Richardson Hitchins ekes out decision over determined Gustavo Lemos

Junior welterweight contender Richardson Hitchins eked out a decision over a determined Gustavo Lemos on Saturday in Las Vegas.

Richardson Hitchins remained unbeaten but struggled in the process.

The 140-pound contender, who is hoping to get big fights, had to dig deep to defeat relative unknown Gustavo Lemos by a unanimous, but tight decision Saturday in Las Vegas.

Hitchins (18-0, 7 KOs) won by scores of 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113, with only the later two tallies reflecting what happened in the ring.

The winner boxed well, fighting effectively behind his jab for most of the fight. However, Lemos (29-1, 19 KOs) used constant pressure to force Hitchins to engage with him and often got the better of the action in an entertaining scrap.

The fighters were almost inseparable in terms of CompuBox stats, with Hitchins outlanding Lemos by only 11 punches overall, 172-161.

However, Hitchins had a significant advantage in jabs landed (98-22) while Lemos had a big edge in power shots that connected (139-74). Fighters are typically rewarded more for the latter than the former.

Still, one judge, Tim Cheatham, somehow had Hitchins winning 117-111, nine rounds to three. The 115-113 scores made sense.

The victory makes the 26-year-old from Brooklyn the mandatory challenger for the IBF 140-pound title. Champion Subriel Matias is scheduled to defend his belt against Liam Paro on June 15 in Puerto Rico, meaning Hitchins could get the winner.

Meanwhile, the 28-year-old Lemos, who has a victory over Lee Selby but never fought outside his native Argentina, proved with his strong performance that he’s among the better 140-pounders.

He came up short on the scorecards but probably earned at least one more significant fight.

Richardson Hitchins vs. Gustavo Lemos: Date, time, how to watch, background

Richardson Hitchins vs. Gustavo Lemos: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Richardson Hitchins is scheduled to face fellow unbeaten 140-pound contender Gustavo Lemos on Saturday in Las Vegas.

RICHARDSON HITCHINS (17-0, 7 KOs)
VS. GUSTAVO LEMOS (29-0, 19 KOs)

Richardson Hitchins (left) and Gustavo Lemos enter their fight Saturday with perfect records.  Ed Mulholland / Matchroom
  • Date: Saturday, April 6
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fontainebleau Las Vegas, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Junior welterweight (140 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Hitchins 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ***
  • Also on the card: Diego Pacheco vs. Shawn McCalman, super middleweights; Skye Nicolson vs. Sarah Mahfoud, featherweights (for vacant WBC title); Galal Yafai vs. Agustin Mauro Gauto, flyweights; Marc Castro vs. Abraham Montoya, junior lightweights
  • Background: Hitchins is a 2016 U.S. Olympian and a rising young 140-pound contender from New York City. The 26-year-old, an excellent technician, is coming off the biggest victory of his career: a near-shutout decision over former three-time world title challenger Jose Zepeda on Sept. 23. Hitchins is ranked in the Top 3 in three of the four major sanctioning bodies, No. 2 by the WBC. Lemos is best known for his fifth-round knockout of one-time 126-pound titleholder Lee Selby at 135 pounds in March 2022, which sent the aging Welshman into retirement. The IBF’s No. 7-ranked 140-pounder also is on a run of 10 consecutive knockouts. However, he has faced no one else of note. And the 28-year-old resident of Buenos Aires has never fought outside of his native country, which makes it difficult to gauge the threat to Hitchins he will pose on Saturday.

[lawrence-related id=41308]

Richardson Hitchins believes he’s on the road to stardom

Junior welterweight contender Richardson Hitchins believes he’s on his way to stardom going into his fight against Gustavo Lemos.

Richardson Hitchins is loaded with ability, he insists. He has just needed a platform to demonstrate it.

The 140-pound contender from Brooklyn has a big one on Saturday night at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, where he’ll take on Gustavo Lemos in an IBF title eliminator (DAZN).

Hitchins, 26, sees it as just another step toward stardom.

“I think I am a star already and superstar status comes with me promoting myself, making the best of my opportunities and getting to that superstar status,” he said on Matchroom’s “Flash Knockdown” podcast. “My name is buzzing already as if I am a world champion.

“People put me in these fantasy fights like, ‘I want to see Richardson Hitchins vs. Devin Haney, vs. Subriel Matias,’ and this is just in a year that I’ve been with Matchroom. Once I’ve had a little bit of exposure to the boxing fans, my name is on the scene.

