Good, bad, worse: Roman Gonzalez is a gift that keeps on giving

A critical look at the past week in boxing GOOD Roman Gonzalez told me before his unanimous-decision victory over Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday that conditioning has been the key to his success. Unusual fitness undoubtedly has played a role in …

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Roman Gonzalez told me before his unanimous-decision victory over Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday that conditioning has been the key to his success.

Unusual fitness undoubtedly has played a role in his ability to steamroll elite opponent after elite opponent for more than a decade, a period in which he has dominated four divisions. His motor has become legendary. For example, according to CompuBox, he threw a fight-high 129 punches in the 12th and final round against Martinez (18-2, 14 KOs).

It’s much more than that, though. His ability to consistently land precise, hard punches at a high rate while avoiding them himself – even against his best opponents – has left observers agog since he first caught the world’s attention.

Gonzalez (51-3, 41 KOs) landed 50.7 of his power shots on Saturday, which is impressive. And get this: 244 of his last 249 punches landed were power shots.

The only flaw in his performance – if it can be called that – is that he was unable to take out Martinez, a current flyweight titleholder who moved up in weight for the fight. That was a more a product of the Mexican’s conditioning and toughness than any deficiency on Gonzalez’s part, though.

And remember: “Chocolatito” continues to fight at a pound-for-pound level at 34, an age when most fighters his size are well into retirement.

Is he the same fighter who crushed everyone in his path at 105, 108 and 112 pounds between 2008 and 2016? No. At the same time, his experience and that astounding conditioning have allowed him to remain one of the best fighters in the world.

Could that have been any more obvious on Saturday? Let’s enjoy him while we can.

 

BAD

Julio Cesar Martinez was outclassed by Roman Gonzalez. Ed Mulholland / Matchroom

You have to feel for Martinez.

The WBC flyweight beltholder, who agreed to face Gonzalez six weeks before the fight after Juan Francisco Estrada pulled out, entered the ring at Pechanga Arena San Diego with designs on becoming a pound-for-pound force.

The protégé of Canelo Alvarez, who had been so dominating himself, left the ring wondering what sort of superhuman being it was that so rudely derailed his grand plans.

Of course, there is no shame in losing to one of the greatest little fighters of all time. That’s what Chocolatito is. And Martinez can take pride in his ability to go 12 rounds with him, although he took a lot of punishment in the process.

He also deserves credit for never giving up. He continued to throw dangerous combinations until the final bell. He landed 21 of 56 punches in the final round, his highest numbers in both categories.

Martinez’s problem is the same one that almost every opponent of Gonzalez has had: As good as he is, he just isn’t good enough to compete with a truly great fighter.

I imagine Martinez will move back down to 112 pounds and successfully defend his title one or two more times. He’ll then move back up to 115 and most likely collect a belt or two at that weight, as long as doesn’t cross paths with Gonzalez again or fight Estrada or Srisaket Sor Rungvisai.

That trio fights at a level Martinez is unlikely to reach.

 

WORSE

Tyson Fury will face Dillian Whyte on April 23. Mikey Williams / Top Rank Inc via Getty Images

The heavyweight division was pulsating not long ago. Now it’s in a wait-and-see mode.

In spring of last year it appeared that Tyson Fury would finally meet countryman Anthony Joshua in the biggest-possible heavyweight fight, which had the boxing world salivating. Then a series of events changed everything.

An arbitrator ruled that Fury must honor a rematch clause in his second fight with Deontay Wilder instead of facing Joshua, which produced a classic Fury-Wilder fight in February 2020. No big heavyweight fights happened between then and September of last year.

That’s when former cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk upset Joshua to win three of the four major belts and put the Fury-Joshua showdown on ice again.

Now what?

Fury is set to defend his title against mandatory challenger Dillian Whyte on April 23 in London, which is a huge fight in the U.K. but not anywhere else. Whyte, a decent heavyweight, doesn’t resonate in the U.S.

