William Zepeda delivers vicious beating, stops Mercito Gesta in six

Lightweight contender William Zepeda delivered a vicious beating before finally stopping Mercito Gesta in six rounds on Saturday night.

What top 135-pound fighters are going to want to tangle with William Zepeda?

The volume-punching Mexican contender buried veteran Mercito Gesta in wave after wave of hard, accurate shots until he finally broke down the overwhelmed Filipino and the scheduled 12-round fight was stopped in the sixth round Saturday in Commerce, California.

Zepeda (29-0, 25 KOs) started throwing — and landing — punches to both the head and body at the opening bell and didn’t stop until Gesta’s cornermen indicated that enough was enough.

Gesta (34-4-3, 17 KOs) fought back bravely until the end, landing some effective counters and sometimes beating Zepeda to the punch. He also moved his feet and ultimately held in attempt to weather the never-ending storm.

However, in the end, he simply couldn’t keep his Mexican counterpart off of him or avoid taking punishment, As a result, by the time the fight was stopped at 1:31 of Round 6, Gesta had taken a terrible beating.

The CompuBox stats were compelling. Zepeda connected on 286 of 618 punches in the five-plus rounds, which is a good night’s work for most fighters over 10 or 12 rounds.

And a remarkable 242 of the punches the winner landed were power shots, which explains Gesta’s inability to continue.

“I wanted to fight a guy with experience,” Zepeda said through a translator afterward. “He gave that to me. I’m going to keep going on my way to becoming a world champion.”

Zepeda’s trainer, Jay Najar, was asked who the team wants next for their imposing fighter.

“We want to fight all the champions who are out there,” Najar said. “We’re ready for each and every one of them. Devin Haney is the champion so we want to fight Devin Haney.”

That was echoed by Zepeda, who said in English, “I’m ready for Devin Haney.”

Haney is expected to move up to 140 pounds to challenge Regis Prograis in his next bout, meaning Zepeda won’t get his dream fight just yet.

If he continues to turn in sensational performances, though, you can bet truly big fights are on the horizon — whether the best 135-pounders like it or not.

William Zepeda delivers vicious beating, stops Mercito Gesta in six

Lightweight contender William Zepeda delivered a vicious beating before finally stopping Mercito Gesta in six rounds on Saturday night.

What top 135-pound fighters are going to want to tangle with William Zepeda?

The volume-punching Mexican contender buried veteran Mercito Gesta in wave after wave of hard, accurate shots until he finally broke down the overwhelmed Filipino and the scheduled 12-round fight was stopped in the sixth round Saturday in Commerce, California.

Zepeda (29-0, 25 KOs) started throwing — and landing — punches to both the head and body at the opening bell and didn’t stop until Gesta’s cornermen indicated that enough was enough.

Gesta (34-4-3, 17 KOs) fought back bravely until the end, landing some effective counters and sometimes beating Zepeda to the punch. He also moved his feet and ultimately held in attempt to weather the never-ending storm.

However, in the end, he simply couldn’t keep his Mexican counterpart off of him or avoid taking punishment, As a result, by the time the fight was stopped at 1:31 of Round 6, Gesta had taken a terrible beating.

The CompuBox stats were compelling. Zepeda connected on 286 of 618 punches in the five-plus rounds, which is a good night’s work for most fighters over 10 or 12 rounds.

And a remarkable 242 of the punches the winner landed were power shots, which explains Gesta’s inability to continue.

“I wanted to fight a guy with experience,” Zepeda said through a translator afterward. “He gave that to me. I’m going to keep going on my way to becoming a world champion.”

Zepeda’s trainer, Jay Najar, was asked who the team wants next for their imposing fighter.

“We want to fight all the champions who are out there,” Najar said. “We’re ready for each and every one of them. Devin Haney is the champion so we want to fight Devin Haney.”

That was echoed by Zepeda, who said in English, “I’m ready for Devin Haney.”

