Good, bad, worse: Handicapped Gary Russell Jr. gave Mark Magsayo lesson in defeat

Good, bad, worse: Handicapped Gary Russell Jr. gave Mark Magsayo a lesson in defeat.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Mark Magsayo deserves credit for his victory over Gary Russell Jr. on Saturday in Atlantic City.

The talented protégé of Manny Pacquiao did what it took to defeat the longest-reigning titleholder in boxing by a majority decision, realizing his dream of become a world champion in the process.

Let’s face it, though: The more-impressive performance was turned in by the 33-year-old Russell, who fought one-handed after aggravating a shoulder injury in the fourth round.

Russell, a southpaw, said he has had problems with his right shoulder for many years but fought through it. He said he first aggravated the injury a few weeks ago. And then, when he landed a right hand during the fight, he rendered the arm useless.

Some fighters might’ve quit at that point. Not Russell. He fought eight-plus rounds using only his left hand and guile against a younger, world-class opponent bent on taking his 126-pound title.

He somehow was able to land enough shots to be competitive and used his still-formidable skill, quickness and athleticism to avoid many of Magsayo’s punches, although the challenger clearly found the target more than he did.

Russell (31-2, 18 KOs) said with his actions, “I’m better than you with one hand tied behind my back and I’m going to prove it.”

And he almost pulled it off, losing by scores that couldn’t have been much closer: 114-114, 115-113 and 115-113. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112, eight rounds to four, but it was a tight, competitive fight.

Again, we must acknowledge that Magsayo (24-0, 16 KOs) earned his first world title fair and square. We also have to call Russell’s performance what it was: remarkable.

 

BAD

Mark Magsayo was thrilled to win his first world title.  Mitchell Leff / Getty Images

When Russell grimaced after landing the right hand that re-injured his shoulder in the fourth round, it seemed as if the end for Russell was near.

Either he’d indicate that he couldn’t use his right arm and retire or Magsayo, facing crippled prey, would overwhelm Russell and end the fight in short order. Neither of those things happened.

Russell decided to give it a go in spite of his handicap. And Magsayo couldn’t find a way to take charge. To be clear, he did enough to win, which is the name of the game. And if a fighter as quick and clever as Russell decides he isn’t going to get hit, it’s difficult to hit him under any circumstances.

That said, Magsayo is a world-class boxer with quick hands himself and a 2-1 advantage in arms available. Russell threw zero jabs –zero! – from the sixth round on. You’d think the challenger would’ve stepped on the gas and run Russell over. Instead, he almost lost.

The good news for Magsayo is he’s still developing under trainer Freddie Roach, who has worked with him for only four fights. As Magsayo learned from spotty performances against Rigoberto Hermosillo and Julio Ceja, he’ll learn from the Russell fight.

Could he beat a healthy Russell in a rematch?

I doubt it given what we saw from the fourth round on but I think he’d be competitive. One, he gave a two-handed Russell problems with his quick hands and effective counterpunching for three-plus rounds. And, two, he will be a better fighter as a result of the experience he gained Saturday.

Magsayo has a lot going from him. His best might be ahead of him.

 

WORSE

 

Tugstsogt Nyambayar, a 2012 Olympic silver medalist, was a hot featherweight contender early in 2020. Today, after going 1-2-1 in his last four fights, the Los Angeles-based Mongolian’s career as an elite fighter might be over.

Nyambayar (12-2-1, 9 KOs) fought to a split-decision draw against Sakaria Lukas (25-1-1, 17 KOs) on the Russell-Magsayo card, a stunning result given the fact that the Namibian took the fight on short notice and is a relative unknown.

That followed a one-sided loss to Russell, a split-decision victory over Cobia Breedy and another unanimous-decision setback against Chris Colbert.

On Saturday, Nyambayar allowed the capable Lukas to dictate the pace much of the fight, using a stiff jab, straight rights and high work rate to fight his favored opponent on even terms – at least.