“So I feel like slowly but surely, people are seeing my talent and that will turn me into the superstar that I want to be once I get my hands on the world championships and big fights.”

Hitchins (17-0, 7 KOs) is coming off a breakthrough victory, a near-shutout decision over three-time title challenger Jose Zepeda in September.

He’s now ranked by three of the four major sanctioning bodies, No. 3 by the IBF. That organization’s Nos. 1 and 2 positions are vacant, which means he’s the top contender for Subriel Matias’ title.

Lemos (29-0, 19 KOs) is a 28-year-old from Argentina who is best known for stopping former 126-pound titleholder Lee Selby in March 2022, although he has never fought outside his native country.

Hitchins is confident things will go well in what he sees as a significant opportunity: Fighting as a headliner on a major card.

“I feel good, I feel ready for the moment,” he said. “This is what I’ve been doing my whole life. This will just be another day in the ring for me and picking up another victory. That’s what we plan to do on Saturday.

“This is big, I’m not going to lie. It’s a huge opportunity. When I first fought on a Matchroom card in Ohio (in 2022) I said, ‘I’m supposed to be the main event right now.’ And I don’t even think it was a year later that I was headlining my first card.

“I felt Matchroom was giving opportunities to fighters that were on a lesser level than me, and I felt I belonged at the level where I was headlining my own cards and be on the verge of a world title.

“I proved myself slowly but surely that I belong with the elite guys in the division, and now is the time to stamp my name in the division and in the sport.”

Hitchins doesn’t have a style that appeals to fans who crave action. The 2016 Olympian, who competed for his parents’ native country of Haiti, is a polished technician.

He’s committed to the hit-and-not-be-hit approach to boxing. That has worked for him, as all but one of his victories have come by unanimous decision or stoppage. And most observers believe his split decision over veteran Argenis Mendez in 2020 should’ve been unanimous.

Hitchins believes he will win over fans with his dominance.

“I’m one of those fighters that people say, ‘Oh he’s boring,’” he said. “But I’m also one of those fighters that could box a perfect fight and not have a glove landed on me. So I feel like that’s my motto, and I’m sticking to hitting and not getting hit, and elevating my game, that’s what we focus on in camp.

“Everything else is just getting in shape and making sure my body is in physical condition to endure punishment if needed or to go any grueling rounds if that’s what it comes down to.”

Fight Week: Richardson Hitchins to face unbeaten Argentine Gustavo Daniel Lemos

Fight Week: Richardson Hitchins is scheduled to face fellow unbeaten 140-pound contender Gustavo Daniel Lemos of Argentina on Saturday.

FIGHT WEEK

Richardson Hitchins is scheduled to face fellow unbeaten 140-pound contender Gustavo Daniel Lemos on Saturday in Las Vegas.

RICHARDSON HITCHINS (17-0, 7 KOs)
VS. GUSTAVO DANIEL LEMOS (29-0, 19 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, April 6
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Fontainebleau Las Vegas, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Junior welterweight (140 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Odds: Hitchins 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Significance (up to five stars): ***
  • Also on the card: Diego Pacheco vs. Shawn McCalman, super middleweights; Skye Nicolson vs. Sarah Mahfoud, featherweights (for vacant WBC title); Galal Yafai vs. Agustin Mauro Gauto, flyweights; Marc Castro vs. Abraham Montoya, junior lightweights
  • Background: Hitchins is a 2016 U.S. Olympian and a rising young 140-pound contender from New York City. The 26-year-old, an excellent technician, is coming off the biggest victory of his career: a near-shutout decision over former three-time world title challenger Jose Zepeda on Sept. 23. Hitchins is ranked in the Top 3 in three of the four major sanctioning bodies, No. 2 by the WBC. Lemos is best known for his fifth-round knockout of one-time 126-pound titleholder Lee Selby at 135 pounds in March 2022, which sent the aging Welshman into retirement. The IBF’s No. 7-ranked 140-pounder also is on a run of 10 consecutive knockouts. However, he has faced no one else of note. And the 28-year-old resident of Buenos Aires has never fought outside of his native country, which makes it difficult to gauge the threat to Hitchins he will pose on Saturday.