Haney is expected to move up to 140 pounds to challenge Regis Prograis in his next bout, meaning Zepeda won’t get his dream fight just yet.

If he continues to turn in sensational performances, though, you can bet truly big fights are on the horizon — whether the best 135-pounders like it or not.

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background.

lightweight contender william zepeda will return against veteran mercito gesta on saturday in commerce, California.

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

[lawrence-related id=37108,37105,37098]

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background

William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta: Date, time, how to watch, background.

lightweight contender william zepeda will return against veteran mercito gesta on saturday in commerce, California.

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

[lawrence-related id=37108,37105,37098]

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez, William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta on tap

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez and William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta highlight a busy weekend.

FIGHT WEEK

Luis alberto lopez will defend his 126-pound belt against joet gonzlaez on friday. on saturday, william zepeda will return against mercito gesta

LUIS ALBERTO LOPEZ (28-2, 16 KOs)
VS. JOET GONZALEZ (26-3, 15 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: American Bank Center, Corpus Christi, Texas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Lopez’s IBF title
  • Odds: Lopez 6-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Xander Zayas vs. Roberto Valenzuela Jr., junior middleweights; Jamaine Ortiz vs. Antonio Moran, lightweights
  • Prediction: Lopez UD
  • Background: Lopez made a splash by outpointing Josh Warrington to take the Englishman’s title last December in Leeds and then proved it was no fluke by stopping veteran Michael Conlan in five rounds on May 27, his fourth knockout in his last five fights. The 30-year-old Mexican last lost in 2019, when Ruben Villa defeated him by a unanimous decision. He’s 11-0 since the setback, with eight KOs. Gonzalez is a slick, tough technician who has failed in two attempts to win a 126-pound world title, losing a one-sided decisions to Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete in 2021. The 29-year-old from Los Angeles is 2-1 since, including a split-decision loss to Isaac Dogboe in July of last year. He bounced back to easily outpoint Enrique Vivas on April 1.

 

RAFAEL PEDROZA (15-0, 11 KOs)
VS. RAMON CARDENAS (22-1, 11 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Boeing Center at Tech Port, San Antonio
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior featherweight (122 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: NA
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Mirco Cuello vs. Rudy Garcia, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pedroza UD
  • Background: Pedroza and Cardenas will fight in the main event on “ShoBox: The New Generation.” Pedroza, 26, is an unbeaten prospect from Panama who will be making his debut in the United States. He is skillful and has punching power, although he has failed to stop his last three opponents. He is coming off a unanimous decision over Yerny Betancourt on May 6. Pedrozo is ranked No. 5 by the WBA. Cardenas is a capable boxer out of San Antonio, meaning he’ll be fighting in front of his hometown fans. The 27-year-old last fought on May 26, when he stopped journeyman Rodrigo Guerrero in two rounds. Cardenas’ only loss came in 2017, when he lost a majority decision to journeyman Danny Flores. He has won 10 consecutive fights since, four by knockout.

 

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

FRIDAY

  • Angel Fierro vs. Brayan Zamarripa, lightweights, Tijuana, Mexico (DAZN)

[lawrence-related id=37555,31672,37105,37098,36209]

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez, William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta on tap

Fight Week: Luis Alberto Lopez vs. Joet Gonzalez and William Zepeda vs. Mercito Gesta highlight a busy weekend.

FIGHT WEEK

Luis alberto lopez will defend his 126-pound belt against joet gonzlaez on friday. on saturday, william zepeda will return against mercito gesta