And had an apparent knockdown of Nyambayar in the eighth round been ruled as such instead of a slip, he would’ve lost for the third time in four fights. Replays seemed to indicate that the referee made a mistake.

Nyambayar, 29, isn’t finished. He can still turn his career around. However, he needs to figure out what has been lacking and make corrections as soon as possible or he could fade into obscurity.

Meanwhile, Lukas, who has campaigned in North America the past few years, put himself on the boxing map with his performance on national TV. We’ll probably see him in another important fight soon.

Junior welterweight contender Sabriel Matias (18-1, 18 KOs) also turned in a good performance on the Russell-Magsayo card, breaking down and then stopping Petros Ananyan after nine rounds. Ananyan (16-3-2, 7 KOs) had upset Matias by decision in 2020.

Matias, fit and as physical as always, simply imposed his will on a durable opponent in an entertaining brawl. This version of the Puerto Rican would be a handful for anyone.

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Good, bad, worse: Handicapped Gary Russell Jr. gave Mark Magsayo lesson in defeat

Good, bad, worse: Handicapped Gary Russell Jr. gave Mark Magsayo a lesson in defeat.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

GOOD

Mark Magsayo deserves credit for his victory over Gary Russell Jr. on Saturday in Atlantic City.

The talented protégé of Manny Pacquiao did what it took to defeat the longest-reigning titleholder in boxing by a majority decision, realizing his dream of become a world champion in the process.

Let’s face it, though: The more-impressive performance was turned in by the 33-year-old Russell, who fought one-handed after aggravating a shoulder injury in the fourth round.

Russell, a southpaw, said he has had problems with his right shoulder for many years but fought through it. He said he first aggravated the injury a few weeks ago. And then, when he landed a right hand during the fight, he rendered the arm useless.

Some fighters might’ve quit at that point. Not Russell. He fought eight-plus rounds using only his left hand and guile against a younger, world-class opponent bent on taking his 126-pound title.

He somehow was able to land enough shots to be competitive and used his still-formidable skill, quickness and athleticism to avoid many of Magsayo’s punches, although the challenger clearly found the target more than he did.

Russell (31-2, 18 KOs) said with his actions, “I’m better than you with one hand tied behind my back and I’m going to prove it.”

And he almost pulled it off, losing by scores that couldn’t have been much closer: 114-114, 115-113 and 115-113. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112, eight rounds to four, but it was a tight, competitive fight.

Again, we must acknowledge that Magsayo (24-0, 16 KOs) earned his first world title fair and square. We also have to call Russell’s performance what it was: remarkable.

 

BAD

Mark Magsayo was thrilled to win his first world title.  Mitchell Leff / Getty Images

When Russell grimaced after landing the right hand that re-injured his shoulder in the fourth round, it seemed as if the end for Russell was near.

Either he’d indicate that he couldn’t use his right arm and retire or Magsayo, facing crippled prey, would overwhelm Russell and end the fight in short order. Neither of those things happened.

Russell decided to give it a go in spite of his handicap. And Magsayo couldn’t find a way to take charge. To be clear, he did enough to win, which is the name of the game. And if a fighter as quick and clever as Russell decides he isn’t going to get hit, it’s difficult to hit him under any circumstances.

That said, Magsayo is a world-class boxer with quick hands himself and a 2-1 advantage in arms available. Russell threw zero jabs –zero! – from the sixth round on. You’d think the challenger would’ve stepped on the gas and run Russell over. Instead, he almost lost.

The good news for Magsayo is he’s still developing under trainer Freddie Roach, who has worked with him for only four fights. As Magsayo learned from spotty performances against Rigoberto Hermosillo and Julio Ceja, he’ll learn from the Russell fight.

Could he beat a healthy Russell in a rematch?

I doubt it given what we saw from the fourth round on but I think he’d be competitive. One, he gave a two-handed Russell problems with his quick hands and effective counterpunching for three-plus rounds. And, two, he will be a better fighter as a result of the experience he gained Saturday.

Magsayo has a lot going from him. His best might be ahead of him.