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

THURSDAY

  • Tito Sanchez vs. Erik Ruiz, junior featherweights, Indio, California (DAZN)
  • Jordan Panthen vs. Ravshan Hudaynazarov, junior middleweights, Costa Mesa, California (TrillerTV+)

FRIDAY

  • Ernesto Mercado vs. Deiner Berrio, junior welterweights, Houston (DAZN)

SATURDAY

  • Bakhram Murtazaliev vs. Jack Culcay, junior middleweights (for vacant IBF title), Falkansee, Germany (no TV in U.S.)
  • Richie Rivera vs. Mathew Obinna, light heavyweights, Uncasville, Connecticut (StarBoxing.TV)

Who’s the best? Ranking the top fighters in the deep 140-pound division

Who’s the best? Ranking the top fighters in the deep 140-pound division.

The junior welterweight division is one of the deepest in boxing, with no fewer than nine elite champions or contenders.

Two of them – two-time titleholder Regis Prograis and 140-pound newcomer Devin Haney – are scheduled to face off on pay-per-view Saturday night from Chase Center in San Francisco, and more such matchups are on the horizon

Who’s the best of the bunch?

Boxing Junkie took a look at the top 140-pounders and selected the nine best for this special feature, ranking them in order of where they stand among their peers at the moment.

Note: This list is not based solely on accomplishments at 140 pounds. Victories at other weights and perceived ability also factored into our ranking.

Also, Gervonta Davis, who defeated two fighters on our list, is not included because he is campaigning at 135. And Josh Taylor, who also has taken down two men here, was not considered because he has moved up to 147.

Here’s the list.

 

  1. TEOFIMO LOPEZ (19-1, 13 KOs)

Key victories: Richard Commey TKO 2, Dec. 14, 2019 (135 pounds); Vasiliy Lomachenko UD Oct. 17, 2020 (135); and Josh Taylor UD June 10, 2023 (140).

Losses: George Kambosos Jr. SD Nov. 27, 2021 (135).

Plusses: Lopez is an exceptional all-around fighter when he’s at his best, as he demonstrated most recently in a convincing decision over Taylor to win a 140-pound title in June. He’s gifted (speed, explosiveness, power) and skillful, which was evident in his breakthrough win over Lomachenko.

Minuses: Inconsistency. He went down and generally struggled against less-talented Kambosos, losing a split decision and his 135-pouind titles. He fought with a dangerous condition in which air was present between his lungs. He also gave a so-so performance against Sandor Martin last December, winning a split decision.

 

  1. DEVIN HANEY (30-0, 15 KOs)

Key victories: Jorge Linares UD May 29, 2021 (135); Joseph Diaz Jr. UD Dec. 4, 2021 (135); George Kambosos Jr. I UD June 5, 2022 (135); Kambosos Jr. II UD Oct. 16, 2022 (135); Vasiliy Lomachenko UD May 20, 2023 (135).

Losses: None

Plusses: The former undisputed 135-pound champion is the best technician in the division, a product of his impressive natural gifts and extensive amateur career. He arguably has the strongest resume here, with a series of important victories (see above). And, at 25, he probably is just entering his prime.

Minuses: Haney is tall (5-foot-8) and has fought at 135 his entire career, which means he should have no trouble transitioning into a new division. However, the fact is that he’s making his 140-pound debut on Saturday. We’ll see how he looks. And he’s a light puncher. His last seven victories have come by decision.

 

  1. REGIS PROGRAIS (29-1, 24 KOs)

Key victories: Kiryl Relikh TKO 6 April 27, 2019 (140); Jose Zepeda KO 11 Nov. 26, 2022 (140).

Losses: Josh Taylor MD Oct. 26, 2019 (140).

Plusses: Prograis does everything well. He’s quick and athletic, he can box and he has power, as his knockout percentage (83%) indicates. He lost to a peak Taylor but essentially fought him on even terms in a close fight. He performed as well a ever in his title-winning KO of Zepeda.

Minuses: He did lose his biggest fight, against Taylor. His best victory (Zepeda) probably carries less weight than the biggest wins of others on this list. And Prograis, at 34, is the oldest member of this group. That means his meeting with Haney is particularly important for his career.

 

  1. GARY ANTUANNE RUSSELL (17-0, 17 KOs)

Key victories: Viktor Postol KO 10 Feb. 26, 2022 (140); Rances Barthelemy TKO 6 July 30, 2022 (140)

Losses: None

Plusses: Russell could end up on the top of this list. He seems to have it all, boxing ability, one-punch knockout power and fighting spirit. The fact he has stopped all 17 of his opponents – including a few established contenders – is striking. He can be hit but that’s due in part to his appealing aggressiveness.

Minuses: His victories over a still-capable Postol and Barthelemy demonstrated that he can win at a high level but we still don’t know how he will do against top-level opposition. Thus, the jury is still out on Russell. His aggressiveness could lead to trouble against a big puncher.