Joshua had planned to fight Usyk again but that isn’t going to happen anytime soon because Usyk is involved in a bigger fight, against Russian invaders intent on ravaging its European neighbor.

Joshua now has no fight in the works and only recently settled on working with trainer Angel Fernandez, although we’ll see whether that’s permanent. Wilder, arguably the No. 3 heavyweight in the world, also has nothing planned at the moment.

So heavyweight fans are going to have to be satisfied with the Fury-Whyte fight and then be patient.

 

RABBIT PUNCHES

Jose Ramirez (27-1, 17 KOs) on Friday bounced back nicely from his loss to Josh Taylor, easily outpointing veteran Jose Pedraza (29-4, 14 KOs) in Fresno, California. Ramirez gambled by agreeing to fight Pedraza, one of the more polished technicians in the sport. However, he fought well down the stretch to win a one-sided decision and re-establish himself as one of top 140-pound contenders. His next fight could be for a belt if Taylor moves up to 147 pounds, as he evidently plans to do. I doubt that Ramirez will reach pound-for-pound status but he’s a good fighter who will almost certainly win another title or two. Pedraza? I still believe in his ability. However, he has struggled against his best opponents. His four losses have come against Gervonta Davis, Vasiliy Lomachenko, Jose Zepeda and now Ramirez. And none of those fights was particularly close. He might’ve hit a ceiling. … Richard Torrez, the 2020 Olympic heavyweight silver medalist, made his pro debut on the Ramirez-Pedraza card. The Californian stopped Allen Melson (6-4, 3 KOs) in two rounds in a fight that proved nothing because of Melson’s size (5-foot-10, 201.75 pounds) and lack of ability. However, one objective of a debut is to get it over with. Mission accomplished. It will be interesting to see how Torrez evolves. He’s relatively small himself, 6-2, around 230 pounds. That could be a problem against some of the behemoths that currently roam the division. Torrez has unpolished ability, punching power and a good chin, though. Stay tuned.

Roman Gonzalez, refusing to get old, dominates Julio Cesar Martinez

Roman Gonzalez, refusing to get old, dominated Julio Cesar Martinez en route to a unanimous-decision victory Saturday in San Diego.

Julio Cesar Martinez is good. Roman Gonzalez is great, even at 34.

“Chocolatito” proved again that he’s far from finished, outclassing his Mexican counterpart to win a wide unanimous decision in a 12-round 115-pound fight and remain among the elite in sport Saturday night at Pechanga Arena in San Diego.

Gonzalez (51-3, 41 KOs) started slowly, getting a feel for Martinez (18-2, 14 KOs) in the first few minutes of the fight. Then, after he knew what he was up against, he shifted into another gear and took complete control of what was expected to be a competitive fight.

He performed like the fighting machine he has always been, attacking incessantly and landing precise, clean shots with remarkable consistency given Martinez’s ability.

Martinez, a 112-pound titleholder, had success in flurries here and there. And he never even thought about giving up, trying to match the Nicaraguan legend’s pace and ferocity until the final bell.

However, by the end of the fight, Martinez might’ve taken more hard punches in this 36 minutes than he had in his previous 19 bouts combined. Or so it seemed.

“I’m very surprised [Martinez survived]. It indicated that he came in very great condition,” Gonzalez said.

Some might want to temper their praise of Gonzalez because Martinez took the fight on short notice and moved up a division, which is reasonable. At the same time, he demonstrated without doubt that he remains near the top of his game at a time when many little men are finished.

The final scores were 118-110, 117-111 and 116-112. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110 for Gonzalez, 10 rounds to two.

“We should change his name from Chocolatito to Benjamin Button,” said promoter Eddie Hearn, referring to the Brad Pitt film character who aged in reverse. “It was an incredible performance. He just gets better and better.”

Retirement obviously isn’t in Gonzalez’s immediate plans but he addressed that notion after the fight, saying, “I still don’t know when I’ll retire. Maybe a few more fights.”