 

WORSE

 

Tugstsogt Nyambayar, a 2012 Olympic silver medalist, was a hot featherweight contender early in 2020. Today, after going 1-2-1 in his last four fights, the Los Angeles-based Mongolian’s career as an elite fighter might be over.

Nyambayar (12-2-1, 9 KOs) fought to a split-decision draw against Sakaria Lukas (25-1-1, 17 KOs) on the Russell-Magsayo card, a stunning result given the fact that the Namibian took the fight on short notice and is a relative unknown.

That followed a one-sided loss to Russell, a split-decision victory over Cobia Breedy and another unanimous-decision setback against Chris Colbert.

On Saturday, Nyambayar allowed the capable Lukas to dictate the pace much of the fight, using a stiff jab, straight rights and high work rate to fight his favored opponent on even terms – at least.

And had an apparent knockdown of Nyambayar in the eighth round been ruled as such instead of a slip, he would’ve lost for the third time in four fights. Replays seemed to indicate that the referee made a mistake.

Nyambayar, 29, isn’t finished. He can still turn his career around. However, he needs to figure out what has been lacking and make corrections as soon as possible or he could fade into obscurity.

Meanwhile, Lukas, who has campaigned in North America the past few years, put himself on the boxing map with his performance on national TV. We’ll probably see him in another important fight soon.

Junior welterweight contender Sabriel Matias (18-1, 18 KOs) also turned in a good performance on the Russell-Magsayo card, breaking down and then stopping Petros Ananyan after nine rounds. Ananyan (16-3-2, 7 KOs) had upset Matias by decision in 2020.

Matias, fit and as physical as always, simply imposed his will on a durable opponent in an entertaining brawl. This version of the Puerto Rican would be a handful for anyone.

[vertical-gallery id=27562]

Mark Magsayo outpoints one-handed Gary Russell Jr. to win title

Mark Magsayo outpointed one-handed Gary Russell Jr. to win the WBC featherweight title Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Gary Russell Jr. faced one too many obstacles in the end.

The long-reigning featherweight titleholder aggravated a right shoulder injury in the fourth round against challenger Mark Magsayo, which made him a one-handed fighter, but was competitive nonetheless Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

However, Russell came up just short on the cards against a busier opponent in Magsayo. One judge had it 114-114 but the other two scored it for the Filipino by the same score, 115-113, making him the new WBC 126-pound champion.

That’s all that mattered to the protégé of Manny Pacquiao, who promotes him.

“This is a dream come true,” Magsayo said in the ring afterward. “This was my dream since I was a kid, since I was an amateur. And now I’m champion. This is my dream.”

Russell (31-2, 18 KOs) came into the fight with a lot on his mind. The longest reigning champion until Saturday night, six years and 10 months, lost his brother to a heart attack in December 2020. His father and trainer Gary Russell Sr. is battling diabetes, which resulted in the amputation of a foot and limited his time in the gym. And the younger Russell had been out of the ring for almost two years.

Russell was able to push through all that but what he said was a lingering injury to his right shoulder, which he first aggravated in camp a few weeks ago, was too much to overcome.

He was able to use his right hand early in the fight but he evidently rendered the arm useless when he landed a punch early in Round 4, which produced a grimace. He barely used his right hand from that point on, fighting only with his left.

Remarkably, he was competitive, popping Magsayo with his left when he could and making the challenger miss many of his punches with his skill, quickness and athleticism. Hence the close scores.

However, Magsayo was able to have his hand raised for an obvious reason: He threw and landed more punches than the one-handed champion. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112 for the challenger, eight rounds to four.

Russell was asked afterward why he didn’t postpone the fight long enough for the shoulder to heal.

“I was itching to get back into the ring and compete,” he said. “I injured my shoulder about two weeks ago in my training camp. I refused to postpone the fight, to push it back. I believed in my skill set, what I bring to the ring. And I felt I still won the fight, to be honest with you.

“… I fought with one arm. He had his hands full with a fighter with one arm the whole fight. I gave him a boxing lesson.”