 

  1. SUBRIEL MATIAS (20-1, 20 KOs)

Key victories: Jeremias Ponce KO 5 Feb. 25, 2023; Shohjahon Ergashev KO 6 Nov. 25, 2023 (140)

Losses: Petros Ananyan UD Feb. 22, 2020 (140)

Plusses: The 31-year-old Puerto Rican is a seek-and-destroy offensive machine. He walks down his opponents, beats them up and, as his knockout record demonstrates, he has the power to end fights early. His last five opponents have quit in their corners, a testament to his destructive ability.

Minuses: Matias slipped up in his first fight with Ananyan, which he lost by decision. Can he lose focus? He says it was a wake-up call. He can be hit. How would that go against someone like Ryan Garcia? And we should probably wait until he beats a top-tier opponent before we label him the next Felix Trinidad.

 

  1. JOSE RAMIREZ (28-1, 18 KOs)

Key victories: Amir Imam UD March 17, 2018 (140); Jose Zepeda MD Feb. 10, 2019 (140); Viktor Postol MD Aug. 29, 2020 (140); Jose Pedraza UD 12 March 4, 2022 (140); Richard Commey KO 11 March 25, 2020 (140)

Losses: Josh Taylor UD May 22, 2021 (140)

Plusses: Ramirez is sort of the forgotten man. The 2012 U.S. Olympian arguably has the deepest professional resume of anyone here. He’s solid across the board. He can box, he has power and he has durability. He went down twice against Taylor but otherwise fought the Scot on roughly even terms.

Minuses: Inconsistency. He looks good in some victories (Pedraza and Commey) and not-so-good in others (Zepeda and Postol). He’s a capable technician, the result of his amateur foundation. However, he’s not particularly quick or athletic.

 

  1. RYAN GARCIA (24-1, 20 KOs)

Key victories: Luke Campbell TKO 7 Jan. 2, 2021 (135); Javier Fortuna KO 6 July 16, 2022 (140)

Losses: Gervonta Davis KO 7 April 22, 2023 (136)

Plusses: Garcia has been blessed with elite natural tools, including his unusual hand speed and one-punch KO power. He’s also a well-schooled boxer, the product of an extensive and successful amateur career. He has two weighty victories. And he’s the most popular fighter here given his massive social media following.

Minuses: Garcia is a capable technician – he’s adept at landing his power punches, for example – but he isn’t a boxing wizard, which we saw in his comeback victory over Oscar Duarte on Dec. 2. And jumping from one trainer to another and ongoing problems with his handlers can be counterproductive.

 

  1. ROLANDO ROMERO (15-1, 13 KOs)

Key victories: Jackson Marinez UD Aug. 15, 2020 (135); Ismael Barroso TKO 9 May 13, 2023 (140)

Losses: Gervonta Davis TKO 6 May 28, 2022 (135)

Plusses: Romero is solid across the board. He’s a decent boxer given his lack of a substantive amateur background and only 16 professional fights, and he has heavy hands, which is evident in his knockout record. And the experience gleaned from his setback against Davis will have helped him going forward.

Minuses: Romero is raw in terms of his skill set compared to the others on this list. He also has one of the weakest resumes, including the loss to Davis. He has been good and powerful enough to get past second-tier opponents. We’ll see how he does in his next fight against an elite opponent.

 

  1. RICHARDSON HITCHINS (17-0, 7 KOs)

Key victories: Argenis Mendez SD Dec. 12, 2020 (140); Malik Hawkins UD Dec. 18, 2021 (147); Jose Zepeda UD Sept. 23, 2023 (140)

Losses: None

Plusses: Hitchins, a New Yorker who represented Haiti in the 2016 Olympics, is a terrific boxer with impressive natural gifts, including unusual quickness. His near-shutout victory over capable veteran Zepeda in his most recent fight was an eye-opener. The 26-year-old is on an upward trajectory.

Minuses: He’s still in the process of proving himself against top-level opposition, as is the case with several others here. He doesn’t have fight-changing punching power, although he has forced several opponents to retire the past several years.

Who’s the best? Ranking the top fighters in the deep 140-pound division

Who’s the best? Ranking the top fighters in the deep 140-pound division.

The junior welterweight division is one of the deepest in boxing, with no fewer than nine elite champions or contenders.

Two of them – two-time titleholder Regis Prograis and 140-pound newcomer Devin Haney – are scheduled to face off on pay-per-view Saturday night from Chase Center in San Francisco, and more such matchups are on the horizon

Who’s the best of the bunch?