A few more big fights, it appears. Gonzalez lost a disputed decision in his previous fight to titleholder and rival Juan Francisco Estrada, who was his original opponent for Saturday before he pulled out after contracting COVID-19.

That matchup, which would be the third between them, would make the most sense for both fighters. But Gonzalez would also like another shot at his conqueror Srisaket Sor Rungvisai or would be willing to fight one of the younger, rising 115-pounders.

It seems Gonzalez doesn’t really care who’s next. “Whatever comes,” he said.

Whomever he faces, fans can be fairly certain that they’ll be watching a still-formidable version of one of the greatest fighters of his generation. He made that clear on Saturday night.

Roman Gonzalez, refusing to get old, dominates Julio Cesar Martinez

Roman Gonzalez, refusing to get old, dominated Julio Cesar Martinez en route to a unanimous-decision victory Saturday in San Diego.

Julio Cesar Martinez is good. Roman Gonzalez is great, even at 34.

“Chocolatito” proved again that he’s far from finished, outclassing his Mexican counterpart to win a wide unanimous decision in a 12-round 115-pound fight and remain among the elite in sport Saturday night at Pechanga Arena in San Diego.

Gonzalez (51-3, 41 KOs) started slowly, getting a feel for Martinez (18-2, 14 KOs) in the first few minutes of the fight. Then, after he knew what he was up against, he shifted into another gear and took complete control of what was expected to be a competitive fight.

He performed like the fighting machine he has always been, attacking incessantly and landing precise, clean shots with remarkable consistency given Martinez’s ability.

Martinez, a 112-pound titleholder, had success in flurries here and there. And he never even thought about giving up, trying to match the Nicaraguan legend’s pace and ferocity until the final bell.

However, by the end of the fight, Martinez might’ve taken more hard punches in this 36 minutes than he had in his previous 19 bouts combined. Or so it seemed.

“I’m very surprised [Martinez survived]. It indicated that he came in very great condition,” Gonzalez said.

Some might want to temper their praise of Gonzalez because Martinez took the fight on short notice and moved up a division, which is reasonable. At the same time, he demonstrated without doubt that he remains near the top of his game at a time when many little men are finished.

The final scores were 118-110, 117-111 and 116-112. Boxing Junkie scored it 118-110 for Gonzalez, 10 rounds to two.

“We should change his name from Chocolatito to Benjamin Button,” said promoter Eddie Hearn, referring to the Brad Pitt film character who aged in reverse. “It was an incredible performance. He just gets better and better.”

Retirement obviously isn’t in Gonzalez’s immediate plans but he addressed that notion after the fight, saying, “I still don’t know when I’ll retire. Maybe a few more fights.”

A few more big fights, it appears. Gonzalez lost a disputed decision in his previous fight to titleholder and rival Juan Francisco Estrada, who was his original opponent for Saturday before he pulled out after contracting COVID-19.

That matchup, which would be the third between them, would make the most sense for both fighters. But Gonzalez would also like another shot at his conqueror Srisaket Sor Rungvisai or would be willing to fight one of the younger, rising 115-pounders.

It seems Gonzalez doesn’t really care who’s next. “Whatever comes,” he said.

Whomever he faces, fans can be fairly certain that they’ll be watching a still-formidable version of one of the greatest fighters of his generation. He made that clear on Saturday night.

Roman Gonzalez vs. Julio Cesar Martinez: date, time, how to watch, background

Roman Gonzalez vs. Julio Cesar Martinez: date, time, how to watch, background.

Roman Gonzalez is scheduled to face flyweight titleholder Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday in San Diego. 