Russell, who hadn’t lost since he was outpointed by Vasiliy Lomachenko in 2014, made it clear that we haven’t seen the last of him even though he turns 34 in June.

He doesn’t know whether he will have surgery on what he believes is an injured tendon but he plans to get past it one way or another and fight once again at an elite level. If anything, he seems more energized than ever.

“Please believe me that I’ll be back,” he said. “I still want these fights. I’ll get my shoulder fixed and be back at it.”

What about a rematch?

Magsayo was too excited afterward to even think about a second meeting with Russell, referring the question to his handlers and saying only that, “I’m willing to fight anybody now. I’m the champion now.”

Russell also was asked about a rematch. He left no doubt about his sentiments.

“Hell yeah,” he said. “Would he want a rematch? … That’s the question. I’ll rematch him.”

Mark Magsayo outpoints one-handed Gary Russell Jr. to win title

Mark Magsayo outpointed one-handed Gary Russell Jr. to win the WBC featherweight title Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Gary Russell Jr. faced one too many obstacles in the end.

The long-reigning featherweight titleholder aggravated a right shoulder injury in the fourth round against challenger Mark Magsayo, which made him a one-handed fighter, but was competitive nonetheless Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

However, Russell came up just short on the cards against a busier opponent in Magsayo. One judge had it 114-114 but the other two scored it for the Filipino by the same score, 115-113, making him the new WBC 126-pound champion.

That’s all that mattered to the protégé of Manny Pacquiao, who promotes him.

“This is a dream come true,” Magsayo said in the ring afterward. “This was my dream since I was a kid, since I was an amateur. And now I’m champion. This is my dream.”

Russell (31-2, 18 KOs) came into the fight with a lot on his mind. The longest reigning champion until Saturday night, six years and 10 months, lost his brother to a heart attack in December 2020. His father and trainer Gary Russell Sr. is battling diabetes, which resulted in the amputation of a foot and limited his time in the gym. And the younger Russell had been out of the ring for almost two years.

Russell was able to push through all that but what he said was a lingering injury to his right shoulder, which he first aggravated in camp a few weeks ago, was too much to overcome.

He was able to use his right hand early in the fight but he evidently rendered the arm useless when he landed a punch early in Round 4, which produced a grimace. He barely used his right hand from that point on, fighting only with his left.

Remarkably, he was competitive, popping Magsayo with his left when he could and making the challenger miss many of his punches with his skill, quickness and athleticism. Hence the close scores.

However, Magsayo was able to have his hand raised for an obvious reason: He threw and landed more punches than the one-handed champion. Boxing Junkie scored it 116-112 for the challenger, eight rounds to four.

Russell was asked afterward why he didn’t postpone the fight long enough for the shoulder to heal.

“I was itching to get back into the ring and compete,” he said. “I injured my shoulder about two weeks ago in my training camp. I refused to postpone the fight, to push it back. I believed in my skill set, what I bring to the ring. And I felt I still won the fight, to be honest with you.

“… I fought with one arm. He had his hands full with a fighter with one arm the whole fight. I gave him a boxing lesson.”

Russell, who hadn’t lost since he was outpointed by Vasiliy Lomachenko in 2014, made it clear that we haven’t seen the last of him even though he turns 34 in June.

He doesn’t know whether he will have surgery on what he believes is an injured tendon but he plans to get past it one way or another and fight once again at an elite level. If anything, he seems more energized than ever.

“Please believe me that I’ll be back,” he said. “I still want these fights. I’ll get my shoulder fixed and be back at it.”

What about a rematch?

Magsayo was too excited afterward to even think about a second meeting with Russell, referring the question to his handlers and saying only that, “I’m willing to fight anybody now. I’m the champion now.”

Russell also was asked about a rematch. He left no doubt about his sentiments.

“Hell yeah,” he said. “Would he want a rematch? … That’s the question. I’ll rematch him.”

Mark Magsayo hoping to make one more dream come true

Mark Magsayo is hoping to make one more dream come true this Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Mark Magsayo has already realized a number of his dreams.