Boxing Junkie took a look at the top 140-pounders and selected the nine best for this special feature, ranking them in order of where they stand among their peers at the moment.

Note: This list is not based solely on accomplishments at 140 pounds. Victories at other weights and perceived ability also factored into our ranking.

Also, Gervonta Davis, who defeated two fighters on our list, is not included because he is campaigning at 135. And Josh Taylor, who also has taken down two men here, was not considered because he has moved up to 147.

Here’s the list.

 

  1. TEOFIMO LOPEZ (19-1, 13 KOs)

Key victories: Richard Commey TKO 2, Dec. 14, 2019 (135 pounds); Vasiliy Lomachenko UD Oct. 17, 2020 (135); and Josh Taylor UD June 10, 2023 (140).

Losses: George Kambosos Jr. SD Nov. 27, 2021 (135).

Plusses: Lopez is an exceptional all-around fighter when he’s at his best, as he demonstrated most recently in a convincing decision over Taylor to win a 140-pound title in June. He’s gifted (speed, explosiveness, power) and skillful, which was evident in his breakthrough win over Lomachenko.

Minuses: Inconsistency. He went down and generally struggled against less-talented Kambosos, losing a split decision and his 135-pouind titles. He fought with a dangerous condition in which air was present between his lungs. He also gave a so-so performance against Sandor Martin last December, winning a split decision.

 

  1. DEVIN HANEY (30-0, 15 KOs)

Key victories: Jorge Linares UD May 29, 2021 (135); Joseph Diaz Jr. UD Dec. 4, 2021 (135); George Kambosos Jr. I UD June 5, 2022 (135); Kambosos Jr. II UD Oct. 16, 2022 (135); Vasiliy Lomachenko UD May 20, 2023 (135).

Losses: None

Plusses: The former undisputed 135-pound champion is the best technician in the division, a product of his impressive natural gifts and extensive amateur career. He arguably has the strongest resume here, with a series of important victories (see above). And, at 25, he probably is just entering his prime.

Minuses: Haney is tall (5-foot-8) and has fought at 135 his entire career, which means he should have no trouble transitioning into a new division. However, the fact is that he’s making his 140-pound debut on Saturday. We’ll see how he looks. And he’s a light puncher. His last seven victories have come by decision.

 

  1. REGIS PROGRAIS (29-1, 24 KOs)

Key victories: Kiryl Relikh TKO 6 April 27, 2019 (140); Jose Zepeda KO 11 Nov. 26, 2022 (140).

Losses: Josh Taylor MD Oct. 26, 2019 (140).

Plusses: Prograis does everything well. He’s quick and athletic, he can box and he has power, as his knockout percentage (83%) indicates. He lost to a peak Taylor but essentially fought him on even terms in a close fight. He performed as well a ever in his title-winning KO of Zepeda.

Minuses: He did lose his biggest fight, against Taylor. His best victory (Zepeda) probably carries less weight than the biggest wins of others on this list. And Prograis, at 34, is the oldest member of this group. That means his meeting with Haney is particularly important for his career.

 

  1. GARY ANTUANNE RUSSELL (17-0, 17 KOs)

Key victories: Viktor Postol KO 10 Feb. 26, 2022 (140); Rances Barthelemy TKO 6 July 30, 2022 (140)

Losses: None

Plusses: Russell could end up on the top of this list. He seems to have it all, boxing ability, one-punch knockout power and fighting spirit. The fact he has stopped all 17 of his opponents – including a few established contenders – is striking. He can be hit but that’s due in part to his appealing aggressiveness.

Minuses: His victories over a still-capable Postol and Barthelemy demonstrated that he can win at a high level but we still don’t know how he will do against top-level opposition. Thus, the jury is still out on Russell. His aggressiveness could lead to trouble against a big puncher.

 

  1. SUBRIEL MATIAS (20-1, 20 KOs)

Key victories: Jeremias Ponce KO 5 Feb. 25, 2023; Shohjahon Ergashev KO 6 Nov. 25, 2023 (140)

Losses: Petros Ananyan UD Feb. 22, 2020 (140)

Plusses: The 31-year-old Puerto Rican is a seek-and-destroy offensive machine. He walks down his opponents, beats them up and, as his knockout record demonstrates, he has the power to end fights early. His last five opponents have quit in their corners, a testament to his destructive ability.

