawrence-related id=19730]

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

The Floyd MayweatherLogan Paul pay-per-view exhibition is nearly finalized, Showtime’s Stephen Espinoza told Sports Illustrated. Espinoza said he doesn’t know the date but added that it’s not June 5, as reported. (Teofimo Lopez and George Kambosos have a pay-per-view showdown scheduled for that date.) Those who might be expecting Logan Paul to do to Mayweather what his brother, Jake Paul, did to Ben Askren can forget it. Mayweather, even at 44 and at a 30-pound weight disadvantage, will make his raw opponent look foolish. Logan Paul has had one pro fight against a fellow YouTube personality. Why anyone would want to pay to see that is beyond me. … Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua reportedly will share most of a $150 million site fee from investors in Saudi Arabia for their anticipated title-unification showdown this summer. Great. If they can walk away with that kind of money, kudos to them. Let’s get the deal finalized, though. We’ve been talking about this fight long enough. … Vasiliy Lomachenko will make his return against Masayoki Nakatani on June 26 in Las Vegas, according to reports. Lomachenko, the former pound-for-pound king, hasn’t fought since he lost a unanimous decision and his titles to Lopez this past October. Nakatani is coming off a come-from-behind knockout of Felix Verdejo in December, which followed a one-sided decision loss to Lopez in 2019. The fight presumably will take place at 135 pounds. Some are convinced that Lomachenko has slipped considerably at 33 years old. I believe he remains a pound-for-pound-caliber fighter. We’ll see.

Good, bad, worse: Emanuel Navarrete beastly, Edgar Berlanga human

Good, bad, worse: Emanuel Navarrete was beastly, Edgar Berlanga human on Saturday night.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qymuTb3Vo0g

Emanuel Navarrete’s performance. Christopher Diaz’s courage. Both were inspiring.

Diaz must have felt as if he was in an unfair fight Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla. Navarrete, defending his 126-pound title, appeared to be significantly bigger and stronger than Diaz. And he has those impossibly long arms, which are seemingly capable of reaching the opposition from across the ring.

Plus, as we saw, Navarrete’s chin would make countryman Julio Cesar Chavez proud. Diaz landed many flush shots but none deterred the champion.

That daunting combination of size, reach and durability – as well as Navarrete’s well-honed ability to make it all work for him – would present a serious problem for anyone between 126 and 130 pounds.

That doesn’t mean he’s unbeatable or even the best at those weights. For example, I would pick fellow featherweight titleholder Gary Russell Jr. to beat Navarrete because of his speed, skill and experience. And Leo Santa Cruz, another beltholder, is similar to Navarrete is many ways. That would be a good, competitive fight.

I like Navarrete’s attitude about future challenges. He said in so many words: “I might lose but it will never be easy for my opponent.” No doubt about that.

The same can be said of Diaz, who went down four times but never stopped trying to realize his dream of becoming a world champion. This wasn’t a fighter trying to survive. He was willing to risk it all in an effort to win and pushed Navarrete to his limits as a result.

We can’t ask more of the fighters than that.

[lawrence-related id=19742]

***

BAD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xp6xQgi20zU

The streak has ended.

Of course, we knew Edgar Berlanga’s run of first-round knockouts wasn’t going to last his entire career. But as I was watching him fight Demond Nicholson in a scheduled eight-rounder on the Navarrete-Diaz card, a part of me was rooting for him to get his 17th opening-round stoppage to start his career.

Alas, it wasn’t to be. Nicholson, a clever veteran, had the ability and wherewithal to survive not only the first round but all eight of them. Suddenly, Berlanga seemed a lot more like the rest of we humans.

The good news is that Berlanga was about as dominating as one can be in a fight that goes the distance. The 23-year-old super middleweight contender put Nicholson down four times and won a wide decision to remain unbeaten in his young career.

More good news: First-round knockouts don’t allow fighters to learn much from the process. Berlanga might’ve grown as a fighter more on Saturday night than in his previous 16 outings combined, which will serve him well going forward.