LUIS ALBERTO LOPEZ (28-2, 16 KOs)
VS. JOET GONZALEZ (26-3, 15 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: American Bank Center, Corpus Christi, Texas
  • TV/Stream: ESPN, ESPN+
  • Division: Featherweight (126 pounds)
  • At stake: Lopez’s IBF title
  • Odds: Lopez 6-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Xander Zayas vs. Roberto Valenzuela Jr., junior middleweights; Jamaine Ortiz vs. Antonio Moran, lightweights
  • Prediction: Lopez UD
  • Background: Lopez made a splash by outpointing Josh Warrington to take the Englishman’s title last December in Leeds and then proved it was no fluke by stopping veteran Michael Conlan in five rounds on May 27, his fourth knockout in his last five fights. The 30-year-old Mexican last lost in 2019, when Ruben Villa defeated him by a unanimous decision. He’s 11-0 since the setback, with eight KOs. Gonzalez is a slick, tough technician who has failed in two attempts to win a 126-pound world title, losing a one-sided decisions to Shakur Stevenson in 2019 and Emanuel Navarrete in 2021. The 29-year-old from Los Angeles is 2-1 since, including a split-decision loss to Isaac Dogboe in July of last year. He bounced back to easily outpoint Enrique Vivas on April 1.

 

RAFAEL PEDROZA (15-0, 11 KOs)
VS. RAMON CARDENAS (22-1, 11 KOs)

  • Date: Friday, Sept. 15
  • Time: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Boeing Center at Tech Port, San Antonio
  • TV/Stream: Showtime
  • Division: Junior featherweight (122 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: NA
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Mirco Cuello vs. Rudy Garcia, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pedroza UD
  • Background: Pedroza and Cardenas will fight in the main event on “ShoBox: The New Generation.” Pedroza, 26, is an unbeaten prospect from Panama who will be making his debut in the United States. He is skillful and has punching power, although he has failed to stop his last three opponents. He is coming off a unanimous decision over Yerny Betancourt on May 6. Pedrozo is ranked No. 5 by the WBA. Cardenas is a capable boxer out of San Antonio, meaning he’ll be fighting in front of his hometown fans. The 27-year-old last fought on May 26, when he stopped journeyman Rodrigo Guerrero in two rounds. Cardenas’ only loss came in 2017, when he lost a majority decision to journeyman Danny Flores. He has won 10 consecutive fights since, four by knockout.

 

WILLIAM ZEPEDA (28-0, 24 KOs)
VS. MERCITO GESTA (34-3-3, 17 KOS)

  • Date: Saturday, Sept. 16
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: Commerce Casino, Commerce, California
  • TV/Stream: DAZN
  • Division: Lightweight (135 pounds)
  • At stake: No major titles
  • Odds: Zepeda 7½-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Pound-for-pound: None
  • Also on the card: Victor Morales vs. Edwin Palomares, featherweights; Yokasta Valle vs. Maria Santizo, strawweights (for Valle’s IBF and WBO titles)
  • Prediction: Zepeda KO 9
  • Background: Zepeda is moving rapidly toward his first title shot. The skillful, volume-punching southpaw from Mexico has been untouchable against solid opposition, including a one-sided decision over former titleholder Joseph Diaz Jr. last October. He threw a lightweight-record 1,536 punches in that fight, according to CompuBox. He followed that with a second-round knockout of overmatched Jaime Arboleda on April 29. The 27-year-old is ranked by all four major sanctioning bodies, as high as No. 2 by the WBA. Gesta, a 35-year-old former title challenger, is battling to get back into contention. The Filipino southpaw is 2-0 since returning from a 2½-year layoff, defeating Joel Diaz Jr. by a unanimous decision and then getting past Joseph Diaz Jr. by a split decision on March 18. The latter fight was at 140 pounds.

 

ALSO FIGHTING THIS WEEK

FRIDAY

  • Angel Fierro vs. Brayan Zamarripa, lightweights, Tijuana, Mexico (DAZN)

[lawrence-related id=37555,31672,37105,37098,36209]

Weekend Review: Terence Crawford vs. Errol Spence Jr. coming? William Zepeda sizzles

Weekend Review: Is Terence Crawford vs. Errol Spence Jr. coming? William Zepeda sizzles.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNERS
The fans