Minuses: Matias slipped up in his first fight with Ananyan, which he lost by decision. Can he lose focus? He says it was a wake-up call. He can be hit. How would that go against someone like Ryan Garcia? And we should probably wait until he beats a top-tier opponent before we label him the next Felix Trinidad.

 

  1. JOSE RAMIREZ (28-1, 18 KOs)

Key victories: Amir Imam UD March 17, 2018 (140); Jose Zepeda MD Feb. 10, 2019 (140); Viktor Postol MD Aug. 29, 2020 (140); Jose Pedraza UD 12 March 4, 2022 (140); Richard Commey KO 11 March 25, 2020 (140)

Losses: Josh Taylor UD May 22, 2021 (140)

Plusses: Ramirez is sort of the forgotten man. The 2012 U.S. Olympian arguably has the deepest professional resume of anyone here. He’s solid across the board. He can box, he has power and he has durability. He went down twice against Taylor but otherwise fought the Scot on roughly even terms.

Minuses: Inconsistency. He looks good in some victories (Pedraza and Commey) and not-so-good in others (Zepeda and Postol). He’s a capable technician, the result of his amateur foundation. However, he’s not particularly quick or athletic.

 

  1. RYAN GARCIA (24-1, 20 KOs)

Key victories: Luke Campbell TKO 7 Jan. 2, 2021 (135); Javier Fortuna KO 6 July 16, 2022 (140)

Losses: Gervonta Davis KO 7 April 22, 2023 (136)

Plusses: Garcia has been blessed with elite natural tools, including his unusual hand speed and one-punch KO power. He’s also a well-schooled boxer, the product of an extensive and successful amateur career. He has two weighty victories. And he’s the most popular fighter here given his massive social media following.

Minuses: Garcia is a capable technician – he’s adept at landing his power punches, for example – but he isn’t a boxing wizard, which we saw in his comeback victory over Oscar Duarte on Dec. 2. And jumping from one trainer to another and ongoing problems with his handlers can be counterproductive.

 

  1. ROLANDO ROMERO (15-1, 13 KOs)

Key victories: Jackson Marinez UD Aug. 15, 2020 (135); Ismael Barroso TKO 9 May 13, 2023 (140)

Losses: Gervonta Davis TKO 6 May 28, 2022 (135)

Plusses: Romero is solid across the board. He’s a decent boxer given his lack of a substantive amateur background and only 16 professional fights, and he has heavy hands, which is evident in his knockout record. And the experience gleaned from his setback against Davis will have helped him going forward.

Minuses: Romero is raw in terms of his skill set compared to the others on this list. He also has one of the weakest resumes, including the loss to Davis. He has been good and powerful enough to get past second-tier opponents. We’ll see how he does in his next fight against an elite opponent.

 

  1. RICHARDSON HITCHINS (17-0, 7 KOs)

Key victories: Argenis Mendez SD Dec. 12, 2020 (140); Malik Hawkins UD Dec. 18, 2021 (147); Jose Zepeda UD Sept. 23, 2023 (140)

Losses: None

Plusses: Hitchins, a New Yorker who represented Haiti in the 2016 Olympics, is a terrific boxer with impressive natural gifts, including unusual quickness. His near-shutout victory over capable veteran Zepeda in his most recent fight was an eye-opener. The 26-year-old is on an upward trajectory.

Minuses: He’s still in the process of proving himself against top-level opposition, as is the case with several others here. He doesn’t have fight-changing punching power, although he has forced several opponents to retire the past several years.

Weekend Review: Zhilei Zhang has blossomed, Joe Joyce has wilted

Weekend Review: Zhilei Zhang has blossomed at 40 years old while Joe Joyce has wilted at 38.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Zhilei Zhang

Zhang didn’t come out of nowhere. The 40-year-old southpaw from China was a silver medalist in the 2008 Olympics and has been a consistent winner as a professional over the past decade. However, when he drew with limited Jerry Forrest in February 2021, he seemed to have hit his ceiling. Then, three fights later, he pushed rising contender Filip Hrgovic surprisingly hard last August to pump new life into his career as he approached 40. And now he has back-to-back knockout victories over once-top contender Joe Joyce, the latter a spectacular one-punch stoppage Saturday in Joyce’s hometown of London. Just like that he became a bona-fide contender for the titles of Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk. Can he beat one of the champions? Probably not. His victories over Joyce were as much the result of Joyce’s limitations as Zhang’s ability. Fury and Usyk are a level above. At the same time Zhang (26-1-1, 21 KOs) is exactly where he wants to be: He has earned the right to fight for a major world title, which is the goal of every prize fighter. He deserves a great deal of credit.