Berlanga graded his performance a “C,” which might reflect his humility more than reality. His principal failure was his inability to find a way to take Nicholson out. However, in Berlanga’s defense, it’s difficult to stop an experienced opponent whose main goal is to survive.

Indeed, the streak is over but Berlanga remains a bad-ass.

[lawrence-related id=19735]

***

WORSE

https://www.instagram.com/p/CODk7OmhVN6/

Golden Boy Promotions had a rough week.

On April 17, CEO Oscar De La Hoya was a guest commentator during the Jake Paul-Ben Askren show and his behavior raised concern about his well-being. Then, six days later, Ryan Garcia, Golden Boy’s top attraction, pulled out of his fight with Javier Fortuna to tend to his mental health.

De La Hoya, whose speech pattern raised eyebrows, later said he had had a few drinks and apologized for the bizarre incident. That was good to hear. However, based on what seems to have been the Hall of Famer’s roller coaster personal life, we all wonder whether he’s still struggling.

And the fact he is planning a comeback at 48 adds to the concern. He is scheduled to return to the ring July 3 on the Triller Fight Club platform, although no opponent has been selected.

De La Hoya said that he has been in training for that fight. How does a “few drinks” fit into that equation?

Of course, Garcia’s situation is different. The lightweight contender has been open about his battles with anxiety and depression, which obviously are making it difficult for him to function.

It seems to me that he made an intelligent decision. He’s only 22. He has time to undergo treatment, learn to cope better with his challenges and then return to the ring when he’s ready.

“I hope to be back soon and am looking forward to stepping back into the ring when I am my healthiest self,” he wrote on Instagram.

Let’s hope De La Hoya and Garcia both find their healthiest selves.

[lawrence-related id=19730]

***

RABBIT PUNCHES

The Floyd MayweatherLogan Paul pay-per-view exhibition is nearly finalized, Showtime’s Stephen Espinoza told Sports Illustrated. Espinoza said he doesn’t know the date but added that it’s not June 5, as reported. (Teofimo Lopez and George Kambosos have a pay-per-view showdown scheduled for that date.) Those who might be expecting Logan Paul to do to Mayweather what his brother, Jake Paul, did to Ben Askren can forget it. Mayweather, even at 44 and at a 30-pound weight disadvantage, will make his raw opponent look foolish. Logan Paul has had one pro fight against a fellow YouTube personality. Why anyone would want to pay to see that is beyond me. … Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua reportedly will share most of a $150 million site fee from investors in Saudi Arabia for their anticipated title-unification showdown this summer. Great. If they can walk away with that kind of money, kudos to them. Let’s get the deal finalized, though. We’ve been talking about this fight long enough. … Vasiliy Lomachenko will make his return against Masayoki Nakatani on June 26 in Las Vegas, according to reports. Lomachenko, the former pound-for-pound king, hasn’t fought since he lost a unanimous decision and his titles to Lopez this past October. Nakatani is coming off a come-from-behind knockout of Felix Verdejo in December, which followed a one-sided decision loss to Lopez in 2019. The fight presumably will take place at 135 pounds. Some are convinced that Lomachenko has slipped considerably at 33 years old. I believe he remains a pound-for-pound-caliber fighter. We’ll see.

Emanuel Navarrete beats up, stops brave Christopher Diaz in 12

Emanuel Navarrete beat up and then stopped brave Christopher Diaz in the 12th and final round to retain his 126-pound title on Saturday.

Christopher Diaz probably had too much courage for his own good.

Featherweight titleholder Emanuel Navarrete received spirited resistance from Diaz but in the end the champion delivered a severe beating before finally scoring a last-second knockout Saturday at Silver Spurs Arena in Kissimmee, Fla.

Navarrete (33-1, 28 KOs) put Diaz (26-3, 16 KOs) down four times, the last time with about 30 seconds left in the fight. He managed to get up, took a series of hard follow-up punches and his corner stopped it to save him from further punishment.

The official time was 2:49 of round 12, meaning only 11 seconds remained. And no one questioned the stoppage.