Is Terence Crawford vs. Errol Spence Jr. really happening? We’ll believe it when we see it but momentum evidently is building toward a long awaited showdown between two of the sport’s most respect champions in July. The Gervonta Davis-Ryan Garcia fight was huge because of the fighters’ fanbases. And the stakes of a potential Tyson Fury-Oleksandr Usyk matchup – undisputed heavyweight championship – are massive. However, strictly from a quality-vs.-quality standpoint, it doesn’t get better than Crawford vs. Spence for all four welterweight belts. They’re a combined 67-0 (52 KOs). They’re pound-for-pound royalty, Crawford No. 1 and Spence No. 4 on Boxing Junkie’s list. They’re not young (Crawford 35, Spence 32) but neither has shown signs of decline. Bottom line: These are two of the best fighters of their generation, making this the biggest 147-pound matchups since Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao in 2015. If it happens. Crawford and Spence were near a deal to fight late last year or early this year when talks collapsed. That’s why I refuse to get excited until a formal announcement is made. That said, the fighters seem to understand that if this fight is going to happen, the time must be now. Fingers crossed.

 

BEST TIMING?
Crawford vs. Spence

Is Crawford vs. Spence past its expiration date? No, at least not compared to Mayweather vs. Pacquiao. Mayweather (38 when he fought Pacquiao) and Pacquiao (36) also were at the top of pound-for-pound rankings but they were clearly past their primes when they met in May 2015. Mayweather fought only two more times, a clear indication that he was near the end. And Pacquiao wasn’t quite the dynamo he was a few years earlier. They should’ve fought in 2010 or 2011. Crawford and Spence aren’t much younger but they seem to be fresher. Crawford has stopped his last 10 opponents, including a break through knockout of Shawn Porter in November 2021. His age could creep up on him at any time but it has yet to do so. Spence survived a horrible one-car crash in 2019 to resume his career in August 2021, when he defeated Yordenis Ugas by a unanimous decision to unify three 147-pound titles. If there are any lingering effects from the accident – as well as a taxing war with Porter before the accident – they weren’t evident in the Ugas fight. This fight should’ve happened a few years ago, meaning we’re probably not getting Crawford and Spence at their very best. They’re close, though. We’ll take that.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
William Zepeda

It’s going to be difficult to crack the upper echelon of the lightweight division, with gifted fighters like Gervonta Davis, Shakur Stevenson, Devin Haney and Vasiliy Lomachenko in charge. If anyone can do it, though, it might be William Zepeda. The 26-year-old Mexican delivered another impressive night Saturday in Arlington, Texas, putting Jaime Arboleda down three times with brutal body shots and stopping him in two rounds. Zepeda didn’t have a chance to show off the otherworldly conditioning he demonstrated against Joseph Diaz Jr. in October, when he threw a division record 1,536 punches over 12 rounds. However, his typical suffocating pressure and heavy hands overwhelmed the capable Panamanian. The volume punching and ability to hurt anyone could be the formula to cause problems for the aforementioned superb technicians. Think of the first Floyd Mayweather-Jose Luis Castillo fight, which Mayweather won by a disputed decision. Castillo didn’t throw as many punches as Zepeda does but he was a pressure fighter who regularly targeted the body. If Castillo could give Mayweather trouble with those tactics, maybe Zepeda can do the same against the top lightweights. I hope he gets his chance soon.

[lawrence-related id=37105,37098]

Weekend Review: Terence Crawford vs. Errol Spence Jr. coming? William Zepeda sizzles

Weekend Review: Is Terence Crawford vs. Errol Spence Jr. coming? William Zepeda sizzles.