BIGGEST LOSER
Joe Joyce

Joe Joyce couldn’t recover from a brutal right hook.  Stephen Pond / Getty Images

Joyce, 38, said during the post-fight news conference that his decision to face Zhang in April was too big of a risk given that he was the WBO’s mandatory challenger to Usyk’s belt at the time. No it wasn’t. If Joyce was what he was supposed to be – a genuine threat to anyone – he should’ve defeated a fringe contender who drew with Forrest and lost to Hrgovic, southpaw stance or no southpaw stance. The fact is he isn’t what he was supposed to be. The 2016 Olympic silver medalist combined size and strength with some ability to win consistently against second-tier opposition to create an aura of formidability, perhaps peaking with a victory over past-his-best Joseph Parker last September. Then the peaking Zhang exposed his limitations – twice. Joyce is big and strong but he’s slow and his skills are solid at best, which isn’t good enough against the best in the division. Joyce mentioned former foe Daniel Dubois as a potential comeback opponent, which makes sense given that both are coming off KO losses. Retirement might be a better option if his goal remains to win a major title. That’s a long shot as things stand now.

RABBIT PUNCHES

Gifted 140-pound contender Richardson Hitchins’ victory over Jose Zepeda (37-4, 28 KOs) on Saturday night in Florida wasn’t thrilling but it was convincing. The 25-year-old New Yorker outclassed a rugged veteran in what was billed as his toughest test to date, winning a near shutout decision on national television. Good night’s work. Hitchins (17-0, 7 KOs) will be a difficult opponent for any of the top junior welterweights. … Conor Benn (22-0, 14 KOs) returned to the ring after 17 months away on the Hitchins-Zepeda card, defeating Rodolfo Orozco by a one-sided decision in a 10-round 154-pound fight. Benn shouldn’t have been allowed to fight, although it’s complicated. Benn tested positive for the banned substance clomifene ahead of his scheduled fight with Chris Eubank Jr. last fall, which led to his suspension. He was cleared by the U.K.’s National Anti-Doping Panel. However, that ruling was appealed by the British Boxing Board of Control and UK Anti-Doping, which seems to leave Benn’s case in limbo. Florida officials should’ve backed British officials. The top agencies must stick together to control cheating.

[lawrence-related id=39001,38994]

Weekend Review: Zhilei Zhang has blossomed, Joe Joyce has wilted

Weekend Review: Zhilei Zhang has blossomed at 40 years old while Joe Joyce has wilted at 38.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNER
Zhilei Zhang

Zhang didn’t come out of nowhere. The 40-year-old southpaw from China was a silver medalist in the 2008 Olympics and has been a consistent winner as a professional over the past decade. However, when he drew with limited Jerry Forrest in February 2021, he seemed to have hit his ceiling. Then, three fights later, he pushed rising contender Filip Hrgovic surprisingly hard last August to pump new life into his career as he approached 40. And now he has back-to-back knockout victories over once-top contender Joe Joyce, the latter a spectacular one-punch stoppage Saturday in Joyce’s hometown of London. Just like that he became a bona-fide contender for the titles of Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk. Can he beat one of the champions? Probably not. His victories over Joyce were as much the result of Joyce’s limitations as Zhang’s ability. Fury and Usyk are a level above. At the same time Zhang (26-1-1, 21 KOs) is exactly where he wants to be: He has earned the right to fight for a major world title, which is the goal of every prize fighter. He deserves a great deal of credit.

BIGGEST LOSER
Joe Joyce

Joe Joyce couldn’t recover from a brutal right hook.  Stephen Pond / Getty Images

Joyce, 38, said during the post-fight news conference that his decision to face Zhang in April was too big of a risk given that he was the WBO’s mandatory challenger to Usyk’s belt at the time. No it wasn’t. If Joyce was what he was supposed to be – a genuine threat to anyone – he should’ve defeated a fringe contender who drew with Forrest and lost to Hrgovic, southpaw stance or no southpaw stance. The fact is he isn’t what he was supposed to be. The 2016 Olympic silver medalist combined size and strength with some ability to win consistently against second-tier opposition to create an aura of formidability, perhaps peaking with a victory over past-his-best Joseph Parker last September. Then the peaking Zhang exposed his limitations – twice. Joyce is big and strong but he’s slow and his skills are solid at best, which isn’t good enough against the best in the division. Joyce mentioned former foe Daniel Dubois as a potential comeback opponent, which makes sense given that both are coming off KO losses. Retirement might be a better option if his goal remains to win a major title. That’s a long shot as things stand now.