“I saw how hurt he was and I was concerned for him,” Navarrete said through a translator. “I’m glad they threw in the towel. … I looked at him. I’m happy he wasn’t severly hurt. We were able to talk [afterward]. He was responsive, everything was OK.

“That’s what the sport is about, caring for your fellow competitor. So thank goodness he’s OK.”

Emanuel Navarrete earned the right to have his hand raised on Saturday.  Mikey Williams / Top Rank via Getty Images

Diaz, fighting for a title for the second time, tried everything to compete with Navarrete but nothing worked consistently.

The Puerto Rican boxed from the outside early in the fight but that allowed his long-armed counterpart from Mexico to land punches from a safe distance. And when Diaz worked his way inside, Navarrete, the busier of the two, still got the better of exchanges.

Finally, when it was clear he had to score a knockout to win, he threw caution to the wind and turned a good bout into a firefight. The fans ate it up for obvious reasons. However, Diaz paid a price for his courage.

Navarrete, who had put Diaz down in Round 4, turned the trick twice in a brutal Round 8. When the round was over, Diaz, on wobbly legs, was bleeding form a cut under his left eye, from his nose and from his mouth. He was a mess.

Still, he undoubtedly won the admiration of everyone watching when he continued to engage Navarrete. He got in some big shots in Rounds 11 and 12 but took many more himself as the final bell approached.

In the 12th both boxers fought as if they needed a knockout, which provided wild entertainment. Still, it appeared as if Diaz was going to survive when, with about 30 seconds remaining, he collapsed under a flurry of hard, damaging shots. He obeyed his instincts by continuing to try but his trainer had seen enough. He signaled a ringside official, who then instructed the referee to end the fight.

The fight certainly lived up the standards of the Mexico vs. Puerto Rico rivalry, although that didn’t provide Diaz much solace.

“I’m a little disappointed,” he said. “I always want to win. It’s a title shot. I want to be with a belt right now. But there’s next time. He’s a great f—ing fighter. He hit hard, you could see. We went to war.

“I made my best fight. I was in shape, I was good. But I have a family. I have to go home safe.”

Navarrete, who was making the first defense of his WBO 126-pound title, is now setting his sights on fellow featherweight titleholders Gary Russell Jr. and Leo Santa Cruz. The problem is it won’t be easy to lure them into the ring, in part because they fight for competing handlers.

For that reason, he’s leaving open the possibility of moving up to the talent-rich 130-pound division.

“The first thing I have to do is take a rest,” he said. “This fight took a lot out of me. I think I’ve earned that rest. And, yeah, there are a lot of good fighters at 126, but none of them really want to fight me. So in the end if no one wants to fight me at 126, I have to analyze what the landscape is at 130 pounds and then look for a good fight there.”

The better Navarrete performs, the more difficult it might be to find that good fight.

[lawrence-related id=19735]

Emanuel Navarrete beats up, stops brave Christopher Diaz in 12

Emanuel Navarrete beat up and then stopped brave Christopher Diaz in the 12th and final round to retain his 126-pound title on Saturday.

Christopher Diaz probably had too much courage for his own good.

Featherweight titleholder Emanuel Navarrete received spirited resistance from Diaz but in the end the champion delivered a severe beating before finally scoring a last-second knockout Saturday at Silver Spurs Arena in Kissimmee, Fla.

Navarrete (33-1, 28 KOs) put Diaz (26-3, 16 KOs) down four times, the last time with about 30 seconds left in the fight. He managed to get up, took a series of hard follow-up punches and his corner stopped it to save him from further punishment.

The official time was 2:49 of round 12, meaning only 11 seconds remained. And no one questioned the stoppage.

“I saw how hurt he was and I was concerned for him,” Navarrete said through a translator. “I’m glad they threw in the towel. … I looked at him. I’m happy he wasn’t severly hurt. We were able to talk [afterward]. He was responsive, everything was OK.

“That’s what the sport is about, caring for your fellow competitor. So thank goodness he’s OK.”

Emanuel Navarrete earned the right to have his hand raised on Saturday.  Mikey Williams / Top Rank via Getty Images

Diaz, fighting for a title for the second time, tried everything to compete with Navarrete but nothing worked consistently.