Roman Gonzalez 50-3 (41 KOs) vs. Julio Cesar Martinez (18-1, 14 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, March 5
  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET / 5: 30 p.m. PT
  • Where: Pechanga Arena San Diego
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Cost: DAZN is $9.99 per month or $99.99 annually
  • Division: Junior bantamweight (115 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Gonzalez 1½-1 favorite
  • Also on the card: Mauricio Lara vs. Emilio Sanchez, featherweights; Angel Fierro vs. Juan Carlos Burgos, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez KO 9
  • Background: Gonzalez was scheduled to face two-belt champion Juan Francisco Estrada in the rubber match of a trilogy but Estrada pulled out after testing positive for COVID-19. Martinez, a flyweight titleholder, immediately agreed to step in. Gonzalez, a former four-division titleholder, has written a remarkable comeback story. Many wrote off the Nicaraguan when he lost back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, the second by knockout at 30, in 2017. However, he bounced back to win three consecutive fights – including a title-winning KO of Khalid Yafai – and some believe he was robbed when he lost a close decision to Estrada in a classic brawl a year ago. The future Hall of Famer seems to be near his best at 34. Martinez is the toughest late replacement you’ll ever see. The Mexican won his 112-pound title by stopping Cristofer Rosales in nine rounds in December 2019 and has successfully defended three times, not including a no-contest against McWilliams Arroyo this past November. Arroyo had to quit because of a deep cut. Martinez will be moving up in weight but should feel comfortable. The hard-charging boxer-puncher has weighed more than 112 in 12 of his 19 fights.

[lawrence-related id=28477,28373]

Roman Gonzalez vs. Julio Cesar Martinez: date, time, how to watch, background

Roman Gonzalez vs. Julio Cesar Martinez: date, time, how to watch, background.

Roman Gonzalez is scheduled to face flyweight titleholder Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday in San Diego. 

Roman Gonzalez 50-3 (41 KOs) vs. Julio Cesar Martinez (18-1, 14 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, March 5
  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET / 5: 30 p.m. PT
  • Where: Pechanga Arena San Diego
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Cost: DAZN is $9.99 per month or $99.99 annually
  • Division: Junior bantamweight (115 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Gonzalez 1½-1 favorite
  • Also on the card: Mauricio Lara vs. Emilio Sanchez, featherweights; Angel Fierro vs. Juan Carlos Burgos, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez KO 9
  • Background: Gonzalez was scheduled to face two-belt champion Juan Francisco Estrada in the rubber match of a trilogy but Estrada pulled out after testing positive for COVID-19. Martinez, a flyweight titleholder, immediately agreed to step in. Gonzalez, a former four-division titleholder, has written a remarkable comeback story. Many wrote off the Nicaraguan when he lost back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, the second by knockout at 30, in 2017. However, he bounced back to win three consecutive fights – including a title-winning KO of Khalid Yafai – and some believe he was robbed when he lost a close decision to Estrada in a classic brawl a year ago. The future Hall of Famer seems to be near his best at 34. Martinez is the toughest late replacement you’ll ever see. The Mexican won his 112-pound title by stopping Cristofer Rosales in nine rounds in December 2019 and has successfully defended three times, not including a no-contest against McWilliams Arroyo this past November. Arroyo had to quit because of a deep cut. Martinez will be moving up in weight but should feel comfortable. The hard-charging boxer-puncher has weighed more than 112 in 12 of his 19 fights.

[lawrence-related id=28477,28373]

Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez still hungry, still working, still winning

Roman Gonzalez fooled a lot of people when he rebounded from back-to-back losses to regain his place among the best 115-pounders.

Roman Gonzalez was asked who would win a particular matchup: the 24-year-old version of himself vs. the current 34-year-old model.

“Chocolatito” smiled and didn’t hesitate to answer. “I think both ages would win,” he told Boxing Junkie through a translator. That’s his way of saying he can still beat elite opposition, such as Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday in San Diego. And no one would argue with him, even at an age when most little men are retired.

That doesn’t mean he doesn’t feel 34. He does. He just has to listen to his body more than he once did, work smarter, allow himself time to recover.