RABBIT PUNCHES

Gifted 140-pound contender Richardson Hitchins’ victory over Jose Zepeda (37-4, 28 KOs) on Saturday night in Florida wasn’t thrilling but it was convincing. The 25-year-old New Yorker outclassed a rugged veteran in what was billed as his toughest test to date, winning a near shutout decision on national television. Good night’s work. Hitchins (17-0, 7 KOs) will be a difficult opponent for any of the top junior welterweights. … Conor Benn (22-0, 14 KOs) returned to the ring after 17 months away on the Hitchins-Zepeda card, defeating Rodolfo Orozco by a one-sided decision in a 10-round 154-pound fight. Benn shouldn’t have been allowed to fight, although it’s complicated. Benn tested positive for the banned substance clomifene ahead of his scheduled fight with Chris Eubank Jr. last fall, which led to his suspension. He was cleared by the U.K.’s National Anti-Doping Panel. However, that ruling was appealed by the British Boxing Board of Control and UK Anti-Doping, which seems to leave Benn’s case in limbo. Florida officials should’ve backed British officials. The top agencies must stick together to control cheating.

[lawrence-related id=39001,38994]

Richardson Hitchins vs. Jose Zepeda: Date, time, how to watch, background

Richardson Hitchins vs. Jose Zepeda: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Rising young 140-pound contender Richardson Hitchins is scheduled to face veteran Jose Zepeda on Saturday in Orlando, Florida.

RICHARDSON HITCHINS (16-0, 7 KOs)
VS. JOSE ZEPEDA (37-3, 28 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 23
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Caribe Royale, Orlando, Florida
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Junior welterweight (140 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Hitchins 3½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Jessica McCaskill vs. Sandy Ryan, welterweights (for McCaskill’s WBA, WBC and WBO titles); Austin Williams vs. Steve Rolls, middleweights; Orestes Velazquez vs. Mohamed Soumaoro, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Hitchins UD
  • Background: Hitchins is a rising 140-pound contender from New York City. The gifted 25-year-old has already faced some solid opponents but Zepeda – a fellow contender with big-fight experience – arguably is his toughest test, at least on paper. Hitchins is coming off a shutout decision over previously unbeaten John Bauza on Feb. 4, his 11th consecutive victory over an opponent with a winning record. Zepeda is a three-time world title challenger known for his solid ability and grit, the latter of which was most evident in his Fight of the Year performance against Ivan Baranchyk in 2020. The 34-year-old from the Los Angeles area was stopped in 11 rounds by Regis Prograis in a fight for a vacant 140-pound title last November. He rebounded to shut out journeyman Neeraj Goyat on March 25. A victory over Hitchins would be a significant step toward getting a fourth title shot.

[lawrence-related id=34314]

Richardson Hitchins vs. Jose Zepeda: Date, time, how to watch, background

Richardson Hitchins vs. Jose Zepeda: Date, time, how to watch, background.

Rising young 140-pound contender Richardson Hitchins is scheduled to face veteran Jose Zepeda on Saturday in Orlando, Florida.

RICHARDSON HITCHINS (16-0, 7 KOs)
VS. JOSE ZEPEDA (37-3, 28 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 23
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Caribe Royale, Orlando, Florida
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Junior welterweight (140 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Hitchins 3½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Jessica McCaskill vs. Sandy Ryan, welterweights (for McCaskill’s WBA, WBC and WBO titles); Austin Williams vs. Steve Rolls, middleweights; Orestes Velazquez vs. Mohamed Soumaoro, junior welterweights
  • Prediction: Hitchins UD
  • Background: Hitchins is a rising 140-pound contender from New York City. The gifted 25-year-old has already faced some solid opponents but Zepeda – a fellow contender with big-fight experience – arguably is his toughest test, at least on paper. Hitchins is coming off a shutout decision over previously unbeaten John Bauza on Feb. 4, his 11th consecutive victory over an opponent with a winning record. Zepeda is a three-time world title challenger known for his solid ability and grit, the latter of which was most evident in his Fight of the Year performance against Ivan Baranchyk in 2020. The 34-year-old from the Los Angeles area was stopped in 11 rounds by Regis Prograis in a fight for a vacant 140-pound title last November. He rebounded to shut out journeyman Neeraj Goyat on March 25. A victory over Hitchins would be a significant step toward getting a fourth title shot.

[lawrence-related id=34314]