The Puerto Rican boxed from the outside early in the fight but that allowed his long-armed counterpart from Mexico to land punches from a safe distance. And when Diaz worked his way inside, Navarrete, the busier of the two, still got the better of exchanges.

Finally, when it was clear he had to score a knockout to win, he threw caution to the wind and turned a good bout into a firefight. The fans ate it up for obvious reasons. However, Diaz paid a price for his courage.

Navarrete, who had put Diaz down in Round 4, turned the trick twice in a brutal Round 8. When the round was over, Diaz, on wobbly legs, was bleeding form a cut under his left eye, from his nose and from his mouth. He was a mess.

Still, he undoubtedly won the admiration of everyone watching when he continued to engage Navarrete. He got in some big shots in Rounds 11 and 12 but took many more himself as the final bell approached.

In the 12th both boxers fought as if they needed a knockout, which provided wild entertainment. Still, it appeared as if Diaz was going to survive when, with about 30 seconds remaining, he collapsed under a flurry of hard, damaging shots. He obeyed his instincts by continuing to try but his trainer had seen enough. He signaled a ringside official, who then instructed the referee to end the fight.

The fight certainly lived up the standards of the Mexico vs. Puerto Rico rivalry, although that didn’t provide Diaz much solace.

“I’m a little disappointed,” he said. “I always want to win. It’s a title shot. I want to be with a belt right now. But there’s next time. He’s a great f—ing fighter. He hit hard, you could see. We went to war.

“I made my best fight. I was in shape, I was good. But I have a family. I have to go home safe.”

Navarrete, who was making the first defense of his WBO 126-pound title, is now setting his sights on fellow featherweight titleholders Gary Russell Jr. and Leo Santa Cruz. The problem is it won’t be easy to lure them into the ring, in part because they fight for competing handlers.

For that reason, he’s leaving open the possibility of moving up to the talent-rich 130-pound division.

“The first thing I have to do is take a rest,” he said. “This fight took a lot out of me. I think I’ve earned that rest. And, yeah, there are a lot of good fighters at 126, but none of them really want to fight me. So in the end if no one wants to fight me at 126, I have to analyze what the landscape is at 130 pounds and then look for a good fight there.”

The better Navarrete performs, the more difficult it might be to find that good fight.

[lawrence-related id=19735]

Video: Emanuel Navarrete, Christopher Diaz make weight

Video: Emanuel Navarrete and Christopher Diaz make weight for their title fight on Saturday.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPGaPwycYJc

Featherweight titleholder Emanuel Navarrete and challenger Christopher Diaz on Friday made weight for their fight Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla. (ESPN, ESPN+).

Navarrete came in at the 126-pound limit; Diaz weighed 125.8.

Navarrete (32-1, 27 KOs) is coming off a close decision over previously unbeaten Ruben Villa to win the vacant WBO title last October, making him a two-division champion. Diaz (26-2, 16 KOs) is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Jason Sanchez last June.

Also on the card, super middleweight prospect Edgar Berlanga, facing Demond Nicholson, will be seeking his 17th first-round knockout in as many fights.

Berlanga and Nicholson (23-3-1, 20 KOs) weighed 168.4 and 168.2, respectively, for their scheduled eight-round fight.

The Navarette-Diaz and Berlanga-Nicholson fights will be televised on ESPN and streamed on ESPN+ beginning at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT.

Here are weights for the other fights on the card, which will be streamed only on ESPN+:

  • Josue Vargas (141.4) vs. Willie Shaw (139.8), junior welterweights
  • Joseph Adorno (135.2) vs. Jamaine Ortiz (136.2), lightweights
  • Orlando Gonzalez (127.6) vs. Juan Antonio Lopez (128.4), featherweights
  • Xander Zayas (146.4) vs. Demarcus Layton (146.2), welterweights
  • Jeremy Adorno (122) vs. Ramiro Martinez 122), junior featherweights
  • Jaycob Gomez (129) vs. Mobley Villegas (129.4), junior lightweights

[lawrence-related id=19697,19692]

 

Video: Emanuel Navarrete, Christopher Diaz make weight

Video: Emanuel Navarrete and Christopher Diaz make weight for their title fight on Saturday.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPGaPwycYJc

Featherweight titleholder Emanuel Navarrete and challenger Christopher Diaz on Friday made weight for their fight Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla. (ESPN, ESPN+).