“It’s not the same,” he said. “It’s a difficult stage. I’ve already gone through a lot of cartridges. And I’m thankful for what I’ve done. I’m going to keep working until I can no longer work. … When you’re young, you have more everything. You’re strong, you have reflexes.

“In this camp, we work on being more intelligent, things like that. And we’ll keep going, all with the strength of God.”

Roman Gonzalez (left) lost a disputed decision to Juan Francisco Estrada is in his most-recent fight but proved he remains among the best 115-pounders. Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

You know it’s remarkable that Gonzalez (50-3, 41 KOs) is still going strong if you’ve followed his career.

The 5-foot-3 Nicaraguan, a protégé of his late countryman Alexis Arguello, won titles in four divisions and built a Hall of Fame career with a high-powered motor and the ability to hurt anyone he hits between 2005 and 2017

Then, in 2017, he lost back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, the second by a brutal fourth-round knockout.

He attributed his troubles to the sudden death of his longtime trainer and friend Arnulfo Obando in November 2016, four months before the first fight with Sor Rungvisai. Still, everyone wondered whether his championship years were behind him as he moved into his 30s.

They weren’t.

Gonzalez, who now works with trainer Marcos Caballero, won two fights by stoppage to earn a shot at unbeaten WBA titleholder Khalid Yafai and scored a vintage ninth-round knockout to climb back to the top of the 115-pound division.

And while he lost a disputed decision to rival Juan Francisco Estrada in his most-recent fight, a year ago, he proved in that fight that he remains near his best.

How did it do it? “A lot of desire,” he said.

Gonzalez was scheduled to face Estrada on Saturday in what would’ve been the rubber match in their trilogy but Estrada pulled out with COVID-19, after which Martinez, a flyweight titleholder, agreed to step in.

He would’ve liked the opportunity to set things right after his disappointment against Estrada in March of last year but he’s not obsessed with the idea. He feels he has nothing to prove.

“If they give me that opportunity, yes. If not, it’s fine,” he said and then added with a smirk. “I’ll take the fight that comes – as long as they pay me.”

Gonzalez will be paid handsomely to take on Martinez, a formidable fighter who was outpointed in his pro debut and hasn’t lost since.

And while Martinez is moving up in weight for the bout, that shouldn’t be a problem for him even against a physical fighter like Gonzalez. The Mexican has weighed more than 112 pounds for 12 of his 19 fights.

Martinez probably isn’t quite as good as the current version of Estrada but Gonzalez is preparing for him as if he is. He was asked whether he saw Martinez as a legitimate threat.

“All of them are,” he said. “The only thing I have in my favor is my conditioning. That’s what’s going to help me do my job the night of the fight. That’s been the thing that has helped me throughout my career.”

Indeed, Martinez had better be at his best because Chocolatito is coming.

[lawrence-related id=28472,28373,18601]

Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez still hungry, still working, still winning

Roman Gonzalez fooled a lot of people when he rebounded from back-to-back losses to regain his place among the best 115-pounders.

Roman Gonzalez was asked who would win a particular matchup: the 24-year-old version of himself vs. the current 34-year-old model.

“Chocolatito” smiled and didn’t hesitate to answer. “I think both ages would win,” he told Boxing Junkie through a translator. That’s his way of saying he can still beat elite opposition, such as Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday in San Diego. And no one would argue with him, even at an age when most little men are retired.

That doesn’t mean he doesn’t feel 34. He does. He just has to listen to his body more than he once did, work smarter, allow himself time to recover.

“It’s not the same,” he said. “It’s a difficult stage. I’ve already gone through a lot of cartridges. And I’m thankful for what I’ve done. I’m going to keep working until I can no longer work. … When you’re young, you have more everything. You’re strong, you have reflexes.

“In this camp, we work on being more intelligent, things like that. And we’ll keep going, all with the strength of God.”