The featherweight contender met his idol and countryman Manny Pacquiao, which happened four years ago at the Senate of the Philippines. A few years later Pacquiao became his promoter. And he now trains with Freddie Roach, who helped guide the eight-division champion to greatness.

Now Magsayo has a chance to realize the dream of every young fighter: He faces long-reigning beltholder Gary Russell Jr. Saturday in Atlantic City (Showtime), his first world title shot.

“This is a big challenge for me,” Magsayo said. “I like the challenge every time I fight. It’s good that I’m going to face a great fighter, a great warrior. If I win, it’s going to change my life. My dream will come true.”

Magsayo (23-0, 16 KOs) has some of the natural gifts of Pacquiao, including quick feet and hands, as well the punching power the boxer-turned-politician had at the lower weights.

The challenger’s stoppage of Julio Ceja – the result of a monstrous straight right hand in the 10th round last August – was a 2021 Knockout of the Year candidate and an important step in his evolution.

The problem might be that he’s still evolving even though he had a substantial amateur background, as Roach learned when he started working with Magsayo before the October 2020 Hermosillo fight.

One example: Magsayo had not incorporated road work into his training regimen, which Roach quickly corrected. And by Magsayo’s own admission, he needed considerable work in general when he landed at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, California.

“I’ve learned a lot things about boxing [from Roach],” he said. “Before, I thought I really knew how boxing is but Freddie has taught me to box. He taught me footwork, moving in and out. He corrected my mistakes. I used to throw wild punches. Now my punches are more accurate.

“He’s taught me everything.”

And he might’ve learned his biggest lesson in the Ceja fight, in which he went down in Round 5 and was losing on all three cards after nine rounds. He made the mistake of fighting the aggressive Ceja on the inside and had lulls in his activity.

The good news for him is that he adjusted and won in spectacular fashion, which earned him a shot at Russell.

“Freddie told me, ‘Mark, you need to adjust,’” Magsayo said. “He said, ‘Don’t follow his toe-to-toe style. Box first, go in and out, hit and not get hit. That’s what changed the fight. I made the adjustment.

“Then, in the 10th round, I saw that his left eye was closing. I threw the right. And I won.”

Said Roach: “That [fight] was really good for him. He has more confidence now.”

But is he ready for Russell, a quick-handed, experienced former U.S. Olympian who will be making the sixth defense of his title?

Roach thinks so. He believes in his protégé, who has undeniable natural gifts and is improving, and he suspects that ring rust from Russell’s two-year hiatus from boxing could work in Magsayo’s favor.

And, yes, Magsayo is confident. He’s humble, even soft-spoken, but he revealed the cockiness of a fighter who likes his chances against one of the better champions in the world.

“He says he’s the fastest fighter in the world,” Magsayo said, referring to Russell. “He forgot that I’m here. I’m fast, too. He thinks I’m too slow for him. That’s good. He will be surprised.

“I’m just confident and ready to fight.”

Mark Magsayo hoping to make one more dream come true

Mark Magsayo is hoping to make one more dream come true this Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Mark Magsayo has already realized a number of his dreams.

The featherweight contender met his idol and countryman Manny Pacquiao, which happened four years ago at the Senate of the Philippines. A few years later Pacquiao became his promoter. And he now trains with Freddie Roach, who helped guide the eight-division champion to greatness.

Now Magsayo has a chance to realize the dream of every young fighter: He faces long-reigning beltholder Gary Russell Jr. Saturday in Atlantic City (Showtime), his first world title shot.

“This is a big challenge for me,” Magsayo said. “I like the challenge every time I fight. It’s good that I’m going to face a great fighter, a great warrior. If I win, it’s going to change my life. My dream will come true.”

Magsayo (23-0, 16 KOs) has some of the natural gifts of Pacquiao, including quick feet and hands, as well the punching power the boxer-turned-politician had at the lower weights.

The challenger’s stoppage of Julio Ceja – the result of a monstrous straight right hand in the 10th round last August – was a 2021 Knockout of the Year candidate and an important step in his evolution.