Navarrete came in at the 126-pound limit; Diaz weighed 125.8.

Navarrete (32-1, 27 KOs) is coming off a close decision over previously unbeaten Ruben Villa to win the vacant WBO title last October, making him a two-division champion. Diaz (26-2, 16 KOs) is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Jason Sanchez last June.

Also on the card, super middleweight prospect Edgar Berlanga, facing Demond Nicholson, will be seeking his 17th first-round knockout in as many fights.

Berlanga and Nicholson (23-3-1, 20 KOs) weighed 168.4 and 168.2, respectively, for their scheduled eight-round fight.

The Navarette-Diaz and Berlanga-Nicholson fights will be televised on ESPN and streamed on ESPN+ beginning at 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT.

Here are weights for the other fights on the card, which will be streamed only on ESPN+:

  • Josue Vargas (141.4) vs. Willie Shaw (139.8), junior welterweights
  • Joseph Adorno (135.2) vs. Jamaine Ortiz (136.2), lightweights
  • Orlando Gonzalez (127.6) vs. Juan Antonio Lopez (128.4), featherweights
  • Xander Zayas (146.4) vs. Demarcus Layton (146.2), welterweights
  • Jeremy Adorno (122) vs. Ramiro Martinez 122), junior featherweights
  • Jaycob Gomez (129) vs. Mobley Villegas (129.4), junior lightweights

[lawrence-related id=19697,19692]

 

Emanuel Navarette vs. Christopher Diaz: Time, how to watch, background

Emanuel Navarette vs. Christopher Diaz: Time, how to watch, background.

HARD-HITTING VOLUME PUNCHER EMANUEL NAVARRETE IS SCHEDULED TO DEFEND HIS NEWLY WON FEATHERWEIGHT TITLE AGAINST CHRISTOPHER DIAZ ON ESPN AND ESPN+.

***

EMANUEL NAVARRETE (32-1, 27 KOs)
VS. CHRISTOPHER DIAZ (26-2, 16 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Uzlw2j-7v8

  • Date: Saturday, April 24
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Silver Spurs Arena, Kissimmee, Fla.
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Cost: ESPN+: $5.99 per month or $59.99 per year
  • Division: Featherweight
  • At stake: Navarrete’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Edgar Berlanga vs. Demond Nicholson, super middleweights; Josue Vargas vs. Willie Shaw, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Navarrete UD
  • Background: Navarrete is coming off a close decision over previously unbeaten Ruben Villa to win his title last October, making him a two-division champion. Villa went down twice, which proved to be the difference in the scoring. The 26-year-old Mexican is a high-volume puncher with power. He had stopped his previous five opponents, not counting an unofficial fight during the coronavirus pandemic in Mexico. Navarrete has said he wants to unify the 126-pound titles. Diaz is a capable boxer-puncher who has fallen short in his biggest fights. The Puerto Rican, also 26, lost a wide decision in a competitive fight against Masayuki Ito for a vacant 130-pound title in 2018. Then, after moving down to 126, he was outclassed by Shakur Stevenson and lost another one-sided decision the following year. He’s coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Jason Sanchez last June. Super middleweight prospect Edgar Berlanga, facing Demond Nicholson, will be seeking his 17th first-round knockout in as many fights on the undercard.

[lawrence-related id=14562]

Emanuel Navarette vs. Christopher Diaz: Time, how to watch, background

Emanuel Navarette vs. Christopher Diaz: Time, how to watch, background.

HARD-HITTING VOLUME PUNCHER EMANUEL NAVARRETE IS SCHEDULED TO DEFEND HIS NEWLY WON FEATHERWEIGHT TITLE AGAINST CHRISTOPHER DIAZ ON ESPN AND ESPN+.