Roman Gonzalez (left) lost a disputed decision to Juan Francisco Estrada is in his most-recent fight but proved he remains among the best 115-pounders. Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

You know it’s remarkable that Gonzalez (50-3, 41 KOs) is still going strong if you’ve followed his career.

The 5-foot-3 Nicaraguan, a protégé of his late countryman Alexis Arguello, won titles in four divisions and built a Hall of Fame career with a high-powered motor and the ability to hurt anyone he hits between 2005 and 2017

Then, in 2017, he lost back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, the second by a brutal fourth-round knockout.

He attributed his troubles to the sudden death of his longtime trainer and friend Arnulfo Obando in November 2016, four months before the first fight with Sor Rungvisai. Still, everyone wondered whether his championship years were behind him as he moved into his 30s.

They weren’t.

Gonzalez, who now works with trainer Marcos Caballero, won two fights by stoppage to earn a shot at unbeaten WBA titleholder Khalid Yafai and scored a vintage ninth-round knockout to climb back to the top of the 115-pound division.

And while he lost a disputed decision to rival Juan Francisco Estrada in his most-recent fight, a year ago, he proved in that fight that he remains near his best.

How did it do it? “A lot of desire,” he said.

Gonzalez was scheduled to face Estrada on Saturday in what would’ve been the rubber match in their trilogy but Estrada pulled out with COVID-19, after which Martinez, a flyweight titleholder, agreed to step in.

He would’ve liked the opportunity to set things right after his disappointment against Estrada in March of last year but he’s not obsessed with the idea. He feels he has nothing to prove.

“If they give me that opportunity, yes. If not, it’s fine,” he said and then added with a smirk. “I’ll take the fight that comes – as long as they pay me.”

Gonzalez will be paid handsomely to take on Martinez, a formidable fighter who was outpointed in his pro debut and hasn’t lost since.

And while Martinez is moving up in weight for the bout, that shouldn’t be a problem for him even against a physical fighter like Gonzalez. The Mexican has weighed more than 112 pounds for 12 of his 19 fights.

Martinez probably isn’t quite as good as the current version of Estrada but Gonzalez is preparing for him as if he is. He was asked whether he saw Martinez as a legitimate threat.

“All of them are,” he said. “The only thing I have in my favor is my conditioning. That’s what’s going to help me do my job the night of the fight. That’s been the thing that has helped me throughout my career.”

Indeed, Martinez had better be at his best because Chocolatito is coming.

[lawrence-related id=28472,28373,18601]

Fight Week: Roman Gonzalez vs. JC Martinez, Jose Ramirez vs. Jose Pedraza

Fight Week: Roman Gonzalez vs. JC Martinez and Jose Ramirez vs. Jose Pedraza highlight big weekend of boxing.

FIGHT WEEK

Roman Gonzalez should have his hands full with Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday. On Friday, Jose Ramirez returns against Jose Pedraza.

Jose Ramirez (KOs) vs. Jose Pedraza (29-3, 14 KOs)

  • When: Friday, March 4
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT
  • Where: Save Mart Arena, Fresno, California
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior welterweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Joet Gonzalez vs. Jeo Santisima, featherweights; Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Abraham Montoya, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Ramirez UD
  • Background: Ramirez lost his two 140-pound titles and the considerable momentum he had built when he lost a close, but unanimous decision against Josh Taylor in May of last year, his most-recent fight. All three judges scored it 114-112, meaning the fight would’ve been a draw had Ramirez not gone down twice. Ramirez said afterward that he learned a great deal in the setback and that it revived his hunger to succeed. The resident of California’s agriculture-rich San Joaquin Valley will be fighting in front of his hometown fans. He didn’t select a pushover as his comeback opponent. Pedraza, a slick former two-division titleholder, is going strong at 32. The Puerto Rican has won three consecutive fights since losing two of three (to Vasiliy Lomachenko and Jose Zepeda) in 2018 and 2019. He last fought in June of last year, when he dominated and then stopped previously unbeaten Julian Rodriguez in eight rounds. His only other loss was a seventh-round knockout against Gervonta Davis in 2017. This will be Pedraza’s 14th consecutive fight in the U.S.