A critical look at the past week in boxing

BIGGEST WINNERS
The fans

Is Terence Crawford vs. Errol Spence Jr. really happening? We’ll believe it when we see it but momentum evidently is building toward a long awaited showdown between two of the sport’s most respect champions in July. The Gervonta Davis-Ryan Garcia fight was huge because of the fighters’ fanbases. And the stakes of a potential Tyson Fury-Oleksandr Usyk matchup – undisputed heavyweight championship – are massive. However, strictly from a quality-vs.-quality standpoint, it doesn’t get better than Crawford vs. Spence for all four welterweight belts. They’re a combined 67-0 (52 KOs). They’re pound-for-pound royalty, Crawford No. 1 and Spence No. 4 on Boxing Junkie’s list. They’re not young (Crawford 35, Spence 32) but neither has shown signs of decline. Bottom line: These are two of the best fighters of their generation, making this the biggest 147-pound matchups since Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao in 2015. If it happens. Crawford and Spence were near a deal to fight late last year or early this year when talks collapsed. That’s why I refuse to get excited until a formal announcement is made. That said, the fighters seem to understand that if this fight is going to happen, the time must be now. Fingers crossed.

 

BEST TIMING?
Crawford vs. Spence

Is Crawford vs. Spence past its expiration date? No, at least not compared to Mayweather vs. Pacquiao. Mayweather (38 when he fought Pacquiao) and Pacquiao (36) also were at the top of pound-for-pound rankings but they were clearly past their primes when they met in May 2015. Mayweather fought only two more times, a clear indication that he was near the end. And Pacquiao wasn’t quite the dynamo he was a few years earlier. They should’ve fought in 2010 or 2011. Crawford and Spence aren’t much younger but they seem to be fresher. Crawford has stopped his last 10 opponents, including a break through knockout of Shawn Porter in November 2021. His age could creep up on him at any time but it has yet to do so. Spence survived a horrible one-car crash in 2019 to resume his career in August 2021, when he defeated Yordenis Ugas by a unanimous decision to unify three 147-pound titles. If there are any lingering effects from the accident – as well as a taxing war with Porter before the accident – they weren’t evident in the Ugas fight. This fight should’ve happened a few years ago, meaning we’re probably not getting Crawford and Spence at their very best. They’re close, though. We’ll take that.

 

BIGGEST WINNER II
William Zepeda

It’s going to be difficult to crack the upper echelon of the lightweight division, with gifted fighters like Gervonta Davis, Shakur Stevenson, Devin Haney and Vasiliy Lomachenko in charge. If anyone can do it, though, it might be William Zepeda. The 26-year-old Mexican delivered another impressive night Saturday in Arlington, Texas, putting Jaime Arboleda down three times with brutal body shots and stopping him in two rounds. Zepeda didn’t have a chance to show off the otherworldly conditioning he demonstrated against Joseph Diaz Jr. in October, when he threw a division record 1,536 punches over 12 rounds. However, his typical suffocating pressure and heavy hands overwhelmed the capable Panamanian. The volume punching and ability to hurt anyone could be the formula to cause problems for the aforementioned superb technicians. Think of the first Floyd Mayweather-Jose Luis Castillo fight, which Mayweather won by a disputed decision. Castillo didn’t throw as many punches as Zepeda does but he was a pressure fighter who regularly targeted the body. If Castillo could give Mayweather trouble with those tactics, maybe Zepeda can do the same against the top lightweights. I hope he gets his chance soon.

[lawrence-related id=37105,37098]

Watch it: William Zepeda’s brutal body shots destroy Jaime Arboleda

Watch it: William Zepeda’s brutal body shots destroyed Jaime Arboleda on Saturday in Arlington, Texas.

Lightweight contender William Zepeda put Jaime Arboleda down three times with body shots in the second round, the third time for good in the scheduled 12-rounder Saturday in Arlington, Texas.

Check out Zepeda’s brutal blows below.

[lawrence-related id=37098,37088]

 

Watch it: William Zepeda’s brutal body shots destroy Jaime Arboleda

Watch it: William Zepeda’s brutal body shots destroyed Jaime Arboleda on Saturday in Arlington, Texas.

Lightweight contender William Zepeda put Jaime Arboleda down three times with body shots in the second round, the third time for good in the scheduled 12-rounder Saturday in Arlington, Texas.

Check out Zepeda’s brutal blows below.

[lawrence-related id=37098,37088]