***

EMANUEL NAVARRETE (32-1, 27 KOs)
VS. CHRISTOPHER DIAZ (26-2, 16 KOs)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Uzlw2j-7v8

  • Date: Saturday, April 24
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Silver Spurs Arena, Kissimmee, Fla.
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Cost: ESPN+: $5.99 per month or $59.99 per year
  • Division: Featherweight
  • At stake: Navarrete’s WBO title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: NA
  • Also on the card: Edgar Berlanga vs. Demond Nicholson, super middleweights; Josue Vargas vs. Willie Shaw, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Navarrete UD
  • Background: Navarrete is coming off a close decision over previously unbeaten Ruben Villa to win his title last October, making him a two-division champion. Villa went down twice, which proved to be the difference in the scoring. The 26-year-old Mexican is a high-volume puncher with power. He had stopped his previous five opponents, not counting an unofficial fight during the coronavirus pandemic in Mexico. Navarrete has said he wants to unify the 126-pound titles. Diaz is a capable boxer-puncher who has fallen short in his biggest fights. The Puerto Rican, also 26, lost a wide decision in a competitive fight against Masayuki Ito for a vacant 130-pound title in 2018. Then, after moving down to 126, he was outclassed by Shakur Stevenson and lost another one-sided decision the following year. He’s coming off a unanimous-decision victory over Jason Sanchez last June. Super middleweight prospect Edgar Berlanga, facing Demond Nicholson, will be seeking his 17th first-round knockout in as many fights on the undercard.

[lawrence-related id=14562]

Emanuel Navarrete wants a war against Christopher Diaz on Saturday

Emanuel Navarrete wants a war against Christopher Diaz on Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla.

Emanuel Navarrete has been working on his technique for his title defense against Christopher Diaz on Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla. And he said during a Zoom call Tuesday that he uses his long reach to keep opponents at bay when that suits him.

Make no mistake, though: The Mexican has been successful – and popular – primarily because of his willingness to exchange punches and his effectiveness when he does.

“That’s the kind of fight I prefer,” he said through a translator. “I prefer to go toe-to-toe and exchange punches. I have the style to make a good fight. It’s going to be a war. That’s what I’m looking for.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Uzlw2j-7v8&t=25s

Navarrete (32-1, 27 KOs) has known almost nothing but success, as he hasn’t lost since the sixth fight of his career. And he became a two-division beltholder October, when he outpointed previously unbeaten Ruben Villa to win the vacant WBO 126-pound title.

Still, he wants to improve. Hence the work during training camp on such things as defense, which isn’t a word one would normally associate with Navarrete.

“For this fight we worked on defense, keeping my hands up, a little bit more technical style because we know if I’m caught with my hands down, a big shot could come in and that could be bad for us,” he said.

One thing that does come to mind when you think of Navarrete is his reach. He’s 5-foot-7 yet has a 72-inch wingspan, which is particularly long for a featherweight. Diaz, who is 5-6, has a 64-inch reach.

That advantage over virtually every opponent has served Navarrete, he said. It allows him to keep opponents away until he wants to engage. And then it’s every man for himself.

“I believe my reach has been very important in my career because I keep all the fighters at a distance where they cannot hurt me,” he said. “But when fighters … get inside my guard, I also like when they do that.

“That’s kind of fight I like. That’s when the real fight starts.”

Navarrete will try to make Diaz (26-2, 16 KOs) fight, which might take some work.

He expects the slick Puerto Rican to move as a way to avoid engaging Navarrete on the champion’s terms. Navarrete will have to cut off the ring to get into his happy zone, which has been extremely unhappy for his opponents.

And during the Zoom call he seemed to try to goad Diaz into a brawl. Navarrete was asked whether he can see this fight living up to the high standards of the celebrated Mexico vs. Puerto Rico rivalry. He responded by saying it’s up to Diaz.

Of course, Navarrete believes that he’ll catch up to Diaz one way or another.

“At one moment of the fight,” he said, “[Diaz] is going to have to stop and trade punches with me.”

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