 

Roman Gonzalez 50-3 (41 KOs) vs. Junior Cesar Martinez (18-1, 14 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, March 5
  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET / 5: 30 p.m. PT
  • Where: Pechanga Arena San Diego
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Junior bantamweight (115 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Gonzalez 1½-1 favorite
  • Also on the card: Mauricio Lara vs. Emilio Sanchez, featherweights; Angel Fierro vs. Juan Carlos Burgos, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez KO 9
  • Background: Gonzalez was scheduled to face two-belt champion Juan Francisco Estrada in the rubber match of a trilogy but Estrada pulled out after testing positive for COVID-19. Martinez, a flyweight titleholder, immediately agreed to step in. Gonzalez, a former four-division titleholder, has written a remarkable comeback story. Many wrote off the Nicaraguan when he lost back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, the second by knockout at 30, in 2017. However, he bounced back to win three consecutive fights – including a title-winning KO of Khalid Yafai – and some believe he was robbed when he lost a close decision to Estrada in a classic brawl a year ago. The future Hall of Famer seems to be near his best at 34. Martinez is the toughest late replacement you’ll ever see. The Mexican won his 112-pound title by stopping Cristofer Rosales in nine rounds in December 2019 and has successfully defended three times, not including a no-contest against McWilliams Arroyo this past November. Arroyo had to quit because of a deep cut. Martinez will be moving up in weight but should feel comfortable. The hard-charging boxer-puncher has weighed more than 112 in 12 of his 19 fights.

Fight Week: Roman Gonzalez vs. JC Martinez, Jose Ramirez vs. Jose Pedraza

Fight Week: Roman Gonzalez vs. JC Martinez and Jose Ramirez vs. Jose Pedraza highlight big weekend of boxing.

FIGHT WEEK

Roman Gonzalez should have his hands full with Julio Cesar Martinez on Saturday. On Friday, Jose Ramirez returns against Jose Pedraza.

Jose Ramirez (KOs) vs. Jose Pedraza (29-3, 14 KOs)

  • When: Friday, March 4
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT
  • Where: Save Mart Arena, Fresno, California
  • TV/Stream: ESPN+
  • Division: Junior welterweight
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Ramirez 5-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Joet Gonzalez vs. Jeo Santisima, featherweights; Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Abraham Montoya, junior lightweights
  • Prediction: Ramirez UD
  • Background: Ramirez lost his two 140-pound titles and the considerable momentum he had built when he lost a close, but unanimous decision against Josh Taylor in May of last year, his most-recent fight. All three judges scored it 114-112, meaning the fight would’ve been a draw had Ramirez not gone down twice. Ramirez said afterward that he learned a great deal in the setback and that it revived his hunger to succeed. The resident of California’s agriculture-rich San Joaquin Valley will be fighting in front of his hometown fans. He didn’t select a pushover as his comeback opponent. Pedraza, a slick former two-division titleholder, is going strong at 32. The Puerto Rican has won three consecutive fights since losing two of three (to Vasiliy Lomachenko and Jose Zepeda) in 2018 and 2019. He last fought in June of last year, when he dominated and then stopped previously unbeaten Julian Rodriguez in eight rounds. His only other loss was a seventh-round knockout against Gervonta Davis in 2017. This will be Pedraza’s 14th consecutive fight in the U.S.