The problem might be that he’s still evolving even though he had a substantial amateur background, as Roach learned when he started working with Magsayo before the October 2020 Hermosillo fight.

One example: Magsayo had not incorporated road work into his training regimen, which Roach quickly corrected. And by Magsayo’s own admission, he needed considerable work in general when he landed at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, California.

“I’ve learned a lot things about boxing [from Roach],” he said. “Before, I thought I really knew how boxing is but Freddie has taught me to box. He taught me footwork, moving in and out. He corrected my mistakes. I used to throw wild punches. Now my punches are more accurate.

“He’s taught me everything.”

And he might’ve learned his biggest lesson in the Ceja fight, in which he went down in Round 5 and was losing on all three cards after nine rounds. He made the mistake of fighting the aggressive Ceja on the inside and had lulls in his activity.

The good news for him is that he adjusted and won in spectacular fashion, which earned him a shot at Russell.

“Freddie told me, ‘Mark, you need to adjust,’” Magsayo said. “He said, ‘Don’t follow his toe-to-toe style. Box first, go in and out, hit and not get hit. That’s what changed the fight. I made the adjustment.

“Then, in the 10th round, I saw that his left eye was closing. I threw the right. And I won.”

Said Roach: “That [fight] was really good for him. He has more confidence now.”

But is he ready for Russell, a quick-handed, experienced former U.S. Olympian who will be making the sixth defense of his title?

Roach thinks so. He believes in his protégé, who has undeniable natural gifts and is improving, and he suspects that ring rust from Russell’s two-year hiatus from boxing could work in Magsayo’s favor.

And, yes, Magsayo is confident. He’s humble, even soft-spoken, but he revealed the cockiness of a fighter who likes his chances against one of the better champions in the world.

“He says he’s the fastest fighter in the world,” Magsayo said, referring to Russell. “He forgot that I’m here. I’m fast, too. He thinks I’m too slow for him. That’s good. He will be surprised.

“I’m just confident and ready to fight.”

Gary Russell Jr. vs. Mark Magsayo: date, time, how to watch, background

Gary Russell Jr. vs. Mark Magsayo: date, time, how to watch, background.

Gary Russell Jr. will make the sixth defense of his featherweight title against unbeaten Mark Magsayo Saturday on Showtime.

Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) vs. Mark Magsayo (23-0, 16 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Jan. 15
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Borgata Hotel Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Featherweight
  • At stake: Russell’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Russell 3-1 (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Subriel Matias vs. Petros Ananyan, junior welterweights; Tugstsogt Nyambayar vs. Vic Pasillas, featherweights
  • Prediction: Russell UD
  • Background: Russell doesn’t fight often but dominates when he does. The long-reigning 126-pound titleholder has fought a total of five times since he stopped Jhonny Gonzalez to win this world title in March 2015, including no bouts last year. The quick-handed veteran is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over previously unbeaten Tugstsogt Nyambayar in February 2020, meaning he will have been out of the ring for almost two years. Russell, 33, will be making the sixth defense of his title. Magsayo, 26, will be fighting for a world belt for the first time. The Freddie Roach-trained protégé of Manny Pacquiao is quick and powerful but is taking a significant step up in opposition in his first shot at a major title. Magsayo is coming off a spectacular knockout of Julio Ceja this past August. He was behind on all three cards when he landed a straight right hand that rendered Ceja unconscious. This will be Magsayo’s fourth consecutive fight in the United States.

Gary Russell Jr. vs. Mark Magsayo: date, time, how to watch, background

Gary Russell Jr. vs. Mark Magsayo: date, time, how to watch, background.

Gary Russell Jr. will make the sixth defense of his featherweight title against unbeaten Mark Magsayo Saturday on Showtime.

Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) vs. Mark Magsayo (23-0, 16 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Jan. 15
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Borgata Hotel Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Featherweight
  • At stake: Russell’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Russell 3-1 (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Subriel Matias vs. Petros Ananyan, junior welterweights; Tugstsogt Nyambayar vs. Vic Pasillas, featherweights
  • Prediction: Russell UD
  • Background: Russell doesn’t fight often but dominates when he does. The long-reigning 126-pound titleholder has fought a total of five times since he stopped Jhonny Gonzalez to win this world title in March 2015, including no bouts last year. The quick-handed veteran is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over previously unbeaten Tugstsogt Nyambayar in February 2020, meaning he will have been out of the ring for almost two years. Russell, 33, will be making the sixth defense of his title. Magsayo, 26, will be fighting for a world belt for the first time. The Freddie Roach-trained protégé of Manny Pacquiao is quick and powerful but is taking a significant step up in opposition in his first shot at a major title. Magsayo is coming off a spectacular knockout of Julio Ceja this past August. He was behind on all three cards when he landed a straight right hand that rendered Ceja unconscious. This will be Magsayo’s fourth consecutive fight in the United States.

Fight Week: Gary Russell Jr. to return to ring after two years against Mark Magsayo

Fight Week: Gary Russell Jr. to return to ring after two years against Mark Magsayo.

FIGHT WEEK

Long-reigning featherweight titleholder Gary Russell Jr. will make his sixth defense against unbeaten Mark Magsayo Saturday on Showtime.

Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) vs. Mark Magsayo (23-0, 16 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 15
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Borgata Hotel Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Featherweight
  • At stake: Russell’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Russell 3-1 (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Subriel Matias vs. Petros Ananyan, junior welterweights; Tugstsogt Nyambayar vs. Vic Pasillas, featherweights
  • Prediction: Russell UD
  • Background: Russell doesn’t fight often but dominates when he does. The long-reigning 126-pound titleholder has fought a total of five times since he stopped Jhonny Gonzalez to win this world title in March 2015, including no bouts last year. The quick-handed veteran is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over previously unbeaten Tugstsogt Nyambayar in February 2020, meaning he will have been out of the ring for almost two years. Russell, 33, will be making the sixth defense of his title. Magsayo, 26, will be fighting for a world belt for the first time. The Freddie Roach-trained protégé of Manny Pacquiao is quick and powerful but is taking a significant step up in opposition in his first shot at a major title. Magsayo is coming off a spectacular knockout of Julio Ceja this past August. He was behind on all three cards when he landed a straight right hand that rendered Ceja unconscious. This will be Magsayo’s fourth consecutive fight in the United States.

Fight Week: Gary Russell Jr. to return to ring after two years against Mark Magsayo

Fight Week: Gary Russell Jr. to return to ring after two years against Mark Magsayo.

FIGHT WEEK

Long-reigning featherweight titleholder Gary Russell Jr. will make his sixth defense against unbeaten Mark Magsayo Saturday on Showtime.

Gary Russell Jr. (31-1, 18 KOs) vs. Mark Magsayo (23-0, 16 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Jan. 15
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Borgata Hotel Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Featherweight
  • At stake: Russell’s WBC title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: None
  • Odds: Russell 3-1 (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Subriel Matias vs. Petros Ananyan, junior welterweights; Tugstsogt Nyambayar vs. Vic Pasillas, featherweights
  • Prediction: Russell UD
  • Background: Russell doesn’t fight often but dominates when he does. The long-reigning 126-pound titleholder has fought a total of five times since he stopped Jhonny Gonzalez to win this world title in March 2015, including no bouts last year. The quick-handed veteran is coming off a unanimous-decision victory over previously unbeaten Tugstsogt Nyambayar in February 2020, meaning he will have been out of the ring for almost two years. Russell, 33, will be making the sixth defense of his title. Magsayo, 26, will be fighting for a world belt for the first time. The Freddie Roach-trained protégé of Manny Pacquiao is quick and powerful but is taking a significant step up in opposition in his first shot at a major title. Magsayo is coming off a spectacular knockout of Julio Ceja this past August. He was behind on all three cards when he landed a straight right hand that rendered Ceja unconscious. This will be Magsayo’s fourth consecutive fight in the United States.