 

Roman Gonzalez 50-3 (41 KOs) vs. Junior Cesar Martinez (18-1, 14 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, March 5
  • Time: 8:30 p.m. ET / 5: 30 p.m. PT
  • Where: Pechanga Arena San Diego
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Junior bantamweight (115 pounds)
  • Rounds: 12
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Gonzalez 1½-1 favorite
  • Also on the card: Mauricio Lara vs. Emilio Sanchez, featherweights; Angel Fierro vs. Juan Carlos Burgos, lightweights
  • Prediction: Gonzalez KO 9
  • Background: Gonzalez was scheduled to face two-belt champion Juan Francisco Estrada in the rubber match of a trilogy but Estrada pulled out after testing positive for COVID-19. Martinez, a flyweight titleholder, immediately agreed to step in. Gonzalez, a former four-division titleholder, has written a remarkable comeback story. Many wrote off the Nicaraguan when he lost back-to-back fights to Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, the second by knockout at 30, in 2017. However, he bounced back to win three consecutive fights – including a title-winning KO of Khalid Yafai – and some believe he was robbed when he lost a close decision to Estrada in a classic brawl a year ago. The future Hall of Famer seems to be near his best at 34. Martinez is the toughest late replacement you’ll ever see. The Mexican won his 112-pound title by stopping Cristofer Rosales in nine rounds in December 2019 and has successfully defended three times, not including a no-contest against McWilliams Arroyo this past November. Arroyo had to quit because of a deep cut. Martinez will be moving up in weight but should feel comfortable. The hard-charging boxer-puncher has weighed more than 112 in 12 of his 19 fights.

Julio Cesar Martinez plans to make big statement against Roman Gonzalez

Julio Cesar Martinez plans to make a big statement against Roman Gonzalez on March 5.

Julio Cesar Martinez won’t be fighting just anyone on March 5 in Temecula, California (DAZN). He’ll be tangling with one of the greatest little fighters of all time, Roman “Chocolatito” Gonzalez.

Does that faze Martinez? Not in the least. This is exactly the kind of fight he has been seeking.

“I’m actually motivated, excited to be facing a strong opponent like Chocolatito because we’re in boxing to face big challenges,” he told Boxing Junkie through a translator. “… Like I’ve always said, I’m very proud to be facing the best.

“I’m in the sport of boxing to face best and to show that I am the best.”

Julio Cesar Martinez lost his pro debut but has won every fight since. Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing

Martinez (18-1, 14 KOs) is already considered the best at 112 pounds, a weight at which he holds the WBC title. However, for this fight, he is moving up to 115 to take on the former four-division beltholder on late notice.

Gonzalez (50-3, 41 KOs) was set to face rival Juan Francisco Estrada but Estrada pulled out after contracting COVID-19 and Martinez agreed to step in.

The Mexican had planned to become a full-fledged 115-pounder in the future but couldn’t resist the opportunity to take part in a fight of this magnitude immediately.

And the added weight shouldn’t be a problem for him: He has fought above 112 pounds – as high as 118½ – in 12 of his 19 fights. He has eight knockouts in those 12 fights, an indication that he can hurt anyone.

Can he do the same to Gonzalez, who has been stopped only once? That’s the plan.

“We’re looking to do, like they say, not leave it in the hands of the judges,” he said. “… I’m looking to make history. God willing, I’ll be able to do that.”

If he wins, even if it’s by decision, Martinez will be perceived differently. He already has a great deal of respect, having won and defended his title four times. A victory over Gonzalez would garner him pound-for-pound consideration.

That’s what happens when you take down a legend. As he put it, “It would be a big jump in my career.”

That could lead to big, lucrative junior bantamweight fights against Estrada and Srisaket Sor Rungvisai, Gonzalez’s arch rivals. He could also target 115-pound titleholders Jerwin Ancajas or Kazuto Ioka.

However, he insists he has some unfinished business at 112 pounds. He had been targeting fellow titleholder Sunny Edwards when he got the call to fight Gonzalez. He’d still like to face Edwards in a title-unification bout.

Then, if things go well, he’d make his move to 115.

“I want to be [unified] champion at that weight,” he said. “That means I have to go back down in weight to fight Edwards. God willing, that will happen. Then I will immediately face Estrada at [junior bantamweight].

“I want to fight the best. I want to leave no doubts about me being the best.”